THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.70
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, Feb. 3, 1970
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—President Nixon plans to operate the White House with 28 less employees this year and a reduction in costs of $450,000, his proposed budget disclosed Monday.
Nixon to reduce staff
In the new budget proposals transmitted to Congress, Nixon asked for a $8.55 million for salaries and expenses of 548 people who work in the Executive Office of the presidency.
Costs for the current fiscal year were figured at $9 million for 578 employees.
Red China supports Arabs
TOKYO—Premier Chou En-lai of Communist China Monday pledged his country's support to the Arab nations in the Middle East conflict and predicted they will "defeat the U.S. and Israeli aggressors and win final victory."
Marcos to step down
MANILA—President Ferdinand E. Marcos, in a move to placate militant students, promised Monday he would not seek a third term and ordered politicians in the governing party to stay out of next year's constitutional convention.
Marcos, who was reelected to an unprecedented four-year second term last November, spoke at a news conference three days after thousands of youths stormed the presidential palace in the worst rioting here since World War II.
U.S. observes ceasefire
SAIGON—The United States and South Vietnam said today they will observe a 24-hour cease-fire during the Tet lunar new years holiday starting Thursday night. Off-duty U.S. troops were ordered to stay out of Saigon for fear of attacks coineiding with Tet.
The standown announcement followed the heaviest fighting of the year throughout the country.
Threat delays plane
Forty-one passengers and the seven member crew left the Boeing 707, while police and FBI agents searched the plane and all the luggage aboard but found nothing.
KANSAS CITY—A Trans World Airlines flight was delayed more than two hours Monday by a bomb threat received by telephone.
Budget cut has no affect
SPACE CENTER Houston--The space agency's new and "very austere" budget for fiscal year 1971 will have little bad effect at the Texas Space Center which serves as home base to America's astronauts, the deputy chief of the agency, George Low, said Monday.
Low told Houston civic and business leaders and key Space Center officials in a special briefing that the $3.333 billion space budget included in President Nixon's spending plan for fiscal year 1971 was the lowest the agency had been offered in nine years.
Nixon budget hits new high
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon's new budget drew hearty and predictable praise from Republicans Monday but Democrats generally dismissed it as long on promises, short on delivery and misleading.
Members of the President's own party described the $200.8 billion, budget with its anticipated surplus as a sharp blow against inflation. They said it began the process of shifting dollars away from defense and toward unmet domestic needs.
President Nixon asked Congress for a budget that would request Americans to pay $2.2 billion more to the government. Republican said the request was justified.
The general reaction from Democrats was that the President's requests short-changed domestic needs and didn't match his rhetoric. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield suggested that cuts in Nixon's request could be
made, primarily in military expenditures.
Nixon said the budget was "one we cannot only defend, but one which will provide adequate funds, in this period when we must fight inflation, for programs the government is involved in."
Nixon's $200.8 billion "hard choices" budget would require raising Social Security taxes, user taxes and postal rates and extending excise taxes to enable the government to fight inflation with a $1.3 billion surplus.
The added cost averages to about $11 for every man, woman and child in the nation.
Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, R-Utah, in a statement that summed up GOP feelings, said, "I hope the Congress follows his lead in this fight and that it doesn't bow to the short-range political expediency in an election year and raise it for vote-getting purposes."
"The most significant aspect of the 1971 budget is that it is balanced," said Rep. Frank Bow, Ohio, ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee.
"Those who have been calling for a reordering of priorities are seeing this President reorder those priorities," declared Senate Republican Whip Robert P. Griffin, Mich.
Nixon's budget followup to his State of the Union promise to clean up the nation's waters evoked criticism from several democrats. They noted that his $10 billion program amounted to only $4 billion in federal funds and that only $800 million would be released next year, no more than Congress provided this year and $400 million less than Congress is already authorized to appropriate.
"More puff than performance," snapped Rep. Charles Vanik, D-Ohio, whose hometown of Cleveland lies on the shores of Lake Erie, one of America's most polluted bodies of water.
Whites boycott schools
INDIANOLA, Miss. (UPI)— The Supreme Court's total desegregation order was implemented Monday in several school districts in the Mississippi Delta, the cotton-growing plantation country where Negroes outnumber whites five to one. Two districts immediately became virtually all-black.
"Something has got to be done about this," complained Joe Dotson, vice-president of Indianola's chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "The schools are still black. You can't call this integration."
None of the nearly 1,000 whites in Indianola's public school system showed up for classes with its 2,800 Negro students. Only two of 441 white children registered for classes at Tunica, a delta town with 3,000 black students, and officials said the two didn't show up Monday.
"We have an all-black school system," said George F. Petty, Tunica school superintendent. "We tried to tell the courts this would happen."
More than 40 school districts across the South, attended by a half-million children, are under court orders to end all vestiges of the dual school system this month. Several closed temporarily to prepare for compliance, while others awaited final word from federal judges on where their students should go.
In Louisiana, where 17 districts must desegregate this month. Gov. John McKeithen wired VicePresident Spiro T. Agnew that his state will defy any court orders putting education secondary to integration.
"These directives, if allowed to stand, will force us into a position of defiance which we would like to avoid if possible," said McKeithen, who joined Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox and Florida Gov.
Claude Kirk in advocating defiance.
Mississippi asked the Supreme Court Monday to let it sue the government in an attempt to alter its desegregation requirements. Gov. John Bell Williams said total desegregation rulings "are causing serious and irreparable harm to the state of Mississippi, its public school system and its economy."
The Supreme Court refused Monday to allow Mississippi, Alabama and Florida to file suits protesting integration plans.
Thirty-nine of the 41 white teachers in the Indianola system resigned. Several of them are now teaching in the Indianola Academy, one of hundreds of private schools that have cropped up across the South in the wake of desegregation pressure.
N.A. N.A.
Photo by Ron. Bishop
They all look the same
It was the traditional battle between students and the IBM cards last week as KU students once again went through agony and bewilderment during enrollment. Karen Zupko, Morton Grove, Ill. sophomore, was one of many students trying to figure which cards to keep and which to turn in.
Publisher will be honored
The Phoenix, Ariz., Republic and Gazette publisher, Eugene C. Pulliam, will receive the 21st annual award for journalistic merit Feb. 19 from the University of Kansas William Allen White Foundation.
Each year the citation goes to an American journalist who "exemplifies William Allen White's ideals in service to his profession and his country."
Pulliam will deliver the William Allen White Lecture at 2:30 p.m. Feb. 10, in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium.
Recipients of the award in previous years have been newspaper editors and publishers, magazine and press association editors and
managers, and a broadcast journalist.
A native Kensan, Pulliam will receive the slate citation at a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Slated also for the day is a 9 a.m. executive committee meeting.
Among recent awards Pulliam has received are the John Peter Zenger Award "for distinguished service in support of the freedom of the people's right to know"; the Wells Memorial Key of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society; the Front Page Award of the Indianapolis Press Club, Journalistic Achievement Award of the American Legion; the Master-Editor-Publisher Award of
The KU-Y will sponsor a program at 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Parlor A concerning the possible ways a student can spend his summer.
Service opportunities highlighted in program
Tom Moore, KU-Y adviser, said summer opportunities included seminars on options for social change, government jobs in Washington, D.C., overseas cultural exchange, travel and service in East Asia, social service in the inner city and work in mental hospitals.
The meeting will feature several speakers who have participated in various programs of the
Slum activist will lecture
Saul Alinsky, who calls himself a "professional radical," will speak at 8 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. His speech topic will be "The American Revolution-Act II."
Alinsky, a sociologist, criminologist and leading figure in the civil rights movement, has been crossing the country since the late 1930's organizing poor communities into power units designed to secure better conditions for themselves.
He established the Industrial Areas Foundation, a training school for agitators which has helped some 40 impoverished communities set up military operations. His most successful is located at Woodlawn, a Negro slum adjoining the University of Chicago campus. Author Charles E. Silberman has called Woodlawn "the most significant social experiment going on among Negroes in America today."
Since his success in Woodlawn, Alinsky has been invited to organize black ghettos by business and church groups. He only accepts the invitations, however, if they come from the community itself.
Alinsky has written many books, among them a biography on John L. Lewis. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.
Enrollment sets new high 17,800
the Arizona Newspaper Association, and the Golden Plate of the American Academy of Achievement.
As classwork began Monday, 17,430 students had enrolled, a gain of 768, or 4.6 percent over the 1969 figure. Kelly predicted nearly 375 late enrollments.
KU spring semester enrollment will reach a new high of 17,800, said William R. Kelly, registrar.
Of the 17,430 students, 16,043 are enrolled on the Lawrence campus, an increase of 724, and 1,387 are enrolled at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, representing an increase of 44.
2 KANSAN
Feb. 3
1970
Pulliam established the Central Newspapers Foundation which has sent hundreds of students to college and has brought foreign reporters to this country for study.
same nature. Moore will speak about the options for social change at Berkeley, Calif.; Olin Trabue, representative of the west central area YMCA office in Topeka will speak on a program of travel and work in Hong Kong and various other places in East Asia; Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior, will speak about her work last summer in the Washington citizenship seminar, and John S. Schwegler, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, will speak about his trip to the U.S.S.R. in the summer of 1968.
A wide range of other possibilities for summer activities will be on display in the room. Students may pick up folders and fliers on the various programs.
Moore stressed the importance of tonight's meeting because applications for the activities are due immediately, and only a limited number of people can get into the programs. Study and preparation are necessary for a number of them.
The programs, Moore said, are mainly for those students who can afford to break even or spend part of their savings since such activities as traveling may run as high as $1,800.
A colloquium on "Computer Application in the Earth Sciences," will be held at KU June 7, 8 and 9. It will be co-sponsored by the Kansas Geological Survey, the University of Kansas Extension and the International Association for Mathematical Geology.
Summer set for meeting
Daniel F. Merriam, research professor of geology, said the purpose of the colloquium will be to discover the applicability of pure science study procedures to the study of geology. The development and use of quantitative methods of study may be helpful in developing the field of geostatistics.
He is currently director of the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge and a trustee of the William Allen White Foundation.
Pulliam has owned and operated 47 newspapers during his career.
The June colloquium will be the eighth in a bi-annual series which has been held since 1966.
Two scientists from the International Association for Mathematical Geology, Fritz P. Agterburg from the Geological Survey in Canada and Vaclav Nemec from Geoindustria in Praque, will attend the colloquium. Also planning to attend are F. Chayes from the Carnegie Institute in Washington, W. C. Krumbein from Northwestern University, G. S. Watson from John Hopkins University and Paul Switzer from Stanford University.
A member of the board of directors and first vice-president of the Associated Press, he served for 32 years as a trustee of DePauw University.
Carnival scheduled
The second annual Brazilian Carnival will take place at 8:30 p.m. Feb. 14, at the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread.
The admission price is $1.50 for singles and $2.00 for couples. Costumes are required and the public is invited.
French professor receives award
John Erickson, associate professor of French, has been awarded a Fulbright Lecturing Fellowship for one year beginning in September.
The fellowship will be used in Rabat, Morocco where Erickson will be in residence at the Mohammed V University as a lecturer on Twentieth Century American and English Literature, Samuel Beckett, and the Modern Spirit.
Erickson defined the Modern Spirit as "the study of British, American and Continental literature and its formative influence on what we call the modern mind."
Erickson has been chairman of the Humanities Lectures Series at KU since 1967. He is also editor of L'Esprit Createur, an international quarterly review of French literature published in Lawrence.
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E.P. Moomau dies; successor is sought
Elam P. Moomau, director of the University Traffic and Security Office since 1964, died Jan. 17 at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Moomau, 60, had been hospitalized since December 22 because of a heart ailment.
Before coming to KU, Moomau served as superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol for 15 years. He served a total of 40 years in law enforcement, working for such agencies as the Wichita police department and the guard force of the Sunflower Ordinance Works.
Moomau had been in charge of many patrol training schools at KU. He graduated from the FBI National Academy in 1955, and completed the Northwestern University Traffic Institute course for police supervisors.
He was a member of several civic clubs in Lawrence as well as the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the National Association of Security Directors. the Kansas Peace Officers Association and the National Sheriffs Association.
C. W. C. H.
Moomau is survived by his
E. P. Moomau
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 3
widow, Florence, one son and one daughter, five sisters and nine grandchildren.
Funeral services were held in the First Christian Church, Lawrence, Jan. 20. Burial was in Medicine Lodge, where Moomau was born.
Work-Study funds to be cut
The Office of Financial Aid today announced that fewer job applications will be accepted by the Federal Work-Study program.
While a successor is sought, the directorship of the Traffic and Security Office is being handled by shift lieutenants.
Bernie Taylor, assistant director of the Office of Financial Aid said that because of President Nixon's aim to cut federal spending, the budget of the Work-Study program here would be cut nearly in half.
During the first semester period of the program, Sept. 15 to Dec. 31, 1969, $90,000 was available for use. For the second semester period, Jan. 1 to May 30, 1970, only $47,740 will be available.
Because of this cutback, Taylor said, fewer job openings would be available and a cut in existing student salaries may be possible.
The Work-Study Program was instituted by the federal government as an aid to financially deficient students. If a student can show that he or she would be unable to afford a college education, without financial aid the student is appointed to a job position.
GERMAN BREWERY
BONN (UPI)—Alaska's first brewery may be built by the Otether Group of West Germany.
Oetker, one of Germany's leading food processors, found a study of the Alaskan beer market potential in 1965-66 to be encouraging. A final decision depends on the state government granting certain tax concessions, an Oetker spokesman said.
If the project is approved, Oetker proposes a brewery with an annual capacity of about 1,375,000 gallons.
Students in the program are allowed a 15-hour work week. The government pays 80 per cent
of the salary and the University department in which the student is employed pays 20 per cent.
Since less money will be available from government sources, the department must subsidize a higher percentage of the salaries, thus preventing more job openings.
EAT LUNCH ALL DAY:
Well, practically, anyhow. The Captain's Table cafeteria is open from 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m.Monday Saturday.
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KWSNN COMMENT
What else ya got?
Somewhere in between now and the next election, many young people will find themselves facing voter registration for the first time in their lives.
The whole affair will go all right until the clerk ve;y pointedly asks each young person whether he wants to be put down as a Democrat or a Republican, to which each young person will very pointedly ask, "what else ya got?"
The Democratic party, once beloved and admired by young and hopeful people, is at a critical stage in its development. Although there seem to be many paths which the party can take, three Democratic leaders seem most prominent as presidential candidates and as the men who will have the most influence on the party.
One is Hubert H. Humphrey: "When the decision was made, I went along. I didn't say much but I went along. . . . We can't be there forever, but think what has been accomplished. There is a new self-confidence in Southeast-Asia—five years ago all those countries were terrified of a Communist take-over. . . . No ally has ever so faithfully fulfilled a commitment—we've walked the extra mile. . . ."
"I'm convinced that he (Nixon) wants to get out just as soon as he can, and a lot sooner than a lot of people think. I keep telling my liberal friends who attack him for not getting faster, 'You're gonna lose—he's gonna get out.' But they won't listen."
By contrast, the other two Democratic leaders are Sen. George McGovern and Sen. Edmund Muskie, both dedicated to the fact that Nixon is not going fast enough in withdrawing from Vietnam and that he is not going far enough in domestic programs. Both are also convinced though possibly not as fervently as Sen. Eugene McCarthy, that the Democratic Party must change and must change NOW. While Humphrey (and let's face this, you who still insist that this is the same Humphrey you knew in the 1950's) is sounding more and more like a Party man, Muskie and McGovern have been sounding like Man men.
McGovern: "The present Administration, like its predecessor, continues to govern the nation as though our chief dangers were from abroad rather than at home . . . I suggest the following: An end to our involvement in the Vietnam war, beginning with an immediate
ceasetire, including the bombardment that is now destroying the Vietnamese countryside . . . 'Vietnamization'—the Administration's current policy—is simply a new slogan for an old discredited policy. . . .
"We should establish a National Economic Conversion Commission to assist the transition of our economy from war activities to peaceful pursuits. . . .
"Finally, I urge needed reforms of our increasingly archaic political institutions, notably our political parties and the Congress. As these institutions must help to translate popular will into public action, the elimination of their defects and shortcomings is essential to a vital and healthy democracy."
Muskie: "Rhetoric has taken us in one direction, while inaction has taken us in another." He has called the Administration "slogan rich and action poor" in fighting pollution and was one of the critics of Nixon's meager anti-pollution program announced in the State of the Union message. In fact, Muskie is such an adamant ecologist that HEW Secretary Robert Finch has ordered his name and photo removed from all HEW phamphlets and films, so that Nixon might appear to have been the man behind all that Muskie has promoted.
The problem, then, for that young person who steps up to that election clerk to register is one of determining just whether the Democratic Party will ever find itself coming around to some of the views of McGovern and Muskie (and also Kennedy and McCarthy) or whether Party men such as Humphrey will continue to lead this endless, macabre menagerie which has emerged in the past ten years.
With any amount of faith at all, most of us will be able to forgive McGovern for clasping Humphrey's hand in Chicago that August while our comrads were being beaten in the streets.
And with any amount of faith at all, most of us can forgive Muskie for being a latecomer in the crusade to reform the party.
And if in joining the Democratic Party we find that the Party men ultimately outpower the Man men, we can emulate the children of the Greek God Kronos. Kronos, as legend has it, ate his children until one day they hacked their way out of his stomach and killed him.
—Mike Shearer
31070248
Sorel's News Service
Manuel Frut
1970, King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights resers
Power to the Puppet
MINNEAPOLIS—Speaking to a Democratic party study group, Hubert Humphrey said he disagreed with those who suggested doing away with party conventions in favor of a national presidential primary. While acknowledging the presence of a "circus atmosphere" in previous conventions, Mr. Humphrey emphasized that it is essential to erase "the impression that they are rigged."
INDUSTRY ORIENTED
POLLUTION CONTROL
AGENCIES
PUBLIC INTEREST
THE MIDWALKER JOURNAL
'Gee whiz! What's wrong with me guarding the goldfish?'
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER
Editorial Page Editor
"You try changing which end of a motorcycle is front and which is back at sixty miles an hour, and you got to type with your toes for a year."—Bob Dylan
Change for the sake of change, despite what you hear, is better than some things. It's better than stagnant sterility and it's better than death, but I guess I'll admit that it does rank far behind change for the sake of continued life and change for the sake of a better life.
Opening a new semester, the Kansan, like everyone else, will be making some changes. We have some new staff members and some old staff members in new jobs. We've got some new ideas and some new hopes and some of them will show up in the UDK.
But at 60 miles an hour, we're not changing which end is front and which is back because we all use our typewriters too much to be typing with our toes.
In the process of making changes and in the process of bringing you a newspaper every day, we'll be counting on readers to point out our errors and to make contributions to our Comment page.
Forgive us for any sins we might commit at 60 miles an hour. Try not to depend on us for the ultimate answers (we actually have few fears that you will), but rather let yourself read the information we provide and digest it as you would any material from another mortal.
From our editorial page, expect opinions from individuals of varying philosophies. There is no 'Kansan opinion.' We all react and think as individuals, and so no opinion expressed on this page will necessarily be the opinion of anyone on the staff (including even the writers themselves, maybe, all of whom will be signed).
The following is a quote from Buddha which, if there were any real mystical substance which might be called justice, would appear everywhere. You don't necessarily have to believe it though:
"Believe nothing because a so-called wise man said it.
"Believe nothing because a belief is generally held.
"Believe nothing because it is written in ancient books.
"Believe nothing because it is said to be of divine origin.
"Believe nothing because someone else believes it.
"Believe only what you yourself judge to be true."
At 60 miles an hour, have a good semester.
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 for occasions when registration rates; 56 a semester, $a year. Second class postage paid at Lawry. Goods services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior written notice. Please contact the university necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser ... James W. Murray
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editor Todd Iilf
News Editor Joe Ehlert
Editorial Editors Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd
Sports Editors Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver
Motion Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkens
Wire Editor Ken Cummins
Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers
Arts and Reviews Editor Genelle Richards
Assistant Campus Editors Vicki Philipson, Carl Walker
Assistant News Editors Donna Shrader, Cass Sexson, Bob Stewart
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Business Adviser ... Mel Adams
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Funds for classrooms approved
TOPEKA—The Kansas Board of Regents approved requests by the University of Kansas Jan. 9 for emergency action designed to make more classroom space available at KU next year.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. told the board 800 to 1000 new students were expected to enroll next fall and no funds were available to provide added classroom space that would be needed.
Appropriations for the renovation of the basement and attic of Flint Hall and rooms in Fowler Hall were struck from KU's budget by Governor Robert Docking Jan. 13.
The Board agreed the Kansas legislature should be asked to allow KU to use $150,000 from educational building funds to purchase five or six temporary structures for use next fall.
Three of the buildings would contain six classrooms capable of accommodating 45 students. One building would be used to house the business office of Watkins Hospital so that space presently occupied by the business office could be used to enlarge clinical facilities. The other two buildings
would contain offices of faculty members.
Three of the temporary structures would be located near Murphy Hall, two near Learned Hall, and the sixth adjacent to Watkins Hospital. Chalmers said these locations were chosen because of their proximity to utilities.
Raymond Nichols, KU executive secretary, told the Board of Regents that KU is using its available classrooms for more than 38 hours each per week. Nichols told the Kansan the recommended maximum usage for lecture rooms is 26.4 hours per
week. He said KU has been exceeding optimum usage for several years.
Nichols also said if the funds which Docking struck from the budget had been approved, the renovated classroom facilities would not have been available until the spring of 1971. "We need space now," he said.
In a related action, the Board of Regents approved a resolution from the Council of Presidents of the state universities of Kansas asking that the first $500,000 in
available educational building funds be used to plan emergency construction programs for the regents institution.
Chalmers, speaking for the presidents, said these funds would accelerate planning for a building program estimated to cost $50 million to $100 million.
The regents have also approved an expenditure of $4,500 for remodeling the KU statewide extension building, formerly the downtown Lawrence post office.
Independent Study offers substitute course for credit
In addition to the courses scheduled during enrollment, KU students may consider supplemental or substitute courses from the offerings of the Extramural Independent Study Center, a part of University Extension.
Personnel from student services at the Center will be available Feb. 2-4 from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Kansas Union room 101. Mrs. Vivian McCoy, director of student services for the center, will be assisted by counselors Phillip Levi, Mrs. Elaine Eklund and Mrs. Phyllis Cassell.
For the student who cannot be on campus this semester, the center offers courses that will allow him to continue his program. Graduate students may take prerequisites for upper division courses and students in residence may choose courses not offered during the spring semester.
Independent study courses may be taken on a pass-fail basis with the permission of the adviser who must also grant permission for enrollment in independent study courses.
Fees are $12 an hour for Kansas residents and $14 an hour for out-of-state students.
The Extramural Independent Study Center has recently been recognized by the National University Extension Association with two first place awards for its innovations in independent study. Alexander Lazzarino, director of the center, accepted these awards
at a Washington meeting last month. Of the 64 member institutions participating, the center received first place for the best new course of study and first place for its use of multi-media approaches to independent study.
James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor and science fiction writer, is developing a course of study encompassing videotaped lectures by 20 outstanding science fiction writers.
The $1.5 million is just part of the $19.5 million collected which exceeded the intended goal of
University Funds distributed by Endowment Association
Dean of Faculty and chairman of the University Planning Board Francis H. Heller said the Board has not decided how the money will be allocated.
$18,617,000 during the Endowment Association's three-year Program for Progress campaign, Youngberg explained.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 5
The objectives of the Program for Progress have been largely accomplished in funds for student aid and faculty development, except for general research funds for KU faculty. Youngberg said.
Youngberg said trustees of the Endowment Association will distribute $851,000 in gifts and $676,-000 in pledges now undesignated to purpose according to the recommendations of the University Planning Board.
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A long range study by the University Planning Board will decide the use of $1.5 million in gifts and pledges given to the University through the KU Endowment Association's Program for Progress campaign, Irvin E. Youngberg of the Endowment Association said Monday.
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all quiet on the western front
Youngberg said objectives not met were a new museum of art, a new law building, three of four colleges within a college and a medical research building.
Youngberg said many of the gifts were designated by the donor for a specific purpose and all the funds solicited are in use except the $1.5 million in the unrestricted opportunity fund.
Students who enroll in independent study have up a year to complete a course, and may enroll at any time of year. The special enrollment period in February is for students who may want to incorporate independent study into their spring semester course loads. Those who wish to inquire about enrollment should go to the Extramural Independent Study Center in the University Extension building north of the Kansas Union.
the red badge of courage
february 10
John Haston, UA, 1931
Short: OLIVER THE VIII, Laurel and Hardy
Woodford Anthony, UA, 1946
WAR/ANTI-WAR FILM SERIES Part 1
february 3
Lewis Wilkinson MA, 1930
Short: JAZ ACK IDOL, Rudolph Valentien
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Forum Room, Union
Steve McQueen
"The Reivers"
Panavision"&Technicolor*
A Cinema Center Films Presentation
A National General Pictures Release.
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Eve. 7:15 - 9:20
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
1978
twelve o'clock high
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INLATRE---Telephone VI 3-5784
february 5
Henry King, USA, 1999
Short; DWURE MOULEUR, Level and hardy
7.00 and 9.00 p.m. Audrey Dudson
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATER Presents
THE HOMECOMING
by Harold Pinter
February 4,5,6,7 February8(matinee2:30)
University Theatre — Murphy Hall Curtain Time: 8:20 — Telephone UN 4-3982
Prices: $2.80, $2.10, $1.40
Current Registration Card Admits to $1.40 Seat
State residence hall tax proposed
TOPEKA (UPI) — A proposed real estate tax on collegiate residence halls and student unions would cost students and their parents an additional $3 to $4 million a year, according to Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents.
Bickford told members of the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee that application of real estate taxes to now exempt campus residence halls and student unions would require increases of from 7 to $19 in student fees, and from $92 to $183 in annual dormitory rentals.
Some campus residence halls have suffered from occupancy problems in recent years because of increased construction of private student dwellings and an increase in enrollment at two-year junior colleges.
Residence hall housing is utilized mostly by lower classmen.
Except for the campuses at Pittsburg and Emporia, he said, residence hall construction in the state came to a standstill two years ago.
Bickford told the legislators freshmen enrollment has not increased substantially since 1968 because of increased enrollment at junior colleges.
Enrollment at the junior level, though, has increased, he said, because of the greater number of transfers of students from the two-year junior colleges.
"This tax would put our whole dormitory situation in serious trouble," he said.
In other action, the House defeated two attempts Monday to trim a measure to appropriate
Most of the two-hour session was devoted to debating the proposed amendments, although 16 new bills were introduced and 10 measures were passed and sent to the Senate.
LBJ held 'high hopes' for Paris peace talks
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Former President Lyndon B. Johnson tells of his high hopes for the Paris peace talks and subsequent disappointment in Vietnam negotiations in a forthcoming television show to be broadcast Friday evening over CBS Network.
$813,793 from general state revenues for six state agencies.
A transcript of the hourlong show disclosed Monday that Johnson told CBS news correspondent Walter Cronkite in the taped interview that he "had hoped for a great deal more than has been achieved" in the peace talks.
The broadcast of Feb. 6, "LBJ: The Decision to Halt the Bombing," is the second in a series of
The appropriation bill sparking the debate would include funds for the Kansas Commission on Interstate Cooperation and the Crieppled Children's Commission.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate took up a $3.1 billion program of subsidies for mass transit development Monday and quickly voted to make sure the money would not all go to a few big cities.
Mass transit subsidies to small states
Both present law and the bill actually limit any state's share to 12.5 per cent.
By a vote of 49 to 26, the Senate adopted an amendment by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., designed to limit any state's portion to 14 per cent. Most senators from smaller states lined up with Proxmire despite pleas that larger cities need the transit help most.
The bill, backed by the Nixon administration, would commit $1.86 billion during the next five years, and the $1.24 billion balance for use later. In its report, the Senate Banking and Currency Committee said the federal government should plan to pump $10 billion into mass transit during the next 12 years.
6 KANSAN
Feb.3
1970
conversations between Johnson and Cronkite.
Expressing his disappointment the ex-president said:
"Now we haven't made any progress there, and my hopes have faded away, and my dreams have not been realized. I DEEFLY REGRET IT, BUT I was constantly trying, just as I tried on many other causes that have failed."
Rep. Paul Dugan, D-Wichita, proposed an amendment to cut the crippled children commission appropriation out of the measure. The general fund appropriation for the agency was $498,398.
In the broadcast, Johnson discusses the bombing halt decision and other controversial issues involving Vietnam during his administration.
The Kansas Relays Student Committee, which is responsible for business aspects of the annual track event, is now accepting applications from interested freshmen. This is a particularly unique committee because many universities hire professional office staffs to handle similar duties.
Members of the 20-man committee are retained from year to year on a merit basis and four or five freshmen will be selected this year, said John Mauk, Conway Springs senior and co-chairman of the committee. Mauk said the three qualifications for applicants are high academic standards, sufficient time and an interest in track. Experience in assisting with athletic events is considered important.
Help sought for Relays
Written applications should be submitted to the committee by Feb. 7, and should include detailed information concerning the applicant's high school and college activities, his fall semester grades and his schedule for the spring semester. The committee will schedule an interview for each applicant and will notify him by telephone or postcard.
Dugan supports a bill in the House to shift the crippled children program to the State Department of Health, where he believes the children will benefit more. He said Attorney General Kent Frizzell has held the appropriation to the commission is not authorized under present laws.
Applications should be addressed to the Kansas Relays Student Committee, Track Office, Room 10, Allen Field House.
we have
HOT
DONUTS
all nite!
JOE'S
BAKERY
The House extended the deadline for introduction of committee bills until today.
Among new bills introduced was one to increase benefits under the state workmen's compensation law. The maximum for medical compensation would be increased from $8,500 to $10,500, the maximum to dependents upon death of an insured employee would be raised from $16,500 to $18,500, and the maximum for a permanent disability from $49 per week to $56 per week.
The 125-member chamber passed a bill to remove the qualification that members of the city councils in second class cities be property owners in the city. It was sent to the Senate.
Other legislation introduced would;
The House also defeated a proposed amendment by Rep. Jack Turner, R-Wichita, to trim $14.-000 out of the bill for the expenses of members of the Interstate Cooperation Commission.
"It creates an economic credibility gap to appropriate money for something we have no authority to do," he said.
The chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Clyde Hill, R-Yates Center, said the appropriation could be cut from the bill later in the Senate if the health department were given the program.
Dugan's amendment failed on a voice vote.
—Create a licensing program for dog dealers and laboratories using dogs in experiments.
-Repeal the $2 per head bounty on coyotes.
—Strengthen the state law prohibiting job discrimination because of sex.
—Permit renters to withhold payment of their rent if their dwelling is unfit for human habitation in the estimation of county health authorities.
—Allow non-residents to vote in watershed district elections if they own property in the district.
In other action, legislation is expected to be introduced in the
Kansas House of Representatives to establish a pilot project in one county to experiment with controlling wild growling marijuana
Gov. Robert B. Docking has asked the 1970 session to enact legislation to control the state's wild marijuana which last summer attracted harvesters from around the nation. There were an estimated 68,000 acres growing in Kansas last year.
Docking is expected to support the legislation which was endorsed by a conference he called Jan. 6 to study the problem.
The chairman of the House Agriculture and Livestock Committee. Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, said his committee intends to introduce the measure today.
The bill is expected to carry out the recommendations of the governor's conference which proposed creation of a five-member board to administer the experimental project in one Kansas county to be selected by the board.
Representatives of Docking's office said earlier federal funds might be available for the project if it is approved by the legislature.
Nigerian explanation sought
Col. Eugene Dewey, who once visited Biafra before its collapse, was put on a Frankfurt-bound plane Sunday only a few hours after being escorted from his Lagos hotel room by Nigerian guards.
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) — The U.S. Embassy Monday pressed for an official explanation of the abrupt expulsion of a member of President Nixon's special relief team in Nigeria.
Nigeria said at the time only that Dewey's "presence in Nigeria at this time is inappropriate." However, the American Embassy said Monday it had asked and was expecting further clarification from the Nigerian government.
Dewey had visited Biafra before its fall and again about two weeks ago traveled to the Ibo heartland at the same time as the
first group of journalists to visit the area since its collapse.
It was Dewey who smuggled a note out from some of the journalists to the American Embassy complaining they were being held at Port Harcourt, Dewey, an expert in logistics with the U.S. Army, was a member of Nixon's special team for Nigerian relief.
In a similar development, the Irish Embassy announced that it had made "in the strongest possible terms" representations on behalf of a group of Irish priests who are being held in Port Harcourt.
Witnesses who recently returned from the area said most of the 75-80 priests and nuns who worked in Biafra until its collapse three weeks ago have been detained in the port city.
SANDALS NOW!
It's not easy to sell sandals in the Dead of winter -but we must!
You see, once it gets warm We'll be down here about 14 hrs. A day, and we'll still be behind! So come down now, and we'll Give you 20 percent off on any Custom made sandal.
Then,when it gets warmer,you Won't have to wait several Weeks to have them made.
(Sale ends Feb. 15th)
Primarily Leather
812 Massachusetts
This Week:
The Freeman Twins
Three Texans and Two Pretty Girls Ladies Free - Monday through Thursday
Matinee - 3 to 6 Fridays Admission FREE with KUID
Live Music Every Night 8-12
Yuk down
Sorority rush starts early for KU coeds
Women's sorority rush has been changed this year because of the early scheduling of classes next fall. Open house rush was held Jan. 30, 31, and Feb. 1, to familiarize the girls in rush with the sororities. Invitational parties will be held on March 13, 14, and 15. Those girls invited will know
Student wins case against closed zones
A University of Kansas student has won a suit against the University in a case concerning closed parking zones.
The student, Steve Joseph,
Wichita, sued the University on
the grounds that closed parking
zones were unconstitutional.
The Student Court ruled in his favor in a hearing held before Christmas. Joseph's fine was cancelled by this decision.
The University has appealed the decision. A spokesman said yesterday that the student court can not rule closed parking zones unconstitutional because parking regulations are set up by the state legislature.
The hearing of this appeal is to take place next week.
COMPUTERS OUTDATED
NEW YORK (UPI)—Today's electronic data processing capabilities will soon be surpassed by computers that can work in pico-seconds—the time it takes light to travel one hundredth of an inch, according to the Business Equipment Manufacturers Association.
by March 17 or 18 if they are subject for pledging.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 7
Second semester freshman girls may go through rush.
Kathy Hoefer, Shawnee Mission junior and president of the Panhellenic Council, said, "With the early schedule next year, there will be no time for rush in the fall as in past years. Early rush was created to solve this problem."
No final figure has been revealed concerning the number of girls in rush. Grade requirements are set at 1.0.
Men's formal rush is held in September, although rushing and pledging are done all during the year. Approximately 680 of the 700 men in rush this fall were pledged. Jay Strayer, assistant to the dean of men, estimates 100 men have been pledged since September.
Ball And Chain
Big Brother &
The Holding Co.
God Sounds
SANTAMARIA
Lilian
CHICAGO
Jay Lacy
THE STUFFS
Heavy
Sounds
God Bless The Child
BLOOD SWEAT
& TEARS
Floor Furnit-
the ELECTRONIC FLAG
Swampy
Gorgeous
CUARD MY
Itha A
Beautiful Day
White Bird
TAS MANAL
Dung Duck Blues
MIKE BLOOMFIELD
Advertiser's Shuffle
Honey I Love My Years
THINKING OF YOU
Ball And Chain
His Brother
The Holding Co.
HEROES
BANTHALIAN
Latin
GREGGO
Last Lay
THE STROPS
HEAVY SOWDS
MUNK WINTER
AT BLOOMFIELD
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Second Semester SPECIAL from HENRYS
Welcome back, students-may your second semester be a successful one! Whatever your plans this semester, remember that a wholesome snack from Henrys is the ideal way to satisfy your hunger! To show our appreciation for your patronage, Henrys will give you a free Big Henry with the purchase of another and the coupon below.
henrys
6th & Mo.
Free Big Henry
Upon purchase of a Big Henry, this coupon is good for an additional FREE Big Henry. Limit one coupon per customer.
RECORD SALE $19.7
RECORD SALE
RECORD SALE $19.7
The entire Everest Catalog—Folk—Classic—Jazz—Stereo & Mono.
GRAB-BAG SPECIALS
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MANITAS DE PLATA FRAMENCO
Homage to Stravinsky
The Romantic Flute
CHORD SCHOOL
The MASON WILLIAMS Listening Matter
The Guitar Artistry of John
MANCAS DE PLATA FLAMENCO
Homage to Stravinsky
The Romantic Flute
The MASON WILLIAMS Listening Matter
The Guitar Artistry of John Williams BACH
NATIONAL ANTHEMS OF THE WORLD
Rod McKuen LIFE IS
Highlights From AMILCARE PONCHIELLI La Gioconda
NATIONAL ANTHEMS OF THE WORLD
The Official Music Opera Offering
Highlights From
AMILCARE PONCHIELI
La Gioconda
Missa GLASSICA PONCHIELI NATURA GRAFICA SINGLE METRIC
Messa GLASSICA PONCHIELI NATURA GRAFICA SINGLE METRIC
L'Uffizi Lord to Carne MUSICI
Anthology
of the Twelve
String Guitar
Presented
Glen Campbell
Mason Williams
Joe Maphis
Howard Roberts
Killie Strahan
James W. McCormack
SHOSTAKOVITCH
SYMPHONY NO. 13 PREMIER RECORDING
Music by Larry McKinnon
Composer for the New York Philharmonic and Miles Davis
Conductor: Michael Tolson
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PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
Building constructed near Iowa St.
KU to house State Geological Survey
Bids for a new building to house the State Geological Survey of Kansas at the University of Kansas will be asked by the State Architects Office Feb. 12, Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, announced recently.
The building will be constructed next to the new U.S. Geological Survey building on KU's west campus, southwest of the intersection of 19th and Iowa. Estimated cost is $900,000. The 1968 Kansas Legislature appropriated $750,000 for the building, and additional funds are committed by the Kansas University Endowment Association.
The structure will include approximately 30,500 square feet and will provide laboratories and offices for approximately 70 full and part-time staff. The Geological Survey is now in inadequate
quarters in Lindley Hall, and its move will release space which is urgently needed for teaching and research.
The new building will be six floors high. Administrative offices will be on the third level. The other five levels will be devoted to staff offices and laboratories. A flat portion of the roof will be a laboratory to study weathering processes.
The plans were prepared by the Topeka firm of Thomas, Johnson & Isley, as associate architects, with Marvin Thomas as principal architect, under the supervision of State Architect William R. Hale. The design will be contemporary and will complement the existing U.S. Geological Survey building in color and texture.
Major design features include three flues on the east side of the
building, an enclosed corridor connecting the building with the U.S. Geological Survey building,
the entrance pedestrian bridge, and stair towers that project above the roof line.
Student earns Navy award
Marvin J. Pratt, Topeka sophomore in engineering, received the Navy's sixth highest award in ceremonies at the Naval Air Station in Olathe, Kansas, on January 3, 1970. Pratt earned the Distinguished Flying Cross Award while serving on active duty in the Republic of Vietnam.
Captain John R. Chappell, commanding officer of the air station
in Olathe, presented the award. The commander read a citation sent to the president by Admiral John J. Hyland, commander in chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet.
Lt. Cmdr. Pratt entered the Navy in September 1958 and served 11 years on active duty, one of which was in Vietnam. He was released from active duty and is now affiliated with the Naval Air Reserve.
The building is constructed in keeping with the long-range plans of the University to redevelop the central campus for the academic mission, to relocate professional academic programs and extracurricular activities to the periphery of the central campus where necessary, and to develop the west campus for research and support functions.
EASY RIDING
Travel Europe with
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CAMPUS PRES WANTED
KU ranks eighth in testing program
The American College Testing program rates KU as the eighth-ranking public institution in the nation in terms of academic excellence.
The report, "Forecasting Academic Success in Specific Colleges," was published in August, 1968 by Donald P. Hoyt. It was prepared to assist guidance counselors in helping high school students select the proper institution for their academic skills.
Comparisons of 985 colleges and universities both public and private were made. Among the public schools, the ratings were: 1-Massachusetts Institute of Technology; 2-University of California at Berkeley; 3-University of Michigan; 4-University of Pittsburgh; 5-University of Texas and Georgia Tech (tie); 6-University of Iowa; 7-State University of New York at Buffalo, and 8-KU.
8 KANSAN
Feb. 3
1970
In comparison with both public and private schools of other states, KU also ranks high. Eighteen states have no schools which rate as high. Another 23 states have no public schools in KU's league, but do have private schools which rate as high or higher.
Walt And Chan
Big River & The Holding Co.
Cold Sugar
BANANAHAM
Lionel
CHICAGO
Lily Lily
THE STREETS
MIKE BLOODVELD
Albert's Skiffle
GloVe Good Times The Child
BLOOD SWAT & TEARS
Kaling Floor
THE ELECTRIC FLAG
HEAVY SOUNDS
SWEET HEROES
ULARO
My Beautiful Day
White Bird
NINNY JUNKY
David Duck Blues
MIKE BLOODVELD
In Down My Winter
Albert's Skiffle
This dynamic collection includes "Ball and Chain," "God Bless the Child," "Sweet Bindness," "Lay Lady Lay," and much more!
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WE'RE
open from 7:00a.m.-2:30 a.m. stocking many drug items specializing in breakfast keeping our cafeteria open from 1:00-8:00.
serving a varied grille menu, close to campus,
friendly.
and
X
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
NOW - AREN'T YOU GLAD YOU WAITED?
the university shop announces its
ANNUAL WINTER SALE
SPORTCOATS
Complete Selection 1/2 and 1/3 OFF
One Group Corduroys 20% OFF
One Large Group
Reg. 16.00 - 19.00
Now $9
DRESS SLACKS
Famous Brand Lined or Un-Lined 20% OFF
Many Others at 20% OFF
All-Weather Coats
SUITS
Including Vested or Shaped or Double-Breasted Models 1/3 and 1/4 OFF
Permanent Press Plain Colors or Plaids Now 4.99
V-necks, Sweater Shirts
Sleeveless & Bulkies
20% Off & 1/3 Off
CASUAL SLACKS
SWEATERS
$3.99 OR THREE FOR $10
DRESS SHIRTS
Entire Stock 1/2 and 1/3 OFF
WINTER COATS
WOOL SHIRTS
TIES $1.99 OR THREE FOR $5
Famous Brand Entire Stock Now 1/3 OFF
Used (Rentals) ___ $25
New ___ 20% OFF
TUXEDOS
Entire Stock Not Included
SHOES
Entire Stock Casual or Dress 20% OFF
JACKETS
Lined ___ 1/2 Price
Un-Lined ___ 25% OFF
the university shop
On the Hill
fiction of
Slight Charge For Alterations
1420 Crescent Road
Al Hack
There are over 1,000 Kansas University graduates of the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute. How many do you know?
Alan Klein
Sec. Ed. Literature
"It is an extremely time saving way of completing assignments, studying for tests, or for whatever personal aims with regard to the reading one desires."
Mark Pierce Jour., Comm. Art
"I found the recall guides for study and finger patterns for speed the most beneficial aspect of the course."
John Schmid
"It's a very interesting and worthwhile course—worth the money spent."
Ted Faucher Clinical Psychology
"With the reading dynamic techniques I learned, I now know how to study...to do all this seven times faster."
Larry Huffman
"This course will enable me to keep up on the reading that I want to and also required reading from my work."
David Kapp Psychology & Sociology
"Good encouragement to read books. Leads to better comprehension."
Nina Lundgaard Education
"I'm an English major. The benefits are obvious."
William Berenson
"I will benefit from this course by having increased time for leisure reading."
Pennie Von Achen
"I can read three times as much in the same amount of time, thus absorbing a store of knowledge, background, enjoyment and relaxation."
Ken Washington
"I didn't realize that in my first two or three classes that I could read nearly so fast or retain as I am now."
Susan Fehrman Journalism
"My comprehension has really increased and text books go much faster."
Daniel Lord
"Not only is speed obtained in reading, but a better understanding of all material you come in contact with is gained. Most important, a feeling of confidence is achieved concerning the demands of college study."
Korb Maxwell Veterinary Med.
"My main benefits from this course are my ability to read at greater rates plus my ability to take better and more comprehensive notes in class."
Janet Selders
"I really enjoyed the course."
Stephen Stras
"This course will cut down the number of hours necessary for studying for an average reader. It will let me read more books now, and also enable me to engage in more activities."
William Black
"It is especially good for study materials and class work in addition to giving me more time for just pleasurable leisure reading."
Jack Gibbons
"Just as valuable as the speed are the study techniques. Somehow no one ever taught me how to study before."
J. Kurt Von Achen Architecture
"The course increased my speed greatly, but without compromising my enjoyment of the material covered. The course was a great help to me in my studies."
To enroll or to obtain information on FREE MINI-LESSON
一
Carol Lock
A. A. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. B.
LAURENCE M. BLANKER
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
Susan Fohrman
Journalism
Catherine
Daniel Lord
100
Stephen Stras
A. J. H.
Korb Maxwell Veterinary Med.
Molody Kennedy
Liberal Arts
100
Janet Seiders
J. Kurt Von Achen Architecture
PENGUIN
Jock Gibbons
To enroll or to obtain further information on our February series, phone VI 3-6424
FREE MINI-LESSON TONIGHT 7:00 HOLIDAY INN
Short Shots
BY BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor
Two early conference losses to Missouri and Iowa State dimmed KU's hopes in the race for the conference championship, but consecutive victories over Colorado and Oklahoma have suddenly thrust the Jayhawks back into the title picture.
The victory over Colorado, defending Big Eight champion, coupled with last night's 78-41 thrashing of Oklahoma, the preseason tourney champs, assures rival coaches that KU has finally picked up the confidence, experience and momentum necessary for a conference contender.
The Sooners, minus star Garfield Hurd who was suspended from the game because of disciplinary problems, attempted to slow up the contest so that they could stymie Dave Robisch's powerful inside play. But OU's game strategy was in vain as the Jayhawks patiently waited out the Sooners and gradually pulled to a commanding edge late in the opening half. KU let many such leads slip away earlier in the season, however this time the 'Hawks showed a killer instinct, put together 40 minutes of complete basketball, and buried the invading Sooners.
OU's attempt to control the game with a deliberate offense tempted Ted Owens, KU coach to say, "I think it was good strategy of McCloed to play possession and try to spread us out, but I'm going to the national committee and fight for a time clock." Owens stressed the importance of the proposed time device by saying, "If every game was played this way (the OU game) we would have just a handful of people."
Particularly impressive in the victory were KU's balanced scoring attack and an effective press. Owens said Robisch was the key to the offense because he was able to pass off when the Sooners sagged on him on the baseline. Owens said he thought the press would work against OU because it bothered them in the tournament and because Colorado had success with the press against the Sooners.
The contest also proved that KU's backline corps have finally come to age. Both Aubrey Nash and captain Chet Lawrence played one of their better games as they netted 11 and 8 points respectively.
Owens was particularly pleased with the play of Roger Brown, second line center, and stressed Brown's importance by stating, "I was really pleased because Roger has to help us down the stretch. He just needs to loosen up."
The stretch run is nearing and the Jayhawks have proven that they will be in the thick of the race, one of the most hectic in the conference's history.
10 KANSAN Feb. 3
1970
Ball And Chain
The Holding Co.
Cold Sweat
MNAMARIAH
Lionel
CHAIRMAN
Lyric Lily
THE BYRO
THE BYRO
HEAVY SOUNDS
Ball And Chain
The Holding Co.
Cold Sweat
MNAMARIAH
Lionel
CHAIRMAN
Lyric Lily
THE BYRO
THE BYRO
MIKE HUMANEL
BLOOMFIELD
Al JONES
Adam's Shuffle
GO Bass The Great
RCOOK SWED
& TEARS!
Killing Floor
THE ELECTRIC PLUS
Sweet Scented
LAWN MOR
In A Beautiful Day
White Bird
Diving Duck Blues
MIKE HUMANEL
BLOOMFIELD
Al JONES
Adam's Shuffle
Ball And Chain
His Brother &
The Holding Chair
Cait Sweeney
ENTHALIAEA
Linton
CHICOO
Lyle and Lay
THE TROPS
Mike Roehmeld
Marty Shurtle
HEAVY SOUNDS
Manny Hunter
MARC BOOCHFIELD
Jimmie Winter
MARTINE ROEHMELD
God Bless The Child
BLOOD SWEAT
& TEARS
Kilving Floor
THE ELECTRIC FLAG
Sweeney KROG
LOUFTE MEYER
Ith Beautiful Day
White Bird
TNA HAWAL
Driving Duck Blues
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41
50
24
10
Baby Bull goes to air
Pierre Russell, the 'Hawks 6-3 junior forward, lets fly one of his typically high arching jump shots that netted him 16 points against the Sooners. Defending for OU is No. 50, Ronnie Lynch.
Jayhawks blister OU
By STEVE SHRIVER Assistant Sports Editor
Kansas ran off 14 straight points at the end of the half and avenged an early season loss to Oklahoma, 78-41, last night in Allen Field House. The Sooners never threatened after trailing only 20-19 with 4:14 left before intermission when the Jayhawks unleashed a 16-2 outburst in front of 9,500 screaming fans.
Once again, Dave Robisch, the Big Eight's leading scorer and rebounder, coped game honors in both departments finishing with 26 points and 12 rebounds. He canned 14 of 15 free throws before yielding to reserves with about four minutes left when the outcome was no longer in doubt.
But, one of the 'Hawks most devastating weapons against the Sooners' slow-down offense, was the full court press which forced 22 OU turnovers and gave KU several easy layups. The Sooners could not handle the press and Pierre Russell came through with several steals, three of them in the burst at the end of the half. Russell finished right behind Robisch with 16 points and 9 rebounds, but it was his sparkling defensive heroes that gave the crowd its biggest thrill.
Clifford Ray led Oklahoma with 12 points and 5 rebounds before fouling out with nearly six minutes left in the game. Ray was one of three Sooners to foul
while the Sooners could manage only 32.5 of theirs. The Jayhawks committed only 17 fouls and OU hit 15 of 19 for 79 per cent; KU converted 65 per cent of their charities on 24 of 37.
out as OU committed 26 persons.
OU missed the services of Garfield Heard, their leading scorer with a 19.8 average, and two reserves who had been suspended for the game by coach John MacLeed for missing a weekend bed-check.
Dominating both defensive and offensive backboards, the 'Hawks carved out a 38-19 rebound advantage over the shorter and outmanned Sooners. Kansas committed only 11 technical errors, well under their 20 per game average.
Passing the ball as many as 18 or 20 times before taking a shot, the Sooners were in the game until KU went into their press. It was a curious twist considering the usual running, high-scoring affairs KU and OU have put on in the past, and may have caused some fans to recheck the uniforms to see if it wasn't really Oklahoma State on the floor.
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics announces a new series of classes designed for you:
The Regular Course:
Three Choices; Mon., Feb. 9, 9:30 - 10:20 a.m.
(MWF for 7 weeks)
Mon., Feb. 9, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(Once a week for 7 weeks)
Wed., Feb. 11, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(Twice a week—Wed. night and Sat. morning 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.—for 4 weeks)
The Freshman Course:
This course is especially designed for freshmen, accenting study skills and incorporating first-year course material.
Tues., Feb. 10, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(Once a week for 7 weeks)
The Vietnam Reading Course:
In this unique course you read and discuss Vietnam in depth while at least tripling your reading efficiency.
Thurs., Feb. 12, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(One a week for 7 weeks)
ONE KU students are
THOU• satisfied Evelyn Wood
SAND Reading Dynamics Students.
Phone VI 3-6424 now,
class space is limited
Kansas hit a blistering 59 per cent of their shots in the first half and ended the game shooting 52 per cent of their field goals,
The victory left KU with a 3-2 conference record and OU sank to 1-4. Both teams now have 12-5 overall records. The Sooners, Big Eight Tourney champions, have been regarded as title contenders, which made the win all the sweeter for Kansas.
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K-State crushes Cyclones; set pace in conference race
By United Press International K-State 82 Town State 64
Kansas State reeled off 10 straight points in the opening minutes of the second half and Jeff Webb and Jack Thomas scored seven free throws in the closing minutes as the Wildcats buried Iowa State 82-64 in a Big Eight Conference basketball game Monday night.
The Wildcats built a 38-31 halftime advantage to 48-35 as the cold Cyclones failed to score a field goal in the first 6:38 of the second half. A Wildcat delay offense closed off a late Iowa State rally which pulled the Cyclones within 10 points in the last four minutes.
Webb led the Wildcats, now 6-0 in conference and 15-3 for the season, with 16 points. Bill Cain scored 18 points for the Cyclones, who fell to a 3-4 conference mark and 10-9 season record.
\*\*\*
Missouri 90, Colorado 73
Henry Smith, Missouri's 6-7 center, hit a career high 28 points and pulled down 17 rebounds to lead the Tigers to a 90-73 Big Eight Conference basketball victory over Colorado Monday night.
Missouri won the game on free throws as both teams hit 30 shots from the field. The Tigers connected on 30 of 34 charity shots compared with Colorado's 13 of 23.
THREE FIRSTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Ohio has recorded at least three firsts in the game of baseball.
The first major league player to pitch two successive no-hit, no-run games was Cincinnati player Johnny Vander Meer on June 10 and 15, 1938.
The first pinch-hitter was Cleveland player J. J. Doyle, who made history when he came to bat on June, 1892.
The first World Series unassisted triple play was recorded in Cleveland in 1920.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 11
Smith, a junior college transfer, got 11 of his points during a 12-point Missouri string early in the game which brought the Tigers from a 12-4 deficit to a 16-12 lead. Missouri went on to grab a 41-37 halftime advantage and Colorado regained the lead only once, 51-50.
Forward Don Tomlinson hit a banker to put the Tigers back on top for good. Tomlinson finished with 25 points and moved into the No. 6 spot on the Tigers' all-time scoring list. He needs only two to replace Joe Scott as No. 5, and only four points to replace coach Norm Stewart as No. 4.
Missouri is now 4-2 in the conference and 12-6 overall. Colorado, 2-4 and 9-9, was led by Mike Coleman's 20 points.
* *
O-State 81, Nebraska 58 Oklahoma State thrashed the Cornhuskers from Nebraska by
Bob Buck, Cowboy forward, captured scoring honors for the evening with 25 points. He hit 11 of 11 at the charity line.
a whopping 81-58 score Monday before 4,000 partisan fans.
1970
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In the first eight minutes of play the Pokes hit their first five field goals attempts and a pair of free throws to grab a 12-4 lead.
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The Cowboys took only 36 shots from the field and downed 23 of them for 64 per cent. At the free-throw line the Pokes cashed in for 35 of 40 attempts for 86 per cent.
Tom Scantlebury led Nebraska with 18 points.
Nebraska fell to 2-3 in the Big Eight and 11-5 on the season while the Cowboys boosted their record to 2-4 in the league and 12-7 for the year.
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keeping our cafeteria open from 11:00-8:00.
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Washington State added as 11th foe
Washington State, a Pacific 8 conference member, has been added as KU's 11th football foe for next year. Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, announced Monday that the KU-WSU clash has been scheduled for September 12 in Memorial Stadium and will kick-off the Jayhawks' new 11 game season.
KU became the first Big Eight conference school to take advantage of the NCAA's new ruling which allows schools to increase next fall's football schedule to 11 games.
"We hope to extend the series for several years," Stinson said, "but for the present we have firmed up the date only for next fall."
Stinson said he will be meeting with Stan Bates, Washington State athletic director, during the next few weeks and expects to work out details for additional games at that time. KU has all ready scheduled the Cougars for a game in Lawrence in 1977.
By adding Washington State to the 1970 schedule KU will play six home football games for the first time since 1955 when the Jayhawks and Cougars met in their only previous encounter on the gridiron. That year KU defeated WSU, 13-0, at Lawrence and ended a 17-game losing streak, longest in the school's history.
Washington State coach Jim Sweeney is optimistic for next fall, pointing to last year's unbeaten freshman squad as "the best in years" for the school.
Both Washington State and KU finished with 1-9 records last fall. The Cougars' lone victory was an opening 19-18 decision over Illinois, while KU's only triumph was over Syracuse. 13-0.
Maravich passes 3,000 point mark
BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI)—Pistol Pete Maravich added 49 points to his all-time scoring record Monday night, leading Louisiana State to a 109-91 Southeastern Conference win over Mississippi State.
Also on the Hawk's home slate next fall will be games with Texas Tech, New Mexico, Nebraska, Iowa State, and Oklahoma. The Jayhawks will play road games against Syracuse, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, Colorado and Missouri.
Maravich, who surpassed Oscar Robertson's NCAA all-time scoring record Saturday, hit a free throw for his 3,000th point with 7:17 left in the first half. The hot-shooting Tigers extended their SEC record to 5-2 and their overall record to 11-5.
Maravich connected on 21 of 40 field goal attempts and seven of nine free throws to maintain his nation-leading scoring pace. He also bolstered his SEC lead in assists with six.
12 KANSAN Feb. 3 1970
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Feb. 3-Tues.-All Star Scratch League 7:00
Feb. 4-Wed.-Fraternity League 6:00
Feb. 4-Wed.-All Campus League ... 8:30
Feb. 8--Sun.-Student Mixed League ... 8:30
Feb. 12-Thurs.—Women's League 4:00
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Freshmen trip Metro.J.C.
Clutch free throwing and smooth playmaking by Mark Williams carried the KU freshman basketball team to a 95-86 triumph over scrapy Metropolitan Junior College Monday night.
Williams, a fiery 5-10 guard from Denver, experienced an unusually cold night from the field but his fine floor play and free throwing more than made up for his lack of shooting consistency. Williams connected on 19-21 free throws and hit 15 straight during one stretch of the
Track team captures title
Outstanding efforts by Kari Salb and Jan Johnson enabled KU to capture a team championship Saturday in the Oklahoma City Invitational indoor track meet.
KU, K-State and Oklahoma State nabbed the top three team positions in the Big Eight dominated meet. The Hawks, NCAA indoor champions a year ago, ran up 68 points in overwhelming the other entries. K-State was a distant runner-up with 40 points and Oklahoma State followed closely behind with 33.
Salb grabbed a first in the shot put competition with a toss of 66 feet, 10 inches. The heave, which topped his previous indoor best, shattered the meet mark by more than three feet. The Jayhawks' other standout shot putter, Steve Wilhelm, finished third.
Johnson soared 16-6 to nose out Bob Segren for the pole vault title. The vault was also a career best for Johnson.
The 'Hawks picked up their final first place finish in the mile relay. Their winning time of 3:15.5 tied the meet record set by Texas last year.
Eric Harris, Oklahoma State senior, turned in the meet's top individual performance by taking firsts in both the 60-yard dash and the 300-yard run. The slender Cowboy shattered meet marks in each event and his :05.9 clocking in the 60-yard event equalled the world indoor record. By streaking to a :30.4 time in the 300-yard run, Harris was also able to tie the American record that he matched during the preliminaries.
game to finish with a game high 27 points.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 13
Randy Canfield and Mike Bossard provided ample inside scoring punch and led the Jayhawks to a commanding 58-45 rebounding edge over the shorter Metropolitan quintet. Canfield tallied 25 points and 17 rebounds and Bossard netted 19 points and pulled down 20 rebounds, high for both teams.
The young Hawks jumped to an early lead and coasted to a 46-32 half time advantage. Bossard spearheaded the opening period spurt by tossing in 15 points and grabbing 14 rebounds.
But Bossard and Canfield ran into foul trouble early in the final stanza and Metropolitan used a full court press to steadily cut the deficit during their absences. With only 27 seconds remaining in the contest, Williams connected on both ends of a one-and-one to give KU a 93-86 advantage and preserve the victory for the Jayhawks.
Bob Jones and Zachary Townsend paced the Metropolitan scoring attack with 23 and 22 points respectively.
The victory was achieved without the services of Leonard Gray, highly regarded frosh forward from Kansas City Sumner. Gray took place in the pre-game drills but didn't return from the locker room for the start of the contest. Coach Sam Miranda, handling the freshmen in the absence of coach Gale Catlett, gave no explanation for Gray's absence.
The frosh are now 6-1 on the year, with their lone blemish being an 82-65 setback to Missouri. KU will meet Kansas City Junior College February 9.
2 lose eligibility
Two members of the University of Kansas track squad are academically ineligible for second semester competition, it was announced today as classes began for the spring term.
The two athletes are Thorn Bigley, a junior middle distance runner from San Diego, and sophomore Bob Bornkessel, a hurdler-spinner from Shawnee Mission, Kan.
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Use Kansan Classified
DO IT TONIGHT:
The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute invites you to a
FREE MINI-LESSON
tonight at the Holiday Inn at 7:00
DO IT TONIGHT:
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PHONE VI3-6424
I
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
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8:00 - 12:00
THE COLLEGE CLUB FOR THE STUDENTS' BUDGET
J
Famed pacifist succumbed to illness
Bertrand Russell dead at age 97
LONDON (UPI) — Bertrand Russell, the British philosopher, pacifist and Nobel Prize winner whose views brought him into dispute with many world leaders, died Monday night at his home in North Wales. He was 97.
The white-haired Russell, a member of a titled family, died at 8 p.m. at Plas Penrhyn, Penryn-deraethra, Merionetshire. He had been ill with influenza.
The London Daily Sketch said Russell collapsed and died at his home.
His wife Edith was with him at the time of death and was put under the care of the family doctor.
Russell, considered one of the world's most brilliant mathematicians when he was in his thirties and one of its most brilliant philosophers when he was in his fifties, turned his career to an ardent advocacy of peace in the last third of his life.
When word of Russell's death spread, friends and relatives began the trek from London and other British cities to the North Wales village that was Russell's home.
His last public espousal of a cause was in December, when he protested to Soviet Premier
Alexei Kosygyn from the expulsion of novelist Alexander Solzhenitsy from the Russian Writers Union.
Because of his protests against American actions during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis and the Vietnam War, some critics tagged him as anti-American.
Russell was one of the few men who had written his own obituary. Believing he would die at the age of 90, Russell wrote in 1937 that "by the death of the
When he sent a protest telegram to the White House during the height of the Cuban crisis, President John F. Kennedy publicly rebuked him, suggesting he send one to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Married four times, he will be succeeded to the earldom by his son, Viscount Amberley. He has a daughter by his second wife and a son by his third wife.
In 1667, Russell organized a Vietnam "war crimes" tribunal, held in Stockholm after French President Charles de Gaulle banned it from Paris. Politicians and educators were called to the meeting to testify against the Vietnam War policies of former President Lyndon B. Johnson and other American leaders.
third Earl Russell, or Bertrand Russell as he preferred to call himself, at the age of 90, a link with a very distant past is severed . . .
He was the last survivor of a dead epoch.
Russell was the author of more than 400 books and won the Nobel Prize for literature. Russell's career as a philosopher, writer and mathematician, which spanned more than 60 years, earned him many laurels, beginning in 1908 when he was named a fellow of the Royal Society in London. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950, UNESCO's Kalinga Prize in 1958 and the Soning Prize for contribution to European culture in 1960.
He was a titled member of British aristocracy but he rarely used the title. He was born May 18, 1872, and orphaned when he was three.
But Russell spent his last years in controversy, firing criticism at the nuclear powers, especially the United States, and even went to jail at the age of 89 after demonstrating with much younger pacifists.
His father, Viscount Amberley had ordered he be raised an agnostic but the court gave young Bertrand to his grandparents, one
of whom was Lord John Russell, prime minister under Queen Victoria.
He lived in Richmond, Surrey,
outside of London, with his elder
son, John Russell Lord Amberley and John's wife, Susan, the daughter of American poet Vachel Lindsay, and their three daughters.
LATE HOURS:
The Captain's Table is now open until 2:30 in the dim, dark morning.
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February draft call includes 207 Kansans
Of the 19,000 men to be called up for active duty in the armed forces in February, 207 will be Kansans, according to Junior Elder, Kansas Selective Service System director. Approximately 1.1 per cent of the men called up this year will be Kansans, he said.
Draft lottery numbers of 60 and below are almost certain to be called up, Elder said. By statute, he said, men with II-S deferments may not be reviewed or reclassified by their draft boards, unless their deferments are no longer applicable.
Elder also said if a draft board went completely through its list of I-A classifications and did not
14 KANSAN Feb. 3
1970
fill its quota, the State Selective Service Board would ask it to review men in other classifications. He said they would go through the II classifications first. This classification includes farm, job, and similar deferments, but does not include the student deferments, he said. If the draft registrant is deferred until a certain date, however, his case could not be reviewed until that date, Elder said.
Elder said that he did not have the reports from local draft boards about the effects of enlistment in the National Guard. He said, however, that National Guard enlistment would probably affect local draft calls at some boards by causing some men holding numbers over 60 to be called.
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Chancellor says KU campus is calmer now
Chalmers speaks to Senate Committee
J. H. W.
Photo by Joe Bullard
Chalmers praises the Senate Code
Chancellor Chalmers speaks to the Kansas House Education Committee about the attitude of students on the KU campus today.
Timetable corrected
Following is a list of corrections to the Timetable of Classes for the Spring Semester 1970. The list corresponds to the pink, two-page correction sheet distributed during enrollment at the Kansas Union.
BABY FOOD BOOM
NEW YORK (UPI) — Three ages of man—infants, young adults and senior citizens—are keeping sales of glass-packed baby foods booming.
The Glass Container Manufacturers Institute says studies show that in the late 1950's the "average" U.S. infant ate 480 jars of baby food annually, compared with about 570 jars today.
Meanwhile, weddings are on the increase, indicating a continued rise in the baby-food-consuming generation. And many senior citizens find baby foods well suited to their dietary needs.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 15
Changes in either time or room number are: Chemistry 263, Organic Synthesis, from 7:30-8:20 to 8:30-9:20; History 85, History of the Second World War, from Dyche Auditorium to Hoch Auditorium; Sociology 217, Theory and Method in Human Ecology, from 226 Fraser to 124 Fraser; Speech 73, History of the Motion Picture in the United States, from 205 Flint to 426 Lindley.
Class cancellations are: Latin 3, Latin Reading and Composition, Math 2a, Algebra, Math 9, Modern Elementary Mathematics I, Psychology 338, Seminar in Social Judgment.
Social Work 362, Differential Use of Social Work Intervention, has been changed from 3 hours credit to 2.
KU Democrats to meet
KU Collegiate Young Democrats will meet tonight at 8 p.m. in the Oread Room at the Kansas Union.
Officers will be reviewed and elections will be held.
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THE CAPTAINS TABLE
By TOM SLAUGHTER Kansan staff writer
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. spoke to the Kansas House Education Committee last Tuesday, which marks the first time the head of a state university has appeared before this committee in the last several years.
At the start of the meeting, committee Chairman John Bower introduced Chalmers to the committee, and turned the informal question and answer session over to him.
The first question asked Chalmers concerned the "attitude on the campus today." Chalmers told the committee things were calmer on the KU campus now, primarily because the Senate Code had eliminated one of the most critical bases for operation of the activist student. Chalmers added the Code involved the student in "a wholly appropriate way" and there was no longer any reason to be involved in any irregular fashion.
Chalmers then said that the students were becoming aware of the problem of pollution, and he saw this as the new thrusts for the spring.
Chalmers was asked if the student body might be asked to make some contribution, or make an assessment towards the cost in building the long-delayed humanities building. He said this question would be considered by the executive council of the Student Senate or the student body itself.
A black member of the committee asked Chalmers whether there was a black studies program at the university and what the student reaction was to the program. Chalmers said that there was no formal black studies program at present, but he could see the possibility of a major in this field in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Chalmers said the high enrollment in the black studies classes showed an endorsement by the student body in the program.
Chalmers several questions concerning the growth of the university, and what the university was doing to compensate for the spiraling enrollment. Chalmers said he asked the Board of Regents for permission to construct four temporary buildings on the campus, that would each have two classrooms.
The committee then asked
Chalmers then commented on the pay scales for faculty at the
University. He said that at KU the salaries were low compared with those offered at other major state universities. Consequently, KU has become a good school for other universities to recruit accomplished faculty.
The session was an informational meeting only,but the committee will be considering bills in the future that may have a direct impact on the University.
JACKIE LUTHER KING JR.
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SPEED READING
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Ending Speed 918
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SPONSORED BY ADVANCED READING TECH., INC.
Dean Moore to teach 14 colleges
KU Religion School offers course by TV
The KU School of Religion is offering a course state wide this semester by the use of educational TV. "History of the World's Living Religions" is being telecast by three stations, covering nearly 80 per cent of the state.
William J. Moore, dean of the Kansas School of Religion and course instructor, said 14 colleges and junior colleges are scheduling the class but others may add it later.
The course will run for 15 weeks with two one-half hour presentations each week. The first lecture was given at 10:15 p.m. Feb. 1. Reading assignments, syllabi and tests are being furnished by the School. Enrollment is being handled by the participating schools.
The lectures are being televised by KTWU, the educational television station of Washburn University in Topeka, the new ETV station on channel 8 in Wichita and station KOAM-TV in Pittsburg.
In addition to state-wide telecasting, the course is also being offered without credit in the adult education program at Lawrence High School. This course will begin Feb. 9, and run every Monday night from 7 to 9 p.m. for 12 weeks. The format will consist of two half hour lectures and two half hour discussions.
The participating colleges are: Barton County Community Junior College, Great Bend; But-
Violators sentenced
KANSAS CITY (UPI) — Nine students or former students of Kansas colleges were sentenced today by U.D. District Court Judge Arthur J. Stanley Jr., under the Federal Youth Corrections Act for narcotics law violations.
The sentences could run as long as six years imprisonment but the court has the authority to modify the punishment.
Judge Stanley ordered the two women and seven young men to appear before him next Friday and he would give "serious consideration to possible modification" of the sentence.
The nine were indicted along with three other students or former students by a federal grand jury last year on charges of selling LSD. Sentenced were Connie Jo Hale, 19, of Atwood; Constance Lou Campbell, 19, of Paola; Donald A. Lawrence, 19, of Wichita; Daniel Kirk Walker, 19, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; and Mark Hamilton Auld III, 18, of Overland Park; all students or former students of the University of Kansas, and John Martin Fleses, 21, of Overland Park; Darrell Norman unruh, 20, of Clay Center; Michael Parke Halloran, 23, of Cleveland, Ohio; and Robert Reese Getzendaner, 20, of Columbus, all students or former students of Pittsburg State College.
16 KANSAN Feb. 3
1970
All except Lawrence pleaded guilty to the charges. Lawrence was convicted by the court without a jury.
ler County Community Junior College, El Dorado; Coffeyville Community Junior College, Coffeyville; Cowley County Community Junior College, Arkansas City; Donnelly College, Kansas City; Hutchinson Community Junior College, Hutchinson; Independence Community Junior College, Independence; Johnson County Community Junior College, Kansas City; Kansas City,
A 10th student was to appear before Judge Stanley later today and charges against two others were pending.
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Auxiliary to have tea Wednesday
The E-Co Berets will have an information tea at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 4 at the Military Science Building for all girls interested in joining the coed affiliate of Pershing Rifles. Those who are interested will then sign up for interviews at the tea.
E - Co (pronounced echo) Berets, the coed affiliate of Pershing Rifles is an organization with several service projects. The members are writing letters to men in Vietnam, helping girl troops in Lawrence, and aiding the morale of the men in ROTC. At Christmas the Pershing Rifle and E-Co Berets gave a Christmas party for 35 children from the Ballard Center. They assisted the Red Cross during the last two blood drives on campus.
Nazi's son pledges to free him
E-Co Berets was organized and established in November 1968. The drill team traveled to Champaign, Illinois to participate in one of several occasions where they performed last year. All girls interested are urged to attend the tea.
BERLIN (UPI) — The son of Rudolf Hess, former Nazi deputy fuhrer, saw his father Monday for the second time in 28 years and pledged he would preserve in efforts to free him.
Wolf Ruediger Hess, 32-year-old Hamburg engineer, saw his father for 30 minutes in the presence of an American official, a French official and two Russians in the British Military Hospital in West Berlin where the 75-year-old man is being treated for a stomach ulcer.
The wife of Hess, the only Nazi still in four-power custody, had been scheduled to visit him too, but a snowstorm grounded her airplane in Munich.
The younger Hess said he was encouraged by the promise of the British government to seek an amnesty on humanitarian grounds for Hess, who was sentenced to life by the International Military Tribunal in Nuernberg on Oct. 1, 1946.
Profs visit to lecture to afro class
The president of Lincoln University, a predominantly black institution in Jefferson City, Mo., will speak at KU this spring for History 80, an Afro-American history and culture course.
Walter Daniel, president of Lincoln University, will be one of six or seven visiting lecturers for the course which will be a cooperative course with guest lecturers from Kansas City, Mo., and Lincoln University.
Other lecturers from Lincoln will include Thomas D. Pawley, head of the department of English, speaking on drama, and James D. Parks, head of the department of art, speaking on Afro-American art.
W. Stitt Robinson, chairman of the history department, said this course originated at the request of Oliver College and that a subsequent request for a similar course taught by a black professor resulted in History 80.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 17
Accused of Yablonski murders
Trio enters innocence plea
CLEVELAND (UPI)—Three Cleveland men accused of conspiring to murder United Mine Workers (UMW) official Joseph A. Yablonski pleaded innocent at
Tuition fees for KU students will be due Wednesday, February 11th, said Richard Steffen, manager of student accounts.
Tuition fees must be paid February 11
their arraignment in federal court here Monday.
Although no official statement has been issued, Steffen predicted the deadline for paying fees would be Feb. 11th and added that the penalty for tardiness would be a $10 reenrollment fee.
Steffens said fee statements will be mailed to the address given by the student at enrollment. He said if students do not receive a fee statement they should go to the registrar's office. Steffens said the students must have a fee statement to pay their fees.
Attorneys for Paul E Gilly, 36; Claude E. Vealey, 27, and Aubran W. Martin, 21, entered separate pleas before chief District Judge Frank J. Battisti.
The three men were indicted last Thursday by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiracy, obstructing justice, and interfering with the rights of a labor union member in the New Year's Eve killing of Yablonski. His wife and daughter were also slain the same night in their Clarksville, Pa., home.
The suspects have been charged with murder in Pennsylvania.
Gilly, Martin and Vealey have been kept separated in the Cuyahoga County Jail since their arrests Jan. 21.
They entered the courtroom separately, and the entire arraignment proceeding lasted only 17 minutes.
The three men were not expected to be brought to trial on the federal charges, which carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison and a $6,000 fine, because the Pennsylvania murder charges take precedence. A lengthy court battle over extradition was expected here.
While Gilly, alleged in the indictment to be the holder of a payroll for Martin and Vealey, was arraigned, his father-in-law, Solious Huddleston, 61, waited in
the Statler Hilton Hotel for the grand jury hearing to resume today. Huddleston is president of a UMW local in LaFollette, Tenn.
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RCA On Campus Interviews
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See your placement officer to arrange an interview. Or write to RCA College Relations, Dept.CSS Building 205-1, Camden, N.J. 08101. We are an equal opportunity employer.
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Middle East fighting distresses soviets
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Soviet Union has warned the United States, Britain and France of its concern over the increased
Von Ende to speak
Rick Von Ende, former chairman of the All Student Council, will speak on the subject of "Students as a Sub-Culture of American Society," on Feb. 17.
Von Ende, also a member of the Dean's Advisory Board and the White House Committee on Campus Tension, will speak at Kansas Wesleyan University as part of that university's convocation program.
In a short interview, Von Enue elaborated on the contents of his speech, by comparing the youth of today to the youth of 50 years ago. He said that 50 years ago, a youth of 18 was expected to be out in the world earning a living. Today, he said, youth is restrained from assuming the demands of society for about five years, or until graduating from college. In this way, he said, students are forced into prolonged adolescence.
Spring draws near
(UPI) — The famous Punxu-tawney groundhog has ruled spring is just around the corner. Since the groundhog did not come out to see his shadow, there was no shadow and, according to legend, that means spring is near.
WHEN FLYING WAS NEWS
WHEN FLYING WAS NEWS CALIFORNIA, Mo. (UPI)—When you see an airplane fly over your house these days, you don't even look up. But 50 years ago a plane flight was as newsworthy as today's space flight.
A story printed in The California Democrat 50 years ago reported: "Another aeroslane passed over California Wednesday evening going east. The pilot flew pretty low, and the town cop could nearly get his number and could tell whether he was exceeding the speed limit or not."
18 KANSAN Feb. 3 1970
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fighting in the Middle East, diplomatic sources said Monday.
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met for three hours and announced they will meet again on Feb. 12.
Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin delivered a communication on the subject to the White House over the weekend, informed sources said, and Monday the Soviet ambassadors in London and Paris followed up with similar notes. It was not clear, however, if the same message was delivered in all three capitals.
In Paris, however, Zorin told newsmen neither the Soviet-sponsored All-European security conference or the planned Big Four conference on Berlin was the reason for his call on Pompidou and then added, cryptically:
Dobrynin, meeting with a top aide to President Nixon, was understood to have expressed concern over recent Israeli raids against Arab states. The implication was that the United States
The State Department declined to comment on the three visits.
should bring pressure on Israel to halt such attacks.
While not informed of the exact contents of the messages delivered in London and Paris, diplomatic sources here discounted rumors in those two capitals that the Kremlin was talking about intervening directly in the conflict unless the Israelis ended their attacks.
The speculation coincided with the 25th secret meeting of the Big Four ambassadors to the United Nations in New York. The envoys of the United States, Soviet Union, Britain and France
Informed sources said Western U.N. diplomats were not informed of the substance of the Soviet talks in London and Paris and sources said that while the Soviet ambassador talked at length during the Big Four meeting, "nothing new" was said.
Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Smirnovsky met with Wilson at 10 Downing St., the prime minister's official residence. Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin called on Pompidou in his Elysee Palace offices.
"You are sufficiently well-informed to know what urgent and important questions are posed at the moment."
All maintained silence on their discussions.
Communist diplomats have been hinting privately that Moscow could not stand idly by if the Middle East conflict escalated into a full-scale war that threatened the Arabs with another defeat.
The Soviets would have to "intervene," the sources hinted.
If you don't like the way people talk to each other, we'll pay you to change it.
We're in the communications business.
And during the next 30 years we're going to upgrade all the equipment we now have in order to provide even better service to our 6 million existing customers.
As if that weren't enough we're also going to have to come up with enough new equipment to provide telephone service to about 26 million more people. As well as equipment for a much more extensive data communications program.
We need enough people (electrical, civil, mechanical and industrial engineers, designers, accountants and economists) to plan, design, build and operate a company that will be four times bigger than we are today. We also need engineers, researchers and scientists to develop electronic switching equipment, laser and other communications systems we'll be using 10,25 and 50 years from now.
But this is only one part of our communications business.
Our Sylvania people, for example, are involved in other types of communications. Like color television sets, satellite tracking stations and educational television systems.
Automatic Electric, Lenkurt, Ultronic Systems and some of our other companies, subsidiaries and divisions are working on advanced types of integrated circuitry, electro-opticals and communications systems between people and computers and between computers and computers
So if you think you have something to say about the way people talk to each other . . . we're ready to listen.
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High court approves rail merger
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court stamped unanimous approval Monday on a merger of five northern and
western railroads which will create the longest rail empire in the United States.
The system, to be known as the
Municipal information begun as KU project
The University of Kansas will be part of a project which will work to develop a unified municipal information system. The project will work to encourage standardization of data and data inventories at the successive levels of government.
R. T. Aangeenbrug, acting director of the KU Governmental Research Center which will coordinate work on the project, said the project is to develop a transferable model information system
The primary objective of the system will be to increase the capacities of the information and decision-making systems of specified urban districts.
Also involved at KU will be the KU Schools of Business, and of Engineering, the departments of geography, economics, human development, psychology and political science.
Important in the project at KU, Aangeenbrug said, are Herman D. Lujan, chairman of the political science department; Philip Gary, assistant to the Chancellor for urban affairs; David Welborn, associate professor of political science, and Aangeenbrug.
Aangeenbrug said because participation in the project assumes a commitment to move into computer usage, the cities in Kansas decided they were not ready to join the system. By the time the project is completed, however, the municipalities of Kansas should be able to benefit from the results of the project.
This project, Aangeenbrug said, which is expected to take about three years to complete under a negotiated contract for about $3 million, will bring KU national prominence and encourage campus interdisciplinary activity.
Environmental crisis was topic of meeting
Students and legislators from the state of Kansas met to discuss the environmental crisis at the Conference on Environmental Problems Jan. 26 at Washburn University.
The conference was the second of its kind sponsored by the state of Kansas.
Three hundred student representatives from all Kansas universities and colleges and six
Two arrested for negligence in train wreck
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) — Two railroad employees were arrested Monday pending investigation of Sunday night's express-local collision 22 miles from Buenos Aires, the worst train accident in Argentina history.
The National Railway System said at least 130 persons were killed and 300 injured when the 10-car express roared at more than 50 miles an hour into the rear of a stalled suburban local.
Police said they took into custody two workers at the Benavidez rail station who thought the suburban local had gone through and signaled the express onto its tracks.
Railway officials said the death toll might go higher. Unofficial estimates ranged as high as 140 to 200 deaths.
Provincial Police Chief Col. Eduardo Anibal Nava said the suburban local pulled out of the popular riverside picnic area of Zarate on Sunday, bound for Buenos Aires with 1,090 passengers. It stalled with engine trouble on the tracks along a field outside of the General Pacheco station.
Alfredo Amoroso, the express engineer, was in near shock as he talked to newsmen.
"I saw the stalled train but I saw it too late," he said. "It was only 300 feet away."
The express slammed into the back of the stalled train, shot into the air and crashed down with crushing force on top of the local.
The bulk of the victims were aboard the sardine-packed suburban train.
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 19
private colleges, legislators and Gov. Robert Docking participated in the one day meeting.
The program began with speeches by five resource speakers on water, air, insecticide and feedlot pollution. The students then divided into discussion groups to decide on questions to direct toward the politicos, members of the legislature and Gov. Docking. After talking with these representatives, the students went to the legislature to convince representatives of the urgency of the environmental problems.
Marvin Harder, special assistant to the governor and organizer of the conference, said the meeting showed the legislature there are many interested and concerned people in the college generation.
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Burlington Northern, will operate 26,500 miles of track in 17 states and two Canadian provinces. It will provide service from the Great Lakes to the Pacific and from Canada to the Mexican border. Its assets are estimated at more than $2 billion.
that the advantages of the merger outweighed its competitive effects.
The 7-0 decision by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger rejected anti-monopoly arguments by the Justice Department and upheld the right of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to okay the controversial merger.
The ICC approved the consolidation in 1967 and a special three-judge federal court approved the action in November, 1968. The Justice Department filed suit on grounds that the commission had not established
But Burger said in his ruling that the court found "substantial" evidence to support the ICC
finding that the conditions agreed to by the five lines and service improvements to shippers and the public "outweighed the loss of competition between the northern lines."
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Saul Alnsky, criminologist and sociologist, is a leading figure in the civil rights revolution in America. Director of the In-Service Program for the Department of Law at several law books, including "Revelille for Radicals" and "John L. Lewis: An Unauthorized Biography." He was photographed in New York.
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Three Dog Night cancels KU concert to cut album
Efforts by the Board of Class Officers for a concert by the Three Dog Night, a West Coast rock group, have failed, said Steve Emerson, Topeka sophomore and publicity chairman.
The concert would have been one of several in a tour of Midwest colleges this spring. The KU concert scheduled for March 1 was cancelled so that the group could meet a deadline for a future album.
The concert committee, headed by Vince Frye, Shawnee Mission junior, was informed Jan. 2 by the William Morris Agency in Chicago that the agreement was broken. Prior to this date, plans had been confirmed both verbally and by telegram. A reserve fee of $5,000 had already been accepted by the agency. This money and a $500 claim for publicity expenses are expected to be refunded, according to Emerson.
Union heads recommend GE contract
NEW YORK (UPI)—The leadership bodies of the ten major unions on strike at General Electric voted Monday to approve a tentative contract agreement and submit it to their membership for a vote. Some rank and file members have already indicated they favor the pact.
The conference board of the United Electrical Workers (UE) and the International Union of Electrical Workers (IUE) approved the contract, estimated by GE at a cost of about $1 billion during meetings that lasted for several hours.
The agreement was reached Thursday in the 96th day of the longest strike in GE history. $\varLambda$ spokesman for the IUE said the vote of its 158-member conference board "was close." A UE spokesman said its conference board members were substantially in favor of the pact, which already had the approval of both bargaining committees.
Although the IUE action was binding on the 90,000 members of that union, the leadership has decided to submit it to a vote of the rank and file because of the length of the strike.
Under UE bylaws, the 20.000-man membership must ratify it. Both votes will be completed by Tuesday night.
So far, only one local-320 in Syracuse, N.Y.-voted to reject the proposal. About half the 5,000 eligible members voted against the tentative settlement by a three to four margin.
20 KANSAN Feb. 3
1970
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Emerson explained that the basketball schedule in Allen Field House and the late date prevented contacting another group this semester.
The board, composed of class officers and past class presidents, had hoped for a non-profit concert as a service to the students at KU. Any possible profits were to be donated to Watkins Hospital.
In a meeting Monday afternoon, the committee considered alternatives to a concert.
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One is the organizing of class parties sometime this spring, free to all students who have paid class dues. Also suggested is a plan to schedule a concert early next school year.
Financial aid has been granted to the University of Kansas by the National Science Foundation and the KU Endowment Association.
The National Science Foundation awarded $28,726 to KU for support and scholarships for the 15th annual Science and Mathematics Camp to be held here June 21-July 31.
New financial aid granted
Eligible for the camp are high school juniors who have shown superior abilities in science and mathematics, but whose schools do not offer satisfactory opportunities in these fields.
Ten annual scholarships of $400 each have been provided by the KU Endowment Association.
Junior College graduates from Kansas and Kansas City, Mo., who
plan a full-time course of study at KU are eligible for the scholarships.
JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES THIS WEEK ONLY JAYHAWKER OFFICE
the senior year if the student maintains at least a 1.5 grade average at KU.
Granting of the award will be based on junior college academic records, financial needs and extracurricular activities. The scholarship can be renewed for
Applications for the 1970-71 school year must be made by Feb. 15. Further information is available in the Office of Student Financial Aid, 26 Strong.
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CAPTAINS TABLE
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Now comes the best part. Since all girls are different, all reactions will be different. Some will be aggressive. Others, submissive. But whether our policy leads to final agreement or not, one thing's for sure.
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Larry Winn seeks probe in pornography business
Washington, D.C. — Congressman Larry Winn (R-3rd-Kan.) joined with several colleagues Jan. 26 in sponsoring a resolution asking for a special House committee to probe the "big business" of porngraphy.
Winn said a special committee was needed because existing laws were not taking care of the problem.
"There is very clear evidence," he said, "that pornography has become a big business with underworld roots."
Winn referred to recently passed legislation designed to curb pornography by allowing the individual to judge whether or not the mail he received was objectionable.
The only probable result the
law has had so far, Winn said, is that the Post Office Department now has the largest pornographic file in the nation.
Winn said that "smut peddlers" use tricks such as changing the name of their corporation when it receives too many orders to stop delivering allegedly obscene material to family residences.
Another trick of the "smut peddlers," Winn said, is to slightly change the format of their advertising pieces. This makes it a different case in the eyes of the law, and a new stop delivery order must be requested by the citizen receiving unsolicited smut through the mails.
Winn said that he and his colleagues hoped the special House committee could investigate these
loopholes in the law in order to "develop new and workable legislation and to track down the underworld ties in the pornography business."
John Harris, postmaster of the Lawrence Post Office, confirmed Winn's views of present postal laws on pornography.
Asked if he found the recenty passed legislation referred to by Winn inadequate, Harris said, "I would say it is true. This particular law appears to produce no effect."
Harris said that his office received many complaints from people receiving unsolicited pornography. He said that his office would report any cases turned in to them and send them on to the Postal Inspection Station.
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Senate not swayed by ROTC support
The Kansas legislature's adoption of the resolution that pledges support for ROTC will not affect the University Senate's corporal committee on ROTC former D. Lujan, chairman, the Senate's committee and associate professor of political science said Monday.
Lujan said that Kansas Legislature has the right to make any recommendations that it feels is best for the state of Kansas. He said he did not feel the legislature's recommendation was an
Stamp sales end
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The savings stamp program which permitted a generation of school children to invest as little as 10 cents at a time in government bonds will be ended June 30, the Treasury Department said Monday.
Savings stamps are a victim of prosperity and rising costs. They are no longer very popular with buyers who apparently consider them insignificant. For the government, they are too expensive to produce and handle.
After stamp sales are discontinued, the Treasury said, outstanding stamps may be redeemed at any time either for savings bonds or for cash.
Talent auditions for two of the
Feb. 3
1970 KANSAN 21
invasion of the University's academic freedom.
Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Science, said he had not read the resolution and could not say if it was a recommendation or a restriction on academic freedom.
Shankel said he hoped the resolution was a recommendation from the legislature and not an absolute restriction in University policy.
Parks seek entertainers
Talent auditions for two of the nation's top family parks and entertainment centers—Six Flags Over Texas and Six Flags Over Georgia—will be conducted Feb. 19 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
College students and graduating high school seniors in Lawrence and neighboring Kansas and Missouri areas are eligible to try out in the auditions which will begin at 3:30 p.m.
All types of entertainers will be considered by the talent scouts including singers, dancers, instrumentalists and specialty acts.
Six Flags will provide a piano accompanist, tape recorder and record player for the auditions, but students should bring their own music, instruments, costumes and props. Those who wish may bring their own accompanists.
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Man in Lewis was a mistake
The impossible dream in living arrangements seemed almost within reach for one male KU student.
Garth Burns, Hutchinson junior, obtained a woman's dorm contract, preferred Lewis Hall and received a letter of acceptance from the Dean of Women's Office shortly before semester break. His moving plans were thwarted, however, when Mrs. Carolyn Routh, resident director for Lewis Hall, noticed the unusual first name and checked contract listings in the Dean of Men's Office.
"The contract has nothing provided to state sex except a heading of either men's or women's residence hall court," said Mrs. Routh. "We always go through contracts to check for returning residents. I noticed the unusual first name and discovered we had a man assigned to Lewis. This has never happened before in Lewis as far as a know."
"The whole thing started after we had been talking about strange names. I thought they might accept Garth as a girl," Burns said. "I didn't really expect to be admitted, but I thought the people checking me in would be more shocked than they were. I didn't expect them to find out until I arrived."
Pope eliminates celibacy review during this reign
VATICAN CITY (UPI)—Pope Paul VI appears to have removed the last possibility that the Roman Catholic law on priestly celibacy can be changed during his lifetime, Vatican observers said Monday.
At the same time, the official Vatican press spokesman emphasized the authoritative importance of the pontiff's statement Sunday rejecting any change in the law and any further discussion of the controversial issue.
Msgr. Fausto Vallainc issued a statement saying the fact the speech was made to an informal gathering of pilgrims and tourists in St. Peter's Square in no way lessened its significance.
Some Italian newspapers had sought to minimize the Pope's remarks because they were not made at a formal occasion. But Vallainc said the Pope was speaking not merely as bishop of Rome but as universal pontiff.
Vallaine said the Pope has often used holiday meetings to discuss matters of great importance "committing without impossible distinctions his authority as head of the Catholic Church."
22 KANSAN Feb. 3
1970
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Over-interest closes county clinic
The Douglas County chapter of the Planned Parenthood Association, $1035\frac{1}{2}$ Massachusetts, closed Jan. 1. Mrs. Darrell Duby, clinic director, said the chapter could not properly care for the large number of patients using the clinic facilities.
The clinic was designed primarily to serve lower income persons in the community, but was used almost exclusively by KU coeds. Mrs. Duby said the association felt services similar to those provided by the clinic should be made available to KU coeds at Watkins Hospital. Letters to that effect have been sent to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers and Dr. Raymond Schweger by the chapter board of directors.
Relying on volunteer workers and the services of Alexander C. Mitchell, a Lawrence physician who has donated his time to the clinic, Planned Parenthood offered a variety of services including educational films, written material, and question-answer sessions on the topic of birth control. Contraceptive devices were issued to women only after they had had a pelvic examination. Mrs. Duby explained these medical services were given to patients as long as they obtained contraceptives from the clinic.
An attempt to consolidate the Planned Parenthood chapter with the Lawrence Public Health Center failed because the public health center did not provide the medical coverage which the
Planned Parenthood Association insisted upon.
An executive meeting with the Kansas City chapter of Planned Parenthood is scheduled for Tuesday evening to decide the future of the Douglas County chapter. Tentative plans call for an information and education bureau instead of a clinic.
The clinic remained open on Thursday evenings throughout January to refill prescriptions and to refer patients to a private physician or the public health center. Coeds who are married can obtain contraceptives from Watkins Hospital.
BIG SPRING
VAN BUREN, Mo. (UPI)—The largest single outlet spring in the United States is Big Spring, which has a maximum flow of 846 gallons daily.
Funds requested
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Missouri River Basin project dominated the budget requests by President Nixon for Kansas projects under the Bureau of Reclamation.
Nixon's request to Congress Monday for fiscal 1971 which starts July 1, showed approximately $2.2 million for Kansas reclamation projects.
The request includes $88,000 for the Kansas state water plan.
Al and Jim want you.
CITY OF CINCINNATI
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If you're an engineering major (EE, ME or CE), Jim Kostoryz and Al Winder want you.
About a company. And a city. About challenges. And decisions.
Because they've 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.
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
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Decisions to meet these challenges can be yours. (But first you must decide to see Jim or Al.)
If you do, you'll see they only care about one thing: whether you're big enough to help a company help build a city.
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Permanent and summer job interviews—EE/ME/CE's 'eb. 5, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Sign up now to see Al Winder or Jim Kostoryz at Placement Office
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the will be offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
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2-9
New Canon FT/QL single lens reflex,
fl. 8 lens, meter, quick loading, case,
UV filter. More than $80.00 off list.
$179.50. Phone VI 3-9252 2-9
ESTATE SALE: Community Building, 115 W. I10, Lawrence, Kansas, Feb. 6, 7, 8, from 9-6. The entire contents, antique and otherwise, of the historical Jaekdieck-Fischer House, 743 Ind. St. Walnut beds — dresser table — windows — love lamps — pictures — frames — books — music — dishes, a lifetime accumulation of everything — everything
Two Kapson Sig lavailers for sale,
were dumb freshman good condition
2-5
Raney Drug Stores
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
SANDAL SALE-20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb. 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarily Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Used Magavox stereo component system with built-in AM-FM radio, sold new or used. Used very little, man Hays Stop clock's, open men, Thurs evenings. 2-9
Usd Magnavox Color TV—sold new $398.50—now only $225.00—with free shipping. Perfect color, perfect color, Ray Stoneback's, downtown, open Mon. and Thurs. evenings.
RECEIVER: Heath AR-15, assembled.
1970 Consumer Report: AR-15 is the best receiver we have tested. Exce-
530. 150 watts RMS. Phone 2-8227
2-9
For Sale: LP records, approximately 100, old, but good selection, many nice cases. Woman's brown fur jacket, size 12, looks new. 648-52-088, evenings.
3 locations to serve your every need Plaxa, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
1967 Pontiac Firebird Sprint OHC 6, air conditioning, power steering and brakes, gold with gold interior, very good condition, one owner, VI 2-7298
AUTO
GLASS
INSTALLATION
Table Tops
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Old fur coats for sale in limited supply. Muskrat, lamb and martin in various colors. $30 to $40 each (cash). VI 3-2374 or 1730 Illinois. 2-9
AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
926 Mass. V1 3-0501
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
VI 3-0501
Bob P.
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
Minnie Pearl's
VI 3-8200
1730 W 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
TAXI RIDE
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
NOTICE
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
Malls Shopping Center
VI 3-1211
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que If you want some honest好会-bar-B-Que This is the place to get some, Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty, Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay plus 10% handing over and Dyno desk hire. Call 442-2047 evenings 14 to 8.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-13
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, m.casians, hiking boots, also custom made belts, watchbands, sashes, purses, vests, sandals, tankers at 812 MORRIS PRIMARILY LEATHER. 3-2
Math tutoring—for almost all under-
graduate experience
2-9
3-6776 after 5 p.m.
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^a$. Mass. St. Louis. Waxed, folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service. 3-2
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Our 20 styles to choose or wear. Your choice of PRIMAR LEATHER, B12 Mass, 3-2
WANTED
Wanted. Two girls need third room.
Two girls need bedroom ap Ridgeline.
2-6
I 2-3644
Wanted Coed to share 2 bedroom apartments to campus. Call 2-531 7-23875
One female roommate for 2nd sem-
sion. Advantages, new apt, WiFi, &
club space, 442-7919-3100
Male student to share my furnished apt. 2 blocks from KU Art Museum.
Students pay $42.50 per month includes phone and utilities. 842-3436 or 842-1615. 2-
Fourth roommate wanted for Gate
call VI 3-7600, Registr or Janet, 2-3
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Three men need 4th to share 6th floor apt. at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities paid except phone Call after 5:30. VI 2-7770. 2-9
Need 1 or 2 replacement roommates to occupy beautiful Gatehouse apartment for second semester. Call 843-2103. 2-9
Three men need 4th to save apt. at Jayhawk Tower. All utilities paid except phone. Originally $67.50, willing to go to $50. Dave, VI 2-814. 2-9
FOR RENT
For rent to upperclass women, large comfortable sleeping room, share kitchen and bath, utilities paid, available Jan. 6th, Tel. VI. 3-1585.
Large (furnished room with private
bedroom) meals
Vaulted Call 842-4473 after 6
2-24
Will sublease at discount a Gatehouse apt. 2 bedroom Electric Kitchen, Dishwasher. Wall to wall carpet. 843-0048.
Large deluxe studio apt—wall to wall carpeted—private bath, entrance and refrigerator—for two men. West Front is 2½ blocks. Evenings. IV 3–2578827
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call V3-1 3281. Mrs. Kauckman
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxel. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Exclusive Representative
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges - Favors
- Guards
- Mugs
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Recognitions • Padules
• Loyaliers • Stationery
- Gifts * Plaques
Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter
VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Accurate typing of these, manuscript papers by experienced typist type of books. Clear brown paper type. Reasonable prices. Closet copy Mrs. Phylliss Nelson. VI 2-2142.
Typing done on electric machine.
Thesis, dissertations, term papers.
Fast, reasonable rates. Call 842-1561.
2.10
HELP WANTED
Camp Fire Girls need counselors for its resident camp. Girls must be at least 19 years old and have some camp experience. We are particularly interested in waterfront instructors, based on our experience with applications, write Mrs. Rhoda Harvellock, Camp Fire Office, 1014 Armrest, Kansas City, Kansas 66102. 2-5
Wish to employ noon hour supervisor for elementary school lunch room and play ground, 11.30 to 12.30. Phone VI 3-4886 for interview. 2-9
Camp Knutson in Northern Minnesota provides a unique summer experience for children who face the problems of child abuse and neglect. Tardation. There are openings for lifeguards, program/operations staff, cooks, and a camp nurse. Write Damian Cunningham. Email damian.kunningham@kansas67456. Division of Social Service /The American Lutheran Church.
LOST
Lost—black men's wallet. Need
lost. Reward. Call 842-6221. 2-9
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Shaking stakes and finalizing sandwiches are your final step when you do all of the Salmon. We work always to prepare the selection as you like them with all the ingredients, then chop them into slices before plating pleasure.
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and a half mile hills north of the Kow River Bridge
843.1421
Want to Make Some Easy Money?
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Lawyers oppose Carswell
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A Negro lawyer, Leroy D. Clark, testified Monday that Supreme Court nominee G. Harrold Carswell frequently shouted at him in his courtroom, once turned his back on him and was "the most hostile federal judge I have ever appeared before."
Clark, who argued cases for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Florida when Carswell was a U.S. District Court judge, was one of three lawyers opposing the judge's nomination at Senate Judiciary Committee hearings.
The other two lawyers characterized Carswell as unfriendly toward Northern attorneys who came South to defend civil rights workers.
Clark said he argued cases before Carswell, then a federal judge in Florida, at least nine times and "Judge Carswell was insulting and hostile."
Clark contended that Carswell's civil rights decision as a U.S. judge in Tallahassee were continually reversed on appeal.
Clark also said Carswell frequently delayed issuing an opinion for months, thereby delaying appeals and desegregation orders resulting from them.
Two other lawyers, Norman Knopf of the Justice Department and Ernst Rosenberger, a New York civil rights lawyer, used the term "extremely hostile" to describe Carswell's attitude toward them in a 1964 case.
Other opposition to the nomination came from Thomas E. Harris, associate general counsel of the AFL-CIO, who called President Nixon's choice "a slap in the face" of Negroes.
Knopf, emphasizing that he was a subpoenaed witness, said he was present in Carswell's chambers when Rosenberger received a lecture from the judge.
"He lectured him for a long time in a high voice," Knopf said. "It was a long, strict lecture about northern lawyers coming down and meddling and arousing local people."
Rosenberger said he was seeking the release of seven Negro voter registration volunteers whose lives, he said, were in jeopardy as long as they remained in the Gadsden County Jail.
Knopf said Carswell "made it clear he was going to deny us all the relief we requested" regardless of the argument that the seven had been illegally convicted.
"What kind of a reputation did Carswell have in regard to civil rights cases?" Sen. Hiram Fong, R-Hawaii, asked Rosenberger.
"His reputation was bad," Rosenberger said. "He was considered an obstructionist."
Marvin Waits, clerk in Cars-
well's former District Court in Tallahassee, was asked about the charge that Carswell was hostile to northern lawyers.
"I have never heard Judge Carswell make any derogatory remarks about any counsel, whether he comes from North,
South, East or West," Waits said.
Another witness, Stephen I. Schlossberg, general counsel for the United Auto Workers, called Carswell's appointment "an insult" to the Senate, to blacks and to the South.
Garbage disposal is a messy problem researcher converts waste to alcohol
LONDON (UPI) Garbage, garbage everywhere and the problem facing municipal authorities and governments the world over is what to do with it.
A British researcher says he believes he has the answer. Turn the garbage into alcohol.
Nowhere more than in Britain is the problem of waste disposal viewed with deep concern by authorities. The average British town-dwelling family produces up to two tons of garbage each year.
Some is dumped, but refuse grounds throughout the country are already overflowing. Some is incinerated, but at a cost of about $16 per ton—a heavy burden on
the taxpayer for a non-produc- "ive process.
Dr. Andrew Porteous, a lecturer at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, believes that by turning garbage into alcohol, authorities have a way to recoup at least part of the cost and achieve efficient garbage destruction.
Dr. Porteous' process works by hydrolizing cellulose, a major constituent of domestic wastes, which, with additional processing, will produce ethyl alcohol.
Ethyl alcohol has many uses in manufacturing processes.
Cellulose is found chiefly in paper and vegetable wastes. Boiled with hydrochloric acid it is converted fairly simply into sugar, which again can be processed by fermentation to produce ethyl alcohol.
The process was used in America during the war years, to provide alcohol for war industries. But not as simply as by Porteous process. In peacetime conditions, the conversion was not economically feasible.
However, Porteous said his process promises to double the alcohol output, and reduce the time taken in hydrolizing from three hours to just over one minute.
Already his proposals are being studied in a program sponsored by the United States Public Health Service.
Hoffman rests defense case; later reverses own decision
CHICAGO (UPI)—U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman rested the defense's case himself in the riot conspiracy trial Monday when the chief defense attorney accused the judge of presiding at a "legal lynching" and announced "we're never going to rest."
The judge relented later and said the defense can present one last witness—the Rev. Dr. Ralph Abernathy, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference—if it has him in court at 10 a.m. Tuesday.
Chief defense attorney William M. Kunstler and Hoffman traded angry blasts in stormy sessions of the trial of seven antiwar demonstration leaders.
Kunstler told the judge he had "violated every principle of justice" and challenged him to "put me in jail."
"Never as a lawyer or a judge have I heard a lawyer make remarks such as you have in this court," Hoffman told Kunstler, and in a lengthy scolding later, the judge said:
"I have never seen the things before that I have seen in this courtroom."
24 KANSAN Feb. 3
1970
"You've never seen us before, your honor," Kunstler replied.
Turmoil erupted when Kunstler announced that, instead of resting as originally agreed upon, the defense planned to have Abernathy testify in defense of seven antiwar protest leaders.
Kunstler's denunciation of the judge raised such wild applause among spectators that Hoffman ordered at least six persons removed from the courtroom.
The seven defendants in the case are charged with conspiring to incite riot among antiwar demonstrators during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. They have been on trial for more than 18 weeks.
Kunstler had said Friday the defense was through presenting "live" witnesses and wanted only to enter some previously rejected television film into evidence. An agreement was reached that the defense would rest after resolution of the film matter Monday.
Monday Kunstler announced he was "going back" on the agreement because Abernathy had just arrived in Chicago and was available as a witness. The prosecution objected and the judge insisted the defense wind up its case.
His voice quivering with anger, Kunstler charged that Hoffman was more concerned with technicalities than with the truth and told the judge: "You have violated every principle of justice in this trial.
"I am outraged to be in this court before you," Kunstler said.
Senate to discuss human relations
FAST BREAKFAST:
The Captain's Table specializes in quick breakfasts; Open at 7:00 with all your breakfast favorites.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
R. L. "Puff" Bailey, Lawrence senior and Senate member, will present a resolution to establish a committee to study the enrollment problems of Speech 141, a human relations discussion course. Bailey said the enrollment problem was caused by a lack of the money needed to hire extra instructors.
Another resolution for a black tutorial program will be presented by Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., senior and chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee.
The Student Senate will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room to discuss a list of new resolutions.
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
812 Massachusetts Open 10 am.
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having a Sandal Sale Now!!
(sale ends Feb. 15)
Diamonds
Women Want Them Men Give Them We Have Them
DIAMONDS
JEWELRY
Christian's
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CHINA GIFTS
Alinsky adovcates change
Saul Alinsky, sociologist, activist and author, denounced student activists who depend on empty rhetoric and stressed the need for organized activists who are unafraid to face the existing society.
The bespectacled self-proclaimed "professional radical" spoke to a capacity crowd in the Union Ballroom Tuesday night.
10. 29. 86
Alinsky spoke in a mildly abrasive manner of the activists, who by working outside the system, are placing themselves "out in space." He continually insisted the only way for activists to beat the establishment was to work within.
A. C. BOGO
Alinsky, who looked more like a professor than a radical, suggested that students stop looking down on their middle class background. He said students who know the middle class world should start organizing and educating toward middle class ideals. He referred to the student revolution as more of a revelation of ideas and values which have long been ignored and should be brought back to life.
Alinsky says change will come only by working within the system.
Alinsky said that for the first time stock proxies would be used for the people, and suggested that student activists propose a
Alinsky suggested that one of the best ways to jolt the establishment was to organize student proxies. He insisted that hitting corporate society in the pocket was a far more effective way of causing a major shakeup than a sit-in or riot.
P. S. N. A.
Photos by Ron Bishop
stockholder's meeting in New York City stadium.
Alinsky spoke of change as a natural and productive environment. He said that conflict is part of the difficult act of settling differences.
Alinsky warned of an approaching period which would be dangerously right, where people
would begin the day reciting the words of the "Star Spangled Banner" and the United States would risk losing its way of life.
He spoke of a Madison Avenue, middle class, moral hygiene attitude which he named as one of the most subversive forces in the country. Alinsky said that public support for Ronald Reagan could
not have jumped from 52% to 80% without help from this subversive attitude.
Alinsky drew laughter and applause in several parts of his speech, titled "American Revolution—Act II," but portions of the audience appeared mildly irritated when he spoke of John Brown and Carry action as the last Kansas radicals.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.71
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, Feb. 4, 1970
Critics attack war policy
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senate critics described the administration's Vietnam War policies Tuesday as a public relations success fostered by a "pistol-whipped" news media, but a strategic failure.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, accused by Sen. Harold Hughes, D-Iowa, and Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., of doing the pistol whipping, countered with charges Democrats are "casting about aimlessly" for a way to discredit the administration.
The exchange came as the Senate Foreign Relations Committee opened two days of hearings on a bill by Sen. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., and other measures concerning Vietnam. Goodell again called for passage of legislation requiring total U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam by Dec. 1.
Goodell told the committee the administration's Vietnamization policies were a "public relations success" but, at best, would only scale down U.S. activities to a residual force level of perhaps 200,000 American troops. He said the war had been "cosmetized," not Vietnamized.
Goodell said estimates of the U.S. residual force in Vietnam ranged from 250,000 men as discussed by "Americans and Vietnamese officials in Saigon", to 30,000, which Goodell said had been mentioned by Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird.
Hughes and Chairman Fulbright said Agnew was responsible for the current state of national "euphoria" about Vietnam because he had "pistol whipped" news media into telling only the good side of the war.
Agnew bristled when told of the charges as he emerged from a briefing session for Republican senators on his recent swing through Asia.
"I think that some of the opposition party people who've dropped all their eggs in one basket by attempting to discredit the U.S. position in Vietnam have found such a little bit of public support for themselves that now they're casting about aimlessly for some way to try to turn the gun back on the administration.
Agnew said, "the people are with the President on this. They've shown this, and no amount of self serving by opposition senators is going to change that."
The hearing, itself, was comparatively restrained. Fulbright even gave the administration some credit for helping reverse the course of the war. Little support emerged for the Goodell proposal.
Fulbright said there had been "signal improvement" in U.S. war policy.
He described the hearings as an attempt to "assist the President in bringing an early end to this war which has divided and irritated the American people for the last five years."
Abernathy refuses to testify in Chicago conspiracy trial
De-escalation policies begun by (Continued to page 20)
Kunstler Monday accused the judge of presiding at "a legal lynching" after the judge ruled
CHICAGO (UPI)—The Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy passed up a chance to testify in the riot conspiracy trial Tuesday. A defense attorney read a purported message from the civil rights leader criticizing the court's refusal to hear him Monday and calling the defendants "brothers on trial."
The judge refused to explain Abernathy's failure to appear to the jury lest he make himself the target of "another vilifying tirade" by William M. Kunstler, the chief defense attorney.
U. S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman called the Abernathy statement "vilifying" and "a pretty horrible thing."
the defense had to abide by an agreement reached with the prosecution Friday and rest its case without presenting another witness.
Hoffman reversed that decision late Monday after the government protested its case had been prejudiced when Kunstler embraced and kissed the leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in open court with the jury present.
But Abernathy left Chicago Monday and Kunstler read in court Tuesday the "regrets" which he said were dictated to him by telephone from Clarksdale, Miss.
Kunstler quoted Abernathy as saying he left Chicago with "a heavy heart." He said Abernathy (Continued to page 20)
Inside...
“Goodbye, Mr. Chips” ... page 5
Gymnastics ... page 8
More on Ecology ... page 4
Fluoridation ... page 18
By United Press International
UDK News Roundup
Judge refuses defence
WASHINGTON—A federal court judge has refused to allow nine defendants, including four Roman Catholic priests, to defend themselves in a trial on charges they destroyed equipment of the Dow Chemical Co. in March, 1969, as a protest to Dow's manufacture of napalm.
Judge John H. Pratt twice denied the request of the "D.C. Nine" on the first day of the trial Tuesday to speak for themselves. He also admonished them several times for speaking out of turn and at one point he said: "Either sit down or the marshal will put you down."
Lieutenant fights dismissal
FORT ORD, Calif.-A 24-year-old lieutenant, dismissed from the Army for refusing to go to Vietnam, says he will appeal his dismissal and ask for an honorable discharge.
Second Lt. Harold Bernt of Montclair, N.J., was sentenced to dismissal Monday by a one-officer court-martial board. For an officer, dismissal is equivalent to a dishonorable discharge for an enlisted man. All military benefits are forfeited.
Asian policy called a hoax
WASHINGTON—Sen. George S. McGovern, S.-S.D., said today President Nixon's program for gradual U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam was a "political hoax" anticipating a 300,000-man American force in Southeast Asia for 15 or 20 more years.
---
KU frosh rank high nationally
University of Kansas freshmen rank higher than the national average in academic qualities, ambitions and activities, according to a questionnaire given by the American Council on Education.
The survey was based on questionnaires given in 41 universities and 229 other junior and four-year colleges.
The questionnaire showed more KU freshmen made A's and B's in high school; fewer made C's and D's. Nearly 9 per cent ranked in the top 1 per cent of their high school class, compared to a national norm of 7 per cent.
More KU freshmen were elected president of a student organization, received a high rating in a state or regional speech contest, had a major part in a play, received an award in an art competition and edited the school paper.
More than the national average were aiming at careers as artists or performers, doctors and other health professions. Their parents were generally better educated than those of the national average freshmen.
The freshmen's objectives in life were to develop a philosophy in life (89 per cent), raise a family (75 per cent), have friends different from themselves (75 per cent), help others in difficulty (66 per cent), be an authority in their field (65 per cent), have an active social life (62 per cent), and keep up with political affairs (60 per cent). All those cited were above the national averages.
Hix submits resolution
Freshman class president Steve Hix, Overland Park, will submit a resolution to the Student Senate tonight to make freshman senators members of the Student Senate.
A petition signed by 1,000 students supporting the resolution will be presented with it.
The resolution asks that freshmen be placed in the Senate during the 1970-71 school year, with the representatives to be elected in the fall semester.
Hix said freshman senators now had only a title with no responsibility given them. He said freshman senators were like any other student who came to watch the student governing body.
The revised calendar for the 1970-71 academic year has been announced by the Student Senate Calendar Committee.
Committee announces new calendar
Martha Fankhauser, Lyons sophomore and representative of the committee, said all state schools were changing to the same calendar so transferring students could begin the new semester without conflicts.
Orientation for the 1970 summer session will be held June 4. Registration and enrollment will be June 5 and 6 and classes will resume June 8. The last days of classes will be July 31 and Aug. 1. Finals will also be given these last two days.
Orientation for the fall semester will be Aug. 24. Registration
and enrollment will be Aug. 26, 27 and 28. Classwork will begin in all departments Aug. 31. Holidays include Labor Day, Sept. 7, and Thanksgiving gives, Nov. 24-29. Classes will resume Nov. 30 until Dec. 12. Finals will then begin Dec. 14 for two weeks until Dec. 24 followed by approximately four weeks of vacation.
One of the advantages to this new calendar is having finals before Christmas. Students will not only be free from worry about finals during the recess, but will also enjoy a vacation which is twice as long as what they have had in the past.
Feb. 4
1970
Orientation for the 1971 spring semester will be Jan. 11 and registration and enrollment will be
Visitor enthusiastic about KU program
An enthusiastic South American is on campus this week—Senora Juan Carlos Lorenzo from Montevideo, Uruguay. Senora Lorenzo is an executive in the Institute for Children, a division of the Organization of American States, which is concerned with the rehabilitation of handicapped children. Since her arrival last Wednesday, she has been jamming every minute with information and ideas to take back to her country.
Senora Lorenzo has spent most of her time observing in KU's New Haworth Hall where the Bureau of Child Research is located. In one week she has decided that she likes the program, but has one reservation about it.
"The faculty has a unique attitude," said Senora Lorenzo. "They bring the best people from each field together for better quality in studies of mental retardation. They're creative and don't hesitate to try and get away from formal thinking."
Senora Lorenzo has a reservation about the facilities. She said that when professionals from a less developed country see what the United States has in equipment, they become discouraged. She said that they returned to their country knowing they didn't have appropriate equipment and thinking their mental retardation programs would become a disaster.
The University of Kansas will not be the only place observed by Senora Lorenzo. She will spend time at the University of Kansas Medical Center and Parsons State Hospital and Training Center.
As an executive in the Organization of American States, Senora Lorenzo hopes to promote an exchange program of professionals between countries beginning with the University of Kansas. She said that she hoped such a program would be directed at training people to be professionals in their own environments, rather than importing a lot of professionals to treat retarded people.
Debate teams take honors
2 KANSAN
The University of Kansas debate teams won top places in two debate tournaments on Jan. 23 and 24.
At the Kansas State College at Pittsburg, the debate teams won second place out of a field of 56 schools with 20 wins and four losses.
In the Junior division, two freshmen, Bill Russell, Omaha, and John Masterson, Falls
HOOKS WRITING
Church, Va., took third place among 76 teams.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Robert Hooks, co-starring in "Blood Kin," is writing a book on Ira Aldrich, a turn-of-the-century actor and first Negro to play Shakespeare in the United States.
In the Senior division, David Jeans, Independence, Mo., senior, and Robert McCulloch, Overland Park senior, took fourth place from among 66 teams.
The KU debate teams also placed in a tournament at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.
Senior Phyllis Culham, Junction City senior, and Deana Bartelli, Pittsburg sophomore, took fourth place from among 48 teams.
The KU team, coached by Donn W. Parson, associate professor of speech and drama, will move to Northwestern University at Evanston, Ill., for a tournament there this weekend.
This Week:
The Preachers
Three Texans and Two Pretty Girls
Ladies Free – Monday through Thursday
Matinee — 3 to 6 Fridays
Admission FREE with KU ID
Live Music
Every Night
8 - 12
Yuk down
Jan. 13, 14 and 15. Classes will begin in all departments Jan. 18.
Spring vacation will be March 6-14. May 4 will be the last day of classes before the final examination period begins and finals will end May 14. Commencement will be held May 16 and 17.
the summer session will have a two-week break, before it heats.
Students who plan to attend
The 1971 summer session's orientation period will take place June 2 and registration and enrollment will be June 4. Classwork will begin in all departments June 7 and will end July 31.
Help us shatter our corporate image
Until recently—Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company. Now, Libbey-Owens-Ford Company.
Perhaps, you'll help us become famous for . . . what is it you want to get your teeth into? As a creative engineer or scientist at our technical center? In manufacturing? In marketing? This may be the opportunity you are seeking! Take a crack at it. See our representative.
Until recently we were known as producers of glass for cars and buildings. Now, we're into many things in addition to glass. New combinations of materials. space age processes as well as products.
FEBRUARY 11, 1970
LIBBEY-OWENS-FORD CO
LOF
TOLEDO, OHIO 43624
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics announces a new series of classes designed for you:
Three Choices; Mon., Feb. 9, 9:30 - 10:20 a.m.
(MWF for 7 weeks)
Mon., Feb. 9, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(Once a week for 7 weeks)
Wed., Feb. 11, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(Twice a week—Wed. night and Sat. morning 10:00 a.m.- 12:30 p.m.—for 4 weeks)
The Regular Course:
The Freshman Course:
This course is especially designed for freshmen, accenting study skills and incorporating first-year course material.
Tues., Feb. 10, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(Once a week for 7 weeks)
The Vietnam Reading Course:
In this unique course you read and discuss Vietnam in depth while at least tripling your reading efficiency.
Thurs., Feb. 12, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m.
(One a week for 7 weeks)
ONE KU students are THOU satisfied Evelyn Wood SAND Reading Dynamics Students.
Phone VI 3-6424 now class space is limited
Deferment elimination recommended
Senate group reviews draft
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A Senate subcommittee headed by Sen. Edward M, Kennedy, D-Mass., proposed Tuesday that all wartime draft deferments be eliminated except for high school students and hardship cases. The proposal said college deferments should be limited to peacetime.
"By pyramiding occupational deferments on top of student deferments, many registrants have effectively obtained an exemption from military service, while less fortunate young men risk their lives in Vietnam," said the Senate administrative practices and procedure subcommittee.
The six-member panel also recommended junking Selective Service exemptions for fathers and those in certain crucial occupations in a report criticizing the "enormous inequities" of the deferment system.
Deferments, it said, favor registrants from wealthier families because they are more likely to attend college and go on to protected occupations.
In a separate statement, Kennedy urged Congress to give serious thought to the possibility of ending student deferments altogether.
The subcommittee defined wartime as a period of "actual conflict" and not necessarily a declared war, and suggested that Congress come up with a yardstick based on the number of casualties suffered.
Committee opposed to utility tax
TOPEKA (UPI) -A proposed law to remove the tax-exempt status of municipal utilities and facilities built with industrial revenue bonds was sharply opposed Tuesday at a senate committee hearing.
Louis Stroup Jr., executive director of the Kansas Municipal Utilities, Inc., told members of the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee the proposed measure would be unconstitutional.
Stroup told the senators the constitution exempts property used exclusively for municipal purposes. An opinion handed down by Attorney General Kent Frizzell stated that it would be unconstitutional to tax such property, said Stroup.
The joint committee on the state tax structure recommended amending a 1969 senate bill to drop the tax—exempt status of municipal utilities.
Stroup read a letter from Fred Diehl, general manager of the McPherson Board of Public Utilities, that asked the committee to include an appropriation to pay court costs for carrying the case to the Kansas Supreme Court, if the committee recommends passage of the measure.
Feb. 4
1970 KANSAN 3
The report, based on hearings last year on inequities in the draft system, will be followed some time this year by full-scale hearings on the subject by the Senate Armed Services Committee, which has jurisdiction over the draft.
rations of early dates in some months.
Kennedy's group further recommended that a computer handle the next annual random selection of draftees, contending that the initial draft lottery conducted Dec. 1 resulted in heavy concern-
Some of its other draft reform proposals have at least partially been overtaken by events. It recommended that the Selective Service director be a civilian limited to two five-year terms. President Nixon is reliably reported to have chosen a young civilian defense researcher to succeed Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey as draft director.
Intern program open to students
An opportunity to become actively involved in the operations of the federal government is being offered to University of Kansas students through the Washington Summer Intern Program. This program is an effort to involve qualified college students in the federal agency which is related to their administrative, professional or technical career field.
The University will be permitted to nominate four students for consideration in the summer program. Nominees must have completed at least 60 semester hours by June 1970, or be a current graduate student. Undergraduate nominees must have a grade point average of 2.5 or better. Graduate nominees must be in the upper half of their class.
Students in all fields may be nominated. Nominations will be based on scholastic ability, demonstrated leadership ability, honors, awards, and other recognition received, and career goals and interests.
Interested students must nominate themselves by submitting the nomination form and application supplement to the Office of Student Financial Aid, 26 Strong Hall, before February 16. The four KU nominees will be
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And the Supreme Court already has outlawed what the subcommittee termed "punirice" reclassification of registrants, a reference to Hershey's controversial policy of urging prime induction of student antiwar protesters who disrupt draft operations.
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KWSNN COMMENT
Loving IT or leaving IT
"Do you have to look away when you pass by the diner/Where the squad car stops for coffee?/Don't you wish that you were anyplace else but here?/... Do you grab a cigarette when a man in an unmarked/Plymouth pulls you over just to say, 'hi?'/Don't you wish that you were anyplace else but here?/And do you fumble in your wallet while you're looking for your license/And he tells you not to talk with your mouth full?/Don't you wish that you were anyplace else but here?"—Harry Nilsson
And don't we all wish, at times, that we were anyplace else but here?
The Our-Country-Right-or-Wrong-Love-It-or-Leave-It crusade has hit hard at many young people, and many young people have decided to do what the Love-It-or-Leave-It nuts have really had in mind—leaving it. The flow to Canada has steadily increased, representing mostly young men who knew that in order to 'love it' they would have to go to prison, because fighting in Vietnam is as far from being an expression of love for America as it is from being an expression of love for the Vietnamese people.
But the nuts who are pushing the issue and insisting that we either love it or leave it have
made a very good point. It was best expressed on a bumper sticker I saw recently which said. "Put your heart in America or get your ass out." With that bit of virtue which so characterizes America, the makers of the bumper sticker had left out the words 'heart' and 'ass' and inserted pictures of a valentine heart and horse's rear, respectively.
Why not, kids? Why not that? Why not precisely that?
If you decide to stay in America, as I think I have decided to do, why don't you really put your heart into it?
I don't mean, I hope, what that redneck with the bumper sticker means though. He means this; Don't bother the cops; don't cheat on your income tax so much that you get caught; send your kids to Sunday School; put the flag out on the right days; and wear an asinine bumper sticker on your rear end.
I mean that we should be as deeply entrenched as possible in America, realize we are each a "child of Amerika," as super-patriot Jerry Rubin calls himself. And from that entrenchment and that realization, we should be ready to put our heart into America.
On issues which America's politicians (excepting the very few or 'sometime' statesmen) are negligent, children of America must put their hearts into America by demanding action.
Active dissent from the quicksandish apathy of America can save America from being strangled by pollution, militarism and materialism.
Since merely 'putting ones heart' into America creates no lobby, we pressure in Washington, D.C., as does—shall we say—the oil lobby or the Detroit 'monster' lobby. Which means that we must find a voice for our hearts in newspapers, in lecture halls, in demonstrations, in the streets.
In other words, if our Mama—America—is bleeding, we're going to take her to the hospital. We're not going to cure Mama by plastering our rears with bumper stickers denying that Mama needs help.
Yeah, there are times, many times, when we wish we were anyplace else but here, but if we are here and we decide to stay, we should listen well to our fellow Americans who tell us to put your hearts in America or get your asses out.
—Mike Shearer
PUT YOUR ❤ IN AMERICA OR GET YOUR ❤ OUT
Inherit extinction
It is a sad fact that only a small number of people actually realize that "in a world devoid of other living organisms, man himself would die."
The earth's plant and animal populations, being a major part of the web of life, have intimate and essential relationships between each other that should not be altered to any great extent for the sake of man. Yet a great majority of people still continue to rid the earth of these organisms in any way they can, by building more highways, needless killing of animals and spraying poisons over our lands without regard to the ecological importance these actions have on the environment.
The science that studies the mutual relationships between organisms and their environment —ecology—is fighting an uphill battle not only because of the complexity this science curtails, but also because people are blind to the proper
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place of fellow creatures and lesser life forms in the pattern of existence.
When man scalps the land by building more highways, he outrages the ecology—he destroys the humus, evaporates the water, erodes the soil, alters the climate, and so shocks the environment to a point where it never again can be the same. Our society has built enough roads of adequate transportation. If we should continue to rob the landscape of its life, man will ultimately shorten his.
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Useless killing of animals, whether large or small, has some ecological effect on the balance of nature. Killing snakes, spiders and rodents just because one is scared of them or ignorant of their niche in life, is not only callous but also dangerous to man. Alan Devoe explained over a decade ago: "All creatures are in a common brotherhood . . . interconnected with everything else. Not only is there a basic brotherhood between all men but there is a bond between a man and a mouse, or a tree and a fox, or a frog and a raccoon." So the next time you go to kill some animals for the fun of it, stop and think why the Creator put that animal there, and then let it go!
One other needless action by man that upsets the balance of nature all too often is the continuous spreading of poisonous chemicals over the land in pursuit of one objective. That main objective so many times is to rid the land of some insect to save a food crop. If the insect is ruining a crop,ok, get rid of it, but use your head when you do it. Before you spray the land with pesticides, consider if your neighbor's farm will be affected,if wind conditions will carry the poisons to other parts of the land and thus pollute the air, if the wildlife and other plant and animal populations will be affected in any way. Remember,the cheapest way is not always the best way. Even though selective spraying may cost more at the start than aerial spraying,in the long run it's more beneficial for the environment.
We make our greatest mistake when we believe that the world belongs to us. It does not—we belong to it. Next Wednesday: Noise pollution.
BILL HULKE, Iowa State Daily
Sorel's News Service
Edward A. Mackel 20
Great Western Theologians
LANDING ZONE BALDY, SOUTH VIETNAM—During his brief visit to Vietnam, Cardinal Cooke of New York, celebrating Mass at an American regimental base 27 miles south of Da Nang, assured his communicants: "You are friends of Christ by the fact that you come over here."
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Editor
For those who don't have the disadvantage of reading the editorials from the Topeka Daily Capital, here are a few quotes from a recent one about Sen. Wayne Morse, whose sharp tongue kept the U.S. Senate alert for years;
"Ordinarily, Kansas don't (very sic) give two hoots who runs for Congress in Oregon.
"But if Wayne Morse, the stormy, sharp-tongued former U.S. senator from Oregon, does convince himself that he should run for the U.S. House of Representatives this year, it becomes a matter of concern for Americans everywhere, including Kansas."
Two questions come to mind. What's so refreshing about a senator who hasn't "sounded off much?" If what this country doesn't need is Wayne Morse, may we assume we do need the congressman he is considering opposing—that being John Dellenback, whom the Daily Capital laudingly calls a "Republican few if any Kansans ever heard of?"
Yessirree, Kansans don't ord'narily give two boots who runs fer Congress in Oregon. And one of the reasons is that they are so misinformed about the value of men who might be candidates there or anywhere. One of the misinformers, if I can believe the shoddy analysis of Morse that the Topeka Capital editorialist has given us, is the Topeka Daily Capital.
POPULAR MUSIC COMPANY
Ruth, in the production of "The Homecoming" appears unaware of the looks she is receiving from the five men in her life—but she's not. Her effect on the lives of these men forms the plot for the contemporary play by Harold Pinter. Actors are from left: Rabkin, Miss Forman, Sorrels, Trussell, Findlay, and Button.
KWSNN REVIEWS
FILMS: Welcome Not Goodbye
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Arts & Reviews Editor
Perhaps the best new musical to come along in quite some time, "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" errups on the screen as an excellent adaptation of an old script with original music and lyrics.
Peter O'Toole as the strict, yet lovable schoolmaster entertains the movie audience with an outstanding performance which very well could be the best of the year. He surpasses his previous performances including that of Lawrence of Arabia and gives a complete' well prepared characterization. His performance should definitely warrant an academy award nomination and hopefully the award.
Petula Clark, as Mrs. Chips, gives a surprisingly good performance proving that she can act as well as sing. Her character is charming in addition to being very believable and her singing comes through as its usual best.
An equally excellent performance is turned in by Sir Michael Redgrave as the headmaster of Brookfield. Father of the famous English acting family, Redgrave fulfills his role in the usual Redgrave style as a fine actor in any character.
The music and lyrics by Leslie Bricusse are fresh and new demonstrating that not only music which has been around for many years can be good and entertaining.
The songs range from the spectacular numbers including the 283 boys of Brookfield to the sentimental love songs between O'Toole and Miss Clark.
"Goodbye, Mr. Chips" merits several academy award nominations. Not only does O'Toole give Oscar quality in his role, but so does the musical score, photography and supporting performers such as that of Redgrave.
For any musical film lover, this is a must. The movie comes to us as something new and not a remnant of many years on Broadway. This proves that new musicals are appreciated and can be done well so welcome to an excellent example in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" and may many more follow.
Man of 'Impostor' fame now is church pastor
FRIDAY HARBOR, Wash. (UPI)—The "Great Impostor" has turned up as a church pastor on an island in Puget Sound.
Fred W. Demara, the subject of a best-selling book and a 1961 movie, is the pastor of the San Juan Baptist Church on the island by the same name northwest of Seattle.
But Demara won't talk to newsmen. He refuses to discuss his new role as pastor of the 30-member conservative church.
Members of his congregation are vaguely aware that their pastor at one time was the subject of
The chairman of the pulpit committee which selected Demara answers all reporters' questions with a terse "no comment" when they ask about the pastor.
Demara is a legend elsewhere. He once performed an appendectomy aboard a Canadian ship off Korea in a raging storm. At that time he was posing as Dr. Joseph Cyr. He once served as assistant warden at the Texas prison under the name of Benjamin W. Jones.
considerable notoriety, but they are not concerned.
Feb. 4
1970 KANSAN 5
He also taught school at St. Martin's College in Lacey, Wash., became a monk in the Midwest and has even gone by the name of Ferdinand Waldo De Mara, the name he was born with.
Best sellers
SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW
(UPI)
(UPI)
(Compiled by Publisher's Weekly)
Fiction
THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN-John Fowles
BREAK-Mario Puzo
THE HOUSE OF THE STRAND-
Danthe du Maurier
February 4 Directed by Sam Taylor USA,1929 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Admission 75c. Woodruff Auditorium
THE STRAND-
Daphne du Maurier
FIRE FROM HEAVEN-Mary Renault
FIPPET ON A CHAIN—Alistair
Maclean
Máclen
THE SEVEN MINUTES—Irving
with
Wallace GANG THAT COULDNT SHOOT STRAIGHT Jumbo Rugby
FIRE FROM HEAVEN—Mary Reim
PUPPET ON A, GHAIN, Alainet
HISTORIERS—Harold Robbins
IN THIS HOUSE OF BREDE—Rummer Godden
THE PROMISE—Chaim Potok
Nonfiction
THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1988—Joe McGinniss
THE GANG THAT COULDNT SHOOT STRAIGHT-Jimmy Breslin
PRESENT AT THE CREATION-
Dean Acheson
AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTION
AND GUIDE TO THE HISTORY OF
IMAGE — William Martin editor-in-chief
ARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Walam Mort, editor-in-chief
(the author)
FREQUENCE
AMBASSADOR'S JOURNAL—John K. Gabbash
THURD
REPUBLIC--William L. Shirter
REPUBLIC--William L. Shirter
COOKBOOK
Galloping Gourmet
MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS—Antonia Fraser
THE COLLAPSE OF THE THIRD REPUBLIC WILLIAM L. PARK
*MY LINE—Alexander Kendrick*
*MY LINE AND PROPHECIES*
Jeanne Dixon
One of the contemporary plays of the 60's, "The Homecoming" by Harold Pinter opens tonight and runs through Feb. 8 in University Theatre.
'Homecoming'appears as both comedy, drama
Directed by James Hawes, associate professor of speech and drama, the play is a kind of psychological study with deep insights into human nature.
"Pinter is one of the brightest young playwrights on the scene. He's British and could be compared with America's Edward Albee. Although his writing is somewhat abstract, he is becoming very popular in this country. This play was first brought over by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1965, and it opened for a long and successful run on Broadway in 1967," Professor Hawes said.
The story features a family in North London consisting of Max, his younger brother Sam, and two of Max's three sons, who are unmarried. Into this setup comes Teddy, the oldest son who has married and teaches at an American university—with his wife Ruth. In essence "The Homecoming" is Ruth's. Her relationship with these men becomes at once funny and grotesque, making for an interesting and astonishing evening.
"The play is short—only two acts—and amusing. Critics call it comedy as often as they do drama. Some of the things that happen are so wild that the relationships cease to be at all unusual and the audience realizes the whole thing is somewhat farcical. But this new type of theatre is also very realistic and it's just something that has to be seen to be understood," Prof. Hawes explained.
The cast consists of five men and one woman and the plot deals
The cast includes: Max, played by Gerald Rabkin, associate professor of speech and drama; Lenny, played by Roy Sorrels, teaching assistant in speech and drama; Teddy, played by Robert Findlazay, associate professor of speech and drama; Sam, Earl Trussell, Kansas City senior; Joey, Van Button, Kemsington, Md., sophomore; and Ruth, Ruth Forman, Shawnee Mission sophomore.
with her effect on various types of men.
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THE HOMECOMING
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25th & Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas
Shatter four school records
Track team captures Oklahoma City indoor
KU's indoor track team, off to a flying start with a smashing victory in the Oklahoma City Invitational, makes its only home appearance of the season Friday night when the Jayhawks host Wichita State and Southern Illinois at Allen Field House.
The meet opens at 5:30 p.m. as the long jump kicks off the field events. The mile run, first of 10 races, goes to the post at 7:30.
In winning the team title at Oklahoma City by 28 points over runnerup Kansas State, coach
Bob Timmons' Jayhawks shattered four school records, tied a fifth and turned in a total of 16 life-time best performances.
KANSAN Sports
Coach Bob Timmons, whose team brought home a NCAA indoor track title only last year, was quite pleased with his team's early showing. Timmons said, "We looked very, very good for our first time out."
Court undecided on reserve clause
NEW YORK (UPI)—A federal judge listened to arguments from both sides yesterday, then announced he would withhold an immediate decision on the attack on the reserve clause of professional baseball brought by outfielder Curt Flood.
Flood, 32, who played for the St. Louis Cardinals for the past 12 years, had objected to being traded to the Philadelphia Phillies during the off-season. His suit challenges baseball's rule that binds a player to the team he originally signs with—or to any team to which he is sold or traded.
Former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg, who represented Flood in arguments before U.S. District Judge Irving Ben Cooper, said Flood is willing to play for St. Louis with or without a contract, until the court makes a decision in the case.
This was to counter an offer by Mark Hughes, attorney for the
Feb. 4 KANSAN 7
1970
Philadelphia club, who had said Flood could appear for practice with the Phillies and play games without prejudicing his law suit.
Judge Cooper thanked both sides for the clarification in which they presented the legal aspects of the case. He concluded: "You have thrown the ball to me, and I hope I don't fluff it."
Goldberg said Flood is not asking for damages, but wants an injunction restraining the use of the reserve clause in trading him to the Philies.
"Flood does not want to be thrown in to servitude," the justice said. Goldberg added that the player wants to stay in St. Louis, where he lives and has a business.
Goldberg also told the court Flood is not asking for retroactive results but only for a modified reserve clause to govern future dealings between clubs and players.
Goldberg said four fundamental issues are involved. The clause, he said, violates U.S. antitrust laws, the 13th amendment of the Constitution, state antitrust laws, and state common laws wherever baseball is played.
Jan Johnson, sophomore pole vaulter from Chicago Heights, Ill., added more than a foot to his previous indoor best as he whipped world record-holder and Olympian Bob Seagren with a school record hoist of 16-6 1/4. Seagren was second at 16-0.
Johnson's former career high indoors had been 15-6, although he soared 16-4 outdoors in winning last year's Kansas Relays. The vault also broke a school record held by Bob Steinhoff of 16-11# in 1968.
Karl Salb, the national collegiate shot put king, opened his junior campaign impressively with a winning toss of 66-10. The heave eclipsed his previous best of 66-8% that won him the NCAA indoor crown at Detroit last year.
Two of KU's classy group of newcomers also broke in impressively with new school records, although they were forced to settle for second place finishes.
Freshman Marvin Foster, who doubles as a football player in the fall, turned in a clocking of 30.6 seconds for the 300-yard dash. Foster's time wiped out the Jayhawk record of 30.7 set last winter by Julio Meade and chased Oklahoma State's Earl Harris to an American record of 30.4 in winning the race.
Foster also led off KU's mile relay team that cracked the school record with a winning 3:15.5 and ran a 440 leg with the distance medley team that finished second to Houston. Foster turned in a 48.8 off the blocks for his mile relay carry and a 48.2 clocking in the distance medley.
Junior college transfer Mike Bates tied the existing school record by running the 60-yard high hurdles in 7.1. Bates took second behind Paul Gibson of Texas-El Paso, who hit a 7 flat time.
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Rev. W. E. Hankey Beginning Speed 214 w.p.m.
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Among the other more pleasing efforts were a 24-4 long jump by Phil Reaves, a junior college transfer, and an 8:52.5 two-mile
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Swimmers return to host Cylcones
"Generally pleased but not overly excited" was the comment of University of Kansas swimming coach Dick Reamon regarding the Jayhawks recently completed road trip to Texas and Oklahoma.
While meeting defeat in three of four dual outings, the KU
J
Bob Hines
tankers displayed great individual efforts and much promise for the future.
Beginning the trip on January 26, the University of Texas at Arlington, lead by double Olympic gold medal winner Doug Russell, swam by the Jayhawks, 68-45. KU, being only one of two teams to beat UTA in the past two years, was completely outdistanced by Olympian Russell and his Rebel teammates.
On the following day the Texas Longhorns showed surprising strength as they handed the Jayhawks their second 68-45 loss in as many days.
The Southern Methodist University Mustangs, the only team to defeat KU in nine dual outings last year, did the trick again as KU fell to its third straight defeat, 75-38.
Returning to Big Eight Competition, the Jayhawks easily defeated the Oklahoma Sooners, 84-28, to conclude the four day trip.
While unsuccessful from a won-lost standpoint, coach Reamon did feel the trip benefited the Jayhawks as it provided some of the best competition in the nation and gave the team the experience of competing for four straight days, experience that will be needed in March when KU travels to Ames, Iowa for the Big Eight championship meet and to Salt Lake City, Utah for the national championships.
Solid individual performances were in high praise by Reamon as he pointed out Kim Bolton (sprint and middle distance freestyle), Bob Hines (sprint and middle distance freestyle), Tom Ellis (middle distance freestyle), Steve Rice (distance freestyle), and Steve Trombold (backstroke) for exceptional effort.
Saturday night KU returns to Big Eight swimming competition as the Iowa State Cyclones visit Lawrence in a dual set to begin at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson gymnastium. The Cyclones Lst heavily from graduation but Coach Jack McGuire recruited an impressive list of freshmen including highly regarded Derk Hanson (breast-stroke and individual medley) and Steve Spikes (diving), both high school All-Americans.
* *
Reamon's tentative lineup for the Iowa State meet;
50 freestyle--Bob Hines, Roland Sabates, Hal Kennedy.
100 freestyle—Hines, Kim Bolton.
100 freestyle—Tom Ellis, Bolton.
**M**
200 freestyle—Tom Ellis, Bolton,
Mike Boyle.
500 freestyle—Marc Wagoner, Ellis,
Steve Rice.
1,000 freestyle - Wagner c., Bob Mauer, Bruce Bove.
200 breaststroke—Bob Wright, Dana Staats.
200 individual medley—Wright, Bo Darrah.
One-meter diving—Bob Bishop, Ray Powers.
Powers.
Three-meter diving—Bishop, Power.
400 medley relay—Trombold, Wright,
Tookalt, Hiper
400 freestyle relay—Bolton, Darrah,
Sabates, Ellis.
Gymnasts looking for sweep of tough weekend clashes
Kansas' gymnastics squad will feel the full weight of their Spring schedule this weekend as they host always tough Oklahoma in a dual meet Friday at 7 p.m., and then go against Western Illinois and Northern Iowa Saturday at 1:30 p.m. Both meets will be held in Robinson Gymnasium.
Oklahoma is perennially a strong performer in the Big Eight and their last three meets with KU have been decided by a single point.
KU coach Robert Lockwood again anticipates a close meet pointing out that last season after defeating OU by less than a point in the dual they came back in the conference match to slip by the Javhawks and finish second.
The Jayhawks' strongest suit will be the high bar. Heading the crew on the horizontal bar is Gerald Carley, ranked ninth in the nation, Roger Hemphill, who was fourth in the Big Eight conference last year and John Brouillette, who Lockwood termed "greatly improved on the high bar" over a tough summer work-out. Lockwood said that the high bar team will "hopefully average 9.0 points per man," out of ten points possible in gymnastics scoring.
Two of the Sooner's top performers are Jim Johannasen, who ranked third in the conference last year on the parallel bars, and Odessa Lovin, a floor-exercise man, who is a transfer student from Odessa, Texas Junior College.
One of the weak points the Jayhawks are fighting, according to Lockwood, is consistency on the side and long horse, but he emphasized that KU is a young
team.
The Jayhawk squad is composed of ten returning lettermen with only one senior, six juniors, and three sophomores. Also the team has a promising freshman Mare Joseph from Lawrence High, who Lockwood said he hopes will replace last year's captain, Bob Pierson, in the all around category.
Fred McCracken, the only senior, will be temporary team captain going into the meet. He is the Rocky Mountain Open parallel bars champion, the Big Eight Open Champion, placed second in the Iowa Open meet, placed second in the Midwest Open meet in Chicago, there receiving a 9.55 which is the highest score that any Jayhawk has received in a gymnastics event, and is ranked second in the nation.
Stan Clyne, junior, returning letterman, broke an arm during conference championships last year but has made a comeback and "done a very good job," according to the coach. Last Friday he placed first on the parallel bars at the Wichita Invitational with a score of 8.65, though the coach said mainly he will be using Clyne on floor exercises.
Floor Exercise—Dan Bradfield, Stan Clyne.
Dude! Horse—Marc Forkins, Richard Schertler.
Still Rings—Mark Hannah, Kirk Gardner.
Long Horse—Ron Faunce, Dan Bradfield.
Paul Fielding Bars—Fred McCracken, Terry Blanchard.
High Bar—Roger Hemphill, Gerald Carley.
All-Around—Marc Joseph, John Broullette.
8 KANSAN Feb. 4
1970
Dollar Weekend at the Red Dog Inn
THE Bed Dog Box
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FEATURING
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Saturday Night-Feb.7th
urday Night—Feb.
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Japanese sign treaty to halt nuclear spread
TOKYO (UPI) — Japan, the only nation in the world ever to be atom-bombed, signed the treaty banning the spread of nuclear weapons Tuesday, but with open reluctance.
The government made clear that final ratification of the treaty by parliament will not come in the foreseeable future. Such approval is necessary before Japan can formally bind itself to the pact.
The nuclear nonproliferation treaty limits the number of
nuclear nations to the United States, Soviet Union, Britain, France and Communist China. It will prohibit other nations from manufacturing or possessing nuclear weapons.
In announcing that Japanese ambassadors in Moscow, London and Washington had been instructed to initial the treaty, the government issued a special statement expressing its reservations.
The statement said the treaty "must in no way restrict non-
nuclear weapons states in their research, development, or implementation of the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, or in their international cooperation in these fields, nor must it subject them to discriminatory treatment in any aspect of such activities."
The statement also said Japan reserved the right to pull out of the treaty if it decides that "extraordinary events, related to the subject matter of this treaty, have jeopardized the supreme interests of the country."
Sheriff claims government sabotaged law enforcement
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) — A sheriff whose territory includes the Berkeley campus area of the University of California charged Tuesday that the federal government allowed radicals to carry on five years of disturbance in his county and then sabotaged law enforcement.
Sheriff Frank Madigan of Alameda County spoke out angrily at a news conference against indictment of 12 of his deputies Monday in San Francisco Federal Court because of their handling of the "People's Park" rioting in Berkeley last May 15.
County Supervisor Joseph Bort of Berkeley said outgoing U.S. Attorney Cecil Poole had set a "terrible example of law enforcement." Poole, whose resignation became effective Monday, had been the nation's only Negro U.S. attorney.
The Alameda County Board of Supervisors unanimously voted to ask Poole's successor, James
L. Browning, Jr., to order a new grand jury hearing that "would be fair and without prejudice."
The Oakland City Employees Association and the County Deputy Sheriff's Association asked the county to provide defense funds for the 12 men.
The federal grand jury accused the deputies of violations of civil rights in the fatal shooting of a 26-year-old man, the blinding of another, and alleged beatings of prisoners following the disorders.
"It's a terrible thing when a U.S. attorney goes out in a blaze of glory at the expense of individuals and justice."
He said Poole has "taken these men and thrown them to the wolves."
The presentations to the grand jury were handled not only by Poole but by two special Justice Department attorneys from Washington.
Madigan said for five years radicals had disrupted Berkeley
and Oakland, stopping troop trains, besieging the Oakland induction center, and carrying on waves of demonstrations at the University of California's Berkeley campus.
"Three of those on trial at Chicago have been active in demonstrations at Berkeley and yet nothing was done here by the U.S. attorney's office," he said.
"The Justice Department has taken this action against law enforcement officers ignoring completely the violation of citizens rights by the mob in Berkeley."
Supervisor Robert Hannon said Poole "took the side of the criminal element."
"The only witnesses called were the criminals involved," he said.
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Millionaire campaigning to free American POWs
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)—Texas millionaire H. Ross Perot said Tuesday he would sponsor a nationwide letter writing campaign in an effort to free American servicemen from North Vietnam prisons.
caravan of trucks throughout the nation to pick up the mail then send it to North Vietnam.
Perot told a luncheon gathering here he has commissioned the Gallup Poll to sound out the feelings of the American people on U.S. servicemen being held captive in North Vietnam.
He said after receiving results of the poll he will sponsor the letter writing campaign, send a
Feb. 4
1970 KANSAN 9
"My efforts alone can't do it, but the prisoners will be free if the American people demand it," Perot said.
Perot said chances for release of the POWs was good if North Vietnamese leaders can be convinced the American people really care about the prisoners.
OLDEST CAPITAL
SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI)—The capital city of New Mexico is the oldest seat of government in the United States, dating to its Spanish founding in 1610.
EAT LUNCH ALL DAY:
Well, practically, anyhow. The Captain's Table cafeteria is open from 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m.Monday Saturday.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
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Campus briefs
Population group to meet
An organizational meeting for the KU chapter of Zero Population Growth will be held today at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Kansas Union,
The formal chapter organization will be set up and plans will be made to inform the public of Paul Erlich's next appearance on the Johnny Carson show and of Erlich's lectures in Lawrence April 28. Erlich is a professor of biology at Stanford University and specializes in population biology. He is president of the national Zero Population Growth organization.
Zero Population Growth, Inc. is a national organization formed to bring the crucial issue of over-population to the attention of the public and state and federal legislators. The two most important methods for achieving the goal of world-wide zero population growth are active lobbying in legislatures and in Congress for legislation to control population and advertising which will popularize the two-child family and alert the general public to the dangers of population growth.
The meeting is open to the public.
Noted ecologist to speak
Barry Commoner, noted for his work in the field of ecology, will be heard through closed-circuit telephone at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at 203 Bailey Hall. He will speak on "The Crisis in Environment."
The broadcast, which will originate from Washington University in St. Louis, will be carried to many universities throughout the Midwest. Commoner is a microbiologist and chairman of the botany dept. at Washington University.
As a founder and a leading exponent of the science information movement, Commoner has helped establish the Committee on Environmental Information. He is also author of the book, "Science and Survival."
In the past year he has written numerous articles and has traveled extensively to U.S. colleges. In each instance, Commoner's message is that "the price of pollution could be the death of man." Commoner and his fellow associates put their faith in man's ability to reform when confronted by compelling facts. "Once you understand the problem," said Commoner, "you'll find that it's worse than you ever expected."
After Commoner's speech on environment, students will be able to ask him questions by use of a two-way relay system installed in Bailey Hall. The program will be taped, and will be replayed at 3 p.m. Friday, February 6, in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Carswell likely to be confirmed
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Judiciary Committee heard new allegations about Judge G. Harold Carswell Tuesday, but voted against further hearings to give him a chance to rebut charges he was hostile to the civil rights of Negroes.
The committee's 9-6 vote was seen as a sure sign that a majority of the 17-member group favored approval of President Nixon's second nominee for the Supreme Court seat vacated by Abe Forta.
But committee liberals, led by Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., succeeded in stalling fast committee action on the controversial nomination. Bayh was instrumental in the rejection of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., for the court last December.
The committee met privately to consider the nomination after hearing Joseph L. Rauh Jr., a civil rights attorney, denounce Carswell as "a closed-minded segregationist judge" whose civil rights opinions were unanimously reversed 15 times by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Nixon named Carswell to that court seven months ago.
"There is a serious question of whether converting a public golf course to a private facility was a criminal act. . There is a possibility a criminal conspiracy existed." Rauh testified.
Rauh also charged that Carswell may have engaged in a crime in helping organize a segregated golf course in Tallahassee, Fla., in 1956, six months after the Supreme Court ruled public golf courses must integrate.
Carswell was U.S. district attorney in Tallahassee when he invested $100 and became an incorporator in the golf club. He later was refunded $76 and dropped out.
Carswell back to rebut his charges if he could.
Founding the table, Rauh begged the committee to invite
"If Judge Carswell were worthy of the Supreme Court, he would demand the right to come back," Rauh said. He described the nominee as "a Judge Haynesworth with a cutting edge. . a bitterness and a meanness that Judge Haynesworth didn't have."
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., who is opposed to any change in the way presidents are elected, opened a filibuster which lasted until enough senators had drifted away to deny the committee a quorum to conduct business. The meeting then broke up.
Sen. James Eastland, D-Miss., said he hoped to call his committee Wednesday or Thursday.
In its closed session, Bayh insisted that the committee first act on its pending business—Bayh's constitutional amendment for the direct popular election of presidents.
Block drawing to be held
Block ticket drawings for the twentieth edition of Rock Chalk Revue will be held Thursday, Feb. 11, and tickets will go on public sale Feb. 17.
Chicago
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It Better End Soon! Where Do We Go From Here?
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The block drawings can be made by any group with a minimum of 20 persons. Tom Moore, KU-Y adviser, said the drawings were open to all students, not just living groups. Moore also said each group should have a second choice of ticket prices in case the first choice was unavailable.
Tickets will go on sale Feb. 17 at the KU-Y office and at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. Moore said students could get the best tickets for the Friday night performance because the Saturday night show is traditionally sold out.
Use Kansan Classified
Book contest scheduled
LATE HOURS:
10 KANSAN Feb. 4
1970
Union Ballroom
The Captain's Table is now open until 2:30 in the dim, dark morning.
sua
The Elizabeth Snyder Book Awards Contest will be held this spring and judging will begin about the middle of April.
6:45 P.M.
Barbara Backus, assistant special collections librarian at Spencer Library, said the contest is for students with book collections centered on any theme and is designed to encourage young people to read.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
This year the contest will be divided into graduate and undergraduate student divisions. The local winner will receive $100 in books and a chance for the $1,000 prize awarded to the national contest winner.
Bridge Players Second Semester Game THURS., FEB. 5
ATTENTION
Engineers Math and Science Majors
IBM will be interviewing on campus Feb.17,18
We'd like to talk to you if you're interested in a career in science and engineering programming,or marketing. Sign up at your placement office.
An Equal Opportunity Employer IBM
Ruling would ease priest shortage
Pope hints at celibacy change
VATICAN CITY (UPI)—Pope Paul VI hinted Tuesday he might reluctantly consider the first limited change in the Roman Catholic Church's law on priestly celibacy since its enactment 900 years ago.
The change would allow married men of mature years with good family and professional reputation to become priests in areas of the world where there are extreme shortages of priests.
At the same time, the Pope ordered Roman Catholic bishops of the Netherlands to reconsider proposals for wider changes in the celibacy law that have brought the worldwide controversy over the subject to a boil in recent weeks.
The Pope outlined his position in a 2,000-word letter to French Cardinal Jean Villot, the papal secretary of state.
Andres M. Torres, assistant dean of the Graduate School, said candidates must be working for the M.A. in East Asian studies, Latin American studies, or Slavic and Soviet area studies; or be M.A. or Ph.D. candidates in the area studies program or one of the 14 departments which cooperate with them to be considered for a graduate fellowship.
Students who plan to earn their degree by Feb. 14, 1970, should apply to their department for consideration. Selection will be made by the Graduate School on the basis of recommendations from the departments and area studies committees.
A $53,250 grant from the U.S. Department of Education will provide graduate fellowships for 15 KU students in foreign languages and area studies in 1970-71.
CLEVELAND (UPI)—A teeteral grand jury Tuesday delved into the financial records of a United Mine Workers (UMW) local in Tennessee where slain UMW official Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski contended the union illegally spent $3.7 million.
He expressed doubts that such a change, if adopted, could in practice be restricted to local cases.
areas an exception to the law, as is the ordination of former protestant ministers, rather than an actual amendment.
Language fellowships available
Grand jury subpoenas mine records
The grand jury, investigating the fatal shooting of Yablonski, his wife and daughter, subpoenaed the records of UMW Local 3228, located in Lafollette, Tenn.
Local 3228 is part of UMW District 19, where Yablonski contended the union's leadership spent $3.7 million over a five-year period to remain in power.
The pontiff expressed "grave reservations" about the possibility of ordaining married men for areas where there are shortages of priests and said it could only be done, if at all, by bishops of the world acting in union with him—presumably at a synod of bishops.
Msgr. Fausto Vallaic, the Vatican press spokesman, said he believed the Pope was referring primarily to Latin America in raising the possibility of ordaining married men for certain areas. "Above all this possibility does not concern Holland," he said.
said discussion on it was closed. His language Tuesday suggested he would regard ordination of some married men for restricted
They were Sollius Huddleston, 61, president of Local 3228 and father-in-law of Paul Gilly, 36, Cleveland; David E. Brandenburg, secretary-treasurer, and Guy Swindle, 65, the local's recording secretary.
Three officers of the local, including the father-in-law of one of three men indicted by the grand jury on a charge of conspiring to murder Yablonski, testified before the grand jury Tuesday.
His hint of willingness to consider this change was expressed in extremely cautious language, and he did not indicate that any immediate consideration was likely.
The personal financial records of the three men also were subpoenaed.
Even so, observers said it was the first time in centuries a pope has even hinted that some married men might be acceptable as priests—other than the handful of former Protestant ministers who have converted to Catholicism and been ordained with papal consent.
Gilly, Claude E. Vealey, 26,
and Aubran W. Martin, 21, all of
Cleveland, pleaded innocent
Monday to federal charges of
conspiring to kill Yablonski
to keep him from testifying about
District 19.
Only Sunday the Pope strongly defended the celibacy law and
Feb. 4
1970 KANSAN 11
The Captain's Table stocks all of your favorite drug items. On your way to class, come see our toothpaste.
WE SELL DRUGS:
Primarily Leather FRINGE COATS
812 Massachusetts
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
The Octoputer
RCA's many-tentacled computer does time sharing plus regular computing. It's a generation ahead of its major competitor.
Once there were only monster computers that did big batch jobs like payrolls. Then came the whirling dervishes of time sharing that let a lot of people work at once. Now there's a new kind of creature that does time sharing and batch work together. So lots of people can use it efficiently.
It's the Spectra 70/46. The Octoputer. There's nothing else quite like it on earth or under the sea.
The Octoputer's arms are long and strong. It sits in the middle of your company and reaches helping hands out in all directions. Suddenly, your company works harder.More of your people use the computer-solving more problems finding more facts, writing more programs.
And it does your big batch jobs in its spare time. The Octoputer does a real armload of work for a handful of change. Check the bills from your timesharing services.
See if it's not more efficient to do the same work on your own
because communications is what RCA is famous for. It'll keep us
Octo-
puting
that's what
you're going to need
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industry is going.
We got there first
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RCA
COMPUTERS
For career information visit your College Placement Office.
ВОД ОПРОИЗМЕНТА
Photo by Ray DiTirro
Students encounter traffic problems
The going was rough during enrollment as students packed the Kansas Union Bookstore in an exhausting effort to gather books required for spring semester classes. Faces seem gloomy, probably because of thinning pocketbooks and the resulting prospects of weekends in front of the tube until the next check arrives from home. Mass confusion, nonexistant books and the idea of lugging 30 pounds of books back home add nothing to the unhappy situation. If you like wall to wall books and people, the bookstore during enrollment is the place for you.
12 KANSAN Feb. 4
1970
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Peace activities top committee's concern
Peace Action Day has been scheduled for Jan. 15, said Mrs. Wes Santee, a member of the Lawrence Committee for Peace in Vietnam. The committee is sponsoring the activity.
One day each month will be designated as Peace Action Day, culminating April 15 in demonstrations concerning the issues of taxes, inflation and military expenditures, Mrs. Santee said. She also said citizens would be urged to take time from "business as usual" to demonstrate discontent with the spending of tax dollars for the war and for military projects.
The main objective of the committee is to bring peace to Vietnam, said I. J. Stoneback, a committee members. He said enough people talk against the war to make peace happen and the committee was organized in November for this purpose.
Chicago
including:
Poem For The People In The Country/The Road
It Better End Soon/Where Do We Go From Here?
Chicago
including:
Poem For The People in The Country) The Road
It Better End Soon (Where Do We Go From Here?
KGP 24
A brand-new specially priced two-
record set from the group whose
music spells excitement all over the
world—Chicago!
2 record set
$599
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Mrs. Santee said work for the next few months would be centered upon educating people about the futility of the Vietnamization, the economic crisis caused by the war and the immorality of the United States' presence in Vietnam.
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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
KU Photography Contest
Kappa Alpha Mu (a national honorary photojournalism fraternity) and Student Union Activities (you know what that is), are proud to announce for the fourth time in as many years, their annual KU photography contest, offering as top prize the Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic with the 50 mm. f1.4 Super Takumar lens.
Entry forms are available in the SUA Director's office in the Kansas Union, or Room 9, Flint Hall. Deadline for entries is 5 p.m., February 20.
SPOTMATIC
HONEYWELL
PENTAX
Asahi Opt. Co.
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Super-Takumar 1:1.4/50
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TROILA
Photo by Ron Bishop
Rat-a-tat-tat Rat-a-tat-tat
Jamie Rigler, Highland Park, Ill. sophomore, Scott Holmes, Kenilworth, Ill. junior, and Lynn Schornick, Yates Center sophomore, comprise the three-man cast of "Cox and Box," a one-act opera to be performed by the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company for the University Women's Club Thursday in the Kansas Union. A public performance of "Cox and Box" and another one-act Gilbert and Sullivan opera, "Trial by Jury," is planned for later this month, according to John and Sandra Jones, directors of the company.
Nigerian gov't to release imprisoned missionaries
LAGOS (UPI)—The government announced Tuesday it would release 32 foreign Roman Catholic priests and nuns who were sentenced to six months imprisonment last week for illegally entering Nigeria.
The government statement said that "as an act of clemency" it would deport the missionaries who were flown to Lagos Tuesday after three weeks confinement in Port Harcourt.
"Arrangements are in hand for their deportation from Nigeria by the first available flight to their respective countries," the statement said.
The priests arrived, unshaven and still wearing their white cappocks. They were met at Ikeja Airport by Archbishop John Aggey of Lagos.
Armed police escorted the group to an airport hotel where they were kept under police guard.
Government sources said the group would leave Nigeria today on a still-undetermined flight.
the former secessionist regime and those involved in its activities," the statement said.
Most of the missionaries—who worked on relief operations in the former secessionist territory of Blafra until it collapsed last month—are from Ireland.
"This action is a further demonstration of the federal government's magnanimity towards
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)—At University of California at Berkeley leads all universities in the number of graduates who earn doctorate degrees.
THE CHAMP
WE'RE:
Feb. 4
1970 KANSAN 13
open from 7:00a.m.-2:30 a.m.,
stocking many drug items,
specializing in breakfast,
keeping our cafeteria open from
Integrated classes also began Tuesday in the Mississippi towns of Clarksdale, West Point and Holly Springs, and in Marshall County. Attendance figures were not immediately available for
keeping our cafeteria open from 11:00-8:00,
11:00-8:00,
serving a varied grille menu,
close to campus,
Bay County, Panama City, Florida, peacefully integrated its school system Tuesday. The northwest Florida county has about a 17 per cent black enrollment.
friendly.
and
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
White teachers defy integration orders
ATLANTA (UPI)—Contending they feared for their lives, white school teachers in the Washington county, Georgia, school system refused en masse Tuesday to transfer to black schools despite a federal court order.
Seventy of the 76 white teachers scheduled for transfer balked, raising doubts over the future of public education in Washington county.
The teacher transfers in Atlanta, scheduled to become effective March 5, and a still-to-be-determined reshuffling of students, has touched off student demonstrations and brought a threat by Gov. Lester Maddox that he may lead a march on Washington.
Volusia county, Florida, which is scheduled to begin busing 1,800 students Wednesday to attain the level of integration federal courts have demanded, decided in emergency session Tuesday to file an appeal with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.
Tuesday was also the day Atlanta teachers learned of their new assignments, with transfers being determined by lottery. The Atlanta system transferred 1,800 teachers, 900 white and 900 blacks, to attain the 57 per cent black-43 per cent white ratio that federal courts say is needed in each school for racial balance.
Atlanta teachers gathered around television sets after the school day ended Tuesday to watch the first lottery draws, televised over the educational TV network.
most districts, but the trend has become clear in Mississippi, where whites have accepted integration only in those districts where they are at least equal in number with the blacks.
No classes were scheduled in Washington county, Georgia, Tuesday to allow time for the teacher transfers to be carried out, and thus it was not immediately known how the rebellion by teachers would affect student attendance.
There was little question, however, that a crisis had developed, and School Supt. W. B. Ouzts Jr. declared, "I cannot operate the Washington county school system without teachers. Some arrangements are going to have to be made."
CHANCELLOR E.L. CHALMERS QUESTION ANSWER SEMINAR
Questions from the audience on any subject will be discussed by the Chancellor.
BIG 8 ROOM OF KANSAS UNION
7:30 P.M. — Thursday, Feb. 5
University Seminar Series
sua
STARTING TOMORROW
AT THE SOUND IN HILLCREST CENTER
Monday-Friday 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m.-Saturday 10-6 p.m.
GIANT RECORD SALE
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
4. 98 Albums ... 3.49
5. 98 Albums 3.99
6. 98 Albums 4.99
HURRY—NO LIMIT WHILE SUPPLY LASTS
There are over 1,000 Kansas University graduates of the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute. How many do you know?
"It is an extremely time saving way of completing assignments, studying for tests, or for whatever personal aims with regard to the reading one desires."
Mark Pierce Jour., Comm. Art
"I found the recall guides for study and finger patterns for speed the most beneficial aspect of the course."
John Schmid
"It's a very interesting and worthwhile course—worth the money spent."
Ted Faucher Clinical Psychology
"With the reading dynamic techniques I learned, I now know how to study...to do all this seven times faster."
Larry Huffman
"This course will enable me to keep up on the reading that I want to and also required reading from my work."
David Kopp Psychology & Sociology
"Good encouragement to read books. Leads to better comprehension."
Nina Lundgaard Education
"I'm an English major. The benefits are obvious."
William Berenson
"I will benefit from this course by having increased time for leisure reading."
Pennie Von Achen
"I can read three times as much in the same amount of time, thus absorbing a store of knowledge, background, enjoyment and relaxation."
Ken Washington
"I didn't realize that in my first two or three classes that I could read nearly so fast or retain as I am now."
Susan Fehrman Journalism
"My comprehension has really increased and text books go much faster."
Daniel Lord
"Not only is speed obtained in reading, but a better understanding of all material you come in contact with is gained. Most important, a feeling of confidence is achieved concerning the demands of college study."
Korb Maxwell Veterinary Med.
"My main benefits from this course are my ability to read at greater rates plus my ability to take better and more comprehensive notes in class."
Janet Selders
"It can increase your speed three times as fast with approximately same amount of comprehension."
Melody Kennedy Liberal Arts
"I really enjoyed the course."
Stephen Stras
"This course will cut down the number of hours necessary for studying for an average reader. It will let me read more books now, and also enable me to engage in more activities."
William Black
"It is especially good for study materials and class work in addition to giving me more time for just pleasurable leisure reading."
Jock Gibbons
"Just as valuable as the speed are the study techniques. Somehow no one ever taught me how to study before."
Jeff Gilles English
"The course increased my speed greatly, but without compromising my enjoyment of the material covered. The course was a great help to me in my studies."
Alan Klein
Sec. Ed. Literature
2015
The image shows a person sitting at a desk, writing or looking at something on the paper. The individual appears to be focused and engaged in their task. The background is blurry, making it difficult to discern any specific details.
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
Larry Huffman
Stephen Winters English
I am not sure how to say that. It looks like "I'm not sure how to say that." or "I'm not sure what I am doing." The second one is more likely to be correct.
Let's re-read the image carefully.
A man is sitting at a desk writing in a notebook. He has a bald head and is wearing dark pants. Behind him are two empty boxes.
One possibility is:
The man is writing in a notebook.
The boxes are empty.
Another possibility is:
The man is writing in a notebook.
The boxes are not empty.
Since the image shows only a partial view of the man, it's hard to determine if he is actually writing in a notebook or just sitting there.
10.26
Susen Fehrman
AIBE
Daniel Lord
POLARIS
A.
Stephen Stras
Melody Kennedy
Liberal Arts
Korb Maxwell
POLYTECHNICA
AUSTIN CADDY
RONALD D. ROGERS
J. Kurt Von Ache
Lock Gibbons
Jeff Gilles
To enroll or to obtain further information on our February series, phone VI 3-6424
FREE MINI-LESSON TONIGHT 7:00 HOLIDAY INN
Rail strike still looms as threat
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Government mediators met separately Tuesday with union and management negotiators but reported no progress toward the long-sought voluntary contract agreement that would cancel the threat of a nationwide rail shutdown next week.
Assistant Labor Secretary William J. Usery and his aides talked in closed sessions first
with representatives of the four shopcraft unions involved in the dispute and then with John P. Hiltz Jr., head of the railroad negotiating team.
A Labor Department official conceded that "the picture is not good."
Separate talks recessed late Tuesday afternoon with no progress reported. They were set to
resume today, but no time was scheduled.
William W. Winpisinger, chief union negotiator, said he could not report "any measurable progress" in union talks with Usery. He said he expected to return to joint bargaining, but "the point now is to come up with a germaine idea to make joint talks useful."
The major obstacle blocking
The International Union of Electrical Workers (IUE) said returns from 16 of its 77 locals including Louisville, Ky.; Syracuse, N.Y.; Pitfield, Mass., and Fort Wayne, Ind., were 28,762 in favor of the contract and 4,956 against. The IUE represents 90,000 GE workers nationwide.
NEW VORK (UPI)—Early returns Tuesday from rank-and-file balloting on the tentative settlement in the 100-day-old General Electric strike indicated that the new contract will be accepted despite pockets of strong opposition.
Returns indicate settlement near in nationwide GE strike
The biggest setback in IUE voting came when members of Local 301 in Schenectady turned down the pact by a 4 to 1 margin on a show of hands. The local
represents about half the 25,000 member work force at GE's oldest and largest plant.
Results of the balloting by members of the United Electrical Workers (UE), which represents 20,000 GE workers, were slower in coming in, but several of the smaller locals among the UE's 28 GE locals had approved the pact by mid-afternoon.
Jury seeks reporter's information
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—A federal grand jury has served a New York Times correspondent with a subpoena demanding that he furnish the material he has gathered since Jan. 1 concerning Black Panthers.
DANISH CRACKDOWN
day to ratify or turn down what AFL-CIO President George Meany hailed as a "great collective bargaining victory."
THE HAGUE (UPI)—Applications by Dutch married couples for adoption of a child totaled 1,263 in 1968, compared with 796 in 1967. The Ministry of Justice said one reason for the rise was a change in an adoption rule. The courts last year managed to deal with 923 applications, of which 898 were granted.
"We're very optimistic," an IUE spokesman said. "We have every reason to feel that before the day is out we'll pass the majority point."
$3.60 to $4.28 an hour over two years.
Caldwell, who is based in San Francisco, said Tuesday he was served with a subpoena, dated Jan. 30, by a deputy U.S. marshal.
The Times correspondent, Earl Caldwell, a Negro, has developed extensive sources of information in the course of reporting numerous stories about activities of black militants.
The demand was similar to those made upon CBS television officials last month. They also were asked to make available information concerning the Panthers, including an interview with exiled Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver last month.
Hillard is accused in a federal indictment of threatening the life of the President during a speech at a Nov. 15 moratorium rally. He told an audience of nearly 100,000 in Golden Gate Park, "We will kill Richard Nixon."
The document demanded that Caldwell bring to a grand jury session Wednesday "notes and tape recordings of interviews, covering the period from Jan. 1, 1969, to date" concerning aims and activities of the Black Panther Party.
But he added, "The Times intends to use all its resources to make sure that no judicial action violates the constitutional guarantee of free press and the rights of newspapermen to carry on their work freely without coercion."
Caldwell was specifically asked for material obtained in interviews with Raymond "Masai" Hewitt, the Panther minister of education, and David Hilliard, the party chief of staff.
"All citizens, including newspaperm, have a duty to respect proper judicial process," Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, publisher of the Times said in New York.
The apparent failure to make any headway so far raised anew the prospect of government intervention, particularly because Congress is scheduled to begin its annual Lincoln Day recess on Feb. 10. That is the expiration date for two federal court orders currently forbidding any strike action and carrier retaliation in the form of a lockout that would paralyze U.S. rail service.
The locals had until 1 p.m. to-
Feb. 4
1970 KANSAN 15
agreement is a proposed change in work rules so that members of one union could do jobs normally performed by members of another in small craft shops. A tentative settlement including a provision changing the work rules was reached last December and ratified by three unions—the Machinists, the Electrical Workers and the Boilermakers. But the fourth union, the Sheet Metal Workers, rejected it out of fear the change would leave some of its members without jobs.
NEW GRILLE IN TOWN:
If the Nixon administration does not propose legislation before Congress recesses and if there is no extension of the present temporary restraining orders or issuance of a preliminary injunction, the unions would be free to strike and the nation might be thrust into a transportation crisis.
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The labor negotiators agreed at the start of bargaining that they would not approve any contract that is not acceptable to all four unions. The railroad negotiators insist that any agreement without a change in work rules will force them to reduce their offer of an 18 per cent pay hike from
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Spooner museum may be hazardous to your painting
When the cold north wind blows, and the temperature falls into the teens, the north wall of the Museum of Art breaks out in a cold sweat, Bret Waller, director of the museum, said Tuesday.
A false wall of one-quarter inch plywood is in front of the windows on the north wall. Water condenses on the wall when the cold air from the windows hits the humid air in the museum, Waller said.
The moisture endangers the works of art in the musuem. This kind of damage takes years to show up in the paintings, Waller said.
He said that on occasion the pictures were taken off the wall and stacked somewhere else until the wall dried or the wind stopped blowing.
"the ironic thing," Waller said, "is that this is the best part of the gallery, and the only part that is temperature controlled. Any modern museum worth its salt has a controlled climate."
He said that to keep the gallery at a constant temperature and humidity the only way moisture can be added to the room is to introduce steam to the heating ducts.
Offices late in arriving
The University Extension Center bought two temporary office buildings which were to be delivered Monday afternoon, but as of yet they have not arrived.
High winds Monday forced the Kansas Highway Patrol to forbid transport. Although there were better weather conditions Tuesday, the buildings never showed up.
The buildings, each 24 feet by 58 feet, will be adjacent to the Extension Center office. They will provide space for 30 desks, said T. Howard Walker, extension director.
A small room in one of the buildings will be reserved for planning conferences and division meetings.
Presently, the Extension Center is located next to the Kansas Union in the former Pi Beta Phi house. Walker has moved his office to the State Extension Center at 645 New Hampshire, and seven desks have been moved into his former office at the University Extension Center.
Walker said that the offices would be used indefinitely.
16 KANSAN Feb. 4
1970
Since the gallery on the first floor is the only part of the museum that is temperature controlled, the pictures upstairs suffer winter and summer, he said.
Spooner Hall is the oldest building on campus, built in 1894 as the University Library. Waller said it is a historic wooden building within a limestone shell and in addition to ruining the paintings, moisture ruined the building.
"This problem is very bad for the building itself. The moisture penetrates into the walls," he said.
Waller said in between seasons when the air conditioner was on and when steam was added there were large clouds of steam coming out to the ducts.
During the summer the second floor gallery is closed and the lights turned off when the temperature hits 90 degrees because there is no ventilation on that floor, Waller said.
The humidity fluctuation is worse than the temperature change. The canvas and wooden frame of a painting expands and contracts with variation of the humidity but the paint does not and small cracks appear as a result, he explained.
Art objects in the gallery are not the only works that are in danger. Waller said that only 1,000 works of 10,000 that were in the museum were displayed. The paintings in storage areas have developed cracks, and chips of paint have fallen from some of the paintings.
Waller said, "We try to keep the more valuable paintings in the gallery, they are safer there."
The limited space in the storage areas restricts students in art history from studying the works, he said.
The poor conditions make it difficult for the museum to get loaned works and travelling shows.
He said that the museum tried to shield the loaned works as much as possible and did not display loaned paintings on the north wall.
"If more people knew about this we would have a harder time," Waller said.
He said the museum had a good relationship with the Nelson
Art Gallery in Kansas City but they were one of the more hesitant to loan works for display.
When the museum does get works for display there is another problem. The truck which carries the paintings backs up to the smallest door of the museum measuring about two and one-half feet by six feet. Large paintings are taken out of their packing boxes outside and maneuvered in through other doors, Waller said.
Waller said there is also a problem with security of the museum. There are 13 areas in the building that are used for display. To have maximum security he feels that the museum would need 13 guards.
Waller said funds from the KU Endowment association were specific gifts donated for works of art and could not be used for a new building.
"We have known for years that we need a new building," Waller said. "Suddenly we are faced with everything falling apart at once."
He said that no one had come forward with the $2 to 3 million needed for a new building and while waiting for a new museum the building had not been kept in the best condition.
Waller said he did not know if any funds were requested in the state budget by the University for a new museum.
He said people probably did not feel like donating money for a new museum because they felt it was the state's responsibility.
Democrats refuse compromise bill
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon stopped just short of meeting Congress halfway in a compromise education and welfare money bill Tuesday, but Democrats said he didn't go far enough.
Nixon suggested a $19,957,125-700 appropriation bill for the departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare. That would be $690 million less than the one he vetosed, but $449 million more than he had originally requested.
Key Democrats said Nixon's offer was still short by at least $350 million. Chairman Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., of the House Education and Labor Committee, said the offer "falls far short of anything that we Democrats would accept."
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Mid-East dispute concerns Kremlin
USSR warns major powers
LONDON (UPI)—The Kremlin has warned Washington, London and Paris that the Soviet Union cannot stand idly by if the escalating crisis in the Middle East erupts into another full-scale war between Israel and the Arabs, high diplomatic sources said Tuesday.
The warnings came in personal messages from Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin to President Nixon, British Prime Minister Harold Wilson, and French President Georges Pompidou.
White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon received a message from Kosygin concerning the Middle East crisis on Saturday. He said the note was being studied and a reply would be given in due course.
Soviet ambassadors delivered Kosygin's message to Wilson in London and Pompidou in Paris on Monday.
According to the sources, Kosygin said the Soviets wanted a political settlement in the Middle
East and urged the big three Western leaders to press Israel to "cool it."
Kosygin did not spell out what the Soviets intended to do, the informants said, but left all options open for action depending on developments in the Middle East crisis.
The sources indicated Moscow may supply more sophisticated offensive weapons, including offensive missiles and the latest type MIG23 supersonic jets, to its Arab allies, notably Egypt which
has been under almost daily attack by Israeli planes. Some have penetrated to within six miles of the capital city of Cairo.
The informants did not rule out Soviet intervention in the event of another all-out war which would threaten the Arabs with a new defeat on the scale of the 1987 war.
But the informants said the Kremlin could not sit on its hands in the face of the growing hostilities and certainly would be in no position to swallow another crushing defeat of the Arab armies by Israel.
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Committee withheld recommendation from Robert Geer, named by Docking to the State Board of Tax Appeals.
TOPEKA (UPI) — By a onevote margin, a Senate committee today voted against recommending Robert N. Woodson, director of state penal institutions, for confirmation to the position.
It was the second appointee of Gov. Robert B. Docking to be rejected by Senate committees in the last ten days. Last week the Senate Assessment and Taxation
Senate committee refuses approval for penal director
The only members of the Senate State and Local Affairs Committee to cast votes in Woodson's favor were the three Democrats on the 11-man committee, Sens. Harold Herd, D-Coldwater, Theo Saar Jr., D-Pittsburgh, and Charles
Inchely, D-Kansas City, and two Republicans, Sens. Steadman Ball, R-Atchison, and Jack Robinson, R-Wichita.
Entire Stock Not Included
Feb. 4 KANSAN 17
1970
The sources said Moscow does not want direct involvement in the Middle East, nor any confrontation with the United States, unless it sees no other way out of its dilemma.
The rejection followed two weeks of suspense while committee members deliberated on the former Leavenworth county sheriff's qualifications. A vote would have been taken last Thursday had it not been for a technicality in Senate procedure.
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High court denies Sinatra petition
Sinatra's lawyers had previously sought a federal court ruling declaring the commission unconstitutional and asking that a special three-judge panel be formed to hear his argument. At the same time, he requested a temporary restraining order against the contempt citation.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Supreme Court denied a petition by singer Frank Sinatra seeking to stay a contempt citation by the New Jersey Commission of Investigation for failure to respond to a subpoena in its inquiry into racketeering.
The Supreme Court ruled against Sinatra on a split vote. Justices Hugo L. Black, William O. Douglas and Thurgood Marshall disagreed with the majority, and Justice William J. Brennan did not take part.
When subpoenaed last June 25, Sinatra told the commission he did not have to respond because he considered the commission unconstitutional and its proceedings "accusitorial." Anyone who appears before it is thus denied due
Winners of the competition will be announced in April.
Ryun places in Hearst photo contest
Jim Ryun, Wichita senior majoring in journalism, has been chosen as one of twenty finalists in a photojournalism contest sponsored by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation Journalism Awards.
The Hearst Foundation sponsored the annual contest in journalism categories including general news, features, editorials, photojournalism, spot news and investigative and interpretative news.
Ryun will now enter final competition which will be completed by March 23. Top prize in the contest is a $1,000 cash prize plus a $1,500 scholarship. Prizes will be awarded to the top ten finalists. All finalists and their schools will receive medallions.
process of law, his lawyers contended.
An early indication of majority sentiment by committee members toward Woodson came Monday when the committee introduced a bill that would upgrade the qualifications and salary for the post.
The measure would require that appointees have a minimum of five years of executive experience in prison administration, either in state or federal penal systems. Under present law the governor can appoint a person whose experience he judges to be equivalent.
The commission issued a warrant for Sinatra's arrest on the grounds of contempt.
The Supreme Court disagreed in its Tuesday denial of application for a stay, which it rendered without comment. The New Jersey commission is now free to pursue its contempt action against Sinatra.
Sinatra's lawyers consequently told the Supreme Court an indictment against Sinatra would do him and his career irreparable harm. The questions they want to raise in their appeal to a circuit court are substantial, they should delay the contempt indictment until the questions are settled by the Circuit Court.
Woodson's experience has been mostly in county and municipal law enforcement, although he did supervise a federally-approved jail. Some legislators felt Woodson's lack of specialized experience was responsible for his not stemming prisoner unrest at the Kansas Penitentiary at Lansing last year.
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A final roll call vote on confirmation of Woodson will probably come Wednesday in the full Senate.
The committee's bill would also raise the salary from $15,000 a year to $25,000 a year.
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Two professors oppose fluoridation
By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas professors are opposed to legislation calling for mandatory statewide fluoridation of drinking water. They are James L. Koevenig, professor of biology, and Albert Burgstahler, professor of chemistry. Both Koevening and Burgstahler feel that the public has not been adequately informed of The harmful effects of fluoridated water.
Koevening said there was no way to regulate the amount of fluoride that an individual would consume in drinking water, and proponents were not considering the evidence which has shown fluoride to be harmful.
Burgstahler will give testimony opposing the bill at a hearing before the Kansas House of Representatives' public health and welfare committee. The hearing is scheduled for 2:45 p.m. Wednesday.
Other people from the Lawrence area to attend the hearing are Ronald Koehn, a Lawrence pharmacist, Ellis Couch, a graduate student in chemistry, and Robert Stevens, a physician from Garnett. Mrs. Dorothy Roberts, who was active in opposing
OU seeks Hogs as 11th opponent
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (UPI)—The University of Oklahoma may be the University of Arkansas' 11th football game opponent, an Arkansas spokesman said today, but no final decision has been made.
Published reports today said the two schools would sign a contract for the 11th game.
"Oklahoma has been mentioned in discussions," said Jim Bell, sports information director for Arkansas. But of the reports of a contract signing, he said, "It has not gone that far that specifically with anyone. I don't think it's that far along at all."
Bell said Arkansas coach Frank Broyles wants the 11th game to be played in Little Rock on Sept. 12 "if he can get it."
Broyles is on a recruiting trip in Texas and will return to Fayetteville Fridav.
Bell said Broyles told him by phone Monday that he would have to "Sit down with some people and talk about it."
"Several teams want to come and play us," Bell said, "But he (Broyles) is not ready to mention them yet."
California has more than 50 winter sports areas in its National Forests.
fluoridation in Lawrence in 1953 and Mrs. Anna Burger, local chapter president of the National Health Federation will also attend. Mrs. Burger is the proprietor of a health foods store in Lawrence.
The bill would require flouridation of all public water supplies serving more than 1,000 persons by July. 1972.
Burgstahler, vice-president of the International Society for Fluoride Research and co-editor of Fluoride Quarterly Reports, has written extensively on the harmful effects of fluoridation. He believes that opposition to fluoridation has been blocked by medical and public health groups as well as local and state governing bodies which have "denied or discounted any evidence showing water fluoridation is not absolutely safe."
Burgstahler came to Lawrence in 1956 and began research in 1962 on enzymes inhibited by fluoride. He has actively opposed fluoridation since then. He participated in a forum on fluoridation held at KU in 1965 which featured a debate on fluoridation in which Burgstahler gave evidence from experiments which proved that fluoride had a variety of harmful effects on humans and animals. Approximately 500 persons attended the forum. Burgstahler described this as an excellent turnout.
Fluoridation of Lawrence water began in 1953. Burgstahler described it as a "quiet action" with very little publicity. He said that he later appealed to several city commissioners for an updated review of the pros and cons of fluoridation, but that all action was declined.
Among harmful effects attributed to fluoridation are headaches, constipation, arthritic flare-ups, nervous conditions and muscle hypertension. Fluoridation has also been linked with a hypothyroid condition. Over a long period of time fluoride seems to counteract iodine in the system.
Burgstahler cited cases in which these symptoms had appeared in patients after they began drinking fluoridated water, and said they disappeared when the patient returned to drinking unfluoridated water.
"It was definitely the fluoride content," he said, "because the patients were also given water containing sodium chloride and other minerals normally found in water. Only fluoridated water produced the symptoms."
Fluoride has also been connected with air pollution, and has been deemed a worse air pollutant than sulphur dioxide. Burgstahler described fluorine gas as a continuous pollutant, saying that when mice were exposed to low level atmospheric fluorine, the ill effects of the gas did not
Lord Bertrand Russell will be cremated Thursday
PENRYHN, Wales (UPI)—The body of Lord Bertrand Russell will be cremated and the ashes scattered following a private funeral without religious ceremony on Thursday, friends of the family said Tuesday.
Russell—mathematician, philosopher and pacifist—died Monday night at the age of 97. The body was taken from his home at Plas Penrhyn in the Colwyn Bay Crematorium in North Wales for cremation at 1 p.m.
"There will be no flowers and no funeral cortege as such," a friend of the family said.
"Lord Russell was extremely positive in his wishes that there would be no ceremony what-soever. It was a deeply felt wish. He could not have been more specific about it, and his wish will be honored."
Russell requested that his ashes
18 KANSAN Feb. 4
1970
In Cairo, the interparliamentary conference meeting there Tuesday released a statement from Russell attacking Israel which was believed to be the last message from him on human rights.
wear off, and repeated doses worsened symptoms and eventually caused death. Mice exposed to low level atmospheric sulphur dioxide fully recovered when it was removed from their air supply.
be scattered, and Lady Russell will decide the place for that, the friend said. Lady Russell, 69, the former Edith Finch, an author from New York when she married Lord Russell in 1952, was with him when he died.
The message, read over a Radio Cairo broadcast, said Israel could not be forgiven for "condemning refugees to hardship" and "driving Arab countries into giving priority to military requirements."
If the bill is passed, 1 part fluoride per million parts water will be added to public water supplies. Burgstahler said that the normal fluoride content of the human body is only one hundredth part per million. The natural level of fluoride in water is dependent on its source. Under the proposed fluoridation plan, drinking water will contain at least 100 times the normal amount of fluoride found in the body. According to Burgstahler, fluoride collects in hard tissues of the body particularly in the lower back. He said the condition is aggravated if a person has any type of kidney ailment. Koevenig pointed out that a diabetic who normally consumes 11 or 12 glasses of water per day would receive twice the amount of fluoride that a healthy person would.
A member of the Russell household said Russell's death was "very quick."
"He was only confined to his bed for a day with influenza, and a few days before that he was in the garden with Lady Russell and enjoying himself," the householder said.
Despite the harmful effects attributed to fluoridated water, Burgstahler said a majority of dentists support fluoridation programs.
"Dentists have not been exposed to enough information concerning the harmful effects of fluoridation in professional journals," he said.
As an alternative to fluoridation, Burgstahler recommended mineral enriched diets for children and adults. He cited several cases in which diets of children enriched with calcium and phosphorus actually arrested tooth
decay. Burgstahler said that too many minerals and other nutrients were lost in the food processing methods used in this country, and if they were replaced, the enriched diet could successfully replace fluoridation as a method of decay control.
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lamps - pictures - frames - books
-music - dishes, a lifetime accumulation
of everything - everything priced.
2-6
Two Kappa Sag lavigilans for sale,
easily dumb freshmen condition. 2-5
daily in the bright freshman.
For Sal: LP records, approximately 100, old, but good selection, many in each. Woman's brown jacket, size 12, looks new. 842-3688, evenings.
Old fur coats for sale in limited supply. Muskrat, lamb and martin in various colors. $30 to $40 each (cash). V 1-3274 or 1730 Illinois. 2-9
LA PETITE GALERIE
+
"with-It" fashions for Daylight and after-hour also Men's wear by Arpeia Lower level 910 Ky., Lawrence
Galvae
Rajdal
910 KY.
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
Minnie Pearls
'COUNTRY-FIED' CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
VI 3-8200
1730 W 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
HIXON STUDIO
R
Bob Blank, Owner
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
1967 Pontiac Firebird Sprint OHC 6, air conditioning, power steering and brakes, gold with gold interior, very good condition, one owner, V1 2-8.70
RECEIVER. Heath AR-15, assembled.
1970 Consumer Report. AR-15 is the best receiver we have tested. Ex-
pansion 350. 150 watts RMS. Phone 842-9
8227
Usd$ Magnavox Color TV—sold new $308.50—now only $225.00—with free shipping on most and perfect color. Ray Stoneback's downtown, open Mon, and Thurs. evenings.
Usad Magnavox stereo component system with built-in AM-FM radio, a surround sound and very little, was $75.00. Ray Stoneback's back, Open Mon, Thurs events, 2-9
Stero *Systems*--factory cost plus 10% handling charge. AR and Dynaco duality. Revox and other lines available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
SANDAL SALE -20', off on all custom made sandals until Feb 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Prima-ly Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Hohner El-Eltic Piano with hardshell case. Good condition, stays in tune, sounds good. Call Jack Manahan, 913-648-1777 or 913-649-4096. 2-6
For Sale - hardly used Smith-Corona
house typewriter Call Scott
75462 825-524-652
'63 Ford for salv. 2-door, standard.
'64 Honda at Skelly station, 2-10
and Louisiana. 2-10
Two sports coats, new; new size 42,
Herringbone, one gray, one brown.
$17.50 each. Call after 5:00 p.m.—842-
0455. 2-10
Ha'nam-Kardon 50 watt AM-FM receiver; 2 walnut enclosed air suspension 12" 3-way speaker systems 842-5225 or 616 Kentucky. 2-10
For Sale: Gibson LG1 6-string, Mahogany 2 piece back, sides; spruce top; sunburst front; excellent condi-
tion; $15.00 Call Dave Perkins.
5024 2-10
"64 Imnaal Convertible - 6 cylinder aus-
pendent good condition $252
842-164-8088
NOTICE
Math tutoring—for almost all undergraduate courses; experience; call VI 3-6776 after 5 p.m. 2-9
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 1-2008
1 Lawrence Kansas 66044
Raney Drug Stores
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest,925 Iowa Downtown,921 Mass.
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
TICKETS ONLY
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
- Badges
- Favors
- Stationery
- Mugs
- Paddles
- Guards
- Guards
- Lavaliers
- Rings - Crested - Letters
- Gifts
PLANNING A TRIP??
645 Moss. LNB Bldd. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Make Your
- Loyaliers
- Stationery
- Gifts
- Planners
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-hi-toed 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
Malls Shopping Center
- Recognitions - Paddles
Let
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay $19 each, plus 10% handling. AR & Dynaco business Call 642-2047 if needs 4 injuries to 10.
- Plaques
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moeasins, hiking boots, also custom made belts, watchbands, sandals, purses, vests, primaries at 812 MEDICAL PRIMARILLY LEATHER
Barn available for barn parties Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-13
VI 3-1211
One female roommate for 2nd semes-
sion and two male roommates for
& close to campus Call 842-791-3244
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 styles to choose. Located on Eisenbown. PRIMARILY LEATHER, 182 Mass. 3-2
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903'1. Mass. St. laundry was folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early same day service. In early 3-2
WANTED
KU Karate Club and Women's Self-
Defense new accepting new members:
Wednesday and Thursday. 7 p.m.
Robinson Gym, Room 211. 2-5
Wanted. Two girls need third roommate for 2 bedroom apt. Ridglea. Call VI 2-3654. 2-6
Three men need 4th to share 6th floor apt at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities paid except phone. Call after 5:30 VI 2-7770 2-9
Male student to share my furnished apt. 2 blocks from KU Art Museum and to be appointed $42.50 per month, income in office and utilities. 842-3436 or 842-1615.
Home of the "Big Shef"
Need 1 or 2 replacement roommates to occupy beautiful Gatehouse apartment for second semester. Call 843-
293-103.
BURCER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Three man need 4th to share apt. at Jayhawke Towers. All utilities paid except phone. Originally $67,50, willing to go to $50. Davi V. 2/18/2014 - 2-9
FOR RENT
For rent to upperclass women, large comfortable sleeping room, share kitchen and bath, utilities paid, available Jan. 6th. Tel. VI 3-1858. 2-4
Large furnished room with private large kitchen. Meals provided Call 842-4473 after 6
Will sublase at discount a Gatehouse apt. 2 bedroom Electric Kiteleen, Dishwasher. Wall to wall carpet. 843-0048. 244
Furnished sleeping room available now. $35. Men only. Call 843-2116. tt
One, two bedroom app. Furnished
until sold. Contact us for details.
Apples available now Call 843-2161 if
you need them.
Entire basement apt. Private entrance,
rooms, fireplace, utilities paid $130.00
per month, available now; for 2 or 3
rooms $145.00; March 2–March
Phone 843-0570 or 843-6011.
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work Call VI 3-2818. Mr. Raucmank.
Table Tops
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
or the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona electric, Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Accurate typing of theses, manuscript papers by experienced typist IBM ribbon clibon, pien type Reasonable price for pres. Mrs Phylliss Nelson VI 2-1214
Typing done on electric machine. Thesis, dissertations, term papers. Fast, reasonable rates. Call 842-1561 000.
HELP WANTED
LOST
Wish to employ noon hour supervisor for elementary school lunch room and play ground. 11:30 to 12:30. Phone VI 3-4686 for interview. 2-9
Camp Fire Girls need counselors for its resident camp. Girls must be at least 19 years old and have some camp experience. We are particularly interested in waterfront instructors, worked with nurses. For applications, write Mrs. Rhoda lock. Camp Fire Office, 1014 Armstrong, Kansas City, Kansas 65120. 2-5
FOUND
Lost—lack men's wallet. Need
urgent. Reward. Call 842-621-2
22-9
Found: 1 pr. man's glasses. Found by Robinson last month. Call John Valentine at 843-0826. Owner must pay for ad. 5-10
Sirloin
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University Senate to discuss changes
Raymond Nichols, Secretary of University Senates and Councils and Secretary of the Senate Executive Committee, announced today a special meeting of the University Senate Thursday, February 5, at 3:30 p.m. in 409 Summerfield Hall.
Nichols said the meeting will consist primarily of discussion on changes recommended by the Committee on Organization and Administration of the University dealing with newly proposed rules and regulations of the University Judiciary as outlined in the Senate Code. The proposed changes have been drawn up as a result of last spring's ROTC Review demonstrations.
The changes recommended provide for a University Judiciary consisting of a Hearing Division and an Appellate Division. The Hearing Division would consist of a panel of 12 students and 12 non-students, excluding the Law
School faculty, and four members of the faculty of the Law School. The Appellate Division would consist of one member of the Law School appointed by the Law School dean. Also included would be another member of the Law School faculty appointed by the Committee of the School of Law and Chief Justice of the Student Court.
The committee's proposal would give the Hearing Division original jurisdiction over any charges brought by any member of the University community against another member, excepting parking and traffic regulations cases. Also the Hearing Division would have jurisdiction to again review disciplinary proceedings.
The Appellate Division would have appellate jurisdiction to review all proceedings conducted by the Hearing Division. The review would consider whether the Hearing Division afforded the
parties to due process of law and acted within the powers granted to that division.
If adopted the new University Judiciary would abolish the present Disciplinary Board and the Board of Disciplinary Appeals. Nichols said this action would improve formal and informal hearings and erase possibilities of vagueness with past proven unflexible and inadequate operations of the boards.
In order for the committee proposal to be a success it must be presented to the University Council consisting of 39 faculty members, 11 students and the Chancellor. Two-thirds or 34 of the 51 members of the council must vote in favor of the proposal on Thursday in order for it to pass. If the change is approved it will then be recommended to the University Senate.
Other proposals include changes in the terminology of the Senate Code and a proposal
to change the present three-point grading system to a four-point system.
Education to play large role in controlling pollution crisis
Nichols said the reasoning behind the grading change was because more schools throughout the U.S. are using the four-point system.
Dr. James E. Allen Jr., the U.S. Commissioner of Education, has urged a major effort forthwith to create environmental ecological education at every student level and for adults.
As President Nixon put it in his State of the Union message, "the great question of the 70's is shall we surrender to our surroundings or shall we make our peace with nature and begin to make reparations for the damage we have done to our air, to our land, to our water."
By United Press International
Environment clearly will be the burning issue of the 1970s in America.
Education has a stake in this—a big one.
He calls it "education for survival" and his reasoning is that education is the key to survival because "in a free society it is always the citizen who must bear the ultimate responsibility for the choices that are made and the actions that are taken."
Critics attack Vietnam war
In an address to the American Council of Learned Societies, the
Goodell said if the committee did not clear his bill in some form, he would find some other way to bring it to the Senate floor for a vote.
Fulbright said that additional hearings would be scheduled sometime after the current two-day session. Secretary of State William P. Rogers will be a witness at later hearings, he said.
Goodell urged the committee to approve his bill requiring total U.S. withdrawal by Dec. 1. He said the measure would be "shock treatment" to encourage the Saigon government to negotiate with the Communists.
Members of Fulbright's committee gave Goodell no support, some of them saying any such withdrawal would lead to anarchy in South Vietnam and end all hope of a negotiated peace favorable to the United States.
However, he questioned whether "it might not be judged as safe and wise to negotiate a prompt end to American participation in the war, leaving the Vietnamese factions to fight it out among themselves."
(Continued from page 1)
former President Lyndon B. Johnson in March 1968 and continued by President Nixon were "far preferable" to previous military buildups, Fulbright said.
(Continued from page 1)
20 KANSAN Feb. 4
1970
EARLY MORNING DRINK:
The Captain's Table serves all of your favorite morning beverages. Start the day with orange juice, coffee, tomato juice, tea, grapefruit juice or hot cholate.
nation's top education official said;
"We must begin to teach not just one but two generations of Americans, simultaneously, all that they must know to revive the earth on which we live."
Dr. Allen challenged American education down to every local school district "to replace confusion with knowledge . . . to replace concern with commitment and action.
"The teacher we intend to send into our public schools in 1980 is today a sixth grader somewhere in America." Dr. Allen said. "He or she must be taught, beginning right now, along with every American boy and girl, about environmental quality, about ecology and about all of the complex and interacting elements that go to make them up.
The commissioner noted that some universities now are establishing departments of environmental sciences but he said similarly oriented programs are needed in grade schools, high schools and junior colleges so that all students "know the basic facts about environment just as you and I learned addition and subtraction."
"We and they must learn together—and in the spare time we have left, we must begin to write the textbooks for this new educational enterprise. That future teachers will enter college in 1976 and textbooks will have to have been written and published, courses mapped out and instructors trained in this new disciplines."
Abernathy fails to appear
(Continued from page 1)
said he had traveled through
"sleet and snow to tell what I knew, only to be refused the right to do so because I was 16 minutes late."
"My heart goes out to my brothers on trial," Kunstler read from the statement.
The statement said Abernathy had "just returned from abroad as an ambassador of goodwill for this country.
"After my experience yesterday in this court I can no longer defend my country against such attacks."
"When I was asked difficult questions about my country's system of justice and equality I groped for words to explain that both existed," the message said. "When foreigners said 'You have no democracy, no justice in America' I attempted to prove that we did."
CAPTAINS TABLE
sua
PICTURE LENDING LIBRARY
Rent a picture for
a semester February 4-5
9:00-5:00
SUA Office 75c Per Picture per semester
DO IT TODAY:
The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute invites you to a
FREE MINI-LESSON today in Parlor A of the Student Union 3:00 and 4:00
DO IT TODAY:
PHONE VI3-6424
Come see how more than 1,000 K.U. students have averaged an increase in speed of $ 5^{1/2} $ times and an improvement in comprehension of 7-10%.
Representation issues before Senate
Medical students want a greater voice in their education. Students at the University of Kansas Medical Center are involved in a confrontation with the faculty in Kansas City to gain that voice.
Brian Biles, third year medical student and representative to the student senate, introduced a resolution to the Senate last night asking the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) to investigate the restriction of students from school government.
The Senate Code, passed last year, guarantees KU students a position on committees. Biles said medical students feel they also should be included in a decision-making position on the Kansas City campus.
The resolution was passed by the Senate. It is hoped, Biles said, this will put the "pinch" on the faculty to allow students to share in governing the Medical Center.
Presently students are concerned about not being allowed to aid in choosing a new head of the Surgery Department. When two students offered to sit with the committee, Dr. Santiago Grisolia, Surgery Chairmanship Search Committee head, said in a memo, "the committee has unanimously voted to decline the kind offer of student assistance."
The Student Senate at the Medical Center then selected three seniors, who were appointed by the dean, to aid in the choosing of the new department head. They are not allowed to sit on the faculty committee, but instead meet separately with the nominees. The selection of the new head will rest sup-
(Continued to page 16)
JACK M. GROSSMAN
Photo by Greg Gorman Chuck Loveland
T. R. C.
Photo by Ron Bishop Steve Hix
Representation was the principal issue at Wednesday night's Student Senate meeting. Steve Hix, freshman class president from Overland Park, told the meeting the freshman class presidency was a meaningless job.
The class president, Hix said had the power only to organize class parties. Hix said his campaign platform stated he would strive to get the freshman class a membership in the Senate, and this platform, Hix said, he believes resulted in his election.
Two alternatives to achieve this goal were presented by Hix. One, that freshman officers elected in October become members of the Senate upon their election, or that freshmen should elect class representatives when they elect class officers.
Hix proposed that next October an exclusive election of freshmen to the Senate be held. He added this would be contradictory to the Senate Code, and then raised the thought of changing the code.
Hix presented the Senate meeting with signed petitions from the freshman class members and said the support from within the Colleges Within a College is needed for the proposals to succeed.
David Awbrey, Senate president, complimented Hix for his efforts but did not outwardly commit himself to support or fight the proposal.
The meeting also marked the return of Marilyn Bowman, elected last year as Senate Vice-president but suspended from
(Continued to page 16)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.72
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, Feb. 5, 1970
ROTC status outlined
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., in a Kansan interview Wednesday, outlined the present status of ROTC on campus and the outlook for the future of the program.
In response to the Kansas legislature's adoption of the resolution that pledges support for ROTC, Chalmers said, "The resolution does not in fact do any violence to our ROTC program. It did what it was intended to do—it gives a strong legislation
endorsement to ROTC on campus."
"The question we face with ROTC," he said, "is, 'Can we be sure the courses are evaluated correctly?' We also have to incorporate ROTC into the University more effectively. Most people are concerned with the problem that ROTC does exist and not how we can improve it."
Chalmers said ROTC's relationship with the rest of the University was only an artificial separation. "It's an outsider to, say,
the English department of Fine Arts, but it's not a separation of individual personality," he said.
When asked about the ROTC curriculum and its relevance as an academic discipline, Chalmers said, "The war training aspects are not conducted on campus but are conducted in summer programs off campus or after officer commission ceremonies. I don't personally believe that ROTC drill should be granted credit—and it isn't at KU—but many
CAUTION
HOT AIR
BLOWER
Photo by Greg Sorber
People who live in plastic houses...
Trucks maneuvered two sections of the trailers to be used for University office space down the hill next to the Student Union and backed onto an empty lot north of the union Wednesday afternoon. The trailers came in half sections and are covered with a large plastic sheet. The other sides of the trailers will arrive tomorrow. A similar structure sets between Summerfield Hall and New Haworth Hall.
By United Press International
UDK News Roundup
U.S. bids for Olympics
WASHINGTON—President Nixon gave his formal backing Wednesday to the United States' bid to gain the Olympic Games in 1976.
Nixon issued a special proclamation for the U.S. delegation to the International Olympic Committee meeting in Switzerland later this month when the site will be picked.
Senate clashes over ABM
WASHINGTON—Democrats and Republicans clashed on the Senate floor Wednesday over whether expansion of the Safeguard antiballistic missile system is vital to U.S. security or a round of "nuclear gamesmanship" with the Soviet Union.
Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., said Nixon's decision to extend Safeguard deployment beyond two initial sites in Montana and North Dakota "just about eliminates any possibility of reaching agreement" with the Russians over mutual control of multiple nuclear warheads.
Nixon man opposed
WASHINGTON—Opposition to 37-year old Charles J. DiBona as director of the Selective Service system is so strong in the Senate Armed Services Committee that President Nixon may never nominate him to lead the draft.
...
Campus briefs
Forum features Nixon adviser
Connie Mack Higgins, one of President Nixon's top advisers on Negro affairs, will speak at KU on Tuesday. Feb. 24.
Higgins is currently the special assistant to the administrator of the Small Business Administration and worked closely with Nixon during his presidential campaign.
The event will be sponsored by the SUA Forum committee and the College Republicans. Higgins will speak on "Black Capitalism in the Nixon Administration."
Lecture on politics slated
Victor Ferkiss, professor of government at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., will lecture on "Technology and the Future of Politics" Friday at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Chalmers speaks at SUA forum
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. will answer questions tonight in a forum presented by Student Union Activities at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
The forum, part of the University Seminar program, will be composed entirely of Chalmers' responses to questions. This will be one of several forums conducted by SUA on campus personnel, said Bill Read, Coffeevyville senior and SUA board member in charge of forums.
ROTC commander named
Franklin Dunn, Virginia Beach, Va, senior, has been appointed commander of the KU Naval ROTC Midshipman Battalion.
Dunn assumed comand from Ralph E. Chatham, Chagrin Falls, Ohio senior, and received the appointment from Capt. J. O. Marzluff, the commanding officer and professor of naval science at KU.
Dunn has worked on the unit's newspaper, the Seahawk, and has served as the editor of the University's undergraduate honor's research paper, Search.
He was also a member of the drill team and assistant battalion public affairs officer.
Researchers awarded grant
Two research associates in the University of Kansas Bureau of Child Research have been awarded a federal grant to study the effects of music on the learning rate of retarded children.
The recipients are Vance W. Cotter and Joseph Spradlin, resident associates in child research. They received a $31,458 grant from the U.S. Office of Education.
KU professor opposes bill
A delegation of opposition to a bill on state fluridation of water was lead yesterday by Albert W. Burgstahler, professor of chemistry at the University of Kansas. House Bill 1624 of the Kansas Legislature House Committee on Public Health and Welfare received some arguments against its passage.
At 2:50 p.m. in room 529 of the state capitol, vice - chairman George L. White called the committee meeting to order. One hour and 45 minutes and nine speakers later, Burgstahler spoke
"No Senate division members of the House or Board of Health members were present as they were two weeks ago," said Burgstahler. "This means they didn't want to hear what we had to say or they felt it was highly insignificant."
pessimistically about the results.
Burgstahler said he thought the press should give the public views to both sides of the issue so the public would know what was happening.
If proponent witnesses had been cross-examined two weeks
ago," he said, "they would have been disproved."
Burgstahler and eight other speakers offered facts and private experiences to the committee, hoping to persuade them not to pass House Bill 1624. A committee member said it was unlikely that the committee will meet again before it makes a decision on whether or not to pass the issue on to the House next week.
Dinner opens oriental new year
Kansas legislature seeks to revoke tax exemptions
State Senator Frank S. Hodge, R-Hutchinson and majority floor leader, gave three reasons for consideration of the bill.
The Kansas legislature is working on a new bill that would revoke residence hall and student union tax exemptions.
The bill, labeled SB 434, was introduced to the legislature with the plan that any university buildings not actually contributing to the educational processes would no longer be tax exempt.
The first reason was that the committee working on the bill wants to remove property tax exemptions which are now constitutional. This means university property not taxed now would later be susceptible to it.
Secondly, the residence halls and student unions that are exempt from property taxes are competing with private property
MADRID (UPI)—The Spanish economy made great strides during the past year, according to recent statistics. Imports rose by only 1.1 per cent over the previous fiscal year, while exports increased 14.8 per cent. Spain's commercial deficit, $2.09 billion in 1967, was reduced to 1.9 billion at the end of 1968.
SPANISH EXPORTS RISE
which is not exempt and the Senate would like to eliminate this problem by removing exemptions.
Finally, Sen. Hodge said the fact that residence halls and student unions are exempt from taxation makes the situation unfair for those private institutions whose residence halls and unions are not exempt.
Reactions to this proposal have been generally the same at KU. Vice-chancellor of Finance Keith L. Nitcher said if the bill passed the legislature it would be necessary to raise student fees and residence hall rates again.
"The dorm rates are already too high and we hope the residence hall and the student union tax exemptions are retained." Nitcher said.
William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs, said he also thought the tax exemptions of the student union and residence halls should not be removed.
"We feel the Kansas Union and the residence halls contribute to the educational function of the University and should not be taxed," Bailour said.
Balfour also said if the state no longer takes up the burden of paying for the operation of the Union building the student body will have to subsidize the needed funds.
The staff of the department of Oriental languages and literatures will introduce their colleagues at a dinner Friday.
The dinner will mark the first Chinese New Year for the staff's colleagues in East Asian Area Studies.
The introduction will take place in the Westminster House, 1204 Oread.
With the aid of a $135,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, Dr. Robert J. Squier, professor of anthropology at KU, will leave this month for more than two years of research in southern Mexico.
Assisting Dr. Squier will be Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Katz, KU graduate students, and Mrs. Squier.
Feb. 5
1970
The Captain's Table cooks breakfast all morning. The eggs, sausage, hash browns, bacon, ham, and pancakes sizzle from 7:00-11:00 Mon.-Sat.
2 KANSAN
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 CRESCENT Rd.
Squier to survey ancient culture
BREAKFAST 7-11:
During his research period Dr. Squier will conduct exploratory surveys of the ancient Olmec culture of the Los Tuxtlas region. He will search for clues to urban development, customs and art.
M. E. D.
Albert W. Burgstahler
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Bridge Over Troubled Water
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Birth control clinic closes
The board of directors of the Douglas County chapter of Planned Parenthood met Tuesday to decide its future course.
The Planned Parenthood clinic, $1035\frac{1}{2}$ Massachusetts, closed Jan. I because it could not provide adequate services to its numerous patients. The clinic was designed to serve low income persons in the community but was being used almost exclusively by KU coeds.
Mrs. Darrell Duby, chapter director, said board members felt services comparable to those offered by Planned Parenthood should be provided for KU coeds by Watkins Hospital. At present, Watkins provides counseling to anyone, and distributes contraceptive devices to coeds who are married or about to be married.
The board decided to provide information concerning contraceptive methods and devices in the form of a leaflet which will probably be distributed through the Dean of Men's and Dean of Women's Offices. The leaflets will tell where birth control counseling and devices can be obtained in Douglas County.
"The board feels it is vitally important that this information be made available to college students," Mrs. Duby said.
Planned Parenthood also plans to distribute information on abortion in a separate publication. Plans for re-opening the clinic will be announced later.
Donations to the Planned Parenthood Association can be sent to the Kansas City chapter, $332_{1/2}$ Troost, Kansas City, Missouri, Mrs. Duby said.
Patients of the clinic have been referred to a private physician or to the Lawrence Public Health Department. Dale L. Clinton, physician for the Public Health Department said devices and information are available to anyone over 18 at the department clinic Monday through Friday. Medical examinations are not required but will be given if requested. Dr. Clinton said coeds are referred to Watkins Hospital for medical examinations.
Applications due
The deadline for men and women to apply for the Associated Women Students (AWS) Leadership Institute is Feb. 13. The fee for the institute, to be held on Feb. 20-21, will be five dollars.
The program will be presented at the First United Methodist Church.
No living cell, tissue or organism can live without phosphate.
A. S. H.
Leonard Harrison
The Kansas Board of Regents which met Jan. 25 discussed Harrison's position as consulting lecturer to Herman D. Lujan, associate professor of political science, and whether a man with a court conviction should be a lecturer.
Leonard Harrison, director of the Ballard Community Center said Tuesday the controversy over his teaching of Political Science 164 has been over played.
Controversy 'overplayed'
"The real question," Harrison said, "deals with academic freedom. Black people can not allow white America to determine who has black experience. The blacks are not hung up on credentials."
with state funds, but Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced Tuesday that it would be more appropriate for him to be paid from non-state funds, which is in keeping with University practices. Harrison said he did not know how he was going to be paid; he was on the outside.
political oppression on the national and local level," he said.
In regard to blacks today and in the future, Harrison said blacks have become more unified than ever before.
At first, Harrison was to be paid
Harrison, born in Enid, Okla., attended Central State College and Phillips University. He lived in Wichita where he worked in the poverty program. Upon moving to Lawrence, he became assistant director of the Ballard Center and now is the director.
"There is unity due to legal and
Feb. 5 KANSAN 3
1970
Texas proclaimed independence from Mexico Nov. 1, 1855.
Interest rates remain at high levels in Kansas
Interest rates will probably remain at high levels, and the resulting changes in the supply and demand for loanable funds will continue to have its greatest impact on the real estate market, said a recent issue of Kansas Business Review.
Gaumnitz said "in periods of rapid economic growth, the trade-off between debt and equity swings heavily in favor of equity. In order to compensate for the shift, debt instruments have to offer the creditor a higher rate of return."
Prof. Jack Gaumnitz of the University of Kansas School of Business said institutions which are normally lenders of capital are seeking more compensation through higher interest rates and equity participation in addition to the basic loan agreement.
'World not ready said James Brody
Brody, heir to an oleomargarine fortune who created havoc last month by announcing he intended to give money away, telephoned United Press International to sav:
SCARSDALE, N.Y. (UPI)—Explain the world is not ready for him yet, Michael James Brody, 21, announced his retirement Wednesday.
"I'm sorry for my sins. I don't have 48 missile bases. I don't have any of that stuff. I can't seem to get anywhere in the United States. I am calling my career to an end. The world isn't ready for me. it's too greedy."
He also claimed to have made a record so controversial that RCA would not release it.
"Because of their relatively low interest yield, real estate loans are not good investments for banks at this time, Gaummitz said. This means that insurance and savings and loan companies must be depended on to finance housing.
Because insurance companies have little incentive to invest in single family housing due to the low interest yield, they are investing more in large commercial apartment projects where the yield is higher.
This leaves the savings and loan institutions alone in the single family housing market with the net effect of a sharp decline in the number of single housing units constructed, said Gaumnitz.
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CHANCELLOR E.L. CHALMERS QUESTION / ANSWER SEMINAR
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KANSAS COMMENT
COMMENT
Getting around
God bless Henry Ford! God bless AmeriCar
God bless Henry Ford! God bless AmeriCar! This is the land of the automobile, from Atlantic to Pacific, lined bumper to bumper every inch of the way. AmeriCar has more autos than any other nation because we are willing to sacrifice.
We are willing to sacrifice the landscape. Imposing hills are dynamited and bulldozed, leaving gaping holes through which our cars can pass at 80 miles per hour. We spend millions of dollars each year to uproot ancient trees and replace them with pavement.
Along with income and gasoline taxes, we also sacrifice huge monthly payments, pay for constant repairs, and spend fortunes to feed and insure our automobiles. But in many cities, no amount of money could buy enough space to even park this proud possession.
The biggest sacrifice, of course, is our own health. Our automobiles are killing us, both directly and indirectly. (Some would argue that cars don't kill people—people kill people. This is a standard argument which also applies to guns, knives, and atomic bombs.)
Traffic deaths have become accepted as an unfortunate necessity. People are more bored with highway casualty tolls than they are with the Vietnam death counts. They are not impressed enough to even buckle up their seat belts.
But the most pressing threat of the automobile is its pollution of the air. The U.S. Department of the Interior has reported that about 75 per cent of the air pollution in AmeriCar is caused by transportation engines. Four years ago, H.E.W. secretary John Gardner warned, "None of us would wish to sacrifice the convenience of private passenger automobiles, but the day may come when we may have to trade convenience for survival."
That day has arrived. Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe recently noted that the number of automobiles in this country is increasing at the rate of 10,000 per day. Automobile usage, he said, is increasing by about 40 per cent every eight years.
People in AmeriCar are addicted to cars, and kicking the habit won't be easy. But there are alternatives. In Europe and Japan, modern subways and monorails have almost eliminated the need for private automobiles in a few cities. If the automobile and gasoline interests could be subdued, effective mass transit systems could be developed in this country.
What's going to happen to this nation when it realizes it must give up its beloved car or else face destruction? Things won't be the same when people have to ride the monorail or stay at home.
Goodby Henry Ford! Goodby AmeriCar!
—Joe Naas
1870 King Baltimore hands the Ward rights reserved.
La Cause Celebre
WASHINGTON—In his recent State of the Union message, President Nixon reminded Americans that: "The greatest privilege an individual can have is to serve in a cause bigger than himself."
hearing voices-
Wants police switch
To the editor:
Much concern over last year's controversy on the subject of the campus police bearing firearms was expressed, exhausted and resolved (for the present apparently) by the words of the chancellor, the staff, and students with the reality in mind of potential danger existing on the campus. I feel this controversy was unnecessary. Whether the police carry firearms or not probably has little effect on the deterrence of crime, because the campus police force seems to be more concerned with parking tickets and directing traffic than they are with the safety of the individuals they fine.
At this point I must confess that I speak from a prejudiced point of view for two reasons. First of all, I have received several parking tickets. Secondly, I have had my car broken into twice. I reported the first crime; the officer at Hoch found it quite humorous. He asked me if I wanted a patrolman there to guard the rest of the cars. I said I did. He said that it would be impossible to send one. The total amount of money lost (including damage) was approximately 95 dollars. Needless to say the second time my car was broken into I realized the futility of reporting it, so I didn't.
I am sure similar things have happened to many other persons.
What would be wrong with having women in Cushman carts giving parking tickets?
Women could even run the control booths. More policemen could take patrols during the day, but especially at night, in cars and on foot, to help make people feel just a little safer and secure.
How can the citizen be expected to respect the "law," if
the "law" doesn't show respect for the citizen?
Robert E. Fisher Auburn, Neb. sophomore
\* \* \*
To the editor:
Despite conflicting political opinions regarding the Vietnam War, there is a humanitarian issue that all of us should be in agreement on—that the saddening inhumane treatment of American POW's in Vietnam be modified at once.
As of this writing 1,361 men are listed by the Defense Department as prisoners or missing in the geographical area of Vietnam and Laos. 419 of these men are known positively to be captive, the remaining 942 are in the "missing" category, but believed to be in captivity. Only 12 others have been released. Many of these men have been in communist prisons for more than five years.
The claim of North Vietnam is that American servicemen interned in their country are "war criminals" and not prisoners of war. Though a 1957 signatory to the Geneva Conventions, the Republic of North Vietnam has never complied with any of the humane rules for war prisoners. (1) They have not released a list of men held prisoner—hundreds of families have endured years of anguish knowing not if their loved one is alive or dead. (2) They have not released the sick and wounded. (3) They have not allowed inspection of prison camps by a neutral nation or agency. (4) The flow of mail is almost non-existent —in five years only about 800 pieces of mail has come out of Viet prisons, and this from the same 100 men.
The few men returned to us have come home in deteriorated physical condition. They have testified to rat-infested prisons where prisoners are not
allowed to talk with or even look at each other without being tortured for doing so. American prisoners have been deprived even basies such as food and proper medical care.
The plight of our prisoners and their families could be altered if enough people could be stirred to voicing their concern for our men. North Vietnam has in the past shown to be receptive to world public opinion—as in 1966 when our men were to be hung as "war criminals" Hanoi stopped action because of outpourings of concern from around the world. If enough of us would again speak out, Hanoi might feel pressured to release our men, or at minimum to comply with the rules of the Geneva Conventions.
Following the Korean truce in 1953 a total of about 1,000 American prisoners were never returned to us. These men are still imprisoned in North Korea and China—more than sixteen years following the truce. (The number remaining alive is down to about 300 now.) Unless we are individually moved to action, a heartbreaking repeat could very well occur for the POW's of North Vietnam.
Won't you help, please? Write to your newspaper and magazine editors (foreign and national), TV and radio commentators, your representatives in Congress, and to the president of North Vietnam. Express your desires concerning prisoner treatment, and support the tenets of the Geneva Conventions.
Jan Kettell Ft. Walton Beach, Fla.
- * *
To the editor:
I am not, of course, completely sure of either the accuracy or comprehensiveness of the Kansan's report of David Abrey's views on Freshmen
Class representation in the Student Senate; however, I would like to take issue with the views that were printed in the January 8th issue. Particularly I have three basic objections:
(1) The members of the freshmen class are not represented by the Senators elected from the Colleges-within-the-College. Many of us are juniors (who should also be represented) whose financial, social and academic interests are often considerably different from those of freshmen. There have been many problems for myself, as a senator representing Corbin College, in communicating with freshmen in that school. I have very few of them as classmates and my schedule permits little time to attend house meetings, floor meetings, sit at tables in dorm lobbies or interview people on the streets.
(2) The freshman class does have special interests which do deserve to be articulated. Examples of such interests are: (a) Decisions are presently being made to increase student fees for a satellite student union and some type of student health facility. The interests of freshmen who may benefit from such facilities are indeed contrary to those of juniors who are having to help pay for them, but will, in fact, never be able to use them as students.
(b) Freshmen should be permitted to articulate their interests on a University-wide basis (such as through the Student Senate or one of its organs) on such matters as the value of academic requirements such as the Speech requirement, the language proficiency requirement and the western civilization program and comprehensive exam. Many senators who are not freshmen do not have to face such requirements any longer
and, hence, do not feel obligated to express the views of those many underclassmen who feel such requirements unfair or unnecessary. Freshmen often have the additional problems which accrue from dormitory life and other forms of mass university life in which many of us who have been at KU a year or two longer are not forced or have chosen not to participate; i.e. athletic events, concerts, large classes, etc.
In fact, who knows what kind of problems the freshmen have? I believe the opportunities of the freshmen to articulate their problems are limited simply because they are not aware of the techniques and machinery of the University governing structure as they would be if their representatives would be permitted to participate.
(3) The contention that irregularities and injustices should be permitted to continue simply because of technical difficulties in a governmental bureaucracy smells like a lot of warmed-over apologetics soaked in elitist contentment with the status quo. David Awbrey is being paid to take the time to represent all the students at the University of Kansas.
Jeff Lough Salina junior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Send resume to the mester, 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Academic and employment advertised offer all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
KINSAN REVIEWS
PLAYS: Contemporary Theatre
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Arts & Reviews Editor
A fine example of the modern theatre can be found in "The Homecoming" by Harold Pinter. Deep drama mixed with some comic moments is typical of the play like many found in the theatre of the absurd.
The total production is excellent including the acting, directing and sets.
All of the characters give exciting performances so it is difficult to single out just one actor.
Even so the best performance is turned in by Gerald Radkin as Max. His character is a delight to watch and makes one sit up and take notice of this truly outstanding actor.
Another very good performance is given by Roy Sorrels as Lenny. Several good moments can be found in his lines with Ruth. He fully develops his character and gives a fine example of an actor who can play several roles and play them well.
Earl Trussell as Sam and Ruth Forman as Ruth are also good in their performances. The key to these two performers, and to the others as well, is believability.
Both of their characters are so real that one actually feels there is a chauffer and mother of three on the stage instead of a senior and sophomore in college.
Trussell gives a thorough, realistic performance of the brother who receives constant static from Max and in the end can not take what the family does to Ruth and what she does to them.
Miss Forman builds from her entrance in scene two to a forceful character who enters the life of four men creating important changes in the previously quiet life of the household residents.
Her performance is excellent forcing the audience to except and believe what she is putting before them. She is mysterious and causes much of the deepness in the play through the effects she has on these men.
Also aiding in the overall production by giving good performances are Robert Findlay as Teddy and Van Button as Joey. They both, like the other characters develop their role into something which is complete with no part of the character left untouched.
All of the performers are very good and each has obviously given his character a great real of attention and thought. They all act to each other making the production an ensemble with everyone reacting to each other and not merely reciting their lines.
The direction of James Hawes is excellent like the performances. He has taken an exciting, superb play, accurately casted it and made the final production one which can very deservedly take its place among other good productions of the season.
The play is one which is entertaining and quite good. But for some theatre-goers contemporary theatre may not be appealing.
Barbra aids the retarded
NEW YORK (UPI)—Barbra Streisand is Honorary Chairman of the National 1970 Membership Drive for the National Association for Retarded Children, a voluntary non-profit organization representing 215,000 parents, friends, professionals and youth devoted to the care of the mentally retarded.
Feb. 5
1970 KANSAN 5
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Steve McQueen
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Panavision"& Technicolor"
A Cinema Center Films Presentation
A National General Pictures Release
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Eve. 7:15 - 9:20
Granada
TREATNE...Telephone VI-3-5784
"Miss Streisand will help us bring to the attention of the public the great need for more members to help the 6 million mentally retarded persons in the country," said Francis White, president of the Association.
Granada
INLATEX--telephone VI 3-5788
BOOKS
A LITTLE TREASURY OF MODERN POETRY, edited by Oscar Williams (Scribner's, $4.75)
—A handy hardback volume, in paperback size, that ought to appeal to many students of literature. The book represents a new revision, brought out again because, in the view of the publisher, the poetry occupies a new place in the world. True, and some newer ones are here, though not the ones you may find in the underground press, even though Ferlinghette, Ginsberg, LeRoi Jones and many
others are represented The book begins with Emily Dickinson, and from there to some of the angry ones is quite a jump.
...
NEW WRITING IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA, edited by George Theiner (Penguin, $1.65)—An anthology that contains examples of poetry and short stories, some newly translated. Most of these will not be known to American readers, who need to become acquainted with Czech literature as they have become acquainted with the brilliant Czech cinema
POLITICAL LEADERS OF LATIN AMERICA, by Richard Bourne (Pelican, $1.65)—A series of political biographies that look closely at important leaders. Those considered are Che Guevara, Argentinian revolutionary who died in Bolivia; Eduardo Frei, president of Chile; Alfredo Stroessner, dictator of Paraguay; Juscelino Kubitschek, president of Brazil; Carlos Lacerda, Brazilian, and Evita Peron, wife of Juan Peron of Argentina.
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He's hard to stop...
Dave Robisch continues to dominate the Big Eight in scoring and rebounding with 30.4 and 16.4 averages, respectively.
Robisch sets torrid pace
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—Dave Robisch is towering over Big Eight basketball teams in much the same fashion as some of his Kansas predecessors.
Athetics like Clyde Lovellette and Wilt Chamberlain dominated the conference in the past. And Robisch is following them.
After five league games, the 6 foot 9 in. Springfield, Ill., junior is scoring 30.4 points and collecting 16.4 rebounds each game. Both figures are conference highs.
Robisch, in fact, is on his way to setting a conference scoring record. Chamberlain set the mark in 1958 with a 28.3 point average. Lovellelain nected 28 points a game in 1952.
Chamberlain, Lovellette and Don Smith of Iowa State are the only players ever to win both the scoring and rebounding titles in the same season.
Cliff Meely of Colorado trails Robisch in the scoring derby with a 21.7 average and Iowa State's Bill Cain is second in rebounding with 16.0 per game.
6 KANSAN
Feb.5
1970
Kansas State sophomore David Hall is the conference's No. one percentage shooter. He's made 37 of 65 field goal attempts for a .569 percentage. Nebraska's Tom Scantlebury leads the free-throw shooters with 22 of 26 for .846.
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Rodgers adds new assistant replaces departed Weaver
One of the nation's leading high school football coaches, Billie Matthews, was added to coach Pepper Rodgers' University of Kansas staff Wednesday.
Matthews, coach at Houston's Cashmere High School the past 12 years, will take over the reins as a varsity assistant to Rodgers with his specialty to be determined later. The 39-year-old Negro replaces Doug Weaver, defensive end coach for the past three seasons, who resigned to join a Lawrence law firm. Weaver, former head football coach at Kansas State, graduated last month from the University of Kansas School of Law.
Coach Rodgers said the appointment of Matthews will become effective in about two weeks.
Matthews guided his Cashmere club to the Houston city
EWBANK STAR ATHLETE
NEW YORK (UPI)—Weeb Ewbank, coach of the Superbowl winning New York Jets, was a quarterback, captain of the baseball team and member of the basketball team during his college days at Miami, Ohio. In 1946 Ewbank was basketball coach at Brown University in addition to backfield coach of the gridders.
championship with a 12-1 record last season. His team also captured the district and bi-district titles in the tough Texas high school playoffs.
A Houston native, Matthews graduated from Southern University at Baton Rouge, La., in 1952. A standout athlete during
his playing days, he quarterbacked the Jaguars to an 11-0 record and the national Negro championship as a freshman. During his four years as a player, Southern won 90 per cent of their encounters, for a fantastic record of 37 triumphs and only four losses.
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Cincinnati, Big O continue controversy over 'trade'
NEW YORK (UPI) Oscar Robertson and Bob Cousy are in perfect accord on one thing, anyway.
Robertson says he has nothing personal against Cousy and Cousy says the same thing about Robertson, which means pretty soon, who knows, they may even open a restaurant together.
Who's kidding who?
They're cordial with each other but how can their association still be the same after what has happened? Matters came to a head
Rugby in tourney
The KU Rugby Club, a member of the Heart of America Union, will kick off the spring schedule Saturday, Feb. 7, with an appearance in the New Orleans Invitational rugby football tournament.
The KU club, which had a 13-4 record during the fall season, is rated as one of the country's top amateur rugby teams. The team is self sponsored and receives no university funds.
Two other major tournament bids have also been extended to the squad. Tentative plans include trips to the St. Louis Rugby Tournament and the Chicago Invitational.
The group also hopes to sponsor a Big Eight meet in Lawrence later in the spring. Only three other Big Eight schools compete in rugby — Colorado, Missouri and Iowa State—so it is anticipated that some non-conference squads will complete the tournament roster.
Among the scheduled spring competition are encounters with St. Benedicts, Rockhurst, KC Blues, Iowa and Missouri at Rolla.
Gray re-instated on frosh squad
Leonard Gray, freshman basketball standout from Kansas City, was back at practice with the KU basketball squad Tuesday after being held out of Monday night's encounter with Metropolitan Junior College because of a misunderstanding.
Varsity coach Ted Owens said he talked with Gray and assistant coach Sam Miranda Tuesday morning.
"The matter was entirely a misunderstanding and it has been cleared up completely," Owens said.
Owens said he would have no further comment about the Gray affair.
"We have an important game with Nebraska to prepare for and that is all we are thinking about right now," Owens concluded.
Official Bulletin
Today
Fee Payment: All Day
Jayhawk Hoggers Club: East Door,
Robinson Gymnasium: 4:30 p.m.
Special film: Twelve O'Clock
Hospital, duchateau; 7 & 9 p.m.
KU Synchro Club: Natatorium,
Robinson Gymnasium: 7-9 p.
"The Homecoming." University
Theatre, 8:20 p.
Feb. 5
1970 KANSAN 7
SUA Special War/Anti-War Film Series TWELVE O'CLOCK HIGH February 5 Henry King, USA, 1949 Short: Double Whoopee, Laurel and Hardy 7 & 9 p.m. Dyche Aud.
this past weekend when Robertson, whose supporters call him the "greatest playmaker since Shakespeare," was traded to the Baltimore Bullets by the Cincinnati Royals, for whom he has starred 10 years.
Robertson, 31, took a hell-no-I-won't-go attitude about the deal since the Cincinnati club hadn't even consulted him beforehand. Besides, Cousy and the Royals had been guilty of a small oversight. They hadn't checked his contract. Had they done so they would've noticed that special clause, the one that says Robertson has to okay a deal involving him before it actually can be made.
Uneasy Situation
So the trade with Baltimore was nullified and Robertson finds himself back where he started, with a club that desires to send him elsewhere. It isn't the best situation for either Robertson, the star of the ball club, or Cousy, the man who coaches it.
One of those who can appreciate the situation is Jerry Lucas. He used to be with Cincinnati but he's with the San Francisco Warriors now. He began the season with the Royals, had been one of their big guns for six years but asked to be traded and Cousy obliged him.
He also said he had nothing personal against Cousy when he left the Royals.
"I asked to be traded because I felt I wasn't going to fit in with their style of play," he says now. "It had nothing to do with my
Carlos plans strategy for pro negotiations
SAN DIEGO (UPI) — Former Olympic competitor, John Carlos, the current "World's Fastest Human," has his bargaining strategy all mapped out for his negotiations with the Philadelphia Eagles about becoming a pro football player.
Carlos is asking $1 million to play ball with the Eagles and if they want him, "they can take it from there."
"I can see starting at $400,000 and working up to $1 million," he said Tuesday, "so I start at $1 million and work down."
Carlos was drafted by the Eagles despite never having played football at San Jose State College.
"I played a lot of street ball and that's more valuable . . . you take more knocks and fall on that concrete without shoulder pads or any protection," said the 6 feet 3 inch 203-pound sprinter.
feeling for Bob. I felt I would be better somewhere else."
Robertson Set To Leave Robertson feels the same way now.
KU basketball stats
"I've conditioned my mind that I won't be here next year," he said from his home in Cincinnati Tuesday, "and it's perfectly all right with me." Robertson keeps insisting he and Cousy "get along fine." That's true. It all depends on your definition of fine.
| G | FG | FGA | Pct. | FT | FTT | Pct. | Pct. | RB | Ave. | PF | Dq. | TF | Aave. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Roblisch | 17 | 166 | 339 | .490 | 177 | 177 | .474 | 284 | 13.2 | 48 | 1 | 42.6 | 27.0 |
| Stallworth | 17 | 112 | 258 | .434 | 39 | 51 | .715 | 122 | 7.2 | 52 | 2 | 263 | 15.5 |
| Russell | 17 | 89 | 174 | .511 | 51 | 19 | .765 | 169 | 9.2 | 52 | 4 | 223 | 13.5 |
| Nash | 17 | 40 | 90 | .444 | 37 | 29 | .481 | 43 | 2.5 | 47 | 4 | 117 | 6.9 |
| Kivisto | 17 | 29 | 76 | .382 | 29 | 77 | .481 | 26 | 1.5 | 31 | 1 | 87 | 5.1 |
| Lawrence | 16 | 13 | 53 | .434 | 11 | 23 | .478 | 19 | 1.2 | 22 | 0 | 57 | 3.6 |
| Brown | 15 | 18 | 38 | .474 | 8 | 23 | .364 | 19 | 1.3 | 31 | 0 | 44 | 2.9 |
| Boslevae | 14 | 10 | 32 | .313 | 13 | 17 | .765 | 21 | 1.5 | 16 | 0 | 33 | 2.4 |
| Mask | 9 | 3 | 14 | .214 | 4 | 7 | .751 | 11 | 1.2 | 4 | 0 | 14 | 1.1 |
| Mathews | 8 | 3 | 3 | 1.000 | 0 | 0.000 | 3 | 0.4 | 1 | 0 | 6 | 0.8 |
| Others | 3 | 2 | 9 | .222 | 2 | 8 | .250 | 2 | 0.7 | 1 | 0 | 6 | 2.0 |
| KU Totals | 17 | 495 | 1086 | .456 | 331 | 504 | .657 | 690 | 40.6 | 306 | 12 | 1232 | 77.7 |
| Opponents | 17 | 472 | 1161 | .424 | 248 | 369 | .672 | 619 | 40.6 | 306 | 12 | 1192 | 77.1 |
KU Basketball Statistics
Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals won three games in the 1967 World Series.
Joe Kuharich was the only Notre Dame football coach never to have a winning record.
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Bars, students under study
Local bars have become part of academic study as well as social meeting places at the University.
Stan Lybarger, Leawood sophomore, interviewed 43 male and female students at the Jayhawk Cafe and the Rock Chalk Cafe. The experiment fulfilled an independent research requirement for Psychology 2.
"Satisfaction sites," said Lybarger, "was my lead going into the experiment." The theory concerning satisfaction sites states that people gain from congregating in a place with a number of people. Lybarger hoped to prove that different personalities frequent different sites to obtain satisfaction.
Criteria were set for the sub-
Cancer cure predicted
Two University of Kansas professors have received attention for their work on a cure for cancer. Mathias Mertes, professor of medical chemistry, received a $29,162 grant from the National Cancer Institute.
John K. Morrow, assistant professor of physiology and cell biology at KU, predicts a cure for cancer possibly in 10 or 15 years.
Morrow said it was possible there were those who would argue about his prediction but he pointed to the progress already made.
"There are some cancers we can cure now," he said.
Morrow is concerned with fusing cancer cells of mice with those of humans, hoping the origin of cancer cells will be established. One theory he is investigating is that a normal cell becomes cancerous because of changes occurring in the genes.
When cells are introduced to each other, they exchange genetic parts. This is the foundation on which Morrow and other scientists have based their research. Morrow's mixing of cancerous mouse cells with normal human cells enables him to observe the results.
Mertes' grant will make it possible for him to continue his work and still augment a five year Career Development Award Mertes received three years ago.
Mertes is searching for a selective inhibitor for thymidylic acid, considered to be a controlling factor in cell division. The abnormally rapid rate of cell division related to cancer is dependent on the rate thymidylic acid synthesizes in the cell.
By treating isolated enzymes with various agents, Mertes hopes to discover an inhibitor which could stop the cancer process.
Feb. 5
1970 KANSAN 9
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The subjects were given a questionnaire with sets of matching questions. One set of questions, for example, was: "Do you like persons of the opposite sex?" or "Do you like to listen to the problems of others?" Lybarger then classified the subjects according to personality by their answers.
jects tested in the cafes. They had to spend a minimum of four hours a week in their respective bars and patronize one bar exclusively.
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Lybarger's theory that people with different personalities frequent different sites was supported by three personality examples. In one case involving nuturance, meaning listening to others' problems, Lybarger discovered girls frequenting the Rock Chalk Cafe had higher scores than girls at the Jayhawk Cafe.
Lybarger attributed this to the Rock Chalk's environment. Its small size creates a much closer atmosphere. Rock Chalk patrons seem to spend longer periods of time at the bar than patrons of the Jayhawk, Lybarger said.
Another personality example
supporting the theory was autonomy, or doing your own work. Men at the Rock Chalk liked to do their own work more than men from the Jayhawk.
Lybarger said he reasoned this was that patrons of the Jayhawk are usually from living groups and thus have more opportunity to get help from other group members. Rock Chalk patrons are usually independent and therefore work alone.
Lovell to retire
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—Apollo 13 commander James E. Lovell said Wednesday he will retire from space flying after he explores the foothills of the moon's highlands in April.
Lovell, who will be 42 next month, has already logged nearly 24 days in space on three missions and he will be the first man to make a fourth spaceflight when he, Thomas K. Mattingly and Fred W. Haise set out for the moon April 11.
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THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 CRESCENT Rd.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
UNCLE JOSEPH
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Responsibility? — You'll never believe!
Involvement? — Up to your neck!
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Learning? — Learn while you do!
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'Cutbacks may be unavoidable'
Budget looks grim
The University of Kansas is anticipating "an austerity year" for 1970, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said.
University officials met last week with the Kansas Joint Ways and Means Committee to discuss new university budget proposals. The proposals made by the Board of Regents were cut in appropriations, resulting in the favorable support of Governor Robert Docking.
KU presently works within a total budget of $48,735,681. The recommended governor's budget is $52,656,881.
"The governor's budget is reasonably good, but it does not provide for much needed faculty and operational improvements," said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor. "It just offsets inflation."
Offsetting inflation is a major problem for KU in the coming year. It has hit the university hardest in the area of construction, said Francis H. Heller, dean of faculties and acting provost.
The current proposal does not provide any new buildings, or the requested remodelling of Strong Hall, Green Hall, Flint Hall, Fowler and the mechanical engineering lab.
Docking's recommendations include an average 6 per cent increase over last year's salaries for faculty members. This is an area of major concern with the Board of Regents. The national increase for the 1969 fiscal year was 7.2 per cent. The President's Council recommended 20 per cent to the Board of Regents as necessary to close the competitive gap which has widened in recent years. The national increase has averaged 6.43 per cent for the 10-year period ending with the fiscal year 1969. The increase granted by Kansas legislators for the same period has averaged 5.42 per cent.
Nichols said proposals do fall short of expectations. Cutbacks, therefore, may be unavoidable, he said.
Recruiting begins for Peace Corps
Nichols has no speculations
The University of Kansas ranks first among 24 Kansas schools used as recruiting stations for the Peace Corps, said Cathy Dancy, member of the Peace Corps Western Regional Office of Public Affairs.
Miss Dancy is at KU to organize the annual Peace Corps recruiting and information week. The project is scheduled for Feb. 9-14, and will consist of class room lectures, an information booth at the Kansas Union, afternoon coffee hours and a panel discussion, Miss Dancy said.
Mario Karr, KU Peace Corps representative, said the panel discussion will be on the topic, "Is the Peace Corps Relevant?" The members of the panel will be KU students, professors and Lawrence residents. Karr said the discussion will be held at 4 p.m. Feb. 11 in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The purpose of the Peace Corps week, Miss Dancy said, is not only to recruit members for the Peace Corps, but also to inform the public of what the Peace Corps is and what it does.
Many people who are interested in joining the Peace Corps do not realize what the goals of working in the Peace Corps are, Miss Dancy said.
"We do not want Peace Corps members to go to a country and do a specific job for two years,"
10 KANSAN Feb. 5
1970
she said. "We want them to teach the people there how to do their job so that when the Peace Corps leaves, the job will continue to get done."
Miss Dancy said she had great hopes for the success of the Peace Corps week at the University of Kansas. The students and faculty of KU have always been very receptive to learning about the Peace Corps and working with it, she said.
where the cutbacks will center. Funds are still needed for overtime services. No appropriations were allotted for the year 1970-71, although in 1969 over $13,000 was spent in this area. There is also no allotment for disability and life insurance for faculty members. The regents requested over $119,000. There is no allotment in the governor's proposed budget.
Order improving after Biafran war
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI)—Maintenance of law and order are improving daily in the former secessionist region area of Biafra, a United Nations observer said Wednesday.
Docking's recommendations do provide for the following:
But there was a report of atrocities by federal Nigerian troops.
International sources said a team of representatives from Britain, Canada, Poland and Sweden would investigate a reported massacre of about 70 Ibo tribesmen last Christmas Day by federal troops.
- Appropriations to raise the student labor wages to the minimum federal requirement of $1.60 an hour. As of February 1, 1970, students are paid $1.45 an hour. However, students will not be paid the minimum requirement of $1.60 until February 1, 1971.
● $60,000 for extending water service to west campus and $100,000 for changing the voltage in the electrical system.
The first settlement in California, the Mission of San Diego, was established by Padre Junipero Serra on July 16, 1769.
- Salary increases for classified employees.
- Funds for equalizing the difference between the actual and estimated enrollment at KU. This problem, said Nichols, is not easily handled. The only way to control this is to control the number of out of state applicants.
The only new proposal suggested by KU was a centralized student placement office. Heller called the $24,000 allotment a "modest attempt" at such a program that would provide facilities and coordination in helping students find jobs.
Docking's proposals are presently before the legislature. Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, said the proposed budget should be accepted. There are no alleged cutbacks or changes, he said. A decision is not expected until next week or later.
EAT LUNCH ALL DAY:
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A Paulist is also the mediator of his age; he tries to bring together the extremes in today's world and the Church, the liberals and the moderates, the eternal and the temporal.
Next, he is very much an individual. It sets him apart immediately. He has his own particular talents and abilities — and he is given freedom to use them.
If you are interested in finding out more about the Paulist difference in the priesthood, ask for our brochure and a copy of our recent Renewal Chapter Guidelines.
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th
vietnam
truth
A SPECIAL COURSE with limited enrollment for those who wish to pursue the "truth" of Vietnam while improving their reading efficiency at least three times.
UUU
"... we can only move slowly and cautiously toward a new Asian policy."
- Edwin O. Reischauer
"...the United States reiterates its traditional position that peoples are entitled to determine their own future, and it will not join in an arrangement which would hinder this."
" . a continued primary reliance upon military power in dealing with insurgency may well bankrupt our na-
- Gen. David M. Shoup
"... the South Vietnamese government is a servile government, implementing faithfully all the policies of the American imperialists."
- Program of the NLF
"I am indeed convinced that the use we have been making of our power in Vietnam for more than a decade has been improvident and foolish ..." — Hans J. Morgenthal
- Hans J. Morgenthau
"The tragedy of Vietnam has divided us more than any conflict in our modern history."
-Nelson A. Rockefeller
"The Vietcong is in deep trouble and time is running out against the communist guerrillas."
- Joseph Alsop
"I will not be the first President of the United States to lose a war."
- Richard M. Nixon
"The major challenge is to assure security plus real economic and social progress in the countryside through a successful pacification program."
George Romney
"We seek no more than a return to the essentials of the agreements of 1954."
"we must ask ourselves whether all the sacrifice will have been for the benefit of the generals and a selfish elite.
- Robert F. Kennedy
- Lyndon B. Johnson
- William W. Boyer Landon Lecture Series
"I am convinced that had our leaders been readers, we would not be in the mess we are in today!"
"I would get out of Vietnam.
. . If I take a road and find myself going in the wrong direction, I see no purpose in continuing along it. I take another road."
- Konrad Adenauer
- Maynard Parker
Newsweek's Saigon Bureau Chief
"Vietnamization will solve none of the causes of the conflict. It provides neither a method of reconciliation nor a means for the total withdrawal of foreign troops."
"Without American aid to Vietnam's military and economic machinery, the country would not survive for ten minutes."
- Bernard Fall
WE ARE TIRED of hearing about Vietnam. But how many of us have even read about Vietnam? Have you read the Geneva Agreements? Would you like to? Would you like to read important primary sources, along with histories and agreements pro and con concerning our involvement in one of the greatest crises of our nation's history? Would you like to get involved in spirited discussions that only knowledge and viewpoints from diverse sources can generate?
IF YOU FEEL that you should know more about Vietnam and would like to improve significantly your reading skills, then Vietnam Reading Dynamics is just the course for you.
viet
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The Vietnam Reading Dynamics Course begins Thursday, February 12, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. at the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute (behind the School of Religion). All books and materials are provided.
PHONE V13-6424 NOW TO RESERVE SPACE IN THIS UNIQUE COURSE
vietnam.
truth
The building is designed to be accessible and welcoming for all users. It features a modern aesthetic with clean lines, a flat roof, and large windows that allow natural light to fill the interior. The entrance is marked by a staircase leading up to a large doorway, which serves as the main access point to the building. Surrounding the building are tall trees that provide shade and a sense of tranquility.
Photo by Bill Higgins
An artist's sketch of the Irene Nunemaker College building
Contractor's bids soon due for Nunemaker building
Bids for the Irene Nunemaker College building, one of the objectives in the Program for Progress, will be received Feb. 26, Irwin Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment Association, said Wednesday.
The structure will be made possible by a gift of $350,000 from Irene Nunemaker of New York City, a University of Kansas alumna.
The contemporary building will be constructed on the slope between Lewis resident hall and Jayhawker Towers apartment complex. The 10,000-square-foot structure will serve as an administrative center for Irene Nunemaker College, one of five Colleges-within-a-College. One of
the five present Colleges-within- a-College will be renamed for Miss Nunemaker.
The top floor of the building will have the main entrance on the west side at street level. A two-story glass wall will grace the rear of the building, which will face the southeast.
Housed on the top level will be administrative and faculty offices, a student advisory board room, an audio-visual room, a library and an apartment for visiting lecturers. A circular staircase will connect the top level with the lower level, which will contain class rooms, seminar rooms, public restrooms, a lounge and mechanical equipment.
(2)
New addition to Mallott Hall
Two stories are being added to Mallot Hall in order to provide more space for the chemistry, physics and pharmacy schools. The construction was started in November of 1969 and will be completed for the 1970 fall semester at an estimated cost of $568,420.
NO WAY-AT ALL JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES
The structure, designed by the architectural firm of Kivett and Myers of Kansas City, Mo., should be in use by second semester of next year.
Feb. 2-Feb. 7 ONLY
Mizzou favors inter-dorm visits despite warning
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—Residence hall students at the University of Missouri voted overwhelmingly to hold an "intervisitation" Friday night between men and women residents, house governors announced Wednesday night.
JAYHAWKER OFFICE
The governors of the 90 residence halls announced the results of Tuesday night's election by residents. A telephone poll late Tuesday predicted passage of the "intervistation" proposal.
The plan drew support from 62 of the houses with 20 against it. Eight other houses abstained.
The protest visits were planned by the Independent Residence Halls Association. They will be held between 7 p.m. and midnight Friday. House governors went back into session Wednesday night to set up visitation schedules.
Jack Matthews, dean of students, warned that students who take part in the activities will not be immune from disciplinary action.
Twenty campus fraternities recently drew suspension of privileges for a similar action. Hearings on that case continued on campus Wednesday.
Profs win funds for biology study
Two University of Kansas professors have been awarded grants totaling $45,493 from the U.S. Public Health Service for continuation of research career programs in the biological sciences.
They are James M. Akagi, professor of microbiology, and Paul R. Burton, associate professor of physiology and cell biology. The five-year awards cover yearly salaries, allowing the scholars to do intensive research in their fields.
Now in the fifth year of his program, Akagi is studying microorganisms which produce hydrogen sulfate that are found in environments with no oxygen. His research will focus on the enzymes of organisms.
Feb. 5
1970 KANSAN 11
Akagi said the study of these organisms was economically important because they could destroy certain industries. These organisms, he said, corrode steel and concrete, spoil crude oil and pollute streams.
His work is also of interest to space research since the organisms exist in environments with no oxygen.
Four graduate students who will assist Agaki are May Chan, Taipei, Taiwan, a Ph.D. candidate in microbiology; Constance Coleman, Kansas City, Mo., a Ph.D. candidate in microbiology; John Findley, Lawrence, a Ph.D. candidate in microbiology; and Carolyn Buntner, Topeka, an M.A. candidate in microbiology.
Burton, who is in the third year of his research under the career development program, is studying rickettsial organisms. He is experimenting to find out how the highly infectious organisms get into a cell and how the cell responds.
Burton said the organism was
pockyed by the United States as part of its biological arsenal. Although the organism is non- iethal, Burton said, it incapacitates by causing a high fever and severe headache.
David Paretsky, professor of microbiology, who has done pioneering research in the field, will be assisting Burton.
Nixon wants negotiations to limit arms
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon, in a stiffly worded note to Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, Wednesday called for negotiations on an agreement to limit arms shipments to both sides in the Middle East conflict.
The Presidential note was delivered to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin at the State Department. It rejected Russian assertions that U.S. support for Israel was to blame for mounting conflict in the Middle East and made it clear Washington holds Moscow responsible for contributing to the trouble by massive arms shipments to the Arabs.
Nixon was replying to a note from Kosygin delivered Saturday in which the Soviet leader sought to blame U.S. support to Israel for the intensified Mideast turbulence.
In his reply, Nixon rejected Kosygin's charges and said restoration of the United Nations cease fire and an agreement by all major arms suppliers to limit shipments to the area were high priority items on the agenda.
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1420 CRESCENT Rd.
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Women in ROTC
Women have invaded the KU's Army and Navy ROTC program. Gail Gordon, Prairie Village sophomore, and Diane Holdredge, Olathe sophomore, are taking the Army ROTC Military Science 52
ISP plans strategy, election
The ISP will "make an effort to attract the votes of those students who want the University to play this kind of role in the community—the role of leadership in channeling resources toward effecting meaningful change against ecological pollution and urban decay," George said.
On-campus issues, George said, will center around discrimination against women and the necessity for fuller implementation of the Senate Code.
A meeting was scheduled for Wednesday night to continue work on the platform and on selecting other possible student body presidential candidates.
The Independent Student Party (ISP) began making plans Tuesday night for the student elections in late March.
Possible candidates named for student body president were Peter George, first year law student from Tuckahoe, N.Y. and Bill Hansen, second year law student from Kansas City, Mo.
The primary points of the ISP platform were sketched and will include the "necessity of student involvement and contribution toward solution of problems which face the community and affect the University." Vietnam will not be an issue in the platform, George said.
and the Navy ROTC Operations Analysis 51 courses this semester.
12 KANSAN Feb. 5
1970
Miss Gordon and Miss Holdredge said they felt, "With our boys in the service, the least we can do is to know what they're getting into. Aside from that . . . it's interesting."
Procedures investigated
"The course is applicable to a merchant marine and deals with international law," Mahoney said. "In many ways, it can be useful to anyone, although it is oriented to train a naval officer."
Lt. P. F. Mahoney, instructor for the Navy course, said he thinks the girls have good enough qualifications to have little problems with the course.
Capt G. G. Vernon, who teaches the Army course, said to his knowledge this is the first time women have taken ROTC courses at KU. He added he thinks it will add a little extra interest to the course.
Asked whether the coeds would participate in the field aspects of the course, Vernon said, "The coeds would not actually be part of the drill."
A resolution calling for a study of personnel hiring procedures at state universities has been introduced into the Kansas House of Representatives by Morris Kay (R—Lawrence).
The resolution would authorize the legislative council to study personnel procedures and make recommendations to the 1971 session of the legislature. The resolution would authorize the study of "hiring, contractual relationships, provision for tenure, and teaching and research requirements practiced at present."
The legislative council, a group of legislators who meet at regular intervals when the legislature is not in session, is headed by John Drury, former KU political science professor.
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J. Sheldon Carey, professor of design, demonstrates his new art—glass blowing. Carey who is a nationally acclaimed ceramist undertook his "second career" with the hope to teach the creative art someday.
J. Sheldon Carey, KU professor of design, has taken up an old but new art--creative glass blowing
Potter turns to glass blowing
A former nationally acclaimed ceramist, Carey was named Outstanding American Potter in 1959 by Time magazine. But now he said he is fascinated by the mysteries of blown glass.
"I look on glass as my second career with many new horizons," said Carey. "It is one of the most exciting creative media with which to work. It is a form of dance-meshing rhythm between high heat, provocative thinking, speed and coordination. It is creating an object of esthetic merit from a glob of molten glass."
Carey made the unusual switch after nearly forty years of learning and teaching. He is now making a name in a new field while still upholding his artistry in ceramics.
He recently had some of his work in glass displayed at the KU Museum of Art as part of a design faculty exhibition. He has won several awards, including first place in its class at a National Aeronautics and Space Administration show in Denver last year.
One of Carey's main goals is to teach a course in creative glass blowing. He has the equipment,
The state bird of Texas is the Mockingbird.
but, he said, no classroom space is available. He presently has to be content with perfecting his technique and displaying his finished work.
Carey is both an innovator in ceramics and glass blowing. During his 1968-69 sabbatical leave he did extensive experimenting
with using prepared glass marbles. He said he has pre-mixed his ingredients in plastic bags, then put them into the oven where when plastic burned, leaving no contaminated materials. Also, he said he now substitutes volcanic ash to cut the amount of sand needed in a batch.
The Captain's Table serves all of your favorite morning beverages. Start the day with orange juice, coffee, tomato juice, tea, grapefruit juice or hot cholo-
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THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 CRESCENT Rd.
Drive begins Tuesday
Pershing Riffles will sponsor its spring semester blood drive Feb. 10, 11 and 12 in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
Michael Barnett, Hampton, Va., sophomore and chairman of the drive, said anyone may participate. All blood from the drive will be distributed to Kansas hospitals which are members of the Blood Program. The drive's goal is to obtain 600 pints of blood.
Pershing Riffes began its blood drive program in the 1968 fall semester and has scheduled a blood drive each semester since then.
Those wishing to donate may do so from the hours of 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Feb. 10 and 11, and 9:30 a.m. to 2:45 p.m., Feb. 12, said Barnett.
The official language of Ethiopia is Amharic.
Feb. 5
1970 KANSAN 13
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书
Read 3 to 10 Times Faster
Take the Evelyn Wood Course and join the more than 1,000 KU and Lawrence Reading Dynamics Graduates who now read faster, understand better, and remember longer.
These 1,000 students have averaged an increase in speed of over 5 times and an improvement in comprehension of almost 10%.
Which Reading Dynamics course best fits your needs and schedule?
The Regular Reading Dynamics Course:
Three Choices
Mon., Feb. 9, 9:30 - 10:20 A.M.
(Meets MWF for Seven Weeks)
Mon., Feb. 9, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks)
Wed., Feb. 11, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Twice a Week - Wed. night and
Sat. morning 10:00 A.M. - 12:30 P.M. for
four weeks)
The Freshman Reading Dynamics Course:
书
Tues. Feb. 10, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks)
This course is especially designed for freshmen, accenting study skills and incorporating first-year course material.
M
The Vietnam Reading Dynamics Course:
Thurs., Feb. 12, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks!
In this unique course you read and discuss Vietnam in-depth while at least tripling your Reading Efficiency.
Phone VI 3-6424 Now. Class Space is Limited.
M
Student fees are not equally distributed
Members of the Finance and Auditing Committee of the Student Senate said this week some of the money from the student activity fees allocated to the athletic department should be transferred to groups that have more need.
Each full-time student pays a $12 activity fee. Out of this activity, $6 goes to the athletic department and the remainder is distributed to other organisations. The athletic department received $170,387 from activity fees in 1969. Most of this money was used to reserve student seats.
Ken Gale, Glenbrook, Conn. graduate student and member of the committee, said the activity fee could be better used if it were diverted to purposes that were more academic.
"It is a question of priorities," Gale said. "The Student Senate must decide which is more important, athletics or urgent academic needs."
Gale cited Watson Library and Watkins Hospital as two areas that could not get enough money to provide adequate services. He said if the Student Senate would allocate the library more money, it could keep longer hours, provide needed reproducing materials for reserved books and repair
Feb. 5
1970
structural building defects.
14 KANSAN
Mark Retonde, chairman of the committee said if less money were given to the athletic department, students would be charged more for their football and basketball tickets.
Marilyn Hall, Frontenac graduate student and member of the Finance and Auditing Committee, said, "Many of us resent that such a large portion of our money goes to the athletic department without our control. We still must pay for our football tickets. All our activity fee pays for is the right for us to pay again.
"The state isn't meeting its responsibility at this university," Miss Hall continued. "Many urgent academic needs have not been met. Therefore, the students are going to have to take over. The student activity fees should be used to meet these needs."
Keith L. Nitcher, vice-chancellor for finance, said that as he understood it, the activity fee was to provide for student recreation and entertainment. Any decision made by the Student Senate will have to be approved by Nitcher.
No definite proposals to the Student Senate have been made yet. The finance auditing committee is making a comprehensive report of activity fees. All campus groups must submit their budget to the Finance and Auditing Committee by February 15.
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Smudge-ins are out!
FAST BREAKFAST:
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THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 CRESCENT Rd.
SALE THROUGH SATURDAY! TAKE 20% OFF OUR $9, $10, $11 SPRING DRESSES!
Sensational savings in our dress department—right now! Shifts, skimmers, buttonfronts, pleat skirts, ensembles and more! In snap-to-care-for cotton knits, acetate jerseys, look of linen rayons, more. Colors—all a girl could ask for. Sizes for juniors, junior petites, misses and half sizes.
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PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
informalWoman are offered to all
students with disabilities to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
1968 Camero, 327 V8 automatic with cossole shift, power steering, and air conditioner. 14,000 miles. $2100.00.
Contact Ron at 842-9100, rm. 540. 2-5
Groovy. Inflatable furniture - m any styles for dorm or apartment. Call VI 1-25801 between 6:30 & 7:30 week-days.
2-6
New Canon FT, QL single lens reflex,
fl 8 lens, meter, quick loading, case,
UV filter. More than $80.00 off list.
$179.50. Phone VI 3-9252. 2-9
New compact electric refrigerator,
ideal for study rooms, dens, etc. Put
away, only $89.99 Rock Shaker back's.
Downtown, open Mon., Thurs. nites,
2-9
ESTATE SALE: Community Building, 115 W. 11th, Lawrence, Kansas, Feb.
12-14. For antique and otherwise, of the historical
Jaedicke-Fischer House, 743 Ind. Inc.
chairs - Virginia sofa - love chairs -
lamps - pictures - frames - books
music - dishes, a lifetime accumulation
of everything - everything priced.
Two Kappa Siglav lavaliers for sale.
Three Kappa Siglav condition. we were dumb freshmen 2-5
For Sale: LP records, approximately 100, old, but good selection, many of each. Woman's brown fur jacket, size 12, looks new. 848-3-92 evenings.
Old fur coats for sale in limited supply. Muskrat, lamb and martin in various colors $20 to $40 each (cash) VI 3-274 or 1730 Illinois. 2-9
Kansan
Classifieds
Work
LA PETITE GALERIE
"with-it"-fashions
for
Daylight and after-hours
also
Men's wear by Arpeia
Lower level
910 Ky., Lawrence
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
1967 Pontiac Firebird Sprint OHC 6, air conditioning, power steering and brakes, gold, with gold interior, very good condition, one owner. I V 7-2798
RECEIVER: Health AR-15, assembled.
1970 Consumer Report: AR-15 is the best receiver we have tested. Phone 842-
8227 840-150 rms RTS. Phone 842-
8227 2-9
Uxed Magnavox Color TV— sold new $398.50—now only $225.00—with free shipping.
perfect color. Ray Stoneback—downtown, open Mon and Thurs. evenings.
Used Magnavox stereo component system with built-in AM-FM radio and a built-in very little mono $75. Ray Stonebakes' new Mono and Thurs. evenings. 2-9
SANDAL SALE-20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarily Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge, AR and Dynaco
dialship. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Hohner Electric Piano with hardstander case. Good condition, stays in tune, sounds good. Call Jack Manahan, 913-648-1777 or 913-649-4096. 2-6
For Sale—hardly used Smith-Corona electric typewriter. Call Carol, 842-7546. 2-6
'63 Ford for sale, 2-door, standard, overdrive. See at Skelly station, 9th and Louisiana. 2-10
Two sports coats, near new; size 42,
Herringbone, one gray, one brown;
$17.50 each. Call after 5:00 p.m.-842-
0455. 2-10
Harmon-Kardon 50 watt AM-FM receiver; 2 walnut enclosed air suspension 12" 3-way speaker systems. 842-5225 or 616 Kentucky. 2-10
For Sale: Gibson LGI 6-string. Mahogany 2 piece back, sides; sprucehurst finish; excellent condition; $1540 Call Dave Perkins, 82-2502
$1544
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder automatic, good condition. $525. Call 842-1694. 2-17
For Sale. 2-owner 1962 Impala 327,
factory air, power steering and power
brakes. Very good condition. Call any-
time. 842-5368. 2-9
New McIntosh 225 Arp, Lafayette pre-amp—indep. tuning, and two eight inch speakers-$300 value, sell for $175 Jay Steinberg, VI 3-171 1-21
Galvin Ragidak
Beautiful Bridal Apparel &
Formal Wear
910 Ky.
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
226 Mass VL 3-0501
926 Mass.
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
Table Tops
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
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Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
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DOWNTOWN
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202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
COIN OP.
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19th and La.
9th and Miss.
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
Heavy sounds—in your car—dig it,
reverb (echo chamber) for sale: $15
plus cost of ad. Call after 6 p.m., VI 3-
9001
2-11
For Sale. 1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass automatic transmission, bucket seats.-8: good condition. Just an anytime to sell. Only $500. Call 843-9588-211
SQUA TRONT—the leading EC fanziness! Issue No. 3 only $2.00 Frazetta interview, Crandall, Wrightson, Feldstein art DAN FLEMING, 1231 Ohi
For Sale: Zenith stent phonegraph.
Almost new. See at 1234 Tenn 2-11
NOTICE
Math tutoring—for almost all undergraduate courses; experience; call VI 3-6776 after 5 p.m. 2-9
515 Michigan St., Bair-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 2-9510. Closed Sunday; Tuesday t
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling. AR & AV specials. Call 842-204-9333 wonders 4 to 10.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roosts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Lapti. VA 3-4022. 5-13
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
sandals, sandals, purses, veils,
barrettes, shirts at 812 MUSEUM
PRIMARILY LEATHER
3-2
Student and family laundries done at Tari's Laundry. 1903' . Mass. St. Patrick's Church and folded, pressed press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service.
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 pairs to choose or own. PRIMARY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
KU Karate Club and Women's Self-
Defense now accepting new members:
Wednesday and Thursday. 7 p.m.
Robinson Gym, Room 211. 2-5
WANTED
Wanted: Two girls need third room.
Room 1: bedroom apt Ridgeley
V-2 3-6844
Z-2 4-6
2434 Iowa Y1-2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
startup service
---
Three men need 4th to share 6th floor
apt at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities
paid except phone Call after
5:30 VI 2-7770 2-9
Need 1. or 2 replacement roommates to occupy beautiful Gatehouse apartment for second semester. Call 843-2103.
Three men need 4th to share apt at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities paid except phone. Originally $6750, willing to go to $50. Dave, VI.2014 2-9
Wanted: Male graduate student to
work as a sales representative for $30 a month. Phone:
842-923-6656 evening.
842-923-6656
FOR RENT
Large deluxe studio apt—wall to wall carpeted—private bath, entrance and refrigerator—for two men. West Virginia 2, blocks. Evenings. V3-2587282
Furnished sleeping room available now $35. Men only. Call 843-2116, tf
For Rent—New two bedroom, luxury apartment. Large rooms. Quiet area.
Occupy immediately. Married couples or two girls only $150. 843-5848. 2-11
Entire basement apt. Private entrance,
private kitchen and bath, 1 or 2 bedrooms,
fireplace, utilities paid. $130.00 per month, available now, for 2 or 3 men. Also one available March 1
Phone 843-0570 or 843-8011. 2-10
One, two bdroom and 191. Furnished
bathrooms in various locations.
Available now Call 843-2116 if you
need them.
For Rent: 2 bedroom apartment, furnished—$140 a month. Call Mike or Tim at 842-5045. 2-11
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Wkl I 3-5281. Mrs. Rucknam.
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Fineest Shrimp, Chicken,
Hamburgers,
etc.
Hurry to Henry's
n & Mo. VI 3-213
Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. VI13-2139
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona electric, Call Mrs. Troxel. 2490 Ridge Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Accurate typing of theses, manuscript papers by experienced typist IBM printer, biblio type type Reasonable prices. Cleared up Mrs Phyllis Nelson VI-2-1243
Typing done on electric machines.
Thesis, dissertations, term papers.
Fast, reasonable rates. Call 842-1561.
7.10
HELP WANTED
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. ty-
pings, web writing, paperwriter with
Pia Pham. Competent Service, M-14
Wright. Phone 843-9554
Camp Fire Girls need counselors for its resident camp. Girls must be at least 19 years old and have some camp experience. We are particularly interested in waterfront instructors, women and nurses. For applications, write Mrs. Lock, Camp Fire Office, 1014 Armstrong, Kansas City, Kansas KC 61520 2-5
Wish to employ noon hour supervisor for elementary school lunch room and play ground, 11:30 to 12:30. Phone VI 3-4686 for interview 2-9
LOST
Lost—black men's wallet. Need urgently. Reward. Call 842-6221 anytime. 2-9
FOUND
Found. 1 pr. man's glasses. Found by Robinson last month. Call John Valentine at 843-0836. Owner must pay for ad. 2-10
Exclusive Representative
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Across from the Red Dog
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Representation
(Continued from page 1)
KU following her participation in the 1969 ROTC demonstration.
Hearings open on Vietnam
in the 1969 ROTC demonstration. Miss Bowman addressed the Senate and thanked the Senate for their support to her and expressed a strong willingness to re-assume her position. Awbrey thanked Frank Zilm, St. Louis senior, for filling in for Miss Bowman.
The next meeting of the Senate will be February 18, when the budget, including appropriations to Watkins Hospital and the Satellite Union as well as student fee increases will be discussed.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott, R-Penn., said Wednesday, barring a catastrophe, President Nixon would not replace troops he withdraws from Vietnam.
Scott assured the Senate Foreign Relations Committee the withdrawal process was "irreversible." But opponents of the war waged their toughest attack on present policies yet—suggesting Nixon planned to leave a residual force in Vietnam of up to
300. 000 men.
Scott told the committee if North Vietnam increases the level of fighting, it "might involve the resort to the use of American power to protect Americans as necessary."
Scott said, "I would not anticipate, barring some catastrophic occurrence—the entry of outside nations—that the reaction of the President would be in terms of escalating troops involvement."
Nixon has warned for nearly a
KU medical students confront facultv
possedly with these two committees. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer's Jr., told the students committee members it would be difficult for him to accept a man the students rejected.
(Continued from page 1)
When asked about the controversy surrounding student participation on the faculty committee to choose the new surgery head, Dr. Russell Mills, associate dean, said the faculty at the Medical Center voted some months ago about student participation on faculty committees. The result of the vote welcomed students "on all committees except those dealing with decisions concerning people."
Chalmers said having students on committees at the Medical Center was a new procedure and it raised some questions by the faculty.
When the students talked to the Chancellor about their position, he told them the best course of action was to go to the SenEx which then led to the passage of the resolution last night.
Chuck Loveland, first year medical student and Medical Center representative, presented the recollection, and said medical students are still enrolled in this University and are still ruled by the Senate Code. "At present, the medical students' voice is irrelevant in the running of the school." Loveland said.
Biles said the confrontation with the faculty is a part of the revolution in medicine. Students want a type of medicine which involves the community and not the kind which makes a doctor
year now any escalation of the war by Hanoi would lead to an appropriate U.S. response but has not said what it would be. Some assumed it would be a re-escalation of U.S. troop involvement.
just a store house of medical knowledge.
Students want faculty who see the students' side to head committees.
What students feel they can do if they get on these committees is have a voice in curriculum, implement community health programs for credit, and get a voice in choosing the department heads.
The committee opened hearings Wednesday on various resolutions dealing with the Vietnam War and is expected to conclude the three-day session Thursday.
If this resolution does not work, Biles said, other action will be taken.
16 KANSAN Feb. 5
1970
Chalmers views ROTC
appeal for faster disengagement—one of the most forceful made since Nixon's Nov. 3 address to the nation, which succeeded in neutralizing dissent from the antiwar blee.
McGovern charged Nixon, through "the skillful use of national television and the politics of manipulation," had "isolated and intimidated American critics of the war while identifying American interests with a regime in Saigon that is despised by its own people."
(Continued from page 1) universities do give credit."
for men interested in it as I support black studies for those who feel this is important to them."
"ROTC, I think, is a very valid function for a university to perform," he said. KU is open to all "comers" in the state of Kansas and the only responsible way to meet that circumstance is to develop a program to meet the needs of all students.
"KU is responsible to the state of Kansas and keeps ROTC to meet the needs of the state of Kansas. I firmly support ROTC
But Sens. George McGovern
D-S.D., Frank Church, D-Idaho,
Vance Hartke, D-Ind., and Clair-
borne Pell, D-R.I., joined in an
He said the Vietnamization policy, in which local forces take over the war as Americans leave, was "a political hoax designed to screen from the American people the bankruptcy of a needless military involvement in the affairs of the Vietnamese people."
Scott pleaded with the committee to back Nixon and relieve Hanoi of "the delusion that American people are divided about this war." He portrayed Nixon as trapped in a "net of fishhooks" which he must unhook one by one.
Looking closer to the future, Chalmers concluded by saying he did not anticipate any major disruptions this spring but did not rule out possible peaceful demonstrations. He said, "A lot of it has to do with our country's connection to the war in Vietnam."
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1420 CRESCENT Rd.
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829 Massachusetts
Student killed in car wreck
David L. Gore, Pawnee Rock junior, died Thursday at 11:15 p.m. as a result of injuries received in a three car accident at the intersection of 19th and Iowa Street.
Others involved in the accident were: Danny J. Jennings, 20, RR 5, Lawrence; Herbert Williams, 41, 1002 W. 24th; and Richard H. Huff, 42, 2514 Cedarwood, a passenger in the Williams car.
Bradley
Jennings was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and is reported to be in fairly good condition. Huff and Williams were treated for minor injuries and released.
David L. Gore
Williams and Huff were in one car and Jennings and Gore were alone in their cars. Both Gore and Jennings were travelling south on Iowa while the Williams car was north-bound on Iowa.
Lawrence police decline comment as to the cause of the accident, pending a thorough investigation and questioning of Jennings.
David Swenson, Sioux Falls, S.D., sophomore, an eyewitness to the accident, said the Jennings car flew into the air after hitting the Gore car, flipped over on its top and traveled approximately 100 feet in the air.
Lawrence police said Jennings' car skidded on its roof until it came to a halt 708 feet from the point of impact.
The impact of the collision was severe enough to tear the engine completely away from the Gore's car and hurl it several feet from the car's final resting place.
Police said Gore was thrown from his car, probably out of the drivers side. Williams and Huff said they thought Gore was thrown from his car before it struck them.
Swenson, who reported the accident to police, said he parked his car in the Alpha Kappa Lamba Fraternity parking lot, looked north of Iowa and the collision.
Swenson said as the Jennings car was sliding on its roof, sparks from the friction of the roof sliding on the pavement made the car look as though it was on fire. Swenson said, "metal was being torn and glass was breaking, it sounded like a metal crusher in a junk yard."
Several persons in the immediate area of the collision who did not see the wreck, but heard the noise, said the collision sounded like an explosion
Williams and Huff said it appeared to them that Gore's car was rolling over and over when it hit them. Swenson added that after the two cars
(Continued to page 16)
THE CAR CRASH.
Photo by Joe Bullard
A car is upside down in a puddle of water. A man stands next to it, looking at the damage.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Mangled cars reflect tragedy at 19th and Iowa Street
Two of the three cars involved in a fatal accident at 19th and Iowa Street Thursday evening show the destructive nature of the collision. The top picture shows the shattered Volkswagen driven by David Loren Gore, who later died at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The overturned Chevrolet was driven by Danny J. Jennings, Route 5, Lawrence. The Jennings car slid more than 200 yards on its top after striking Gore's car from the rear.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Code changes discussed
A special meeting of the University Council was held yesterday at 3:30 p.m. in 409 Summerfield Hall to discuss recommendations which would make changes in the Senate Code.
Following an Organization and Administration Committee report from chairman Marston McCluggage, professor of sociology, discussion ensured on three issues which McCluggage thought to be the most controversial.
The planned discussion recommending a University Judiciary never occurred in the two-hour session as members debated changes in terminology and voted on recommendations to improve present code regulations.
The issues were (1) Final Examination Schedules which read: The instructor of a course shall decide whether a final examination is necessary unless the department in which a course is given makes that decision. Decisions by the department or school would normally relate to multi-sectioned or service courses. As early as possible in the course the instructor shall inform the students of the function
of the examination in determining the course grade.
At one point in the discussion a motion was made to exclude the credit/no credit grading system from the University but an amendment was introduced and after some discussion, the credit/ no credit system was saved when Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and vice-chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee moved to retain the grading system.
(2) Grade points and grade point averages which states: Grade points are numerical weights assigned to completed hours of academic work, according to the following schedule of values: For each hour of grade A—four grade points; grade B—three grade points; grade C—two grade points; grade D—one grade point and grade F—zero grade points.
Von Ende said, "We need to keep a credit/no credit system within the rules of the University. I think in the future that we will get to a credit/no credit system with some real meaning and we will eventually move away
from letter grades. In keeping the system it will protect the student who decides to advance his education by going to graduate school."
The third major issue discussed was academic dishonesty to which was added the following sanctions which may be imposed upon a student or an instructor for academic misconduct. It read:
- Admonition: An oral statement that his present or past actions constitute academic misconduct.
- Warning: An oral or written statement that continuation or repetition, within a stated period, of actions which constitute academic misconduct may be the cause for a more severe disciplinary sanction.
- Censure: A written reprimand academic misconduct. Censure may include a written warning.
- Other sanctions which may be imposed upon a student for academic misconduct are:
- Reduction of Grade: Treating as unsatisfactory, work which is a product of academic mis- (Continued to page 16)
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Cigarette-cancer link found
NEW YORK—Two scientists produced Thursday what they said was the long-sought direct cause-and-effect proof that cigarette smoking causes lung cancer.
They got it from 62 dogs who were required to "smoke" nine unfiltered cigarettes daily for up to 875 days or two years and more than four months. Fourteen of them developed lung cancers.
Carswell vote delayed
WASHINGTON—A delay of 10 days in the committee vote on G. Harrold Carswell's Supreme Court nomination has given his opponents more time to search his private and public record.
They are seeking any evidence that Carswell's well's performance as a federal judge in Northern Florida shows an anticivil rights bias. They are also probing his private life for instances or suggestions of racial discrimination.
Hanoi objects to delegate
PARIS—Hanoi has all but ruled out secret peace talks with the United States so long as Ambassador Philip C. Habib heads Washington's delegation in Paris.
Habib's presence as the chief U.S. negotiator, a North Vietnamese spokesman said, means "the United States is downgrading the talks with the ultimate aim of sabotaging them."
Campus briefs
Counselors needed for camp
Counselors for the 1970 session of Midwestern Music and Art Camp are urgently needed, said Russell L. Wiley, camp director.
More than a thousand high school students from across the country attend the camp to study in the fields of music, art, journalism, speech and debate, science and foreign languages.
The session lasts eight weeks, from the second week in June until the last week in July. Room and board are furnished free to counselors and each counselor is paid $100. Counselors may enroll as many as six hours of summer school courses.
as instructors. Interested students should contact Ellen Garber, Room 214, Murphy Hall, or call UN 4-3755.
Physics prof will speak
Robert J. Friauf, professor of physics, will speak next Thursday and Friday, February 12 and 13, at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota.
The lecture is part of the Visiting Scientist Program, sponsored by the American Association of Physics Teachers and the American Institute of Physics.
The program organizes visits between physics teachers and the faculty and students of other universities. The visiting teachers discuss courses with the host college staff and offer suggestions to help improve the curriculum.
Friauf will discuss his recent research projects in diffusion of ionic crystals and the physics of the photographic process.
Jayhawker yearbook delayed
The fall section of the University of Kansas Jayhawker Magazine Yearbook has been delayed. Richard Louv, editor of the Jayhawker, said the delay was caused by the individual pictures taken of the freshmen.
Past Javhawkers have had group pictures of the new students.
"It took longer to strip them (the pictures) and lay them than we fleured," said Louv.
Louv said the fall section will be distributed February 23 and 24.
Faculty to attend seminars
Six faculty members from the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy will participate in the Fourth Annual Mid-Winter Pharmacy Seminars, Feb. 8 and Feb. 15, sponsored jointly by the KU School of Pharmacy, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas Regional Medical Program and the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy.
The seminars will deal with clinical testing for diagnosis of circulatory, glandular and organic diseases and available diagnostic products.
The participating faculty are Dean Howard E. Mossberg, Assistant Dean Hugh A. Cotton and professors Morris D. Faiman, Frank G. Martin, Gary Lage and Carlton Erickson.
Fellowship program announced
The Office of International Programs and SUA announce the 1970 Lisle Fellowship Program. Lisle Fellowships offer field experience in intercultural living and working outside of the academic environment in Washington, D.C., California, Denmark, Colombia, India and Japan. This program may be of special interest to students in the departments of political science, language, sociology, psychology, education and international relations.
Mr. Jon D. Findley will be on campus Feb. 5 and 6 in Room 305A of the Kansas Union to meet students who are interested in the program.
AWS plans high school day
Associated Women Students (AWS) will attempt to innovate a little in their traditional High School Relations Day this spring.
Barby Bauer, Wichita junior and chairman of the High School Relations Day Committee, said she hoped to make the program less structured and on a more personal level for the potential KU coed.
Miss Bauer said AWS would provide the high school seniors with information they would not be able to obtain from the barrage of literature they would receive from the University.
A panel of four or five upperclass women will relate experiences they encountered when they came to KU.
2 KANSAN
High school seniors will either receive personal invitations from KU freshmen from their hometown or will be invited to attend the program through their schools.
Feb. 6
1970
DO IT ALL
BUT
DO IT NOW
JAYHAWKER SENIOR PICTURES
LAST CHANCE
BSU will continue to work in the placement of black administrators, Spearman said. He said the BSU requested a Dean of Black Students and a Dean of Black Student Affairs, both to be appointed by fall of this year.
BSU announces results of election, new policies
The Black Student Union (BSU) announced the results of Wednesday night's election of officers for the coming year.
John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore, was elected president for the spring and fall semesters 1970. Duane Vann, Lawrence sophomore, was elected vicepresident and Jodi Berry, Leavenworth senior, was elected treasurer.
The second step discussed by Spearman involved the recruitment of black students. He said that 2.1 to 2.6 per cent of the students at the University of Kansas are black. The BSU hopes to increase this number with the aid of an associate director of admissions and financial aids primarily for black students. The BSU will concentrate their recruiting efforts in Kansas but will branch out into surrounding states.
Residence halls change to yearly contract system
Residence hall contracts will undergo a major change next fall. The contracts, which are now signed by the semester, will be binding for a full academic year.
Hall residents who now pay a $25 application fee in September, will have to pay a $50 fee to include both semesters. The residence hall costs for the year will be about $900.
If a student wishes to cancel the contract for the spring semester, there are special provisions. Judy Weber, office of the dean of women, said that legitimate reasons for women would be if the student were planning to leave KU or if she were planning to get married. In either of these cases, she said the coed would have to inform the resident hall director by Dec. 1, and would have to pay $100 to break the contract.
When asked about this change in housing policy, Nancy Mustard, Wichita junior and a residence hall counselor, said that she felt it to be "unfair" and not flexible enough for the University student.
Another step outlined by Spearman is the placement of more black faculty members. He said the BSU will increase their efforts in seeing that more black faculty members are hired by the administration.
Bob Harper, Charleston, Mo. senior and counselor at Ellsworth Hall, said a year-long contract would simplify bookkeeping. He said if the halls provided reasonable provisions for cancelling the contract, the new contracts would be a good idea.
The fourth step discussed pertained to plans for new funding techniques and scholarships to be made available to black students. Spearman said that the
BSU is currently approaching outside foundations and corporations for help in financing such scholarships.
The final step discussed by Spearman involved deeper commitment of the BSU in community affairs as well as University affairs. The BSU will become more involved in problems facing the Lawrence community, he said.
KU Students
Cleaning Headquarters
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
daily pickup & delivery to all
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1029 Phone
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KU
BREAKFAST 7-10:
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THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 CRESCENT Rd.
This Week:
The Preachers
Ladies Free - Monday through Thursday
Matinee-3 to 6 Fridays Admission FREE with KU ID
Live Music
Every Night
8-12
yuk down
Chalmers questioned in open forum
By JOHN GOODRICK Kansan Staff Writer
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. answered questions in an open forum last night conducted by the Student Union Activities (SUA). Questions from 50 students ranged from language requirements, finances, discrimination, library funds, to planned parenthood.
When asked to comment about KU's funds cut Chalmers said the Legislature seems to say stop accepting students and solve your financial problems. Chalmers said curtailment would be unfair to anyone in a public University if he must he would "introduce a lottery system."
Chalmers said the fund cut for Watson Library was due to a cut in federal funds, but added the state gave the University a $10% increase in funds for the library to offset the federal cut. He added, this was the "first state increment in library funds and support in three years."
When asked what we as students and faculty of the University can do about the problem of finances, Chalmers said students and faculty must be active in
pointing our needs and accomplishments. He added students might form speaking groups to talk to various organizations about the problem. "Public higher education faces a crisis with other institutions," he said.
One student asked why if students pay for 25% of construction costs of the University, why can't the students have more to say on who is on the Board of Regents.
The Chancellor said he doesn't think the Regents exerted much control over the University administration, but there is a definite need for more communication between the Regents, students and faculty. He added, Gus Stuart, from the Board of Regents, will be visiting soon the University to talk with students and faculty.
To registration problems, Chalmers said next fall there will be pre-registration. Students will lose the ability to choose when and where they want their classes but at least they will get the classes they want, he said.
When asked about the possibility of KU going to a tri-semester or quarterly basis, he replied the "modified semester is one of
the most promising calenders I've heard of yet."
A student who said she had worked during enrollment said there were many demands for classes dealing with race relations and population.
"We can't afford to ignore the demands of the students financially or educationally, the Chancellor said. He said the student ratio has reduced within a decade from 1 to 15 to 1 to 22.
In response to a question on the current situation for beer on campus the Chancellor said the Legislature is still trying to decide whether beer is a malt beverage or liquor.
To a question about the language requirement, Chalmers answered, "I personally agree with the concern you express. It comes from two years of college German." He said a bachelor's degree should mean more than only "six hours of freshman English and 124 hours credit."
Another question concerned the stringent demands set by some schools for receiving the bachelor's degree.
The Chancellor answered the student should talk to the Student Advisory Committee.
Physicist helps Israeli commune
Sidney Flairman, resident associate of physics at the University of Kansas, is helping the Kibbutz Aliva Desk further its program.
The Kibbutz Aliya Desk is a national organization which supports and aides the Kibbutz way of life in Israel.
The kibbutz in Israel is a unique social experiment in cooperative living which strives for personal and community awareness. It has fulfilled important tasks in such areas as land reclamation, security, agriculture and industrial development. It has also provided leadership to different parts of Israeli society.
The kibbutz is a communal type of living for Hebrews. Fiarman said it dated back to the late nineteenth century. Then it was only communal living with the purpose of developing the deserts of Israel, he said. Today the kibbutz is also used for psychological experiments, educational study abroad and as a vacation plan.
The kibbutz is divided into three main programs, the kibbutz ulpan plan, a six month program of one half day work and one half day Hebrew studies; the temporary workers plan, living and working on the kibbutz, with a minimum stay of one month and the short summer ulpan plan, a nine week program, with five weeks of one half day of work, one half day of Hebrew studies
Rock Chalk tickets on sale
Block ticket drawings for the 20th edition of Rock Chalk Revue will be held Wednesday and tickets will go on public sale Feb. 17.
The block drawings can be made by any group with a minimum of 20 persons. Tom Moore, KU-Y adviser, said the drawings were open to all students, not just living groups. Moore also said each group should have a second choice of ticket prices in case the first choice was unavailable.
Tickets will go on sale Feb. 17 at the KU-Y office and at the Information Booth at Jayhawk Boulevard. Moore said students could get the best tickets for the Friday night performance because the Saturday night show is traditionally sold out.
Feb. 6 KANSAN 3
1970
and one week of tours and one week free.
It costs nothing to live on the kibbutz. The only expense is your transportation to Israel. The only requirement is that members be 14 years old.
Fiarman said that children do not live with their parents on the kibboutz. They live with other children, four to a room, only seeing their parents at meal times or a few hours in the evening. Counselors raise the children.
The kibbutz is found all over Israel. It is an independent nonprofit-making organization, which receives some help from the government when needed.
A representative of Hillel, a Jewish organization, asked about the practice of certain fraternities
"I have been to Israel and have seen what they have done. They have made the desert bloom, Flairman said.
Fiarman feels that the kibbutz is particularly effective for both the individual and especially Israel.
Besides his concern in the kibbutz Aliya Desk, Fiarman is also involved in Hillel, which with the help of faculty and students, has been attempting to get KU to offer a modern hebrew language program.
Navy will form women's group
Navy ROTC at the University of Kansas is planning to sponsor a women's auxiliary unit.
The unit will be similar in form and purpose to Angel Flight, affiliated with Air Force ROTC and E. Company Beret, affiliated with Army ROTC.
Miss Cheryl M. McElhose, Kansas City, Mo., senior, will be the key organizer of the unit.
Capt. J. O. Marzluff, head of the Navy ROTC unit at KU, said the girls will decide the functions of the group.
Faculty adviser to the unit will be Lt. P. F. Mahoney, assistant professor of naval science. Student adviser and liaison between the men's and women's units will be Robert L. Shiffman, Prairie Village senior.
There will be a meeting of all interested coeds at Shiffman's apartment at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Jim Hutton will play the title role in the pilot film of a proposed television series, "Doug Selby, The D.A."
JIM HUTTON STARS
and sororites that are openly prejudiced. He said they openly support only certain faiths as demonstrated in the rush book. Chalms said the National Office of Sororities and Fraternities had been instructed to remove religious and racial discriminations.
When a student expressed a desire to learn Hebrew, because it was his "heritage, culture, and identity," the Chancellor said that he knew of the request and had sent a recommendation for the course to the College of Arts and Sciences.
In response to a question about
planned Parenthood Chalmers said students could get a complete health examination and prescription from the Watkins Memorial Hospital but the actual issuing of pills to unmarried students is done through the County Health Office.
Chalmers said Wescoe Hall is being designed to include two 300 seat lecture halls to compensate for the "poor facilities at Hoch." He added this would only put a "small dent" in the problem.
"Grades many times get in the way of learning," Chalmers said of the pass-no-credit system.
Pharmacy meeting slated
Pharmacists and prospective professionals from mid-western and eastern Kansas will attend the fourth annual Mid-Winter Pharmacy Extension Seminar in four Kansas cities on Sunday and Feb.15.
Two practicing pathologists and six faculty members of the KU School of Pharmacy will present eight 20-minute sessions on clinical testing for diagnosis of circulatory, glandular and organic diseases, and on available diagnostic products.
Pharmacists may sponsor guests, part-time employees or high school students interested in pharmacy careers.
The seminar is a project of KU, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas Regional Medical Program and the State Board of Pharmacy. Robert M. Nelson
of University Extension is coordinator.
Colloquium set
KU faculty attending are J. Alan Sanders and Laurence W. Price, pathologists at the Lawrence Clinical Laboratory, Dean Howard E. Mossberg, assistant Dean Hugh A. Cotton and Morris D. Faiman, Frank G. Martin, Gary Lage and Carlton Erickson.
The KU departments of French and Italian will sponsor a graduate colloquium at 8 p.m. Feb. 12 in the Kansas Union Pine Room Eugene Falk will speak on "The Stylistic Forces in the Narrative."
The speech will be presented in English, and is open to all students and faculty.
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KAWSAN COMMENT
Bertrand Russell: a night in Kansas
Bertrand Russell, the hoary-headed high commissioner of world dissent, died Monday night, just three years short of his hundredth birthday. During the last 60 years of his life, he established himself as the foremost skeptic of the post-industrial era. Religion, morality, tradition, the nation-state, all felt the sting of his wit.
He campaigned ardently for peace, predicted the annihilation of the human race unless mankind discarded the atomic bomb, wrote more than 40 books (winning the 1950 Nobel prize for literature), met and corresponded with most of the world's leaders, and, in the process, married four times. His "Principia Mathematica" (1910) revolutionized mathematics.
In 1929, Russell, already world famous, visited the University of Kansas in conjunction with a KU lecture series. He was on a tour of campuses with historian Will Durant and at each stop, Russell debated Durant on the topic, "Is Modern Education a Failure?"
Russell chose the affirmative, criticizing the patriotic tone of textbooks and the resultant conformity in education that he felt led to intolerance.
"Intolerance has come to be a characteristic of everyone because of lack of self-reliance in our schools" and because of the dearth of "the intellectual and vigorous being most apt to disregard the idea of the herd," Russell said.
Countering Durant's statement that what appeared to be conformity was really cooperativeness, Russell quipped: "Cooperativeness appears to a limited extent in our systems of education, but is the kind which is found in the pirate's ship where all hang together lest all hang separately."
The evening's discussion lasted two hours, during which each contender displayed ample wit, according to the Nov. 8, 1929, University Daily Kansan.
"There was no doubt about the audience's enthusiasm," the Kansan editorialized. However, not everyone was impressed.
"I went to the debate (so-called) last evening," an irate J. S. H. wrote the Kansan, "expecting great things. Surely, I hoped, Bertrand Russell's reputation as a great thinker is based on real critical powers. He ought to have a swell time with Americanism as mouthed by Durant.
"So because I had a hard uncompromising seat. I sat awake through two hours of what I should like to call intellectual prostitution. And I resent it . . . Didn't we pay good money to hear them talk?"
"Instead of ideas," he continued, "they gave us wisecracks. Mr. Durant won 31 laughs; Mr. Russell won only 21. At their next stop, I suppose they'll change about. . . Has commercialism been recruiting speakers as well as our football players?"
Whether J. S. H. was a solitary pedant or the judgment of the Kansan (whose editorials at the time were written with all the critical perception of a nice old lady's thank-you note) was in error, we don't know.
One of Russell's statements that night does seem to strike home, however: "Intelligence, sympathy and joy of life have been made crimes, and until they are recognized as essential to all, education will continue to be a failure."
If "society" were substituted for "education," the quotation might well characterize the direction of Russell's near-century of thought. But a better indicator of his philosophy came at the beginning of his brilliant career.
"In action, in desire, we must submit perpetually to the tyranny of outside forces"; he wrote in 1917, "but in thought, in aspiration, we are free, free from our fellow-men, free from the petty planet on which our bodies impotently crawl, free even, while we live, from the tyranny of death.
"Let us learn, then, that energy of faith which enables us to live constantly in the vision of the good; and let us descend, in action, into the world of fact, with that vision always before us."
Monroe Dodd
Easing through
"Anybody whose name will be sent up by the President will have no trouble getting confirmed unless he has committed murder—recently."
—Sen. George Aiken, R-Vt.
G. Harrold Carswell, President Nixon's second choice for the Supreme Court after the Clement Haynsworth debacle, is distinct evidence of what the U.S. Senate can get itself into by exercising its constitutional authority. The upper house gave notice late in 1969 that it would not accept Haynsworth because the South Carolinian had an indiscreet habit of mixing his business interests with his court rulings.
Testimony in the Senate judiciary committee indicates that Carswell looked and acted with disdain toward civil rights workers while he was a U.S. district judge in Tallahassee, Fla. His now-infamous white supremacy speech during his 1948 campaign for the Georgia legislature leaves doubts in the minds of opposition senators, although Carswell says the words he
Now the Senate finds that Mr. Nixon has reached once again into his southern stew—and pulled out another potato.
uttered then are now "obnoxious and abhorrent to my personal philosophy."
William Van Alystyne, a Duke University law professor, testified last fall in favor of Haynsworth—calling him an able and conscientious judge but now rejects Carswell.
Van Alystyne told the judiciary committee last Friday that, in examining Carswell's decisions in civil rights cases, he found no reassurance to offset the 1948 campaign speech. He also said there was nothing in Carswell's handling of cases generally "to indicate that he could serve with distinction on the Supreme Court."
Opponents of confirmation have delayed a vote on Carswell until February 16 at the earliest. Yet the move appears hopeless; the Senate wants to deal with its backlog of issues and defeating Carswell would only cause a further slowdown until Mr. Nixon could nominate a new man. Meanwhile, Minority Leader Hugh Scott predicts an 80-20 vote for Carswell.
Mr. Nixon, having been patient, will finally get his way. And the Supreme Court will suffer as a result.
—Monroe Dodd
Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF
To a Flower-Child
I Wish you a Weekend World, my Wench
Your Winsome Word and Way,
Doth Lift my Listless Livelihood
And Waft all Woes Away
💖
THE MINISTRY JOURNAL
'Introducing your next U.S. Supreme Court Justice . . . a legal giant of our time . . . good old Harrold What's his-name'
right on—
Bv GUS diZEREGA
Speech 141, "Human Relations," is probably the most popular class at KU. Within the first two hours of enrollment most sections were closed with a waiting list of hundreds of students—as this writer found to his sorrow. Later more sections were opened but the predicament of 141 as well as the popularity of the LA&S 48 sections help to dramatize a crisis in American education. Both classes are terribly pressed for money, as are the liberal arts in general.
More and more the liberal arts are coming under fire from legislators and other "leaders." In American society the purpose of universities is training, not education. Students are supposed to learn a marketable skill and then enter society to join the neurotic ranks of the silent majority.
The traditional idea of education gets screwed in the process.
Spiro Agnew suggests that more engineering students and fewer liberal arts students might be to the good of everyone while our own pint-sized version, Senator Shultz, reveals his unfathomable ignorance of the society he is out to save when he refers to those in liberal arts as a "different breed of cats." It is in liberal arts that the values of Western civilization are transmitted and hopefully elaborated upon.
But, after all, you can't eat philosophy. And our rulers are short of money, after Vietnam, the ABM and the rest of Nixon's bombs, bullets, and bulls--t, anything spent on education might be inflationary. (Unless, of course, it is the education of nuclear physicists and others who might sell their souls to their rulers.)
So what is lost if and when the Spiro Agnews of the world triumph?
Only the opportunity for each student to find himself, to grow inwardly and evaluate his society and how it should or shouldn't be changed. In other words, the chance to develop into a human being in the fullest sense of the word.
Most students will never get another chance. After graduation most of us will be husbands and wives with families to be responsible for. And, even if only for their sake, the pressure to obey society's rules will be intense. The security of marriage, family life and a job all tend to make us settle down mentally as well as physically.
Liberal arts provide as good an environment as this society has in which to spend much of our time thinking and growing (which isn't to say it's perfect). But in the abomination that is American society today, thinking is dangerous. One may think unruly thoughts. Worse, one may take them seriously enough to act upon them. Today, to think is eventually to condemn. So thinking must cease.
Our rulers cannot launch a straightforward assault on education. No, far better to keep the name and change the essence. Replace the development of the thinking individual with the "productive member of society," that is, the Good American who enters life and leaves it without ever having created a ripple. So universities must become bigger and better technical schools, producing experts who, because they have no broad concept of society as a whole, can do little else but follow orders.
This is Spiral Corkscrew's not-so-latent totalitarianism—a hideous fusing of Senator Shultz's Know Nothing anti-intellectualism with the technocratic demands of modern society.
We as students must support and encourage the extension of courses which help us develop as people capable of independently judging our lives and our society. Only in this way will we be able to use our technology to build a truly free world instead of serving as efficient bureaucrats in an exploitative reality.
Perhaps student money over which the Student Senate has control would better be used in supplementing Speech 141, LA&S 48, and other classes of general value, than in going to the Athletic Corporation.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. 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.
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: An Ungainly Monster
By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
Six years of shooting and 100 million dollars are behind the Soviet Union's massive production of "War and Peace." The effort must have been like a dinosaur giving birth. The original version was almost eight hours long, and even now, trimmed to $6\frac{1}{2}$ for American audiences, the film is an ungainly monster.
It was undoubtedly a labor of love, though; evidently every frame was handled with utmost care. The Russians knew that this was "their" masterpiece of world literature, and they treated it with all the majesty and seriousness and respect it demanded. The only problem is that they neglected to give it any life.
Tolstoy's novel is a vast but incredibly detailed panorama of human experience; the movie has the vastness, some of the detail, but the human experience is missing. Though hundreds of thousands of people parade by onscreen, we become truly intimate with none of them. They are merely mannikins spouting lines, and we can only hope for a battle scene to come in at the right moment to relieve the dullness.
Of course, the medium itself is responsible much of the time for the War being more entertaining than the Peace, but the bulk of the blame must fall right into the lap of the director, Sergei Bondarchuk. It takes a special knack to make long films that very few directors have; a sense of rhythm and unity of style are essential. Bondarchuk tries very hard to integrate the spectacular and personal elements of the story but the task is beyond him. In seeming desperation, he produces a veritable grab-bag of "technique"—watch closely and you'll see everything: slow motion, split screen, hand-held camera, frozen frames, sweeping crane shots, monochromatic sequences, along with many soulful views of sky, landscape and blowing leaves. These effects are supposed to make the production more "cinematic," but their artificiality makes it all the more stiffly literary.
The director dwells upon his images until they lose whatever subtlety they had, and all we are left with is a series of grandiose illustrations.
Bondarchuk also co-wrote the screenplay, so to him too must fall the blame for the dismal lack of characterization. The dialogue, the interior monologues, the lengthy passages from the novel head by a narrator all tell us that these people are thinking, feeling and changing, but we can never tell by looking at them. The actors go through the motions of their parts, as dictated by the novel, but there is nothing inside them. One suspects that the Soviet Political philosophy is largely behind the unwillingness to give any real life to individual characters.
The dubbing, too, puts a formidable wall between us and the people onscreen. Dubbing is inexcusable under any circumstances, but doubly so in "War and Peace" because it is so bad—the voices seem to be reading from the telephone directory.
This cumbersome, inert mammoth of a movie does have its interesting moments. One remembers certain scenes such as the elegantly filmed grand ball, where Natasha meets Andrei, the Battle of Borodino, which lasts forever, the brief friendship between Pierre and a French officer, and the burning of Moscow, seen through a storm of cinders. Individual images come to mind also; the introduction of Natasha in a torrent of blinding light and a series of quick cuts; the exchange of looks between Natasha's uncle and a captured wolf after a hunt; the endless lines of cannon at Borodino firing in rapid succession; the slow motion murder of a boy by a firing squad. Memorable moments, but what a wait!
"MARRY ME, MARRY ME"
A gentle French comedy from Claude Berri, who made "The Two of Us."
"THE REIVERS" — Delightful tale of a lad's loss of innocence in the South at the turn of the century. Steve McQueen is at his best.
The Weekend Scene
"WAR AND PEACE" Part II—
See review this page.
"PUTNEY SWOPE" - Underground film - maker Robert Downey's first legitimate effort about the Black Revolution in a Madison Ave. ad agency. It is generally inept, but succeeds in getting a few laughs from its subject.
“DR. ZHIVAGO” — David Lean's 1965 adaptation of the Pasternak novel is somewhat entertaining but never goes deeper than high-style soap opera.
"SHIP OF FOOLS" (SUA Popular Film—Friday and Saturday) —Stanley Kramer's 1965 pseudo-symbolic, pseudo-drama. The biggest waste of gifted stars since his own "Mad World" the year before.
"THE HOMECOMING" (theater production) - An excellent play of the contemporary theatre by Harold Pinter with outstanding examples of fine acting and directing and an authentic set.
NO WAY-AT ALL
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KU faces NU on road in 'must' game
An up-and-coming KU basketball team will be looking for its first conference road win of the season when the Jayhawks square-off against Nebraska Saturday night in Lincoln.
The 7:30 encounter will mark the season's second meeting of the two clubs. Joe Cipriano's Cornhuskers tripped the 'Hawks, 78-73, in the consolation finals of the Big Eight pre-season tourney.
But things have changed since that initial contest in Kansas City. The Jayhawks, on the strength of Dave Robisch's outstanding play, put together back-to-back victories over Colorado and Oklahoma to bring their conference mark to 3-2 and now stand 12-5 in overall play. Meanwhile, the Cornhuskers were thrashed 81-58 by Oklahoma State and dropped to a 2-3 record in conference play.
To make matters worse, Nebraska's conference title hopes were dealt a serious blow when three "Husker standouts" were
recently ruled scholastically ineligible for second semester play. The book casualties—Marvin Stuart, Cliff Moller and Jim Brooks—were all being counted on by Cipriano to give Nebraska
KANSAN Sports
guidance down the tough conference stretch run. Stewart was the team's second leading scorer with a 13.7 average and Moller was the key to the Cornhusker's dangerous full-court press. Brooks finished last season's campaign with an 11.9 scoring production, but was forced out of the starting line-up this season by sophomore flash Chuck Jura.
Tom Scantlebury, 6-2 senior playmaker, will direct Nebras-
ka's depleted forces against the Hawks. Scantlebury, a dangerous outside threat, tops Nebraska in scoring with a 14.8 point per game average. Joining Scantlebury in the backcourt is Al Nissen, a surprising soph who is currently hitting at a 50 per cent clip from the field.
Nebraska's front-line of Leroy Chalk, Bob Cratopp and Jura promises to give the Jayhawks a rough time on the boards. Chalk is currently fifth in conference rebounding and has pulled down an average of 11 rebounds a contest. Jura, another of Nebraska's excellent sophomores, has found the range on 55 per cent of his field shots, second in the conference behind K-State's David Hall.
Others expected to see considerable action in Saturday's tilt are Sam Martin, senior guard, and Ken Cauble, 6-5 defensive ace who doubles as a high-jumper on the track team.
Winning, trophies are end result as intramurals are 'too' competitive
By STEVE SHRIVER Assistant Sports Editor
The intramural program has lost some of its flavor. It seems amazing that this can be attributed partly to the increase in competition between intramural teams.
Another ironical fact is that Bob Lockwood, coordinator of the men's intramural program, cannot be held responsible for the decay of intramural athletics. Lockwood has significantly improved the program in his six years at KU, adding football playoffs, extra trophies and generating more enthusiasm into the program.
Rather the problem seems to lie with the intramural participants themselves. The competition may be too stiff, if that is possible. Too many teams and too many players are taking the intramural program too seriously. They enter and play with one thought in mind—to win a trophy and gain prestige.
The trophies and prestige associated with winning are not the idealistic end results of the intramurals. Perhaps we have
6 KANSAN Feb. 6 1970
lost the original purpose of intramurals. They are designed and offered by the university as a means of letting off steam, of playing for the sake of playing and for just plain fun.
What so many intramural athletes are missing out on, is the fun. They attach too much importance to winning and take the game too seriously. The intramurals are not designed to follow the example of professional, or even intercollegiate athletics. They are designed for the students and since it is the student's program, the students are the ones who make the program a success.
If more intramural athletes could take a different attitude toward the program, they could undoubtedly benefit more from it. They could reap the benefits
Swimmers meet
The University of Kansas swimming team will return to action Saturday night at 7:30 when it hosts Iowa State in a dual meet at Robinson gymnasium.
THE MUST-SEE PICTURE
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The Praise...
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Keep Mounting!
about
Ship of Fools"
VIVIEN LEIGH
as the divorcee
SIMONE SIGNORET
as La Contessa
JOSE FERRER
as an angry man
LEE MARVIN
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OSKAR WERNER
as the Ship's Doctor
ELIZABETH ASHLEY
as the artist's sweetheart
GEORGE SEGAL
as the American artist
JOSE GRECO
as the seller of love
MICHAEL DUNN
as the dwarf
CHARLES KORVIN
as the Captain
february 6 AND 7
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of the original intention of the intramural department—to play for fun.
Losing is not so bad if you have fun at it and, after all, everybody loses something, sometime. Winning could be more fun (if you had fun at it) and a trophy could be an added reward, instead of an end in itself.
more Bud Stallworth. Russell, playing spectacularly in recent games, hit a shot at the buzzer to push the 'Hawks to a 75-73 win over defending conference champ Colorado. Russell is second in rebounding for KU (9.9) and is the club's third leading scorer with a 13.5 mark. Stallworth follows Robisch in scoring with a respectable 15.5 average.
The Jayhawks' sophomore guard combination of Bob Kivisto and Aubrey Nash round-out the starting quintet.
february 6AND7 woodruff aud 7:00AND9:30 50¢
The Captain's Table is now open until 2:30 in the dim, dark morning.
LATE HOURS:
KU's Dave Robisch, boasting without a doubt the best three-game combined scoring and rebounding spurt in the history of the conference, once again leads the Jayhawks into battle. The 6-9 junior pivot is currently averaging 30.4 points and 16.4 rebounds a game in conference action and is rapidly approaching a new single season conference scoring mark.
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UFO into orbit . . .
Karl Salb, 6 foot 4 inch, 275 pound weightman for the KU track squad, is one of three giants the 'Hawks boast of this year. Doug Knop, 6-2 and 239 pounds, and Steve Whilhelm, 6-2 and 236 pounds, round out perhaps the best collegiate shot-put combination of all-time. All three will be on hand this Friday night in Allen Field House for KU's only indoor appearance of the season. Salb set a personal indoor best last weekend at the Oklahoma City Invitational when he tossed the 16-pound ball 66 feet, 10 inches. He hopes to better that mark Friday against Southern Illinois and Wichita State.
Arkansas will matchup with USC for 11th game
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (UPI)— Arkansas broke a tradition Wednesday and announced a home-and-home football series with Southern Cal.
The teams will play in Little Rock in 1972 and in Los Angeles in 1973. It will be the 11th game of the season for both clubs.
The landing of USC as an addition to its schedule was a boost to Arkansas football which has been criticized for playing weak teams outside its own Southwest Conference.
But Arkansas' football schedule situation is somewhat unique. It is required to play six of its 10 games per season in Arkansas—three in Fayetteville and three in Little Rock. Every other year it must play four conference schools on the road and three out of conference games in Arkansas.
Major college teams, who prefer to sign home-and-home agreements, have shied away from playing the Razorbacks since the visiting team does not receive as large a percentage of the gate receipts.
Feb. 6 KANSAN 7
1970
Wednesday's announcement marked the first time Arkansas had announced a non-conference game this far in advance. School officials announce the schedule only one year ahead of time.
The athletic directors of both schools were pleased at the prospective meetings of the two perennial powerhouses.
"We are happy," said John Barnhill, athletic director at Arkansas. "These should be good games of interest to both people of Arkansas and California as well as nationally."
"We are happy to have this home and home series scheduled with the University of Arkansas, in as much as we have never met before," said Jess Hill, athletic director at U.S.C. "It should be the start of a fine relationship and football series."
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Sayers receives honor from Jaycees as pro athlete, community leader
Gale Sayers, former All-American halfback for KU in 1965, has been named one of the Ten Outstanding Young Men of America for 1969 by the Jaycees. Sayers was recognized not only for setting six new NFL records in his four seasons as a running back for the Chicago Bears, but also for helping to improve the lives of those less fortunate in Chicago in his role as a community servant.
Sayers is the second KU athlete to receive the honor during the past two years. Jim Ryun, record-holding KU track star, was named one of the Ten Outstanding Young Men for 1968.
During both his junior and senior years at KU, Sayers was named to the All-American first team and was recognized as player of the year in the Big Eight Conference. Since joining the Chicago Bears four seasons ago, he was named rookie of the year for 1965 and has been a unanimous all NFL selection at running back four straight times.
Sayers played in three Pro Bowl games and was voted outstanding offensive player in his last two. Injury prevented him from playing in the 1969 Pro Bowl.
Sayers' six NFL records include most touchdowns in one game (6), most touchdowns in a season (22), most points in a rookie season (132), total offense in one season (2,240 yards), total offensive average in one game (19.6 yards per attempt) and the most touchdowns on kick-off returns in a career (6).
Though both a football player and a stockbroker, Sayers is also summer coordinator for the Chicago Park District's sports program for underprivileged children and is a member of the
Youth Action Committee in his neighborhood.
In 1966, he became co-chairman of the Sports Committee of the Legal Defense Fund of the NAACP. In the fall of 1968, he started the Gale Sayers Foundation in connection with the Chicago Daily News to provide clothes and scholarships for needy student newspaper carriers.
Sayers, who began his pro career in 1966, has not yet received a degree. When interviewed by
the kansan earlier this year, he said he plans to receive a physical education degree in September, 1970.
"In my senior year I appeared in a lot of all-star games and was trying to sign a pro contract, so my studies were hindered and I had to drop some courses," he told the Kansan.
Sayers, at 26 years old, is the youngest of the ten men selected for the honor. The others include young businessmen, politicians, scholars and civic leaders.
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No major requirement plan proposed
Ideas for a free university were discussed at the Centennial College Educational Policies and Planning Committee meeting Thursday, said Lynn Pew, Greensburg sophomore committee chairman.
Reviewing the freshman and sophomore requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the committee discussed dropping all requirements and
placing no particular emphasis on a major. The need for some requirements if the student decided upon a major was also discussed.
Liberal arts courses in the College Within a College system
were examined in relationship to a free university. The committee considered the possibility of admitting students without a major emphasis and arranging courses
to make such admission feasible.
Pew said it could be possible for the student to study freely until he felt he was well enough prepared to interview for a job.
They do exciting things. Like mining oil instead of pumping it. Working on air pollution. Making electricity from the atom. Isn't that the kind of company you'd like to work for?
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Our interviewer will be here soon. Talk to him.
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The Pill: A cause?
Campus VD triples since last spring
By MARILYN McMULLEN
Kansan Staff Writer
Venereal disease is on the rise at KU. The number of cases treated at Watkins Memorial Hospital has tripled since last spring.
"We see only one third of the cases treated in Lawrence," said James W. Campbell, physician at Watkins. "We have close liaison with the county health department and private doctors in the community. They treat twice as many patients as we do."
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, Watkins administrator, said that eight to eleven cases of venereal disease are treated at Watkins each week. He added that the number of undetected cases on campus is quite large.
There is a higher incidence of gonorrhea than syphilis on campus. Schwegler described this as unusual, and said that although gonorrhea could cause sterility, it usually did not result in permanent brain damage as does untreated syphilis.
Schweegler said a possible cause of the rise in VD is the increasing number of pill takers. "When a rubber condom is used," he said, "some protection against infection is afforded. With the pill, a person is protected from pregnancy, but not VD."
Schwegler, who is associated with the public health service, said the Douglas County public health clinic distributes approximately 2,000 pills a month to women over 18. He attributed increasing promiscuity to the availability of the pill to almost anyone for the asking.
"If the incidence of VD continues to increase and people continue to be promiscuous, everyone might inevitably be infected at some time," he said.
Syphilis and gonorrhea germs are passed by infected persons during sexual intercourse or close body contact. A person can have either disease, or both at once.
A cured person can be reinfected by having intercourse with a person who has the disease. Symptoms of the diseases are somewhat different and vary with the individual.
A few days after being infected, a man with gonorrhea will experience a burning pain during urination and may have a discharge of pus. A woman will rarely have pain or notice any signs of gonorrhea until the disease has spread to her uterus. It then causes intense pain and sometimes warrants a complete hysterectomy.
cure rate is almost 100 per cent.
A blood test will reveal syphilis in any stage. The disease can be treated with antibiotics, and the
Gonorrhea is harder to detect. The germs must be grown in culture for several days to confirm diagnosis. Sometimes germs are thick in the discharge of pus from a man, but they are usually few and far between in a woman's lower genital tract. Gonorrhea cannot be detected by a blood test.
Because a woman notices no signs of the disease until it is quite advanced, she can infect several men without realizing it.
After syphilis is contracted, a painless sore called a chancre will appear where the germs entered the body. The chancre is usually obvious in a man but can be hidden in the genital tract of a woman, making detection impossible until secondary symptoms appear. They are fever, severe throat, a rash and headaches. Hair may fall out in patches. In this stage sores may develop in the mouth and the disease can be passed by kissing.
KANSAN
In its secondary stage syphilis can imitate several other diseases, and is sometimes referred to as "The Great Imitator."
A person who suspects he has venereal disease should see a doctor immediately. If the disease is not treated, permanent brain damage, arthritis, blindness and heart disease may result.
Information on VD is available
at Watkins Hospital and the public health clinic, and treatments are kept confidential. A person who is treated is asked to name all those he might have infected so they can be contacted and treated.
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Who's whose Engagements
Debby Corley, Wichita senior majoring in secondary education, Delta Delta Delta to Dave Gaughan, Overland Park senior majoring in business administration, Alpha Kappa Lambda.
Sally Anderson, Shawnee Mission senior majoring in American studies, Delta Delta Delta to Mark Edwards, Emporia senior majoring in history, Sigma Chi.
Feb. 6
1970 KANSAN 9
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Local ecology group fights water pollution, trash dump
An organization known as Coordinated Ecology Action (CEA) has begun operations in Lawrence and at KU. The purpose of the organization, according to its secretary, Mrs. Barbara Day, is "ecology action; cleaning up the environment." Two specific areas of concern in Lawrence are the water pollution in the Kaw river and the location of a new trash and garbage dump.
CEA is working closely with various organizations in Lawrence trying to conserve the environment. One such group is the Douglas County Environmental Association. This group's activities include lobbying for more legislation dealing with the environment, planting trees in areas that have been thinned by unrestricted cutting and location of the new dump site.
CEA is also considering the initiation of a "dishonor roll" for those industries and individuals who persist in polluting the environment. Mrs. Day said, however, that they do not wish to alienate anyone from their cause.
"Our aim is to work with these people in a combined and constructive effort to conserve the environment," she said.
CEA is also planning a teach-in at KU April 22-28 featuring various speakers and exhibits depicting the seriousness of the ecological problem.
Anyone wishing to volunteer for any projects or to offer suggestions for the April teach-in is urged to contact the organization's office at the Wesley Foundation Center, 1314 Oread.
Firemen, police join forces in Public Safety Division
The Public Safety Division's primary role is to integrate the function of the police and fire departments. Gilbert Smith, the division director, feels that his eight man force is accomplishing just that.
The combination of tasks that the Public Safety Division men perform are unlimited. One half of the force is trained in fire fighting and the other half aids the Lawrence Police Department in the fighting of crime.
The Lawrence Police Department patrols the city in four different area. However, the Public Safety Division men have to patrol the whole city. There are two men in the division's single car 24 hours a day and seven days a week. A second car will be added to the motor pool enabling the force to provide a four man patrol around the clock.
Even though each man in the division is trained in one of the fields, they perform versatile tasks. Firemen and police on the Safety Division handle all types
Smith said the purpose of the team was "to get maximum protection in minimum time." Their police unit functions as a part of the Lawrence Police Department; they take orders from the police sergeant. The firemen receive their instructions from the fire lieutenant, and help extinguish small fires that do not require major equipment.
of emergencies; they can give open heart massage and first aid; and with their resuscitation equipment they are often in demand by the sheriff's office.
Smith said the Public Safety Divisions "is a blossoming field." It began September 1, 1969 with nine members and will grow to 16 men by March 20, 1970.
Smith said the budget the city allocates to police and fire departments is 44.9 per cent of the city's total budget.
"The city administration has exhibited a willingness to assist both departments. However, they have their limitations," Smith said.
Business office relocates
The University Business Office has moved to Room 20 of the remodeled basement of Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
The move, made during the Christmas break is completed, said Gary Carrico, comptroller, Thursday. Now all departments except the National Defense Student Loan Office are at the Carruth location. The Personnel Office and the Retirement Office,
10 KANSAN Feb.6 1970
NO HUSH PUPPY
BALTIMORE (UPI) — Baltimore police take barking dog complaints seriously. After a number of calls from neighbors about a woman who let her dog bark, police zipped out to her house, arrested her, fingerprinted her and then locked her up for 12 hours. County officials protested the action, but the police said the woman had been warned several times about her noisy dog.
both closely related to the Business Office moved to Carruth, Carrico said.
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THE WATER COLOR BOOK
"Do you remember a story about..."
Mary Trehey of the Chilton Research Services was busy on the Hill Thursday making a survey on students' recall of the contents of the Kansan. Interviewed here was Dave Wade, Wichita senior, who was trying to get in a little relaxation between classes.
Awbrey predicts trouble in budget cut possibilities
Dave Awbrey, Student Senate president, said Thursday that people are going to be "stepped on" in the process of finding places to cut the budget.
At the forthcoming budget meeting, Feb. 16 in the Chancellor's office, all of the various committees and organizations of the University will meet to discuss possible means of revising the budget thus giving more funds for future needs.
"We are going to need three things:" Awbrey said, "a new hospital, a humanities building and a satellite union."
One possible cut could be a $12 student activity fee which would total $400,000 a year. Other facets of the budget are to be examined.
"What do some organizations as AWS do with money? There are a lot more things worthwhile, like the Free University," Awbrey said.
The next important event involves open hearings Feb. 20 on revision of the student handbook. The Committee on Rights and Privileges did a very comprehensive revision. Awbrey said,
Other forthcoming activites are
In 1602, Capt. Bartholomew Gosnold, the English navigator landed on Cape Cod, to which he gave the name it still bears.
Feb. 6
1970 KANSAN 11
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elections March 17-18, the establishment of a committee to revise homecoming and a black summer camp in cooperation with the Interfraternity Council.
partment of Health with the appointment of a full-time medical director," Mrs. Branson said.
Mrs. Branson said the proposed bill would put criteria on a basis of severity of the disease and length and financial need. It would be broadened to include other organic diseases, defects or conditions which would hinder the achievement of growth and development. It would also abolish residence and marital requirements.
"There is a need." she said, "to modernize and strengthen cri-p
Opposite Hillcrest Center
The current law defines a crippled child as one under 21, unmarried and afflicted with various conditions, such as harelip, cardiac defects or an orthopedic condition or deformity that can be cured or materially improved.
Kansas group seeks new law to benefit crippled children
The Kansas Coordinating Council for Health Planning, organized in 1967, is presently seeking in the Kansas House of Representatives a more up to date bill concerning crippled children.
FAST BREAKFAST:
Mrs. Vernon L. Branson, vicechairman of the council, said Thursday that the present law is obsolete and a severe restriction to the progress of services for handicapped children.
The Captain's Table specializes in quick breakfasts; Open at 7:00 with all your breakfast favorites. Breakfast is over at 10:00.
plied children's services in the state. We cannot do this as long as we operate an uncoordinated program."
"There are basically three parts to this bill: that the present law on crippled children be repealed, that the definition of a crippled child be made broad and that the program of crippled children services be placed in the State Dean equal opportunity employer
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
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campus interviews
Individuals majoring in Computer Science, Engineering (Electrical, Mechanical or Industrial), Mathematics, and Physics will be interviewed by Collins Radio Company.
February 16 & 17, 1970 Some facts about Collins:
1. Collins pioneered many of today's data techniques and recently announced a computer-controlled design and manufacturing service for customers.
2. The company ranks as the largest independent producer of microwave systems.
3. More than 75% of the commercial airlines use navigation/communication equipment supplied by Collins.
4. The company designs and installs computer systems for the military and for railroads, airlines and many other industrial organizations.
5. Collins serves as the prime contractor on NASA's worldwide Apollo tracking network.
6. The company is recognized as one of the world's leading manufacturers of commercial broadcast equipment.
7. Collins received the first contract awarded to a single company to design, equip and build an earth station for satellite communications.
Contact your College Placement Bureau for additional information.
COLLINS
(1)
KU professor waits for moon dust
Lunar materials can support base station
By GREG SORBER
Kansan Staff Writer
Raw materials on the lunar surface could be used for a self-supporting base station on the moon, a University of Kansas geology professor said Thursday.
Dr. Edward Zellar performed an experiment which released water from silica material similar to the composition of lunar soil.
He is still waiting to receive lunar samples from the NASA control center in Houston in order to execute the experiment with original lunar material.
"I am quite confident that we will get the sample," Zellar said. "We did not get the sample yet because of extremely tight distribution problems."
His experiment showed two kinds of potential resources can be derived from the moon's soil. The first resource is water; the
12 KANSAN Feb. 6
1970
second is stored energy. The heat produced by the stored energy could warm a base station through the lunar nights, which last 14 days.
Zellar said the lunar dust stores energy when particles emitted by the sun strike the silica on the moon. The crystal structure then becomes disordered. When he executes his experiment, he will be doing essentially the same thing as the sun, firing high energy protons at the dust. The silica crystals will become even more disordered.
When heat is applied, the crystals will snap back into their original shape, producing a great amount of heat energy, considerably more than was originally put into the dust, Zellar said.
When TNT explodes, he explained, it releases 1,000 calories.
The lunar dust stores over 200 calories per gram, one-fifth of the energy of TNT.
"You do not get an explosion, just high temperatures," Zellar said.
The men on the first permanent moon base will have to live off the land, Zellar said. It is just too expensive to transport material up to the moon.
The lunar base will live with minimum support from the earth. The process of obtaining water and energy has been shown to work, and there is no reason it couldn't be done on the moon, he said.
There are two problems Zellar will encounter in working with the lunar sample. The moon dust will be an impure, complex mixture and will be more difficult to work with than the fundamental earth materials. He also fears that the dust will be contaminated by the retro-rockets of the Apollo 12 lunar module and the earlier unmanned surveyor.
"In other words, we're facing the problem of lunar pollution," Zellar said.
risk of pollution than Apollo 12. He will receive the samples from Apollo 12 instead. A proposal will be submitted for samples from the Apollo 14 mission, he said.
He said his request for lunar samples was for the dust from Apollo 13. It would involve less
NASA's distribution policy. Formerly every milligram of lunar dust had to be accounted for.
"The Apollo 12 rocks," he added, "have not been distributed. In fact no lunar rock has been distributed. It's all in Houston."
Zellar said it now is too expensive to have such control over the material. The budget reduction in Washington changed the situation, and he expects the dust to be distributed soon.
None of the universities that requested the samples have received them. He attributes this to
Colorado gets its name from the Spanish word for "red."
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ENGINEERS, MATHEMATICIANS:
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[Top] A man in a suit speaks to another person in a suit, who is seated behind a computer. [Bottom] A man in a white shirt and black tie works at a desk with a keyboard and mouse.
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Because of the nature and scope of the National Security Agency's mission, our successes are in direct relation to your achievements.
At NSA, we are responsible for designing and developing secure/invulnerable communications and EDP systems to transmit, receive and analyze much of our nation's most vital information. The advancing technologies applied in this work are such that they will frequently take you beyond the known and accepted boundaries of knowledge. Consequently, your imagination and resourcefulness are essential qualifications for success.
The Career Scene at NSA: ENGINEERS will find work which is performed nowhere else . . . devices and systems are constantly being developed which are in advance of any outside the Agency. As an Agency engineer, you will carry out research, design, development, testing and evaluation of sophisticated, large-scale cryptocommunICATIONs and EDP systems. You may also participate in related studies of electromagnetic propagation, upper atmosphere phenomena, and solid state devices using the latest equipment for advanced research within NSA's fully instrumented laboratories.
MATHEMATICIANS define, formulate and solve complex communications-related problems. Statistical mathematics, matrix algebra, and combinatorial analysis are but a few of the tools applied by Agency mathematicians. Opportunities for contributions in computer sciences and theoretical research are also offered.
COMPUTER SCIENTISTS participate in systems analysis and systems programming related to advanced scientific and business applications. Software design and development is included, as well as support in hardware design, development and modification.
Career Benefits: NSA's liberal graduate study program permits you to pursue two semesters of full-time graduate study at full salary. Nearly all academic costs are borne by NSA, whose proximity to seven universities is an additional asset.
Starting salaries, depending on education and experience, range from $9,169.00 to $15,000.00, and increases will follow systematically as you assume additional responsibility. Further, you will enjoy the varied career benefits and other advantages of Federal employment without the necessity of Civil Service certification.
Check with your Placement Office for further information about NSA, or write to: Chief, College Relations Branch, National Security Agency, Ft. George G. Meade, Md. 20755, Attn: M321. An equal opportunity employer, M&F.
Campus Interview Dates: February 20,1970
CHINA SECURITY AGENCY
national security agency
1
Board functions include physical needs
The University Planning Board was established in the early fall of 1969, replacing the University Planning Council and the Program Development Council, said Francis Heller, dean of faculties and co-chairman of the Board yesterday.
Heller said the planning council was primarily a physical program established in the 1950's. Its main achievement was a ten-year plan which was initiated in 1960 and will receive its final goal when Wescoe Hall is built. The devel-
Professors get grant for census of mammals
By year's end two museum curators will be "experts" on the population of small mammals in the northern great plains grasslands area.
The year of the great "people" census, 1970, is also the year of the "animal" census for the KU Museum of Natural History.
J. Knox Jones, Jr. and Robert S. Hoffman, professors of systematics and ecology and curators of mammals for the Museum of Natural History, have been granted $18,090 from the National Science Foundation to make a census
of small mammals in the grasslands area.
The census is part of a larger study of "man and his environment" being organized by the National Science Foundation, Hoffman said.
The School of Architecture and Urban Design will sponsor three lectures Monday, Wednesday and Feb. 19.
The animal census conducted here will be combined with other area census findings to provide data for area from Canada to Mexico.
Heller said the board operates on the basis of priorities in two categories, physical and academic. "There are no clear cut academic priorities at present, but there are four main priorities in the physical category. They are: the School of Law, which needs a new structure; Malott Hall, which can no longer hold all three departments of chemistry, physics, and pharmacy; the visual arts, which is spread all over the campus and the computation center, which is undergrowing rapid growth, Heller said.
Heller, in charge of academic affairs on the Board, said in reference to present general policies. "Our needs are three fold—money, people and facilities."
Architects to give talks
KU's part in the study will be completed over the summer when field crews will operate on the Kansas-Oklahoma border, in South Dakota and in Montana, setting traps and collecting data on the small mammals caught in them.
Norman Carver, author of books on Japanese architecture and ancient civilization will speak Feb. 10; Dr. N. S. Lamba, an Indian town planner, Feb. 13, and Dr. Walter A. Netsch, a member of the architectural firm of Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill will speak Feb. 19.
"The Board's job is a continuing process," Heller said. Their work deals largely with corresponding needs of students, faculty, and administrative personnel. Expectations are sent by the University to the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature based on formulated relationships.
are to count present resources, project what we will be doing in the future, and estimate resources needed," Heller said.
opment council was established in 1966 but was too short lived to establish any major accomplishments, Heller said.
The three lectures are slated for 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
and might house new language facilities to replace our present 'shop worn' ones. Wescoe Hall would be the center of most of the Humanities Departments," he said.
Concerning Wescoe Hall, Heller said it would "reliieve crowding
"Our job is to construct a model university based on numerical relationships. The physical aspects
Feb. 6
1970 KANSAN 13
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Peace Corps 'effective'
The Peace Corps is the most effective program, dollar for dollar, the United States has in foreign countries, Philip Young, graduate research assistant in anthropology, said Thursday.
In the 21 months that Young was a Peace Corps member in Turkey he worked in a general community development program. Young said that the program was a loosely structured system of teaching manual skills and working with the internal programs of the Turkish government.
"The Peace Corps," Young said, "tries to gain development by working within the customs and culture of a country instead of against them."
Young said many of the United States' foreign development programs ignore the customs of the country. This kind of program, he said, not only hinders the country's development but also lessens the good will our government is trying to build.
14 KANSAN Feb. 6 1970
Young said working with the Peace Corps was rewarding, but it was not an easy job. A three-month training program helps the individual find out if he is equal to the strain of working in a foreign country.
Young said. "I got discouraged two or three times a day."
"The visible progress is slow."
The amount of good a Peace Corps member does is due to luck as well as training, Young said. In order to do the most good, a person must be placed in an area that needs the special skill he has to offer.
ROTC sections plan slight course charge
The Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC programs plan no extensive program changes for the spring semester, said their commanding officers.
There will be, however, a slight change in some course procedures. Col. Lancaster, commanding officer of Air Force ROTC, said guest speakers from different schools in the University will be invited to lecture in various classes. Areas such as management, history and speech will be stressed in this program.
The three services have a combined enrollment of almost 500 men, a slight decrease from previous years. Col. Riedel, commander of Army ROTC, attributes this drop to the new draft lottery.
EAT LUNCH ALL DAY:
The Naval section of ROTC is planning their annual review of the cadets for May 1 in front of Allen Field House. The all-service review will be held sometime in May, Lancaster said, but a definite date has not been set.
Well, practically, anyhow. The Captain's Table cafeteria is open from 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Monday Saturday. Grille opens at 2:30.
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Use Kansan Classified
MATH MAJORS:
$4^{n} t = \frac{1}{2 \pi} G^{n}$
$4^{n} t = 0$
$\phi(t) = \frac{e}{2 \pi} \int_{-\infty}^{+\infty} G_{T}(t)$
$G_{T}(t) = \int_{-\infty}^{+\infty} e^{-a t} d t$
$= \left[ -\frac{a}{e} t \right]_{-\infty}^{+\infty}$
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It will if you join the National Security Agency. In fact, working for NSA will bring you face to face with mathematical challenges so great that they frequently go beyond the known boundaries of mathematical knowledge.
NSA is the agency within the federal government that is responsible for designing and developing invulnerable communications systems and EDP devices to transmit and receive vital information.
The Career Scene at NSA: As a mathematician at NSA, you will play an active part in defining, formulating and solving communications-related problems, many of major national significance. Statistical mathematics, matrix algebra, finite fields, probability, combinatorial analysis, programming and symbolic logic are but a few of the tools applied by Agency mathematicians.
Theoretical research is also a vital concern at NSA, owing to the fact that the present state of knowledge in certain fields of mathematics is not sufficiently advanced to satisfy NSA requirements.
Your Imagination, a Vital Factor: Because you will be working at and beyond the present-day state-of-the-art, your imagination will be stretched to its limits. Mathematical problems will seldom be formulated and handed to you. Instead you will help define the problem by observing its origin and characteristics and the trends of data associated with it. You will then determine whether the problem and data are susceptible to mathematical treatment, and if so, how.
Career Benefits: NSA's liberal graduate study program permits you to pursue two semesters of full-time graduate study at full salary. Nearly all academic costs are borne by NSA, whose proximity to seven university tional asset.
Starting salaries: depend on $9,169.00
assume additional benefits and other advantages of Federal employment of Civil Service certification.
Check with your Placement Office for further information about NSA, or to: Chief, College Relations Branch, National Security Agency, Fort George G. Meade, Md. 20755. Attn: M321. An equal opportunity employer, M&F.
Campus Interview Dates: February 18, 19, 1970
national security agency
4.67 = 1/24
... where imagination is the essential qualification.
M O P O R T I N G E C H A N D U N I T Y
M O P O R T I N G E C H A N D U N I T Y
national security agency
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
manual, woman and offered to
all students will regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Groovy. Inflatable furniture - many
styles for dorm or apartment. Call
VI 2-5801 between 6:30 & 7:30 week-
days.
2-6
New Canon FT/QL single lens reflex,
fl. 8 lens, meter, quick loading, case,
UV filter. More than $80.00 off list.
$179.50. Phone VI 3-9252 2-9
New compact electric refrigerator,
ideal for study rooms, dens, etc. Put
home, where only $89.99. Hay Stone-
back's back, open Mon, Wed
Thurs. nites.
2-9
ESTATE SALE: Community Building, 115 W. 11th, Lawrence, Kansas, Feb. 4. A fine antique and otherwise, of the historical Jaedicke-Fischer House, 743 Id. Lincoln dresso charis - Virginia - love seat - lamps - pictures - books - music - dishes, a lifetime accumulation of everything - everybody priced 2-6
Old fur coats for sale in limited supply. Muskrat, lamb and martin in various colors. $30 to $40 each (cash) V 1-3274 or 1730 Illinois. 2-9
For Sale: LP records, approximately
100, old, but good selection, many
size, each. Woman's brown fur
jacket, size 12, looks new. 843-362
evenings.
2-9
1967 Pontiac Firebird Sprint HC 6,
air conditioning, power steering and
brakes, gold with gold interior,
good condition, one owner, VI 2-7298.
RECEIVER: Heath AR-15, assembled.
1970 Consumer Monitor: AR-15 is the best receiver we have tested. Ex-
cellent. 350, 150 watts RMS. Phone 842-9
8227
Used Magnavox Color TV—sold new $398.50—now only $225.00—with free cart, and a free screened-color Ray Stoneback's downtown, open Mon, and Thurs, evenings.
Used Magnavox stereo component system with built-in AM-FM radio—with very little iron, $75.00. Ray Stonebuck's open, hard and Thurs evenings. 2-9
SANDAL SALE -20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarily Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory plus 10% handling charge, AR and Dynaco dealership, Revox and other lines available. Phone 842-2047 evening
For Sale--hardly used Smith-Corona
typewriter, Call Carol, 7546
2-6
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
VI 2-1008
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Hohner Electric Piano with hardshell case. Good condition, stays in tune, sounds good. Call Jack Manahan, 913-648-1777 or 913-649-1098. 2-6
'63 Ford for sale, 2-door, standard,
overdrive. See at Skelly station, 9th
and Louisiana. 2-10
Two sports coats, near new; size 42,
Herringbone, one gray, one brown.
$17.50 each. Call after 5:00 p.m.-842-
0455. 2-10
Harmon-Kardon 50 watt AM-FM receiver; 2 walnut enclosed air suspension 12" 3-way speaker systems 842-5225 or 616 Kentucky. 2-10
For Sale: Gibson LG1 6-string. Mahogany 2 piece back, edges; spruce top; sunburst finish, exquisite design. $15.00. Call Dave Perkins, 842-5024. 2-10
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder aut-
good condition b525-217
862-194-098
862-194-098
For Sale. 2-owner 1962 Impala 327,
factory air, power steering and power brakes. Very good condition. Call anytime. 842-5368. 2-9
New McIntosh 225 Amp, Lafayette pre-amp—indep. tuning, and two eight inch speakers-$300 value, sell for $175 Jay Steinberg, VI 31741-1 211
Heavy sounds—in your car—dig it
reverb (echcho chamber) for sale: $15
plus cost of ad. Call after 6 p.m., VI3-
9001.
2-11
For Sale: 1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass; automatic transmission, bucket seats; R-8; good condition; any fmli. R-8 to sell. Good for Christie for sale. Only $500 $500 743-858-2188
SQUA TRONT—the lending EC fanzine! Issue No. 3 only $2.00. Frazetta interview, Crandall, Wrightson, Felic stain art. DAN FLEMING, 1231 Ozaukee
For Sale: Zenith stereo phonograph.
Almost new. See at 1234 Tern.
2-11
For Sale: AMPEG G15 guitar amp,
with a 15" Jenson speaker. Has an
extrax such as dolly control.
Throw in cord. 843-6707
after five. 2-12
General electric portable stereo; black case, foldout speakers, excellent condition. $30. Must sell. Call Mark Dietz. 843-4711. 2-10
For Sale: Man's Naismith Hall contract. A Garrad 40 MKII turntable with base, dustcover and cartridge. Call Allen, 842-0430. 2-12
GROOVY: INFLATABLE FURNITURE—many styles for dorm or apartment. Call 842-5861 between 6:30 and 7:30 weekdays. 2-12
Old fur coats and capes—beaver-
clothes 1618 TSH. #ZA, 842-6810, 2-12
Love Seats—matching black foam rubber, solid malagoyan in walnut stitch. Good shape. $0.00 Also two matching walnut lamps, $0.00–2188.
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
V
DOWNTOWN PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss
T
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 1-9868
Let
PLANNING A TRIP??
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
Willing to bicker! Have two used bows, new set of hunting arrows, and finger guard Cheap! Call 842-1881 9-12
Make Your
Malls Shopping Center
Fyre boots, frringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watch bands, sandals, purses, vesties,
gloves and shoes at 812 MUSEUM,
PRIMARILY LEATHER
3-2
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4023. 5-13
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you wish.
This is the place to get some Ribs. Chicken. Brisket is our special treat. This is the place to get some Ribs. Chicken. Brisket is our special treat. I 2-9514. Closed Sunday. Tuesday if
VI 3-1211
NOTICE
Math tutoring—for almost all under-
graduate experience
1-37764 after 5 p.m.
2-9
Three men need 4th to share 6th floor apt. at Jayhawk Tower. All utilities paid except phone. Call at 2-950-731-7770
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry. 1903$^2$. Mass St. Wassar dressed, and folded, permanent clothes. Bring in early on same day service. 3-2
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay $10 each with 10% handling. AR & Dynaudio leadership. Mail 442-242-9485 wives 4 to 10.
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 styles to choose or you own. PRIMARA LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
WANTED
Three men need 4th to share apt. at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities paid except phone. Originally $6750, willing to go to $50 Dave. VI 2-14/2014 - 2-9
Need 1 or 2 replacement roommats to occupy beautiful Gatehouse apartment for second semester. Call 843-2103.
Wanted : Male graduate student to
work as a lecturer in 360 a month.
842-923-6565 evenings. 2-9
Wanted: Two girls need third room-
bed in apartment Ridges I
V 2-3654 2-6
- Passports
- Portraits
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
摄
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Need male roommate in two-bedroom
Apartment. Phone 845-1598 2-12
Conditioned. Phone 845-1598 2-12
Wanted: Riders, rides, or car pool.
KUMC to KU daily. Contact Bob at:
22-0806 4019 Adams St., K.C., Kan.
7=12
We need one additional roommate in a beautiful 4-bedroom duplex, reasonable rent. Call John, Mary or Herb at 843-2103. 2-12
FOR RENT
Furnished sleeping room available now $35. Men only. Call 843-2161. tf
Entire basement apt. Private entrance.
bedrooms, fireplace, utility spaces $130.00
per month, available now, for 2 or 3
rooms. March 26th
Phone 845-0750 or 845-6011 - 210
For Rent—New two bedroom luxury apartment, Large rooms. Quiet area. Occupy immediately. Married couples or two girls only $150. 843-5884 2-11
For Rent 2 bedroom apartment, furni-
ture for 1 month, Call Millefur-
Tim at 843-794-2111
2-11
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accuracy. Call VI 3-3281, Mrs. Ruckman
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxl, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Accurate typing of these, maru-
anize, and print the data on IBM selective-carbon ribbon, pica type. Reasonable prices. Close to campus. Mrs. Phylliss Nelson. VI-2-124
Typing done on electric machine
Fast, reasonable rates. Call 842-1561
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken,
Hamburgers,
etc.
Hurry to Henry's h & Mo. VI 3-2139
Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, term papers, other misc. typists. Must have MS in Comp Sci or Pica design. Competent service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-14
HELP WANTED
PERSONAL
Wish to employ noon hour supervisor for elementary school lunch room and play ground, 11:30 to 12:30. Phone VI 3-4886 for interview. 2-9
LOST
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $801_{12 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. **tt**
Lost-black men's wallet. Need ur-
reward. Call 842-6221. 2-9
FOUND
Lost: Between Watkins and Snow, a pair of black-rimmed round glasses with bracelets. Behind them is the Reward $2. Please call 843-6263 and leave message. 2-12
Found. 1 pr man's glasses. Found by Robinson last month. Call John Valentine at 843-0836. Owner must pay for ad. 2-10
Found: one woman's watch during enrollment. Call Dan in 560 McColum; identify the watch, pay for this ad, and the watch is yours. 2-10
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU I.D. is worth $1,00 off on planning your return. Bring **I** to your room and **Bring it** to the door. You'll receive a $100 credit.
Sirloin
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Stalking stubs and fresh select awards aways when you watch at the *Saturn*. We serve only the凌晨, preparing the selection as you like them with all of the latest movies at the Saturn for uncompromising pleasure.
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
T
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one half mile north,
of the Kow River Bridge
843-1411
Want to Make Some Easy Money?
Sell what you don't need with a Kansan Classified.
Classified Rates
25 words or less ...
Each additional word
Classified Display ..
One Time Three Times
$1.00 $1.50
.01 .02
$1.50 per column inch
Clip and fill out the form below. Bring it by the Ad office, 111 Flint Hall (with the cash), or mail your ad to us! c/o Shelley Bray, Classified Ad Manager, 111 Flint Hall. Please include check or money order for the full amount.
Five Times $1.75 .03
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(Print ad below as you want it to appear)
Dibona nomination unsure
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Charles J. Dibona's views and personality have failed to impress key members of the Senate Armed Services Committee—so much so that President Nixon might drop plans to nominate him as Selective Service director.
The White House confirmed last week that Dibona had been offered the job to succeed Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey. It said Thursday, as it did then, that no final decision had been reached.
Dibona, a 37-year-old naval academy graduate and civilian research consultant for the Pentagon, met with Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of
Council
(Continued from page 1)
conduct. Reduction of grade may not include the awarding of an "F" in the course as a result of a single act of academic misconduct.
- Disciplinary Probation: Exclusion from participation in specified privileged or extra-curricular activities for a period not exceeding one school year.
- Suspension: Exclusion from Classes and other specified privileges or activities for a definite period not in excess of two years.
- Expulsion: Termination of student status for an indefinite period. The conditions of readmission, if any, shall be stated in the order of expulsion. Other sanctions which may be imposed upon an instructor for academic misconduct are:
- Recommendation of Suspension: Recommendation to the Chancellor that an instructor be excluded from teaching and other specified privileges or activities for a definite period not in excess of two years.
- Recommendation of Dismissal: Recommendation to the Chancellor that an instructor be dismissed from the University staff for an indefinite period. More than one sanction may be imposed upon a student or an instructor for the same offense or offenses.
A vote was then taken and passed to recommend these changes to the University Senate which will then decide whether or not to adopt the changes.
In other business, the council elected James U. Maloney, professor of chemistry and petroleum engineering, as presiding officer.
The council then recessed until 3:30 p.m. Thursday, February 12.
16 KANSAN Feb. 6 1970
1/2 OFF
WINTER
MERCHANDISE
• Coats
• Dresses
• Sportswear &
• Accessories
Entire Stock Not Included
COACH HOUSE Stores in Kansas, Missouri and Colorado
Maine, its ranking Republican,
on Jan. 26.
Mrs. Smith refused comment, but other sources reported that she was "adamantly" opposed to Dibona and that Stennis also was against the appointment, which the committee would have to clear.
Dibona, just back from a Caribbean cruise, said in a telephone interview that he expected to decide in a few days whether to accept the job that Hershey will vacate Feb. 16.
"I still have the matter under active consideration, and it's my understanding that is the case at the White House," Dibona said.
"I agree with President Nixon's policy of moving toward an all-volunteer Army," Dibona said, noting that its complications are under study by a special White House commission.
"Everybody seems to have something different, but it is mostly a question of the guy being difficult and abrasive
Student killed
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) collided, "it seemed like it was raining car parts."
Gore's death marks the first fatal accident in Lawrence for the new year.
* *
Gore was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer T. Gore, Pawnee Rock. He was a junior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, majoring in psychology.
He was the president of Templin Hall for the Fall, 1969 semester, and he was a member of the Templin intramural football team. At semester break he moved to Gatehouse Apartments.
Gore was the recipient of one of two Laura Sivight Memorial Scholarships awarded to outstanding Pawnee County students. Miss Sivight was a KU sophomore from Larned when she was killed in an auto accident in December, 1968.
Funeral arrangements are being arranged through the Beckwith Funeral Home, Larned.
as an eventual substitute for the draft. The senator said that "the feeling is that there is a man—Dibona—committed to killing a program he is supposed to take over."
rather than something in his record," said one Senate source.
One committee member said a key issue is Dibona's advocacy of an all-volunteer armed force, an idea that the President favors
NEW GRILLE IN TOWN:
The Captain's Table is proud of its grille menu. Ace is creating a variety of hamburgers, steaks,and sandwiches for you. Grille opens at 2:30.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 CRESCENT Rd.
ONE THOU SAND
ONE THOU SAND Read 3 to 10 Times Faster
Take the Evelyn Wood Course and join the more than 1,000 KU and Lawrence Reading Dynamics Graduates who now read faster, understand better,and remember longer.
M
These 1,000 students have averaged an increase in speed of over 5 times and an improvement in comprehension of almost 10%.
Which Reading Dynamics course best fits your needs and schedule?
The Regular Reading Dynamics Course:
Mon., Feb. 9, 9:30 - 10:20 A.M.
(Meets MWF for Seven Weeks)
Mon., Feb. 9, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks)
Wed., Feb. 11, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Twice a Week - Wed. night and
Sat. morning 10:00 A.M. - 12:30 P.M. for
four weeks)
The Freshman Reading Dynamics Course:
Tues., Feb. 10, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks) This course is especially designed for freshmen, accenting study skills and incorporating first-year course material.
B
The Vietnam Reading Dynamics Course:
Thurs., Feb. 12, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks) In this unique course you read and discuss Vietnam in-depth while at least tripling your Reading Efficiency.
Phone VI 3-6424 Now. Class Space is Limited.
ONE THOU SAND
South fights desegregation
MOBILE, Ala. (UPI)—Four Deep South governors conferred about the "chaotic school conditions" in their states Sunday and decided to meet with their congressional delegations in an effort to fight federal desegregation policies.
Govs. Albert Brewer of Alabama, Lester Maddox of Georgia, John Bell Williams of Mississippi and John McKeithen of Louisiana met for nearly three hours in the International Trade Center, then released a terse statement restating their opposition to some federal policies, especially busing.
They did not elaborate on their plans to meet the congressmen, but said the meetings would be held as soon as possible "to seek a unified course of action to obtain relief from the chaotic conditions now facing our schools.
"We affirm our determination that no child in any state or any school system shall be mandatorally bused for the sole purpose of achieving racial balance in our public schools," the statement said.
"We believe that the same standards for the operation of schools applied in other states should be applied in the Southern states. We resent the fact that we have been singled out in our respective states for punitive treatment," the statement added.
The statement also urged the people of the South to try to solve their problems through "orderly democratic processes and not through violence."
In Charlotte, N.C., about 1,500 white parents and their children crowded onto the lawn of the federal building to protest a desegregation plan that would mean busing of more than 10,000 children. Organizers of the rally urged parents to boycott schools, cancell newspaper subscriptions, and launch letter-writing campaigns to public officials.
In Miami, some 243,000 Dade County school children will return to classes Monday after a court-ordered week's vacation to give administrators time to desegregate school faculties.
About 2,000 teachers were shifted around Dade County's
240 schools on orders by U.S. District Court Judge C. Clyde Atkins to achieve a racially balanced faculty.
School officials said the transfers were made without difficulty and no problems were anticipated when classes resume Monday.
KU students have until Wednesday to pay their school fees. Payment must be made at the Business Office in Carruth-0'Leary or mailed to the Business Office. The IBM computer card must accompany the fee payment.
"We will go to the courts with all the resources we can marshall to gain reliief." Brewer said;
After Wednesday a late fee fine of $10 will be added to a student's bill.
Williams said the governors had made "certain plans for future action" which he could not reveal at the present time. Brewer said the meeting would result in "something tangible and concrete."
BULLETIN
(Continued to page 16)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
--the Democrats for years have controlled both the White House and the Congress."
80th Year, No. 74 The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Monday,Feb.9,1970
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—President Nixon dispatched Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird to Vietnam today for a top-to-bottom look at how well the South Vietnamese are taking over the war—and how fast the United States can continue to pull out.
Laird begins Viet tour
Pancake race set to begin
LIBERAL—Liberal's "fastest girls" in town readied Sunday for the big race, their annual Shrove Tuesday Pancake derby against the lasses of Oney, England.
Winning times are compared by transAtlantic telephone following the Liberal leg of the race, run over a 415-yard, S-shaped course with the participants flipping hotcakes on a griddle as they go.
Medical fee fix proposed
WASHINGTON—A Senate staff study, sharply critical of the fees doctors collect for treating Medicare patients, says the government's health insurance program has driven up medical costs for all Americans.
Its chief proposal for overcoming the problem—a fixed schedule of fees participating doctors can receive for the Medicare practice—struck a sensitive nerve. The medical profession has always opposed government-set fees.
Demos answer Nixon with nation-wide film
WASHINGTON (UPI)— The Democratic Party replied Sunday to President Nixon's State of the Union address with a televised film intended to show "a not-so-silent majority" blaming the administration for inflation, unemployment, urban decay, pollution and poverty.
This year the party turned to its best-looking young legislators, found a supporting cast of angry shoppers and unemployed workers and put them in a variety of settings including a supermarket, an abandoned housing development, a smog-covered valley and an outdoor coffee shop.
But the professionally produced one-hour film, beamed across the nation free of charge by the three major television networks, represented an obvious departure from past presentations in which portly politicians followed one another to the microphone with long-winded speeches.
Initial Republican reaction came from Rep. Bob Wilson, chairman of the GOP Congressional Committee, Who said: "The Democrats pinpointed many of the problems facing the country on their TV show—residual problems left over from eight years of Democratic administration—and they sounded just like a group of disgruntled heirs arguing over their meager inheritance."
This theme was supported by House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford, who said the program "was a lot of talking about long-standing problems that have gone unsolved while
The best-known Democratic figures, with the exception of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, were not shown or were relegated to minor roles. The stars were attractive newcomers like Reps. Patsy Mink, D-Hawaii, and William Clay, D-Mo., or candidates facing tough re-election contests.
A typical scene went something like this;
"Good morning," Mrs. Mink said to a woman who had just paid a food bill of $60.52 in a supermarket checkout line. "We hear a great deal about inflation and about the rising cost of prices. As a housewife and person who is responsible for shopping each week, I wonder if you could tell us what inflation means to you?"
"Well," the woman answered, "it means that I don't often buy a luxury item like sugar-coated cereal which the children love, or ice cream, and that orange juice we have to really ration. And I have to think about these things now and I used to consider these just quantity items you had to buy and keep up with and they're no longer necessity items."
The Democrats did manage to squeeze in a minute for a traditional behind-the-desk-with-the-flag message from 78-year-old Speaker John W. McCormack, Mass., who praised "young Democrats" and "emerging leaders." The film's producers spliced in shots of young people while McCormack spoke.
1
Alone...
Photo by Greg Gorman
"Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each of us be alone,"—Kahil Gibran A student pauses on the hill behind Flint Hall.
Campus briefs
Angel Flight to begin rush
The Ennis C. Whitehead chapter of Angel Flight is holding its annual rush information tea at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, said Julie Jardes, Overland Park sophomore and Angel Flight rush chairman. The chapter is an auxiliary to the Arnold Air Society and is a service organization.
Interviews for Angel Flight will be held Feb. 15—18. Anyone wanting further information should contact Miss Jardes at 843-8022.
Blood Drive begins
The Red Cross Blood drive will begin Tuesday and continue through Thursday in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said Michael Barnett, Hampton, Va., sophomore and chairman of the drive.
Those wishing to donate may do so from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday and Wednesday, and 9:30 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. Thursday, Barnett said.
Student loan fund established
A student loan fund in honor of a University of Kansas student who lost his life in World War I has been established at KU.
The gift of $5,000 was made by Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd E. Alquist of Clay Center and was named the John Paul Slade Student Loan Fund. Slade, a brother of Mrs. Alquist was a lieutenant in the field artillery in France at the time of his death in 1918. The contribution was made to the Endowment Association through the Program for Peace.
Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, said the loan funds were available to all students of KU who met the minimum standards of academic achievement under the loan program.
Chemistry lectures slated
The department of chemistry will present two lectures Thursday and Friday.
Phi Lambda Upsilon, an honorary chemical society here at KU, will feature Martin Dickinson, KU Professor of law, to speak on "Income Tax—What is Deductible."
Dickinson will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in 122 Malott.
Harrison Shull, professor of chemistry from Indiana University, will speak Friday on "Computational Chemistry."
The lecture Friday, funded by the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc., will be given at 4 p.m. in 124 Malott.
Texaco to interview seniors
Texaco Oil Company will be interviewing at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office on Thursday.
Texaco, the fourth largest manufacturing corporation in the United States, will be interested in seniors in the College.
Those interested should contact the College office.
Japanese group plans meeting
The KU Japanese Student Association's first meeting of the spring semester will be held in Dvche auditorium Tuesday at 7 p.m.
A kanjincho kaduki play and talk relating to freedom in Japan will be presented at 8 p.m. The public is invited.
Law scholarship applications due
Students planning to attend the University of Chicago School of Law next year should contact J. A. Burzle, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, at 206 Strong Hall by Tuesday if they wish to be considered for the University of Kansas National Honor Scholarship program for the University of Chicago School of Law.
Ford agency seeks models
Job interviews will be held Thursday for women students interested in modeling work, said Pam Smith, Ottawa senior and secretary of the Associated Women Students fashion board.
Interviewing are representatives from the Ford Model Agency of New York. Students must have a height between 5'7" and $ 5^{\prime} 9\frac{1}{2}^{\prime \prime}$, a slender build and must be photogenic.
Students interested should contact Mrs. Susan Hess, assistant ocean of women, before Wednesday for an appointment.
Registration deadline near
The voter registration deadline for Douglas County is Tuesday. A voter must be 21 years old and a six-month resident of the state plus a 30 day resident of the precinct in which he lives. Persons not registered should sign up in the city clerk's office by 9 p.m. Tuesday.
AWS begins scholarship drive
The Associated Women Students Scholarship Committee has begun a round of projects to raise money for a traditional scholarship which will be awarded on AWS honors night in April.
Kathy Nemeth, Oberlin sophomore, said the committee has asked each living group on campus to hold a money making project for the scholarship. The committee itself will operate a concession stand at
Feb. 9
1970
2 KANSAN
all of the track meets. The committee is also considering designing a calendar to sell and bringing a speaker to KU to raise funds for the project.
Regents praised by new member
Elmer Jackson, the first Negro ever to be appointed to the Kansas Board of Regents, has expressed confidence both in his fellow Regent board members and in the Board of Regents as an administrative organization.
By JIM ROTHGEB
Kansan staff writer
Jackson, 57, was appointed to the Regents by Gov. Robert Docking on January 14 as a replacement for C. N. "Ned" Cushing of Downs.
Jackson graduated from the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in 1933, and received his degree from the KU School of Law in 1935. He is now a member of Stevens, Davis, Jackson and Haley law firm in Kansas City. He is also a special assistant to Attorney General Kent Frizzell.
"In the short time I have been with the Board of Regents," Jackson said, "I have found the members of the Regents to be a high caliber group of men who certainly will not agree on everything but will definitely make a point to look objectively and fairly at the situations that confront them."
Applications for the scholarship will be due in April.
Jackson is the executive director of the National Bar Association and served as president of the association from 1959 to 1961. He was recipient of the C. Francis Stradford Award of the NBA for outstanding and meritorious service.
An active member of the Kansas City Urban League, Jackson is currently vice-president of the Wyandotte County Mental Health Association. He has also been active in the Kansas City branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
In a telephone interview Friday, Jackson commented on issues currently before the Board of Regents and gave his views of the educational system of Kansas.
He spoke highly of the colleges and universities in Kansas saying the people of this state can be proud that their young people are educated in such a system as ours.
He said today's colleges were run by a fine group of administrators and, because of closer ties between students and administration, the quality of education was at an all-time high.
Jackson said the primary obligation of today's colleges was to allow the student to get an education without disruption. He pointed out that Kansas colleges had been recognized throughout the country for this characteristic.
One of the major problems facing the Board of Regents is whether to increase faculty salaries. If such an increase did take place, cutbacks would exist in other areas of the educational budget proposed by Gov. Docking.
Jackson said that a recent survey of college faculty salaries in twenty schools in the American Association of Colleges and Universities, KU ranked very close to the bottom.
He said the proposed salary increase would not alarmingly raise the faculty wages but bring them to an average level comparable to those salaries given in schools about the size of KU.
Jackson said the Board of Regents had taken no official stand on the issue of giving credit to students enrolled in ROTC, but he thought the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature were pretty much in agreement in support of ROTC courses.
"The Board of Regents operates by a good set of by-laws and statutes," he said.
ROCK CHA1K REVUE improbable history
ROCK CHALK
REVIEW
improbable history
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—
KU-Y office,
information booth on
campus,
Bell's, the sound, Kief's
sponsored by KU-Y
Use Kansan Classified
NEW GRILLE IN TOWN:
The Captain's Table is proud of its grille menu. Ace is creating a variety of hamburgers, steaks,and sandwiches for you. Grille opens at 2:30.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics, of course. Take the Freshman Reading Dynamics Course and:
1) At least triple your reading efficiency.
2) Cover all the readings of English II.
3) Learn the most effective study skills available and apply them to your course materials.
What about the Lifetime Membership?
This is really a good deal. As a Reading Dynamics graduate you have full privileges to Evelyn Wood institutes at home and abroad. For example, next year at KU you can enroll at no additional cost in the popular Reading Dynamics Western Civ. course or in special interest courses such as Vietnam Reading Dynamics.
M
evelyn wood
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freshman course
ONE KU Evelyn Wood
THOU. Reading Dynamics
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VI3-6424? Reserve your place in the Freshman Reading
Why not call V13-6424? Reserve your place in the Freshman Reading Dynamics Course which begins Tuesday, February 10, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
Drugs symbolize deeper problems
Headquarters deals with various issues
By DAN OSBORNE
Kansan Staff Writer
"Our theme is helping people help themselves," said Brian Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa, senior, referring to the newly formed drug abuse center Headquarters. "Drug problems, psychological hang-ups, boy-girl problems and helping people relate to one another are but a few of the issues we deal with here." he explained
Headquarters, located at 1546 Massachusetts, began Dec. 16 and was conceived by Bauerle. The idea came from having worked with two similar organizations, the Ecstatic Umbrella in Kansas City and the Manner House in Chicago.
Two other KU students, John Pettit, Mission senior, and Dave Nutt, Baldwin senior, helped Bauerle make Headquarters a reality.
The building used by Headquarters is an old, two-story six-room house where Bauerle, Pettit and Nutt reside.
"At first the rent was paid by contributions we received from the First Methodist Church," Bauerle said. "Now we rely on contributions and just play it by ear."
Funding is not all "played by ear," however. Headquarters sponsors dances to raise money
and has a steering committee which attempts to raise funds both locally and nationally. Bauerle said the steering committee is composed of KU faculty members, local professionals and other local people.
"We base our programs here on concern for others. We don't try to psychoanalyze the kids because we don't feel qualified." Bauerle said.
"The first thing we do when someone comes for help is to try to gain his trust. We then explain the different alternatives offered here and the person is free to choose among them."
One alternative offered by Headquarters is a group of local doctors and psychologists who can be consulted for help. Other alternatives are group and interpersonal discussions, human relations classes and just being around concerned people, Bauerle said.
"We started out by dealing mainly with kids who had bad drug problems," Bauerle said. "Then we realized that drugs are just a symptom of deeper problems."
In order to cope with these problems, Headquarters is attempting to initiate a wide range of programs. Assisting with these programs is a group of 35 high
school students called 'staffers.'
To become a 'staffer' a student merely fills out a card to indicate he is available for service. Bauerle said that 'staffers' consulted with kids coming to Headquarters and try to make them feel at home. 'Staffers' also are free to initiate new programs.
A future program initiated by the 'staffers' is the production of a movie. The movie will be produced with the aid of Don Baldwin of the Wesley Foundation and used to describe the programs at Headquarters.
Educational programs at Headquarters include films, lectures by KU faculty members and the opportunity for high school 'staffers' to enroll in the free university.
Although Headquarters is not primarily a drug center, every effort is made to inform the people there about drugs and their effects with the help of a local pharmacologist, Bing Hart.
Bauerle and his staff use research done by Hart to teach the kids about drugs and for speaking engagements. This knowledge also is useful in treating people who have come to Headquarters as the result of a bad drug trip.
The mood at Headquarters is one of enthusiasm. Comments by
Natural balance explained; ecologist warns of suicide
kids involved indicate that Bauerle's attempt to create a "home" atmosphere is successful.
"The first night I came here i was impressed with the way everybody cared about everybody else," said Sam Katz, a sophomore at Lawrence High School. "I don't have any real problems but I just come here to be with people."
Katz said he comes to Headquarters on weekends and every day after school. He indicated that his parents know of his visits and have no objections.
Dana Garrison, a junior at Lawrence High, said, "This is my first time here but I really like it and think it's a great idea."
Garrison said he heard about Headquarters from his friends and plans to come more often.
Although Headquarters has been open less than two months,
Bauerle and his staff are optimistic, Bauerle indicated that the response from both kids and their parents has been favorable.
environment is polluted.
"Of course the long range effects won't be known for quite some time, but the short term effects are very encouraging." Bauerle said.
Dr. Barry Commoner spoke Thursday of environmental problems bewildering in their complexity in a speech broadcast to numerous schools throughout the midwest.
"We are doing ourselves in," he said. "We are on a suicidal path." He added that we are not compatible with our own laws of nature.
Commoner is a noted ecologist and is presently the chairman of the botany department at Washington University in St. Louis. In his speech, "Crisis in Environment." Commoner indicated the world is on a suicidal path unless something can be done to protect the environment.
taken place, said Commoner. There is a huge debt man owes the environment and in some instances, many of us may reach the point of no return within the next generation. He said man should start immediately to alleviate problems that exist now and suggested that we not try to conquer nature, but live with it.
"The problems are discouraging," said Commoner. How can a society be so enriched and yet be so impoverished "
Commoner blamed many of our problems on the fact technological advances have completely overcome the balance of nature. He said with the smell of polluted water, the smog in the air and the problem of waste treatment, it is clear that the
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Commoner also said that technology is incompatible with the environment.
In explaining his theory, Commoner spoke of a vast web of biological interaction involved in the environment. He said the four elements present in all living beings make up a complex living machine. Everything we do, said Commoner, depends on the function of that machine.
An ecological backlash has
The Captain's Table stocks all of your favorite drug items. On your way to class, come see our toothpaste.
WE SELL DRUGS:
Friday: Consolidated Freightways, BS-business administration, BA-alier arts, data processing; Shell Companies, BS-business administration, accounting, economies financing; Textual BS-business administration, counting, MS-law; Union Tank Car Co. BS-business administration, accounting, finance systems analysis.
Wednesday: Cessna Aircraft Company,
Hutchinson, BS business advice
and management. Dow Corning Corporation,
BS, MIS.
MBA-accounting, finance marketing,
sales; Price Waterhouse and Co., Ba-
sity of accounting majors, law &
division. ABA - PAC 241.
Thursday: General Foods Corporation,
BS-business, BA-aliberal arts,
BS-college, BSc-accounting and MS-accounting majors, law; Shell
Companies, BS-business administra-
tion, accounting economics, finance
markets; Stata-Bell oil of New Jersey;
MS or MBA only
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
- 1420 Crescent Rd.
Tuesday: Ernst & Ernst, BS or MS accounting and management law and engineering; Mobil Oil Corporation, BS-business administration, BA-liberer MBA; Ralston Purina Co., all degrees, management and development.
Quinn will be writing a book on the subject of wonder. Quinn
said he had taught several courses on the subject and had most of the materials collected for the book. He said that wonder is "the passion of the soul, which leads to the search for understanding."
Quinn said the library at Mon-serrat, a monastery in Sitges, has an excellent supply of the theological and philosophical materials on wonder.
KU director plans research
Quinn, his wife Eva, and his three children will leave Friday. The family will live in Sitges, Spain for several months while Quinn does research on a book, he said.
Dennis Quinn, director of Pearson College, will leave the University of Kansas and the country in a few days to travel to Spain.
Monday: Bendix Corp, BS, MBA business administration, accounting; business administration, BA-liberal arts; National Bank Examiners, BS or MS-business administration, BA-economies or labor; Simmons University, BA-liberal arts; journalism majors; Standard Oil of Indiana, K.S., MS, BS business management or financial sales; Yellow Freight Systems, Inc., BS or MBA-business administration operating management trainees, summer_work
Feb. 9
1970 KANSAN 3
Business interviews posted
The University of Kansas School of Business has announced its interview schedule from Monday to Friday. Employers are interested in graduating seniors and graduate students.
Interested business students should sign up in 202 Summerfield.
Engineers Math and Science Majors
IBM will be interviewing on campus Feb.17,18
We'd like to talk to you if you're interested in a career in science and engineering, programming, or marketing. Sign up at your placement office.
An Equal Opportunity Employer IBM
KAWSAN COMMENT
A sad circus
There is a sad circus in Chicago.
It is sad because the ringmaster doesn't like laughter. In fact, he will not tolerate it.
Julius Hoffman does not recognize the humor of the show he is running, and this is a tragedy. It is obvious that he is not going to let the participants go home after the final act.
The Chicago conspiracy trial should be a fantasy, but it's not. All over America, people are reading newspaper accounts of Hoffman's circus, and laughing, just as they laughed at Hitler in the 1930's when he reminded them of Charlie Chaplin.
There have been many occasions during the trial when laughter was appropriate. There was, for example, the time that Judge Hoffman threatened to throw poet Allen Ginsberg out of court for chanting in Sanskrit.
And there was the time that Abbie Hoffman was on the witness stand and declared that he was a resident of Woodstock Nation. "What state is that in?" asked the judge. "The state of mind." Abbie replied.
Sometimes the humor was light. One witness, Anne Patrick Kerr, a member of Parliament, informed Judge Hoffman that she could be addressed as "the Honorable Member for Rochester and Chatham." The judge replied, "That's a little too long. I'll just call you Madame Witness."
But at times the dialogue sounded like it come out of Catch 22:
Judge Hoffman: "Let the record show that the defendant—rather, the defendants' counsel, Mr. Kunstler, on two occasions here refused to
sit down when the Court directed him to sit down."
Kunstler: "Oh, that's not fair, Your Honor."
Weinglass (another defense attorney): "He sat down, on both occasions, Your Honor. I must object to that."
Kunstler: "I sat down on both occasions."
Judge Hoffman (red in the face): "I mean right now. in this decision."
Judge Hoffman: "You did finally, after I urged you."
Kunstler: "I sat down."
Weinglass: "Your Honor, that is not a fair characterization."
Judge Hoffman: "Will you sit down!"
Some of the incidents were too bizarre to be funny. Judge Hoffman was not at all humorous when he had Bobby Seale bound and gagged. Later, he sentenced Seale to four years in prison for contempt of court.
The judge erred also when he excluded Ramsey Clark from the witness stand and tried to do the same to Rev. Ralph Abernathy. And when Judge Hoffman recently sent Dave Dellinger to jail for interrupting the trial, the tears in the courtroom were not caused by laughter.
Incompetence may be humorous for a while, but too often it leads to disaster.
Radicals are rarely noted for the art of understatement, but Rennie Davis scored heavily in this department when he said recently, "This court is bull--it."
For Judge Hoffman's handling of this case has become more profane than any statements made by the defendants.
The humor has faded,but the show goes on. Noe.
Sorel's News Service
Population & academia
We recently submitted a questionnaire to students and faculty at Cornell University designed to test attitudes and preferences concerning family size and contraceptive technique. The 1059 respondents (74 percent males) were a mixed lot who represented the physical and biological sciences, humanities, and social sciences and who included faculty (294), graduate students (174), upperclassmen (264), and freshmen (327). Given the level of education of the sample, the results were unexpected in several respects.
From SCIENCE
First, although there was general agreement (84 percent) on the desirability of limiting family size, a substantial majority (65 percent) said it wanted three children (39 percent) or more (26 percent). Only 30 percent favored two children, and a mere 5 percent expressed preference for one or none. Choice was in no major way affected by age, sex, marital status, parenthood, or professional specialty. Even the respondents whom we expected to be most concerned about the population crisis (for example, graduate students and young faculty in biology) included a minimum of 50 percent with a desire for three children or more.
As regards contraception, about one-half favored "the pill" over all other available means as a way both to space children (53 percent) and to maintain family size at its desired limit (50 percent). Other contraceptive appliances such as condoms, diaphragms, and intrauterine devices were each given top preference by no more than 13 percent of the sample. Voluntary sterilization, either of man or woman, was judged as decidedly undesirable. Only 6 percent opted in favor of vasectomy as the preferred form of contraception once full family size had been achieved; the corresponding number favoring ligation of the oviducts was 2 percent A majority (52 percent of males and 61 percent of females) said they would never undergo sterilization, even after having had the desired number of children. The operation was judged to be as undesirable as abortion and abstinence for prevention of family growth beyond the set limit. It is of interest in this connection that the consequences of sterilization are not generally understood. For example, asked whether vasectomy would abolish the ability to ejaculate, nearly half the respondents (49 percent) confessed to ignorance or expressed either certainty or probability that emission would no longer accompany orgasm. Biology students scored no better than nonbiologists, and graduate students, even after marriage and parenthood, seemed to be no better informed than freshmen. The only exceptional group was the biology faculty, but, even there, 30 percent were either misinformed or uninformed on this point. Comparable ignorance prevails with respect to oviduct ligation: 37 percent of respondents were certain, or thought it probable, that the operation would interfere with the menstrual cycle.
We are bothered by these results. Perhaps of least general concern is the probability that proponents of voluntary sterilization are backing a hopeless or nearly hopeless cause. But what are we to make of the educated youth growing up among us that is either unconcerned about population growth or, at the very least, unable or unwilling to apply to itself the simple arithmetic of compound interest? And what, if any, are the prospects for improved sex education when ignorance about the reproductive system is widespread even among those who should know best?—Thomas Eisner, Ari van Tienhoven, Frank Rosenblatt, Cornell University.
Griff & the Unicorn
Griff &
BY SOKOLOFF
GOING SOMEWHERE, I'M FLYING SOUTH FOR THE WINTER.
WHAT?!
YOU CAN'T BE SERIOUS!
YOUR WINGS ARE TOO SMALL!
HOW CAN YOU EVEN THINK OF FLYING?
I HAVE DELUSIONS OF GRANDEUR.
CARTOON
Making hypocrisy secure
CHICAGO—Looking forward with hope to the 1970s, Mayor Richard J. Daley praised the idealism of youth and cited Jesus and Lincoln as models for today's long-haired, bearded generation. As for plans for the next decade: "I would like to see a real program—not a program, but real action on the question of how we live as human beings, what we are doing to one another."
hearing voices-
To the editor:
I was very pleased with your recent article calling attention to some of the serious inadequacies of Spooner Hall as an Art Museum building.
I was further quoted as saying that private donors have not given money for a new building because they feel that the state should provide such facilities. What I really said was that people have not donated money for maintenance and upkeep of Spooner Hall because they feel (quite rightly, I think) that this is the state's responsibility.
We are, on the contrary, very hopeful that private support will be found for a new museum building. This was one of the goals of the Program for Progress and must surely remain an item of top priority for the University.
There are two points, however, that should be clarified. I was quoted as saying that I did not know whether funds had been requested from the state for a new museum building. What I actually said was that I did not know whether funds had been requested specifically for the renovation or remodeling of Spooner Hall. Small scale renovation conceivably could be paid for out of general maintenance funds available to the University and might not require special state appropriations.
A. Bret Waller, Director,
Kansas University Museum of Art
An All-American college newspaper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for holidays. Published a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior notice. The Office of Student Services is necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editor Ted Iliff
News Editor Joe Bullard
Editorial Editors Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Doid
Sports Editors Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver
Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkens
Wire Editor Ken Cummins
Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers
Arts and Reviews Editors Genie Richards, Kiel Geary
Assistant News Editors Wiki Phillips, Nila Walker
Assistant News Editors Donna Shrader, Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart
Photographers Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Lefflingwell
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser Mel Adams
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks
Advertising Managers Larry Cates Joanne Bos
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Thirty classes offered
Free University opens today
The Kansas Free University classes begin today with 30 classes offered. Pre-enrollment is not required.
The class leader, called a coordinator, is either interested in a particular field or well-versed in the area he will be coordinating.
Additional information about each course offered in Kansas Free University may be found in the Free University Catalogue which may be picked up in the Union or the Carterbury House.
The courses offered, the time,
place, coordinator, and his phone
number are:
Anarchist Theory, 7:30 p.m. Monday, 1301 Louisiana #10, John Weissmiller, 842-5701; Introduction to Assemblage Art, 7:30 p.m. Bookstore, Harry Kroon, 843-4318; Beermaking, 7:30 p.m. Monday, 1701 Ohio, Bob Marvin; Folksong Workshop, 7:30 p.m. Monday, 116 Lle Rie Cemetery, 7:30 p.m. Lle Rie Museum, 842-7200; Martyrs and Martyri-Makers
—The Female Predicament, Monday,
Call Roe Schmidt, 843-6556; Poetic
Terrence Williams, 842-1053; Rhythm
and Blues, 7 p.m. Monday, 1328 Vermont,
Bode Benhivengo, 843-2703; The
Monday, Call Roe Krebs, 842-5267.
Classical Music, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
1701 Ohio, Jeff Dearinger, 842-576-656
Gravestone Rubbings, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
941 Louisiana #302, Mary Hatcher,
842-2371; Science Fiction, 7:30 p.m.
tuesday U.S. International, 8:45 p.m.
U.S. Industrialism in Latin America, 8 p.m. Tuesday, 1142 Indiana #3,
Jeff Lough
Drugs and the Mind, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
1546 Mass, Bing Hart, 843-4062
or 842-7472; Esperanto, 7:30 p.m.
wEDNESDAY, 1301 Louisiana #10, John
Weismiller, 842-5701; Knitting Yarn-
craft, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 1935 Ohio
CITY, Knittingners bring a pair of medium-sized needles and a skein of knitting worsed.
Functional Morality, 8 p.m. Thursday,
1332 Louisiana, Richard Spear,
842-5339; Jesus, 7 p.m. Thursday, 1527
u# & #A8; Smooie Mood; What We
Built in Our School and Out
Of, 8 p.m. Thursday, Room 17, Marvin
Hall, Tod Lundy, 842-4668
Free University Orchestra, 11 a.m. Saturday, 1701 Ohio, Ri Acverall m. times before, sun up, KA声塔 n. times Mueller; Blues Guitar, 8:30 p.m. Sunday, 1116 Louisiana, Daryl Katz; Breadmaking, m. Sunday, 1530 Lincoln, F. G. Marxism; Theory and Practice, 2 p.m., 1510 Kentucky #G, Fred Murphy; Draft Counselors Training, 2:30 Sunday, Lou Oufle, Lawrence Peace Cen
The Art of Ecology, Saturday Afternoons, call Deermeow or Mountain Beaver at 842-2976 for arrangements; Balance Skills, call Phil Levi at 842-
February proclaimed Peace Corps Month
Governor Robert Docking today proclaimed February as Peace Corps Month in the state of Kansas. In his proclamation Governor Docking urged "the
Year long course in biology plan
A summer course in biological field study, offered at KU this summer, may be the beginning of a special full-year study of vertebrate biology available in the spring semester 1971 to graduate students.
The National Science Foundation made a $5,000 grant for the summer course titled "Field Methods for Vertebrate Biologists."
The coordinators of the course, Robert S. Hoffman and J. Knox Jones Jr., said whether the year long course would be developed depended upon the experience this summer. The summer course will emphasize multifaceted fields of study, including ecology, ethnology and systematics.
Students in the eight week summer course will spend three weeks in Lawrence and five weeks in the Custer National Forest of Montana. Graduate students enrolled in the summer course will enroll in a four hour fall semester course devoted to the preparation of a detailed research report.
Feb. 9
1970 KANSAN 5
Kansas citizens to give serious consideration to the possibility of participating in this organization."
Glen Fischbach, Peace Corps western regional director, received the governor's proclamation on behalf of the Peace Corps.
This week has been designated KU Peace Corps Week and films will be shown from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. every day in the Kansas Union Oread Room. A question and answer session will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
More than a dozen Peace Corps recruiters will be in Kansas during the month of February Fishbach said. The recruiters will spend much of their time on college and university compues he said. The other part of the campaign, Fishbach added, will be directed at the experienced Kansas farmer whose skills are urgently needed.
The Peace Corps is in Kansas looking for more than 2,000 experienced farmers and other persons who are interested in serving overseas as Peace Corps volunteers.
"Most of the applicants need to be single," Fishbach said, "but there are a number of requests for married couples and some requests which allow for married couples with dependents."
The Peace Corps recruiting team will conduct an extensive 10-day recruiting campaign throughout northern Kansas beginning today, Fishbach said.
Governor Docking said he urged citizens to give their full support of the ideals for which the Peace Corps stands.
Forum topic insurance
The Annual Insurance Forum at the KU School of Business will be 2 p.m. March 7 in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The annual lecture is funded by an endowment created in 1957 by a group of Kansas insurance executives. The goal is to increase understanding of the role of insurance in American life among students and the public.
Maynard W. Whitelaw, vice president of General Adjustment Bureau in New York City will be the speaker. Whitelaw's lecture on "Some Managerial Concepts" will be followed by a discussion moderated by Harold C. Krogh, professor of business administration.
Official Bulletin
Today
Today
Fee Payment: All Day
Physics Colloquium: Dr. Jacob Enoch, KU. "Theoretical Problems in the Physics of High Beta Plasmas." 124 Malott, 4:30 p.m.
Freshman Basketball: Kansas City Community Junior College Allen Tech
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium, 6:45-9:45 p.m.
Basketball: Oklahoma State. Allen
Field, House. 8:05 p.m.
Prospective Law Students: Students present at Chicago School of Law next year should contact Dean J. A. Burzle, 206 W. 48th St., Chicago, IL 60610 if they wish to be considered for the University of Kansas National Honor College at University of Chicago School of Law.
Eligible Voters: Tuesday, Feb. 10. is the last day to register at the City Hall for the March 3 Lawrence bond registration. Registration is open evenings too.
Tuesday
AYMENT, 31 Day.
AYMEN, 31 Day.
Jayman, East Door.
Robinson, Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium, 6:45-9:45 p.m.
Sung and Carlucci
Bridge Over
Troubled
Water
Simon and Garfunkel
reg. $5.99
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr.
Bridge Over Troubled Water
call Kemp Houck at 842-7550 or 864-
4279; Old Time Flicking, call Bill
Spoars at 843-2173 for appointment;
Population Explosion Control, cal
cubism chum at 842-7656; Radical
Education, let Leroy Chittenden
at 843-8313.
KIEF'S
4163 or 864-4178 for arrangements; Camping, call Becky Rose or Rie at 842-3768, Colloquium on Biogny for Paul Starr at 843-7039 for time.
Loving Worthless People, call John Sachse at 842-8544, Movement Media.
WE'RE:
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open from 7:00 a.m.-2:30 a.m. stocking many drug items specializing in breakfast keeping our cafeteria open from
keeping our cafeteria open from 10:00-8:00.
10:00-8:00,
serving a varied grille menu,
close to campus,
and
friendly.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
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KIRSTEN'S
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54
Photo by John Brown
Blazin' Bud pumps for two . . .
Sophomore Bud Stallworth is one of the reasons coach Ted Owens has gone to the fast break as an offensive weapon. The Hartselle, Ala., product has good speed and hits with consistency from the corner. Against Nebraska and ((No. 54) Chuck Jura Saturday night he canned 14 points.
Stinson answers no as controversy clouds
BY GALEN BLAND Kansan Sports Writer
Is the University of Kansas under investigation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association? Wade Stinson, athletic director at KU, says definitely not, but the Hutchinson News and Hutchinson Community Junior College officials say yes.
It was reported in the Hutchinson paper last week that NCAA officials were in Hutchinson investigating some KU-oriented activities. Hutchinson Juco officials have said that a KU counselor tried to persuade a Hutchinson Community Junior College instructor to change a grade from D to C in order to make a football player eligible for a scholarship at Kansas.
The incident was relayed to the chancellor's office here and the investigation was requested by the chancellor, the Hutchinson News reported.
The player allegedly involved was Vince O'Neal, who is now enrolled at KU, but not on scholarship. O'Neal was the player who was involved in the investigation of Kansas State University a few weeks ago.
K-State was investigated by the NCAA for allegedly giving O'Neal the American College Test one day too early.
O'Neal was a star in both football and track at Plainfield (N.J.) High School. He was sought by many universities but chose
Hutchinson Juco when he failed to get a score high enough on the ACT to qualify for an athletic scholarship at a major college.
He was a standout on the 1968-69 Hutchinson football and track teams. He still did not have the grades to meet KU entrance requirements last fall and remained at the junior college.
O'Neal had trouble making buses for Hutchinson games this fall and was dropped from the squad. He made the grades to enroll at KU for the spring semester.
The Hutchinson News reported in last Wednesday's edition that Wayne Duke from the NCAA was in Hutchinson last week checking the charges. They reported that he told Hutchinson school officials that the NCAA takes a dim view of people with university connections who try to have grades changed.
The story said the NCAA was merely investigating the matter. No charges had been filed and no threat had been made to place KU on probation.
The only comment that Stinson would make was that the university was definitely not under investigation.
Big Eight Standings
Basketball is the only major sport of strictly American origin.
CONFERENCE GAMES
| | W | L | Pct. | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas St. | 6 | 1 | .857 | 497 | 435 |
| Missouri | 4 | 3 | .571 | 460 | 450 |
| Kansas | 4 | 3 | .500 | 450 | 407 |
| Nebraska | 3 | 3 | .500 | 406 | 415 |
| Iowa St. | 4 | 4 | .500 | 583 | 612 |
| Colorado | 3 | 4 | .429 | 527 | 494 |
| Oklahoma | 2 | 4 | .333 | 349 | 434 |
| Okla. St. | 2 | 5 | .286 | 436 | 461 |
ALL GAMES
W L Pct. PF PA
Kansas St. 15 4 .789 1402 1257
Oklahoma 15 4 .722 1353 1278
Nebraska 12 5 .706 1265 1219
Kansas 12 6 .667 1394 1276
Missouri 12 7 .632 1366 1298
6 KANSAN Feb. 9
1970
Okla. St. 11 8 5.79 1271 1227
Iowa St. 11 9 5.50 1485 1471
Colorado 10 9 5.26 1439 1332
RESULTS LAST WEEK:
RESULTS LAST
Kansas State 82, Iowa State 64;
Oklahoma State 81, Nebraska 58;
Missouri 90, Colorado 73; Kansas
78, Oklahoma 41; Iowa State 89;
Missouri 78, Colorado 72; Kansas
State 59; Nebraska 84, Kansas 73;
Oklahoma 62, Oklahoma State 57.
GAMES THIS WEEK:
GAMES THIS WEEK:
Monday—Kansas State at Iowa
State, Oklahoma State at Kansas,
Oklahoma at Missouri.
Tuesday—Nebraska at Colorado.
Saturday—Iowa State at Oklahoma, Kansas at Kansas State, Colorado at Oklahoma State, Missouri at Nebraska.
Deadly outside shooting and powerful board play enabled Nebraska to breeze past KU, 84-73, in a conference encounter in Lincoln Saturday night.
Hawks unable to break road jinx
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor
Huskers stifle KU hopes
The Cornhuskers, enjoying a fantastic shooting night, finished the contest with a 57 per cent marksmanship from the floor. Nebraska displayed a balanced scoring attack as four 'Husker starters and super-sub Sam Martin all finished in double figures.
A tenacious defense kept Dave Robisch and the other members of KU's league leading offensive machine in bay throughout the evening. Robisch entered the contest sporting the top scoring and rebounding credentials in the conference, but Nebraska's saging zone limited the 6-9 junior center to only 20 points—well below his 30.4 conference average.
Nebraska, sweeping both the offensive and defensive backboards clean, finished the game with a commanding 36-20 rebounding edge. Only a fine 52 per cent field goal average kept the Jayhawks within a respectable margin of the hot shooting and hustling 'Huskers who often threatened to turn the contest into a rout.
Ten early points by KU's sophomore forward Bud Stallworth pushed the Jayhawks to an early 22-21 lead with 9:24 left in the opening period. But Stallworth picked up his third personal with 7:25 still remaining and was forced to suit out the remaining minutes of the half.
Unable to combat Nebraska's crunching front line, coach Ted Owens was forced to spell the hot-shooting Stallworth in the first half with 6-10 reserve center Roger Brown.
Jayhawks countered with buckets by Robisch and Pierre Russell but the Cornhuskusers were not to be headed and took a 39-34 advantage into the locker room at half time.
KU's lead was short lived as a hook shot by Nebraska's Chuck Jura got a sputtering 'Husker offense moving and they quickly raced to a 33-26 advantage. The
The Jayhawks bounced back at the start of the second half and knotted the score at 43-43 on Robisch's lay up with 16:07 remaining. But Nebraska shattered all hopes of a KU comeback when Bob Gratrpown down a long-range jump shot and Tom Scantleburry swiped the ball from Bob Kivisto and raced down for an easy set up.
Leroy Chalk followed with a baseline jumper and the 'Hawks, now trailing 49-43, were unable to get within five points of the surging 'Huskers throughout the remaining minutes of the second stanza.
Nebraska enjoyed its biggest margin of the game, 74-60, when Robisch fouled out with 3:20 left in the contest.
Jura, 6-10 sophomore forward, topped Nebraska in both scoring and rebounding with 16 points and 11 rebounds. Gratopp and Martin, who entered the game with a 4 point per game scoring average, both finished with 15. Scantlebury tallied 13 and Chalk netted 11 for the Huskers.
Pierre Russell followed Robisch on the KU scoring chart with 15 points. Stallworth added 14 and Kivisto finished with 12.
The 'Hawks are now 3-3 in the conference and 12-6 over all. Nebraska's win evened their league mark at 3-3 and pushed them to a 12-5 season's record.
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Bouncin' Bob on the move . . .
Bob Kivisto, 6-1 sophomore guard from Aurora, Ill., has been used by coach Ted Owens almost exclusively as a press breaker. His deft ball handling and behind-the-back dribbles have earned him the job as the point man in Owen's offense. Against Nebraska Saturday night Kivisto hit five of six field goal attempts and ended up with 12 points, one of his best outings this season. Defending for the 'Huskers is (No. 20) Al Nissen, another of the outstanding sophomores breaking into the Big Eight this year.
Wildcats lose first but remain on top
By United Press International
Nobody really thought Kansas State was going to sail through the Big Eight basketball race unchallenged.
But, despite receiving their first broadside volley Saturday night, 72-59, from Colorado, Kansas State maintained a two-game lead in the loss column.
Reason is, Missouri and Kansas, the only teams within shouting range, suffered their third conference losses at Iowa State and Nebraska.
While Missouri and Kansas return home Monday night, however, Kansas State will stay on the road, visiting Iowa State.
'Cat defense breaks down
K-State suffered its first conference loss, after winning six straight, when it failed to contain Colorado's Cliff Meely in the second half. The Wildcats and Buffaloes were tied, 32-all, at halftime and Meely had been held to five points.
But Meely broke loose in the last 20 minutes, totaling 22 points, and Colorado's zone defense proved impenetrable. The zone also kept Colorado out of foul
KU-KSU clash on regional TV
The Kansas-Kansas State basketball game set for Manhattan Feb. 14 will be televised by seven stations in Kansas and Missouri it was announced last week.
The telecast of the 7:35 p.m. game will be in addition to the Big Eight's regular weekly television game that afternoon from Lincoln, Neb., of the Missouri-Nebraska game.
The KU-KSU game in Ahearn Fieldhouse has been sold out since Jan. 1.
Stations carrying the broadcast include WIBW, Topeka, the originating station with Fred White and Max Falkenstien doing the play-by-play, and KMBC of Kansas City.
Cyclones pounce on Tigers
trouble and K-State away from the free-throw line. The Wildcats made five of eight charities, while Colorado sank 14 of 29.
Four Missouri players, led by David Pike's 18, scored in double figures. But it was to no avail as Bill Cain poured through 21 points in Iowa State's 89-78 victory.
Sam Martin was a surprise starter for Nebraska, but the six-foot senior guard canned 15 points as the Cornhuskers shot over Kansas' zone and won going away, 84-73.
Feb. 9
1970 KANSAN 7
Closest game Saturday was at Norman, Okla., where the University of Oklahoma downed Oklahoma State, 62-57. The Sooners fended off a late Cowboy rally when Clifford Ray and Scott Martin both下墒 two free throws eabh in the last 25 seconds to clinch the verdict.
'Hawks run away from ISU, WSU
By JIM RYUN
Steve Wilhelm highlighted KU's only home appearance of the indoor season Friday night as he nipped his better known teammate and defending NCAA champion Karl Salb in the shot put with a toss of 65"-3".
Kansan Sports Writer
The Jayhawks ran away with team honors by amassing 86 points in route to blitzing Southern Illinois and Wichita State in the triangular meet held in Allen Field House. SIU grabbed the runner-up position with 57 points and Wichita was a distant third with only 19 points.
"Tonight was the first time in a long time that I've concentrated on what I was doing," Wilhelm said. "I can't concentrate and talk to other people like Karl does. I have to really be ready when it comes time to throw."
"I tried to keep relaxed across the middle of the ring and then explode at the end. My first two throws were high but on the third one it snapped and I blasted one."
Wilhelm's winning "blast" was a new personal high. Pleased with his effort as he walked out of the shot put ring, he was immediately congratulated by teammates Salb and Doug Knop.
The evening's carnival of events was filled with many other good performances for the 'Hawks. KU's Phil Reaves turned a 6.1 clocking in the 60-yard dash to tie Ivory Crockett, SIU's NCAA 220-yard dash king, for first place.
The Jayhawks finished one-two in the 440 year run as Julio Meade was timed in 49.1 and Marvin Foster, freshman flash from Kansas City, finished in 51.2.
It was almost a triumphant evening for KU's Jan Johnson in the pole vault. Johnson cleared the vault standards at $16^{\prime} - 0^{\prime \prime}$ to win the event, but he didn't make the new height of 16-7 which would have been a personal best
"I'm really concentrating, and trying a little of this transcendentalism," Johnson said. "The bottom part of my vault is flawless but I'm not pulling enough to get over the top."
This afternoon and evening the Jayhawks, NCAA indoor champs last year, will compete at Omaha, Neb., in an invitational track meet. Head track coach Bob Timmons said that about half of the team would travel to Omaha and the remaining half will venture to the Houston Astrodome meet Friday night.
Long jump> -1. Don Miller, SIU, 12-
11; 2. Obed Gardiner, SIU, 22-4½; 3.
Paul Packer, Wichita, 21-6¼; 4. Louis
Strother, Wichita, 21-0½.
Meet results
**Heat results**
35-1b, league (dinamics)—1. Bill
Penny, Kansas, 50-10%; 2. Flil Black-
town, 50-9*43'; 3. Dick Young,
Kansas, 46-0%; 4. Mike Wendland,
Kansas, 38-9.
High jump—1. Larry Reineke, Kansas, 6-6/1; 2. Mike Bernard, SIU, 6-4; 3. Rick Leichner, SIU, 6-4; 4. Gary Johnson, Kansas, 6-2.
Triple Jump>-1. Don Miller, SIU.
Jumping for 4th place -2. Don Miller, SIU.
Randy Williams, Kansas 49-4, 4. Paulacker, Wichita, 43-10 (Field House)
Swing for 4th place -3. 49-0½ by John Vonon, SIU, 1984.
Mile run—1. Al Robinson, SIU,
4:10.9; 2 Doug Smith, Kansas; 4:11.5;
3 Mike Solomon, Kansas; 4:12.0; 4
Roger Kathol, Kansas; 4:12.1.
Shot put-1, Steve Wilhelm, Kansas,
Doug Knop, Kansas, 59-4½; 4, Fib
Blackiston, SIU. 52-0½ (Al Feuerbach
of Blackiston threw 128 in non-
effect)
60 Dash—1. I (tie) Phil Reaves, Kansas and Ivory Crockett, SIU, 6.1; 3 (tie) Albert Hughes, Wichita and Larry Staton, Wichita. 6.2.
600—1. Brian McElroy, Kansas,
1:12:3; 2. Randy Julian, Kansas, 1:13:9.
3. Dennis Stewart, Kansas, 1:15:0; 4.
Mike Larimar, Kansas, 1:15:8.
440-1. Julio Meade, Kansas, 49.1; 2. Marvin Foster, Kansas, 51.2; 3. Larry Marvin Cooper, Kansas, 51.2; 4. Marvin Cooper, SIU, $30. 3. (Ties Field Harbor) by Bill Calhoun, Oklahoma in 1968.
60, High Hurdles - Fye, Mike Bates,
Willie Ammon, Kansas, 7.8; 4, Bill
Ammon, Kansas, 7.8;
2-Mile—1. Al Robinson, SIU, 8:59:2
2. Jay Mason, Kansas, 9:02:0; 3. Rich
Elliott, Kansas, 9:04:6; 4. Doug Smith,
Kansas, 9:20.6
1,000-1. Roger Kathol, Kansas,
2:14:9. 2. Dave Robl, Wichita, 2:16:6.
3. Glenn Uijejy, SIU, 2:16:7. 4. Dennis Petterson, Kansas, 2:19:0.
880-1. Carl Nicholson, Wichita,
1:56.5; 2. Ken Nalder, SIU 1:56.9; 3.
Glenn Cunningham, Kansas, 1:58.4; 4.
Paul Mattingly, Kansas, 2:00.0
60 Low Hurdles-1. Mike Bates,
Kansas, 7.0; 2. Ron Frye, SIU, 7.2;
3. Wille Amison, Kansas, 7.3; 4. Bill
Buzard, SIU, 7.3.
Mirie Relay-1. Kansas (Marvin Fosse-
Julio Meade), 3:26.6; Southern Illinois
(Marvin Cooper, Bill Buzard,
James Krony (Kon Frye), 3:35.9;
Wichita, 3:36.5.
Pole Vault 1. Jan Johnson, Kansas,
16-0; 2. Steve Rickets, Wichita, 14-0;
3. Larry Cascio, SIU, 14-0; 4. Rocky
Gillenwasser, Wichita, 13-6.
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Secretary Rogers visits Morocco
RABAT, Morocco (UPI)—Secretary of State William P. Rogers took his tour of Africa into the Moroccan countryside Sunday and dined on pigeon pie and roast lamb. He and his wife dug into the food with their hands, native style.
Entertainment was provided by dancing girls accompanied by a native orchestra.
Rogers arrived in Rabat Saturday on his first stop of a 10-nation, two week tour of Africa which will include Nigeria.
Sunday, Rogers and his official party motored to the ancient capital of Fez where he spent more than two hours touring the narrow streets and alleys of Medina, the Old City, founded by King Iris I in 808 A.D.
Rogers watched brassworkers and other artisans in their cubbyhole shops and frequently stopped to express admiration for the craftsmanship.
The party was then taken to a
palm-fringed glade for a diffa, a traditional Arab meal served under tents which included couscous, a North African dish of meat, meats and sauce.
There were no eating utensils, so the American diplomats, his wife and the official party, dug in with their hands.
After the festivities, Rogers flew back the 120 miles to Rabat where he was honored at an official dinner by Foreign Minister Abdelhadi Boutaleb with whom Rogers had already had one meeting and will have two more sessions Monday.
Rogers said they discussed economic developments planned in Morocco and other countries of this area. They did not touch on the Middle East question but that is expected to come up at the Monday meetings.
Rogers emphasized on his arrival in Rabat Saturday night that the Nixon Administration is
trying to pursue a balanced and impartial course in suggesting Arab-Israeli peace formulas.
He is expected to elaborate on this in discussions he will have with King Hassan and others here before leaving late Monday for Tunisia on the next leg of his tour.
But before leaving for Tunisia, Rogers will sign a U.S.-Morocco air transport agreement.
Rogers is expected to explain the U.S. formulas for peace negotiations between Israel and Egypt and Israel and Jordan, submitted in October and December respectively, were intended as guidelines and not an effort to impose a big power solution.
In each case, the United States suggested Israel withdraw from all the Arab territory it conquered in June, 1967, except for defense points on the borders necessary for security.
In return, the Arab states
Missionaries held in Nigeria
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) — The Irish embassy said Sunday Nigeria has not yet allowed diplomats to see 28 Catholic priests held incommunicado in Port Harcourt for the past 10 days.
"We have had no reaction from the government" even though Nigeria has been made aware of the Vienna Convention which defines the right of access to nationals held captive, an embassy spokesman said.
The missionaries, including the bishop of Owerri, 61-year-old Joseph Wheland, are the second group of Roman Catholic workers to be rounded up by Nigeria's 3rd Marine Commando Division which overran former Biafra.
The first group of 32, after being convicted of being in Nigeria illegally and sentenced to six
months imprisonment, were deported Thursday "as an act of clemency" on orders by the Nigerian government.
The group held now is reportedly saying mass each morning at Port Harcourt's Presidential Hotel with Wheland officiating.
Although the priests were due to go on trial last Wednesday, sources here expect them to be similarly deported within the next few days.
Some sources believe there still are about 20 Catholic priests and nuns, mostly of the Holy Ghost Order, working in the northern sector of form Biafra now occupied by the Nigerian 1st Infantry Division.
Broadcasting Corporation has denounced all Catholic priests for aiding and supporting the Biafran rebellion and Catholic sources believe that "the Holy Ghost Order in Nigeria is finished for the time being."
The deported missionaries, including six nuns, said they had been treated reasonably well. Some priests, however, were locked up in a one room cell with only a bucket for washing and another for use as a toilet.
A commentary by the Nigerian
The formula for talks was that used at Rhodes in securing the 1949 armistice. Each side would be in a separate room in the same building and negotiate through a United Nations mediator.
This could be considered "direct negotiations," which the Israelis want or could be interpreted to be otherwise, since the Arabs refuse face-to-face sessions.
seems to the United States to offer the best hope of getting some progress but Russia has been unenthusiastic. The Israelis contend the United States is veering more toward the Arab side, and the Arab nations remain suspicious of Washington's intentions.
would agree to conclude peace and pledge no more attacks from their territories.
Although he is a staunch advocate of total Israeli withdrawal and the Palestinians' rights to their own state, King Hassan is considered by the United States to be a "moderating" element on Arab forces.
The ambiguity of the formula
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Second of pharmacy seminar series meets
The 4th Annual Mid-Winter Pharmacy Extension Seminar met Sunday in Salina and Pittsburg.
This was the second in a series of seminars to be given, in six cities this year. The first met January 18 and 24 in Garden City and Colby, respectively. The third will meet Feb. 15 in Kansas City and Wichita.
This seminar is in addition to the regularly established biannual (fall and spring) Pharmacy Extension Circuit Course program scheduled for the past 13 years.
8 KANSAN Feb. 9
1970
The seminar was sponsored by the KU School of Pharmacy, the University of Kansas Extension, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas Regional Medical Program and the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy.
The purpose of the program was to give educational value by presenting information enabling pharmacists to keep up with changing aspects of pharmacy, to help the pharmacists get better acquainted and allow them to express their difficulties and needs to the University Pharmacy faculty members and for the opportunity to talk over common interests in the field.
NEW YORK—Every 43 minutes fire claims a life, says the Insurance Information Institute. Of the 12,200 persons who died in fires in 1968, about one-third were children.
This educational series of programs was directed to practicing pharmacists and guests, part-time
DEATHS BY FIRE
employees or high school students interested in pharmacy and sponsored by a pharmacist.
Two Lawrence pathologists and six faculty members from KU spoke on clinical testing for diagnosis of circulatory, glandular and organic diseases and on available diagnostic products.
They were Drs. J. Alan Sanders and Laurence W. Price of Lawrence Clinical Laboratory, Dean Howard E. Mossberg, Assistant Dean Hugh A. Cotton and Profs. Morris D. Faiman, Frank G. Martin, Gary Lage and Carlton Erickson.
Robert M. Nelson of University Extension was coordinator of the program.
Litto, whose special interests are the drama of Africa and Brazil, will speak on "The Black-ness of Brazil's Black Theatre."
Frederic M. Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama, will speak at the fourth annual Conference on Comparative Literature at the University of California, April 16-17. Black Literature of the world will be examined at this conference.
Prof to speak
Research will focus on the human measles virus and the canine distemper virus. Bussell will examine the basic properties of the two, how they grow, and their relationship to influenza virus.
Robert H. Bussell, associate professor of microbiology, won a $24,043 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service to continue the study of selected viruses.
Bussell receives grant
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Shultz opposes hiring of Harrison
By LINDA WRIGHT
Kansan Staff Writer
State Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Douglas County, said in an interview that he and several members of the state legislature are concerned about the hiring of Leonard Harrison as resource consultant and lecturer at KU.
"Harrison is a militant," Shultz said, "and his political ideas and opinions could sway uncertain students in that direction. It is wrong for the University to hire him; they could get someone else."
Harrison, controversial director of the Lawrence Ballard Community Center, has been employed by Herman D. Lujan, associate professor of political science and chairman of the political science department, as consultant and guest lecturer in Political Science 164, Topics in Political Theory. The course deals specifically with black political ideology, black revolutionary thought, black power and "Uncle Tom-ism."
Shultz said he was particularly concerned about Harrison's police record and academic standing. Shultz distributed photo-copies of Harrison's record, showing that Harrison has been arrested several times, to legislative members.
In May 1969 he was convicted on charges of intimidating three anti-poverty program officials and received the maximum sentence of 10-21 years. At present, he is out of jail on bond pending an appeal.
The Kansas Board of Regents
Instructors meet to plan field work
The Social World Field Instructors Conference met Friday, Feb. 6, to discuss ways to implement the plan for teaching students large systems intervention as part of Basic Field Work.
The field instructors are a part of the School of Social Welfare at the University of Kansas.
Field instructors are members of the KU faculty and staff members of their respective welfare agencies. Their purpose is giving instruction in graduate school programs. They relate to social work practice how the theories learned in class adapt to actual cases.
Scott McGill, KU faculty member and field instructor for the Leavenworth County Welfare Department, and Chuck Frankenfeld, full time staff member of the Mattie Rhodes Center, Kansas City, Mo., spoke at the conference.
McGill emphasized working with the students in small communities and helping with the munities and helping with the unemployment of minority groups. He also talked on student awareness.
Frankfield spoke of three lines in a large systems field. The first line was working in an intermediate system to develop policy, program and a learning experience. This is done by working with fathers from low income areas and helping them deal with their problems. The second line was working in a large systems area, such as a model city program.
The third line was working within the agency itself, and getting a good look at the agency system. This provides students the opportunity to initiate policy change with the board. It also shows what challenges are available.
Larry Brown and Aase George, coordinators of Field Instruction, helped to plan the meeting at the request of the field instructors. Robert M. Nelson, University Extension, coordinated the conference.
Feb. 9
1970 KANSAN 9
1975
Sen. Reynolds Shultz
passed a resolution in 1961 stating that it would not employ instructors who have been convicted of a felony.
When asked about the legality of hiring Harrison, Francis Heller, dean of faculties, said that the board of Regents considered the matter on Jan. 25, and decided to take no action, therefore the University felt inbounds when it hired Harrison.
Heller also said that Harrison was being employed because "the class deals with black politics and Harrison has a distinct contribution to make to the class both as a black person and an experienced politician."
Shultz viewed the hiring of Harrison as indicative of the direction KU may be headed.
"I think as much of KU as anybody," Shultz said, "but if these things continue it could start hurting the University in ap-
Grad school suffers from growth problem
By WILLIAM MORRISSEY
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Graduate School is experiencing growth and enrollment problems, said a report issued last March by the Commission on Colleges and Secondary Schools.
Figures show that enrollment and degree production have doubled in ten years, making KU one of the select universities issuing over 200 doctoral degrees annually.
The team was critical of graduate program funding by diverting resources from undergraduate instruction, using new instructional funds for a research-teaching staff rather than supportive services and the maximizing of foundations, federal grants and contract funds for program expansion.
The commission's report said "a very high percentage of high-risk students" are admitted to graduate study, and asked: "Is it possible that the creation of so many doctoral programs has made it necessary for departments to accept more students than are qualified in order to continue?"
Regarding working conditions, Albrecht said there were plans for reorganization of graduate student financial support. The graduate student would have no teaching requirement in his first year. He would teach during his second and third years and in the fourth year, while working on his dissertation, he would again have no obligation to teach.
"The University should decide," they said, "what its mission should be at the advanced level and establish the facilities and administrative organization to realize that objective."
The commission was also concerned with increasing reliance upon students as teaching assistants. "KU may have to give increased attention to salaries and conditions of employment," the report said.
Concerning new programs, Albrecht said, "I don't think it is necessary or particularly good for the morale of the University to clamp a lid on the development of new programs."
Admission standards for the Ph.D. were "pretty respectable," Albrecht said, and added that enrollments have not been enlarged to justify more programs.
Of special concern to Albrecht was the graduate situation. He emphasized that teaching and course responsibility should be part of the student's professional development, and his progress should be tied to the salary he gets for his work.
William Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School, responded to the commission's findings.
Proposals for new programs will be carefully examined, and any additions would be under
the supervision of existing programs, he said.
Albrecht said a voluntary program evaluation favoring a systematic review program had been adopted by the graduate school.
A new concept of formulated budgeting, tieing allocation to costs and needs, may help the school, he said.
Francis H. Heller, acting provost of the planning board, said KU was working on a master academic plan. He said the plan depended in part on KU's schools and departments. If the departments plan more doctoral programs, the plan will be more urgent.
The commission ended its report on a favorable note.
"The Graduate School and its departments and faculty, have much evidence of scholarly vision, high-level goals, understanding of the aims of modern graduate education, appreciation of the necessity of resources such as library and research facilities and a morale that would be an asset on any campus," the report said.
PRISON AMENITIES
ROSARIO, Argentina (UPI)—Police Chief Francisco Alberto Lopez has ordered that families visiting prisoners on cold days be served coffee or mate, a green tea popular in Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay. It is drunk through a metal tube like a straw.
propriations. That wouldn't hurt the people like Harrison but it would hurt the good students and faculty."
In reply to Shultz's remark about University appropriations, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said that the only thing worth noting was that appropriations were voted on by the entire legislature, and while Shultz was entitled to his opinion, the final decision rested with the legislature as a whole.
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Over
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Couple takes over as 'housemother'
Students direct scholarship hall
By CHERYL BOWMAN
Kansan staff writer
A graduate student and his wife have taken over the housemother's chores at Stephenson Scholarship Hall.
Rodney Bush, Rochester, N.Y., graduate student in psychology, and his wife, Betty, a senior in business, became the resident directors of Stephenson Scholarship Hall last semester.
Last spring the men of Stephenson Scholarship Hall decided they would rather have a graduate couple as their resident directors than the traditional housemother. This is the first time a men's scholarship hall has tried this arrangement.
Hearing to determine if fair trial possible
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) — Testimony will be heard Monday in an effort to determine if Lt. William L. Calley's right to a fair trial was forfeited, either by "command control" exerted from President Nixon through the military chain of command or by undue pre-trial publicity.
The bantam first lieutenant is charged with the premeditated murder March 16, 1968 of 102 South Vietnamese civilians at the hamlet of My Lai 4. He had been charged with 109 murders, but the prosecution last month dropped two specifications—listing seven slayings—from the charge.
Before adjourning a pre-trial hearing Jan. 20, Lt. Col. Reid W. Kennedy, the military judge, said witnesses would be called in an effort to establish whether Nixon and high-ranking army officials exercised prejudicial command influence in ordering Calley tried.
10 KANSAN Feb. 9
1970
Defense attorney George W. Latimer says he can show that Ft. Benning commandant Maj. Gen. Orwin C. Talbott, who signed the articles of court-martial, "knew that the President of the United States had spoken" when he ordered the trial.
Kennedy said members of Ft. Benning's chain of command would be available to testify. If it is decided there might have been "command control." Secretary of State Melvin A. Laird, Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor and Army Chief of Staff William Westmoreland may be called to testify.
Latimer said such control would also influence the military officers who will sit in judgment of Calley.
The defense and prosecution also will argue the "free press-fair trial" motion Monday.
In that motion, the defense contends Calley has been done irreparable harm by pre-trial press coverage, which included photographs and interviews with witnesses to the alleged massacre.
The ultimate responsibility of the hall resides with the resident directors, but the Bushes's main duties are planning the meals and taking care of other necessary daily duties.
The men of Stephenson thought no one person in the hall could handle all of those duties efficiently, so they suggested a graduate couple to perform them, rather than one housemother or a student living in the hall.
"We like this arrangement much better," said Patrick Bowman, Leavenworth sophomore. "The Bushes are there just in case we need them. They don't try to act like our mother away from home."
Mark Haefele, Ulysses sophomore, said one of the most noticeable differences between this year and last year was the duties of the vice-president of the hall. Last year the vice-president was the etiquette chairman. He had the responsibility of seeing that the first eight men that entered the dining room sat at the head table with the housemother. This year there is no etiquette chairman.
“During the first week of school last year,” recalled Bowman, “I was late to dinner one night and I had to ask the housemother for permission and beg her pardon before I could sit down. I was always reprimanded for neglecting to escort her to certain places.”
around. The men here are old enough to know what to do without me telling them." Bush said.
"I'm not a guy to police people
The resident director said he did not attend any of the hall meetings because he thought the men were capable of accepting responsibility for themselves.
Of the 50 cities selected to receive planning grants under the federal government's Model Cities programs, 36 are communities with populations of fewer than 50,000 persons.
"The first time my wife and I went down to dinner, all of the men stood up," said Bush. "I laughed out loud. We have none of that type of discipline now."
Bush, 24, said he thought the closeness in age between the students and himself presented no problems.
"I'm no disciplinarian," Bush said. "I attend many of the late night bull sessions. I am just a friend to the guys."
Bush said he wanted to clarify the image of scholarship halls.
"Although the hall's grade point average last semester was 2.31, the guys here are not bookworms. They're bright guys, but they still have a lot of fun," he said.
The Bushes were included in the hall's initiation at Lone Star Lake during the first week of school. The purpose of this initiation was for the men to learn to know one another. Each new student was given a wooden S with the names of all the residents of the hall carved on it.
"I think I can do a more effective job than a housemother because I am closer to the residents' ages and I can get along better with them," Bush said.
WE'RE:
open from 7:00 a.m.-2:30 a.m. stocking many drug items specializing in breakfast keeping our cafeteria open from
10:00-8:00 serving a varied grille menu close to campus,
friendly.
and
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
NOW - AREN'T YOU GLAD YOU WAITED?
the university shop announces its
ANNUAL WINTER SALE
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Complete Selection 1/2 and 1/3 OFF One Group Corduroys 20% OFF
Famous Brand Lined or Un-Lined 20% OFF
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V-necks, Sweater Shirts
Sleeveless & Bulkies
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Many Others at 20% OFF
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Permanent Press Plain Colors or Plaids Now 4.99
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Including Vested or Shaped or Double-Breasted Models 1/3 and 1/4 OFF
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WINTER COATS
WOOL SHIRTS
Famous Brand Entire Stock Now 1/3 OFF
TIES $1.99 OR THREE FOR $5
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Used (Rentals) $25
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DRESS SHIRTS
SHOES
Entire Stock Casual or Dress 20% OFF
JACKETS
Lined ___ 1/2 Price
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On the Hill
the university shop
Slight Charge For Alterations
1420 Crescent Road
Al Hack
Retired prof wins honor at Nebraska
E. Christian Buehler, professor emeritus of speech at KU, received the honorary degree of doctor of humane letters from the University of Nebraska. The presentation was made at commencement exercises at the Lincoln campus Jan. 31.
Buehler, a native of Sterling, Neb., pioneered the development of forensics on the college level.
At the close of his military service in World War I, Buehler's division selected him to represent the American Expeditionary Forces as a student at King's College, University of London. He received a bachelor of arts degree from Central Wesleyan College, Warrenton, Mo., in 1920, and a bachelor of oratory from Northwestern University in 1924.
In 1923 Buehler became the first student to earn a master's degree from Northwestern's School of Speech.
Buehler taught at Hamline University and Washburn University before beginning a career at KU in 1925. As director of forensics and chairman of the speech department, he earned a
PETER L. DUBERSTEIN
E. Christian Buehler
national reputation for effectiveness as a teacher.
Textbooks by Buehler have been used for many years in basic speech courses offered at KU. He was an early advocate of educational films and won wide acclaim for his work in adult education.
Buehler retired from KU in 1964. Since then he has accepted several visiting professorships, including one at the University of Nebraska in 1968.
In 1964 Buehler received two major awards, one from KU for distinguished teaching, and the other from Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, the forensic honorary society.
SEATTLE (UPI) — A Russian who works as a translator for the United Nations was in jail Sunday on charges of trying to buy secret information about United States missile defenses from an Air Force sergeant.
Soviet arrested as spy
Aleksandr V. Tikhomirov, 37, who lives with his wife and daughter in New York, was arrested as a Soviet spy Saturday by FBI agents after, a meeting with the airman.
He was held in city jail in lieu of $100,000 bond while federal officials tried to determine who he wanted them to notify in his behalf.
"I protest my detention and I ask you inform our consul in Washington, D.C., and our mission in New York," Tikhomirov said in a thick Russian accent at his arraignment.
The FBI charged him with attempting espionage "from personal information . . . and information furnished by a confidential source who is a technical sergeant in the United States Air Force."
The information concerned antiaircraft and missile weapons and installations defending the Pacific Northwest.
The FBI said the sergeant, who was not identified, contacted an
agent on Dec. 6 and reported Tikhomirov had met him in Seattle, given him $300 to obtain some secret material and set another meeting for Saturday.
The Soviet citizen was arrested outside the Colonial Theater in downtown Seattle after receiving
secret documents.
A preliminary hearing was scheduled for Wednesday to determine if the FBI had probable cause to issue a warrant for the Soviet citizen's arrest. If the evidence is adequate, he will be bound over to a federal grand jury.
Grant-in-aid
EAT LUNCH ALL DAY:
Well, practically, anyhow. The Captain's Table cafeteria is open from 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Monday Saturday. Grille opens at 2:30.
Joel J, Gold, associate professor of English, was one of 36 scholars to win grants-in-aid for post doctoral research from the American Council of Learned Societies.
Variable cloudiness and cooler with 10 to 25 mph northwest winds today. Tonight, fair and warmer. High today in the 40s. Low tonight in the 20s. Probability of precipitation 5 per cent today through Tuesday.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
Gold's grant will assist him in preparation of a book on the letters of John Wilkes, 18th century English literary figure. Gold is on sabbatical leave for the 1969-70 year and is doing research and writing in England, France and Ann Arbor, Mich.
Weather
Journalism award goes to publisher
Feb. 9
1970 KANSAN 11
Transformer built
The structure is being built by the Kansas Construction Company. Completion has been delayed until late this summer due to the General Electric strike and other strikes.
The structure being built behind Fowler Hall is a transformer which will increase the electrical distribution on campus. Leo E. Ousdahl, assistant superintendent of Building and Grounds, said the addition is to take care of the increased electrical needs due to the addition of new buildings and changes being made in present ones.
The William Allen White Foundation's 21st annual award for journalistic merit will be presented Tuesday as part of the William Allen White School of Journalism's William Allen White Day.
Eugene C. Pulliam, publisher of Phoenix Newspapers Inc., will receive the award from Lee F. Young, acting dean of the School of Journalism, at a 12:30 p.m. luncheon in the Kansas Union ballroom.
Pulliam will lecture at 2:30 in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium. His speech is entitled "The Unchanging Responsibility of the American Newspaper in a Changing Society."
The day's activities also include an executive committee meeting of the Foundation at 9:00 a.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union.
The William Allen White citation is awarded each year to an American journalist who "exemplifies William Allen White's ideals in service to his profession and his country." Walter Cronkite, noted television newsman, received the award last year.
ERC BLOCK TRAFFIC HELSINKI (UPI) - Motorists driving to work got a shock when they saw three elk striding down the highway towards Helsinki. Police, alerted to a traffic jam, arrived and shooed the animals into a nearby forest.
ELK BLOCK TRAFFIC
Who's whose Engagements
Gaynelle Vansandt, Harrisonville, Mo., senior majoring in history education to Chris Wells, Denver, Colo., senior majoring in economics and business.
Jan Marcason, Prairie Village junior majoring in elementary education, Kappa Kappa Gamma to Russ Welsh, Shawnee Mission junior majoring in biochemistry, Phi Kappa Psi.
Michelle Black, Kansas City, Mo., senior majoring in English to Jim Blase. Olathe junior majoring in business administration.
Jane Lindquist, Kansas City senior majoring in elementary education, Kappa Kappa Gamma to Bob Druten, Kansas City, 1969 graduate in accounting, Phi Delta Theta.
Suzie Bear, Wichita senior majoring in biology and math, Sigma Kappa to Jim Hamilton, Wichita State University senior majoring in aeronautical engineering.
Rosemary O'Konski, Overland Park junior majoring in English education to Wayne G. Lischka, Prairie Village junior majoring in architectural engineering,Lambda Chi Alpha.
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Black American Club plans program
Lawrence High to observe Black Heritage Week
Black Heritage Week will be observed at Lawrence High School Feb. 23 to Feb. 27.
The Black American Club is coordinating five days of displays and activities to bring about a better understanding of black mores and customs.
Vanessa Collins, president of the club, said the week's program was designed to promote the relevance of black students to LHS and to display their talents and abilities.
Activities for the five-day program will begin Feb. 23 with an all - school assembly featuring state Sen. George Brown, D-Col.
Brown, a Negro, was born and raised in Lawrence. He was graduated from LHS and received a journalism degree from KU. He moved to Denver in 1950. While working as night city editor for the Denver Post, he became active in federal housing and urban coalition. He now is serving his
fourth term as senator. A reception will be held in his honor at 3 p.m. in the LHS cafeteria.
A fashion and talent show is planned for the afternoon of Feb. 24. A dress shop from Kansas City, Mo., will show the latest in black fashions.
Feb. 25, a film, "Black Heritage," will be featured. It is a documentary on the advancement of the blacks through history. A question and answer period will follow the film.
Book reviews will be given in the library after school, Feb. 26. The books presented will contrast the lives, ideals and methods of such black leaders as Malcolm X vs. Martin Luther King Jr. and Frederick Douglas vs. W.E.B. DuBois.
Helping with the production and other facets of the program are several KU students, including Horace Bond, Lawrence doctoral candidate in drama; Linda Jones, Netawaka senior; Veda Monday, Kansas City senior; and Frances Robinson, Kansas City junior.
Featured Feb. 27 will be an all school assembly by Sumner High School concert band. Sumner, which is located in Kansas City, is a predominantly black school. Throughout the week an art display will be set up in the school. It will consist of art work done by both the Black American Club's members and local black citizens. The Black American Club was organized last year to inform the administration, faculty and studentry, at LHS, of the problems affecting black students and to advance the economic and political status of black students in the school and the community.
"Soul: the antidote to puritanism' is the theme which should be remembered," said Miss Collins, the club's president.
CHICAGO (UPI) — LSD, the chemical which can induce fascinating hallucinations and interesting introspection, may also result in malformed babies, even if users of the chemical stay "clean" during pregnancy, three doctors said Sunday.
LSD causes genetic physical malformation
The physicians, writing in the February issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, said LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) may damage the chromosomes of germ cells in the parents and thus lead to abnormal off-spring.
Pediatricians Lillian Hsu and Kurt Hirschhorn and pathologist Lotte Strauss, all of the Mount Sinai school of medicine, City University of New York, based their study on the case of a malformed infant.
The child's father, 26, and its mother, 22, had taken several doses of LSD, the father four years prior to the infant's birth, and mother, nine months prior to conception.
The infant's mother continued to use marijuana, barbiturates and methedrine during her pregnancy, but the doctors said those drugs "have so far not been found
Neither parent was aware of any other congenital defect in the family, the doctors said. Both parents had chromosome breaks.
to cause chromosomal damage."
The doctors said chromosome aberrations such as those found in the infant "in most instances are carried in two or more generations of the same family in individuals . . . with a history of diminished fertility and repeated miscarriages."
Since neither parent had a family history of such defects, the doctors said, "Chromosomal aberration in the infant and the history of LSD ingestion by the parents, both of whom show other chromosomal structural rearrangements in some of their cells, suggests that LSD may have induced abnormal chromosome arrangements in the germ cells of the mother."
According to the physicians, chromosomal aberrations in the infant resulted in its being born with low set ears, a broad nose with a prominent bridge, poorly formed wrists, a left hand with four fingers and a right hand with six fingers, loose skin on both hands and many internal defects.
the club will be sponsoring to show LHS the black students have great worth and want to belong.
It was organized in September 1968 during a time of crisis when discontent over lack of a black cheerleader triggered a walkout by 30 to 50 black students who repeated demands first voiced five months earlier.
Club seeks high IQ's
If you suspect that your cranial cavity is loaded with super cells then you may be eligible for membership in MENSA, a nonprofit educational corporation chartered by the University of the State of New York.
pate in psychological experiments. In addition to research, it is concerned with a productive life for intelligent people, she said. Members have formed Mensa schools for gifted children and established MENSA University for adult education. Through the MENSA Friends Program, members throughout the United States offer personal aid to inteligent inmates at correctional institutions, Miss Kafman said.
MENSA originated in 1945 when Sir Cyril Burt, professor of psychology at London University, saw the need for a panel of highly intelligent people to counsel statesmen and other decision makers. Roland Berril, a London attorney, administered standard IQ tests to a select group of individuals and with the high scorers founded MENSA.
One of its main purposes is research in psychology and the social sciences. MENSA members are often called upon to participate in psychological experiments.
MENSA groups hold monthly meetings. American MENSA activities culminate each spring with the Annual Gathering, a conference which attracts members from all over the United States and Canada.
MENSA is an international, intellectual organization with active chapters in 14 countries and a worldwide membership of more than 18,000 people. There are more than 125 local chapters in the United States, she said.
Members' ages range from 8 to 80. Life styles vary from ascetic to opulent. Occupations include folksingers, farm laborers, corporate executives and belly dancers. MENSA provides members with an interested but critical audience for new ideas, Miss Kafman said. Thinking, discussing and debating are keynote activities.
12 KANSAN Feb.9 1970
SANDALS NOW!
It's not easy to sell sandals in the Dead of winter - but we must!
The sole qualification for membership is that you have an IQ higher than 98 per cent of the world's four billion people, said Alice Kafman, New York MENSA spokesman.
The group grew steadily in England, and spread to the United States in 1957. In less than a decade the United States had more than 10,000 members.
Anyone interested in starting a chapter at the University of Kansas can obtain more information by writing MENSA, Department C, 50 E.42 St., New York, N.Y.
Concrete grievances included the need for a course in black history, the need for a black counselor, and the need for a black cheerleader. All of these demands were met by the school this year. In addition, a course in Negro literature is offered. The black counselor, Mrs. Roosevelt Calbert, and Jesse Milan, elementary district consultant, sponsor the club.
Black Heritage Week is just one event in a series of programs
You see, once it gets warm We'll be down here about 14 hrs. A day,and we'll still be behind So come down now,and we'll Give you 20 percent off on any Custom made sandal.
Then,when it gets warmer,you Won't have to wait several Weeks to have them made.
(Sale ends Feb. 15th)
Primarily Leather
812 Massachusetts
This Week:
The Soul Possessions
Ladies Free – Monday through Thursday
Matinee — 3 to 6 Fridays
Admission FREE with KU ID
Live Music
Every Night
8-12
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The following provisions constitute the candidacy requirements of the election procedures for the Student Senate to be held March 17-18,1970
1. A candidate for the presidency and a candidate for the vice-presidency of the student body must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy at least thirty (30) days prior to the general election. This declaration must be accompanied, if the candidate was not a member of the Student Senate for the semester immediately preceding the general election, a petition signed, with names and student number, by five hundred (500) bonafide members of the student body of the University of Kansas approving the candidacy. Each candidate must pay a five (5) dollar filing fee.
2. Any person wishing to be a candidate for the Student Senate must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy prior to the 2nd of March,1970. This declaration must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee.Candidates for the Student Senate must run from the school in which they are currently enrolled, and the declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a certification from the office of the dean of the school that the student is in fact enrolled in that school.
3. Declaration and certification forms for candidates for the Student Senate can be picked up at the Student Senate Office or in the office of the dean of each school of the University.
4. Candidates must indicate whether they wish to be identified on the ballots as running as independents or as members of a particular political party or coalition.
5. Class officer candidates must submit a declaration of candidacy and a petition containing the signatures of fifty (50) bonafide members of their class to the president or secretary of the Student Senate prior to the 2nd of March, 1970. Class officer candidates may also indicate their desire to run as part of a coalition. The declaration and petition must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee per candidate.
100
Photo by Greg Sorber
'Spring' is a set of wheels and a fast sidewalk
"How fast can he go to get where he's going," a slogan used for the movie, "Downhill Racer," could apply to 13 year-old Jimmy Henderson challenging the sloping campus sidewalk south of Hoch Auditorium. How fast can he go to capture the excitement and thrill of the warm weekend weather?
Jimmy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim M. Henderson, 1113 West 29 Terrace. Mr. Henderson is a KU education teaching assistant. Jimmy is a sixth grader at Broken Arrow elementary school.
SEDE BOKER, Israel (UPI) President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt must go if there is to be peace in the Middle East, David Ben-Gurion said Sunday.
Nasser must go to end Middle East conflict
"Not only will he have to go, he may not be able to stay," said Israel's first prime minister. "His position is becoming more and more critical."
The conditions for ending the Arab-Israeli conflict formed one part of a UPI interview with Bengurion in his bungalow in this Negev Desert kibbutz.
The 83-year-old leader said American supplies of jet aircraft are decisive in Israeli defense, that a Soviet drive for domination of the Mediterranean Sea is the kernel of Middle East trouble and that Israel should never surrender the Golan Heights it took from Syria nor East Jerusalem it took from Jordan in the 1967 Six Day War.
Ben-Gurion, asked if he thought Moscow would send troops to aid its Arab allies, said, "I don't believe they would send them now because they would be afraid of America."
"But, they will send in more and more arms and better arms and they will send in more of their officers to train the Arabs,"
he said. "This may be very dangerous."
Then what of President Nixon's current month-long consideration of sending Israel additional F4 Phantom jets to keep Arab and Israeli arms in balance?
"Jets are the decisive factor."
Ben-Gurion said. "The Six Day War was won in the first half of the first day, At noon I knew the war was won. Their Arab aircraft were destroyed."
Ben-Gurion, who retired from office in 1963, sat on an uncushioned wooden chair in the low ceilinged living room of the green bungalow. The decorations on the walls were as simple as the lifestyle of the Polish Jew who came steerage to Palestine 63 years ago in hopes of helping found Israel. There are photographs of his children and grandchildren, a painting of his late wife and a copy of Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation.
The only other foreign politician represented on the wall is Mayor Richard J. Dalley of Chicago. A Chicago City Council resolution, signed by Dalley and hailing Ben-Gurion's 80th birthday, hangs on a nail. Ben-Gurion wore an Israeli army private's uniform without insignia "$We seen three wars and the uniform is comfortable."
Frizzell to speak
Five Kansas legislators and Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzel are scheduled to discuss pending legislation affecting KU in a nonpartisan forum on campus later this month.
The forum, which will probably feature a question-and-answer session between students and legislators, is sponsored by the Collegiate Republicans. As arrangements now stand, the forum is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Feb. 18 in the Kansas Union Forum Room. But the date is subject to change because of a Student Senate meeting that night, according to Larry Huffman, Erie senior, Collegiate Republicans treasurer.
The legislators are State Sen. Glee Smith, R-Larned, president pro tem of the senate; Rep. Calvin Strowig, R-Abilene, speaker of the house; Sen. Tom Van Sickle, R-Fort Scott; Rep. Richard Loux, D-Wichita, and Rep. Franklin Gaines, D-Augusta.
Relationship with Christ discussed
Building a personal relationship with Jesus Christ is the theme of the winter College Life Conference, Feb. 27 to March 1, at Rock Springs Ranch near Junction City.
Nearly 80 KU students are expected to attend with 350 students from across the state.
Jim Jones, staff member for KU Campus Crusade for Christ said the purpose of the conference is "to build and strengthen the students' relationships with Christ and to learn the 'hows' of Christianity."
The conference, which is sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ, will feature Dean Ballard, personnel director for World Radio Missionary Fellowship, who will speak on Christian maturity.
Jones said students who are interested in attending the conference should call a KU staff member or Gary Olander, state director for Campus Crusade for Christ.
14 KANSAN Feb. 9
1970
ONE THOU SAND
20
Read 3 to 10 Times Faster
Take the Evelyn Wood Course and join the more than 1,000 KU and Lawrence Reading Dynamics Graduates who now read faster, understand better, and remember longer.
M
These 1,000 students have averaged an increase in speed of over 5 times and an improvement in comprehension of almost 10%.
Which Reading Dynamics course best fits your needs and schedule?
The Regular Reading Dynamics Course:
Three Choices
Mon., Feb. 9, 9:30 - 10:20 A.M.
(Meets MWF for Seven Weeks)
Mon., Feb. 9, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks)
Wed., Feb. 11, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Twice a Week - Wed. night and
Sat. morning 10:00 A.M. - 12:30 P.M. for
four weeks)
The Freshman Reading Dynamics Course:
Tues..Feb. 10,7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
Tues., Feb. 10, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
(Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks)
This course is especially designed for freshmen, accenting study skills and incorporating first-year course material.
The Vietnam Reading Dynamics Course:
M
Thurs., Feb. 12, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M.
Thurs., Feb. 12, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M. Meets Once a Week for Seven Weeks) In this unique course you read and discuss Vietnam in-depth while at least tripling your Reading Efficiency.
Phone VI 3-6424 Now. Class Space is Limited.
ONE THOUSAND
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kansas are offered
all at no cost. To be color to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
New Canon FT/QL single lens reflex,
fl. 8 lens, meter, quick loading, case,
UV filter. More than $80.00 off list.
$179.50. Phone VI 3-9252. 2-9
New compact electric refrigerator,
ideal for study rooms, dens, etc. Put
it down, save only $99.99. Ray Stone-
back's. Downtown, open Mon.
Thurs. nites. 2-9
For Sale: LP records, approximately 100, old, but good selection, many sizes, each one Woman's brown fur jacket, size 12, looks new. 843-297-evenings.
Old fur coats for sale in limited supply. Muskrat, lamb and martin in various colors. $30 to $40 each (cash). VI 3-2374 or 1730 Illinois. 2-9
1967 Pontiac Firebird Sprint OHC 6,
air conditioning, power steering and
brakes, gold with gold interior, very
good condition, one owner, VI 2-7288
RECEIVER: Heath AR-15, assembled.
1970 Consumer Report: AR-15 is the best receiver we have tested. Except.
642-350 130 watts RMS. Phone: 842-2827
Used Magnavox Color TV—sold new $388.50—now only 12M—with free shipping on most colors. With 10M, perfect color, Ray Stoneback's downtown, open Mon and Thurs., evening
Used Magnavox stereo component system with built-in AM-FM radio, compatible with every live kit $75.00. Ray Stoneback's, open Mon, and Thurs. evenings. 2-9
SANDAL SALE -20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarly Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
'63 Ford for sale, 2-door, standard, overdrive. See at Skelly station, 9th and Louisiana. 2-10
Harmon-Kardon 50 watt AM-FM receiver; 2 walnut enclosed air suspension 12" 3-way speaker systems. 842-5225 or 616 Kentucky. 2-10
For Sale: Gibson LGI 6-string. Mahogany 2 piece back, sides; spruce top; sunburst finish; excellent condition; $15.00. Call Dave Perkins, 5024.
64 "Impala Convertible 6 cylinder aut-
good condition, 824-1604 824-1604 2-17
New McIntosh 225 Amp, Lafayette pre-amp—indep. tuning, and two eight inch speakers-$300 sell, for $175. Jay Steinberg VI 3-1711. 2-11
For Sale. 2-owner 1962 Impala 327,
factory air, power steering and power
brakes. Very good condition. Call any-
time. 842-3538. 2-9
66
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 1-2008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
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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.
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
Heavy sounds—in your car—dig it-
reverb (echcho chamber) for sale; $15
plus cost of ad. Call after 6 p.m., VI 3-
9001.
2-11
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
For Sale: 1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass; automatic transmission, bucket seats; received condition; start anlymh Received new tires; Start anlymh to sell. Only $500. Call 843-9583. 2-11
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
SQUA TRONT—the leading EC fanfare! Issue Note 3. only $2.00. Frazetta interview, Crandall, Wrightson, Feldstein art. DAN FLEMING, 1231 Orih
For Sale: Zenith stereo phonograph.
Almost new See at 1234 Tern. 2-11
For Sale: AMPEG G15 guitar amp,
with a 15" Jenson speaker. Has all
the extras such as dolly and cover.
Threw in cord. 845-7607 five
2-12
General electric portable stereo; black case, foldout speakers, excellent condition $30. Must sell. Call Mark Dietz, 843-4711. 2-10
GROOVY: INFLATABLE FURNI-
TURE—many styles for dorm or
apartment. 412-5801 between 6:30
and 7:30 weekdays. 2-12
For Sale: Man's Naismith Hall contract. A Garrad 40 MKII turntable with base, dustcover and cartridge. Call Allen, 842-0430. 2-12
Old fur coats and capes-beaver
clothes 1618 Tenn. #ZA, 842-6810 2-12
clothes 1618 Tenn. #ZA, 842-6810 2-12
Love Seats—matching black foam rubber, solid mahogany in walnut stain. Good shape, $50.00. Also two walnut lamps, $60.00. 2188. 2-12
Willing to bicker! Have two used bows, new set of hunting arrows, and a finger guard. Cheap! Call 842-1881. 9-12
CARPET SAMPLEPS—The inexpensive way to make custom designed area rugs or carpet an entire room. These sample rugs are approximately 12” x 18”, range from indoor/outdoor to shag including every imaginable color and design, and cost only $2 each. Use carpet tape or tape to secure pieces together with eye-catching and inexpensive carpet. To place orders and obtain further information, call PRISES, P.O. Box 852, Lawrence, or call 842-0002, 5 p.m. - 6 p.m., Mon-Fri. 2-11
For Sale: One man's Naismith Hall contract. Call Mike, 842-6150. 2-13
60 Cadillac, good shape, four lighters,
cheap at $90. Carb 842-594-0. 2-13
9.16 Truckm TR-4, good mechanically,
good design, best offer. Call 842-5490.
$2-13
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Que, if you cannot get there, the place is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special offer V 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Math tutoring—for almost all under-
graduate experience
3-9776 after 5 p.m.
2-9
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3:4032. 5-13
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
Galactic Bridal
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moaicals,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watchbands, sandals, purses, vests,
gloves and shoes 812-3
PRIMARILY LEATHER 812-3
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
Your headquarters
910 Ky.
for
Student and family laundries done at Tair's Laundry. 1903¹⁴. Mass. St. Paul's Chapel and folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early or same day service. In early 2-3
612 N. 2nd St.
MIДAS®
Three men need 4th to share 6th floor apt at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities paid except phone. Call after 5:30. VI 2-7770. 2-9
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 styles to choose for our curtains. PRIMARLY LEATHER 812 Mass. 3-2
Need 1 or 2 replacement roommates to occupy beautiful Gatehouse apartment for second semester. Call 843-2103. 2-9
WANTED
mufflers and shocks
843-8943
Three men need 4th to share apt. at Jayhawker Towers. All utilities paid except phone. Originally $67,50, willing to go to $50. Dave, VI 2-104. 2-9
Wanted! Male graduate student to
study for 360 a month. PhD
842-9236 evenings.
2-9
Need roommate in two-bedroom
Room. Phone 845-1598 2-12
Conditioned. Phone 845-1598 2-12
Wanted: Riders, rides, or car pool.
KUMC to KU daily. Contact Bob at
722-0806. 4019 Adams St. K.C., Kan.
9.19
We need one additional roommate in a beautiful 4-bedroom duplex; reasonable rent. Call John, Mary or Herb at 843-2103. 2-12
Wanted: Male student to share nice two bedroom apt. Swimming pool. $70 a month. Call 842-5859 after 9 p.m. 2-11
FOR RENT
Entire basement apt. Private entrance.
bedroom, living room, rooms, fireplace, utilities paid $130.00 per month, available now; for 2 or 3 months
Phone 843-0570 or 843-6011. March - 2
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Home of the "Big Shef"
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Favors
- Guards
- Gurds
- Mags
- Reconitions
- Paddles
- Lavaliers
- Stationery
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lists - Stations
PERSONAL
HELP WANTED
- Gifts - Plaques
Wish to employ noon hour supervisor for elementary school lunch room and play ground, 11:30 to 12:30. Phone VI 3-4866 for interview. 2-9
For Rent: Two bedroom apartment completely furnished. University Terrace. Call 842-1105 and 842-1423. 1-23
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $801^{1}$ Mass, Returns $4.00 and up. tf
For Rent- New two bedroom luxury apartment Large rooms. Quiet area.
Occupy immediately. Married couples or two girls only $150. 843-5884 2-11
For Rent: 2 bedroom apartment, fur-
mented month call. Month Call: M-211
Tim at 843-5045
TYPING
- Sportswear
V
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog
Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work VI 3-2381. Mrs. Kraukman
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxl, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Typing done on electric machine.
Thesis, dissertations, term papers
Fast, reasonable rates. Call 842-1561.
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken,
Hamburgers,
etc.
Hurry to Henry's
h & Mo. V13-2139
Experienceed typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typing. Use concise typewriter with a typeface. Type service. Mrs Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service. 5-14
LOST
Lost—black men's wallet. Need urgently. Reward. Call 842-6221 anytime. 2-9
Lost: Between Watkins and Snow, a pair of black-rimmed round glasses in a tweed ease. Urgency needed. Leave message. Please leave call 641-8543. 2-12 leave message.
FOUND
Found: 1 pr. man's glasses. Found by Robinson last month. Call John Valentine at 843-0836. Owner must pay for ad. 2-10
SERVICES OFFERED
Found: one woman's watch during enrollment. Call Dan in 560 McCollum; identify the watch, pay for this ad, and the watch is yours. 2-10
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on
the phone line. Your Group Tax: 8015.5Mes $4.00 and up if
the phone line is used.
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Sirloin
Saling tags and fresh select awards awaken you when you do close the Saturn. We serve you only the final, premium selection as you list them with all the supporting materials at the Saturn for the ultimate daring pleasure.
One and one half miles north of the Raw River Bridge
842 1321
Bull
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
Malis Shopping Center
TRAVEL SERVICE
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Make Your Spring Break Reservations
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
VI 3-1211
SNOOPY
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact:
Shelley Bray
University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
- Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Classified Rates
**Classified Rates**
1 time — 25 words or less — $1.00—Add. words $.01 each
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Carswell nomination "sad"
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark said Sunday that President Nixon's nomination of Federal Judge G. Harrold Carswell to the Supreme Court "is a sad one for this country."
Clark, asserting that black Americans still look to the high court more than to any other institution for aid in their fight against racial discrimination, accused the President of "tinkering with the confidence of a major part of our people" by naming Carswell.
"These are difficult times for
Schools
(Continued from page 1)
There has been little or no violence since the Supreme Court's "desegregate now" orders began going into effect in Dixie, but there have been colossal problems. Thousands of white students defected to private schools or no schools at all, teachers quit, and school officials have had to contend with mammoth refurnishing and relocation tasks.
After the statement was read, McKeithen emphasized that the governors were not fighting integration, but "forced integration."
"To say that you have to sit on the front seat of a bus even if you don't want to, that's not America," said McKeithen. "If everyone were treated alike the people of this country would rise up. I'd like to see what would happen to Chicago or Detroit or Los Angeles if they attempted the same kind of desegregation there."
16 KANSAN Feb. 9
1970
our country and . . . the problem of race is a major part of the underlying difficulties," Clark said in a UPI Washington Window interview.
By choosing Carswell, he added, "you give the appearance of someone who has been unwilling or reluctant to fulfill the rights of people who have waited many generations to have their rights fulfilled and are still waiting.
"So I think the nomination is a sad one for this country," said the 45-year-old Washington-New York attorney.
Carswell has repudiated a speech made 22 years ago during a Georgia election campaign when he advocated white supremacy. He also has denied charges he was hostile to government civil rights
lawyers and biased against their cases.
He contended there were at least as many outstanding jurists from the South "proportionately as any other part of the country" if Nixon wanted a Southern judge.
Most of the liberal-moderate Republicans who helped scuttle the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr, are holding back any commitment on the appointment of G. Harrold Carswell to the high court.
They are, for the most part, keeping their options open—waiting to see if any new information comes up before the nomination reaches the Senate floor.
On the Haynsworth nomination, 17 Republicans deserted
President Nixon and their votes were a decisive factor in the 55-to-45 rejection of the appointment. Of this group, only Sen. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., has come out with a formal announcement of opposition.
Goodell, charging that Carswell had failed to "heed and promote" the civil rights revolution, is one of three senators who have declared their intentions. The others are Democrats—Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota and William Proxmire of Wisconsin.
On the basis of an informal survey among the 17 GOP senators who opposed Haynsworth, it appears that Sen. Jacob K. Javis of New York will vote against confirmation of Nixon's latest selection for the Supreme Court.
But the survey also indicates that four of the 17 dissidents, including Sen. Republican Leader Hugh Scott, Assistant Senate GOP Lealer Robert P. Griffin, plan to vote for Carswell. Taking a similar stance are Sens. John Sherman Cooper, Ky., and Richard S. Schweiker, Pa.
The commitments of Cooper and Griffin, at least, are not endlessly binding, however. Cooper's support is firm only if nothing unexpected should surface before the vote and Griffin gives a similar indication.
Griffin, who at first backed Haynsworth and then changed his mind, said, as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee: "If it came to a vote today, I would vote to report him out."
Details uncertain in Gore accident
Lawrence police reported Saturday that the car in which David L. Gore, Pawnee Rock junior, was killed Thursday night, turned off 19th Street onto Iowa and into the path of the car driven by Danny J. Jennings. 21. RR 5. Lawrence
Police have no indication whether Gore's car had stopped at the intersection before pulling onto Iowa, nor in which lane of traffic the accident occurred.
Jennings told officer his car hit the rear of Gore's car, and hit a curb. He said he did not remember anything else.
Gore's car apparently crossed the center line of Iowa and collided with the one driven north by Herbert L. Williams, 41, 1002 W. 24th.
Police were unable to give details of the accident Friday until they had talked to Jennings. Jennings was held overnight Thursday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, then released Friday morning.
Funeral services for Mr. Gore will be at 2 p.m. today at the United Methodist Church in Larned, with burial in the Larned Cemetery.
Born Nov, 20, 1949, he is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Gore, Pawnee Rock; two sisters, Mrs. Beth Ann Hown, Toronto, Ont., and Sherry, of the home; two brothers, Allen, Manhattan, and Ronald, Larned; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Smith, Larned.
This accident was the third fatality on Iowa Street in 13 months.
LATE HOURS:
The Captain's Table is now open until 2:30 in the dim, dark morning.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Bartoks Mountain
$1 admission
$1 per pitcher ($\frac{1}{2}$ gal.)
8:00 - 12:00
THE COLLEGE CLUB FOR THE STUDENTS BUDGET
804 W. 24th
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 75
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, Feb. 10, 1970
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Pentagon misuses funds
WASHINGTON—Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., said today the Pentagon has "usurped," "absorbed" or "heisted" $10 billion in savings that should have resulted from defense spending cuts.
"The Pentagon has heisted $10 billion of the peace dividend," he said. "The long-suffering taxpayers have been robbed of $10 billion in tax relief or improved domestic services or a combination of the two."
"He said the $10 billion in savings were eaten up by new weapons systems."
TUNIS—Secretary of State William P. Rogers drew the first anti-American demonstrations of his African tour before opening talks today with Tunisian leaders in his reappraisal of U.S. policy toward the continent.
Visit draws protests
Rogers arrived Monday night from Rabat, Morocco, shortly after more than 100 students tried to march on the U.S. embassy in Tunis. About 2,000 others gathered downtown shouting "Nixon Assassin!" Police dispersed them.
WASHINGTON—Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., says he may release secret transcripts showing an "exceedingly disturbing" escalation of U.S. involvement in the civil war in Laos.
U.S. extends war to Laos
Gore charged on his own authority that "we are engaging now in a civil war in Laos and we have chosen sides just as we did earlier in Vietnam."
And despite a pledge by President Nixon to reduce U.S. involvement overseas, Gore said, the United States had "increased our involvement and our presence in Laos and the government refuses publicly to admit it."
BENEFIT BUILDING FOR THE VETERANS OF WWII
Photo by Ron Bishop
More office space for extension division arrives
Mobile buildings to be used for University office space were maneuvered into an empty lot north of the union Monday.
The KU extension buildings arrived in half sections. Similar buildings set between Summerfield Hall and New Haworth Hall.
Rights bill near finish
The Student Senate Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities committee will finish drafting a student bill of rights this week.
The bill, if accepted by the senate, would affect the rights of all University of Kansas Students.
Chris Morgan, Emporia third year law student and chairman of the committee, announced that the student bill of rights will be printed in its entirety in the Wednesday edition of the Kansan.
Entitled the "Code for Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct at the University of
Kansas," the document essentially is a bill of rights written to protect the student's rights in certain areas.
These include classroom expression; freedom of protest; campus expression; student privacy, which involves the confidentiality of student records and proscribed conduct which includes (1) offenses against persons, (2) offenses against property, and (3) offenses against the orderly processes of the University.
"The committee has been working hard on the document off and on since fall," Morgan
said, "and we have tried to narrowly define these rights as much as possible. We don't guarantee the bill will solve all problems but I think it's fair and I can't see any reason why anyone wouldn't accept it."
"I sincerely hope that every student will at least read the bill of rights and become aware of how it could affect them," he said.
Morgan said he plans to hold a public hearing for Friday, with time and place to be announced. All students may then voice their opinions.
The bill will go to the Student Senate for approval Feb. 25.
General denies influence
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)—The general who made the final decision to charge Lt. William L. Calley with 102 murders insisted Monday he was not influenced from above. His own superior wouldn't even talk to him about the case.
Maj. Gen. Orwin C. Talbott, commander of Ft. Benning, his deputy, Brig. Gen. Oscar E. Davis, and Col. Robert M. Lathrop, the staff judge advocate at the base, all denied there was any outside influence on them to bring Calley to trial.
All three testified at a pretrial hearing for the 26-year-old officer, accused of slaying 102 Vietnamese civilians in a sweep of the village of My Lai on March 16, 1968. The
hearing was recessed until Tuesday.
Calley's attorneys claim he cannot get a fair trial in a military court because of improper influence on local officers, stemming from the White House through the Pentagon.
But the base's top brass insisted that not only was there no such influence, but every effort was made to shield them from influence.
Talbott, who made the final decision to bring charges against Calley, said he read the transcript of the investigation conducted at Ft. Benning "from cover to cover more than once" and determined that "the alleged case against him was so serious it could only be determined by a court of law."
Lt. Col. Reid W. Kennedy, the trial judge, asked Talbott if he had been influenced "by any outside source."
"None whatever," Talbott said.
Talbott said he read only the base investigation transcript before ordering charges filed. He said Army legal authorities advised him not to read a massive Inspector General's report on the case or look at any photographs, because they might prove "prejudicial" to his decision.
He said the only message from higher authority he ever received from Calley was a cable from "some higher headquarters" last year pointing out that Calley was due to be released from the Army on Sept. 6 and couldn't be held
beyond that unless there was a formal investigation.
The investigation was ordered on Sept. 5, by Calley's brigade commander.
Davis, who was acting commander of Benning for less than three weeks last fall before Talbott took over, said "absolutely not" when asked about higher influence.
"In fact, I was avoiding influence like the plague. I don't think anybody wanted to touch it."
Lathrop, the staff judge
So great was the zeal to protect him from undue influence, he said, "There was an obvious attempt to withhold information from me by people at the base, because I might be the man who had to make the charge."
advocate, was asked by the Army prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel, if he acted on orders from "any high authority in Washington."
"I did not," Lathrop said. He said he began working on the case last August and sought legal assistance from the Pentagon. He said he got a call from Col. William Chilcoat of the judge advocate general's office in Washington who said "do nothing until you hear from us."
On Sept. 4, Lathrop said, Chilcoat called him and "we got the green light, as we call it, stating in effect, okay, Ft. Benning, the case is yours to do with as you wish."
Military law requires that decisions to court-martial a
(Continued to page 12)
Placement test developed
A new and more effective method of testing incoming college freshmen in English proficiency has been co-developed by KU English education professor Oscar M. Haugh.
The examination, just issued by Houghton Mifflin of New York, is called the "College English Placement Test" and is the result of four years of research by the authors.
Haugh, who also serves as director of the KU language arts teaching program, combined with James I. Brown, professor of rhetoric at the University of Minnesota, to prepare the examination for Houghton Mifflin.
The examination concerns itself with effectively measuring a student's understanding of the basic structure of the English language and his ability to manipulate his language effectively, and providing accurate information for placing a student in the kind of composition class best suited to his needs and abilities. Depending on the results a student will be placed in one of three English sections—remedial, regular, or honors. Because the exam points out individual weaknesses it has diagnostic implications as well, Haugh said.
To help determine the exact content of the exam Haugh and
Red Cross blood drive begins today at JRP
The Red Cross blood drive begins today and will continue through Thursday, said Mrs. Marcella Wolfson, chairman of the drive.
The blood drive is sponsored and organized by the Pershing Rifles, she said. It will be open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, and from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
Mrs. Wolfson said donors need weigh only 110 pounds and be in good health. Parental consent is no longer needed for 18-year-olds, she added.
Blood drives by the Red Cross supply one-half the more than five million blood units used each
year in the United States, Mrs. Wolfson said.
After blood is collected, she said, it is sent to distribution points and hospitals. Needed blood is often supplied by hospitals. A sub-center distribution point operates from the main center in Wichita on a 24-hour basis to help meet the need.
Mrs. Wolfson said because Douglas County participates in the Red Cross blood program, KU students and residents of the county reserve blood for thirteen dollars a pint when it is needed whether they donate or not. Costs can run as high as $100 in some metropolitan hospitals which do not have this program she added.
City's newest commissioner calls for KU cooperation
City Commissioner John Emick said in an interview Sunday it was imperative that the city of Lawrence cooperate and function with the University.
The city is growing as is the University, Emick said, and the problems they have in common are related to growth.
"Growth problems are good problems," he said. Emick was sworn in as a city commissioner Feb. 3 to replace Dr. Robert Hughes, a Lawrence physician, who moved from the city.
Mayor Clark O. Morton Jr., who presides over the commission, said Emick was appointed because his previous experience with the job, his interest in it and his availability of time for it. Emick served on the commission from 1965 to 1969. He was mayor of Lawrence from April 1968 to April 1969. Illness prevented him from re-running for the job at the end of his term. He will complete Hughes' term of office which will end in April, 1973.
Emick said the commission also meets regularly with University officials in an attempt to coordinate the city's growth problems with KU's. Representatives of the KU faculty and administration serve on the city's Planning Board, the Board of Code Appeals and the Human Relations Board.
Problems of traffic, housing and sewage, Emick said, are mutual to the city and the University.
Emick said the commission worked with the University to provide more and better housing for the students. The University he said, wants the city to be responsible for a certain percentage of the housing.
Since KU is on the hill, he said, any new facilities as residence halls or classroom buildings have sewage and water problems. Agreements are worked out with the city on the amount KU will pay to hook onto the city sewer system. Water is bought on a gallonage basis, Emick said.
He said garbage and trash was another mutual problem. Presently the city is looking for a
2 KANSAN Feb.10 1970
new landfill location because the one west of the KU campus is almost full.
"The commission is always willing to help the students with their problems." Emick said.
Student organizations, he said, often come to the commission for help. For instance, during Rock Chalk Revue, the commission allows the students to string a banner advertising the show across Massachusetts Street. Lawrence merchants are encouraged to attend the performance.
Brown sampled nearly 160 American College and university English professors to determine what should be involved in a freshman English course.
KU representatives who were recently involved on a screening committee which chose a new City Manager, Buford Watson Jr., were Donald Metzler, associate dean of engineering; Francis Heller, dean of faculties; and Edwin Steen, professor of political science.
Emick said the University was always willing to help the city. For instance, KU service organizations promote and collect for the yearly March of Dimes fund raising.
A University even the size of KU gets lost in a large city, Emick said. It is better to have a University in a town the size of Lawrence so both can work with and benefit from each other.
This, combined with the personal teaching experiences of the authors, went into the original choice and construction of items on the test. All items chosen were then screened three times, when some were found to be invalid.
HUTCHINSON — A Modesto, Calif. youth discovered the cost of bringing marijuana to Kansas could be greater than the penalty of his conviction for illegal possession.
Convicted youth discovers taxes
To insure proper and orderly emphasis, Haugh and Brown arranged the items so they parallel actual steps in writing a composition. This includes subject selection, limiting the topic, organizing the topic, expressing ideas in complete sentences, determining how to choose the best means of expression, and proof-reading.
John Peterson found the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) had placed a claim of $160,000 on his estate for an excise tax. The tax is $100 for each ounce of marijuana transferred.
Peterson discovered the tax as he prepared to appeal his conviction here on the illegal possession charges. He sent to California to obtain the necessary processing fees, and discovered the IRS claim made against his money.
An optional second part of essay questions concerning contemporary problems is also a part of the exam.
"This is where we separate the men from the boys," Haugh said.
Student. are given a choice of subjects to write to further check the student's ability.
The "College English Placement Test" is only now being released and can be expected to be in wide use during the fall.
Midi-skirts will go
NEW YORK (UPI) — Found:
One designer who predicts the
midi-length skirt won't shoot
down short skirts.
He's Mr. Blackwell, originator of the worst dressed list. He says the midi probably will be in garbage cans by fall.
Blackwell said. "We spent five years making women feel free and now the fashion industry is trying to tell them to put on a dress that will age them 20 years."
In Person! In Kansas City! OLIVER
("Sunday Morning;""Good Morning, Starshine;"
"Jean")
Sunday, February 15; 7:30 p.m. Municipal Auditorium Music Hall Reserved Seats: $3.50; $4.50; $5.50 at all Jenkins Music Stores and the Music Hall Box Office Sunday
WE'RE:
open from 7:00 a.m.-2:30 a.m. stocking many drug items specializing in breakfast keeping our cafeteria open from 10:00-8:00 serving a varied grille menu close to campus,
friendly.
and
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
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• Blouses
• Half-Slips
• Bras
• Pajamas
• Panty Hose
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Campus briefs
Angel flight tea held tonight
The Ennis C. Whitehead chapter of Angel Flight, women's service auxiliary, to the Arnold Air Society, is holding a rush information tea tonight from 6:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk roof of the Kansas Union, Interviews for Angel Flight membership will be Feb. 15-18. Interested women students should attend the rush information tea or contact Julie Jardes, Angel Flight rush chairman, at 843-8022.
Debate team places fifth
The University of Kansas debate team, coached by Donn W. Parson, associate professor of speech and drama, placed fifth in a tournament this weekend at Northwestern University at Evanston, Ill.
The team of David Jeans, Independence, Mo. senior, and Bob McCulloch, Prairie Village senior, placed fifth out of a field of 60 schools.
The debate team will compete in three tournaments this weekend.
From a tournament at the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md., the team will travel to Northeast Oklahoma State College for a tournament there. Then the team will compete at Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia.
Professor joins research team
Robert S. Hoffman, professor of systematics and ecology, was appointed to a four-year term on the United States National Committee of the International Union for Quarterly Research.
Hoffman, curator of mammals in the KU Museum of Natural History was appointed by Philip Handler, President of the National Academy of Natural History.
The committee will organize the participation of American scientists in the International Quarterly Research to be held in New Zealand in 1973.
Geographers to attend symposium
Two University of Kansas geographers will attend a western hemisphere symposium on geographic research in Latin America from April 30 to May 3 at Ball State University, Muncie, Ind.
John P. Augelli, director of the Latin American Center at KU, is a member of the planning committee.
Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography will be chairman of a panel on research needs in the area of population and settlement in Latin America.
AWS holds leadership institute
Associated Women Students (AWS) will sponsor a leadership institute Feb. 20-21 at the First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont.
Friday's session will last from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. The institute will run all day Saturday.
Participation in the institute is limited to 100 persons. Male students, as well as coeds, are encouraged to register. KU faculty members are invited by AWS to participate in the institute.
Applications for the institute can be obtained in the dean of men's and dean of women's offices. They must be turned into the dean of women's office by 5 p.m. Friday.
Miss Taylor said a $$ registration fee would be paid by the participant's living group.
Tenor to perform at KU
John Alexander, described by the New Yorker magazine as "one of the two or three finest tenors at the Metropolitan," will perform in concert tonight at 8:20 in the University Theatre. Murphy Hall.
The concert is one of two performances in the KU Concert Course to be presented during February. The Concert Course is sponsored by the School of Fine Arts.
Alumni Board nominees named
The University of Kansas Alumni Association announced the names of six men nominated for election to the 1970 Alumni Board. Three of the six will be elected to serve five-year terms on the board.
The nominees are Samuel D. Evans Jr., 1964 business graduate from Salina and vice-president of EVCO Distributing, Inc.; Nicholas L. Gerren, 1953 Ph.D. and professor and dean of the School of Music and Art at Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio; William W. Hambleton, 1951 Ph.D., associate dean of faculties, associate director and state geologist of the Kansas Geological Survey and chairman of the Committee on Computing and
Data Processing at KU; Richard Kane, 1939 graduate, director of the First National Bank in Bartlesville, Okla. and member of the national board of YMCA; Sam W. G. Lowe, 1948 law graduate and attorney in Colby; and Dwight D. Sutherland, 1945 graduate and lumber operator in Kansas City.
Feb. 10 KANSAN 3
1970
Ballots will be sent to all paid members of the Alumni Association in April. Members of the association must return their ballots by May 20. In addition to these six men, nominations of other alumni must be made to the Alumni Association by petition bearing at least 100 signatures of paid members.
The meadowlark is not a true lark. It belongs to the same family as the blackbird and the oriole.
Teens, drugs-first in series in adult education classes
"You — Your Teenager and Drugs," a 10 week series of classes in the Lawrence Adult Education program, will begin at 7:30 tonight.
Classes will meet from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. each Tuesday at Lawrence High in room 122. Cost for the entire series will be $10 per person and $15 per couple. Persons will be admitted to single lectures for $1.50.
E. J. Logsdon, director of adult education for the program, said the classes were set up out of a real need to deal with drug abuse.
Speaking at the first meeting will be Harold Mossberg, dean of the KU School of Pharmacy. He will discuss "A Comprehensive View of the Current Drug Problem."
Staff members from Headquarters, Lawrence's drug abuse center, will speak Feb. 17.
William Binns, psychologist for KU's Mental Health Center, will speak Feb. 24. He will discuss the psychological aspects of drug abuse.
"An Effective Approach to Drug Abuse" will be Dr. Cecil Switzer's talk March 3. Switzer is director of the children's division for Menninger Foundation in Topeka and a staff member of Carriage House, Topeka's drug abuse center.
A film on marijuana will be shown March 10. Robert Lowe, coordinator of the drug series and Lawrence School System psychologist, will comment on the film and answer questions.
Lowe recently returned from Denver where he and Mrs. Jean Dicker, LHS nurse, attended a four-day seminar on drug abuse.
Control of drugs through federal legislation will be discussed March 17. The speaker for that date is not yet known.
A panel of parents will discuss their role in helping with teenage drug abuse March 24.
Another panel discussion will take place March 31. It will deal with how schools should attempt to cope with drug abuse in the school environment.
Representatives from the Lawrence Police Department and Lawrence juvenile courts and some local lawyers will discuss law enforcement and the abuse of drugs April 7.
WE SELL DRUGS:
The Captain's Table stocks all of your favorite drug items. On your way to class, come see our toothpaste.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
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This Week:
The Soul Possessions
Ladies Free – Monday through Thursday
Matinee — 3 to 6 Fridays
Admission FREE with KU ID
Live Music
Every Night
8-12
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KAWSAN COMMENT
Money, money, money...
Money, money, money, money, money. . . Can you use any money today? Money, money, money, money, money. . . Nice new bills that we're giving away. In our treasury there's a mighty sum, millions we've subtracted from our take home pay. Can you use any money today?"—Irving Berlin.
Irving Berlin was not referring to Kansas taxpayers, but he knew well the attitude of taxpayers and Kansas taxpayers have no real reason to differ from taxpayers everywhere. They feel, and rightly so, that their money is being taken and given to others; they feel this most keenly when they see no benefits from their output.
Kansas is at a critical stage with the economic life of her education systems threatened seriously by taxpayers who are feeling the pain of high property taxes (which finance much of the state's school expenses) and who, at the same time, are not seeing the benefit of their output for education.
Any man can understand money leaving his hands when he sees a new highway being built in front of his home, but the value of education is much less visible, particularly to taxpayers who don't have children.
Taxpayers in Kansas are probably even less aware of the benefits of maintaining universities than of the benefits of maintaining primary and secondary schools. But schools on all three levels are in danger.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr., spoke wisely when he said, "We have already severely
over-extended our human and physical resources."
And with many urgent, money-demanding projects looming—Wescoe Hall, Watkins' rejuvenation or replacement, a new library, etc. it looks as if we might be asked by the State to extend our overextension a bit further.
The solution is twofold: 1.) to convince the State Legislature that it should not put a lid on property taxes and that it should consider a long-range increase in expenditures for all levels of education in Kansas; 2.) to convince the taxpaying public that no better investment can be made than education.
It is a common misconception, and held far too often on campus, that the university is run foremost by private funds and secondarily by State funds. Not only is the State the central financier of the university, but it is the only source which can be depended upon on a yearly basis.
If some schools have reached the point where they can exist without State funds, KU is not among them. We cannot tell the State Legislature to get lost, as much as we would sometimes like to.
Without a long-range program of intensified rehabilitation, Kansas' schools can look forward to sinking into the unsuitable slime of insufficiency.
The rehabilitation will take money, money, money, money, money. And, yes, Irving, we can use some money TODAY.
Mike Shearer
...money, money, money
From The Wichita Eagle
An assistant superintendent of schools at Shawnee Mission, Kan., told school administrators the other day that they will have to persuade "the taxpaying citizens of our districts to march on the Capitol building" if they want more state aid to education.
He is right about that. It isn't likely that many citizens are concerned enough to march on the capital, but they will have to show some interest if the Legislature is to be convinced it should appropriate $43 million in additional state aid—or even continue the present $26 million.
But the legislators also know that if an
The senators and representatives at Topeka know that Kansans are smarting under high property taxes. That is one of the reasons a "passel" of tax-lid bills has been introduced.
The judge v. tongues
CHICAGO (UPI) — "Chicago Seven" defendant Abbie Hoffman, denying Judge Julius Hoffman's demands that he remain quiet:
"Julie, your gonna have to cut out our tongues. That's the only way you'll make us stop talking."
arbitrary lid is put on the property tax, which finances most of the school expenses, the need for state aid will be even greater than it is now.
A large portion of any increased school support will of course go into teacher salaries, and there is nothing wrong with that. Kansas must compete on at least an even basis with other states and with industry.
Since most of the money will be spent on teacher salaries, this means the state must insist on efficient teaching.
However, if the state is to contribute such a large chunk of its revenue to support local schools, there must be some assurance that the money is being spent wisely.
What all of this means to Kansas parents and others interested in education and the future of Kansas is that the Shawnee Mission assistant superintendent's advice should be followed.
If not a march on the Statehouse, there should at least be a campaign of telephone calls and letters to senators and representatives.
They should be urged to support elementary and secondary education at 40 per cent of the total, which would take thou $43 million, or at the very least, continue the emergency $26-million appropriation made last year.
In addition, the Legislature ought to be urged to require school districts receiving state aid to pay teachers on a merit basis rather than tenure.
Education can only improve when excellence is rewarded and mediocrity discouraged.—Editorial page, Feb. 4, 1970.
Griff & the Unicorn
SOKOLOFF
HOW ABOUT GIVING ME A BOOST SO I CAN FLY SOUTH FOR THE WINTER?
SURE...
READY... SET...
GO!
NEXT TIME, LET GO OF MY FEET, OKAY?
HOW ABOUT GIVING ME A BOOST SO I CAN FLY SOUTH FOR THE WINTER?
SURE...
READY... SET...
GO!
NEXT TIME,
LET GO OF MY
FEET, OKAY?
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1969,
University Dally Kansan.
PARTY LEADERSHIP
PLEASE HELP THE LAME, THE NEEDY & THE BLIND
$ PARTY BUNDS
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THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
I recently wrote to about ten graduate schools and carefully reviewed their application procedures to determine to which I should apply. I immediately threw out all of those who ask to have references rate personality or ability to "get along," whatever that is.
I was taking no chances.
This week I ran across a copy of the Fort Hays Kansas State College admission questionnaire, the type the school mails to the school which the admission candidate is leaving. The questionnaire tops them all.
The questionnaire begins: "We have a very solid, clean-cut, well-groomed student body. When transfers or out-of-state residents are considered for admission we want to be positive that they are the type which will cause no disturbance or bad rapport on campus or in the community. The confidential help of school officials is very much appreciated by us."
Catch that, you flabby, shaggy, shabby KU radicals; they have a solid, clean-cut, well-groomed student body, which might explain why they are looking for people who will not cause disturbances. We all know, don't we, that it is the solid, clean-cut, well-groomed type that really causes disturbances?
The questionnaire goes on to ask the recipient school to check the following as they apply to the student: (space is left after each word for a big, hateful check mark).
"1) Boisterous, uncouth, undisciplined, (or) refined, thought-
ful.
"2) In dress—long haired, shirt-tailed, beatnik, (or) neat,
well groomed.
"3) Inclined to be radical, agitator, left or right wing, (or) orthodox.
"4) Emotionally unstable, psychotic, wild with car, (or) well adjusted."
Are you still with me? Let's skip down to number nine:
"9) Probably has problems with alcohol, drugs, homosexuality, (or) none."
I gave myself the test and, good news, I won, Fort Hays Kansas State College lost and I'm not qualified to attend.
My first reaction on reading the questionnaire was one of utter horror. Do these people really depend on this cheap criteria? Is it their school or their administration that is sick? Or both?
But thinking it over, I decided it was only fair that creeps should have a place of their own, someplace sheltered from beat-niks, radicals, psychotics, alcoholics and homosexuals.
Next to a cemetery, Fort Hays Kansas State College may be the most comfortable place in Kansas for the right kind of student.
Refined? Thoughtful? Neat? Well-groomed? Orthodox?
Well adjusted? None?
Dead?
Maybe Dead?
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KNNSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Puff of cotton candy
BY RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
"The Reivers" is as irresistible as a puff of cotton candy. Who can argue with it? It has everything.
First, there is a tousle-haired boy, wide-eyed and ready for introduction to the lascivious world outside his small Mississippi town, and two raucous young men—one white, one black—to serves as his guides. Add to these a gruff but loving grandfather, a gaggle of good-hearted prostitutes, a drawing redneck sheriff, an exciting horse race, and top it all off with a shiny 1905 Winton Flyer, complete with a bud vase beside its steering wheel.
All ingredients are then carefully placed in that misty, pastel-colored period at the turn of the century, when nobody worried about anything and even sin was innocent.
Steve McQueen plays Boon, a sort of general handyman and rascal, who "borrows" the Flyer from his employer and lures the Boss's young grandson off to taste the wicked pleasures of Memphis, in particular a "cat house" whose most tempting offering happens to be Boon's current inamorata. With them comes another semi-profession reiver (rascal)—a fun-loving black played by Rupert Crosse—who, immediately upon arrival in Memphis, trades the prized car for a race horse. More complications ensue, of course, climaxed by a horse race photographed in delicious slow motion, but all is well in the end, and everyone is happy, including the audience.
The director and the writers can be forgiven for occasionally getting carried away with their own nostalgia, because, after all, that is partly the reason we came. Nostalgia has become an important element in many recent motion pictures. It is a new type of escapism, or at least a refined type: temporal rather than spatial. But even movies that provide good, solid escapism are rare, so while "The Reivers" is here, why not reel in it?
ISRAEL AND THE ARABS, by Maxime Rodinson (Pelican 95 cents)—An interpretation of the conflict in the Middle East that has erupted into war twice in two decades. The author of this work sees the Arab-Iraeli row in simple terms: "the struggle of an idigenous population against the occupation of part of its normal territory by foreigners." He demonstrates sympathy with the Arabs without going overboard
*****
RAT PACK SIX, by Steven N. Spetz (Gold Medal, 60 cents); THE TREMBLING EARTH CONTRACT, by Philip Atlee (Gold Medal, 60 cents)—Two for lighter moments. The Atlee book is another one about Joe Gall (a well-named hero), who this time dons an Afro wig, has a few injections, and becomes a black secret soldier. Now how about that? Wild. "Rat Pack Six" is about six young soldiers in Vietnam, and the view of war is not a cozy one, and not for the squeamish. Nor for those who love beautiful writing.
BOOKS
*****
A STORY TELLER'S STORY, by Sherwood Anderson (Viking Compass, $2.75) - Autobiographical writings by the famous short story writer and novelist. Anderson describes here a life that moved from middle class materialism to bohemianism, and he reflects on Midwestern life, American values, and literature
in his time. The book was published in 1924, and it has a preface by Walter B. Rideout.
THE CRIME OF PUNISHMENT, by Karl Menninger (Viking Compass, $1.95) — A widely praised work that appeared about a year ago, by the famous Kansan who is chairman of the board
of trustees of the Menninger Foundation in Topeka. Menninger, who is one of the wisest and warmest men in America, asks some searching questions about America and crime and violence, and focuses upon the penal system, which he sees as being responsible for much of the problem.
FAST BREAKFAST:
The Captain's Table specializes in quick breakfasts; Open at 7:00 with all your breakfast favorites. Breakfast is over at 10:00.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
RECORDS
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
No one sings with tongue in cheek as well as Phil Ochs. "Phil Ochs' Greatest Hits" is Ochs' tribute to an era of music which he obviously both loves and understands. Including tribute to such stars of the pre-Beatles era as Elvis Presley and Jim Dean, this album gives us an array of songs ranging from the twangy "Gas Station Women" to the 50's sound in "My Kingdom for a Car."
This isn't exactly Phil Ochs as you've known him, but then neither is Phil Ochs. Never was.
Harry Nilsson, surely one of the brightest stars to emerge on the vocal skyline, is singing Randy Newman songs on "Nilsson Sings Newman." The two couldn't be more compatible.
With songwriter Newman at the piano, Nilsson weaves his way through "Yellow Man," "Cowboy," "The Beehive State," "Davton, Ohio, 1903" and "So Long, Dad."
As those who've heard his "Aerial Ballet" and "Harry" albums know, Nilsson's voice has just the right amount of nostalgia to carry off the type of songs Newman has here. While the new album may lack the variety of "Harry," it is singularly enjoyable, mellow and very, very Nilsson.
***
If you love Aretha Franklin, her newest album, "This Girl's in Love with You," is a must. She sings "Eleanor Rigby" with far more energy than the Beatles intended, and she does it wonderfully.
Maybe a little predictable, Aretha is still a big-voiced, enthralling singer, and her voice on such songs as "Son of a Preacher Man" and her own "Call Me" is successfully hot.
$$
***
$$
Not nearly enough acclaim has come to The Guess Who, the artists on RCA's "Wheatfield Soul," and intriguing new album. This is the group that won a silver record for its first big single, "Shakin' All Over."
Included in the new album is their hit "These Eyes."
Far too little variety is the biggest flaw of the Friends of Distinction on their new album, "Grazin.'" Not to be put down, however, is the sincerity of the well-blended voices on the album.
Feb. 10
1970 KANSAN 5
THE BAND
Critics have acclaimed the second album,
"THE BAND" as the
"ALBUM OF THE YEAR."
"RAG MAMA RAG"
is the new single
by popular demand.
Capitol.
Capitol
THE BAND
Title hopes continue as Hawks down O-State
By BRUCE CARNAHAN
Kansan Sports Editor
Outstanding second half performances by KU's Dave Robisch and Roger Brown sparked the Jayhawks to a 69-58 conference win over stubborn Oklahoma State Monday night in Allen Field House.
Robisch riddled the Cowboy's stingy man-to-man defense for a game high 31 points—17 coming in the second period. Monday night's scoring spree thrust the 6-10 Jayhawk standout over the 1,000 career point mark—a feat that only ten other KU cagers have achieved.
KANSAN Sports
Robisch, who upped his two year point production to 1,009 at the expense of the Cowboys, now ranks tenth on the Hawks career scoring chart behind such illustrious performers as Clyde Lovelette, Wilt Chamberlain, Walter Wesley and Jo Jo White.
Brown, KU's second-line center, entered the game with 15:35 remaining in the second stanza and the 'Hawks holding a slim 43-34 edge over the Cowboys. The 6-10 junior, a starter on last year's NIT squad, grabbed a game high 10 rebounds and scored nine points in his brief appearance to guide the Jayhawks down the stretch run towards their 13th win of the season.
KU surprised Oklahoma State with a full court press at the outset of the contest and jumped to
a 7-2 lead before the momentarily stunned Cowboys were able to set up their traditional pattern offense. But O-State quickly settled down to business and grabbed a 9-7 lead when Sparky Grober hit on a 20-foot jumper only three minutes later.
The slow 'Pokes, unable to penetrate KU's tough 1-3-1 trap zone in the early going, were forced to rely on deadly outside shooting to stay within striking distance of the Hawks. The lead continued to change hands until Oklahoma State suddenly lost its magical shooting touch and the Jayhawks reeled off 12 consecutive points to move from a 17-16 margin to a comfortable 29-16 edge with 6:15 remaining in the opening period.
The Cowboys were never able to completely recover from KU's sudden scoring spurt and the Jayhawks edged to a 36-30 half time advantage.
The Hawks used a couple pages from Oklahoma State's own playbook—solid defense and a deliberate patterned offense—to increase the slim six point intermission advantage into a commanding 60-45 margin in the second half. The Cowboys, conference cell dwellers, were never able to cut the deficit to less than 11 points in the final 7 minutes as they fell to their sixth conference loss in eight encounters.
Both KU and O-State enjoyed excellent shooting nights. The Jayhawks converted 26 of 51 field goal attempts for a fiery 51 per
The Soviet Union lost about 7.5 million men during World War II, the most of any allied nation.
ISU blasts Wildcats; Tigers nudge Cowboys
By United Press International
Iowa State led most of the way Monday night, blasting Big Eight Conference-leading Kansas State, 80-64.
Aaron Jenkins gave the Cyclones a lead they never lost when he arched in two baskets for a 15-11 margin with 13:40 to play in the first half. Jenkins led all scorers with 21 points.
Jerry Venable was Kansas State's top scorer with 16 points.
The loss dropped Kansas State to 6-2 in conference play, one game ahead of Missouri and Kansas in the loss column. Iowa State is 5-4.
Iowa State's biggest lead came
with 3:47 to play when Rick Engel scored for a 73-51 margin. The Cyclones led at halftime. 39-31.
Oklahoma went 10 minutes without a field goal Monday night and Missouri capitalized for a 55-47 Big Eight basketball victory.
The Sooners led, 16-9, with eight minutes left in the first half. From that point until two minutes had elapsed in the second half, however, Oklahoma managed only six free throws.
6 KANSAN
Feb. 10
1970
By then, Missouri had built a 31-22 lead, which it never lost.
Missouri, which hit 51 per cent of its field goal attempts, was led by Henry Smith's 13 points. Theo Franks had 11 and Don Tomlinson 10. Garfield Heard scored 12 points and Clifford Ray 11 for Oklahoma.
cent mark and the Cowboys canned a sizzling 57 per cent of their shots.
Bud Stallworth and Bob Kivisto supplemented the fine inside play of Robisch and Brown by tallying 10 points each. Pierre Russell added 8 points to the balanced KU scoring attack.
KNOW ANY FRENCH TOASTS?:
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Bob Buck topped the Cowboys' scoring chart with 15 and also led the team in rebounding by hauling in 7 rebounds.
KU is now 4-3 in conference play and 13-6 for the season. The Jayhawks, who trail league leading K-State by a slim one game, will venture to Ahearn Fieldhouse Saturday for a face-to-face showdown with the Wildcats.
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By STEVE SHRIVER
Assistant Sports Editor
Kansas coach Ted Owens was understandably pleased with Monday night's basketball results. While his Jayhawks were polishing off pesky Oklahoma State, 69-58, Iowa State waltzed past league-leading Kansas State, 80-64.
Thus, KU and Missouri, who beat Oklahoma, 55-47, were both able to inch within one game of the Wildcats in the loss column. The 'Hawks meet K-State in a showdown this Saturday in Manhattan in a regionally televised game.
"It will be necessary to beat K-State twice to win the championship," Owens stated flatly in the locker room after the Cowboy game. "We could be sure, if we won them all."
"This win tonight definitely puts us in the race," Owens said, "but Missouri and Nebraska only have three losses apiece, too. Colorado's only two games back and so is Iowa State. You can't even guess who might win it."
The only thing definite about Owen's appraisal of the Big Eight race, or anybody's for that matter, is his last statement. Any one of six teams could take the crown with a solid stretch run. After this Saturday's action, if KU could knock off K-State, first place would be deadlocked in a three-way tie with the Kansas schools and either Missouri or Nebraska.
The Cornhuskers must face still-potent Colorado tonight in Boulder and return home to host Missouri Saturday night. If the Tigers can get by Nebraska in Lincoln they could be tied for the lead, while NU must win both its games this week to have a chance to tie.
Oklahoma State was all but eliminated from the race with this defeat as the 'Pokes now stand at 2-6. But, Kansas must face them again in Stillwater where they could turn spoiler, seeking revenge.
Owens paid tribute to the Cowboys after the game. "It's hard to shake them. They're a tough team and they really hang in there.
"The high-court press helped us (into forcing 26) 'Poke turnovers') and the zone helped us later, too," he said.
Owens singled out reserve
Feb. 10
1970 KANSAN 7
Photo by Ron Bishop
KANSAS
40
14
55
Aggressive defense pays off ...
Chet Lawrence (hands in air) and Pierre Russell (No. 44) move out of their zone defense to put the clamps on an unidentified Oklahoma State player with the ball as Dave Robisch (No. 40) and Rick Cooper (No. 55) watch. The tenacious 'Hawk defense forced 26 Cowboy turnovers.
Roger Brown as a major factor in the outcome. Brown came off the bench early in the second half and played through the rest of the game, finishing with 9 points and 10 rebounds. He hit three of five field goals, three of four free throws, and blocked several shots in one of his better performances of the season.
Despite the murky look of the conference race, one thing remains certain. A team that meets the challenge and wins it all, will be a team of championship calibre.
UPI Top Twenty
Team Points
1. UCLA 34 17-0 349
2. S. Carolina 17 1-1 294
3. Kentucky 1 17-1 274
4. St. Bonaventure 15-1 237
5. N.M. State 18-2 178
6. N.A. State 17-1 124
7. Jacksonville 17-1 92
8. N.Carolina 14-4 65
9. Pennsylvania 19-1 66
10. Drake 16-4 36
11. (T) Iowa 11-4 22
12. Davidson 16-3 22
13. Houston 15-3 19
14. Winning 15-4 17
15. (T) Marquette 14-3 16
16. Notre Dame 14-5 16
17. Santa Clara 15-3 13
18. (T) W. Kentucky 15-2 11
19. State 18-2 11
20. (T) Ohio University 15-3 9
21. Illinois 12-5 9
EAT LUNCH ALL DAY:
Well, practically, anyhow. The Captain's Table cafeteria is open from 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Monday Saturday. Grille opens at 2:30.
Rifle team hits for 2nd
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
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The Kansas men's rifle team took second place with 1,071 points in the NRA Intercollegiate Sectional Smallbore Bike match Friday and Saturday at the University of Missouri at Rolla.
$3.99
KU's men's and women's teams will be on the road this weekend, firing at a match at the University of South Dakota at Vermillion.
Scoring for the team was Rick Daly, St. Louis senior, 288; Mike Jenkins, Salina sophomore, 270; Linn Covey, Ft. Leavenworth freshman, 259; and Mary Arnold, Holton junior, 254. Miss Arnold placed second individually in the women's division with a score of 258 out of 300 points.
Both the team and individual matches were quarter internationals consisting of one target each of prone, kneeling and standing positions with 300 points possible. The University of Missouri at Rolla won the match with a score of 1.121 points out of 1.200.
SUA
Special War/Anti-War
Film Series
THE
RED BADGE
OF COURAGE
February 10
John Huston, USA, 1951
Short: OLIVER THE VIII,
Laurel and Hardy
Woodruff Aud., Union
7:00 and 9:00 p.m.
A. S. Koehler
Steve McQueen "The Reivers"
Paravison*Technicolor*
A Cinema Center Films Presentation
A National General Pictures Release
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Eve. 7:15 - 9:20
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BUSY
She's ready for the splash
Irene Dunavan, Overland Park senior, models a swim costume that local store owners predict will be popular on poolsides this summer.
Skinny suits 'flair' up for spring
By CLANCEY MALONEY Kansan Staff Writer
The "wet look," swim costumes and "funky prints" are big words in swimsuit fashion for spring and summer.
Suits this year will be smaller—that is, more skin than ever before will be revealed. Cut-outs and sheer fabrics also are part of the swim fashion outlook.
"Wet look" suits are made from acetate and nylon shimmer fabric to give the look of being wet, whether wet or dry. Clipped velour used in mini-one piece suits also gives the wetness that fashion-conscious coeds will be looking for when sun-bathing time rolls around.
Jim Schubert, co-owner and buyer for the Jay Shoppe, is concentrating on swim ensembles for summer. Everything from cotton voile bellbottoms and blouses to floor length shimmer skirts with halter tops will be worn over matching swimsuits. The idea, one local merchant said, is to look as good when you get out of the pool as when you went in.
"Funkey prints," which are small, two-color prints will be popular this spring in suits with matching coverup shirts. These prints are similar to the small paisley prints and flowered prints in style four years ago.
8 KANSAN Feb. 10
1970
Another big trend this year, according to Mrs. Dorothy Green, manager of Kirsten's, are huge crochet-like and small flat knits and printed jersey. Many are made with wool blends and have no linings, allowing for natural curves.
Mrs. June McMillan, manager
of the Alley Shop downtown, said many suits do not have built-in bras as they did last year, which again emphasizes the trend toward natural contours.
The overall fashion picture for summer 1970 is skin, and lots of it. Suits are smaller and they show more.
NEW GRILLE IN TOWN:
The Captain's Table is proud of its grille menu. Ace is creating a variety of hamburgers, steaks,and sandwiches for you. Grille opens at 2:30.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
WE'RE SUPPORTING YOU ALL THE WAY
Kauhawka
ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners
Three Convenient Locations:
DOWNTOWN
1111 Mass.
VI 3-5155
MALLS
23rd and Lo.
VI 3-0895
HILLCREST
9th and Iowa
VI 3-0928
Publishers blamed for troubles
Publisher are usually at fault when books are late in arriving, said James Christman, manager of the Kansas Union Bookstore.
"Some publishers are much faster to deliver than others," he said. "If a book is out of print when we order it, it's naturally going to take longer for us to receive it."
Chrestman added that there
had been fewer complaints of books not arriving or orders being too small to fill class needs this semester than in the past three years. He attributed this partly to the fact that the bookstore had begun ordering by computer.
Instructors must place orders for books five months before the
tape. Except in the cases of foreign publishing companies, orders are printed by computer and held until after students sell their books. Orders to foreign publishers are processed by hand and placed as soon as they are typed.
If a book is required for a class, the bookstore always orders extra copies to cover students who enroll late.
Books recommended but not required are ordered in quantities equal to half the estimated size of the class. Christman said that only in upper division, graduate
and engineering classes do all students enrolled purchase recommended books.
Senate bill would allow taxes on halls
"We prefer to buy books from students," Chrestman said. "This not only puts more money in their hands, but also means that more students will buy books. There is a tendency for students to share new books rather than buy them individually."
Books are reordered on the first day of classes and take an average of two weeks to arrive. Publishers fill orders in the sequence they are received. In special cases, a "hot line" order may be placed which is processed faster than standard orders.
Chrestman said instructors will be required to order books two weeks earlier than usual next year because of the earlier starting date of the school year.
semester begins. This procedure gives the bookstore time to collect all the orders and estimate how many books must be ordered after books are bought back from students.
A bill was introduced in the Kansas Senate Jan. 19 which would allow taxes to be assessed on residence halls and union facilities at state-supported colleges and universities. The tax burden would be placed on students attending the schools.
Senate Bill 434 is being reviewed by the Senate Committee on Assessment and Taxation. If passed, the bill would lift the tax exemption status from all campus buildings and facilities not built by state funds.
Based on the average occupancy level for the 1969-70 school year, students living in KU residence halls would be required to pay an additional $152.52 a year to cover the tax assessment.
Couples living at Stouffer Place would be assessed an extra $308.91 per year. Residents of scholarship halls would be charged an extra $103.48.
Every KU student, regardless of his living situation, would be required to pay an $8 assessment to cover taxes on the Kansas Union.
Feb. 10
1970 KANSAN 9
Orders are punched on IBM cards and transferred to magnetic
Cut lip endangers Al Hirt's career
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Trumpeter Al Hirt said Monday a cut from a piece of concrete which struck him in the lips during a weekend carnival parade might endanger his career.
Twelve stitches were required on the inside of his upper lip.
Hirt said doctors gave some hope that his lip might heal, enabling him to play again, but "the doctors don't play a trumpet."
Hirt, who operates a popular Bourbon Street night spot, was riding a float in a carnival parade Sunday night when someone in the crowd threw the concrete, hitting him in the mouth.
Weather
Fair and warmer with southwestern winds from 15 to 25 miles per hour. Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Turning colder tonight and Wednesday. High today, 50-55. Low tonight in the lower 20's. Probability of precipitation near zero per cent today. 10 per cent tonight.
Bridge
Over
Troubled
Water
Simon and Garfunkel
Bridge Over Troubled Water
reg. $5.99
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr.
$3.99
GIRLS FREE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Blues Garden
$1 admission
$1 per pitcher ($\frac{1}{2}$ gal.)
8:00 - 12:00
THE COLLEGE CLUB FOR THE STUDENTS BUDGET
804 W. 24th
T
Marathon trial goes on
CHICAGO (UPI)—U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman Monday refused to issue a directed verdict of acquittal for seven men charged with conspiring to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention.
The refusal of the defense motion cleared the way for the last stages of the marathon trial.
Final arguments are expected to begin Tuesday.
The defense asked for the directed verdict with the argument that the government had failed to prove its case and that Hoffman should therefore free the "Chicago Seven" without sending their fate to a jury.
Testimony ended in the 19-
Poet, translator visits KU to teach and confer
W. K. Merwin, poet and translator, will arrive on campus today to teach writing classes and confer with individual student writers.
Merwin is the first of three poets-in-residence who will visit KU during the spring semester to present lectures and work individually with students. Also scheduled are Jack Anderson, a New York poet who will be on campus during the first three weeks in March and will present a public reading of his works March 12, and Diane Wakowski, a New York poet who will be here April 28.
Merwin will conclude his stay Feb. 19. He will give a public reading of his poetry at 4 p.m.
Feb. 17 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Merwin was educated at Princeton University and was the editor of Nation magazine for a short time. He has published six books of poems since 1952, the most recent two being "The Lice" and "The Moving Target." He has also published nine volumes of translations, among them "Poems of the Cid," "The Song of Rolland," "Voices" (poems by Antonio Porchia), and "Transparence of the World" (poems by Jean Follain).
week old trial after 193 witnesses testified and more than 20,000 pages of trial transcript were compiled.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard G. Schultz announced the prosecution wanted ten hours to sum up its case against the anti-war protest leaders accused of conspiring to incite riots during the convention. Chief defense attorney William M. Kunstler said the defense wanted five hours for its summation.
Hoffman granted seven hours to each side in which to make their closing arguments.
In arguing for directed acquittal, Kunstler said the prosecution had presented no "specific evidence" that there was a conspiracy.
Schultz answering briefly, said the government had proved "it was the plan of these men to bring people here for a violent confrontation with the police which would precipitate a riot."
The government also proven, he said, that the defendants used the facilities of interstate commerce to bring demonstrators to Chicago "in furtherance of the riot they planned."
BREAKFAST 7-10:
The Captain's Table cooks breakfast all morning. The eggs, sausage, hash browns, bacon, ham, and pancakes sizzle from 7:00 - 10:00 Mon.-Sat.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
Use Kansan Classified
Grant given for cell study
The National Science Foundation has awarded the University of Kansas a $45,000 research grant in cell biology.
Eugene Bovee, professor of physiology and cell biology, will direct research for the two-year tenure of the grant, which began Feb. 1.
The grant was awarded to support research on the effects of chemical pollutants on mobility behaviors of one-celled plants and animals or protozoa.
Various chemicals, when placed in water with protozoa, can affect or damage their ability to move. Because many human cells are similar to one-celled animals, the chemical damage to protozoa can be related to possible damage caused by pollutants to human cells.
By using missile-tracking cameras attached to microscopes, scientists can make ultra-high speed films of the protozoa to watch for locomotive deficiencies caused by pollutants.
Alan Organ, graduate student from Philadelphia, Ronald Goddard, graduate student from Des Moines, and Mercedes Acuna, graduate student from Cuman, Venezuela, will assist Bovee in the experiments.
Navy patrol boat held by Cambodia
SAIGON (UPI) — A U.S. Navy river patrol boat inadvertently strayed into Cambodian waters last week and was seized by Cambodian forces, American headquarters reported Monday. The vessel and its five-man crew are being held.
Cambodian officials said the boat and the crew were taken to the Cambodian naval base at Chrui Changwar near Phnom Penh.
A dispatch from Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, said the boat was intercepted last Thursday night six miles inside Cambodia.
10 KANSAN Feb. 10
1970
Kentucky's forests cover 12 million acres, nearly half the state's total land area.
E. E. T.
Hair. It's not the style that counts, it's what's under it.
The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, New York, N.Y. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M.F
For a free 18" x 24" poster of this advertisement, write: The Equitable, Dept. B, G.P.O. Box 1170, New York, N.Y. 10001
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the advertisements served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
SANDAL SALE—20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb. 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarly Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and DVAC
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evening.
Harmon-Kardon 50 watt AM-FM receiver; 2 walnut enclosed air suspension 12" 3-way speaker systems. 842-5225 or 616 Kentucky. 2-10
For Sale: Gibson LGI 6-string, Mahogany 2 piece back, sides; spruce top; sunburst finish; excellent condition; $15.00 Call Dave Perkins 842-5024.
"64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder au-
bility good condition, $525
842-104-6934
'63 Ford for sale, 2-door, standard,
at Saskatchewan at Skelton station,
and Louisiana. 2-10
Two sports coats, near new; size 42,
Herringbone, one gray, one brown.
$17.50 each. Call after 5:00 p.m.-842-
* 0455. 2-10
New McIntosh 225 Amp. Lafayette pre-amp--indep. tuning, and two eight inch speakers-$300 value, sell for $175. Jay Steinberg, VI 3-171-1. 214
Kansan
Classifieds
Work
For You!
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
910 Kv.
Gabrielle Bridal
TEXACO
W. 9th TEXACO
★ New, experienced management
- Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
★ Student specials
THE ANTE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
SANDWICH SHOP
For Sale: AMPEG G15 guitar amp, with a 15" Jenson speaker. Has all the extras such as dolly and cover. Throw in cord. 843-6707 five. 2-12
For Sale: 1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass;
automatic transmission, bucket seats;
good condition, gift certificate;
Received by Christmas.
to sell. Only $500. Call 843-9588, 2-11
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III.
General electric portable stereo; black case, foldout speakers, excellent condition. $30. Must sell. Call Mark Dietz, 843-4711. 2-10
Heavy sounds—in your car—dig it!
reverb (echcho chamber) for sale; $15
plus cost of ad. Call after 6 p.m., VI 3-
9001.
2-11
DELICATESSEN &
For Sale: Zenith zenhit phonograph.
Almost new. See at 1234 Tenn. 2-11
GROOVY: INFLATABLE FURNI-
TURE—many styles for dorm or
apartment. Call 842-5801 between 6:30
and 7:30 weekdays. 2-12
For Sale: Man's Naismith Hall contract. A Garrad 40 MKII turntable with base, dustcover and cartridge. Call Allen, 842-0430. 2-12
Old fur coats and capes--beaver,
nipkins 1618 Tenn. ZA, 824-801-2
1028, 1618 Tenn. ZA, 824-801-2
1028
Love Seats--matching black foam rubber, solid mahogany in walnut stain. Good shape, $0.00. Also walnut lamps, $30.00. 843-2188.
Willing to bicker! Have two used bows, new set of hunting arrows, and a finger guard. Cheap! Call 842-1881.
CARPET SAMPLES—The inexpensive way to make custom designed area rugs or carpet an entire room. These rugs are approximately 12" x 18", range from indoor/outdoor to shag including every imaginable color and design, and only slightly larger than the carpet tape or sew these pieces together for eye-catching and inexpensive carpet. To place orders and obtain further assistance, write STROBO ENTER-PRISSES, P.O. Box 852, Lawrence, or call 842 1043. 5 p.m. - 6 p.m. Fri. M-11
60 'Cadillac, good shape, four lighters,
cheap at $90. Call 824-594-90.
2-13
For Sale: One man's Naismith Hall contract. Call Mike, 842-6150. 2-13
'62 Triumph TR-4, good mechanically,
rough outside, new valves $400 or
best offer. Call 842-5940. 2-13
Very clean 1966 VW 1300 Bug with
Large body. Oversize snowzeal
$850. At see 1708 up
2-16
Must sell this week: Good 1959 4-door Pontiac. One owner. Also large tandem wheel utility trailer. Also locally new 816 tires. Call 843-25447.
1968 Ward-Benelli motorcycle, 250 cc.
Also two helmets. See Merle Milburn
after 5:00 at 1416 Tennessee. $250. 2-16
Magnavox annual sale! Don't miss Magnavox annual sale! Don't miss stercos, components. AM-FM stereo radios, transistors and tape recorders! Monton, antnown town-0-16 Mont. and Thurs. evenings!
Magnavac deluxe tape recorder sold new at $89.95—used one month, cut to $50.00. *Ray Stoneback's.* 929. Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings. 2-16
Tape recorder cassettes reduced! Two hours, only $3.00; 90 min., only $2.50; one hour, $1.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon and Thurs. nite
For Sale: Concord four-track stereo cassette deck. Used very little, buying a larger tape deck. Comes with jacks.
$60.00. Call 842-6844. 2-16
For Sale: Panasonic stereo tape recorder—practically new, complete with two mikes, accessories, two separators, and headphones and hear to appreciate. Sold new for $275, now $150. Call John at $42-8237 after 5:00. I need tuition money fast.
'66 Mustang V-8, low mileage, excellent condition. Very reasonable. Must see to appreciate. 842-9036 after 6:00. 2-16
Refrigerator. $20. VI 2-9155. 2-12
Recording tape for sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Shelby—1967 GT500, 4-speed, air conditioning, new polyglas tires, excellent condition, low mileage, 2111 Kasold B103, 842-5992. 2-16
G.E. portable stereo, $4$; soul albums,
$2$ each; Topaz ring (5), $4$; Playboy
mus (9), $7$; ceramic pots. Call 843-
2854 between 5-10 p.m.
NOTICE
Two f-78-14 Remington tires, good tread, with or without rims, will fit most GM cars. Make offer. Dennis Miller, 842-7000. Make rv. 933. 2-16
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, 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 tf
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay 10% handling. Dynaco dealership. Call 842-2047 evenings 4 to 10.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-13
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watches bands, sandals, purses, vests,
sunglasses at 812 MARRIAGE
PRIMARILY LEATHER 3-2
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^1$ . Mass. St.
Tarr's laundry coiled, perma-
press on hangers. Bring in for
same day service. 3-2
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 colors to choose or your own. PRIMARA, LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
Need male roommate in two-bedroom
house. No children. Phone 843-1598
Conditioned. Phone 843-1598
2-12
Wanted: Riders, rides, or car pool.
KUMC to KU daily. Contact Bob at
722-0806. 4019 Adams St., K.C., Kan.
2.19
WANTED
We need one additional roommate in a beautiful 4-bedroom duplex; reasonable rent. Call John, Mary or Herb at 843-2103. 2-12
Wanted: One bass player who sings; one guitarist who sings and any verbera; another who is interested in organizing a progressive rock band with excellent drummer and lead player who does all original music. Chuck 42-1309 time or Rocky, 842-5645
2-20
FOR RENT
Entire basement apt. Private entrance,
living room, fireplace, upholstery paid $130.00
per month, available now, for 2 or 3
months. Phone 843-0570 or 843-6011. March-
1-2
For Rent- New two bedroom luxury apartment. Large rooms. Quiet area. Occupy immediately. Married couples or two girls only $150. 843-5848 2-11
Apartment in exchange for work. Call 843-7863. 2-13
For Rent: 2 bedroom apartment, fur-
ranch, monthly month Call Mick I.
Tim at 842-504-3617
For Rent. Two bedroom apartment
for rent. Call 842-1105 and 842-1433. 2-13
Call 842-1105 and 842-1433.
Small basement efficiency apartment
building with a basement
electricity. Call 842-3750, 12-10 p.m.
Interested in a sales career? High earnings and management opportunities. Sign up at Summerfield Business Office. Interviews on Tuesday, February 17, 1970, all day. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance 9-16
To sublet—spacious one-bedroom apt.
ideal for one or two people, two
blocks from campus, $125 furnished.
Available. Call 842-4869.
Call 842-4869. Mar-2-16
Wanted: Male student to share nice two bedroom apt. Swimming pool. $70 a month. Call 842-5859 after 9 p.m.
2-11
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Wkli 3-2381. Mrs. Ruckman,
LA PETITE GALERIE
"with it" fashions for Daylight and after-hour also Men's wear by Arpeja Lower level 910 Kw. L
Portraits
- Applications
HIXON STUDIO
B
- Passports
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
"Please call for appointment"
Bob Blank. Owner
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
For the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
926 Mass.
- Reweaving
VI 3-0501
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
Table Tops
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey — VI 3-416
Raney Drug Stores
福禄寿
3 locations to serve your every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest,925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Minnie Pearls
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
'COUNTRY-FIED' CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
We Care About
VI 3-8200
1730 W 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
VI 3-8200
8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
Malls Shopping Center
A
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Banana Boom
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
VI 3-1211
SERVICES OFFERED
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
Found: 1 pr. man's glasses. Found by Robinson last month. Call John Valentine at 843-0836. Owner must pay for ad. 2-10
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing materials, paperwriter
Plea Spee. Compient service.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. M-15
Wright. Phone 843-9554.
FOUND
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Your KU LD. is worth $1,00 off on
Group Tax. 80115美金 $4,00 and up if
$3,00.
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxl. 2496 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Found: one woman's watch during enrollment. Call Dan in 560 McColum; identify the watch, pay for this ad, and the watch is yours. 2-10
K
Gentlemen, would you like your own English tailor? Suits, sport coats, blazers, made to measure. Suit prices satisfaction guaranteed. Teal 842-4193 2-16
USED BOOKS—READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Westerns, Comics, Playboy
Fantasy, Fiction, Furniture
934 Mass. Book 843-2736. New boasting
25,000 books.
3-2
DRIVE-IN
AND COUN OP
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
Typing done on electric machine.
Thesis, dissertations, term papers.
Fast, reasonable rates. Call 842-1561.
LOST
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss.
Lost: Between Watkins and Snow, a pair of black-rimmed round glasses on the desk. Urgency needed. Reward $2. Please call 843-685-212
leave message.
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 1-9868
PERSONAL
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $ 801^{12 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. **tf**
Try One Today
814 Iowa
BURGER CHEF
INDUSTRIES
2434 Iowa VI 1-2008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Tony's Service
Home of the "Big Shef"
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
Your headquarters for
miDAS
mufflers and
shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Photo by Steve Haynes
New bridge nears completion
Workmen have almost completed steel work on a new county bridge over the Kansas River 15 miles west of Lawrence at Lecompton. This view looks north across the river from Lecompton toward Perry.
Press honor to Briles
Ernest Austin Briles, 78 year old publisher from Stafford, was honored this afternoon as the Kansas Editor of the Year at the William Allan White Day Luncheon in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The presentation was made by John Conard, editor of the Kiowa County Signal, Greensburg, and former Speaker of the Kansas House of Representatives.
"Truth, loyalty, honor, courage, humility, fair-mindedness, concern. . these words characterize the life and service of a truly beloved country editor," Conard said in praise of Briles.
Conard praised Briles as, "a Kansas newspaperman who fully exemplifies the William Allen White ideals in journalism and in service to his profession and his community."
Briles began his journalism career when he purchased the Stafford County Republican. Two
Briles has served Kansans for 25 years, six years in the Kansas House of Representatives, eight years in the Kansas Senate and almost nine more years as chairman of the newly-created board of Social Welfare. While serving in both chambers of the Legislature, he held both the Speaker of the House position and president pro-tem of the Senate.
years later he bought the rival paper in the community and has been at the same editorial helm today.
The other scheduled event of the day is the 21st annual William Allen White Day address by Eugene C. Pullium, publisher of the Phoenix, Ariz. Republic and Gazette. Pullium will receive the award for journalistic merit given annually by the William Allan White Foundation after his speech in Woodruff Auditorium scheduled for 2:30 p.m. today.
General denies influence
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
soldier must be made at the base level. The Army is required to satisfy the military judge that no command influence prevailed before a court martial can be held.
Lathrop said he recommended Calley's court-martial following a formal investigation
at Ft. Benning, including the questioning of Paul Meadlo, a Vietnam veteran who had been in Calley's company. He said his recommendation was based entirely "on my evaluation" of the investigation.
12 KANSAN Feb. 10
1970
NEW TV MOVIE
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Burt Reynolds will star in "The Return" for Cinema Center Films, a movie-for-television.
EARLY MORNING DRINK:
The Captain's Table serves all of your favorite morning beverages. Start the day with orange juice, coffee, tomato juice, tea, grapefruit juice or hot chocolate.
M
THE
CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
Car cost high in Boston,low in Portland
BOSTON (UPI)—It costs more to own and operate a car in Boston than any other city in the nation and Portland, Ore., is the cheapest place to run a car, the Automobile Legal Association (ALA) said Sunday.
Phil Wallwork, ALA public relations director, said a Boston motorist who uses his car for business and drives 10,000 miles a year pays 20.92 cents per mile. A Portland driver pays only 15.98 cents per mile.
The Boston figure, he said, is.57 cents per mile higher than New York, the next costliest city at 19.35.
Other cities studied for a national "cost of car operation" reported and their cost-per-mile rates for a 10,000 miles-a-year driver:
San Francisco, 18.43; Providence, R.I. 17.86; Chicago, 17.67; Los Angeles, 17.66; St. Louis, 17.49; Richmond, Va., 17.43; Hartford, Conn., 17.33; New Orleans, 17.29; Miami, 17.22; Dallas, 17.13; Washington, D.C., 17.08; Seattle, 16.96; Atlanta, 16.83.
Also Minneapolis, 16.82; Rutland, Vt., 16.80; Pittsburgh, 16.75; Portland, Maine, 16.75; Memphis, 16.64; Oklahoma City, 16.54; Helena, Mont., 16.52; Cleveland, 16.51; Salt Lake City, 16.28; Denver, 16.25; Savannah, Ga., 16.15; and Manchester, N.H., 16.06.
"On a city-to-city basis, the greatest variable is the cost of insurance." Wallwork said. "The insurance expense is the main reason why the cost of car operation in Boston is greater than in all of the other cities."
SUPPORTING STARS
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Andrew Prine and Ben Johnson have won supporting roles in John Wayne's new western, "Chisum."
REA E.E.SENIORS
- LOOK into the engineering opportunities open in rural electrification and telephony
- ASK your Placement Office for pamphlets telling what the Rural Electrification Administration offers for a challenging career with all advantages of Federal Civil Service
- SIGN UP for a personal interview with the REA Recruiting Representative who will be at your Placement Office February 16,1970
NO DISCRIMINATION
LATE HOURS:
The Captain's Table is now open until 2:30 in the dim, dark morning.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
THE CAPTAINS TABLE
1420 Crescent Rd.
Use Kansan Classified
The University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
presents
THE RIMERS OF ELDRITCH by Landford Wilson
Feb. 12-21st at 8:20 p.m Murphy Hall Experimental Theatre
For reservations call UN 4-3982
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.76
The University of KansasLawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, Feb. 11, 1970
Pulliam earns White award
Eugene C. Pulliam said Tuesday that without a free press man would hopelessly face the problems which plague the world.
Pulliam, who received the annual William Allen White Award for Journalistic Merit Tuesday, presented the twenty-first William Allen White Memorial Lecture in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium.
PRESIDENT
Lee F. Young, acting dean of the School of Journalism, presented the award to Pulliam.
Pulliam, a native Kansan, currently is publisher of Phoenix Newspapers Inc. He is first vice-president of the Associated Press and a member of the board of directors.
In his speech, entitled "The Unchanging Responsibility of the American Newspaper in a Changing Society," Pulliam said American newsmen should protect and perpetuate the people's inviolable right to know and to print the truth.
Pulliam responded to Vice President Agnew's slash of the media, "All of us know that much of what Agnew said is true. Despite all disclaimers to the contrary, however, there was at least an implied threat of a crackdown on network licenses in the Vice President's remarks."
Photo by Randy Leffingwell
Pulliam warns against government control of the press
The government, Pulliam said, has the right to complain, but it is the job of the press to answer these complaints with the truth and express their right to know the truth. He said if these rights were not exercised, it would not be long before the government regulated news completely.
Pulliam said without the press man would not receive the truths needed to solve the problems in today's world.
Remembering his experiences with Wil-
Eugene C. Pulliam, recipient of the annual William Allen White Award for Journalistic Merit, presented the twenty-first White memorial lecture in the Kansas Union Tuesday. Pulliam spoke for continued freedom of the press and warned of possible government regulation of the news.
(Continued to page 16)
Plan fixes basic income
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen.
Fred Harris, D-Okla., proposed a plan Tuesday that would guarantee every American a basic income instead of welfare. Under his bill, a family of four would receive $3,600 a year by 1973 with the federal government footing the entire $20 billion cost.
Harris offered the plan as a "Democratic alternative" to President Nixon's plan to share federal revenues with the states and his proposed welfare reforms which would guarantee a $1,600 income to a family of four.
As in the Nixon program, the able-bodied would be required to work or take job training under Harris' plan, but mothers of infants or school-age children would be exempt.
Harris said 40 states already pay more than $1,600 in welfare and Nixon's plan "would mean for many a sad plunge into the lower depths of even greater poverty."
Starting July 1, poor families would be guaranteed a minimum
income of $2,520 under Harris' legislation. This would rise to $3,060 in the fiscal year, starting July 1, 1971 and to $3,600 in mid-1972.
Harris' plan would cost the government about $7 billion the first year and it could rise to $20 billion by 1972. But Harris expressed confidence that Social Security boosts, job benefits, higher minimum pay and other programs would reduce the number of poor—now 25 million—to the
(Continued to page 16)
20 50 80 110 150 180 20 250
Blood needed
The Red Cross blood drive, sponsored by the Pershing Rifles, is now in progress in the lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall. The drive began Tuesday and runs through Thursday. Hours are; today 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Prince shatters tradition
Youth dresses as flag
LONDON—Prince Charles took his seat in the House of Lords today, prepared as Britain's future king to shatter royal tradition and speak out on national and world issues.
PORTLAND. Maine—A 19-year-old student was ordered out of his District Court hearing Tuesday because he was dressed in clothing which resembled the American flag.
Timothy Sample of Boothbay Harbor had been ordered to appear because his car is painted with red and white stripes and stars on a field of blue.
After several minutes next to the throne, Charles removed his robes and moved to the front crossbench, which has no political ties.
Civil war threatens Jordan
AMMAN—Arab guerrillas have gone on alert in Jordan and warned of an "all-out civil war" if the government enforces newly announced restrictions aimed at taking away their guns.
Campus briefs
NSA interviews scheduled
The National Security Agency (NSA) will interview interested students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences on Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 18 and 19. Interviews will be in the college office at 206 Strong.
Students not in the field of mathematics, engineering, physics or computer science must have taken the NSA professional qualification test in December of 1969. All applicants must also be citizens of the United States.
Additional information and application forms may be obtained from the College Placement Office at 206 Strong.
NSA is a major research and development activity of the U.S. Department of Defense.
Chalmers invited to seminar
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. will attend an invitational seminar sponsored by the American College Testing Program at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday of this week.
Chalmers will be one of 20 U.S. college and university presidents and chancellors attending the meeting.
Visiting professor to speak
Eugene Falk, professor of French and comparative literature at the University of North Carolina will speak to the French and Latin graduate students Sunday. Falk's topic will be "Stylistic Forces in the Narrative."
John Erickson, KU associate professor of French said the lecture will be open to all who are interested.
The lecture will begin at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
A compromise fair housing bill was approved Tuesday in the Kansas House of Representatives by a vote of 116-0. Senate approval had come Monday, so the bill will now to to Gov. Robert Docking, who is expected to sign it.
Compromise fair housing bill approved by Kansas House
One of the compromises involved was the insertion of a provision allowing the attorney general or county attorney to represent plaintiffs. The Civil Rights Commission can settle most complaints without the necessity of a district court trial.
The bill is designed to prohibit discrimination in the sale, rental or financing of owner-occupied residences of four or fewer units, commercial buildings and vacant lands. The Kansas Civil Rights Commission played an active role in the passage of the bill.
A person who believes he has been discriminated against would first file his complaint with the Civil Rights Commission. If medication failed, the commission could conduct a hearing. If the complaint was found justified the commission could issue an order for the property owner to cease discriminating.
If this order failed, a suit may
March of Dimes in motion with KU students active
More than 400 Lawrence residents and KU students collected Sunday for the March of Dimes.
Mrs. Robert Jordan, chairman of the Mother's March division, said the drive was going well. More than $4,000 has been raised toward Lawrence's goal of $7,000.
Professor receives award
raise money for the drive. Twenty-seven Greek houses were left ransom notes stating that their housemothers could be retrieved for a minimum of $5 at the Lambda Chi house.
Workers have not yet collected in apartments. Mrs. Jordan said it would be appreciated if KU students would volunteer to help with this part of the drive to be held in March.
Sigma Kappa sorority topped all donations with $23.15. For this they received the Kidnap Kup, the prize awarded annually to the group paying the most ransom.
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity staged their annual kidnapping of housemothers last Thursday to
A total of $256.57 from this project was turned over to George J. Williams, director of public works and campaign director of the Lawrence March of Dimes.
Brower R. Burchill, assistant professor of physiology and cell biology at KU received an award of $1,970 from the Biomedical Sciences Support Grant Subcommittee.
Burchill received the award to help improve present facilities in his laboratory and adapt them better to his research on the regenerative mechanisms of the large protozoan, stentor coeruleus.
E-Co. Berets plan rush tea
The E-Co. Berets will hold a rush and information tea Feb. 18 at 7:30 p.m. in the Military Science Building.
The E-Co. Berets is a women's service organization affiliated with the Pershing Rifles. At present they are sponsoring the blood drive for the Red Cross in Lawrence. They assist other organizations in and around the Lawrence area, and have formed a drill team which competes nationally.
2 KANSAN
Any woman student wishing information is invited to attend the meeting. Those attending are not obligated to join.
Feb.11 1970
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970,
University Daily Kansan.
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be filed in a district court. The plaintiff could be represented by either the attorney general's office or the appropriate county attorney.
Gov. Docking, who had called for a fair housing law in messages to both the 1969 and 1970 legislatures, will give priority attention to the bill. He is expected to sign the bill into law soon.
The passage ended a seven year struggle for a fair housing bill. The issue was first raised in 1963, and the legislature conducted a study on the matter. It was decided that discrimination did exist, and a bill was proposed in 1967. Since then the bill has moved from the House to the Senate and from committee to committee, but no law was ever passed.
Rep. James P. Davis, D-Kansas City, a strong civil rights proponent, said the bill wouldn't solve the problem of discrimination but would ease it.
Homer Floyd, former University of Kansas football star and executive director of the Civil Rights Commission, described the bill as "a workable compromise."
PETER SCHNEIDER
James Spencer Christian Science Lecturer
WE CAN CHANGE OUR WORLD
But we have to make sure the change is good. And we have to begin with ourselves. James Spencer of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship says that no matter who you are, your influence for good can be great. If you meet the challenge with the means God gives you.
Hear Mr. Spencer share some fundamental truths about changing our world.
Thurs., Feb. 12, 1970
7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room,
Kansas Union
SPONSORED BY CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION
Variety of opportunities limited
Center operates on narrow budget
By DAN OSBORNE Kansan staff writer
The East Lawrence Center, located at Tenth and Delaware, provides the citizens of east Lawrence with a limited number of educational and recreational programs, said Kenneth White, director of community action at the center.
The East Lawrence Center began in the summer of 1968 through the efforts of the East Lawrence Advisory Board and the Lawrence Community Resources Board, a group composed of representatives of local civic organizations.
The building occupied by the East Lawrence Center was formerly used to service Lawrence Sanitation Department trucks. In 1968 the building was donated to the center by the City of Lawrence and was partially remodeled.
The center is composed of a community action department and the recreational department, White said.
The community action department is staffed by White and an assistant director, Mrs. Verner Newman. It is financed by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) and provides a number of limited programs.
Mrs. Newman said one of the community action department's most successful programs is the employment referral service.
"This service is open to both kids and adults and is similar to any other employment service," said Mrs. Newman.
Other programs include cooking and sewing classes, child health care, helping with miscellaneous emergencies and referr-
ring needy people to social welfare.
Feb. 10 KANSAN 3
1970
"The basic purpose is to establish programs the people can take over when OEO is no longer able to help." White said.
The recreational phase of the East Lawrence Center is financed by the Lawrence Recreation Commission and receives help from private individuals.
Michael T. Harris, Terra Haute, Ind. junior and director of the center's recreation department, said the Lawrence Recreation Commission donated several pieces of used equipment when the center opened, but that most of it was inadequate.
Some of the recreational equipment includes: one used piano, two portable basketball goals, a broken juke box, a small slippery slide, an old pool table and several lop-sided basketballs. Harris indicated that he has received a number of uniforms from the recreation commission but that they had no numerals. He also said that at one time he received several used uniforms and basketballs from Ted Owens, University of Kansas basketball coach.
Harris said the center was poorly ventilated and had only one electrical outlet for the entire recreational section of the building.
Even with the inadequate equipment, Harris has been able to implement several recreational programs. He has organized basketball and flag football teams and tries to plan as many dances as possible.
"Most of the kids who use our facilities have no money," Harris said. "A center of this type should give the kids something to look forward to."
Harris said that on the average day about 30 to 35 grade school and junior high school students use the center.
"Wherever you find adequate recreational centers, you'll probably find less juvenile delinquency," Harris said. "Money spent for this center is a good investment when you consider the consequences of delinquency," he said in reference to contributions.
Concerning future plans, Harris said he would like to have more programs for girls.
"A few girls shoot baskets or play pool, but we really don't have any facilities specifically for them," he explained.
He also said that the kids using the center had expressed an interest in sports films and other movies.
"I've tried to get a projector from the recreation commission
but I haven't been successful. I'm sure we could get free use of films, but without a projector the films will have to wait." Harris said.
Both Harris and White were concerned with the lack of private contributions and the slim budget on which the center must operate. Harris summarized the situation when he said, "I think this center has potential but it's going to take some work."
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KAWSAN COMMENT
Let's pay Harrison
Leonard Harrison has much less to gain by being approved as a KU teacher than does KU.
The controversy over his hiring in the Political Science department as a lecturer and consultant has been absally inane, typically petty and outrageously anti-education.
Hired to teach Political Science 164, a course in black political ideology, Harrison's salary has been challenged because of his academic background and his recent conviction for intimidating Wichita anti-poverty program officials, a conviction which is on appeal.
The real question, however, should be whether Harrison is competent as an instructor, and that is really no question.
Harrison's work with the Ballard Community Center and several supplementary programs had been widely recognized in Lawrence as the first success in that area. Harrison brought to life issues concerning poverty and race which Lawrence had kept carefully hidden for a long time. His treatment of these issues was always positive.
In 1968, when a segment of Lawrence High School's black students walked out of classes because of administration negligence concerning several issues with which the students were concerned, Leonard Harrison proved to be a liaison between the students and their parents and between the Lawrence black community and the school board. Without threats, without hatred, and with a great deal more diplomacy than most people would be able to muster for such a situation-if it affected their race-Harrison counselled the participating students, encouraging and cautioning them in their act of civil disobedience.
Harrison and his wife Tina helped set up a temporary black school in a home so that the black students could not be accused of avoiding education when, in fact, they were wanting to make education more meaningful.
On KU's campus, Harrison has been a frequent lecturer, and his lectures have been impressive to the many who have heard him.
What is KU all about if not education?
He is no saint, but on the topic for which he has been hired, no man with ten PhDs could surpass him.
"The real question," Harrison has told the Kansan, "deals with academic freedom. Black people can not allow white America to determine who has black experience."
State Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Douglas County, (the one who said he admired much of what Joseph McCarthy did, in case anyone has forgotten) is among the opposition to Harrison's hiring. Shultz said, "Harrison is a militant and his political ideas and opinions could sway uncertain students in that direction. It is wrong for the University to hire him; they should get someone else."
It is precisely because Harrison's ideas and opinions could sway 'uncertain students,' whoever they are, that Harrison should be hired. Deeply concerned with his race and deeply concerned with KU's weak black recruitment programs, Harrison's ideas are precisely the ideas which need exposure.
Hopefully, Harrison's hiring will not be looked upon as a favor to him. Those who have heard him speak and seen him in action know that his primary concern is not acquiring teacher status; his primary concern, if an observer can judge, is the destruction of evil misconceptions and the creation of a just position in America for the American black.
If Harrison is passed over in this search for a salary source which won't offend those who should be offended if they find truth offensive, KU will have begun a very sad decline in both black education and student-administration relationship. Mike Shearer
$haring God's wealth
Madalyn Murray O'Hair, that irrate atheist who has an uncanny ability to find holes in what we fondly call "freedom of religion," has found another hole.
In starting her own non-church church to gain the tax exempt status which churches enjoy, Mrs. O'Hair has brought to the surface a fact which most churchmen would like kept a secret—that money is every bit as much a part of the American church as Nabisco wafers and grape juice.
The church has, at least in the past century, been deeply involved in great humanitarian work which, understandably, should differentiate it from other organizations. But at the same time, inconsistencies and blatant hypocrisies have arisen in the tax-freed church.
As Alfred Balk put it in the title of a Harper's article some time ago, "God is rich."
In addition to passing the coffer, modern churches have dabbled in business, and here is where I think Mrs. O'Hair must be heeded. If a church branches out from the usual business of pastoring to the spiritual and sociological needs of man into the field of business, then there is no doubt that that business branch should be tackled by the government the same as any other enterprise whose design is profit-making.
In Los Angeles, the Temple Baptist Church, for instance, owns the Philharmonic Auditorium and office building; the Muskungum Presbytery of Ohio operates a cement block factory in Arizona; the United Brethern Church in Milbank, S.D., is in the butter and cheese business;
and a Southern California religious group operates a chain of eateries featuring mushroomburgers, all of which has been noted by writer Balk.
Other church assets include holdings in newspapers, radio stations, television stations department stores, farms, tourist havens Republic and National Steel, Boeing, Lockheed Curtiss-Wright, fruit companies—and on and on and on.
"California's Christian Brothers—a monastic order—are major winemakers and one of the country's leading producers of brandy," Balk says.
"The Protestant Cathedral of Tomorrow in Akron, Ohio, owns a shopping center, an apartment, an electronics firm, a wire and plastic company and the Real Form Girdle Company," says Balk.
If Mrs. O'Hair's contention that churches should be taxed in entirety is a bit extreme, and I think it is, there remains the very real point that many churches are using their tax exempt status in non-church, profit-seeking pursuits.
One Catholic priest has estimated that the Catholic Church itself is "the biggest corporation in the United States." If that is doubtful, the combination of the assets of all protestant and Catholic churches would surely make for a less dubious statement.
In view of the extensions of the church, Mrs. O'Hair cannot be ignored. If we see any gap at all between passing the coffer and making Real Girdles, then this is one sacred cow that should be butchered.
—Mike Shearer
Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF
BY TAKING A RUNNING JUMP, I SHALL LAUNCH MYSELF INTO FLIGHT!
UP! UP!
AND AWAY!
DON'T SAY ANYTHING... JUST GO GET AN AME.
AND
AWAY!
DON'T SAY
ANYTHING...
JUST GO
GET AN AKE.
Griff & the Union, Copyright, 1970,
University Daily Kansan.
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER
Editorial Page Editor
"Bullshit" is not my favorite word.
And with the urgency of such problems as air and water pollution, growing militarism and stifling materialism, it might seem superfluous and blind to devote time to the advantages and disadvantages of the word "bullshit."
But since I believe that freedom of expression is closely associated with all of the sacred freedoms (including freedom from pollution, militarism and materialism), I must apologize for the use on two editorial pages recently of dashes in place of the 'h' and 'i' in the word "bullshit." The dashes were provided by neither the authors nor editors, and we all regret them.
Asterisks and dashes, in 1970, are an affront to any intelligent person. They are an aberration left over from a time when books and witches were burned.
Oscar Wilde insisted that there are no such things as bad books. There may be poorly written books. Likewise, there are no bad words, there are only poorly used words. Words concerning sex, the human anatomy or even animal excretion (that's bullshit for bullshit) shouldn't frighten us.
right on—
By GUS diZEREGA
In our "democracy," campaign promises are often made and rarely kept. President Nixon is no exception—or perhaps we could say that he is exceptional in the arrogance with which he is abrogating his promises, promises which got him elected.
Take two promises of importance to all students, those dealing with conscription and Vietnam. The draft, we were told, was to be ended after the war. Yet what do we see shaping up? The lottery, by giving the illusion of reform, has undercut student protest against the draft. In reality, however, the lottery plus Nixon's projected elimination of deferments have in reality set the stage for universal military training which, oddly enough, comes closer to meeting the military needs of a badly overextended empire than anything so unAmerican as voluntarism.
The Nixon regime is sending up trial balloons suggesting that a volunteer army is impractical and plans to end the draft may have to be scrapped. The only likely "reform" is Sen. Edward Kennedy's "universal service" which makes the draft "fair" by making every man a slave with no exceptions. I cannot help but wonder at those who feel that democratic oppression, because it is universal, is more fair than selective oppression.
Saigon cannot take over in Vietnam. In a country where ten year old children fight the American invaders it is idle to speculate whether Thieu or any other American henchman can stabilize South Vietnam. Tricky Dicky refuses to make a time table for withdrawal public because it "would completely remove any incentive for the enemy to negotiate an agreement. They would simply wait until our forces had withdrawn and then move in." Monthly Review shatters his logic by asking "if Saigon couldn't take over the war by a fixed date, what reason is there to suppose it would ever be able to?" Nixon himself admits that our rate of withdrawal depends to a large extent on what Hanoi does. Whatever that is, it is neither plan nor timetable.
A similar story prevails with Vietnam. Nixon's colossal lie that he had a plan to end the war won him election and still has most Americans in thrall, but let's look closer.
Supposedly the war is going to be Vietnamized which, far from being a new policy, was pushed by LBJ during his reign. The December Monthly Review effectively demonstrates that Nixon's "Vietnamization" is an attempt to take some of the strain out of American involvement in Vietnam not so much to make peace (it won't) but to make our continued stay there more palatable politically while freeing forces to make war elsewhere in the world—most probably South America.
End the draft? A Nixon lie. More likely it will be extended. Plans to end the war? Timetables? Also Nixon lies. As usual, the government whether it be tweedledee Democrat or tweedle-dum Republican has refused to make more than token gestures towards peace while stirring up the American people against those who want us out as friends of Communism, dupes, etc., etc. The war was begun undemocratically by a President who got elected on a peace platform. It has proceeded just as undemocratically since then. Demonstrations have not ended it. The "New Politics" have not ended it. Only organized resistance will end it. Unless you're married, don't go to Canada when you are drafted, go into the army and organize. A conscript army is a slave army, dissent can be stirred.
When the history books of the future compare the Vietnamese people with the Greeks at Thermopylae let it not be said that like the Persians, we remained an army of slaves.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the U., university of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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The image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or symbols.
KU graduate now recruits
Peace Corps seeks minority groups
Peace Corps
Photo by Steve Fritz
Peace Corps week progresses
Delano Lewis, deputy director of Volunteer Placement for Minorities, confers with Homer Butles, director of Specialized Recruiting, over plans for Peace Corps Week. The two men will be in the Kansas Union Oread Room every day this week from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Planes may provoke Arabs, Rogers heard
TUNIS (UPI)—Tunisian Premier Bahi Ladgham said Tuesday he told Secretary of State William P. Rogers that the continuing supply of war-planes to Israel by President Nixon was a "provocation" to the Arab world.
Rogers, on a 10-nation tour of Africa, conferred with Ladgham and other Tunisian leaders Tuesday while heavily armed police kept at bay mobs of youths chanting, "Nixon assassin" and "Paleastine is Arab."
He said the demonstrators "had a right to express their opinions."
The Premier, in a session with American newsmen traveling with Rogers, gave the impression that he condoned the student demonstration against U.S. Mid-east policy which went on most of the day in Tunis.
Largham's blunt warning that Nixon was adding insult to injury by continuing to supply war planes for Israel came as something of a surprise.
Although Tunisia and the United States naturally differ on the Middle East question, American officials had not expected any such blunt attack on Nixon's policy in public at this time.
Taken against a background of demonstrations in which many of
ISP to meet plan election
The Independent Student Party (ISP) will hold a meeting at 8 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room to discuss the Student Senate Elections this spring.
Buzz Fischer, Bird City junior, said the agenda of the meeting will include a discussion of issues for the elections and the nomination of the student body president and vice-president for the party.
"We hope anyone interested in student government will attend the meeting. We will take nominations from the floor and then vote by a secret ballot. Hopefully this will be the most democratic way to nominate candidates for both president and vice-president," Fischer said.
Feb. 11 KANSAN 5
1970
the students shouted "to hell with Nixon," Ladgham's statement tended to wind up Rogers' meetings here on a note of something less than harmony, despite Tunisian official protestations of great and enduring friendship for the United States.
Rogers, after a mid-day meeting with Ladgham, announced the United States was giving Tunisia an additional $2.9 million for flood relief.
The secretary cancelled a scheduled visit late Tuesday afternoon to the University of Tunis. The official explanation was that he did not have time because he must talk more with Bourguiba. However, officials privately said it was obviously impossible to go there with hundreds of student demonstrators awaiting him.
A panel discussing questions of interest about the Peace Corps will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Forum Room. The questions under discussion are: "Is the Peace Corps Relevant? Has it done its job? Is it an extension of American imperialism?"
Peace Corps panel
The panel will be held in conjunction with KU Peace Corps week Feb. 9 to 13, and Peace Corps month as proclaimed by Gov. Docking.
A question and answer session will follow the discussion.
By STEVE FRITZ
Kansan Staff Writer
The Peace Corps, until recently, has been lax in its recruiting of minority groups, said Delano Lewis, Peace Corps Deputy Director of Volunteer Placement for Minorities, Tuesday.
The 1960 KU graduate said, Peace Corps should represent the entire United States. Until last year, Lewis said, the Peace Corps has been thought of as a white middle class organization.
"My job with the Peace Corps," Lewis said, "is directed at the recruiting and selection of volunteers from minority groups." The individual must still decide whether he wants to be in the Peace Corps or not, he said.
"We want the Peace Corps to be an organization that represents all the people of the United States," he said.
Lewis said the Peace Corps wants to encourage members of minorities to think abut volunteering their services.
When Lewis joined the Peace Corps in 1966 he was given a position on the staff in charge of all Nigerian volunteers. Lewis was faced with the problem of withdrawing the Peace Corps volunteers because of the Nigerian Civil War.
"The Peace Corps was not ordered out of Biafra and Nigeria," Lewis said, "but the Nigerian government advised us to leave." Since the government was more interested in making war than in development, the Peace Corps was withdrawn, he added.
Lewis said the Peace Corps is using the communications media to gain a larger minority audience.
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"We are going into minority communities," he said, "and working with church groups and presenting special programs to tell the people we need them."
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At Atlanta University, Lewis said, the Peace Corps program is applied to the Masters of Education degrees. The student, he said, is required to do one semester's
study prior to his work in the Peace Corps and one semester's study after the Peace Corps.
The basic approach for minority recruiting, Lewis said, is to be informal, not to pressure anyone, and to offer them equality. "The Peace Corps is trying to reach members of minority groups as individuals," Lewis said, "not as groups."
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— N.Y. Post
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— N.Y. Times
Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroules Present
Fanny Hill
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Written and Directed by MAC AHLBERG · A WOMAN
Distributed by CINEMATION INDUSTRIES · COLOR by DeLuxe
Varsity
THEATRE · Telephone VI 3-1065
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LEGAL NOTICE:
The Student Senate Committee on Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities is preparing for submission to the Student Senate the Bill printed below. The Committee will hold an open hearing on Friday, February 13, 1970 from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union for the purposes of receiving testimony and opinions on these proposals and/or receiving alternative suggestions. Christopher L. Morgan, Chairman.
ART. 1. These rules shall be known as the Code for Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct.
Bill of Rights
ART. 2. The following enumeration of rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by students in their capacity as members of the student body or as citizens of the state.
classroom and homes. The rules of students to be secure in their persons, living quarters, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures is guaranteed.
A. Free inquiry, expression and assistance are our educational goals; appropriate opportunities for learning in the classroom and on the campus shall be provided by the university.
b. Students will be exempt from disciplinary action which affects their status as a student except for academic failure or violation of a Student Senate or University Senate rule or regulation. Rules and regulations shall be fair and clearly promote an advance of the degree. The university has legal authority to conduct a student when he is outside University property. A student is subject to local, state, and federal statutes.
(a) Debts owing to the University. A student shall not be subject to dismissal or disenrollment for failure to pay debts due and owing to the University. However, debts incurred in any one semester shall be included in the next semester or succeeding semester fee schedule, amount of which shall be a condition precedent to enrollment in the University.
E. No disciplinary sanctions may be imposed upon any student without notice to the accused of the nature and cause of the charges, and a fair hearing which shall include confrontation
F. A student accused of violating University regulations is entitled, upon request, to a hearing before a judicial body.
ART. 2 When used in this Code.
(1) The term "university" means Kansas University and, collectively, those responsible for its control and operation.
(2) The term "student" includes all persons taking courses at the institution both full-time and part-time pursuing undergraduate, graduate or extension studies.
(3) The term "instructor" means any person hired by the institution to conduct classroom activities. In certain situations a person may be both "student" and "instructor". Determination
(4) The term "legal compulsion" means a judicial or legislative order which requires some action by the person to whom it is directed.
(5) The term "student press" means either an organization whose primary purpose is to publish and distribute any publication on campus or a regular publication of an organization.
(8) All other terms have their natural meaning unless the context dictates otherwise.
(6) The term 'shall' is used in the imperative sense.
Access to Higher Education
ART. 4. Under no circumstances may an applicant be denied admission because of race, religion, ethnic background or political affiliation.
Classroom Expression
ART. 5. Discussion and expression of all views relevant to the subject matter is permitted in the classroom subject only to the responsibility of the instructor to maintain order.
A. Students are responsible for learning the content of any course for which they are enrolled.
B. Students are responsible in classroom discussion and submission of written exercises
C. Students are not consistent with this School's policies.
ART. 6. Academic Evaluation of student performance shall be neither prejudicial nor capricious.
ART. 7. Information about student views, beliefs, and political associations acquired by professors in the course of their work as instructors, advisors, and counselors, is confidential and is not to be disclosed to others unless by consent of the student.
A. Questions relating to intellectual or skills capacity are not subject to this section except that disclosure must be accompanied by notice to the student.
Campus Expression
ART. 8. Discussion and expression of all views is permitted within the university subject only to requirements for the maintenance of order.
A. Support of any cause by orderly means which do not disrupt the operation of the institution permitted. (See Section 24, (c), (1))
ART. 9. Students, groups, and campus organizations may invite and hear any persons of their own choosing subject only to the requirements for use of university facilities.
Campus Organizations
ART. 10. Organizations may be established within the university for any legal purpose whether the aims are religious or educational. If an organization shall not disqualify the university-based branch or chapter from university privileges. Membership in all university-related organizations shall be open to any member of the university community who is willing to subscribe to the stated aims of the organization.
(a) A student may not be denied the rights of access to and participation in any universityiversity approved activity because of race, religion, sex, ethnic background or political affiliation.
ART. 11. In order for an organization to receive university funds the organization shall file with the Student Executive Committee of the Student Senate a list of officers and their addresses, and, a declaration that the organization shall abide by the rules and regulations of the University Senate or Student Senate.
ART. 12. The Student Senate delegates to each organization or living group responsibility for establishing rules concerning social conduct. An organization or living group may discipline any member provided that the process employed does not conflict with any rights guaranteed by this constitution. Any secondary action taken shall not affect a members' rights and privileges as a student of this university.
ART. 13. Use of Facilities. University facilities shall be assigned to student organizations for regular business meetings, social functions, and for programs open to the public. Reasonable restrictions on use of facilities may be imposed unless space assigned, time of use, and to ensure proper maintenance of the facilities. Subject to the same limitations, university facilities should be made available for assignment to individuals or groups within the university community, even though not formally organized; but preference may be given to programs designed for audiences consisting primarily of mem-
Use of University Funds
ART. 14. The Student Senate has sole authority to allocate university funds designated student resources upon submission of budgets to, and approval by, the Student Senate.
ART. 15. A student, group, or organization may distribute written material on campus without prior approval.
(a) Where funds are allocated to a student organization, financial accountability shall be required.
Freedom of Protest
ART. 16. The student press must be free of censorship, and its editors and managers must be protected from arbitrary suspension arising out of student, faculty, administration, alumni, or community disapproval of editorial policy or content. Similar freedom must be assured for the oral statement of views on a university-controlled radio or television station.
ART. 17. The right of peaceful protest within the university community must be preserved. University retains the right to assure the safety of individuals, the protection of property, and the freedom of speech.
The tenure of editors and managers should be determined by the regularly elected student editor, who should accept the position on behalf of the department only by the same bodies in accordance with fair and orderly procedures prescribed in advance.
(a) Picketing and External Access to University Buildings. Orderly picketing and other forms of peaceful protest are protected activities on university premises in the absence of interference with free passage through areas where members of the university community have a right to be.
(b) Control of University Buildings. Peaceful picketing and other orderly buildings, including corridors outside auditoriums and other places set aside for public meetings.
(c) Every student enrolled in the university has the right to be interviewed on campus by any legal organization which desires to recruit at the campus. Any student or group of students has the right to protest against the appearance on campus of any organization provided that protest does not interfere with any other student's opportunity to have an interview.
Violation of Law and University Discipline
ART. 18. If a university student is charged with an off-campus violation of law, the matter should be on no disciplinary concern to the university unless the student is incarcerated and the case goes to court.
If the violation of law occurs on campus and is also a violation of a published university regulation, the university may institute its own proceedings against the offender if the university interest involved is clearly distinct from that of the community outside the university. The university must then provide that if the offence of prosecution of a student is anticipated or after law enforcement officials have disposed of the case.
Privacy
ART. 20. The institution is neither arbiter or enforcer of student morals. No inquiry is permitted into the activities of students away from the campus where their behavior is subject to regulation and control by public authorities. Social morality on campus, is of no disciplinary concern to the institution.
ART. 19. Students have the same rights of privacy as any other citizen and surrender none of those rights by becoming members of the academic community. These rights of privacy extend to reservation of living with a institutional relationship or residence hall contract may expressly or impliedly give an institution authority to consent to a request of a student's room by police or other government officials.
ART. 21. When the institution seeks access to a student room in a residence hall to determine compliance with provisions of applicable multiple dwelling unit laws or for improvement or repairs, the occupant shall be notified of such action not less than twenty-four hours in advance. The security and safety services in emergencies where imminent danger to life, safety, health, or property are reasonably feared.
ART. 22. In all cases involving suspected violation of residence hall regulations, entry shall be permitted only upon the securing of an administrative warrant from the body in that hall be required for the adjudication of violations of its regulations. The warrant to be effective must be based on facts sufficient to establish probable cause that a violation has occurred or is taking place.
Confidentiality of Records
ART. 23. Respect must be accorded the essentially confidential relationship between the university and its students by preserving to the maximum extent possible the privacy of all records relating to them.
The official student academic record, supporting documents, and other student files are confirmed to be maintained only by full-time members of the university staff employed for that purpose.
2) Separate files shall be maintained, as follows:
(a) Academic records, supporting documents, and general educational records.
(b) Records of disciplinary actions.
(b) Records of discipline proceeding
(a) Medical and psychiatric records
(c) Recruit and pay personnel
(d) Financial aid records.
(3) No entry shall be made on a student's academic record, and no document shall be placed on the records of any other person. (4) A student who receives an honor of honors shall be deemed actual notice. Any student wishing to challenge the accuracy of any entry in his record or the presence of any item in his file may bring the equivalent of an equitable action against the appropriate administrator before the judicial body to which he was charged.
(4) Each student shall have access to his records and files subject only to reasonable regulation as to time, place, and supervision.
d) information relating in any way to any of the following categories is not relevant to the decision-making process, and the contribution to any such matter except upon the express written request of the student in question.
(b) Religion
(c) Political or social views.
(6) Except with the prior written consent of the student concerned, or as stated below, no information in any student file may be released to any individual or organization.
(d) Membership in any organization other than honorary and professional organizations directly related to the educational process.
(3) record-keeping personnel may have access to student records and files only as stated in paragraph (1) above.
or for the faculty with administrative assignments may have access to records and files for internal educational purposes, as well as for routinely necessary administrative and statistical records. The disciplinary records is limited to the officials responsible for those matters. No one having access under this paragraph may disclose information beyond that listed in (c) or (d) below.
The following information may be given any inquirer, and the only information to be released is that of the inquirer. In addition to enrollment; and (iii) degree awarded, honors, major field, and date. In addition to the above, a student's address, telephone number, date of birth, and signature may be confirmed if the inquirer asserts that the inquirer's information is incomplete or incorrect.
(a) properly identified officials from federal, state, and local agencies may be given the proper information if expressly requested. (i) school or division of enrollment; (ii) periods of inpatient care; (iii) nature of academic record in general, i.e., excellent, good, fair (not specific grades); (v) address; and (vi) name and address of parent or guardian.
(vi) verification of signature; and (vii) name and address of parent or guardian.
(b) Under no circumstances may any person making an inquiry be given personal access to
the academic record may be retained subject to the limitations on discla-
stated. social records may be retained so long as any objection to the university continues
(a) This academic except as follows:
(а) The academic record may be retained subject to the limitations on disclosure above
any student file.
2) No record shall be preserved beyond graduation or other final departure from the univer-
city of any student except as follows:
* academic record may be retained subject to the limitations on disclosure above
(6) Financial records may be retained so long as any obligation to the university continues or is fulfilled. In such a case, the subject to the limitations on disclosure imposed by the normal rules for privileged information.
RT. 24. Proscribed Conduct
1. A student who, on University premises or at University sponsored or supervised functions, may another in threat of serious bodily harm, or commits a battery upon any person, shall be subject to imprisonment for life.
SECTION A. OFFENSES AGAINST PERSONS
2. For a second offense under this section, a student shall be subject to a sanction of not less than suspension.
SECTION B. OFFENSES AGAINST PROPERTY
1. A student who, on University premises, steals or takes or carries away the money or other property of a student, or is in violation of a warning or a warning, restitution and a fine of not more than one-half the value of the property involved.
A student who, on University premises, steals or takes or carries away the money or other person with him, is a criminal. The punishment for not more than one-half the value sanctioned of not more than suspension, restitution and a fine of not more than one-half the value
3. A student who embezzles or without proper authority converts to his own use any money or other personal property entrusted to him by a University office or Organization of the value of fifty dollars or less shall be subject to a warning, restitution and a fine of not more than one-half the value of the property involved.
4. A student who embezzles or without proper authority converts to his own use any money or other personal property entrusted to him by a University office or Organization of the value of more than fifty dollars shall be subject to a sanction of not more than suspension, restitution and a fine of not more than one-half the value of the property involved.
A student who willfully and maliciously breaks, destroys, or damages University property, or the institution's organizations located on university premises shall be subject to not more than suspension for five days of fine.
not threaten suspension, restitution and a hite hot to exceed one hundred dollars. 6. For a second offense under this section a student shall be subject to a maximum sanction of expulsion
SECTION C. OFFENSES AGAINST THE ORDERLY PROCESS OF THE UNIVERSITY
1. A student who intentionally causes a substantial disruption or obstruction of (a) teaching, research administration, disciplinary proceedings, or other University activities, or (b) other authorized staffed, or constitutionally protected activities on University premises, including employment recruitment and public service functions, shall be subject to a sanction not greater than suspension.
2. A student who knowingly furnishes false information to the University or forges or alters a transcript with an identification with intent to defraud shall be subject to a sanction of not greater than suspension.
3. For a second offense under this section a student shall be subject to a maximum sanction of expulsion.
SECTION D. SANCTIONS DEFINED. LISTED IN THE ORDER OF INCREASING SEVERITY,
SANCTIONS ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS.
1. ADMONITION: An oral statement to a student that he is violating or has violated University rules.
2. WARNING: Notice orally or in writing that continuation or repetition of conduct found wrong will take a period of time stated in the warning, may be cause for more severe disciplinary action.
3. CENSURE: A written reprimand for violation of specified University rules including the penalty for violatingciplinary sanction in the event of the finding of a further violation within a stated period of time.
4. DISCIPLINARY PROBABILITY Exclusion from participation in privileged or extracurricular activities as set forth in the notice for a period of time not exceeding one school year.
take the form of appropriate service or other compensation.
6. FINISH a money payment to a designated University fund.
7. SENSES
7. SUSPENSION: Exclusion from classes and other privileges or activities as set forth in the notice for a definite period not to exceed two years.
8. EXPULSION: Termination of student status for an indefinite period. The conditions of readmission, if any, shall be stated in the order of expulsion.
SECTION E. LIMITATIONS.
1. No sanctions or other disciplinary measures may be imposed against a student by the University concerning student nonacademic conduct other than that (1) proscribed in these sections, or (2) proscribed in rules of nonacademic conduct adopted by other University organizations pursuant to express authorization granted by the Student Senate.
2. No charge under these sections may be brought against a student if more than thirty days have elapsed since the discovery of a violation of University rules concerning nonacademic conduct.
25. Authority for the promulgation of rules concerning student nonacademic conduct resides in the Student Senate pursuant to Article III, Section 4 of the University of Kansas Senate Code.
AUTHORITY
Topics include Vietnam, pollution
Sen. McGovern speaks at Fort Hays
HAYS (UPI) — Stressing the need to get out of Southeast Asia, scaling down the military budget and redeeming our own society. Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., addressed the students and faculty at Fort Hays State College Tuesday afternoon.
The senator, on a state-wide speaking tour, appeared as a feature of the Artists and Lectures series on the Fort Hays State campus.
While dwelling at length on the Vietnam war and reiterating his long-standing position on the United States' involvement in Southeast Asia, McGovern returned to his concern with today's
current popular topic, environment.
"We have a great task to turn away from war and destruction," he said, "and turn to the redemption of our own great, but troubled, land. We have a special obligation to take care of what we have. Environment is more than our land, water or air, it is how we treat one another."
In response to a question about the current situation in the Middle East, the senator said that he felt it was potentially more dangerous than Southeast Asia at this time. He pointed to the frustrating position which he believes the United States is in regarding the Middle East.
Parking rule upheld by KU student court
A ruling which upholds the validity of rule VI-K of the parking and traffic regulations of KU was handed down Feb. 3, by the Student Court.
Rule VI-K says cars cannot park in the small parking lots of the central campus during semesterbreaks and vacations without a permit. Opponents said the rule was unconstitutional and discriminatory.
The opinion of Chief Justice John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student, of the Student Court was:
"It is the 4-3 decision of this court that rule VI-K of the parking and traffic regulations of the University of Kansas is neither vague nor discriminatory.
"The majority of this court has
decided that the rule is in the best interest of the University. These lots are very small and are close to the central campus area where the need to be in this area would necessarily be greater for faculty and staff (those with bona fide reasons as evidenced by their having received parking stickers for these lots) than for students, and especially during these vacation and between semester periods.
"Though this court does have full power, and indeed duty, to refuse to enforce any rule it finds to be unconstitutional, we feel the need for this has not arisen.
"The constitutionality of this particular rule is no longer in question by this court and we therefore uphold its validity and enforceability."
Men's rush held in August
Men's formal rush week will begin Tuesday, Aug. 17 and last through 9 p.m. Friday, Aug. 20.
the outside. This program must be settled by the leaders of the Arab states and the governments of Israel in meetings over the conference table," McGovern said.
"There can be no solution from
Israel. The third factor is the Russian interest and technology that is a key to the Arab military program.
NEW YORK (UPI) — Four Jacqueline Onassis letters stolen from the files of former Deputy Secretary of Defense Roswell L. Gilpatrick were withdrawn Tuesday from an auction sale at which they were expected to bring $500 to $1,000 each.
Dave Andersen, vice-chairman for rush, said that registration for participating rushes will be held Aug. 17. That night there will be a mass "train-date" dinner in the Kansas Union to kick-off the week. The rushees are to live in McCollum Hall.
Gilpatrick learned of the theft of the letters from locked files at his Manhattan law firm from a reporter who called to question him about the sale of the letters at the Charles Hamilton Auction Galleries March 12. Gilpatrick is reported to have checked his file of Mrs. Onassis' letters and found it empty.
during formal rush. Each fraternity was allowed to take 35 per cent of its pledge class during open rush.
"Our allies in Europe float on a sea of Middle East oil, which is produced by the Arab states, while we have a commitment to the preservation of the State of
EUROPE!
FLY EUROPE WITH SUA
June 10 New York to Paris
Aug. 12 Paris to New York
Total Cost $249.00
PASSPORT FORUM
Feb. 11, Big-8 Room
Kansas Union 7:00 p.m.
Photographer will take pictures
Cost $1.00
Applications and information for pass-
ports will be available.
Feb. 11
1970 KANSAN 7
Jackie's letters saved from sale
"We don't feel the early rushing date is going to affect us because various living groups on and about campus are going to yearly contracts," Andersen said. Prospective fraternity men will think twice before signing yearly contracts."
Andersen said that 70 per cent of the men that pledged during formal rush last year were from out of state.
Last year of 717 men interested in joining the Greek system, 376 pledged during open rush and 286
Some have argued against rush week, citing Kansas State as one school that has eliminated it, Andersen said.
Here's Where It's At
Final Price-Smashing REDUCTIONS
sale-
SKIRTS
690
reg. to $16
sale-
COATS
Dress Coats - Car Coats
½ Price
sale-
BLOUSES
590
reg. to $14
sale-
PURSES
½ price
sale-
DRESSES
1090
reg. to $24
sale-
ENSEMBLES
½ price
sale-
SWEATERS
750
reg. to $18.00
Shot put trio leads way
Hawks to compete in Astrodome Relays
Unbeaten in team competition the past two indoor campaigns, KU will send a full squad to Houston this week in a bid to win the championship at the Astrodome Relays Friday and Saturday nights.
Jayhawks coach Bob Timmons has entered a 23-man squad, headed by his titanic trio of shot putters—Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop.
The three finished one-two-three at last year's NCAA indoor in leading the Jayhawks to the national indoor crown.
Salb, the reigning NCAA king both indoor and outdoor, hit an indoor career peak of 66'-10" in winning the Oklahoma City Invitational title two weeks ago.
KANSAN Sports
However, he was upset by teammate Wilhelm in a triangular last week as the bespectacled California topped 65 feet for the first time with a winning toss of 65'-3".
Knop's life-time best of 60'- 91½" came last year at the NCAA meet when he finished third behind Salb and Wilhelm.
At Houston the Jayhawks will
have entries going in a dozen individual events as well as strong combinations in all three relays.
In the pole vault Kansas boasts a prime contender in Jan Johnson, a sophomore who soared to a personal best of 16'6" in the Oklahoma City meet to whip world record-holder Bob Seagren. Johnson won the Kansas Relays title last spring as a freshman.
Coach Timmons sent a small squad to the Omaha Federation Track and Field Meet Monday night. The only first place for a Jayhawk performer came from Phil Reaves, who went $24'-21\frac{1}{2}$ to nab the broadjump title.
Timmons said that Reaves, a Fresno Junior College transfer, did an excellent job from coming from behind because he was using a shorter runway for his approach than he was used to.
Mel Gray, Missouri spinner, turned in the fastest time of the evening with a fine 5.2 seconds showing in the 50-yard dash. Gray's clocking was a tenth of a second off the world record.
Timmons was also pleased with the performances of three promising freshmen, Dave Anderson, Gary Johnson and Larry Reineke.
Anderson, of Shawnee Mission, ran the best two-mile of his career in 9:02.2, tying for fourth place with teammate Rich Elliott, a Chicago sophomore.
KU signs fifteen to scholarships
Fifteen outstanding high school football players, including the third of the Riggins brothers and 11 Kansas City gridders, signed Big Eight letters of intent Tuesday morning to accept University of Kansas athletic scholarships.
He is the brother of John Riggins, the Jayhawks' junior fullback, and Junior Riggins, a half-back on KU's 1968 Big Eight co-champions and Orange Bowl squad.
Bill Riggins, a 5-11 and 195 pound defensive back from Centrala, became the third member of the Riggins family to pursue his athletic career with the Jayhawks.
'Cats ink eight
The full platoon of Kansas City athletes, accompanied by their parents, cast their lots with the Hawks at a breakfast signing party at the Hotel Muehlebach.
Kansas State assistant Jerry Elliott called Calhoun "the finest back ever to come out of Wichita." Calhoun rushed for more than 1,400 yards and scored 100 points last fall.
Seven of the 11 Kansas City
MANHATTAN (UPI) — Don Calhoun of Wichita North, one of Kansas' prize running backs, was among eight high school seniors who signed Big Eight football letters of intent Tuesday to attend Kansas State University.
Oklahomaans signed by Coach Vince Gibson's staff were Greg Jones, 210-pound linebacker from Tulsa Memorial; Chuck Davis, 215-pound tackle from Tulsa Hale; Clinton Baul, 180-pound split receiver from Tulsa Washington, and Alan Cheatwood, 185-pound tailback from Harrah. Other signees included Bob Rauscher, 210-pound linebacker from Coffeyville, Kan.; Larry Roth, 215-pound running back from Chicago, and Tom Evans, 215-pound fullback-linebacker from Blue Springs, Mo.
8 KANSAN Feb. 11 1970
The Wildcats also landed four Oklahoma high school stars.
signes were from Missouri and four were from Kansas.
Reineka and Johnson both jumped 6'6" in the high jump for career bests. Johnson, who this year is perfecting his own backward "Fosbury Flop," had a previous best of 6'2".
Tuesday was the first day Big Eight member schools could sign prospective football players to scholarship agreements.
The list of Kansas Cityans signing with KU include Gregg Beggs, a 6-1, 205 pound center-defensive tackle from Bishop Miege; Tim Johnson of Wyandotte, a 6-2, 215 pound tackle; Allan McCay, 6-foot, 185 pound quarterback from Shawnee Mission East; Mike Englebrake from Lee's Summit, a 220 pound fullback; Emmett Edwards III, Central's 178 pound safety-split end; Mike McDaniel, 205 pound offensive end from Oak Park; guard Randy Rice, a 6-1, 220 pound from Truman; Pat Henderson, Northeast's 185 pound split end; Robin Gifford of Southwest, a 6-2, 185 pound quarterback; Roland Cox, Southwest's 5-9, 175 pound linebacker; and Bob Tidwell of Pembroke-Country Day Kansas City, Mo., a 5-10, 185 pound halfback.
In other events, Doug Smith, Sioux City sophomore, finished fourth in the mile with a clocking of 4:16. Al Robinson, Southern Illinois's Australian distance man, won the event with a time of 4:07.7.
Other signes outside of the Kansas City area are Arkansas City's Mike Clemente, a 6-1, 220 pound center and Dennis Cohlmia of Wichita North, a 6-foot 200 pound tackle.
KANSAS CITY (UPI) — The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) will extend bids Feb. 24 to compete in its post-season championship basketball tournament.
NCAA to extend post-season bids
Bids to the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) in New York are tendered the same day.
440- Randy Julian, Julio Meade
Mike Blake, Mark Smith, Mike Solomon
Milk- Brandon Smith, Mike Solomon
Bill Hatcher, Shawnee Mission sophomore, took second in the pole vault with a 15 foot completion. Mike Wedman, University of Colorado, won the event with a vault of 16'6".
A maximum of nine first-round games will be played March 7 with first-round winners advancing to the four regionals—East, Mideast, Midwest and West—on March 12 and 14.
A maximum 25-team field could fill the NCAA bracket with 15 conference champions automatically qualifying. Ten at large invitations could be extended Feb. 24.
The meet drew an estimated crowd of 5000 fans.
The semifinals March 19 and finals March 21 will be played at the University of Maryland.
- * *
Kansas entries for Astrodome meet
100-Johnson, Mickey Martins,
and
Two-Mile—Jay Mason, Smith
46 Hurdles—Wille Amison,
Mike Bates
120 High Hurdles — Amison, Bates
High Lunar — Reinhardt
Pole Vault—Bill Hatcher, Jan Johnson
ong Jump - Reaves
Gordon Knop, Karl Sab,
Steve Wilhelm
Mile Relay-Marvin Foster, Mike Larimore, Julian, Meade
Jim Nethouse, Roger Kahol, McElroy
Jim Nethouse, Roger Kahol, McElroy
Jim Nethouse, Roger Kahol, McElroy
Nethouse, Kahol, Foster,
Nethouse, Kahol, Foster,
Nethouse, Kahol, Foster,
This Week:
The Soul Possessions
Ladies Free - Monday through Thursday Matinee-3 to 6 Fridays Admission FREE with KU ID
Live Music Every Night 8-12
yukdown
Greatest new British import since the Mayflower!
new
er!
It may have taken 300 years, but now, genuine fish & chips are here. Genuine, that is, if they're Alfie's. Only Alfie (that sly rascal) takes the very freshest whitefish and fries it to a just right golden crisp. And serves it up with the crunchiest, lightest chips in the colonies. Plus the tangiest, most tempting secret sauce you've ever tasted. So special, grown men weep for more! Try a bit of tradition for lunch or dinner, today. Verily, there's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite!
Alfie's
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH
T.M.
Alfie's
Fish & Chips
GIVE OR TAKE OUT
T.M. Aine's Fish&Chips
RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT
6th and Maine VI 2-5500
$ \textcircled{c} $1969, Alfia's Fish & Chips, Inc.
Seattle franchise may be American League trusteeship
By ED SAINSBURY UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UPI)—The American League may take over the franchise of the Seattle Pilots as a trustee and operate the club in 1970 while searching for a buyer, it was learned Tuesday night.
The possibility of operating the team as a trusteeship was developed by several American League owners during the break between their afternoon and evening meetings on the question of what to do with Seattle.
The league, discussing the Seattle franchise situation for the third time in league meetings, would like to keep the team in its present location. But a number of owners have not been satisfied with the financial solutions offered by the various Seattle groups.
"The American League is leaning ove backwards to keep baseball in Seattle," President Joe Cronin said during the break. "But there are many, many problems."
Alcindor nears NBA scoring lead
Alcindor, who has guided the Milwaukee Bucks into second place this season in the National Basketball Association's Eastern Division, moved into second place this week in the scoring standings.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Lew Alcinder is getting closer to the tan
The 7-foot-2 center now has a 26.9 average with 1,611 points in 56 games for a slight lead over third-place Elvin Hayes of San Diego, who has averaged 26.8 points a game.
Jerry West of Los Angeles continued to lead the NBA with a 31.7 average with 1,710 points in 54 games.
Billy Cunningham of Philadelphia is fourth with a 26.4 average and Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati rounds out the top five with a 25.5 average.
In the free throw department, Flynn Robinson of Milwaukee went 14-14 last week to increase his percentage to .904. Robinson hasn't missed an attempt so far in February. His last miss came on Jan. 31 when he hit on five of six against Phoenix.
Johnny Green of Cincinnati has the best field goal percentage in the league--560. Wes Unseld of Baltimore is second at 543.
Feb. 11 1970 KANSAN 9
The franchise has been held by William Daley and Dewey Soriano, who are willing to sell out to another Seattle group headed by Fred Danz. But the Danz financial situation did not gain approval from the league owners and a new group under direction of hotel operator Edward Carlson moved into the picture.
The Carlson organization said it had sufficient funds to meet the league-established price of $9.5 million for the franchise.
But part of the Carlson financing was from "non profit" backers and Cronin said, "We don't quite know all the details" of this group. Other monies were offered by Limited Partners.
Cronin said he did not believe the loan from the Bank of California of $2.5 million to the present owners was a "hang-up." But it was learned the financial aspects involving limited partners and non-profit partners of the Carlson group was.
The League, Cronin said, hoped to settle the franchise problem Tuesday night and keep the club in Seattle. But should a decision be made to transfer the
Gabriel, Eller voted honors
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Roman Gabriel, Los Angeles Rams quarterback, and defensive end Carl Eeller of Minnesota Monday were named the National Football League's offensive and defensive players of the year by the Kansas City Chiefs' Club "Committee of 101."
Gabriel and Eller will be honored at a banquet here next Monday night, billed as Kansas City's first annual salute to professional football.
Gabriel guided the Rams to the Coastal Division title with an 11-3 record, throwing an NFL high 24 touchdown passes. Eller was instrumental in the Vikings leading the NFL in 12 defensive categories.
The players were selected by a vote of 101 sportwriters and broadcasters throughout the country. Previously the committee named Daryle Lamonica, quarterback of the Oakland Raiders, as the American Football League's offensive player of the year and linebacker Bobby Bell of the Kansas City Chiefs as the AFL's defensive player of the year.
Coach of the year honors will go to Hank Stram of Kansas City and Minnesota's Bud Grant.
franchise, representatives of both Milwaukee and Dallas-Ft. Worth were on hand.
Cronin said settling the Seattle problem was urgent because of the approach of spring training and hoped it could be done Tuesday night because both the American and National leagues will meet Wednesday to hear a report on negotiations for the agreement with major league players by the clubs.
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truth
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A SPECIAL COURSE with limited enrollment for those who wish to pursue the "truth" of Vietnam while improving their reading efficiency at least three times.
"... we can only move slowly and cautiously toward a new Asian policy."
- Edwin O. Reischauer
- Geneva Agreements
"...the United States reiterates its traditional position that peoples are entitled to determine their own future and that it will not join in an arrangement which would hinder this."
"' . . . a continued primary reliance upon military power in dealing with insurgency may well bankrupt our nation."
Gen. David M. Shoup
"the South Vietnamese government is a service government, implementing faithfully the policies of the American imperialists.
Program of the NLF
"I am indeed convinced that the use we have been making of our power in Vietnam for more than a decade has been improvident and foolish . . ."—Hue | Morpheasant
— Hans J. Morgenthau
"The tragedy of Vietnam has divided us more than any conflict in our modern history."
Nelson A. Rocketeller
"The Vietcong is in deep trouble and time is running out against the communist guerrillas."
- Joseph Alsop
"I will not be the first President of the United States to lose a war."
- Richard M. Nixon
"The major challenge is to assure security plus real economic and social progress in the countryside through a successful pacification program."
- George Romney
Robert F. Kennedy
" . . . we must ask ourselves whether all the sacrifice will have been for the benefit of men, generals and a selfish elite "
- Lyndon B. Johnson
"We seek no more than a return to the essentials of the agreements of 1954."
"I am convinced that had our leaders been readers, we would not be in the mess we are in today!"
- William W. Boyer Landon Lecture Series
"I would get out of Vietnam. . .
If I take a road and find
myself going in the wrong
direction, I see no purpose in
continuing along it. I take
another road."
Konrad Adenauer
"Vietnamization will solve none of the causes of the conflict. It provides neither a method of reconciliation nor a means for the total withdrawal of foreign troops."
- Maynard Parker Newsweek's Saigon Bureau Chief
"Without American aid to Vietnam's military and economic machinery, the country would not survive for ten minutes."
Bernard Fall
WE ARE TIRED of hearing about Vietnam. But how many of us have even read about Vietnam? Have you read the Geneva Agreements? Would you like to? Would you like to read important primary sources, along with histories and agreements pro and con concerning our involvement in one of the greatest crises of our nation's history? Would you like to get involved in spirited discussions that only knowledge and viewpoints from diverse sources can generate?
IF YOU FEEL that you should know more about Vietnam and would like to improve significantly your reading skills,then Vietnam Reading Dynamics is just the course for you.
M
The Vietnam Reading Dynamics Course begins Thursday, February 12, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. at the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute (behind the School of Religion). All books and materials are provided.
PHONE VI3-6424 NOW
TO RESERVE SPACE IN
THIS UNIQUE COURSE
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truth
Avalanche buries hotels; 39 dead
VAL D'ISERE, France (UPI)—With a "sudden dreadful thunder" as the only warning, a massive avalanche engulfed two Alpine hotels under tons of snow Tuesday, crushing walls and killing dozens of young skiers as they ate breakfast. Scores were injured.
By late Tuesday night, the interior ministry placed the official death toll at 39, of which 23 had been identified. It said no other persons were reported missing in the worst avalanche in France since World War II.
The list of victims and their addresses released late Tuesday indicated that all of the dead were residents of France.
Hurtling down 10,000-foot high Dome Peak, the avalanche smashed through the dining room of a skiers' hostel where more than 200 French, Belgian and German youths were breakfasting. The avalanche engulfed the Eidelweiss Hotel.
Cars parked nearby were swept 150 yards by the wall of snow.
Blinding snowstorms cut visibility to zero and thwarted efforts to find snow-trapped skiers. Snow was still falling as darkness came after a day of frantic rescue work.
Winds hit gale force of 50 miles per hour and piled huge drifts along roads leading to the disaster area. Some ambulances got through but others could not reach the scene.
President Georges Pompidou dispatched Interior Minister Raymond Marcellin to help supervise rescue work.
Vivianne Euzenat of Paris said she was eating breakfast in the hostel when "there was this sudden deadful thunder."
"It smashed over the table where I was sitting and then I was in horrible darkness," she said. "It must have been more than a half hour before I lost consciousness. When I was dug out they told me I had been buried alive for two hours."
Benoit Miko, 21, of Brussels, said he heard the noise and then "was smashed right through the dining room and through the outside wall together with the snow."
Chantal Demure of Lyons said she also remembered the noise.
"The windows just smashed in. I was buried under the snow but was dug out immediately. All I can remember really is the noise and the table hurling about," said Miss Demure.
About 200 residents in the area of the disaster left their homes Tuesday night, fearing more avalanches.
It was the worst single avalanche disaster in Europe since 1965 when 100 persons were killed at Garmisch in West Germany. Three months after the Garmisch avalanche, another avalanche in Switzerland killed 88 persons.
Amendment proposed to Kansas constitution
TOPEKA (UPI) — A proposed constitutional amendment to overhaul the executive branch of state government was recommended for passage Tuesday by a house committee.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee on a vote of 14-4 recommended the proposal be adopted by the house.
The amendment would have the governor and lieutenant governor run as a team much the same as the president and vice president do on the national level.
The only other elective state offices would be the attorney general and the secretary of state. All four offices would have four-year terms, with no limit on the
---
Shultz extended the invitation to testify that Awbrey suggested to him, in a letter, that students be permitted to testify before the Senate in matters related to students and the University.
terms. The present terms are two years.
Awbrey said that he and Morgan would testify against the proposed bills because the bills were unnecessary.
Senate Bills No. 417, 418, and 421 will be considered. The bills relate to student behavior on campus, access to student records and disciplinary actions against students and faculty members.
The U.S. Coast Guard was established Aug. 4, 1790.
All other state officers now elected would be appointed by the governor. This would include the treasurer, auditor, insurance commissioner and printer.
10 KANSAN Feb. 11 1970
David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, and Christopher Morgan, Emporia junior and chairman of the Students Rights Committee, accepted an invitation from Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, to appear before the Senate Education Committee at 11:30 a.m. today in the State House.
Shultz asks two students to testify
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Kansan wins pancake race
LIBERAL (UPI) — Kathleen West, a leggy Kansas teen-ager in a gray miniskirt, bounded over the bricks of this sunny prairie town Tuesday and won for America supremacy at pancake racing.
"Wow!" she shouted at the end of the 415-yard, S-shaped course along Kansas Avenue. "I wasn't so much worried about not winning as I was about not falling down."
The 5-9, 114-pound girl won the 21st annual international Shrove Tuesday pancake race in a record time of 59.1 seconds.
She defeated the girls of Olney, England, who braved a street full of slush and a whipping wind to run their cobblestone course.
Kathleen is the first Negro ever to win the race.
The British winner was defending champion Sylvia Winstanley, an 18-year-old shoe factory worker, who finished the English end of the race in one minute, 11 seconds.
Kathleen sprinted in high leaps past flatbed trucks and 20,000 spectators in Liberal, and Sylvia whizzed through the winding streets of Olney past houses with thatched roofs.
Each girl flipped a pancake in a skillet at least three times as required during the race.
"Sometimes I think a traditional race like this does more for relations with America than
anything the politicians could do," said Ronald Collins, organizer of the Olney race.
Kathleen, a 19-year-old junior college coed majoring in business, came close to winning the past two years. But she stumbled and fell both times.
"I just kept saying, 'Don't fall down,'" she said when she won and broke the old record for the race at one minute, three seconds set in 1967 by England's Janet Bunker.
The American win cut the British lead in the Shrove Tuesday pancake race to 11-10. The traveling silver skillet trophy returns to Liberal and Kathleen wins $150 and a color television set.
Two American sailors from Kansas tried to enter the English race disguised as ladies. They were disqualified.
Agnew says South abandoning Demos
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday night the South, like the rest of the nation, is abandoning the Democratic party because it cannot abide the kind of leadership and platform Democrats offer at the national level.
Speaking before about 2,000 Republicans at a $100-a-plate fund raising dinner, Agnew said the Republicans need not apologize for their rising fortunes in the old confederacy.
"The 1960's have heard the death rattle of the old Democratic coalition of FDR, and the years have witnessed the emergence of a new Republican majority in American politics," Agnew said. "The national Democratic party sits teetering on the edge of political and financial ruin—dragged there by the blumers and excesses of its current leaders."
Agnew denied the existence of a Nixon administration "southern strategy" which writes off the Northeast and cow towns to biases and prejudices against black Americans.
Feb. 11 KANSAN 11
1970
"The charge is composed of 50 per cent politics and 50 per cent sour grapes." Agnew added.
"For the first time in a century the Republican party is a force in the South, and it is a force for good," he said.
Agnew said the South was moving toward the Republican party because the domestic and foreign policies of President Nixon are consistent with its own best traditions and political philosophy.
Republicans have made substantial inroads at state and local levels among Negro voters, Agnew said.
"Where on earth has any great minority come so far, so fast, as have our 20 million black Americans—out of slavery and through segregation to their current station in American society—in the course of a single century?" Agnew asked. "This is a record that should inspire optimism and hope in America—not pessimism and despair."
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truth
vietnam
11:01
A SPECIAL COURSE with limited enrollment for those who wish to pursue the "truth" of Vietnam while improving their reading efficiency at least three times.
". . we can only move slowly and cautiously toward a new Asian policy."
- Edwin O. Reischauer
- Geneva Agreements
" . . . the United States reiterates its traditional position that people are entitled to determine their own future and that it will not join in an arrangement which would hinder this."
"... a continued primary reliance upon military power in dealing with insurgency may well bankrupt our nation."
"... the South Vietnamese government is a servile government, implementing faithfully all the policies of the American imperialists."
"I am indeed convinced that the use we have been making of our power in Vietnam for more than a decade has been improvident and foolish..."
- Hans J. Morgenthau
- Program of the NLF
"The tragedy of Vietnam has divided us more than any conflict in our modern history."
- Nelson A. Rockefeller
"The Vietcong is in deep trouble and time is running out against the communist guerrillas." Joseph Alonso
- Joseph Alsop
"I will not be the first President of the United States to lose a war." — Richard M. Nixon
- Richard M. Nixon
George Romney
"The major challenge is to assure security plus real economic and social progress in the countryside through a successful pacification program."
— Carson Parnay
- Robert F. Kennedy
“‘we must ask ourselves whether all the sacrifice will have been for the benefit of men generals and a selfish elite.”
Lyndon B. Johnson
"We seek no more than a return to the essentials of the agreements of 1954."
William W. Boyer Landon Lecture Series
"I am convinced that had our leaders been readers, we would not be in the mess we are in today!"
"I would get out of Vietnam. . .
If I take a road and find
myself going in the wrong
direction, I see no purpose in
continuing along it. I take
another road."
- Konrad Adenauer
"Vietnamization will solve none of the causes of the conflict. It provides neither a method of reconciliation nor a means for the total withdrawal of foreign troops."
- Maynard Parker
Newsweek's Saigon Bureau Chief
"Without American aid to Vietnam's military and economic machinery, the country would not survive for ten minutes."-Gerard Earl
Bernard Fall
WE ARE TIRED of hearing about Vietnam. But how many of us have even read about Vietnam? Have you read the Geneva Agreements? Would you like to? Would you like to read important primary sources, along with histories and agreements pro and con concerning our involvement in one of the greatest crises of our nation's history? Would you like to get involved in spirited discussions that only knowledge and viewpoints from diverse sources can generate?
IF YOU FEEL that you should know more about Vietnam and would like to improve significantly your reading skills, then Vietnam Reading Dynamics is just the course for you.
M
The Vietnam Reading Dynamics Course begins Thursday, February 12, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. at the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute (behind the School of Religion). All books and materials are provided.
PHONE V13-6424 NOW TO RESERVE SPACE IN THIS UNIQUE COURSE
vietnam.
truth
The following provisions constitute the candidacy requirements of the election procedures for the Student Senate to be held March 17-18,1970
1. A candidate for the presidency and a candidate for the vice-presidency of the student body must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy at least thirty (30) days prior to the general election. This declaration must be accompanied, if the candidate was not a member of the Student Senate for the semester immediately preceding the general election, a petition signed, with names and student number, by five hundred (500) bonafide members of the student body of the University of Kansas approving the candidacy. Each candidate must pay a five (5) dollar filing fee.
2. Any person wishing to be a candidate for the Student Senate must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy prior to the 2nd of March,1970. This declaration must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee.Candidates for the Student Senate must run from the school in which they are currently enrolled,and the declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a certification from the office of the dean of the school that the student is in fact enrolled in that school.
3. Declaration and certification forms for candidates for the Student Senate can be picked up at the Student Senate Office or in the office of the dean of each school of the University.
4. Candidates must indicate whether they wish to be identified on the ballots as running as independents or as members of a particular political party or coalition.
5. Class officer candidates must submit a declaration of candidacy and a petition containing the signatures of fifty (50) bonafide members of their class to the president or secretary of the Student Senate prior to the 2nd of March, 1970. Class officer candidates may also indicate their desire to run as part of a coalition. The declaration and petition must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee per candidate.
President proposes pollution plan
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon proposed Tuesday an ambitious plan to clean America's skies and waters, rid the countryside of junk, open up more park lands and develop within five years a virtually pollution-free automobile.
Except for his $10 billion, five-year program of federal-state efforts to curb water pollution, the President gave no estimate of the total cost of his program. In any case, some Democrats promptly said Nixon didn't go far enough.
The President made clear in a lengthy message to Congress on the environment that everyone—government, industry and individuals—will have to pay
Ten Kansas university students, six from KU, were placed on three-year probation Monday following their conviction for the possession and sale of the hallucinogenic drug, LSD.
Ten students convicted of drug sale
The decision came from the U.S. District Court under the Federal Youth Corrections Act. The youths are being held in county jail pending the beginning of their sentences.
One requirement placed on the youths during their probationary period will be that they don't use or deal in any narcotics or drugs and refrain from associating with persons who do, said Judges Arthur J. Stanley Jr. and Wesley E. Brown, the presiding judges for the cases.
Calley hearings continue; Laird may be called
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)—The defense tried without success for the second day Tuesday to get the Army to say that command influence—including action by President Nixon—played a role in bringing murder charges against Lt. William L. Calley Jr. for the alleged Mai Lail massacre.
Tuesday's hearings concluded at 3:40 p.m. CST, with indications the sessions will last at least until Thursday. Involved is a defense motion asking that the charges against Calley be dropped on grounds that command influence has erased any chance he had to get a fair court-martial.
the price for generations of neglect of the country's once seemingly endless natural resources,
The court said it would rule Thursday on defense requests to call Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, Secretary of the Army Stanley Resor and Army Chief of Staff William Westmoreland in the case. It said a ruling on the motion to dismiss the charges also might be issued at that time.
The final witness Tuesday was the commanding officer of Calley's brigade, who denied from the witness stand that he was influenced by any outside source in recommending Calley be prosecuted.
As an example, Nixon proposed requiring cities to charge industries fees for treating their waste products.
Lt. Col. Frank L. Garrison gave the testimony during hearings on a defense motion to drop the charges against Calley on the grounds of command influence.
At the time the charges were brought against Calley, Garrison was reviewing officer of the Calley investigation and recommended the lieutenant be court-martialed.
Calley is charged with the premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese civilians on March 16, 1968, the day his infantry platoon swept through the village of My Lai.
And for consumers, on the theory that a car's price ought to include the cost not only of its manufacture but of its disposal, Nixon suggested a federal bounty, financed by an added excise tax on new cars, to encourage prompt scrapping of automobiles now abandoned as rusting eyesores.
Feb. 11 1970 KANSAN 13
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, welcomed what he called Nixon's support for proposals he made last month. The Senate's leading champion of controlling pollution, Muskie expressed disappointment that Nixon did not propose attacks on trucks, buses,
and aircraft and other nonautomotive forms of transportation
Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., said Nixon's plan "in terms of dollars, falls short of the broad-ranging programs that are promised." And Republican Sen. Clifford Case of New Jersey said Nixon's initiatives, as many as they are, "are still not enough."
House Democratic leader Carl Albert said Nixon had failed to propose spending as much as the Democrats already had authorized to fight pollution.
The Ford Motor Co. and the institute of Scrap Iron and Steel pledged Their support.
- Federal regulation of fuel composition and additives, as well as exhaust emissions, and required testing for emission in automakers' production models rather than voluntary testing of prototypes.
Nixon told Congress his aim was nothing less than "the rescue of our natural habitat as a place both habitable and hospitable to man."
In all, the President made 23 legislative proposals and ordered
- Establishment of nationwide federal air and water pollution control standards, including for the first time intrastate as well as interstate waters and ocean waters within U.S. boundaries.
14 steps by executive order or administrative action to improve the environment. Among them were other provisions for:
A review of current use of the 750 million acres of federally owned land, with an eye to converting or selling some of it for parks or recreational land, with emphasis on areas close to the crowded cities.
- Research aimed at finding ways to reuse more solid waste materials and make others, especially containers, more easily disposable.
- Violations of these standards would subject industries or cities to maximum court fines of $10,000 a day, and the interior secretary would be authorized to seek emergency injunctions against serious water pollution.
- Tightening of federal controls on emission of carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons from automobile exhausts, with new curbs on nitrogen oxides by 1973 and particle matter, including lead, by 1975.
- Ordering the U.S. Patent Office to give priority to applications for pollution-control devices.
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Re-designing is only answer
Iowa Street scene of 40 auto accidents yearly
By CHERYL BOWMAN Kansan staff writer
Four persons have died during the past 13 months as the result of injuries received in car accidents on Iowa Street.
The stretch of highway between 15th and 23rd Streets is the scene of more than 40 car accidents each year police reports indicate. There is no stop light or traffic control in this stretch.
The latest victim was David L. Gore, Pawnee Rock junior, who died last Thursday from injuries suffered in a three-car accident on Iowa, 64 feet south of 19th. Gore's car turned onto Iowa from 19th into the path of a car driven by Danny Jennings.
"People think stop signs are the answer to everything," said Leonard Hoover, Lawrence City Engineer, "but that's not true. If a stop light was put in at 19th and Iowa, right angle accidents
might decrease, but tailenders would increase.
"There is no quick and easy way to improve the conditions on Iowa Street," Hoover added, "or something would have been done long ago."
Hoover said eventually the site would be a major University intersection. He said the street would have to be completely redesigned, the street widened and left turn lanes installed.
The procedure for obtaining a stoplight in any area begins with the city. The City Commission must issue a warrant to the State Highway Commission showing a need for a traffic light. The State Highway Commission will review the situation, and if it decides there is a need for a light. If a light would improve the traffic situation the Commission will approve the warrant and a stop light will be installed.
Hoover said he didn't think the State would approve a warrant
for a stop light at 19th and Iowa. He said the site was a three-way intersection and the traffic was heavy only at certain times of the day and year.
"Every September, 15,000 cars are added to the city by students," Hoover said. "Ordinarily, when students are on vacation the traffic isn't bad. We can't design all streets for twice the usual amount of traffic."
Fire destroys school, racism attack praised
The speed limit on Iowa Street is 45 miles per hour. Hoover said if the speed limit was reduced to 35 miles per hour traffic hazards would not be reduced. He said the speed limit was set at what 85 per cent of the drivers would normally drive.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Gov. Albert Brewer of Alabama praised Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., Tuesday for his speech attacking racism in the North, and another Southern politician said that freedom of choice could be the law of the land within 18 months.
Brewer said Ribicoff's Senate
In Mississippi, fire destroyed an all-white school which had been scheduled to open with a desegregated faculty.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Democratic Policy Council urged the Senate Tuesday to reject President Nixon's choice of Judge G. Harrold Carswell for a seat on the Supreme Court.
Democrats urge defeat
The policy council also attacked the administration's economic policies which it said had brought the nation "the cruel reality of inflation and the growing threat of recession."
It also opposed the administration plan for further deployment of the Safeguard Antiballistic Missile and asked for delays in testing multiple warhead missiles lest these actions jeopardize Strategic Arms Limitation SALT talks with Russia.
These new declarations came in a fat document approved at Monday's meeting of the council headed by former Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey.
14 KANSAN Feb. 11
1970
speech "was encouraging" to him.
"That a man like this, a senator,
would, in a spirit of fair play,
acknowledge publicly that there has
been a double standard and that
we have been singled out for unusual treatment in connection
with the operation of our schools is encouraging."
"I've driven 45 miles per hour on Iowa." Hoover said, "and I think it's safe. Those who violate the limit at 45 miles per hour would violate it at 35 miles per hour also. People would be mad if the speed limit was lowered."
Ribicoff told the Senate Monday the North has been "as systematic and as consistent" as the South in depriving Negroes of their rights. "The plain fact is that racism is rampant throughout the country.
In Florida, state Rep. Jack Poorbaugh said a constitutional amendment allowing freedom of choice in the selection of schools was the "only sensible way to resolve the school crisis," and predicted such an amendment could be passed within 18 months. He said he and 20 other Florida politicians have begun a drive for passage of the amendment.
The Judiciary Committee of the Florida House of Representatives, meanwhile, approved two resolutions calling for sweeping changes in the federal court system.
"The Supreme Court has become a supreme legislature and supreme executive—it's no longer one nation under God, but one nation under the Supreme Court," said State Rep. Don Nichols, chairman of the committee. "They feel perhaps they're annointed instead of appointed."
The formerly all-white Maben, Miss. attendance center, scheduled for faculty desegregation Tuesday, burned to the ground Monday night—the third Mississippi school to burn since the Supreme Court's "instant desegregation" orders were handed down late last year.
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traffic conditions on Iowa Street except to completely re-design it. He said the city was trying to get money to re-design Iowa under a plan in which the city would pay half of the cost for spot improvements and the federal government would pay the remainder. He said so far the city had been unsuccessful in securing any money under this plan.
Sunday, February 15; 7:30 p.m. Municipal Auditorium Music Hall Reserved Seats: $3.50; $4.50; $5.50 at all Jenkins Music Stores and the Music Hall Box Office Sunday
"It's easy to propose things," Hoover said, "but if there isn't any money, there is nothing we can do. Iowa Street is a difficult place to add any constructive temporary improvements. The State is aware of the problem. If there's anything concrete and reasonable that can be done, the State would approve it."
Hoover said he didn't think there was anything constructive that could be done to improve
An accident on North Iowa Street, where Lakeview Road and Iowa form a "Y", claimed the life of Larry Lee Riggs, March 18, 1969. Riggs was driving a Wakarusa Township fire department tank carrier on the way to a brush fire north of the city when the accident occurred. Police said he was driving at 35 miles per hour.
In another Iowa Street accident, Mrs. Jack D. Vanderwoude, a nurse at Watkins Memorial Hospital, was killed Sept. 26, 1969, in a two-car collision at the intersection of Iowa and 25th. Police said Mrs. Vanderwoude's car was struck broadside bv another car.
Alan R. Dringenberg, Galesberg senior, was killed at the same intersection Jan. 26, 1969. Dringenberg was a passenger in a southbound car that attempted a left turn off Iowa Street onto 25th Street and slid into the path of another car.
Primarily Leather FRINGE COATS
812 Massachusetts
the Rimers of Eldritch
february 12
february 21
1970 —
8:20 P.M.
experi-
mental
theatre
UN4-39
82
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
course of instruction must be agreed to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
SANDAL SALE -20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb. 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarily Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder au-
good condition, good ciders 525-
842-194-698.
New Malcolm 225 Amp, Lafayette pre-amp—indep. tuning, and two eight inch speakers-$300 value, sell for $175. Jay Steinberg, VI 3-1711- 2-11.
Heavy sounds—in your car—dig it-
reverb (echcho chamber) for sale:$15
plus cost of ad. Call after 6 p.m., VI 3-
9001.
2-11
For Sale: 1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass; automatic transmission, bucket seats; engine starts anytime; received new car; can be sold. Only $500. Call 843-9588. 2-11
For Sale: Zenith stenh phonograph.
Almost new. See at 1234 Tenn. 2-11
For Sale: AMPEG G15 guitar amp.
with a 15" Jenson speaker. Has all
extrats such as dolly and combo.
Throw in cord. 843-6707
after five. 2-12
GROOVY: INFLATABLE FURNI-
TURE—many styles for dors or
apartment. 842-5801 between 6.30
and 7.30 weekdays. 2-12
Old fur coat and calf-scarves—beaver
fur clothes, 1618 Tenn., $2; AA4-62810, 2-12
clothes, 1618 Tenn., $2; AA4-62810, 2-12
For Sale: Man's Naismith Hall contract. A Garrard 40 MKII turntable with base, dustcover and cartridge. Call Allen, 842-0430. 2-12
Love Seats—matching black foam rubber, solid mahogany in walnut stain. Good shape, $50.00. Also two matching walnut lamps, $30.00. 2188 2188
Willing to bicker! Have two used
bows, new set of hunting arrows,
and a finger guard. Cheap! Call 842-1881.
9-12
CARPET SAMPLES - The inexpensive way to make custom designed area rugs or carpet an entire room. These rugs are approximately 12" x 18", range from indoor/outdoor to shag including every imaginable color and design, and cost only 25c each. Use carpet tape or stitchery tape for eye-catching eye-catching and inexpensive carpet. To place orders and obtain further information, write STROBO ENTER-PRISES, P.O. Box 824, Lawrenceville, 842-0002, 5 p.m. - 6 p.m., Monday-Fri. 2-11
For Sale: One man's Naismith Hall contract. Call Mike, 842-6150. 2-13
Very clean 1966 VW 1300 Bug with
the rearview mirror snow see
$950. See at 1700. In-24
69 Cadillac, good shape, four lighters,
cheap at $90. Call 842-5940. 2-13
*62 Triumph TR-4, good mechanically,
best offer. Call 842-5340.* $400-213
best offer. Call 842-5340.* $400-213
---
Must sell this week: Good 1959 4-door Pontiac. One owner. Also large tandem wheel utility trailer. Also two technically new 816 tires. Call 2-12 3447
66
Tony's Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
THE HILE in the WALL
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th G III.
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
1968 Ward-Benelli motorcycle 250 cc
After 3:00 at 1416 Tennessee. $250-2-16
Magnavox annual sale! Don't miss this once a year chance to save on stereos, components, AM-FM stereo radios, transistors and tape recorders! Ray Stoneback's downtown—open Mon. and Thu. evenings. 2-16
For Sale. Concord four-track stereo cassette deck. Used very little, buying a larger tape deck. Connes with jacks, $60.00. Call 842-6844. 2-16
Tape recorder cassettes reduced! Two hours, only $3.00; 90 min.; only $2.50 one hour, $1.99. Ray Stoneback's Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. lists ... 2-16
Magnavox deluxe tape recorder sold new at $89.95—used one month, cut to $50.00. Ray Stoneback's 929. Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings. 2-16
For Sale. Panasonic stereo tape recorder—practically new, complete with two milks, accessories, two cases and heat to appreciate. You just see and hear to appreciate. Sold new for $275, now $150. Call John at 842-8237 after 5:00. I need tuition money fast.
Refrigerator. $20. VI 2-9155. 2-12
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc.
'66 Mustang V-8, low mileage, excellent condition. Very reasonable. Must see to appreciate. 842-9036 after 6:00
9-16
Recording records for sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord or phone at 843-4836. 2-23
Shelby-1967 GT500, 4-speed, air conditioning, new polyglas tires, excellent condition, low mileage, 2111 Kasolb B103, 842-5992. 2-16
G.E. portable stereo; $45; soul albums;
$2 each; Topaz ring (5); $40; Playboy
musium (9); $7; ceramic mice; Call 2-16
2854 between 5-10 p.m.
Two f-78-14 Remington tires, good tread, with or without rims, will fit most GM cars. Make offer. Dennis Miller, 842-700-793, Rm. 933. 2-16
Guild Slim Jim 6 string with custom black paint and case; excellent condition; new, $375.00; sell for $215.00 Call Jim Hemsworth V 3-577-00 2-17
Ampex cassette player in stereo tap systems. In excellent condition. $130 or best offer. 843-7923. Ask for Doug Dannen or leave message. 2-17
Hurry to Henry's
6th & Mo. VI 3-2139
1966 Chevy Impala. Need money real
price. Buy very cheap.
2039 anytime. 2-17
4059 anytime. 2-17
**85** Honda, 250 cc Hawk, runs well.
or best offer on this week Call 2-13
6900
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition,
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
1959 Pontiac, air cond. New battery.
Jump off,泵水.
TLC: 842-903-3966 6 p.m.
For Sale: 1966 Corvette, 4-speed, 327-
p.m. pn. 643-7708, 434-7708,
p.m. $2700, Walls bargain.
Valentine Special—3 cushion sofa and matching chair, Reg. Price $259.90, Factory Bedding Outlet Price $199.90; full size sofa sleeve $199.90; Valentine valentines day gift $299.90; Early American $209.90, TV lounger $109.90, Reg size mattress and box spring set $99.90; extra long bed set $89.90; Queen size set $199.90 extra firm. Valentine special bedding set $299.90; Bedding Outlet located 4 doors south of Eldridge Hotel, 843-4297. 2-13
Glennie Bradal
910 Ky.
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
CONGA DRUM: nearly new muleskin
fiberglass with legs $75, 843-626-2, 17
Custom guitar amplifier 100W, trem.
takes it. Stew, 842-8068
2-13
take it. Stew, 842-8068
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 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday t
NOTICE
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay 10% handling or Dynaco dealership. Call 485-2047 evenings 4 to 10.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapid. VI 3-4032. 5-13
Fyre boots, frringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watchbands, sandals, purses, vests,
socks, goggles, and swimwear.
PRIMARILLY LEATHER. 3-2
3-2
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's. Laundry, 1903$^1$. Mass. St. Louis, folded, permanently press on hangers. Bring in same day service. In early-2-3
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade over our curved to choose or design. Our curved to PRIMARY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
"Sirloin
Need male roommate in two-bedroom
and four-bedroom apartments
Conditioned. Phone 843-1598 2-12
WANTED
We need one additional roommate in a beautiful 4-bedroom duplex; reasonable rent. Call John, Mary or Herb at 843-2103. 2-12
Wanted: Riders, rides, or car pool. KUMC to KU daily. Contact Bob at 722-0806. 4019 Adams St., K.C. Kan. 2=12
Wanted: Male student to share nice two bedroom apt. Swimming pool. $70 a month. Call 842-5859 after 9 p.m. 2-11
Interested in a sales career? High earnings and management opportunities. Sign up at Summerfield Business Office. Interviews on Tuesday, February 17, 1970, all day. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance 9-16
Wanted: One bass player who songs; one guitarist who sings and an ever-asking drummer who is interested in organizing a progressive rock band with excellent drummer skill or all original material. Call Chuck, 42-1530 midtime, or Rocky, 842-6454.
2-20
Apartment in exchange for work. Call 843-7863. 2-13
Female roommate wanted for luxury
phone. Reasonable. Call 842-742-8800
2-17
building stools and fresh insect seedlings await you when at the Stall. We offer only the 18-in-1 pre-packaged theatricals as you will them with a few of our favorite chairs, the dressing room for uncomfortable dressings
Either a male roommate or two people to occupy a two-bedroom apartment near campus. No lease. Call 842-6211. 3-17
Always Pleasurable Dining
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and a half miles north
of the Kaw River Bridge
843-1431
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
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
Your headquarters
SHAW AUTO
SERVICE
for
miDAS®
612 N. 2nd St.
mufflers and
shocks
843-8943
FOR RENT
For Rent—New two bedroom luxury apartment. Large rooms. Quiet area.
Occupy immediately. Married couples or two girls only $150. 843-5848. 2-11
For Rent: 2 bedroom apartment, fur-
niture in the month. Call Mike 1-
281-842-504. Tim at 842-504-
For Rent, Two bedroom apartment
for rent. Race: B44-1105 and B44-1433 2-13
and 2-14.
Small basement efficiency apartment
electricity Electricity 842-3750, 12-10 p.m.
electricity 842-3750, 12-10 p.m.
To sublet—spacious one-bedroom apt. ideal for one or two people, two bloom from campus, $125 furnished. Call 842-4869. Available. Call 842-4869. 2-16
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work I 3-2381. Mia Kuekman
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxel. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI J 1-1440. 3-2
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
er formats, typewriter, typewriter
Plea type. Competes. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service
5-14
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU L.D. is worth $1.00 off on
your Tuxedo 801L Mass. and up if
Troup Tax, 801L Mass. and up if
Gentlemen, would you like your own English tailor? Suits, sport coats, or dress to measure. Sut prizes start at $46.25; satisfaction gains call. Feat 842-4193. 2-16
Offset printing for yourself, movement or organization at reasonable rates. Bill Lee. 1230 Oread. 842-9402. 2-17
TEXACO
Student specials
W. 9th TEXACO
★ New, experienced management.
★ Open 7 p.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
THE FIRST EMPEROR OF GREECE
Minnie Pearls
COUNTRY-FIED CHICKEN
COLLin or Carry Out
V1 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan
L. G. Balfour Co.
Exclusive Representative
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Guards
- Mugs
- Badges - Favors
- Guards
- Mags
- Recognitions
- Paddles
- Recognitions * Paddles
* Laundry * Stations
- Lavaliers
- Stationery
- Gifts
- Plaques
- Gifts • Plaques
- Sportswear
Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog
Dressmaking and all rations. 20 years
experience. Call 843-2736. 8-5 2-17
PERSONAL
Unele Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $801^{1}$ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. **tt**
JUDY GARLAND is alive and well and doing her thing Thursday night at the theater. See MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS' P.M., and THE PirATE (1948) at 9 p.m. to popular request, JUST NOT will not sing "Over the Rainbow" in either film.
LOST
Girl wants female traveling companion
in tour in March
April Call 851-825-6934
2-13
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Lost: Between Watkins and Snow, a pair of black-rommed round glasses Ursula Urgent Reward $2. Please call 843-6261 and leave message. 2-12
USED BOOKS—READ and TRADE Buy, sell, trade used paperback books: Educational, Science Fiction, Novels, Romance, Westerns, Comics, Playboy Book, Sports, Fashion, Furniture Show, 984 Mass. Books 843-2736. 3-25 25,000 books.
Use Kansan Classifieds
"with-it" fashions
LA PETITE GALERIE
also Manic swans by Arnold
with-it fashions for Daylight and after-hour
ower level 910 Ky., Lawrence
Men's wear by Arpeja
Men's wear by Arpeja
ower level
910 Ky. Lawrence
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
For the best in:
New York Cleaners
- Reweaving
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
宝宝
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss.
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
Student financial problems discussed
A meeting was held Monday night with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., members of the administration and members of the Student Senate to discuss financial problems which will affect KU students.
One problem discussed was next year's fee increase which will mean Kansas residents will pay an additional $60 per year while out-of-state residents will pay an additional $125.
A bill which has been presented in the Kansas Legislature and is currently in committee will, if passed, remove exemptions from all public residence halls, married student housing and student unions all over the state.
The tax exemption cutoff will mean that those students living in residence halls will have to pay an additional $130 per year, those living in married student housing will have to pay an additional $305 per year, those living in scholarship halls will have to pay an additional $106 per year and all students living on or off campus will have to pay an additional $16 for the student union.
Another problem discussed concerned the building of Wescoe Hall which would provide space for 2400 students and house 500 offices. Presently the federal government and the state legislature plans $5½ million for building, with students to pay the difference. This would mean an additional $7 per student each semester over the next 20 years.
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee must make a decision on the increased fee to cover the cost of Wescoe Hall. The decision must then be given to the Board of Regents before they convene Feb. 20 so the Regents can make a proposal to the legislature March 10.
A similar problem, the building of the satellite union and hospital complex was discussed. Under the present financial situation, the union would cost the students an additional $5½ per semester over the next 20 years and the hospital
complex an additional $8-10.
Other administrators who attended the meeting were Keith
Nitcher, vice chancellor in charge of finance; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University; Francis Heller, dean of faculties; and Donald Alderson, dean of men.
White award
(Continued from page 1)
liam Allen White, Puliam said White's words and the meditations of his heart were still an undiminished inspiration to all newspapermen who wanted to become great newspapermen.
Pulliam concluded his speech by saying we could be thankful that William Allen White's example was the inspiration of America's reporters, editors and publishers.
Pulliam established the Central Newspapers Foundation which sends hundreds of students to college and has brought foreign reporters to this country for study. He is also director of the Freedom Foundation at Valley Forge and a trustee of the William Allen White Foundation.
Recent awards Pulliam has received are the John Peter Zenger Award for distinguished Service; the Wells Memorial Key of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society; the Front Page Award of the Indianapolis Press Club; the Journalistic Achievement Award of the American Legion; the Master-Editor-Publisher Award of the Arizona Newspaper Association; and the Golden Plate of the American Academy of Achievement.
Another presentation made at the luncheon preceding the Pulliam lecture was the William Allen White Foundation's 1970 Kansas Editor of the Year Award. This year's recipient was Ernest Austin Briles, publisher of the Stafford Courier.
Briles bought his paper in 1915 when is was the Stafford County Republican. His column "Hit and Miss" has since gained much recognition.
The award was presented by John Conrad, publisher of the Kiowa County Signal and former Speaker of the Kansas House of Representatives.
Judge warns court
Briles has served the state of Kansas for 25 years. He spent nine years as chairman of the board of Social Welfare, eight years in the Kansas State Senate and six years in the Kansas House of Representatives. Briles was both Speaker of the House and President Pro-tem of the Senate.
The policy of his paper and life has been in his words, "to be very sure we publish the truth, nothing but the truth and that we do not use rumor and gossip."
NEW YORK (UPI)—State Supreme Court Justice John M. Murtagh warned defendants, defense counsel and spectators Tuesday at the pre-trial hearings of 13 Black Panthers that he will use his summary contempt powers in case of any further court-room outbursts.
ing Monday when a defendant told Murtagh he should "have a white robe on, with a hood on it."
Murtigh dropped contempt proceedings against Sheila Younce, a 24-year-old Negro researcher for Newsweek Magazine, after she apologized for applaud-
Miss Youngen said she had found the hearings "an emotional and traumatic experience" because of her own experiences as a black," but she said she was "deeply sorry if my conduct impeded in any way the court's attempt to conduct a fair trial."
Pulliam said he has given a scholarship contribution to KU. The grant $1,000 a year, will be given to a junior in the School of Journalism who best exemplifies the ideals of William Allen White.
The defendants are charged with conspiring to bomb public facilities.
About 200 people attended the lecture and presentations.
Trial nears end
U. S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman is expected to place the case in the hands of the jury, probably this week. The trial will be 20 weeks old Wednesday.
CHICAGO (UPI)—A prosecutor told a federal court jury Tuesday that defendants in the riot conspiracy trial plotted the rioting that erupted during the Democratic National Convention as "the start of the revolution."
The defendants—leaders of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, the Youth International Party Yippies and other militant groups—are charged with conspiring to incite riots and with inciting riots during the August 1968 convention.
Schultz, his voice failing him at times, said the government had proved this conclusively during the turbulent trial. He soffed at defense contentions that Yippie leaders, with their talk of violence and a festival of life, had perpetrated a myth that caused Chicago officials to get "up tight" and overreact with police and National Guard security forces.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Schultz charged in a daylong final argument that seven antiwar militants lured thousands of persons to Chicago with the deliberate intention of "inciting them to violence."
Defense attorneys were to have their turn after Schultz. Then U.S. Attorney Thomas A. Foran was to make the government's last-stab argument before Hoffman instructs the jurors and sends them into deliberation.
Their real aim, he said, was the establishment of "a National Liberation Front political arm of the Viet Cong in the United States."
the jurors sat, stony-faced,
much of the time. One man dozed
off repeatedly and a woman juror
elbowed him awake. Yippie leader
Abbie Hoffman, a defendant, slept
most of the time and thumbed through "Variety," the show business magazine, when he was awake.
Schultz said the government proved Rubin exhorted demonstrators to "get the pigs, kill the pigs." He said Rennie Davis, a National Mobilization leader, "planned violent actions" to disrupt the convention and boasted afterward demonstrators had "created an American National Liberation Front."
Before the convention, Schultz told the jury, the defendants went about the country talking of a Yippie "festival of life and love" and "peaceful" protests planned for Chicago. These were rushes, he said, "to get people here for the purpose of inciting them to riot."
When fully in effect, Harris' plan would allow a family still to earn $75 a month with no loss in benefits. But benefits would decline as earnings rose above $75 monthly and when the family's earnings reached $522 a month it would no longer be eligible for any benefits. The President's $1,600 plan contained a similar provision although the money involved would be less.
The $3,600 figure is based on government surveys which show that much is now required for a family of four to sustain itself at the "poverty level." The guaranteed income would rise as the cost of living rises.
(Continued from page 1)
point his program's costs would never reach $10 billion.
16 KANSAN Feb. 11 1970
Wages
The annual student dinner was not scheduled this year because of Pulliam's early return to Kansas City.
Unlike Nixon's plan, which covers only families, Harris' would also cover individuals living alone or childless couples.
His introduction of the plan was his first major act since announcing his decision last week to step down as Democratic national chairman, saying he wanted to be free to take initiative as a senator, not as a representative of his party.
THE
Bad Dog Iron
Friday Night at the Red Dog
Friday Night at the Red Dog
DANCE TO THE RISING SUNS SOUL
Free Beer—$1.50 Admission
Saturday Night is Dollar Night $1.00 Pitchers $1.00 Admission
THE
Dog Dog Bon
DANCE
TO THE
RISING SUNS
SOUL
Free Beer-$1.50 Admission
Saturday Night is
Dollar Night
$1.00 Pitchers
$1.00 Admission
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 77
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, Feb. 12, 1970
Students ask for autonomy
M.
Photo by Greg Gorman
Shultz explains legislation
Sen. Reynolds Shultz, (R-Lawrence), clarifies a point in committee hearings on three bills that are of concern to KU student leaders.
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said Thursday at a Senate hearing on Bills 417, 418 and 421, "I plead with you not to pass this legislation. It will make me look like a fool and what the Student Senate has done this year will be made a lie."
"The threat we see from these three bills undermines what we are trying to do at the University," Awbrey said.
Awbrey, Christopher Morgan, Emporia law student and chairman of student rights committee and Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and vice-chairman of University Senate executive committee, spoke to the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee against the three bills. The bills introduced by Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, called for the Board of Regents to establish a code of student behavior, release of student records and disciplinary action against student and faculty members convicted of a crime arising out of campus disturbance.
"The University," he said,
"has already solved the problem."
Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents, said that these bills deal with problems of the past few years which existed on college campuses, but recently there has been a decided reduction of disturbances.
"We've had only one incident this fall," Bickford said, "and it has quieted down now."
He cited several reports indicating that student unrest was on the decrease.
Awbrey said, "I do not foresee any demonstrations on campus."
Bickford said that the University's climate of education is envied by other states. Its legislators have been very fair with higher education and the Board of Regents, he said.
Jess Stewart, a member of the Board of Regents, said that adoption of these bills is negative action pointed at a small minority of militants. He said that the bills could cause a "backlash" from students and parents because of an infringement on privacy.
(Continued to page 12)
MICHAEL J. MILLER
Photo by Greg Gorman
Student leaders attend hearings
Dave Awbrey, student body president and Rick Von Ende, chairman of senate executive committee listen while Chris Morgan, chairman of the student rights committee, makes a point in Kansas senate committee hearings on recent legislation introduced by Sen. Reynolds Shultz, (R-Lawrence).
UDK News Roundup
Hanoi downgrades talks
PARIS—North Vietnam sent its No. 3ranking delegate to the Vietnam peace talks today, downgrading its delegation to the lowest level since the conference opened.
Xuan Thuy, the delegation chairman, has been boycoting the meetings to protest what he insists is President Nixon's downgrading of the talks by naming no successor to Henry Cabot Lodge who resigned Dec. 6.
Youth head for Cuba
BOSTON-About 400 young volunteers headed for Canada on chartered buses Wednesday night to meet a cattleboat which will take them to Cuba to help harvest the sugar cane crop.
In Ottawa, the Federal Immigration Department indicated the youths probably would be allowed to cross the border to meet the ship, the Luís Arcos Bernes, which was delayed by heavy storms at sea.
U.S. aid undistributed
LAGOS, Nigeria—With an estimated one million Civil War refugees starving in what was once Biafra, some $12 million dollars worth of U.S. relief aid idle in Lagos, American officials confirmed Wednesday.
By contrast, nearly all of the British aid airlifted to Nigeria immediately after the end of the war last month has been distributed among war refugees in the IBO heartland that formed Biafra.
Calley hearing continues
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)—A military judge ruled Wednesday his court has jurisdiction over Lt. William L. Calley Jr. and struck down a defense motion to dismiss charges. Calley murdered 102 Vietnamese civilians at the village of My Lai.
In addition, Lt. Col. Reid W. Kennedy rejected a surprise motion seeking dismissal of the case on grounds the charges against Calley were "discriminatory and unconstitutional," and being heard by the wrong court.
Kennedy said the pre-trial hearings, which have gone on for three days, would continue Thursday when attorneys argue another motion to dismiss the case on grounds Calley's rights to a fair trial were violated by undue publicity.
During the afternoon, Kennedy rejected a defense plea to subpoena top Army brass to testify concerning the alleged My Lai massacre, and also said he did not think this would be a proper time to rule on whether "command influence" played a role in the charges.
A hearing has been under way for three days on a defense motion the charges be dropped on grounds that "command-influence"—reaching as high as the White House—had made it impossible for Calley to get a fair trial.
After hearing arguments on the point during the afternoon, Kennedy refused a defense request to subpoena Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, Army Secretary Stanley Resor and Army Chief of Staff William Westmoreland.
During the morning session Col. Jim D. Keirsey, staff officer at Ft. Benning, admitted from the witness stand that he once was
ISP picks George
An Independent Student Party meeting took place last night in the Kansas Union resulting in Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student, being nominated as student body president and Sharon Baucom, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, being selected as nominee for student body vice-president.
(Continued to page 12)
After the meeting was called to order by Brian Biles, Kansas City medical student, and some preliminary proposals were suggested for ISP, serious nomination for student body president began. Three other candidates besides George were considered before he received a majority vote by secret ballot.
"The members attending last nights meeting ranged from moderates to liberals," George said. "I am a liberal by tradition. Some of the people here have certain feelings which don't coincide with mine so they weren't happy with my election."
George said that his philosophy would not be carried into the campaign, but that he hoped the party would force their philosophy down his throat.
"One of the issues I will face
will be the problem of discrimination against women and blacks," George said. "That is the reason I choose Sharon to run with me."
Miss Baucom was chosen by acclamation.
"I was surprised at the acclimation," Baucom said, "but not at my nomination.
"I have two things against me because I'm a woman. One is because I'm black and the other is adopted by sex. I can't do much about the one but I can do something about recognizing equal rights for women."
She described this as a women revolution in which women would be trying to gain back what is equally theirs.
After the election David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and present student body president, said that the student body president was powerless. He claimed that all the power remained with the 94 members of the Student Senate
But the ISP nominee for student body president had another thought.
"Just because Dave didn't have any power doesn't mean that I won't," George said.
Campus briefs
Register for Model OAS now
The Model Organization of American States (OAS) is beginning its publicity drive to sign up countries to debate March 13 and 14 at the Kansas Union.
Robert Ward, Wichita graduate student and publicity chairman for the Model OAS, said those students interested in forming delegations should call the KU-Y office at 864-3761.
Ward said students should register as soon as possible in order to be sure of getting country assignments they want. Registration is open until March 10.
Four students are necessary to make a delegation. The cost per delegation to participate in the debates is $5.
Ward said the Model OAS was similar to the Model UN in that students debated important issues pertaining to the countries they represented.
The Model OAS is sponsored by the Model UN and the KU-Y. For additional information interested students may contact Ward at 842-4953.
Silver shown at art museum
Ten award-winning pieces from the 1969 Sterling Silver Design competition will be shown Monday, Feb. 16, at the University of Kansas Art Museum. The exhibit will run through Feb. 20.
All the award-winning pieces are the work of student silversmiths from across the country. The competition, held in New York, was sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America.
The pieces are presently on a nation-wide tour of major schools and department stores.
Hand-crafted harpsichord heard
A new harpsicord, six years in the making, was heard for the first time in concert at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall. J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of music history, played the harpsicord. He was accompanied by Howard Boyajian, professor of music, on the violin.
The harpsicord was hand-crafted by Frank Hubbard of Boston and it is an exact replica of a 17th century harpsiccord made by the Flemish craftsman Hans Moerman. The instrument has two manuals, three sets of strings and a manual coupler for sound variation. The body parts are entirely of wood.
Red China film next in series
"Red China Diary" with Morley Safer is the next of a series of "Films of Fact and Fiction" which will be shown at 3:30 p.m. each Monday in Bailey Hall, Room 3, by the KU Bureau of Visual Instruction. The series began Feb. 9 and will end May 11.
Some of the other films that will be shown are: "Heritage in Black" and "Harlem: The making of a Community" on Feb. 23; "People of the Buffalo," "Our Proud Land" and "Legends of the Sioux" on March 30; "Marijuana" and "Crisis in the Cities: What's Happening" on April 13; "Cezanne," "Art of Metal Sculpture" and "Will Art Last" on May 11.
Prof gets grant for drug study
Robert A. Wiley, associate professor of medical chemistry, received a $7,820 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to continue work on tranquilizers and psychic energizers.
Wiley, who is in his fourth year on the project, is studying the makeup of the two different but related drugs. He hopes to determine why two similar drug products, tranquilizers and stimulants, produce such different results.
Hormone research grant given
Marjorie Z. Newmark, assistant professor of biochemistry, received a grant of $15,564 from the National Heart and Lung Institute. The grant will be used to continue research into the metabolic regulation of arterial tissue.
The project is designed to pinpoint which of the enzymes of the aorta, the main heart artery, are affected by a particular hormone. Miss Newmark also hopes to determine whether a hormone alters the amount of the enzyme in the tissue or changes the efficiency enzyme
Miss Newmark hopes the research will provide some cites to the development of arteriosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries.
Visiting professors named
Agehananda Bharati, professor of anthropology at Syracuse University, and Charity Waymouth, senior staff scientist at Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, have been appointed Rose Morgan Visiting Professors at the University of Kansas for the 1970-71 school year.
The Rose Morgan Visiting Professorship was established through a bequest of Miss Morgan, a former professor of English at KU. The Visiting Professorship brings distinguished figures to KU for at least one semester. Besides a stipend, Miss Morgan's estate provides that her furnished home near the campus be available for use by the appointees.
Bhariti, who will serve during the fall semester, is a student of oriental religions and speaks 16 languages.
Miss Waymouth is a specialist in tissue culture and has worked with the nutrition of animal cells and their long-term propagation. She will fill the professorship for the spring semester of 1971.
2 KANSAN Feb. 12
1970
Both professors will teach an undergraduate course and a graduate seminar.
Relevancy of Peace Corps discussed at SUA forum
The relevancy of the Peace Corps was the topic of the SUA Peace Corps Forum yesterday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. The forum consisted of a panel discussion followed by a question and answer session.
Del Lewis, a member of the Peace Corps staff in Nigeria and Uganda, said the Peace Corps needs the kind of people who need respond to changes around the world. He said the Peace Corps had "more excited people" six years ago than they have now.
Jeorge Chamst, graduate student from Peru, said he felt the Peace Corps was more relevant
five or six years ago than it is now. He suggested individual failures and arguments between volunteers as causes of discouragement among Peace Corps volunteers.
The Ottawa University lecture series will present Norman Hollander, first cellist of the Kansas City Philharmonic, and Carl Bobish. Ottawa University professor of piano, in concert at 8 p.m. Monday in the Ottawa University chapel.
Lecture series to present cellist
"People in Peru don't trust Peace Corps volunteers as much as they used to." Chamst said. "There's an anti-American feeling in South America and people there feel that anything coming from the United States, including the Peace Corps, is a part of American imperialism."
Felix Moos, professor of anthropology, said he thought the Peace Corps was relevant only in a selfish sense.
Moos said he wanted to see people in the Peace Corps who were committed to long term development.
Bill Miller, a returned volunteer from Colombia, said the Peace Corps was relevant only to the extent that peace in the United States was relevant. He said that as long as the United States felt peace was good, the Peace Corps would continue.
goes to a country and comes back with great insight, but the two years he spent there were hardly long enough to revamp the world. Countries want American technology, but they don't want American ideology."
Lewis said the Peace Corps couldn't do the ideal and never pretended that its volunteers were to be technicians. He said the Peace Corps was intended to provide middle level manpower to underdeveloped countries.
"People don't have the right conception of Americans." Miller said. "One of the goals of the Peace Corps is to expand foreign perspectives of the American people, and to expand our perspectives of their countries, too."
Moos said the Peace Corps would be more relevant if it would fulfill the role of bringing technicians to underdeveloped countries. He said these countries needed volunteers who were better trained. Volunteers are most effective after their first tour, Moos said, but most of them leave the Peace Corps after one tour.
Many countries found their own people could do the job Peace Corps volunteers were doing, Lewis said. Now these countries need more skilled volunteers. Lewis concluded with the remark that, if the Peace Corps "is to survive," it will be in a different form than it is today.
"It's a great experience for Americans to view these countries as zoos." Moos said. "A volunteer
the Rimers of Eldritch
february 12
february 21
1970 —
8:20 P.M.
experimental theatre
UN4-39
82
1965
Photo by Greg Sorber
If your car had a mind of its own . . .
A grimace is all you can do when your car decides to lodge itself on the brink of a hill. Grimacing, the driver said the parking brake was set when she parked behind Flint Hall Wednesday. She started to walk away when she heard a crunch and turned to see her car rolling down the embankment. The car was stopped by the curbing, otherwise it might have rolled into the greenhouse below.
Initial schedule announced
An initial schedule of hearings was set Tuesday by the University Planning Board to hear proposals for space by several University schools, departments, and organizations.
The proposals were in response to Memorandum No. 3, a Board
DiBona withdraws
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Charles J. DiBona, who ran into some stiff opposition on Capitol Hill, has withdrawn himself from consideration as draft director Lewis B. Hershey's successor, the White House said Wednesday.
Presidential Press Secretary Ziegler said discussions that White House staff members had with the Senate Armed Services Committee were "a factor" in DiBona's decision.
Feb. 12 KANSAN 3
1970
publication which asked for the proposals. Mrs. June Michal, administrative assistant with the board, said the list was not meant to include all the hearings and more will probably be scheduled
Charles seated
LONDON (UPI)—Commanded by his mother the queen to ignore danger in debating his country's laws, Prince Charles took his seat Wednesday in the House of Lords.
The 21 year old heir to the British throne did not make a maiden speech following a nine-minute seating ceremony that made him the sixth Prince of Wales introduced in Parliament in 285 years.
But Buckingham Palace sources said Charles, in future visits to the gilded chamber by the River Thames, would ignore royal tradition of noninvolvement and speak out on issues he champions.
later.
The hearings will be held in the Kansas Union Council Room. They are:
Feb. 19, 7:30 p.m., the Schools of Law and Education; Feb. 21, 9 a.m., the Departments of Physics, Chemistry and Pharmacy, and the Health Science Advancement Award Committee; Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m., the Departments of Mathematics and Computer Science, the Computation Center and the University Libraries.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Safeguard Antiballistic Missile (ABM) radars emit such powerful radiation at present that it could cripple the long-range missiles it is supposed to protect and endanger the health of their launch crews, it was learned Wednesday.
Rep. Robert L, F. Sikes, D-Fla., a ranking member of the House defense appropriations subcommittee and a principal backer of Safeguard, confirmed in general terms existence of the difficulty.
The Army has told key members of Congress about the problems of "meshing" the ABM system with the Minuteman ICBMs it will surround, but believes it can overcome them.
ABM emits radiation could cripple missiles
"They recognize that it's a problem, but it's not anything that is causing them apprehension," Sikes said.
Rep. Otis Pike, D-N.Y., an ABM opponent, said he had not heard about the radar radiation problem but said he intended to ask about it when Army witnesses appear before the House Armed Services Committee.
The administration is asking Congress for $1.4 billion for Safeguard during the fiscal year starting July 1. President Nixon has announced his intention to expand the system from the two ABM sites in North Dakota and Montana which Congress approved last year to the full 12 installation envisioned in the program.
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CURTAIN CALL'70
Ninth Annual College Auditions for SIX FLAGS
Your talent could win you a star-spangled season at SIX FLAGS, performing for the world's most enthusiastic audiences! SIX FLAGS needs; VOCALISTS (popular, classical, country and western, rock, barbershop quartettes, folk soloists and groups): DANCERS (tap, ballet, modern, jazz, acrobatic); INSTRUMENTALISTS (banjo players, jug bands, Dixieland bands); VARIETY ACTS (comics, magicians, baton and saber twirlers, ventriloquists, tumblers, trampoline and trampolette artists). ALL KINDS OF TALENT WILL BE CONSIDERED.
If selected, you'll work under professional direction in one of SIX FLAGS' many original variety extravaganzas or specialty shows featured throughout the Park. And you'll have the time of your life as a star member of the famous SIX FLAGS family of performers. Audition open to all age groups including college students. Be there!
Thursday, February 19 — 3:30 p.m.
Kansas Union - The Forum Room -
First Floor
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
(Registration is 30 minutes prior to audition time.)
SIX FLAGS
OVER TEXAS / OVER GEORGIA
DALLAS / FORT WORTH ATLANTA
PROJECTS OF GREAT SOUTHWEST CORPORATION
KWSNN COMMENT
In search of funds
A group of KU Student Senators learned Monday, to no one's dismay really, that students would be forced to bear an increasing share of the cost of running the University—beyond the $60 incidental fee hike announced in November. The Senate Finance and Auditing Committee and student members of the Senate Executive Committee heard Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and other administration officials say there is a distinct possibility students will be assessed $7.50 per semester starting this fall for construction of Wescoe Hall, $10 per semester within the near future for the proposed hospital, $6 per semester for the Satellite Union and $8 per semester to help pay taxes on the Kansas Union. In addition, the administration told the senators, University residence hall contracts may soon be increased $152.52 per year.
A pessimistic reading indicates that a Daisy Hill resident may, within the next few years, pay $167.76 per semester more than he does now. Out-of-staters will add an extra $65, as announced in the November fee additions.
Under this speculation, apartment—and private residence hall—dwellers will pay $91.50 more than at present. ($156.50 for non-Kansans)
There is little cause to argue the $10 for the proposed $2 million hospital. Watkins is woefully inadequate and we feel most students will be inclined to accept the price of improved health care. Likewise, if the Student Senate and the Union Operating Board ever come to an agreement on the Satellite Union, the students can probably be expected to tolerate the cost.
The Wescoe Hall request rests on shakier grounds. While the $7.50 levy is not exorbitant, the theory behind it is precedent-setting. Until now, KU students have not been forced to pay for the cost of building campus structures; state and federal monies have sufficed.
However, government funds fall $21/2 million short of the estimated $8 million that will be eventually required to pay for the controversial humanities building. Apparently, private support hasn't come forward, so the University's only alternative is to turn to the students.
There are two routes open to the University in adding the $7.50 to semester costs: to increase incidental fees by that amount or to subtract the cost from the $12 student activity fee.
The latter course will hold down semester costs, but may lead to some untoward ramifications when the Student Senate reallocates the remaining $4.50. Forty-four per cent of the fund now is marked for athletics. That percentage will necessarily drop, leading to higher ticket prices. Ten per cent of the fund goes to the University Daily Kansan, 7 per cent to dramatics and 5 per cent each to the Kansas Union, the band and the concert course. Forty-two other recipients of activities fees comprise the remainder. These organizations' funds may be reduced drastically and some will be cut out entirely.
For the $7.50 to be added to next year's budget, the Student Senate must first approve the plan, then rush it to the Board of Regents in
time for the board to submit it to the statehouse before the legislature adjourns March 10. In such a short time, a student referendum appears almost impossible. If the Student Senate rejects the fee plan, the Board of Regents may hesitate to ramrod the increase through.
The possible $8 Union tax fee and the boost in residence hall contract prices will loom if the legislature passes Senate Bill 434. The measure, presently in committee, provides for lifting the real estate tax exemption on student unions and residence halls at Kansas colleges and universities. The bill's sponsors have said that residence halls and student unions compete on an unfair basis with private property not exempted and with similar, though taxed buildings at private colleges.
The bill seems to be a desperate attempt to tap new sources of revenue in an era of austerity spawned by Governor Robert Docking's no-new tax pledge. The blame for Wescoe Hall's uncertain future might in large part be paid there, too.
And other sectors of the University's operation not directly involved with the fee raise are suffering. Faculty salaries under the governor's recommended budget will be increased 6 per cent at a time when the Council of Presidents advises the Regents a 20 per cent increase is necessary to close the competitive gap with other universities. The Chancellor's requested remodeling of Strong, Green, Flint and Fowler Halls is not included in the budget. The budget contains no funds for overtime services or faculty disability and life insurance.
Yet when the campus is marred by temporary structures to alleviate a dire classroom shortage, when KU becomes a hunting ground for other universities seeking professors, when students are asked for the first time to support building construction, hold-the-line actions are not enough.
The legislature did supply a 10 per cent increase in funds for Watson Library (the first in three years), money for water and electrical service changes and a salary increase for classified employes.
Governor Docking and the legislature do not bear the onus for KU's ever-dimming future alone. Their ears are cocked toward the tax-payers who feel they are supersaturated with taxes and who are disgusted with what they believe to be the end product of their education dollar—campus disorder.
We at KU know that the entire University is not responsible for the actions of some 200 demonstrators last spring. We also know that higher education—especially as practiced at KU is one of the state's greatest assets.
The case for increased funds through higher taxes (as seems necessary) must be presented in some way to the legislature. The Chancellor and the administration have tried mightily and received only a pittance. Perhaps it is time the students spoke, through their own and their parents' letters and conversations with the legislators. It might lead to a re-examination of Kansas' fiscal priorities.
Monroe Dodd
Griff & the Unicorn
THE ONLY WAY I CAN FLY IS TO GET ALTITUDE OVER THIS CLIFF
I CAN'T LOOK...
GERONIMO!
I DID IT!
I'm flying!!
I'M GOING SOUTH FOR THE WINTER!
SEND ME A POSTCARD FROM MIAMI!!
SEND ME A POSTCARD FROM MIAMI!!
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970,
University Daily Kansan.
An American paradox
By MIKE RIEKE Kansan Correspondent
John Smith slid his chair away from his walnut desk, walked to his office bar and fixed a scotch and water. He sipped it as he gazed out his window at the city below.
Smith was very disturbed. He had important work to do but he could not concentrate. His thoughts kept slipping back to the anti-war demonstrators. They had always bothered him.
He had been bothered when they first started making noise about the war; but he had thought they would burn themselves out in a short time. There were only a few radicals then.
He had been bothered when thousands of demonstrators had marched on the Pentagon in 1967; but he had been soothed by the way they had been handled—many had been arrested. Surely, he had thought, that episode would be their last attempt to break the war effort.
Things had only gotten worse. In 1968, McCarthy and Kennedy had campaigned for the Democratic Presidential nomination by opposing the war. Then there had been the Moratoriums and the Moratorium March. Even members of Congress called for a quick end to the war.
Smith knew those demonstrators were anti-American. The U.S. government had made a commitment and anyone who criticized that commitment was anti-American. Good Americans stand behind their government and do not do anything to hurt it.
Smith shook himself out of his deep thought and started back to his desk.
He is vice-president of a large conglomerate and is in charge of the shipbuilding branch. On his desk were some important claims that had to be mailed to Washington that day. His company had a contract to build a destroyer and the company engineers had made some careless miscalculations that could cost the company a few million dollars.
Rather than have the company lose the money, Smith had to make sure that the claims he was filing would be reimbursed by the Pentagon. The company stockholders would not stand for such a sizable loss.
As he sat down at his desk, Smith wondered once more how those demonstrators could be so anti-American.
WASHINGTON FASHION NOTES
WASHINGTON FASHION NOTES
PRESIDENT NIKON HAS APPROVED
A NEW UNIFORM FOR WHITE HOUSE POLICE
THAT IS SO WIDELY ACCLAMED THAT
FURTHER CHANGES MAY BE IN ORDER
THIS APPAREL IS UNDER
CONSIDERATION FOR THE
PRESS SECRETARY
THE NEW CABINET
RAIMENT MAY LOOK
LIKE THIS
WHILE THE WHITE HOUSE
INTELLECTUAL WILL BE
MORE SUBDUED
THE JOINT CHEFS OF
STAFF WILL SPORT THIS
CHIC ENSEMBLE
AND, RUMOR HAS IT, SOME CHANGES
ARE BEING CONSIDERED IN THE
PRESIDENT'S OFFICE
SANDERS
CONFEDERACIÓN DE ALTA FORZA 1890-2000
WASHINGTON FASHION NOTES
ALICE IN WONDERLAND
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THE JOINT CHEFS OF STAFF WILL SPORT THIS CHIC ENSEMBLE
AND RUMOR HAS IT, SOME CHANGES ARE BEING CONSIDERED IN THE PRESIDENT'S OFFICE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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JANE M. BURKE
Townspeople gather to watch a small tragedy which will provide fuel for gossip in the days to come in the Iowa town of Eldritch. "The Rimers of Eldritch" is the next production on the Experimental Theatre stage running tonight through Feb. 21. Cast members are: (from left) Karen Klinkenberg, Basehor; Betsy Miller, Glenview, Ill., sophomore, Kathy Sheldon, Ottawa freshman, Barbara Allen, Lawrence sophomore, Ron Shull, Haven senior, and Linda Flatten, Topeka junior.
Play describes hypocracy in small midwestern town
By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer
Described by director Bill Meikle as a pointallistic play, "The Rimers of Eldritch" opens tonight at the Experimental Theatre and runs through Feb. 21.
Meikle, assistant instructor in speech and drama, said the plot is developed through a series of vignettes which occur in illogical time sequence.
"The play is presented as a series of flashbacks and previews of events which occurred around a central bizarre incident," he said. "It is a perspective of truth, myth and hypocracy in a small midwestern town."
Written by Lanford Wilson, a native of Lebanon, Mo., "The Rimers of Eldritch" won the New York Drama Critics Circle award for the best off-Broadway play of 1967.
"I'm sure Wilson was writing about his hometown," Meikle said.
The director explained pointallism as a technique through which a series of isolated events are used to form a complete idea or story. The first act of "The Rimers of Eldritch" comprises 41 scenes. It is a long play, lasting for almost $21 \frac{1}{2}$ hours.
According to Meikle, the play "kicks the tar out of white Anglo-Saxon piety. It is a story of small-town people who hide behind their concepts of divine intervention.
"A rimer is someone who covers the truth with a myth," Meikle explained. Therimers of Eld-ritch justify their actions as manifestations of God's will."
The play explores the mind of the midwestern white-Anglo-Saxon-Protestant. Audiences are
Finney for 'Scrooge'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Producers of "Scrooge" have settled on a third star for the title role—Albert Finney—after Rex Harrison and Richard Harris were forced to quit the role due to schedule conflict.
Patricia Neal in new film
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Patricia Neal, who valiantly overcame a series of strokes four years ago, will star in "The Visitor" for Commonwealth United in a screenplay written by her husband, Roald Dahl.
Feb. 12
1970 KANSAN 5
required to perceive the various distortions of truth which people choose to believe. Almost every character has buried a lie.
"It's a tremendously religious irreligious play." Meikle said. The cast is interested, and has put a colossal amount of thought into characterizations."
Meikle said that although there
are 18 members of the cast, there are no lead roles.
"The town is the lead character," he said. The play is about us. Audiences will see themselves or people they know. They'll observe the state of mind which can alloy lynchings and witch-burnings in the name of Christian piety."
JUDY GARLAND DOUBLE BILL February 12
MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS
Vincent Minnelli, USA, 1944 7:00 p.m. ONLY—Dyche Auditorium
THE PIRATE
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Admission 75c for one film, $1 for both
Friday the 13th DOUBLE HORROR MIDNIGHT SHOW
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Let this picture speak for itself!
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THE POETRY OF CATULUS, translated by C. H. Sisson (Viking Compass, $1.85)—A translation that includes the complete Latin text.
What happens in a southern town when law and order is in the hands of a black man?
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Short Shots
---
If the Kansas gymnastics team continues to improve through the rest of the season at their present rate, they could very well end up the number one team in the nation.
By STEVE SHRIVER Assistant Sports Editor
Last weekend in a meet with Western Illinois and Northern Iowa the gym squad scored 158.90, the highest score ever for Kansas and second highest ever for a Big Eight team.
Iowa State, last year's Big Eight champions and number three team in the nation, scored over 161 points in the 1969 conference meet to set the standard. The Cyclones have consistently hit above 160 points this season and are the consensus choice to win, not only the Big Eight again this year, but the NCAA championship.
KANSAN Sports
Last Friday the 'Hawks disposed of Oklahoma, their chief rival for second place, in a dual at Robinson, 155.55 to 152.20. Now they must turn their attentions to improve upon their routines, according to coach Bob Lockwood.
"Until last weekend it was a race for second place," Lockwood said. "Everyone took it for granted Iowa State would win it again this year. But, I've been believing in these boys all year and now, they believe in themselves."
Lockwood attributed the team's success Saturday, partly to a change in attitude after the big victory over OU Friday.
"We felt real good about beating them (Oklahoma) and we came out Saturday more relaxed," he said. "The boys were smoother in their routines. When you're tense you tend to become a little more cautious on the apparatus. But we got the positive attitude, became more relaxed and more aggressive. We knew we could do it, and we did."
Two other school records fell in the process. Gerald Carley hit a 9.3 in the high bar event and John Brouillette scored a 51.85 in the all-around.
Kansas took first place in every event Saturday, all but one second place, and scored a clean sweep in the high bar with all four spots. Marc Joseph, freshman competing in the all-around, hit a career-high 49 points even. Terry Blanchard and Fred McCracken working on the parallel bars, both hit career highs, 9.0 and 8.85, respectively, en route to a 1-2 finish in that event.
KU's next meet will be at Warensburg, Mo., Friday against Central Missouri and Ft. Hays State. Although the gymnastics squad is still five meets and six weeks away from the Big Eight Championships, March 19-21 in Manhattan, they are undoubtedly looking forward to meeting Iowa State head-to-head.
If the team continues to improve as they have, and it seems inevitable they will, the pressure will be shifted from the Jayhawks to the Cyclones. And Lockwood will be the first to admit that a good routine depends on a good mental attitude, a positive attitude.
As Lockwood has said in the past, "Who knows, we may decide the national champion right in our own backyard."
Muliebrity has nothing to do with mules, but is the feminine counterpart of virility, or womanliness.
Big Eight Standings
Houston meet-glamor
M. E. "Bill" Easton, former Kansas track coach, today was named honorary referee of the 45th Kansas Relays to be staged on KU's new synthetic track April 16, 17 and 18.
While Jayhawk track coach from 1947 through 1965 Easton was director of 18 Kansas Relays meets. He also directed the Drake Relays seven years before taking the KU track post.
6 KANSAN Feb. 12 1970
M.E. Easton to be honored
HOUSTON (UPI)—Officials of the Astrodome - Federation National Indoor Championship are excited about the reputation their meet is acquiring this year.
Easton's Kansas squads won 39 Big Eight team championships in cross-country and indoor and outdoor track, making him the
The executive director of the U.S. Track and Field Federation, Carl Cooper of Tucson, said Tuesday that the Feb. 13-14 meet will be the greatest track meet ever held indoors.
104
Bill Easton
The teams include last year's NCAA indoor champion, Kansas; Michigan State, which won the USFFF meet in Milwaukee last year; San Jose State, the NCAA outdoor champions of 1969; and Southern Cal, the perennial track power.
NROTC men tour base
Twenty-one Midshipmen from the University of Kansas toured the Marine air station at Cherry Point, North Carolina over semester break.
winningest coach of any sport in Big Eight history.
During one stretch in the 1950's Easton's teams won every Big Eight title in all three phases of track for eight years in a row. In 18 years at KU he won 16 league cross-country meets, 12 outdoor crowns and 11 indoor championships.
His teams won the NCAA outdoor in 1959 and 1960 and the national cross-country meet in 1953. While at Drake he won three NCAA cross-country titles.
Easton developed 32 All-Americans and eight Olympians, including the only four-time champion in Olympic track history, discus-thrower Al Oerter. His athletes broke four world records, 14 American records, 14 intercollegiate marks and four Olympic standards.
Easton coached Mexico's national track team for the 1968 Olympics and in addition served as coordinator for those games at Mexico City. Previously he had coached Malaya's national team for the Asian Games in 1962.
After his Olympic assignment in Mexico City Easton returned to KU to resume teaching as an assistant professor in the department of physical education, a post he currently fills.
| | W | L |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Kansas State | 6 | 2 |
| 2. Missouri | 5 | 3 |
| 3. Kansas | 4 | 3 |
| 4. Iowa State | 5 | 4 |
| 5. Colorado | 4 | 4 |
| 6. Nebraska | 3 | 4 |
| 7. Oklahoma | 2 | 5 |
| 8. Oklahoma State | 2 | 6 |
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Doing it all backwards . . .
Freshman Gary Johnson has perfected his own kind of "flop" this year in the fashion of Olympian Dick Fosbury. In the Omaha meet Monday, Johnson high-jumped a career high of six feet six inches.
'Phog' still rhymes with basketball
One of the most illustrious figures in basketball history is the former University of Kansas coach, Dr. Forrect C. "Phog" Allen.
1
Phog Allen
Allen, who will be 85 next November 18, stepped down as the Jayhawk coach following the 1956 season when he reached the university's mandatory retirement age of 70, often referred to by the extremely "quotable" Allen as the age of "statutory senility."
It came for Allen just a year before the collegiate debut of Wilt Chamberlain, the 7-foot giant from Philadelphia who Allen persued to come to KU.
Feb. 12
1970 KANSAN 7
The news of Wilt's decision to enroll at Kansas following an intense, nation wide recruiting struggle prompted one of Allen's better quips. When a reporter called the KU coach for comment about Wilt's decision Dr. Allen remarked: "That's wonderful news; I hope he'll come out for the team."
After bowing out with 31 conference championships in 46 years of coaching Dr. Allen began practicing osteopathy in a down-town Lawrence office and tackled a busy schedule of appointments and speaking engagements for the next dozen years.
Allen retired as the winningest coach in basketball with 771 victories against 233 defeats. That record stood until 1968 when he was overtaken by one of his former pupils, Adolph Rupp of Kentucky.
In 1968 illness forced him to give up osteopathic practice. It became painful for him to be on his feet very long at a time because of arthritis in his knees and he seldom left his home at 831 Louisiana.
His wife, Bessie Evalina Allen,
died of a heart ailment January
4, 1970. She was 82 and they had
been married 61 vans.
Of all of his many accomplishments, the one Allen cherished most was his successful effort to
have basketball added to the Olympic program. During the late 1920's and early 1930's Phog conducted practically a one-man crusade trying to coax Olympic officials to include basketball in the world games. His uniting work finally paid off when the American-invented game was added to the Olympic program in 1936 at Berlin.
As a student at the University of Kansas, Allen's coach was Dr. James A. Naismith, the man who invented the game of basketball. When Allen first thought of making a career of coaching he talked with Naismith and was given this oft-quoted bit of advice: "You don't coach basketball, Forrest, you just play it."
Growth being the trend these days in the National Basketball Association, the Los Angeles Lakers subjected themselves to a mind-expanding experience Tuesday night.
By JOHN JEANSONNE UPI Sports Writer
Baltimore's shot in the arm for its 111-106 victory came from Earl Monroe, who scored 19 of his 27 points in the second half, and Kevin Loughery, who hit 16 of his 25 points in the last two periods.
In other NBA games, Milwaukee downed Philadelphia 139-131,
San Francisco defeated Atlanta 113-104, Cincinnati trimmed Detroit 117-115 and Phoenix beat Boston 122-117.
The Lakers, struggling to stay within striking distance of Western Division leader Atlanta, were off to a 13-point lead over the Baltimore Bullets at halftime, but it turned out to be a bad trip.
Year honors, scored 36 points to lead the Bucks, who built a 17-point margin in the final period and coasted the rest of the way. Billy Cunningham and Hal Greer each scored 28 points for the 76ers.
Lakers continue slump
Lew Alcindor, a candidate for MVP as well as Rookie of the
Six straight points by Joe Ellis, who finished with 16, sent San Francisco away from a 101-101 tie as the Warriors outscored Atlanta 12-3 in the final 3:42 of play. Five other Warriors were in double figures.
Tom Van Arsdale scored Cincinnati's last five points, including the decisive basket with two seconds to play, after Connie Dierking kept the Royals in the game most of the night by scoring 30 points.
Connie Hawkins led Phoenix with 35 points, but the Suns weren't assured of the victory until the final 1:56 when Celtic Don Nelson, who had scored 24 points, fouled out.
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But Vanity Fair is on your side For years, we've been selling the finest engagement and wedding rings to students for far less than they would pay in a retail jewelry store.
Getting married can cost a lot of money. In fact, sometimes marriage seems like a conspiracy to bankrupt the bride and groom.
Such savings are possible because we handle the whole process of making a ring ourselves, from buying the diamond in Antwerp to selling it to you on your campus.
And only Vanity Fair knows how to keep costs down without compromising quality. A look at our now 36-page, full-color catalog will convince you of that. This coupon will bring it to you free. Or, if you prefer, visit our showrooms at 55 E. Washington Street, Chicago.
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10
Photo by Judy Gerling
Christmas in February?
Down by the campanile, some kind soil noticed this poor tree pining away for some sign of warmer weather, and with samariitan-like concern, affixed 19 pine cones to its branches.
U.S. Public Health Service gives grant to professor
Robert H. Bussell, associate professor of microbiology at the University of Kansas, has received a grant of $24,043 from the U.S. Public Health Service.
The grant, titled "Comparative Studies of Selected Myxoviruses," is a continuation of a four year old program designed to study the life properties of related measles and canine distemper viruses.
Bussell said that he and his team of researchers were interested in learning about the mode of replication of the viruses.
"We won't actually study the diseases arising from the viruses themselves; we are more interested in how to retard their growth," he said.
Bussell said that the major goal of this year's research was
Feb.12 1970
to find out more about properties of these viruses than were already known about the influenza virus. In this way, these viruses could be related to others that were well known.
The KU microbiology department received the grant because it is one of the few laboratories in the U.S. that is qualified to conduct this kind of research.
Bussell said that although drug companies and professional laboratories were more interested in finding reliable vaccines for viral diseases, he and his team want to find out what the mechanism is that could retard or destroy viral growth.
8 KANSAN
Bussell said he and his research team want to isolate the nucleic acid in the virus. This, he said, would be the key to infection by the entire virus.
Working with Bussell are Gordon Newlin, David Waters and Miss Ann Ranken, all graduate students in microbiology.
The physiology and cell biology department at the University of Kansas will be represented at the meeting of the American Neurological Society in Albuquerque, N.M., March 16-18.
Science team travels to N.M.
Dr. Charles R. Wyttenbach, KU assistant professor of physiology and cell biology, and Stanley Twomey, teaching assistant in the biological sciences, will present "Changes in Microtubular Protein Concentration in Various Regions of the Mouse Brain during Postnatal Development."
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Frederick E. Samson, KU professor of physiology and cell biology, and Twomey will present "A Complement-fixing Antibody against Microtubular Protein from the Vertebrate Brain."
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Samson and H. L. Fernandez,
Chile graduate student in physiology and cell biology, will present "Disruption of Axonal Transport by Vinblasting."
Dennis R. Dahl and Mrs. Diana A. Redburn, research assistants in physiology and cell biology, and Samson will present "Brain Microtubular Protein (Tubulin)."
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'Hello Fido? This is Rover.'
Man's best friend seems to find this convenience of his master's world perplexing. Perhaps among his other duties he will some day be required to answer the telephone. He probably will never be bothered by long waiting lines. If only he had a dime...
Credit/no credit option available Feb.16-26
William L. Kelly, KU registrar,
said students may fill out their
credit/no credit options between
Feb. 16 and Feb. 26.
Kelly said if one is interested in taking a course on the option, he should pick up a credit/no credit option card and instruction sheet from his dean.
After filling out both sides of the card, it should be double checked to make sure the SSN number is correct. There was some problem last semester with students incorrectly copying their SSN number, said Kelly.
The completed card should then be returned to the dean's office. Upperclassmen in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences should turn their cards in at the registrar's office, window 1. No cards will be accepted without a KU-ID for identification.
The program has not been changed since last semester, Kelly said. The grade option is opened to all undergraduates except those who are in the schools of business and education.
The instructor will not be informed of those students choosing this option. He will assign the student a letter grade for the
course and the registrar will convert the grade into credit or no credit. The grade report will be the first visual indication that the students has chosen the credit/ no credit option.
Credit will be received for grades of A, B or C with no credit for grades of D or F.
Students may choose this option only during the third and fourth weeks of classes. Once a student has made his selection, the course will remain under this option.
If a student drops a course after Feb. 27 the course will be graded "W" if his work is of passing quality on the date he dropped it. He will be given no credit if his work is not of passing quality.
Courses marked credit or no credit will not count in computing the grade point average. Courses marked credit count in the total hours earned by the student for graduation; courses marked no credit do not count as hours earned.
No courses in a student's declared major may be taken on the credit/no credit option.
Engineer shortage foreseen, KU enrollment also slips
Enrollment in engineering in the past few years has decreased while general enrollments have swelled said Associate Professor Paul G. Hausman, state chairman of the Engineers Council for Professional Development, Wednesday.
Hausman said 30,000 to 40,000 engineering graduates will be available this year, however, some sources quote 75,000 will be needed. At KU there are 250 interviewers from different companies speaking to more than 150 students, he said.
Hausman attributed the downward trend of enrollment at KU to many of the junior colleges established in the state. He also said surveys show a decrease in physics and chemistry courses taken
The system was originally designed by the Department of Communications at the Medical Center in order that medical students on the parent campus would have the opportunity of taking the basic science courses. At the end of the first year of operation in 1966, four to six hours a week were transmitted over the microwave.
Feb. 12
1970 KANSAN 9
Gordon Titus, director of communication services at the Medical Center, said that the estimate for 1970 transmission over the microwave would be close to 1,-100 hours.
in the country's high schools and if such trends continue, they could cause problems, Hausman said.
The media of television has become a link between education at the University of Kansas and the University of Kansas Medical Center.
To increase enrollment in engineering, Hausman said he aided in establishing a guidance program while he was chairman of the Mid-America Engineering Guidance Council of the ECDP. The purpose of the council is to acquaint the industrial and technical societies and schools in guiding students interested in engineering.
Today classes are transmitted and received equally between the two campuses. The variety of courses being taught over the closed circuit TV include anthropology, civil engineering, computer services, general education courses and special conferences of faculties of both campuses and other special events. In all, 30 departments are involved in the programming.
Through a closed circuit television between KU and KUMC students can participate in classes on the other campus. This link between the two campuses provides greater integration of their educational programs and activities.
MU housing office turns over names
KU, Medical Center linked by closed circuit television
At KU the operational facilities are in 203 Bailey Hall and 124
There are three areas in which the council helps high school and junior college counselors. Those areas include the councils film library which provides taped cassettes, films, and video tapes to the schools, the speaker's series, and literature provided by the council.
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—Harold Condra, housing director for the University of Missouri-Columbia, has turned over the processed names of students who participated in last Friday's "intervitation" to the dean of students, it was announced Wednesday.
Dean Matthews made no comment but Condra stressed that his office has handled the matter in the same way it handles any violation. Condra added that further action would have to come from Matthews' office.
University officials warned students that they might be subject to disciplinary action if they took part in the protest visits.
The Committee for Concerned Students, a local activist group, has scheduled a play for noon Thursday in front of the student union. The group says the play will show trial and execution of students for violating the school's intervitation code. Executioners, the CCS said, will represent the university board of curators.
The CCS also planned a rally for Thursday night in front of the student commons.
Mallot Hall. Soon to be completed is a video conference room for faculty and staff in 31 Mallot. In charge of operations here is Alex Lazzarino, director of instructional television.
uling of exams so that he can give the exam in person or he can call in a graduate student to proctor the exam while he watches over the class from a television set.
The class at one campus sees and hears the professor at the other campus on TV monitors. The professor, in turn, is able to see and hear the students on a TV monitor at his end. Questions can be raised and answered from either end of the system. When a student speaks, the camera focuses on the individual so names are connected with faces.
Exams present no problems. The instructor has several alternatives. He can stagger the sched-
There is one channel of audio video each way between the two campuses. An underground cable stretches from classrooms at KU to a tower behind Marvin Hall into the master control system. The signal is transmitted from there to KUMC.
Through the use of this program a professor can instruct two classes simultaneously. Titus said it could eliminate the need of huge classes or the alternative of smaller classes taught by graduate students.
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8-12
Yuk down
Groups protest office assignment
C. J. LEE & F. D. HARRIS
Photo by Kay Teegarden
Groups discuss office space in Kansas Union
David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, and Mrs. Katherine Giele, activities adviser of the Kansas Union, discuss problems of office space in the union at a meeting of the Union Operating Board.
Representatives of three student groups met Wednesday with the Union Operating Board to discuss problems of office space in the Kansas Union.
The Independent Student Party (ISP), Hillel and Student Faculty Course Evaluation Committee representatives complained about their office assignments. The ISP and the Evaluation Committee claimed that sharing an office with a political organization would jeopardize their operations.
Hillel spokesmen protested their temporary assignment of office space. They said they were seeking permanent office space on the grounds that they were not a religious organization.
The Union Operating Board met in November when requests for office space first exceeded the
available space and the four member Board established some guidelines to replace the former first come, first served policy.
These informal guidelines for office space include making space available for temporary assignments, having religious groups find other space, allowing no organization more space than is needed and allowing only organizations which serve the entire student community.
The meeting dealt mainly with the individual problems of the groups present. A solution acceptable to all was the doubling of non-conflicting groups in the present office space until the Board adopts a rigid formal policy.
Proposed solutions to be discussed in a Friday Board meeting
include reassigning all office space on a consistent criteria, installing four by eight one-man metal closets to serve as offices and partitioning the Kansas Union's activities lounge into offices.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
Guadalajara, Mexico
The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, will offer, June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, political science, language and literature courses. Tuition $160; board and room $155.
Write Dr. Juan B. Roal, Office of Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
Sorority soda sales earmarked for needy
Girls in four KU sorority houses have devised a new method to set aside money for charities.
Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Delta Gamma, Pi Beta Phi and Gamma Beta Phi service their own pop machines, charging five cents extra for each bottle of pop. This extra money goes into a joint bank account until members decide where it is needed most. The balance in the account to date is $1,139.19.
If any house in the group wishes to withdraw, it can do so with the stipulation that the money which it gave up to that point remain in the account.
Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and chairman of the steering committee, says the committee has not decided yet where the
10 KANSAN Feb. 12 1970
money will be used. She said that suggestions were welcome, and that the question would probably be referred to the newly established Panhellenic Philanthropy committee.
Official Bulletin
Todav
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door,
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
KU Synchro Club: Natatorium, Robinson Gymnasium, 7-9 p.m.
Lecture on Transcendental Meditation
in Big Eight Room, Kansas Union,
Missouri.
Christian Science Lecture: "We Can
Unite the United Nations, Union
Jawaharlal Nehru, 7:30 p.m.
Jawaharlal Room, 7:30 p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Eldrith." 8:20 p.m.
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnasium, 7 p.m.
Film Society: "Intruder in the Dirt." Drumbo Auditorium, 7.5
**stim Society:** "Intrude" to the Dust." Dyche Auditron 7 & 9 & Film:"Iper File" Wood-ruff Auditron, Kansas Union. 7 & 9:30 p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Eldolph." 8:20 p.m.
Folk Dance Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium, 7:30 p.m.
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WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the work order will be credited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
SANDAL SALE—20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb. 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarly Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder automatic good condition, $252-17
For Sale: AMPEG G15 guitar amp,
with a 15" Jenson speaker. Has all
extras such as doily and cover.
Throw in cord. 845-767-000
five. 2-12
GROOVY: INFLATABLE FURNI-
TURE—many styles for dorm or
apartment. Call 842-3801 between 6:30
and 7:30 weekdays. 2-12
For Sale: Man's Naismith Hall contract. A Garrad 40 MKII turntable with base, dustcover and cartridge. Call Allen, 842-0430. 2-12
Old. fur coats and capes—beaver,
muskrat, seal, fox. Also strange old
clothes. 1618 Tenn., #A, 842-6810. 2-12
Love Seats—matching black foam rubber, solid mahogany in walnut stain. Good shape, $30.00. Also two walnut lamps, $10.00. 2188. 2-12
Willing to bicker! Have two used bows, new set of hunting arrows, and a finger guard. Cheap! Call 842-1881.
2-12
For Sale: One man's Nailsmith Hall contract. Call Mike, 842-6150. 213
"62 Triumph TR-4, 4 good mechanically,
62 Triumph TR-4, 5 good values
bore. Offer Call 842-5940. $400 - 13
$350
60 Cadillac, good shape, four lighters,
cheap at $90. Call 842-594-30.
2-13
Very clean 1966 VW 1300 Bug with
the Dana 550 snowsize snow
$950. See at 1709 lines 2-14
1968 Ward-Benell motorcycle, 250 cc.
Built after 3:00 on 14th Tennessee; $250, 2-16
Must sell this week: Good 1959 4-door Pontiac. One owner. Also large tandem wheel utility trailer. Also two-tonneally new 616 tires. Call 2-35-3447.
Magnaxox annual sale! Don't miss Magnaxox annual sale! Don't miss stereos, components, AM-FM stereo radios, transistors and tape recorders! Mon. and Thurs. evenings—2-16 Mon. and Thurs. evenings
Magnavox deluxe tape recorder sold new at $89.95—used one month, cut to $50.00 Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon, and Thurs. evenings. 2-16
Tape recorder cassettes reduced! Two hours, only $3.00; 90 min., only $2.50; one hour, $1.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon, and Thurs. nine a.m.
For Sale: Panasonic stereo tape recorder—practically new, complete with two mikes, accessories, two separators, and hear to appreciate. Sold new for $275. now $150. Call John at 842-8237 after 5:00. I need tuition money fast.
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AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
For Sale. Concord four-track stereo
assette deck. Used very little, buying
a larger tape deck. Comes with jacks,
$60.00. Call 842-6844. 2-16
Refrigerator. $20. VI 2-9155. 2-12
'66 Mustang V-8, low mileage, excellent condition. Very reasonable. Must see to appreciate. 842-9036 after 6:00.
-1-16
Recording tape for sale. All sizes and
kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord
Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Shelby- 1867 GT500, 4-speed, air conditioning, new polyglas tires, excellent condition, low mileage, 2111 Kasold B103, 842-5992. 2-16
G.E. portable storage $45; soul albums;
$2 each; Topaz ring (5), $50; Playboy
music and a butterfly tawny brown
and ceramic tiles; Call 843-2854
between 5-10 p.m. 2-16
Table Tops
Two f-78-14 Remington tires, good tread, with or without rims, will fit most GM cars. Make offer. Dennis Miller, 842-7000, Rm. 933. 2-16
Guild Slim Jim 6 string with custom black paint and case; excellent condition; new, $375.00; sell for $215.00; Call Jim Hensworth vl. 3-1577. 2-17
Ampex cassette player in stereo tape systems. In excellent condition $130 or best offer. 843-7922. Ask for Doug Dannen or leave message. 2-17
1966 Chevy Impala Need money real
3066 need very cheap
3997 anytime
2-17
'65 Honda, 250 cc Hawk, runs well.
$225 or best offer this week. Call 843-
6900. 2-13
AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition,
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
1959 Pontiac, air cond. new battery,
fuel pump, generator, brakes. Needs
TLC. Best offer. 842-9936 after 6 p.m.
-217
For Sale: 1966 Corvette, 4-speed, 327-
p.m. p.m.; 843-770-588,
p.m. $2700. Will bargain.
Valentine Special-1 cushion sofa and matching chair, Reg. Price $259.00, Factory Bedding Outlet Price $199.00, Factory Bedding Outlet Price $199.00, price $199.00 Early American steeper $299.00, TV louge $109.00, Reg. size mattress and box spring set $69.00; extra long bed set $89.00; Queen size set $109.00; extra firm, Valentine special bedding set $109.00; factory Bedding Hotel, located 4 doors south of Eldridge Hotel, 843-4297. 2-13
CONGA DRUM: nearly new mulexil
fiberglass with legs. $75, 843-626-2, 17
Kustom guitar amplifier. 100W, trem.
takes it. Steve, 842-8068. best-2-13
take it. Steve, 842-8068
For Sale: Realistic 40 changer, $25;
10-watt realistic stereo Amp, $25;
Regula LKB camera, EE, x-synch,
$35. George, 843-8454. 2-18
Sony TC-8 8-track stereo recorderraier tape deck for sale. Six months old. Like new. Call for Karl at 843-9072, after 6. 2-18
Deluxe 2-speaker stereo FM walnut radio, famous brand reduced from $99.90 to $79.90 Ray Stoneback's, 929 Open Monday to open nights. ... 2-18
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Clearance! AM-FM radios, famous brands, entire stock of floor samples reduced—transistors as low as $10.00. Ray Stoneback's, downtown. 2-18
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Four new wide radial F70-14 new B.F.
Goodrich whitewall - final cut to 300-
plus $2.58 FET each. Ray Stoneback's fast free installation. 2-18
Sunn amp. with two D140F JB.L.
speakers. Gibson EB-O. Bass with
hardshell case. Band broke up. Phone
Ted. 842-7000. Rm. 813. Best offer 2-18
F
TC-50 pocket cassette-corder, 6 months old, worth $125.00 new; need money, wireless phone includes 4 cards, phone remote switch. Call Jim, 843-7404. 2-18
WANTED
Need roommate in two-bee -on
phone. 845-1598 *2*-12
Conditioned. Phone 845-1598
Wanted; Riders, rides, or car pool.
KUMC to KU daily. Contact Bob at
722-0806. 4019 Adams St., K.C., Kan.
2-12
Interested in a sales career? High earnings and management opportunities. Sign up at Summerfield Business Office. Interviews on Tuesday, February 17, 1970, all day. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.
We need one additional roommate in a beautiful 4-bedroom duplex; reasonable rent. Call John, Mary or Herb at 843-2103. 2-12
Apartment in exchange for work. Call 843-7863. 2-13
Wanted: One bass player who唱s;
one guitarist who sings and any vert-
erse musicians who sing or write
interests singing in progressive
rock band with excellent drummer
material, original music,
material Call Chuck, 842-139
time, or Rocky, 842-5645.
2-20
Female roommate wanted for luxury
and Reasonable Call 842-748-3
ings 2-17
NOTICE
515. Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-good-bearin' Bar-Ribs, Chicken, Brinket are our specialties IV 9-2510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay 10% handling. Dynaco dealership. Call 842-2047 evenings 4 to 10. tt
Either a male roommate or two people to occupy a two-bedroom apartment near campus. No lease. Call 842-6211.
Tony's
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
ALEXANDRIA
CHRONICLE
THE WEEKLY NEWS
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
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VI 3-8200
1730 W 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
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Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laplaid. VI 3-4032. 5-13
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, meceasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
baskets, purses, rests,
breeties, dog collars—at 812 MED
PRIMARILY LEATHER.
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry. 1903$^2$. Mass. St. Petersburg, folded and folded, press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service. Service in early 3-2
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 styles to choose or to purchase. PRIMARA LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on your Truck Tax. $801.01 Mass. $400. and up if you Group Tax 801.01 Mass. $400. and up if you
Gentlemen, would you like your own English tailor? Suits, sport coats, blazers, made of measure. Suit prince-collar, made of satisfaction fabric. Call 842-4138. 2-16
Offset printing for yourself, movement or organization at reasonable rates. Bill Lee, 1230 Oread. 842-9402. 2-17
Dressmaking and alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2765, 8-17
52% of your income tax goes to the Pentagon—give Melvin less money. He and up keep a twin Gatchen, 843-965-1208 Mississippi. after 6 p.m.
2-18
Furniture waxing and other household work. Flexible hours. Own transportation. $2.00 an hour. 842-4088 evenings. 2-16
PERSONAL
Girl wants female traveling company.
Girl wants female traveling in March.
April. Call 842-2624. 2-13
Thanks!—to the person who turned in my wallet at Learned. 2-16
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up.
Have fun while learning about world affairs. Represent a country in the Model OAS, March 14, 15. Call KU-Y office, UN 4-3761. 2-18
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VI 3-1571
Al Lauter
JUDY GARLAND is alive and well and doing her thing tonight at Dyche MEME ME LOISE (1944) at 7 p.m. AND THE PIRATE (1948) at 9 p.m. Due to popular request, JUDY will not sing "Over the Rainbow" in either film.
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
FOR RENT
For Rent Two bedroom apartment
Call 842-1105 and 842-1433 2=13
Call 842-1105 and 842-1433 2=13
Small basement efficiency apartment
electricity. 842-3750, 12-10 p.m.
electricity. 842-3750, 12-10 p.m.
Apt. single male. $85 a month, annual
Share bath. 1314 utility.
842-213-6
2-18
To sublet—spacious one-bedroom apt, ideal for one or two people, two blooms from campus, $125 furnished, to hold. Available Maries Mackenzie Call 842-4869
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call VI 3-3281. Mrs Ruckman.
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typing. Professional copywriter Pata type. Competent service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. S-14
LOST
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Lost: Between Watkins and Snow, a pair of black-rimmed round glasses. Urgency needed. Reward $2. Please call 843-625-212 and leave message.
USED BOOKS—READ and TRADE. Buy, sell, trade used paperback books: Educational, Science Fiction, Novels, Romance, Western Homes, Anyboy H Bookstore, H Furniture 934 Mass. Phone 843-2736 Now boasting 25,000 books. 3-2
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Southern schools close
A Florida school that compiled last week with the Supreme Court's immediate desegregation order was ordered closed Wednesday shortly after black and white students threw chairs at each other in its cafeteria.
One black student and one white student were expelled for the violence at Everitt Junior High at Panama City, Fla., by the Bay County school board, which met in emergency session minutes after the fracas occurred.
They and 15 other students were arrested. Several of the 50 students involved in the fracas received minor injuries.
The Panama City schools, which had been partially desegregated, complied Feb. 2 with the Supreme Court's order for full integration. The Panama City strife and the Monday night burning of a school at Maben, Miss., are among the few disturbances reported in the South since the massive transition began last month.
Students ask
(Continued from page 1)
"We presently have viable policies to cope with the situations of this type, Stewart said. "The board members feel that we are on top of the situation at this time."
In agreement with Stewart, Mrs. Walter R. Porter, R-Emporia and a member of the committee, said that if we threaten the students with bills such as these they will rebel. She advised the legislative members to listen to what the students want and then take positive action.
Hearing
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
told to "hold up" on proceedings against Calley. He said the order came in a telephone call he received late last August from Brig. Gen. Samuel Reid, his counterpart at the Third Army level at Fort McPherson in Atlanta.
Normally soft-spoken defense attorney George W. Latimer pounced on the phrase "hold up." "Hold up?" he asked.
"Hold up?" he asked.
"Yes." Keirsey replied.
The pretrial hearings have been conducted in the same courtroom where Calley will be court-martialled if his motions fail. No date has yet set for the trial.
Keirsey said the first indication he had that Calley was under investigation came July 23rd when he received a call from Col. William Wilson of the Inspector General's Office in Washington informing him Calley was at Ft. Benning and "was not to be re-assigned."
He said the "hold up" order he later received from Brig. Gen. Reid was removed on Sept. 4th or 5th when officials here were given what has been termed the "green light" to proceed on their own in the Calley case.
He said Gen. Reid called again saying, "It's your action, you're not receiving any instructions."
He passed out copies of the newly prescribed code of conduct which is expected to be adopted by the Student Senate Feb. 25. He asked that the University be allowed to try things out on its own to see how they work.
Morgan said, "A communications vacuum exists; the legislators don't know what the University is doing."
"The obvious advantage to this," Morgan said, "is our ability to change rapidly if established regulations become ineffective or new ones necessary. We all know the legislature can't do this."
Von Ende spoke on the importance of retaining a state of confidentiality between student and University. He said he was against taking private and confidential records and making them available.
"I am asking that we be understood as a community that is in many ways unique," Von Ende said.
As the Panama City fight occurred, movements mounted across the South to relieve the pressure of court orders requiring the busing of students to accomplish desegregation.
North Carolina Gov. Robert Scott told a news conference that state funds would not be used to bus school children out of their neighborhoods, and the Florida cabinet adopted two anti-busing resolutions.
The Tenn. Senate also passed an anti-busing measure by a 24-2 vote, with the only opposition coming from the Senate's two Negro members.
Sen. James B. Allen, (D-Ala.), meanwhile, called on all southern governors to push for anti-busing and freedom of choice laws. He suggested they be patterned after New York state's statute which has been approved by federal courts.
"If New York is entitled to such a law, Alabama and all the other states should be as well," said Allen.
However, South Carolina Attorney General Daniel R. McLeed said there was no law that could provide the South relief from desegregation pressures. He said politicians who insisted that immediate integration orders could be blocked were engaging in "political buzzword."
Informed sources in Louisiana predicted Wednesday that Gov. John J. McKeithen will call a special session of the legislature Feb. 18 to deal with public schools. The source said McKeithen will
12 KANSAN Feb. 12 1970
In Person! In Kansas City! OLIVER
("Sunday Morning;" "Good Morning, Starshine;" "Jean")
give the legislators five days to deal with two bills-one dealing with unitary school systems and the other with a New York-type busing law.
Sunday, February 15; 7:30 p.m. Municipal Auditorium Music Hall Reserved Seats: $3.50; $4.50; $5.50 at all Jenkins Music Stores and the Music Hall Box Office Sunday
Gov. Scott of North Carolina told a news conference that a 1969 state law prevents involuntary busing of students, and expenditure of state funds for such busing.
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Gov. Claude Kirk introduced one of the Florida anti-busing resolutions to the cabinet, and State Education Commissioner Floyd Christian presented the other. The cabinet decided to ask state legal authorities to extract the best parts of both and merge them into one resolution for adoption as policy.
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Final arguments for seven heard
The Tennessee bill, which now goes to the House, would cut off state aid to any school district which forces its students to attend a school outside his neighborhood. The two black senators who voted against the bill predicted it "will rise up against you and haunt you in the pages of history."
CHICAGO (UPI)—A prosecutor told a federal court jury Wednesday the government has proved beyond reasonable doubt that the "Chicago Seven" came to the city to incite a riot which they hoped would "start a Vietnam in the United States."
Mostly cloudy this morning becoming fair and a little warmer with light southwest winds this afternoon. Clear to partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Colder tonight. High today 40 to 45. Low tonight lower 20s. Probability of precipitation 5 per cent today through Friday.
The defense, in final arguments, charged the government is trying to make "scapegoats" of "seven men who worked most of their lives for peace."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
80th Year, No.78
Friday, Feb. 13, 1970
Calley to stand trial
FT. BENNING, Ga, (UPI)—A military judge swept aside all but two defense motions Thursday and ruled that Lt. William L. Calley Jr., must stand court-martial, beginning May 18, for the alleged My Lai massacre.
The Army announced in Washington several hours later that a fifth soldier, Capt. Thomas K. Willingham, 25, of Allenhurst, N.J., also had been charged in the My Lai case. A Pentagon spokesman said Willingham now faces the military equivalent of a grand jury investigation, and that specifications will be published if the probe upholds charges.
Calley's case is expected to set a precedent for the others. Thursday's ruling was regarded as a key one.
The ruling by Lt. Col. Reid W. Kennedy capped four days of testimony by nine military witnesses called by the defense in an attempt to show that widespread publicity and "command influence" by high
military officers and the White House had rendered it impossible for Calley to get a fair trial.
The military judge set May 15 for further hearings on the "command influence" issue, but the fact he set a court-martial date and his earlier comments concerning the matter gave ample evidence of his leanings.
Kennedy struck down the first argument, saying that while "the publicity has been extensive . . . it has had no effect upon this court and this court can provide a fair trial for Lt. Calley."
Reed told defense attorney George W. Latimer Wednesday that "at this point, there is no evidence that these people—those allegedly involved in the command influence—communicated with anybody down here at Ft. Benning.
"If the defense would come up with evidence that Gen. William C. Westmoreland called Gen. Orwin C. Talbott
then I would have to take some action." Westmoreland is Army chief of staff, and Talbott is the commanding general of Ft. Benning.
The 26-year-old Calley, a short, balding man from Miami, is specifically charged with the premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese men, women and children on March 16, 1968, the day the platoon he commanded swept through the hamlet of My Lai 4.
Calley, dressed in his olive green officer's uniform, showed no emotion over Thursday's ruling, which all but assured he would have to stand trial.
Apart from ruling in favor of the defense on the command influence issue, about the only thing that could hold up the court-martial now would be a finding that some of the 10 presently empanelled members of the court-martial board had been influenced by publicity. If such a finding were made, a new search would simply be made for unprejudiced jurors.
Clifford calls for timetable
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Former secretary of defense Clark Clifford Thursday called on the Nixon administration to announce a definite timetable for the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam.
"I would suggest we remove our ground troops by the end of 1970 and remove the balance of our troops by the end of 1971." Clifford said.
He said the announced timetable would be of "great benefit since, first, it would get our men out of the war and, second, Saigon would have to make an honest effort to end the war if the American troops are out."
Clifford, who replaced Robert S. McNamara in February 1968 as defense secretary under President Lyndon Johnson, was asked who in the Johnson administration first suggested a halt to the United States'
bombing of North Vietnam. The question was posed as a result of a taped television program presented last Friday in which Johnson said the suggestion first was made by then secretary of state Dean Rusk.
Cifford replied, "I believe it is undignified and inappropriate for me to answer that question. There is no conflict as to who made the first suggestion. Secretary McNamara made the suggestion in 1967—a full year before I took office."
Clifford said he finds fault with the Nixon Vietnam policy on three points which the President "has reiterated four or five times as conditions determining disengagement from the war."
Clifford called Johnson's decision to halt the bombing March 31, 1968 "a watershed" in the course of American policy in Vietnam.
He listed them as "one, progress in the Paris peace talks, two, lessening of the level of combat and, three, the speed at which the South Vietnamese can take over the burden of combat."
Clifford said to depend on the first two conditions would be "unwise since they are within the discretion of Hanoi. "The third point leads to foot dragging ... because Saigon is not making an honest effort to end the war."
Clifford said, "The Saigon government does not want the war to end. They like it the way it is now...we're protecting them in office."
"The South Vietnamese government like the American support that's like a golden pump pumping all that money in there."
The old school building.
The image shows a large, leafless tree reflected in a still body of water. A small building is visible behind the tree, positioned slightly to the left. The scene appears to be in a rural area with sparse vegetation and a few telephone poles in the background.
A
Reflections
Photo by Steve Haynes
The still waters of early evening mirror landscape and sky on a warm and sunny winter afternoon. The location is Lakeside Lake northwest of Lawrence
Violence closes schools
By United Press International
Racial violence closed three schools in different parts of the nation Thursday while President Nixon was speaking out against the busing of students to achieve racial balance and unequal application of integration laws in the North and South.
Los Angeles balked at a court order which school officials said would result in the daily busing of 240,000 students and "destruction of the school district." Civil rights leaders invited Southern governors to join a suit demanding complete integration of San Francisco's schools.
One of the schools closed by violence was the senior high school in Lima, Ohio, where black and white students engaged in fistfights following a talk by Richard Thomas, a Negro poet and graduate student from Michigan State University.
Thomas referred to George Washington as "Georgie baby," and said he was a "white president" who kept Negro slaves.
He then raised a clenched fist in a black power salute.
About 300 white students walked out while Thomas was talking, touching off scuffling in which one student was injured. Officials closed the school for the remainder of the day.
High schools in Baltimore, Md., and the neighboring city of Annapolis, also were forced to close.
Officials said Annapolis High, scene of numerous racial disturbances, was a "shambles" after students went on a
The entire Annapolis police force was sent to the school to quell the disturbance by blacks.
Classes also were dismissed at Eastern High in Baltimore after an argument between a teacher and a female Black Panther escalated into a general altercation at the all-girls school.
rampage, tearing down bulletin boards smashing windows, desks and other furniture.
President Nixon's views on current Supreme Court integration orders were contained
in a White House memorandum distributed to a few Republican senators in Washington.
Weather
Partly cloudy to cloudy and colder today and tonight. Chance of light rain or snow tonight. Saturday, partly cloudy and continued cold. Northeast winds, 10 to 20 m.p.h. today. High in the 30's. Low tonight in the 20's.
Campus briefs
Docking to present award
Gov. Robert B. Docking will present the distinguished elder citizen award at the 20th annual Conference on Aging, Feb. 23-24, at the University of Kansas.
More than 150 persons are expected to attend the conference, said E. A. McFarland, director of institutes and conferences at KU. The conference theme is "What's Ahead for the Older Kansan?"
IFC joins midwest association
The Interfraternity Council of the University of Kansas has been admitted into the Midwestern Interfraternity Council Association MIFCA. The MIFCA, founded in 1966, includes Interfraternity Councils from 15 states throughout the midwest.
The purpose of the MIFCA is to provide a communication link between Interfraternity Councils and enable IFC representatives to exchange ideas and experiences at their annual conferences. The organization is non-policy making and non-legislative.
Legislators to visit Campus
Legislative leaders of the Kansas House and Senate will make their annual visit to the campus Feb. 17. The visitors will include the Ways and Means Committees of both houses. The visit is planned as a social occasion and there will be no effort on the part of University officials to explain their budget requests, said James Nichols, executive secretary of the University.
The Chancellor will speak to the lawmakers and they will hear a panel discussion of pollution problems in Kansas and how the University can help solve these problems. The panel will consist of Robert L. Smith and Ross McKinney, professors of civil engineering; Kenneth Armitage, professor of biology; and Robert Aangeenbrug, director of the Center for Regional Studies and associate professor of geography.
KUOK to run special series
KUOK, the local radio station operated by KU students, plans to run a series of special programs devoted to such groups as Crosby, Stills and Nash, the Rolling Stones and the Beatles.
Brian McKinney, Westport, Conn, sophomore and the new music director of KUOK, said the programs would be featured on Thursday night and would last from 9 p.m. to 12 p.m.
KUOK is also planning to run a series of talk shows featuring interesting or well-known people on campus, said Robert Sullinger, general manager of the station. Sullinger said the guest interviews would last about 20 minutes and would have an open audience forum afterward.
Spanish institute scheduled
The Spanish department has organized a summer study program in Barcelona, Spain. The Barcelona Summer Language Institute will be an eight week program from June 18th to August 19th.
The institute will consist of a two week guide of attractive cities in Spain such as Madrid, Granada and Valencia. The students will then have four weeks of classroom work in Barcelona.
The final two weeks of the program will be devoted to independent study. George Woodyard, professor of Spanish and co-director of the program, said many of the students spent this time travelling to other countries in Europe.
The institute will accommodate 25 people, and there are still applications available. Anyone with a background in the Spanish language is welcome to apply.
Woodyard said scholarships are available.
2 KANSAN
Feb. 13
1970
Further information is available in the Spanish department.
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Smith, a native of Missouri, is a graduate of KU. As a student he served as arranger and soloist for the University Concert Band,
8 p.m., Sat., Feb. 14
THE FOLLOWERS
Forum Room Kansas Union
★ Christian Folk Singers
Claude T. Smith, contemporary composer, will conduct the KU Symphonic Band in the premiere performance of his latest work, "Occasional Overture," at 3:30 p.m.Sunday.
HOLE
The composition, commissioned by the KU School of Fine Arts, is dedicated to the University of Kansas.
Symphony dedicated to KU
Kenneth G. Bloomquist, director of bands at KU, described Smith's music as "commercial,
on a tour of eastern Kansas and northern Oklahoma. The tour lasts from Feb. 18 through Feb. 21. The final performance on the tour is scheduled for the College Band Directors National Association convention at the University of Oklahoma.
No Admission Charge
meaning that it is understood by audiences not technically trained in music." He said Smith's compositions were characterized by occasional uneven meters and pleasing harmony.
Sunday's concert will be performed by the Symphonic Band
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1970
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82
Ecology, community involvement:
Chalmers views campus trends in 70's
By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., said he believed that student participation in forming university policies would be responsible for a movement away from overt protest demonstrations on the KU campus this spring.
His statement came during a Kansan interview Feb. 10. Chalmers discussed expected trends on American campuses during the 70's.
"I have had no occasion to veto any measure which students have voted on," Chalmers said.
KU students have a hand in forming university policy through votes cast in Student Senate and University Senate. Chalmers said KU has been one of the first universities to grant students so much decision-making power
He added that there would still be incidences of student action during the spring, but said they would be concerned with extending social concerns beyond the campus.
KANSAN
--characteristic of the 50's. There will be more educators than jobs, enabling universities to weigh the relative merits of prospective instructors rather than constantly struggling to fill job openings.
"I expect to see students active in two main areas. There will be cleanup campaigns and other community projects such as the New Jersey Street Project last spring. More students will be active in establishing legal and medical aid outlets for low income families."
The second area, Chalmers said, would be on a nation-wide scale. It is the area of environmental improvement.
"I don't think the public is quite prepared for the momentum, persistence and energy with which students will attack this problem," he said. "Students can help the situation by organizing constructive campaigns designed to inform the public of the seriousness and immediacy of the problem, and what can be done to alleviate it."
Chalmers believes higher education will see great changes in the 70's. He said America was returning to a buyer's market
Feb. 13 1970 KANSAN 3
BERTO BOGLIA
"Different colleges will be looking for different qualities and abilities in the instructors they hire."
E. Laurence Chalmers Jr.
Chalmers said he expected to see a change in the style and content of instruction on the college level, but added that specific changes would differ with individual schools.
Speaking of grading systems, Chalmers said he believed letter grades sometimes interfered with effective learning.
"Some measure of progress is needed," he said, "but perhaps we are ready for some innovation in the area of grading."
Chalmers suggested the possibility of written evaluations of each student as a more effective method of judging a student's abilities.
He expressed concern over the growing number of university students, and the accompanying shortage of funds necessary to
operate school facilities.
THE FOLLOWERS
★ Christian Folk Singers
8 p.m., Sat., Feb. 14
Forum Room
Kansas Union
No Admission Charge
"Funds must come from increased supports from state and federal governments," he said. "Recent cutbacks have been difficult to adapt to." Chalmers added that anticipation of increased financial need depended on student and faculty help.
SEEKING A WRY
REALISTIC SPY?
LOOK INTO
‘THE IPCRESS FILE’
“A TINGLING.
NO-NONSENSE
SUSPENSE YARN!”
—TIME
“‘THE IPCRESS FILE’ IS A THINKING MAN’S ‘GOLDFINGER!’”
—NEWSWEEK
“THE VERY MODEL OF SUSPENSE ENTERTAINMENT!” —SATURDAY REVIEW
MICHAEL CAINE
NIGEL GREEN
SUE LLOYD
* THE * * IPCRESS * * FILE *
TECHNICOLOR
“A BLOOD 'N' GUTS
SPY THRILLER!" —N.Y. DAILY NEWS
woodruff aud.
FEBRUARY 13,14
7:00 and 9:30 5O¢
the growth rate of a state university the size of KU. We will need $100 million worth of new buildings by the end of the decade."
"Our present road leads to disaster. We have built half the number of facilities required for
"Students who attend two-year colleges and decide they want degrees greatly increase the number of students enrolling."
While Chalmers agreed that city colleges and community junior colleges will play an increasingly important role during the 70's he said they tend to compound the problem of the large state university.
Chalmers said there was a possibility that the time required to complete a bachelor's degree might be extended in the future. "We're in the age of the information explosion," he said. "Formal education might someday develop a life-long phenomenon."
This Week: The Soul Possessions
Ladies Free - Monday through Thursday Matinee-3 to 6 Fridays Admission FREE with KU ID
Live Music Every Night 8-12
Yukdown
Greatest new British import since the Mayflower!
new
er!
It may have taken 300 years, but now, genuine fish & chips are here. Genuine, that is, if they're Alfie's. Only Alfie (that sly rascal) takes the very freshest whitefish and fries it to a just right golden crisp. And serves it up with the crunchiest, lightest chips in the colonies. Plus the tangiest, most tempting secret sauce you've ever tasted. So special, grown men weep for more! Try a bit of tradition for lunch or dinner, today. Verily, there's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite!
Alfie's
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH
T.M.
Alfie's
Fish & Chips
RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT
T.M.
Alma's
Esh&chips
6th and Maine VI 2-5500
@ 1969, Alfie's Fish & Chips, Inc
KANSAS COMMENT
Bugs and busts
The recently passed Federal Narcotic Law which allows police to enter and search homes of suspected drug dealers without warning has confused many people.
Among the confused, unfortunately, are those whose moral outrage cannot extend beyond the drug-using community to see that this type of almost-groundless search is abominable no matter what the suspected crime.
While it is easier to empathize with the suspected pot dealer than with the suspected organized-crime leader, it remains a fact that in neither case is the individual a criminal; in both cases he is as innocent as you or I—until proven guilty. The new "no knock" law lets police break into a home if a magistrate can be convinced that the suspect is likely to destroy evidence, which, in effect, opens every door.
The outrage over the "no knock" provision which already applied in 28 states by state statute has been negligible. Big Brotherism is not frightening to what we might call the Silent Majority. Not because the what we might call Silent Majority is sinless, but rather because their particular sins do not happen to be on the snooping list of Big Brother.
An editorial in the Kansas State Collegian says, "When 'no knock' is coupled with regulated wiretapping, authorities will have two formidable weapons with which to fight organized crime."
"Fears that regulated wiretapping would plunge us into a police state have not materialized. First reports, if accurate, indicate that the device has been used with discretion."
There can really be no such thing as discretion when the homes of private individuals are being penetrated on mere suspicion or without warning or when no proof exists or when no charge is filed or when J. Edgar is up tight.
Furthermore, there is little if any evidence
to show that a "no knock" searching system would be useful.
Columnist Carl T. Rowan says that in 28 states which have had the provision, it has been "of no consequence in halting the drug traffic." Likewise, it's effect on organized crime would be negligible.
When the K-State editorialist assures us that there is no danger of America becoming a police state, one must hurriedly ask what we should call our non-police state where police have free access to homes?
The problem is a perplexing one, which bothered Robert Kennedy a great deal and one which, I hope, bothers Attorney General John Mitchell. Mitchell recently announced that curbs had been put on wiretapping, but, as columnist Rowan points out, "He says nothing about the number of electronic devices the FBI planted under the guise of protecting 'national security.' The latter category obviously is the crucial one since Mitchell has claimed that he has the personal power to bug student groups and any other domestic organization which he considers dangerous."
Having an indiscriminate man such as Mitchell claiming such power is alarming, but when that power is distributed freely to police and narcotics officers across the country, the effect is more than alarming. There remains nothing to prevent a magistrate from giving police permission to enter any home without knocking.
Do you have to have something to hide to detest the federal government's making your home its home? No. The accost of the home of anyone is an accost on the liberty of everyone.
Liberty, an over-used word, is an underused commodity. If it is taken away in the pretense of protection, we have destroyed the village in order to save it.
—Mike Shearer
JUSTICE DEPART
WIRETAP
The miracle cure-all
WONDER DRUG!
THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
75 W. All rights reserved 1978
Fountain Hill, Fountain Hill
'Hurry, hurry, hurry!'
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. 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.
Member Associated Collegiate Press
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
OLYMPIC GLOBE
Goo?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon, news conference:
"With regard to Vietnam, we are watching that situation
closely, particularly with regard to inflation. The inflation—I mean we were talking about inflation. I mean infiltration."
hearing voices—
In defense of Fort Hays
To the editor:
Regarding Mike Shearer's "Alphabet Soup" of Dec. 10, I can understand why he disapproves of the Fort Hays Kansas State College questionnaire. From his description of it, I do not care for it very much either.
But I do think that some of his statements were rather extreme and probably were not indicative of his actual beliefs. For example, his statement that "it was only fair that creeps should have a place of their own" certainly sounds as though he is labeling the student population of Fort Hays as "creeps." Perhaps Mr. Shearer knows more about Fort Hays than I, but I think that his blanket condemnation is rather unjust.
I trust that he really does not believe that those attending Fort Hays are "creeps," but I cannot derive my trust from his writing. My trust is based only on the
opinion that one who has risen to the responsible position of Editorial Page Editor of the UDK could not hold such an obviously unfair belief.
Also, Mr. Shearer seems to indicate that he believes to be "dead" those people who are refined, thoughtful, neat, well-groomed, orthodox, well-adjusted, and without problems of alcohol, drugs, or homosexuality. Can he really mean this? Surely, a man in Mr. Shearer's position must know a few people who hold these attributes, and yet are not considered by Mr. Shearer to be "dead," whatever that adjective means in his context.
Thus, it is easier to believe that Mr. Shearer has been somewhat careless about conveying what he thinks than it is to believe that he really thinks what his writing would indicate. I know that he must be very busy turning out the large amount of copy that appears
under his by-line. However, I hope that in the future he will be able to find the time to reflect more carefully on his writing before it is converted into newsprint.
Kent Dannen
St. Joseph, Mo.,
Special Student
* *
To the editor:
The Feb. 10, 1970 UDK carried in the Alphabet Soup column a protest stated in such a tone as to indicate disapproval that "the creeps should have a place of their own"—as the author put it.
I do not care to take a side, but there are some matters of fact I would like to present regarding criteria for judgment and without giving off vibrations of righteous indignation.
1. A person is not a creep for having his own clique preference.
Griff & the Unicorn
AH, HAPPY FLIGHT... LIKE A GRAACEFUL SPARROW, BORNE ALOFT A GENTLE ZEPHYR, I SOAR AMONG THE VAGRANT CLOUDS...
AN HOUR OR SO LATER
GASP!
IM EXHAUSTED!
I'VE GOT TO REST SOMEWHERE... WHEW!
WHEEZE! RANT GASP!
NOW I KNOW HOW LINDBERGH FELT...
BY SOKOLOFF
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970,
University Daily Kansan.
2. The criteria for determining a creep, as presented in the article, is as faulty as the criteria for admissibility to Fort Hays Kansas State College, ergo, a creep is refined, thoughtful, neat, well-groomed, orthodox, well-adjusted (admittedly nebulous), and probably has no problems with alcohol, drugs or homosexuality.
3. Many administrations, of which Fort Hays Kansas State College is probably exemplary of, are simply paranoid and feel quite justified in refusing people they don't understand yet (admittedly unfair as that may be).
On page ten of the same issue of the UDK was an ad by the Equitable Life Insurance Co. with the legend, "Hair. It's not the style that counts, it's what's under it." Human beings of any degree of intelligence should be allowed to be scared if they feel scared. If we are going to pretend to be "just" and "human" instead of protesting injustice and inhumanity, we should cure the victim of its faults.
Lee Drong
Lawrence freshman
**\*\*\***
To the editor
I would like to bring to your attention an article that appeared in a January, 1970, issue of the Wall Street Journal concerning birth control clinics on University campuses. (I'm sorry I can't send you a copy; our papers were thrown out before I cut it out.)
The article mentions a number of college campuses that have set up facilities as part of the infirmary and regular care to the university co-ed. The latest case was at Berkeley, where the Oakland Planned Parenthood had to make some sort of arrangements, for there were so many students, the clinic couldn't handle the other clients. I especially point to this situation, for it is exactly what has happened to the Lawrence Planned Parenthood clinic.
The clinic has had to close because we can't get the volunteers to man the clinic, just for the one night it is open, but the patient load, almost all co-eds, demands we be open at least twice a week.
It seems to me that the University should provide for its own, but when approached, shy away from facing the fact girls want pills. I can think of no better way to get birth control facilities on the campus than to have the paper look into the facts and report in the paper, I think you would find it a very interesting series.
I think it interesting that while typing this letter I've been interrupted by one phone call, a college girl asking where, since the clinic is closed, can she go and TALK with a doctor concerning some type of contraception. Wisely, she didn't want to go to the county health department and just be given some pills without any medical supervision. I think it's a sorry state for both the University and Lawrence.
If I can answer any questions or furnish names for further questioning, I'd be more than happy to.
Mrs. James A. Sherman 1734 Illinois
KNWSAN REVIEWS
PLAYS: Rewarding experience
By MARILYN McMULLEN
Kansan Staff Writer
Outstanding performances and a superb technical crew made the opening performance of "The Rimers of Eldritch" a richly rewarding dramatic experience. Though the play was long, characterizations were maintained throughout and the split-second timing of the scene changes kept interest from lagging.
The play deals with the acceptance and rejection of truth by members of the dying town of Eldritch, Iowa. Each person buries lies under a veneer of rime, which, according to Eva, "Makes everything sparkling white like the hoarfrost of autumn."
Peggy Freisen's portrayal of an old woman losing her faculties, done without the aid of makeup or props, was flawless. Patty McGill and Marilyn Mackey were convincing as two gossiping cronies and Betsy Miller was excellent as a confused and rebellious teenager who came to know the tragedy of trying to grow up too quickly.
The teamwork displayed by the entire cast in developing and maintaining character saved somewhat pat incidents from becoming melodramatic.
The success of the play depends on fine rapport between cast and audience. Lanford Wilson has written a drama using stereotyped smalltown characters to jolt his audiences out of the blindness one develops when living with a situation from day to day. The cast mingles with the audience before the first act, requesting that the audience think of them as real people portraying real people on stage.
The mingling period, though it lasts only a few minutes, is rather tedious if one is not sitting on the periphery of the stage where the members of the cast place themselves.
Wilson has used only the undesirable stereotypes of small-town people. The characters who are not already gossips, whores, or hypocrites, are rapidly becoming tainted by the stagnancy and narrow-mindedness supposedly characteristic of all small towns. However, he has made his point effectively, and leaves audiences with an opportunity and a reason for extensive soul-searching.
FILMS: 'Spirits' visit screen
By RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
Poor Edgar Allan Poe is probably still revolving wildly in his grave from the rash of cheap horror movies which have glutted the market in the past decade, exploiting his name in an almost criminal way. American International Pictures, the chief perpetrator of those outrages (with the aid of Roger Corman and Vincent Price), has now released yet another picture based upon the work of America's great "artist of anxiety."
But "Spirits of the Dead" is different from its predecessors, in execution if not always in quality. It was made in Europe and gives us a trio of Poe stories adapted and directed by three of the continent's foremost film-makers: Roger Vadim, Louis Malle, and Federico Fellini.
Fortunately, the producers knew enough to present the worst of the three first. Vadim uses "Metzengerstein" as an excuse to display his wife, Jane Fonda, in a dizzying succession of kinky costumes. Poe's story, about a medieval prince who has the head of a rival family murdered and then becomes strangely attached to the dead man's huge horse, is somewhat distorted to include a couple of orgies and the suggestion of romance between Jane and her brother Peter.
"William Wilson" is one of Poe's best and most famous works, and Louis Malle treats it with evident respect, even though he turns the title character into a super-cool playboy-sadist. The tale of a cruel young man, pursued through life by his virtuous alter ego, has its exciting moments, including a card game between Wilson (Alain Delon) and a black-wigged Brigitte Bardot, but cannot overcome a poor script and general lack of tension.
The last, and by far the best, of the three adaptations is from a minor story entitled, "Toby Dammit, or, Never Bet the Devil Your Head," and is the first film directed by Fellini in four years, which, in itself, is an event. He has moved the tale into the twentieth century: Terrence Stamp plays a broken-down British actor, brought to Rome to star in "the First Catholic western," and pursued everywhere by
Feb. 13
1970 KANSAN 5
the devil, in the form of a grinning little girl with luridly painted fingernails. In his elegantly horrifying surrealistic style, Fellini does better justice to the Spirit of Poe than the previous two efforts combined, and this suggests that, for the past twelve or so years, the great romantic stylist has been out of his genre. His subtly moving camera, ingenious selection of character types, and mastery of briefly-seen images are far better suited to the horror film than to the psychological "confession films" he has been producing lately. In his last three movies, Fellini's imagery constantly overpowered whatever he had to say, so he is probably better off not trying to say anything.
Vadim and Malle are semitalented hacks, while Fellini is a sensitive craftsman, who at least used to be an artist; those who sit through the first two-thirds of "Spirits of the Dead" will be amply rewarded if they keep their seats to the last.
The Weekend Scene
“THE REIVERS” — Held over for everyone to enjoy again.
"TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN"—The story of an unlucky bank robber, written, directed by and starring Woody Allen.
"TICK . . . TICK . . . TICK . . ."
—An action melodrama set in a small southern town, where the sheriff is none other than big Jim Brown.
"SPIRITS OF THE DEAD"— See review this page.
"FANNY HILL" — Another Swedish skin epic. Those who go probably deserve what they get.
'Baby Maker' to screen
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Robert Wise, who produced and directed "Sound of Music," will star Barbara Hershey in "The Baby Maker" for National General.
Lynn Redgrave signs
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Lynn Redgrave signed with Warner Bros. to star with James Coburn in "Blood Kin."
Let this picture speak for itself!
I
Steve McQueen "The Reivers"
Pavison & Technicolor*
A Cinema Center Films Presentation
A National General Pictures Release.
Eve. 7:20 & 9:25
Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:20
Adult $1.50; Child $7.5
Hillcrest
FRIDAY the 13th
DOUBLE HORROR
MIDNIGHT SHOW!
VINCENT PRICE
in
“THE OBLONG BOX”
In Color
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
“The CONQUEROR WORM”
Starring Vincent Price
In Color
Special "Shock Bonus" for those who stay to the end
ADULTS $1.50
TONIGHT ONLY!
Show Starts
at 11:30
Varsity
TREATHE ... Telephone VI3-1065
FRIDAY the 13th DOUBLE HORROR MIDNIGHT SHOW!
Varsity
THEATRE ... telephone VI-3-1065
"THE IPCRESS FILE" (SUA Popular Film, Fri. and Sat.- Back when spy movies were the rage, this was one of the best. Directed by Sidney J. Furie; 1965.
"THE RIMERS OF ELD-RITCH" (theatre production)see review this page.
KU SYMPHONIC BAND IN CONCERT (Sunday)—Included in the program will be the premier performance of a new work by Claude T. Smith who is also the guest conductor.
CLYDE HOLLOWAY (Sunday)—Holloway performs on the organ in this concert.
WANTED
FOR ASSAULT, ARMED ROBBERY AND
COMMITTING A LEWD AND IMMORAL DANCE
WITH A CHOCOLATE PUDDING.
Now! 7:15 - 9:15
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
PALOMAR PICTURES INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN"
starring
WOODY ALLEN and JANET MARGOLIN
Now! 7:15 - 9:15
Mat. 2:30
Sat. & Sun.
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone V1.3-5788
X
From the country that gave you "I,A WOMAN"
"INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS"
(YELLOW)
'FANNY HILL' is a 'porno-classic!'
— ARCHER WINSTON
"In there with sex and love all the way!"
Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroules
Fanny Hill
Distributed by CINEMATION INDUSTRIES • COLOR by DeLuxe
Mat. DAILY 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V1-3-1065
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S ULTIMATE ORGY
BRIGITTE BARDOT
ALAIN DELON
JANE FONDA
TERENCE STAMP
PETER FONDA
STARRING IN
"SPIRITS OF THE DEAD"
IN COLOR BY BERKEY PATHE FROM AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL
Eve. 7:10 & 9:20
Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:10
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
What happens in a southern town when law and order is in the hands of a black man?
Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents
A Ralph Nelson Film
...tick...tick...tick...
starring Jim Brown · George Kennedy
Fredric March · Panavision' and Metrocolor
Eve. 7:05 & 9:05
Sat. - Sun. Mat. 2:05
Adult $1.50; Child $.75
Hillcrest
PASADENA
Hillcrest
Rockets' owner instrumental in changing Hayes'attitude
NEW VORK (UPI) — Maybe you've heard of a fellow named Bob Breitbard and maybe you haven't, and if you haven't maybe you should because here's a man who did more than maybe save a ball club, he saved a ball player.
The ball player he saved is Elvin Hayes and if you've heard of Breitbard you may figure you see his motive since he is owner and president of the San Diego Rockets who aren't a whole lot now and probably would be much less without Hayes.
Hayes, upset because the lastplace Rockets had dropped their 12th contest in the last 14, was quoted as saying his teammates were "a bunch of losers" and that he wanted to be traded far away from San Diego.
Talks Common Sense
Breitbard and Hayes talked at some length Sunday night. They talked again the next day, and again after that. Breitbard didn't deliver any lectures. All he talked was plain common sense.
"I can't say enough about that
man," Hayes says. "I've never met another human being like him. He doesn't treat me like just anybody, he treats me like a son. He talks to me as if he was my own father. Some of the things he told me I don't think I'll ever forget the rest of my life."
Hayes is sincerely sorry about what happened. He's glad about one thing, though, and that's the attitude of his teammates.
Everything between Elvin Hayes and the San Diego Rockets is fine now. The Rockets are still in the cellar but Hayes firmly believes they are going to get out.
"With all the stuff that was written," he said before Wednesday night's game with Atlanta, "they haven't turned against me. They really care about me, and how do I tell 'em how much I appreciate that? These guys are all winners, every one of 'em, not losers. If they're losers I'm a loser also. I'm not gonna cut these guys down and make myself come out smellin' sweet. If they're dirty, I'm dirty also."
Pilots to stay in Seattle
CHICAGO (UPI)—After weeks of uncertainty and hours of deliberation, American League owners have decided to keep the Seattle Pilots playing baseball in Seattle.
The AL owners came to that decision Wednesday night after two days of meetings, and decided to loan the troubled franchise $650,000 out of the league's treasury with no deadline for repayment.
William Daley, the largest stockholder, said the only difference was that he and his associates, Dewey and Max Soriano, now apparently have a considerable amount of support in Seattle, from ordinary citizens as well as business groups.
The most impressive show of support was from a quartet of businessmen headed by Edward Carlson, a Seattle hotel operator, which bid $9.5 million to take over the team and keep it in Seattle.
The AL owners, in their fourth prolonged meeting over a two-day span, rejected the idea of the Carlson group because they could not accept the philosophy that the team would be operated by a nonprofit corporation which would donate any money it made to various charities.
6 KANSAN
Feb.13
1970
Daley said the $650,000 would get the Pilots into spring training and would allow them to pay bonuses and spring contracts.
"I'm not so sure we'll be a moneymaker in 1970 or 1971, but when we get the domed stadium I'm sure we'll be profitable," Daley said.
Clay to keep belt from new champion
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Cassius Clay said Wednesday he will not present his heavyweight championship belt to the winner of the Joe Frazer-Jimmy Ellis fight because both men have been quoted in news stories as saying they don't want it.
Clay said another reason he wouldn't turn over the belt to the winner is because of the attitude of the New York Boxing Commission.
"I had a call from the Garden matchmaker, Teddy Brenner, saying the boxing commission would not let me go into the ring to donate my belt," Clay said at his home here.
The former champ said he plans to offer the belt to Central High School in Louisville, Ky., for its trophy case. Clay graduated from the school in 1960.
Weekend Special!
MEN'S CHUCKA BOOTS
Reg. $6.99
Sale Price
$5.55
This Weekend Only!
Pay-Less
Self Service SHOES
Hayes thought back to all the commotion he caused.
1300 W.23rd St.
"It wasn't like me," he said. "I felt bad when the stories came out because I think we have a good basketball team and I know we're gonna win, I also feel each individual on the club can be a star so why would I ever call them losers? Look, everybody in the world has said something he didn't mean and was sorry for. I'm sorry about the whole thing and I assure you it's not gonna happen again.
Elvin Hayes' height generally is listed at 6:09 $ _{1/2} $ but that's a mistake.
He has grown some the past week.
based on
William Faulkner's
Intruder in The
Dust
directed by Clarence Brown
Tonight
KU Film Society
Members: Free. Others: 75c
7:00 and 9:00 at Dyche
Use Kansan Classified
Boss's Birthday Sale
11 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY 12 SPENCER'S BIRTHDAY 13 VALENTINE'S DAY
15 Make an Old Man Happy!
Bill Spencer, having had the unfortunate luck of being born on Friday the 13th hopes to brighten his day by offering a great saving on a new or used car to all of his thoughtful KU friends. He will deduct $100 from the cost of any car on the lot to any warm-hearted person who walks in to offer a birthday wish. Even if you don't need a car, stop by and bring a smile to that aged face.
COMPETITION
SPORTS
CARS
East of bridge
on Hgwy. 10
COMPETITION SPORTS CARS East of bridge on Hgwy.10
THE SHOEBOX
Located at the Carriage Lamp at the Malls, The Shoebox features the following specials in eating and entertainment:
(1) TUESDAY—Ladies' Night Out—All unescorted girls receive their beer at half price.
(2) WEDNESDAY—Chicken in a Box—Four pieces of chicken, french fries, butter 'n roll----97c
(3) THURSDAY—Pitcher Night—75c for pitchers all night long.
(4) EVERY DAY Specials:
Bud's Spuds—A delicious blend of butter, cheese ham, and onion combined in a twice-baked potato unique in Lawrence.
★ Shoebox Special-Beef, corned Beef, Ham and Cheese on a sesame bun.
★ 20c off all sandwiches with pitcher.
★ 20c off all sandwiches with pitcher.
★ Double order of french fries or onion rings for regular price.
Come enjoy these specials with a date or friend in the comfortable atmosphere of The Shoebox!
THE SHOEBOX Malls Shopping Center
'Hawks headed towards Valentine date with slumping and injured Wildcats
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor
Saturday is Valentine's Day and the KU Basketball squad has a 7:35 date with the K-State Wildcats—but there will be no hearts or flowers extended between the two as the Jayhawks instead hope to spend the evening by putting on their own Ahearn Fieldhouse version of the famed St. Valentine's Day Massacre with a sound drubbing of the league leading Wildcats.
The game will mark the season's first matchup between the two Sunflower state rivals.
The Wildcats, who have dropped their last two conference games, hold a narrow one-game advantage over the Hawks in the loss column. K-State is 6-2 in league play and KU is 4-3 in conference action.
A Jayhawk victory would not only pull KU even in the loss column but it would also make for one of the wildest conference races in history as a possible six teams would have chances to catch the Wildcats down the stretch run.
But a win over K-State in Manhattan isn't an easy thing. The 'Cats have won 13 straight home court encounters and their last loss in Ahearn Fieldhouse was the 73-67 setback that the 'Hawks handed them last year.
To top things off, the Jay-
hawks, who also boast an unbeaten home record this year,
are not fairing so well on the road and are yet to chalk up a road victory over conference opponents.
K-State is feeling the results of its recent combats with Colorado and Iowa State and it is possible that the Wildcats will not be at full strength Saturday night. The 'Cats entire front line of Bob Zender, David Hall and Jerry Venable returned home battered and bruised from the road swing. Although the three are slated to start Saturday, Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons has said that they may just see limited action against KU.
Hall, a 6-6 center, suffered a severely sprained ankle in the Iowa State loss and didn't play in most of the second half. The sophomore star leads the Wildcats in rebounding with a 9.5 per game average and is third in scoring with an 11.9 average.
Venable, who is bothered with a wrenched back, is K-State's top scorer with a 14.1 mark and he also sports a fine 7.2 rebounding average. The 6-6 forward netted
Swimmers host triangular meet
The KU swimmers host Oklahoma State and Northern Illinois in a double dual meet Saturday at Robinson Gymnasium Natatorium. The meet starts at 2 p.m
Seeking to go over the .500 mark in dual competition the Jayhawks will have a jugged lineup for the meet as coach Dick Reamon gives his defending Big Eight champions an opportunity to swim in other events besides their specialties.
"I'm reasonably pleased with our effort," Reamon said of KU's 90-23 win over Iowa State last week. "The kids' times ought to be a little better. I'm not pleased with the entire squad effort, but we're looking better."
Reamon expressed pleasure in the performances of Scott Skultery, who clocked his best time of the season in the 200-vard backstroke (2:03.0), Steve Rice, who finished second in the 200 and 500 freestyle, and Bob Wright, who hit his season best time in the 200 individual medley (2:03.4).
Kansas is 3-3 in dual meets entering the upcoming triangular.
AU
Jerry Venable
Feb. 13
1970 KANSAN 7
26 points in K-State's win over the Jayhawks last year in Allen Field House.
Zender came away from the Cyclone clash with a sore jaw after tangling with an errant Aaron Jenkins elbow. The 6-7 forward has been a pleasant surprise for Fitzsimmons and is boasting a 13.0 scoring figure and a 7.1 rebounding mark.
signments against the 'Hawks. Webb is averaging 11 points a game while Hughes, the only K-State starter not in double figures, has netted 9 points a game. Terry Snider, 6-3 junior, will also log time against the 'Jays.
David Lawrence has come on strong in recent games and Fitzsimmons says the 6-6 forward will see plenty of action in spelling the front-liners. Playing in a reserve role most of the season, Lawrence has still managed 6 points and five rebounds per encounter.
KU coach Ted Owens feels it is vital for the Jayhawks to win against K-State if the 'Hawks are to claim the conference championship.
"We know we can win the championship," Owens points out, "if we win all the rest of our games."
K-State returns a solid back-court duo from last year that promises to give KU plenty of troubles Saturday night. Wheeler Hughes, a ball-handling magician, and sharp shooter Jeff Webb have both nabbed starting as-
He continued saying, "If we
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were to lose this one, it would put us two games behind in the loss column and, at this stage of the race, it would be extremely unlikely that we could make it up."
straight. We've got to stay with those things and let the chips fall where they may."
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Fitzsimmons is fearful of the extremely explosive KU offense that is tops in the Big Eight. He sums up the Jayhawks' outstanding personnel by saying, "Well, they've got four high school All-Americans on the floor along with Pierre Russell, who's a pretty fair country basketball player. In order to win we've got to go back to the things that were good to us when we won six
Dave Robisch, 6-9 center heading for college All-American honors, will lead the Jayhawks into battle at Manhattan. The southpaw's soft jumpers have produced 1.009 points in his two years of varsity action and his conference average of 29.0 is slightly above the record pace of 28.3 that Wilt Chamberlain set in winning the 1958 scoring derby.
Probable Starters
KANSAS
Stall'sh'(th-8)
Russell (6-3)
Robich (6-3)
Kivisto (6-1)
Nash (6-2)
Proof
aide Starters
position START
Position Venable (6-6)
forward Zender (6-7)
center Hall (6-6)
guard Hughes (6-1)
guard Webb (6-4)
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The following provisions constitute the candidacy requirements of the election procedures for the Student Senate to be held March 17-18, 1970
1. A candidate for the presidency and a candidate for the vice-presidency of the student body must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy at least thirty (30) days prior to the general election. This declaration must be accompanied, if the candidate was not a member of the Student Senate for the semester immediately preceding the general election, a petition signed, with names and student number, by five hundred (500) bonafide members of the student body of the University of Kansas approving the candidacy. Each candidate must pay a five (5) dollar filing fee.
2. Any person wishing to be a candidate for the Student Senate must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy prior to the 2nd of March, 1970. This declaration must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee.Candidates for the Student Senate must run from the school in which they are currently enrolled, and the declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a certification from the office of the dean of the school that the student is in fact enrolled in that school.
3. Declaration and certification forms for candidates for the Student Senate can be picked up at the Student Senate Office or in the office of the dean of each school of the University.
4. Candidates must indicate whether they wish to be identified on the ballots as running as independents or as members of a particular political party or coalition.
5. Class officer candidates must submit a declaration of candidacy and a petition containing the signatures of fifty (50) bonafide members of their class to the president or secretary of the Student Senate prior to the 2nd of March, 1970. Class officer candidates may also indicate their desire to run as part of a coalition.The declaration and petition must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee per candidate.
Professor says training successful so far
Program aids minority businessmen
The University of Kansas School of Business is currently involved in a program in Wyandotte County designed to help minority businessmen called the Business Management Training Program.
Clifford Clark, dean of the school of business, said the program was designed to touch on the basic tools of business and to allow participants to find their potential for business management and expansion of business opportunities.
The program is staffed by four professors from the School of Business: William Bentz, Rick Polley, Gordon Fitch and Charles Saunders. Classes are held each Wednesday night at the Parkwood Community Center in Wyandotte County.
Pollay said the program was financed by Title 1 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 and was
likely to be funded again next year. He indicated it was doubtful that the program would expand, however.
The Business Management Training Program began last fall and was conceived by faculty members of the School of Business and the community development branch of the KU Extension Office.
Clark said the planning began last spring. Research was done last summer by two graduate students in the School of Business from Kansas City, Dick Mensch and John Young.
"Eighty-four people enrolled initially," Polly said, "but about half of them have dropped out. I think one reason for the large drop-out is that some of the people had the mistaken idea that business instructors have the key to making millions."
Although the program is de-
Enrollment predicted to hit 24,000 by 1979
Enrollment at KU will approach 24,000 students by 1979, according to predictions released by Vice-Chancellor for Institutional Planning, George B. Smith.
Smith emphasized that these figures were purely predictions subject to revision and correction. Several separate predictions are compiled and Smith then establishes a mean of the high and low predictions.
The predictions are revised every year with consideration given to many elements that affect the predictions, such as draft laws, tuition increases, economic conditions, availability of housing, decreases in out-of-state enrollment and one factor that is rapidly becoming visible in Kansas, the junior college, Smith said.
Smith said the enrollment predictions for the next five years total approximately 22,000 students. The average increase in enrollment in the last five-year period showed an increase of approximately one thousand students a year. For the next five-year period the predictions show a decrease in average enrollment by approximately 600 students a year.
Smith said one of the factors that plays an important role in the predictions is the actual
Feb. 13
1970 KANSAN 9
in MANHATTAN
after the game Saturday
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through the course and it was very well received. We've seen changes in a lot of the people and many of them are extremely talented," Pollay said.
number of high school age students attending high school. Smith said trends show a correlation between the two figures.
There are a number of methods used to arrive at the predictions, Smith said, all reasonably accurate. He stressed that any arbitrary system could be used providing it produced creditable predictions.
signed for owners of small businesses, many of the enrollees are either employed by a firm or are potential business owners. Polly said the program also had a high
proportion of women.
Pollay indicated that the program thus far had been successful.
"We ran an evaluation midway
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Student appeals to Board
English Department's plagiarism policy queried
By JIM CZUPOR Kansan Staff Writer
Plagiarism at the University of Kansas can warrant any one or all three possible penalties of; failure in the course, suspension from the university and expulsion.
Despite the fact that a working definition of plagiarism constantly remains in limbo, the chance of severe penalties that can be inflicted upon a student for committing such an act is not nullified.
At this moment a case is being appealed to the Board of Disciplinary Appeals by a student (who wishes to remain anonymous) because he plagiarized a theme and received an "F" from the English I course. He now has an incomplete until his appeal is once again heard.
"I just looked through Cliff's Notes," he admitted, "to get some ideas and ended up copying directly from the notes, which he (the teacher) later told me was about 80 per cent of the paper. I wasn't thinking about what I was doing."
After making an appointment with Donald Warders, acting assistant professor of English and Thurston Moore, director of the freshman / sophomore English department, he learned he would fail the course. Moore said he would fail because he had plagiarized on a theme and he did so on an in-class theme, which Moore said is more severe than plagiarizing on out - of - class themes.
Moore advised the student of his right to appeal the decision and he did to Donald K. Alderson,
10 KANSAN Feb.13 1970
dean of men and to the University Disciplinary Board (UDB).
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student has elected to defend the student in question. George said, "I want to make all University regulations consistent and most important I want to get this fellow a grade from the course with the exception of an "F." He didn't deserve an "F."
George says he feels the consistency lacking stretches back and forth between University regulations and the regulations of the English department.
"Now maximum penalty as the University states," George said, "implies a minimum penalty also exists, just as you write down the number one, you expect the number two to follow. But the minimum penalty as such is left up to the English department."
The English department has recorded in its freshman syllabus a maximum and minimum penalty for plagiarism. The minimum is receiving an "F" in the course. The maximum is expulsion from the University. "This," George says, "is directly contrary to the University regulations."
Moore of the English department disagrees with George. The
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partment is rewarding competent cheaters and not the others. The regulations should be applied uniformly or not at all."
Moore defended the English departments' right to give an "F" in the course because it would be unfair to give the cheating student a "C" or "D", he said, when the honest student struggles through the semester unaided to earn a "C."
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As the involved student admits, "I know a lot of people who have plagiarized on out-of-class themes and flunked the theme but got the chance to write it over again.
The student in this case finished with a "C" grade but now has an incomplete. "I don't see any educational value in taking the course over again," he said, "if I already got a "C" out of it."
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glish department makes an arbitrary distinction between more and lesser acts of cheating. In this case the student received a punitive "F."
maximum and minimum penalty, he said, was placed in the syllabus merely as a warning to the student to draw his attention to University regulations.
"Another guy in my house wrote a paper from "Cliff's Notes" and got an "A" on the paper. A friend of his copied the paper and got an "F"; but got the chance to rewrite it. He then got a "C." I don't think the English department is being very consistent."
"There doesn't seem to me to be any discrepancy since the UDB upheld our decision," he said.
Ray Stoneback's
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George said the English department admits having several cases of plagiarism a year but only a very few have received a grade of "F."
On the other hand, Moore said he thought perhaps 10 cases of plagiarism occur every semester and each was handled with a different degree of punishment.
George said, "The English de-
George said he feels, "The En-
Santa Fe
SANTA FE RAILWAY
will interview students at the UNIVERSITY of KANSAS
Wednesday, February 18, 1970 to review
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Santa Fe is a transportation company serving the southwest by rail, truck and pipeline. We have substantial interests in oil, lumber, uranium, coal, real estate and other enterprises, too.
If you would like more information about a career with Santa Fe where the only limit to your future is your desire, ability and effort. arrange for an on-campus interview. We want to talk with you.
Santa Fe offers career opportunities in these departments: Accounting, Finance, Cost Analysis, Railway Operations, Market Research, Real Estate and Industrial Development.
We are looking for individuals with Masters degrees in Accounting, Quantitative Methods, Business Administration Transportation and Marketing or Bachelors degrees in Transportation, Real Estate and Statistics.
Schedule your interview with the University Placement Office and ask for brochure featuring Santa Fe career opportunities.
G.M.D.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
advertisementham are offered to all students with regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
SANDAL SALE—20% off on all custom made sandals until Feb. 15. Be ready for spring! Come now to Primarily Leather, 812 Mass. 2-13
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and DNCO
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder automatic good condition, $525. Call 842-1694. 2-17
For Sale: One man's Naismith Hall contract. Call Mike, 842-6150-73.
02 *Triumph TR-4,* good mechanically,
good build. **20** *best offer*, Call 842-5940.
**2-13**
Very clean 1966 VW 1300 Bug with
very clean oversize snow机
8950. See at 1709 pages 2-46
1968 Ward-Benelli motorcycle, 250 cc
from 2 acre 1416 Tennessee $250 2-16
after 5:00 at 1416 Tennessee $250 2-16
Magnaxov annual sale! Don't miss Magnaxov annual sale! Don't miss stereo, stereos, components, AM-FM stereo radios, transmitters and tape recorders at Mon., Mon. and Thurs. evenings 2-16 Mon. and Thurs. evenings
Tape recorder cassettes reduced 'two hours, only $3.00; 90 min, only $2.50; one hour, $1.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Tues. nite.
Magnavoy deluxe tape recorder sold new at $89.95—used one month, cut to $50.00. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings. 2-16
For Sale: Panasonic stereo tape recorder—practically new, complete with two mikes, accessories, two separators and hear to appreciate. Sold new for $275. now $150. Call John at 842-8237 after 5.00. I need tuition money fast.
For Sale. Concord four-track stereo cassette deck. Used very little, buying a larger tape deck. Comes with jacks, $60.00. Call 842-6844. 2-16
'66 Mustang V-8, low mileage, excellent condition. Very reasonable. Must see to appreciate. 842-9036 after 6:00.
2-16
Recording tapes for sale. All sizes are kinds, $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Shelby—1967 GT500, 4-speed, air conditioning, new polygas tires, excellent condition, low mileage, 2111 Kasold B103, 842-599. 2-16
G.E. portable tablet; $45; soul albums;
$2 each; Topaz ring (5), $40; Playboy
mus (9), $7; ceramic Hawaiian
mus (9), $7; ceramic Mus (9);
43-2854 between 5-10 p.m. 2-16
We Care About 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
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Home of the "Big Shef"
60 Cadillac, good shape, four lighter,
cheap at $99. Call 842-594-90.
2-13
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Two f-78-14 Remington tires, good tread, with or without rims, will fit most GM cars. Make offer. Dennis Miller, 842-7000, Rm: 933. 2-16
Guild Skim Jim 6 string with custom black paint and case; excellent condition; new, $375.00; sell for $215.00.
Call Jim Hemworth VI 3-5770. 2-17
Ampex cassette player and speakers.
Finest in stereo tape systems. In ex-
terior condition $130 or best offer
843-792-3133 for Doug Dunning
or leave message 2-19
**$5 Honda** 25c cc Hawk, runs well or best offer this week. Call **6900**
**6900**
**2-13**
Western Cliv. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Ed., Campus Mad House, 411 W 14th St.
1966 Chevy Impala. Need money real
3009 vary. Need very cheap. Bid 2-17
3097 anytime.
1959 Pontiac, air cond. new battery,
fuel pump, generator, brakes. Needs
TLC. Best offer. 842-9936 after 6 p.m.
17
For Sale: 1966 Corvette. 4-speed, 327-
p.m. p.m., 434-7705. 434-7705.
p.m. $2700. Want bargain.
Valentine Special—3 cushion sofa and matching chair, Reg. Price $259.90; Factory Bedding Outlet Price $199.90; Extra bed set price $199.90; Price $169.90; Early American sleeper $209.90; TV lounge $109.90; Reg size mattress and box spring set $69.90; extra long bed set $89.90; Queen size extra large bed set $79.90; Royal King bed and frame $179.90; factory Bedding Outlet, located 4 doors south of Eldridge Hotel, 843-429-2, 2-13
CORONA DUIMY; neatly mug nuzzle
CORONA DUIMY; neatly mug nuzzle
CORONA DUIMY; neatly mug nuzzle
Kustom guitar amplifier 100W, trem.
takes it. Steve, B42-8068
takes it. Steve, B42-8068
For Sale: Realistic 40 changer, $25;
10-watt realistic stereo Amp, $25;
Regula LKB camera, EE, x-synch,
$35. George, 843-8454.
2-18
Sony TC-8 8-track stereo recorder/ tape deck for sale. Six months old. Like new. Call for Karl at 843- 9072, 6072.
Deluxe 2-speaker stereo FM walnut radio, famous brand reduced from $79.90. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Monday and Tuesday nights, 2-18
Clearance! AM-FM radios, famous brands, entire stock of floor samples reduced—transistors as low as $10.00. Ray Stoneback's, downtown. 2-18
Four new wide radial F70-14 new B.F.
Goodrich whitewall—final cut to 30-
300 plus $2.58 FET each. Ray Stonebac'
back's fast free installation. 2-18
Sunn amp. with two D140F J.BL.
speakers. Gibson EB-O. Bass with
hardshell case. Band broke up. Phone
Ted. 842-7000. Rm. 813. Best offer. 2-18
THE HTE in the WALL
TC-50 pocket cassette-corder, 6 months old, worth $125.00 new; need money, well worth it! Includes 4 phone chargers, remote switch. Call Jim, 843-7404 2-18
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill.
Hot Rod VW, 76 horse, fully set up for gymkhanas, 842-2191
2-19
Austin Healy 3000, Mark III, needs very little work to restore to original condition, 842-2191. 2-19
68 Bridgestone Super. 90, low mileage.
842-2191. 2-19
GROOVY. INFLATABLE FURNITURE—many styles for dors or apartment. Call 842-5801 between 6:30 and 8:00 weekdays. 2-19
WANTED
Wanted: One bass player who sings; one guitarist who sings and any verbera vocalist; two or more interested in organizing a progressive rock band with excellent drummer skills; and all original material to call Chuck, 842-133-0011 time or Rocky, 842-564-55. 2-20
USED PORTABLE CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER: Concord F-50, works by telephone. A cable plug) converter. Includes carrying case, microphone, 2 sets of batteries, charger, and a small will sell to best reasonable offer. Call Huggins at 843-5220 or 842-6600. 2-17
apt roommate wanted for luxury
fitter Reasonable Call 842-748-321
2-17
- Portraits
Either a male roommate or two people to occupy a two-bedroom apartment near campus. No lease. Call 842-6211 2-17
Apartment in exchange for work Call 843-7863. 2-13
- Applications
Interested in a sales career? High earnings and management opportunities. Sign up at Summerfield Business Office. Interviews on Tuesday, February 17, 1970, all day. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.
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515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Q. If you want some honest-to-gooodness 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 2-5510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday ff
NOTICE
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HIXON STUDIO
"Please call for appointment"
Bob Blank, Owner
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Table Tops
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New York Cleaners
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping up to 10' handling. AR & R dealership dealer award. Call 842-2647 evenings 4 to 10.
For the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
926 Mass.
VI 3-0501
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Lapti: VA 3-4032. 5-13
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moeaskins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watch bands, sandals, purses, vests.
Hat straps, socks at 812 MEMORIAL
PRIMARILLY LEATHER
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^{1}$ Mass. St. Washed, dried, and folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for day service. 3-2 SANDLES will adorn sandy enjoy the comfort and durability of sandalands. Over 20 styles to choose or design your own. PRIMARILY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2 Ayn Rand study group been formed:
Ayn Rand study group being formed:
write David R. Cormier, 928 Rhode Island.
2-19
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, $801.1² Mass, $4.00 and up. If Gentlemen, would you like your own English tailor? Suits, sport coats, Blazers, made to measure. Suit prices are based on satisfaction guaranteed. Call 842-4193. Offset printing for yourself, movement or organization at reasonable rates. Bill Lee, 1230 Oread, 842-9402.
Dressmaking and alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2765, 8-1-27
52% of your income tax goes to the centagon-give Melvin less money. Rent the centagon-up (save twice) Gretchen, 843-9653, 12-18 Mississippi after 6 p.m.
2-18
Furniture waxing and other house-
hold work. Flexible hours. Own trans-
portation. $2.00 an hour. 842-4088 en-
vings. 2-16
PERSONAL
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
Girl wants female traveling companion for European tour in March and April, Call 482-2624. 2-13 Use phone is alive and unhappy with the money we saved our clients. Group 801; Mass., Returns 84; up.
Hurry to Henry's
6th & Mo. VI 3-2139
LOST
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9th and Miss. VI 3-9868
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Missing—brown folio case. Important
in the collection.
843-6213 or 842-1871. 2-17
843-6213 or 842-1871. 2-17
TYPING
Thanks—to the person who turned in
the book and gave me advice.
Have fun while learning about world
affairs. Represent a country in the
world. Visit a museum. Call 14, 51 Call
office, UN 4-3761 2-18
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
K
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- pies, paperwriter Pica service, Wica pae. Competent service. M 15. Wright. Phone 843-9554.
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona electric, Call Mrs. Troxcl. 2495 Ridge Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
USED BOOKS—READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Westerns, Comics, Playboy
Films, Graphic Novels, Furniture Store
314 Mass. Book 843-2736. No boating
25,000 books.
TEXACD
For Rent: Two bedroom apartment
completely furnished. University Terrace.
Call 842-1105 and 842-1433. 2-13
Apt., single male, $85 a month, utilities paid. Share bath. 1314 Teen,
842-2161. 2-18
Lost on Hill: Bank pass book, South Norwalk Savings Society. Need urgently. Reward. Call 842-5498 anytime. 2-13
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call VI 3-2818. Mrs. Ruckman.
FOR RENT
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
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Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge
842-1431
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
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Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact:
Shelley Bray
University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
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
Senator exposes threat
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)—A state senator charged today that a bank representative threatened a member of the Senate with intimidation if he did not vote against proposals that would increase tax rates on financial institutions.
Sen. Lester Arvin, R-Rose Hill, told members of the senate Assessment and Taxation Committee he learned of the threat from a fellow senator. According to Arvin, the un-named senator was threatened with financial intimidation by a bank representative, whom he also refused to name.
Arvin refused to make any further comment when questioned by newsmen.
The committee was holding a
One measure would raise the privilege tax on banks and savings and loan associations from 5 per cent to 8 per cent. Another proposal would raise the privilege tax on banks and savings and loan associations $ \frac{1}{2} $ per cent, and impose a surtax of $ 2 \frac{3}{4} $ per cent on net income in excess of $ 25,000.
bearing on three bills that would increase the privilege tax and impose a surtax on banks and savings and loan associations.
Charles Goodell, president of the Kansas Savings and Loan Associations League, told the committee the proposed surtax and privilege tax increases would result in "... one more blow to the housing industry," because of increased rates being passed on to lenders.
Goodell urged the senators to consider delaying implementation of the measures, if they are passed, for at least two years, when he said inflation may be reduced.
Henry Bubb, a Topeka banker and member of the state Board of Regents, also urged delaying the effective date of the measures, if passed.
"This year 1970 is going to be a tough year for financial institutions," he said.
Maurice E. Fager, a Topeka banker, told the committee that the proposed privilege tax increase would result in a 50 to 70 per cent tax increase for some banks, depending on the size of assets.
sanction of a recent Senate Republican caucus.
Bubb was critical of the committee for having killed measures Wednesday that would have imposed a severance tax on gas production, which he said had the
Village, disputed Fager's claim,
since state taxes are deductible
from federal taxes, Bennett argued
that the net increases would
be no more than half the percentages Fager quoted.
Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Prairie
One of the measures being considered would apply the increased taxes toward financing of public schools.
Students burn rules
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—Firemen were called to the scene of a demonstration on the University of Missouri campus Thursday and, amid the laughter and cheers of students, doused a blaze of 20 smoldering university regulation pamphlets.
The scene of the noon-hour demonstration involving about 100 students was in front of the Student Union Building.
A student activist group — the Committee of Concerned Students—staged the demonstration to show a portrayal of the "trial and execution" of students for breaking the school's "intervisitation" rule.
The play condemned the university's Board of Curators for the "intervisitation" regulation
which prevents men students from entering the rooms of coeds.
Following the play, the students burned 20 copies of the M-Book, which contains the rule they oppose.
12 KANSAN Feb. 13
1970
The University of Missouri—Columbia has a student population of 20,000 and many of the students were passing the Student Union Building as the demonstration was in progress.
The CCS also planned another demonstration Thursday night in front of the university's famed "Columns" in hopes of gaining support for another intervisitation.
Harold Condra, university housing director, Wednesday turned over to Dr. Jack Mathews, dean of students, the names of students who participated in intervisitation protests last Friday.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.79
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, Feb. 16, 1970
Black affairs committee a 'possibility'
By TOM SLAUGHTER
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., revealed in a Kansan interview, the possibility of the creation of the Chancellor's Black Affairs Committee.
Chalmers said the committee would be under the auspices of the Chancellors office, consequently it would not be subject to approval by the Student Senate or the University Senate.
The announcement came from a question regarding the status of the request for a Dean of Black Student Affairs made by the Black Student Union earlier this year. Concerning the request, Chalmers said, "My impression from the black students on the campus, is that creating such a single post or person does not adequately meet the needs of black students."
Chalmers went on to say, "It is quite possible that what our black students recognized, is that a single person, no matter what he was called, doesn't solve the problems that black students encounter on a predominately white campus, and it may in fact require a multiplicity of people. Perhaps what you need more than anything else is a coordinating group that draws these people together."
Chalmers said action is being taken now in hiring blacks in three University offices, the Dean of Men; the Dean of Women; and the Office of Admissions. Besides these three posts the Chancellor employs a black, Phillip Gary, as an adviser on Urban Affairs.
Chalmers said the black committee would relate to the non-teaching and non-research functions of the university. Asked if he thought the committee would serve the needs of blacks better than a dean, Chalmers said, "Yes, because they are diverse needs. They are needs in terms of finding self-help and in evaluating admissions from a different perspective."
Concerning admissions, Chalmers said, "We are no longer asking what an ACT score means, when the ACT is standardized against a middle class, northeastern population of white students."
Chalmers said the University must talk to other sources who know the black students background and the specific problems they may have had, and take these problems into account when the University considers the black student for admission.
"This approach calls for a different kind of admissions program, and people
who have the sensitivity to make these new approaches are needed in several areas of the University." Chalmers said.
Chalmers said he has been working with BSU and maintaining a continuing dialogue concerning the various problems and issues that concern them. Chalmers said he has asked the BSU to submit two names of students to sit on the committee. Chalmers was quick to say that the BSU had never made a demand of him, "I want to point out most seriously that the BSU have never since I've been here, issued a demand."
Chalmers said the membership of the committee would consist of two undergraduates, two graduate students, two faculty members, and two black administrators. Chalmers said he is waiting for a meeting of the black graduate students to nominate two representatives to the committee.
Chalmers said there is a possibility that the chairman of the committee would also serve as the chairman of the department of Black Studies, if that department is added within the structure of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Chalmers said the committee could act as a sounding board for grievances of the black students on campus.
Chalmers said, "It is important that the committee have a charge and a method for replacement of appointments year by year in the future."
Chalmers said the committee would not, and could not, be totally responsible for the hiring of black faculty, because the faculty members of the specific departments should be compatible with the members of their own departments, but the black faculty should not be wholly incompatible with the black students.
When asked if a Dean of Black Student Affairs would be a panacea of the problems of the black students on campus, Chalmers said, "No, not for me, I think it is becoming clear to everyone that one person doesn't begin to meet the needs of the black students. Until they are met in these several ways, there will always be gaps."
Speaking of the BSU Chalmers said, "Involved groups can't be ignored." He said a balance between black students and faculty should be reached in all areas of the university, through "a joint process of cooperation. The resulting new appointments will be the group who reaches out to find other areas of need and concern in the university community."
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Carswell vote due
WASHINGTON—The fate of G. Harrold Carswell's Supreme Court nomination and a constitutional amendment to reform presidential elections neared decision today in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The committee scheduled a vote on a motion to send the Carswell nomination to the Senate floor for confirmation or rejection.
Pullout investigation begins
WASHINGTON — The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is beginning a brand new phase of its struggle to unlock the mysteries of Vietnam—this one geared to how to get out rather than why we got in.
Members will turn their attention this week to the details of U.S. entanglement in the political fabric of South Vietnam to try to find out whether the props would be knocked out from political programs designed to quell rebellion should the thousands of Americans involved pull out.
SANTO DOMINGO—A Dominican Airways DC9 jetliner with 102 persons lost power in one engine and crashed into the Caribbean moments after takeoff Sunday night.
Plane crashes; 102 dead
WASHINGTON—Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird says "Vietnamization" is proceeding "ahead of schedule" in South Vietnam and more U.S. troop pullouts can be expected because of continuing progress.
More troop pullouts seen
'Seven' jailed
CHICAGO (UPI)—The jury in the trial of the "Chicago Seven" ended its second day of deliberations without reaching a verdict Sunday night. The chief defense lawyer was sentenced to more than four years on contempt charges and all the defendants were jailed on similar counts.
The panel of 10 women and two men met for $9 \frac{1}{2}$ hours Saturday and began again at 9 a.m. CST Sunday. There were no indications from the jury room whether they were split on a verdict.
U. S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman meted out his own justice in sentencing William M. Kunstler, 50, the flamboyant civil rights lawyer from New York who has upbraided the judge
throughout the trial, to four years and 13 days in jail.
Hoffman called Kunstler the kind of attorney who has "a stimulating effect on the increase of crime." He also dealt out a contempt sentence of a year, eight months and five days to the other defense counsel, Leonard I. Weinglass, 33, New York.
But he stayed execution of the lawyers' sentences until May 4 because they must lead the inevitable appeals of the defendants' contempt sentences and, if the jury returns a guilty verdict, of their conviction.
Moves were launched almost immediately to overturn the contempt citations the 5-foot-5, 74-
year-old judge imposed Saturday and Sunday.
Kunstler announced that a legal team composed of seven prominent lawyers would fight the contempt sentences. At a news conference, he introduced the group's chief, Morton Stavis, administrative counsel of the law center for constitutional studies in New York.
Stavis said many different avenues of appeal would be followed, but the first thrust would be to gain bond for the "seven" and to establish Hoffman's "obvious and deep personal involvement in the case."
The Supreme Court has ruled, Stavis said, that judges who hold (Continued to page 12)
Bill of rights discussed
The University of Kansas may no longer automatically notify parents of their youngsters' grades, if the proposed code of student rights, responsibilities and conduct is approved.
The Student Senate committee on student rights, privileges and responsibilities discussed that change of policy and other matters in the proposed code Friday night. The code is to be presented to the Student Senate Feb. 25.
Present University policy, said Kelly is to automatically report grades of single students under 21 years of age to their parents or guardian.
Kelly said this change in policy could save both time and money.
Chris Morgan, committee chairman and Emporia law student said the relationship is between the University and the student, not the parents.
During the committee's discussion of other provisions relating to student records, Kelly said that he and Mrs. Agnes R. Barnhill, assistant to the registrar, are the only persons in his office authorized to release transcripts on the basis of telephone requests.
He said that federal investigators asking to see student records must present, in addition to their identification, proof in the form of instructions that they have been assigned to make background checks in connection with possible employment of the persons whose record is involved.
In these cases, Kelly said, transcripts and academic information are made available to the investigators without written authorization from the former student. It is assumed that the person is competing for a job, that he would want the material released and that more people would be harmed by the delay in seeking authorization than are hurt by making the information available.
Also questioned by Kelly was the code which apparently would have barred the University from disenrolling students refusing to pay fines or hospital bills.
Current policy, said Kelly, is to let a student enroll even though he may owe fines and bills from the previous semester.
Singer Buffy Sainte-Marie to be featured
Festival of Arts coupons still on sale
Student Union Activities will continue coupon sales beginning Wednesday in the SUA office for the fourth annual Festival of the Arts.
About 22,000 coupons, which entitle each coupon holder to attend the six performances, were sold during registration, said Darrell Reed, Leawood senior and SUA Festival of the Arts chairman.
Martin Ritt, film director; Lawrence Ferlinghetti, poet and novelist; the New York Rock Ensemble; Barbara Rose, contributing editor to "Artform Magazine;" and singer Buffy Saine-Marie will be featured at the festival.
All performances begin at 8
p. m. in Hoch Auditorium.
Martin Ritt will discuss his current work including his adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Howard Slacker, "The Great White Hope." The play is the story of a Negro prize fighter.
Other Riff productions include "Hud," "Edge of the City," "The Long Hot Summer," and Hemingway's "Adventures of a Young Man." His most recent film, "The Molly McGuires," is now being released.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, whose book of poems, "A Coney Island of the Mind," is now going into its sixteenth printing with a quarter million copies in print,
will present a reading of his work March 31.
Ferlinghetti's novel, "Her," published in 1960, is now in its seventh printing. Other poetry books by the author are "Starting from San Francisco" and "Unfair Arguments with Existence."
His numerous poetry readings in both this country and abroad include appearances at the Berlin Literary Colloquium and the poetry evening at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
Performing April 1 will be the New York Rock Ensemble, a quintet noted for performing classical selections before intermission and coming back after the break with rock adaptations of their earlier pieces.
Barbara Rose will discuss her views about the uses of modern art April 2.
and cello; Brian Corrigan,
rhythm guitar; Clifton Nivison,
lead guitar; Martin Fultrman,
drums and oboe and Michael
Kamen, piano.
An evening of modern dance will be presented by the Luces Hoving Dance Company, April 3 The Holland-born Hoving began his career as a member of the Jooss Ballet, later going to the Jose Limon Dance Company where he achieved fame for his portrayal of characters in "The Moors' Pavance" and "Emperor Jones."
Survey reveals sentiment about language requirement
Figures concerning a survey to determine student opinion of the foreign language requirement at the University of Kansas indicate that of students who participated in the survey two-thirds of freshman and sophomore students favoring a change want the requirement abolished.
In the junior and senior range, dissent seemed to be evenly divided between those who merely wanted a requirement change and those who wanted it abolished entirely.
The figures represent only students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said Robert Duncan, a coordinator of the survey.
The Committee on Language Research, a part of the North College Student Advisory Board, sponsored the survey.
Over 4,000 surveys were received from students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Duncan said. He said because the
Blending classical with contemporary, the group boasts three Juilliard trained musicians. Last summer the ensemble sold out three shows at Stanford University.
2 KANSAN
college has the highest amount of required hours in a foreign language, the committee has first analyzed surveys from students in the College.
Comprising the ensemble are
Dorian Rudnytsky, bass guitar
Feb.16 1970
with his own dance company the last few years, he has served as choreographer for such companies as the Juilliard Dance Ensemble, New York; Bright Culberg Company, Sweden; and Kurt Joos Folkwang Dallet, Germany.
Duncan said students were asked to give their own comments and that many indicated they wanted improved courses—courses including studies of the culture and philosophy of a foreign country. The survey also showed many students favored lessening the amount of classes and making teacher choices more selective.
Buffy Sainte-Marie, a Cree Indian noted for her songs portraying her feelings about injustice to her people, will climax the festival April 4.
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Hoving has made four overseas tours with the company under the auspices of the State department. He has appeared frequently in New York on Broadway, on television and in concert.
What?—1-12 months on Tropical Island
When?—Now
He has been awarded choreographic grants by the U.S. National Endowment of the Arts and the Dutch government. Hoving is a member of the Juilliard School faculty.
Where? Unspelled Caribbean Island
Why?—Why not?
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Railroad stops westbound trains
The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad has announced it will discontinue westbound trains numbers 23 and 24. It will eliminate stops between Newton, Kansas and Belen, New Mexico.
Irv Robinson, Prairie Village junior and travel director of Student Union Activities, said students who will be affected by the discontinuation of the trains can attend a public hearing to be held in Topeka. The hearing is scheduled at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in room 307 of the Post Office Building, 5th and Kansas Ave.
KU professor gets research grant
Gary L. Lage, KU assistant professor of pharmacy, received a $16,587 grant from the National Heart and Lung Institute to continue research into compounds used in heart treatment. Lage will study the metabolism and distribution of cardiac glycosides to determine how they can be made safer.
Grant given to Medic Center prof
Pedro S. Toledo, research associate in the department of otolaryngology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, has been given a $8,940 grant from the Deafness Research Foundation for the first year of a project aimed at finding cures for deafness.
Since his association with the Medical Center, Toledo has been a part of a research team which developed an improved method for the study of the inner ear.
Doctor talks to therapy club
The Physical Therapy Club will have its first spring meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine room of the Kansas Union.
The speaker will be Byron Walters, a staff physician from Watkins Hospital. The title of his speech will be "Physical Therapy in General Medicine Practice."
Norwegian professor to lecture
Ove Arbo Hoeg, professor of botany at the University of Oslo, Norway, will lecture at the University of Kansas today and Tuesday.
His speech today, "The Fossil Flora of the Devonian Era," will be at 4:30 p.m. at Snow Hall in room 222. Tuesday he will discuss "The Flora and Vegetation of Norway." at 7 p.m. at Snow Hall in room 443
This program is sponsored by the botany department of the University.
The programs are open to students, faculty and the public.
Guard deadline approaches
Due to a recruiting ceiling, men with no prior service have until March 1 to fill approximately 200 openings existing in the 69th Brigade of the Kansas National Guard.
Staff Sgt. Gerald McConnell of the Lawrence National Guard unit said that after March 1 a recruiting ceiling will go into effect and only men with prior service will be considered for enlistment. He said that men with prior service in either the Army or Marine Corps will be eligible for enlistment after the recruiting ceiling goes into effect.
The University of Kansas is currently involved in a program financed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) designed to conduct research in the area of citizen participation in urban problems.
KU participates in HUD urban observatory program
The program, called the Urban Observatory, began last September and pairs cities with universities in studying urban problems and citizen participation. The currently involved in a program University of Missouri at Kansas City and KU are jointly involved with Kansas City, Mo. and Kansas City, Kan, in the midwest observatory.
The Kansas City Observatory is organized into a corporation called the Not for Profit Corporation. It consists of six members including the KU representative, Clifford Clark, dean of the School of Business. Other members are the UMKC representative and city officials from Kansas City, Mo. and Kansas City, Kansas.
Baltimore, Atlanta, Nashville, Milwaukee and Albuquerque were initially chosen as participants by the National League of Cities.
Clark said the purpose of the observatory is to examine the way in which urban dwellers express opinions and influence their environment.
The research phase of the program, at KU is conducted by a group of seven students in American Studies. Forrest Berghorn, associate professor of American Studies, advises the group and is available for consultation, although the students make the final decisions.
Peace Corps week termed a success
Peace Corps week at the University of Kansas was a complete success, Mario Karr, KU Peace Corps representative, said Sunday.
The Peace Corps program had two parts, Karr said—informing the public about the Peace Corps and recruiting.
Karr said he would not know the number of volunteers from KU until next week.
The Peace Corps recruiting team will be at Kansas State University next week. This is part of the program established for Peace Corps month in Kansas Karr said.
Room equipped for heart studies
Located on the fourth floor of Sudler Hall in the medical clinic area, the room is especially designed for cardiovascular teaching of staff and postgraduate programs. Cardiovascular study involves the heart and blood vessels.
A cardiovascular room has been built and equipped at the University of Kansas Medical Center with memorial funds from the family and friends of the late David N. Sosland of Kansas City.
Feb. 16 KANSAN 3
1970
Seating about 40 people, the room is equipped with the following teaching aids: a combination slide and opaque projector; an analytical motion picture projector, which is used to project x-ray motion pictures of the heart; two banks of x-ray view boxes which can be operated from a central control near the speaker; ultraviolet light to illuminate fluorescent chalk on a blackboard; a closed circuit television screen and a teaching oscilloscope which enables everyone in the room to listen to and view the tracings of heart murmurs of a patient, or hear audio tapes of heart sounds.
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Berghorn said the group has produced a conceptual design for studying citizen participation groups and an indexed bibliography of literature on citizen participation. These will be used for research by all the urban observatories when the final report is submitted next fall.
"The next step for the research group will be to go into Kansas City for actual contact with citizen groups to test the conceptual design," Berghorn said. The research group has been mainly
concerned with defining citizen participation groups according to characteristics such as age or sex, he said. "Other urban observatory groups may be using a different focus," he said.
Berghorn said he believes the observatory has been useful in getting the students involved in urban affairs research and acquainting them with city government. He said the findings of all the observatories will be made public.
Films show phenomena simulated by computer
The department of physics and astronomy, in cooperation with computer sciences at the University of Kansas, will present three films on computer simulation this week.
The films, entitled "Computer Fluid Dynamics," "Dynamics of Disc Galaxies" and "Plasma Instabilities," show computer simulations of various scientific problems.
Tom Armstrong, assistant professor of physics, said the full-color films were taken from computer graphic readouts and visually show particular scientific phenomena that could not be
simulated by any other means.
For example, Armstrong said, the film on disc galaxies shows the type of movement that takes many thousands of centuries to occur in a star system such as ours. The film condenses in five minutes what takes millions of years to occur naturally.
Armstrong said this particular film was easy for anyone to understand, whereas the other two films were more technical but still worth-while to people interested in computer sciences.
The films will be shown at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 238 Malott. There will be no admission charge.
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As we go to press, nobody has found a use for the rear deck of a conventional sedan, except of course pigeons.
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KWSAN COMMENT
More cheap thrills
Looking through a strange magazine the other day, I ran across a picture of a really beautiful blonde. Slowly my eyes moved to the bold headlines on the same page and I was immediately puzzled.
"Just add air," it said, "and she's ready for real action."
Well, I looked at the blonde again. I'm not sure just exactly what I was expecting to find, but I didn't. I mean I didn't find anything particularly unusual about her.
This was certainly startling. Never before had I seen a girl's picture with a headline that said, "Just add air." But then I'd never read this magazine before, either. I was at a friend's place, you know, and this was the only thing he had around to read.
Not that I'm apologizing, understand. I consider myself free to read anything I want. I just want you to know that I don't read girlie magazines all the time.
Anyway, I read on and discovered that the blonde was really only a doll—an inflatable doll that sells for about ten dollars. But she wasn't any ordinary old inflatable doll, not by any means. She was the "ultra deluxe model."
This amazing inflatable doll even wrote her own advertising copy. Listen to what she had to say about herself:
"I'm completely life-like in every detail . . .
My soft, life-like body is flexible and bendable.
Let me be your loving companion . . . I know you will love playing with me."
The ad specified that she stands five feet four inches tall and measures 37-23-36. I had to admit that for ten dollars she sounded like a bargain. But in spite of all of her many attributes and her modest price, I knew that this doll just wasn't my type. And I began wondering just what kind of people her customers might be.
Using my orthodox reasoning, I decided first of all that most of the customers would be men. But what kind of men? I struggled for an answer and finally, being an optimist myself, I came up with a heartening theory.
Yes, the answer was obvious. The man that would buy an inflatable doll was an ecology-minded man. Probably the most critical problem facing the world today is the soaring population. And although this doll could do a lot of surprising things, I really doubted if she could become pregnant. I wasn't certain, of course, but I doubted it.
This was definitely good news—a potential solution to a threatening problem. This doll possessed all the major qualifications. She was
cheap, appealing, and sterile. It would be simply a matter of educating the public—introducing slogans like, "A doll in every home." Yes, this was an exciting idea. I went next door to explain it to my neighbor, who I have always considered a logical man.
"Perversion!" he shouted
"Ecology," I said.
"Perversion!" he repeated.
He had a point. I'd thought that doll advertisement was kind of odd when I first saw it, you know. Maybe the men who bought that doll weren't even interested in ecology. They might have bought the doll even if she wasn't sterile.
But why else would a man prefer a doll instead of a real, live woman? Possibly. I thought, because a doll doesn't present any obligations or responsibilities. A man can enjoy his doll and then shove her in a closet. With the doll, a man does not have to compromise his freedom.
"No one in his right mind cares that much about freedom," my neighbor said when I told him about my idea. He'd heard of people becoming slaves to their own desire for freedom, but this situation was much worse, he said. They're just a bunch of dirty old men who go out and buy dolls because no real woman will have anything to do with them," he explained.
Being an optimist, I just couldn't accept that statement. I've always believed that for every dirty old man, there is an equally dirty old woman. If I'm right, it seems that they ought to be able to get together, unless there's some kind of a communication gap.
Communication! I knew that I'd found the key at last. When confronting the opposite sex, too many people are still trying to be subtle. The trouble is that the world is now moving too fast for subtlety to be effective.
"We've got to have signs." I said.
"Signs, what signs, signs of what?" my neighbor asked.
"But what kind of signs?" he asked,
"Signs that say, I'm Looking for a Dirty Old Woman,' or even 'I'm Looking for a Replacement for My Inflatable Doll.'" I said. "We've just got to get these people together!."
Sorel's News Service
"But what about ecology?" my neighbor asked.
"The hell with ecology." I said. "We've got to stamp out all this perversion."
Joe Naas
"It's very far away. It takes about half a day. To get there, if we travel by my dragonfly."—Jimi Hendrix
Where it's at
Pepperland, Oz, Nirvana, Euphoria. They've always seemed a little abstract to me. I've wanted to go, but I could never understand exactly where they are. Even Jimi's directions confused me more than they helped.
But I've been enlightened. Yes, I know where it's at now. Fort Hays. That's right. Fort Hays. If the whole town is like the college, and it probably is, then Fort Hays is a citadel of peace. The college admission questionnaire says that everyone there is "solid, clean-cut, and well-groomed." They keep it like that by trying to keep out people who might have problems.
Waste?
—Joe Naas
LONDON (UPI)—Five British garbage men have won Sir Winston Churchill memorial trust grants of $3.600 to travel abroad and see how other countries collect and dispose of their refuse.
Oh wow. A land of perfection. Now if I can just locate my . . . uh . . dragonfly.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Acceptance is based on an online class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. All fees charged to the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . Mel Adams
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks
Advertising Managers Larry Cates, Joanne Bos
advertising Manager Oscar Bassisson
Classified Market Sheila
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser... James W. Murray
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editor Ted Illiff
News Editor Joe Bollard
Educational Editors Mike Shearer Joss Nass, Michael Carnahan
Sports Editors Bruce M carnahan, Steve Shriver
Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkens
Wire Editor Kee Cummins
Hardware Page Editors Linda Lovd, Cameron Wheatley
Arts and Reviews Editors Genelle Richards, Rich Geary
Assistant Campus Editors Vicki Phillips, Niila Walker
Assistant News Editors Donna Shrader,
Photographers Ron Season, Brian Stewart
Member Associated Collegiate Press
1869 King Features Syndicate Inc. World rights reserved.
WASHINGTON—The F-111, the Air Force's swing-wing attack plane, has yet another "serious shortcoming." This latest flaw—an inadequate wing box—will require overhauling 450 planes at an expected cost of $80 million. A Senate Appropriations subcommittee also revealed that the F-111, which has cost more than three times the original estimate, is "seriously short in engine power for non-nuclear missions." But, says vice-commander of the Air Force Systems Command John W. O'Neill: "The F-111 is a very good airplane."
It's Superbotch
hearing voices一
To the editor:
The demonstrations against ROTC last year, and the moratoriums and anti-war demonstrations of this year certainly illustrated an apparently intense desire on the part of many people (especially in the moratoriums) to bring an end to the war in Vietnam. The ROTC question is being hashed over and the war continues. It is time to be realistic.
In effect, every person demonstrating against the war, by the mere fact that he exists, is an integral part of the basic problem that caused that very war to start and is enabling it to continue.
The demonstrations were aimed at the wrong target
I am not justifying war. But if this problem and others (pollution, pesticide poisoning, famine, etc.) are to be alleviated, the basic cause must be alleviated, that being over-population.
I challenge every single person who participated in anti-ROTC demonstrations and moratoriums to give at least as much active support to the movement for population control. Not to do so would be hypocrisy, unless the anti-war movement is just an immature fad packed with insincerity.
I further challenge every one else to move into action. The population problem is every one's problem. But remember that concern is fruitless unless one takes action toward correcting the situation. Join the "Zero-Population" organization, write senators and congressmen, write school-board members and teachers from home-town schools urging that proper education in population control be started now, early enough to sustain the movement generation after generation.
The scope of the human-survival problem is finally being realized. Time is running out. Do something.
Robert E. Fisher
Auburn, Neb., sophomore
$$
★★
$$
To the editor:
To the extent that publicly demonstrated ignorance is proof that Kansas should spend more money on education, Mike Shearer's, "Money, money, money..." editorial in the Thursday, February 10 UDK demonstrates much more money on education must be spent to provide an adequate education even at the State's largest university.
For Shearer's benefit, as well as the benefit of others who have been "absent" from the state for several years, the central controversy is not whether schools need more money but, rather, where it shall come from. The question, in large measure, is whether to retain the outmoded and inefficient tax on real property as the basis for local school finance or to abandon it in favor of an income tax with equalizing factors between school districts. The issue is not, as Shearer immaturely and dogmatically states, whether, "...Kansas' schools can look forward to sinking into the slime of insufficiency," but whether the tax burden of excellent schools will equitably be shared by all or inequitably borne by those with the most real property: the farmers.
Since Shearer has not seen fit to provide us with facts, we must therefore guess that the property tax lid proposal he is against is not the property tax lid embodied in current House Bill 1851 which would impose not so much a property tax lid as a statutorily open path to enactment of sales and income taxes by local units of government. The property tax lid proposal that Shearer thinks he is against would ultimately raise more revenue than retention of the present real property tax. Could it be that Shearer has not read the property tax lid proposals?
Philip Ridenour
Third year law student
Admire, Kansas
Patricia Ridenour
Third year law student
Peabody, Kansas
FORD
Photo by Ron Bishop
It was generally a bad day
Friday the 13th was generally a bad day as seen by the persons who were involved in the more than 25 minor accidents reported by the Lawrence Police Department. These unlucky persons met each other with the help of a snowy evening and slick street at the intersection of Sunflower Road and Sunnyside Avenue.
New city library proposed
A new library may be in sight for the city of Lawrence.
Residents will vote March 3 on a $1,575,000 bond issue for a new Lawrence Public Library. The issue, if approved, will provide for a new library building and other needed library facilities.
The problems with the present building are many, said Karen Ashim, circulation assistant at the library. Foremost is the lack of space. Every month books must be stored because there is no space for them, Miss Ashim said.
Space also is lacking for adult education classes and the children's story hour. Children now meet in offices or in the basement, she said, because there are no rooms for them.
Other problems with the present building that she cited were limited office work space, a lack of seating facilities (there is seating for only 29 patrons), leaking in the basement and children's room when it rains, and a flight of stairs to the entrance which is an inconvenience for the aged and handicapped.
The $1,575,000 bond issue, if passed, would cost the taxpayer an estimated $2.52 for each $1,000 of assessed valuation, based on the 1969 assessed valuation of the city.
Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism and chairman of the publicity committee working for the approval of the new library, said, "With constantly increasing building costs, it will be more economical to construct the new library at this time."
sale of the existing library facilities upon completion of the new building, elimination of costly maintenance and repair which is required for the existing building, and elimination of duplication of staff in the adult and children's areas of the library," he added.
"Further savings to property owners will be realized with the
The location of the prospective library is the south side of 7th Street between Vermont and
Feb. 16
1970 KANSAN 5
Lawrence residents will vote in March in their regular polling places on approval of the bond.
Kentucky, north of the police-fire station.
"The University needs public relations."Awbrey said, "if nothing else than just to educate kids. Major speakers brought in for homecoming would get big coverage throughout the state."
Awbrey said he thought there should always be a queen because she was a symbol.
Homecoming revision suggested by Awbrey
"Homecoming should be applicable to the University today," Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said Thursday. "Instead of a cute girl, trashy house decorations and a poor football team, the alums should see the University as it is in 1970."
"We need to get younger people interested; we should have an equal number of juniors and seniors as well as freshmen and sophomores," said Mark Rotonde, chairman of the finance and auditing committee and president of Interfraternity Council.
Awbrey said a homecoming chairman and committee are vitally needed to work on revising of the present set up.
Awbrey said there are a limitless amount of things to do. Possible ideas for a revision of homecoming are to bring in major speakers, a concert, community service projects, a week similar to Festival of the Arts, a carnival in the Student Union or a political week.
"The queen should be a more active type person," he said. "She should represent the University; become a person, instead of a sex symbol."
ENDS TUESDAY
"rib
cracking comedy"
—JUDITH CRIST,
TODAY SHOW
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY
AND RUN"
FROM THE AMERICAN
COLOR / BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC
DISTRIBUTED BY CERAMA RELEASING CORPORATION
* Granada
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5782
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY
AND RUN"
FROM THE AMERICAN
BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.
COLOR 06 / BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.
"rib
cracking
comedy"
—JUDITH CRIST,
TODAY SHOW
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY
AND RUN"
FROM THE AMERICAN
COLOR / BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.
DISTRIBUTED BY CINEMAMA RELEASING CORPORATION
7:15 & 9:15
Sat. & Sun. Mat.
2:30
Granada
THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5788
From the country that gave you "LA WOMAN"
"INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS"
(YELLOW)
'FANNY HILL' is a "porno-classic!" — ARCHER WINSTON
"在 there with sex and love all the way!" — N.Y. Post
Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroules Present
Fanny Hill
new... and from Sweden
Distributed by CINEMATION INDUSTRIES · COLOR by DeLuxe
Mat. DAILY 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone 1-3-1065
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI-3-7065
the Rimers of Eldritch
february 12
february 21
1970 —
8:20 P.M.
experimental theatre
UN4-39
82
KU and Lawrence policies for check cashing tighten
By CURT CHAUDOIN
Kansan Staff Writer
There is no need for alarm when cashing a check in Lawrence or at the University of Kansas, provided you have the proper identification and adequate funds in the bank.
The University and most Lawrence bank and businesses have established check cashing policies for KU students.
The Kansas Union check cashing policy includes the following rules:
● No second party checks from students may be cashed.
- Two party checks from parents and payroll checks other than the Union may be cashed. The limit is $100.
● Personal checks may be cashed, up to a $50 limit.
● Fees for cashing checks are 10c for checks up to $10, 15c for checks up to $25 and 20c for checks up to $100.
The only identification required for cashing checks at the Union is a KU identification and registration card.
When an insufficient funds notice is received by the Union, a notice is sent to the student. If the check is not covered after two notices, the student's name is sent to the Business Office and put on the accounts receivable billing. His records are held until the bill is paid.
The Business Office has a similar check cashing policy, which includes:
- Student checks are limited to $25 because of the limited funds available to cash checks. The Business Office is budgeted for $6,000 in checks per day.
- No second party checks may be cashed, except from parent or guardian.
- The charges on checks cashed are 10c for checks up to $25, 15c for checks up to $50 and 25c for checks up to $100. There are no charges on returned checks.
Richard Steffens, manager of school accounts, said the Business Office is allowed to send checks returned for insufficient funds through the banks twice.
If a check cannot be cleared, said Steffens, a notice is sent to the student. If no answer is received, the student's name is placed on the student accounts receivable list. A hold is then placed on his records. The student may enroll for the following semester, but he will be notified later in the semester of his delinquency in payment of the check.
Both the Union and the Business Office will cash out of state checks.
Businessmen in Kansas are protected from bad checks by an insufficient funds check law. The law states that if a person is delinquent in payment of a check and due notice has been sent to him in the form of a registered letter, and if he does not cover the check in 7 days, the sheriff
Canadian to give Humanities talk
A Canadian literary critic and scholar who has been awarded 19 honorary degrees by American and Canadian universities will give a Humanities Series lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday. Northrop Frye, Distinguished University Professor at the University of Toronto, Canada, will speak on "The Humanistic Era" in the new Woodruff Hall in the Kansas Union.
Frye will participate in a forum arranged by Student Union Activities at 10:30 am. Friday. The topic of the forum will be "Satire."
During his visit to KU, Frye will also speak to an advanced class in literary criticism and a theater colloquium.
or county attorney may take legal action.
William Teemer, manager of Kroger Family Center, said 40-50% of their business is from KU students. Kroger's check cashing policy towards KU students is the same as for all other customers.
Checks at Kroger's may only be cashed for the amount of purchase unless you have "Kroger courtesy card." With a courtesy card, checks may be cashed for $5-$10 over the purchase.
KANSAN Feb. 16 1970
Courtesy cards are easily obtained.
When a bad check is received, every attempt is made to contact the individual before legal action is taken, Teemer said. If no action to cover the check is taken after four or five weeks, the sheriff must be notified according to state law, he said.
"It is a shame it has to be done," said Teemer, "but we receive over $20,000 in bad checks every year."
Raney Drugs at Hillcrest Shopping Center, said he has had very little trouble with insufficient funds checks from KU students.
William McNeary, manager of
William B. Lienhard, vicepresident of the First National Bank, described their check cashing policy as liberal, because they have not had any trouble from KU students.
Lienhard said that probably less than 5 per cent of the bad checks he receives are from KU students.
Checks at First National may be cashed for less than $100. Identification is required and checks may be cashed from out of state banks.
Lienhard said the bank would cash second party checks if the student has an account at the bank.
There is a 10c charge for cashing checks and a $1.00 charge on all checks returned.
William J. Womack, a spokesman for the Douglas County State Bank, said their check cashing policy also is liberal.
About To Lose Your 2-S Deferment?
Try the TWO-YEAR Army ROTC program. If you want to go on to grad school, we can show you how to obtain a 1-D classification, serve your country as an officer in the U.S. Army, and receive $50 per month while in school. Only two years active duty required. 1 March deadline, so HURRY!
Contact:
Prof. of Mil. Science 203 Mil. Science Bldg. UN4-3311/3312
If you'd like to sell a Chevy mag wheel to a Ford owner, sell him the one that fits all Chargers.
E-T DIFFERENTIAL COVER
• TWO MODELS FIT ALL GM CARS
• OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE SOON
Increase the appeal of your machine! Cool that oil and show your class with E-T's exciting deeply finned and polished differential cover. Attractively packaged and on display at your local E-T Mag wheel dealers everywhere.
WHAT KANSAS BUILDS -
BUILDS KANSAS
GREGG TIRE CO.
814 W 23rd
8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Daily
Closed Saturdays at 4:00 p.m.
842-5451
GT
GI
differential cover
www.differentialcover.com
11 BOLT STYLE
6
CO
History museum sells gifts and art
A shop specializing in imported gifts is being operated by the Natural History Museum. Jewelry from Mexico and the Philippines, embroidery from Peru, wooden figures from Africa and bamboo toys from Taiwan are sold to museum visitors and KU students.
The shop was opened in November of 1968. The profits support the summer workshop for pre-college students.
This program is designed to give young people the opportunity to understand their natural environment through contact with exhibits, specimen material and literature. Publications prepared by faculty members and graduate students, and other books related to natural history are also available.
The Museum shop subsidiary of the Kansas Union bookstore is open to the public from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 1:30 p.m. until 4:30 on Sundays.
M
Photo by Bruce Bernstein
Museum Shop offers unique items
Kris Mazuu, Lawrence senior, works in the shop operated by the KU Natural History Museum. The shop specializes in imported gifts which are sold to museum visitors and KU students.
KU senior seeks nomination
Michael Glover, Lawrence senior, will seek the democratic nomination for the Kansas House of Representatives.
His chance to represent the 39th district will be decided in the Aug. 4 primary election. Glover said he was familiar with the area and was a product of it because he has lived here for 10 years. He added he thought the issues facing the nation were here in the 39th district.
"Air pollution by the co-op fertilizing plant is a real problem," Glover said, "and their representative hasn't policed the situation.
"Another issue in the election
will be property taxes. We have to find a better system of taxing in Kansas because there is too much taxing in relation to the kind of service they receive."
Glover said he hoped to express his views to all persons in his district by carrying out a door to door campaign. He said the key to the election would be to do well in the agrarian sector of the district.
said. "The tax pays for the government and rich person's benefits because the man with a $50,000 income pays less sales tax than the man with a $5,000 income."
Hoping to be classified as a liberal, Glover said he was opposed to the present sales tax.
"I'm against the sales tax because it hurts the middle and lower income of the economy." he
The University of Kansas Masters of Public Administration program has produced more city managers than any other similar program.
More city managers come from KU courses
Edwin Stene, director of the program, will retire at the end of this year. Professor Sherman Wyman will direct the program after this year. The MPA program has 105 of its alumni holding city manager positions. There are also many assistant city managers who have graduated from this program.
The program began in 1948 for municipal administration. In 1950 the state option was added and in 1962 the national administration and public affairs options were added.
Five out of every nine Kansas city managers have graduated from this program. All Lawrence city managers of Lawrence have come from this program.
The University of Pennsylvania is second in the production of city managers with a total of nearly 100. No other university has produced as many as 30 city managers.
Stene said the majority of students were in the city field but several were in the federal and state levels. The demand by cities for new city managers far exceeded the number of men put out by MPA, he added.
"The biggest problem is recruiting students," Stene said, "other universities have scholarships while we do not."
Stene said there were 18 students recruited for this year but only 10 came. Some were lost to the draft and others were drawn to other fields, he said.
He said in this area of the country there were no similar programs. The University of Iowa,he said,tried to begin the program but they could not get enough students to keep it going.
He said the University of Colorado had more students but they were not an adhesive, academic group. Many of their students took only a few courses and worked for the government full-time.
Chicago Eight rally planned
Stene said small cities could no longer compete with larger cities for city managers from this program. The first graduate of MPA took a position in Holton for a salary of $3,000. Present graduates command much higher pay. For instance, the second assistant city manager of Dallas, who graduated from KU's MPA, commands a salary of nearly $25,000 a year.
Union, said Eric Wolfe, Wichita sophomore and spokesman for the group.
A group of KU students, including leaders of the Student Mobilization committee, is planning a rally and march to demonstrate support for the Chicago 8 and their lawyers. A meeting is planned for all interested students at 8 p.m. Monday in the Kansas
"The march and rally are to demonstrate support for the Chicago 8 and their lawyers who were given outrageous prison sentences for contempt of Julius Hoffman's court," Wolfe said.
Feb. 16
1970 KANSAN 7
Julius Hoffman was the judge for the trial of the eight persons charged with violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
TIDE
8:00-12:00
$1 Admission
Per Pitcher
804 W. 24th
CURTAIN CALL'70
Ninth Annual College Auditions for SIX FLAGS
Your talent could win you a star-spangled season at SIX FLAGS, performing for the world's most enthusiastic audiences!
SIX FLAGS needs: VOCALISTS (popular, classical, country and western, rock, barbershop quartettes, folk soloists and groups): DANCERS (tap, ballet, modern, jazz, acrobatic); INSTRUMENTALISTS (banjo players, jug bands, Dixieland bands); VARIETY ACTS (comics, magicians, baton and saber twirlers, ventriloquists, tumblers, trampoline and trampolette artists). ALL KINDS OF TALENT WILL BE CONSIDERED.
If selected, you'll work under professional direction in one of SIX FLAGS' many original variety extravaganzas or specialty shows featured throughout the Park. And you'll have the time of your life as a star member of the famous SIX FLAGS family of performers. Audition open to all age groups including college students. Be there!
AREA AUDITIONS
Thursday, February 19 — 3:30 p.m.
Kansas Union - The Forum Room -
First Floor
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
(Registration is 30 minutes prior to audition time.)
SIX FLAGS
OVER TEXAS / OVER GEORGIA
DALLAS / FORT WORTH ATLANTA
PROJECTS OF GREAT SOUTHWEST CORPORATION
Union adds many new faces
I am not sure if I will be able to get a good shot of this. It looks like an empty room with a chandelier in the foreground and a view of a building across the street in the background. The sky is dark, suggesting it might be early evening or night.
New addition with a familiar view
The Governors Room, which seats 14, is located in the Northwest Addition to the Kansas Union, and was donated by the Class of 1967.
Photos by Steve Fritz
The Northwest Addition to the Kansas Union cost $1,100,000,
$100,000 of which came from a fee assessed the students of the University of Kansas beginning Fall 1967.
The new addition extends the capacity of the Union in handling larger groups of people. The Union averages 30 different functions a day consisting of 15 to 500 people per group. This averages out to 12,000 different functions in a school year.
The new addition houses four meeting rooms, including the Laurence Woodruff Auditorium. The auditorium seats 600 people and has a fully equipped projection booth.
The Governors Room, furnished by the Class of 1967, seats 14 around a conference table. The Council Room has 76 permanent seats behind tables and has a permanent movie screen. The International Room is the most flexible room and seats 35 to 40. However, it is left empty and is set up as needed.
The Mount Oread Book Shop carries the paperback and trade books formerly housed in the Book Store. The Book Shop has 28,000 titles of various books in all fields of interest.
The KU Alumni Association is also housed in the Northwest Addition. The entrance to the offices is carpeted in blue and the floor of the offices is carpeted in bright red. The officers of the freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior classes have offices in the Alumni Association section of the Union addition.
Included in the cost of the Northwest addition is the tunnel connecting the Union with X-Zone parking lot. The tunnel is heated and lighted and measures 224 feet long and 16 feet wide.
[Image of a conference room with rows of chairs and a large wooden wall. The ceiling has recessed lights. There are no people in the room.]
Union addition council room
The Council Room seats 76, has permanent tables and a movie screen. It will be used for some of the 30 different functions the Union averages per day.
THEATRE
Woodruff Auditorium in Union addition
Laurence Woodruff Auditorium, one of four meeting rooms in the Northwest Addition to the Kansas Union, seats 600 and is equipped with a projection booth.
K-State closes in on conference crown as second half surge trips Jayhawks
By BRUCE CARNAHAN
Kansan Sports Editor
K-State used a superb full-court press and a strong performance by Bob Zender to come from nine points behind midway in the second half and nip KU, 71-68, Saturday night in Ahearn Fieldhouse.
The Jayhawks, playing brilliantly at times, took a narrow 36-32 half time edge and built it into a nine point margin, 51-42, with 10:30 remaining in the game. The K-State press, which had been ineffective in the early part of the game, suddenly began to work and the 'Cats forced the Hawks into some costly mistakes. K-State turned the turnovers into points as they reeled off 14 points in the next three minutes and catapulted to a 56-54 edge. Zender, a 6-7 sophomore forward, sparked the offense as he netted eight points during the sudden Wildcat surge.
The 'Hawks rebounded to knot the score at 56-16 and 58-58, but Jerry Venable hit the first of a one-and-one opportunity to put K-State on top for good, 59-58, with 6:22 showing on the clock.
After gaining control of the ball again, the 'Cats elected to slow their offense down and look for the unmolested layin. The Jayhawks allowed the K-State guards to toy with the ball for about 30 seconds before Pierre Russell and Bob Kivisto moved out to put pressure on the Wild-cats. But the officials ruled that KU had not put up enough of a defensive challenge and slappel a technical foul on the 'Hawks.
The call proved to be crucial as Zender converted the awarded charity. Venable then drove the lane for two layups and the 'Cats had pushed their flimsy one-point edge into a 64-61 advantage with 2:56 left in the contest.
Gymnasts cop honors
Kansas' gymnasts, dropping from last week's record-shattering form, capped top honors in the Warrensburg meet Friday scoring 152.67 points.
Several members of the squad were hit with the flu bug prior to the meet including all-around performer John Brouillette and high bar man Gerald Carley. Brouillette was unable to throw his last routine on the high bar and Carley did not make the trin.
But Carley's replacement, freshman Brian Cooper, scored a career high on the high bar with an 8.8. Roger Hemphill edged him out in the same event and hit one of his best routines ever with a 9.1.
Kansas finished far ahead of the rest of the field as Ft. Hays State took second and the host school, Central Missouri State, was last. Although the team scored 158 points las. week to set a new school record, their showing Friday was still respectable considering the sickness and not-so-stiff competition, according to coach Bob Lockwood.
Dan Bradfield outdistanced his better-known teammate, Stan Clyne, in the floor exercise, 9.0 to 8.8, in one of his best outings, Kirk Gardner, the Jayhawks' stellar ring man and only oncebeaten this year, gave his usual performance, a 9.25, good for another first place. Terry Blanchard and Fred McCracken, working on the parallel bars, finished one-two in that event with 8.95 and 8.65, respectively.
Kansas travels to Colorado this weekend for an expected tough visit with CU Friday night and a double dual with Colorado State and Mankato State Saturday.
Feb. 16
1970 KANSAN 9
44
Chet scoops two
Chet Lawrence, Jayhawk senior guard, drives between two defenders for a bucket in the second half. Wildcat defenders are Jerry Venable (No. 44) and Jeff Webb (No. 24).
Needing the ball, KU was forced to abandon its 1-3-1 trap zone and move into a man-to-man full-court press. But the Wildcats kept their cool, dumped in three quick points, and took a commanding 67-61 lead with a little over 1:30 remaining.
KU mustered seven points in a last ditch effort, but the Wildcats countered with a bucket and two free throws to preserve the win
Hughes netted 12 in addition to his outstanding floor play.
Zender turned his most outstanding night as a Wildcat as he snatched scoring honors for the game with 23 points and held Dave Robisch, the conference's top points maker to only 20—nine below his average. Zender also grabbed 11 rebounds, a high for the Wildcats who enjoyed an enormous 46-30 rebounding edge. Venable followed Zender in scoring with 16 points and Wheeler
The Jayhawks outscored K-State from the field, 29-28, but inconsistency at the foul line cost the 'Hawks as they could only manage 10 of 17 charities while K-State dumped home 15 free shots to provide the winning margin.
KU placed four starters in double figures headed by Robisch's 20. Russell and Kivisto both canned 14 and Bud Stall-worth added 10 to round out the balanced attack.
ROCK
ChfA1K
RSVUE
improbable history
ROCK
CHALK
RSVUE
Roger Brown, who scored 8 points in his first start of the season, and Robisch provided all but six of the 'Hawks rebounds as they each snared 12.
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—
Feb. 17
KU-Y office,
information booth on
campus,
Bell's, the sound, Kief
sponsored by KU-Y
The victory boosted K-State to a 7-2 record in conference play and all but cinched a Big Eight championship for the Wildcats. KU, Missouri and Nebraska trail K-State in the league standings, but each has four losses and it's very unlikely that they will be able to make up the difference during the final weeks of conference play. The 'Cats, who have a two game advantage over the
ROX SCORE
| BOA SYSTEM | FG | FT | RB TF | PB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| KANSAS | 4-12 | 1-2 | 2 | 10 |
| Stallworth | 10-12 | 2-5 | 1 | 20 |
| Brolsch | 8-19 | 4-13 | 3 | 20 |
| Brovich | 4-6 | 0-1 | 12 | 5 |
| Russell | 7-11 | 0-1 | 12 | 5 |
| Klaviste | 5-15 | 4-6 | 5 | 14 |
| Lobisieve | 1-4 | 0-6 | 1 | 24 |
| Bobsiliev | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 |
TEAM 29-59 10-17 30 21 68
K-STATE FG FT RB TP FM
Zender 6-9 6-9 11 14 23
Zender 8-14 7-9 11 12 23
Hall 2-9 9-1 8 3 4
Hall 4-11 0-0 6 0 8
Hughes 5-11 1-4 6 13
Lawrence 0-1 1-1 2 2 1
Snider 0-1 1-3 2 1 1
Snider 0-1 1-3 2 1 1
TEAM 28-64 16-27 46 15 74
TEAM 28-64 16-27 46 15 74
The loss virtually killed any KU hopes for a title as it evened the Jayhawks' league record at
pack, have only five games remaining, two of them in Manhattan.
4-4. It also marked the fourth consecutive game that conference foes have dealt the Hawks losses on the road. KU is still looking for its first win on the road in league play.
7-11 1741 Mass.
7-11 1741 Mass
12 a.m.-7 a.m.
The new 7-11 store on Mass. (open all night) is having a study-break special this week, Mon., Feb. 16 thru Fri., Feb. 20. For 48c you get a ham sandwich, a bag of chips, and a can of 7-11 pop.
Bologna ___ 39c/1/2 lb.
Ham ___ 69c/1/2 lb.
7-11
1741 Mass.
7-11 1741 Mass.
MONTAGE
IN EUROPE, THE COST OF TRAIN TRAVEL IS STRICTLY ACADEMIC.
We're not trying to tell you that it's free. Simply that train travel is geared to your needs.
First, we have a variety of low-cost plans that are available only in North America. The last paragraph tells you about these. Then you can save both time and money by using the trains as your overnight accommodations for far less than your train ticket plus overnight hotel accommodation costs.
The European railroads cover Europe like a vast intercontinental urban transportation system. There's virtually no
where that isn't on our map. Europe's railroads are clean, and very comfortable indeed. And they are fast, frequent and punctual.
If your interest in touring Europe is more than academic, your Travel Agent has all the details of the money-saving plans offered to Americans: Eurailpass, Eurlairtiff, Eurailgroup, British BritRail Pass and ThriftRail coupons.
For further information on rail travel, write to: European Railroads, Dept. 3, Box 54, Madison Square Station, New York, N.Y. 10010.
22
I think we should talk this over ...
Jayhawk coach Ted Owens contests a technical foul called on the 'Hawks during the second-half of Saturday night's game against K-State. Looking dismayed in the foreground is KU captain Chet Lawrence.
'Cat yearlings bomb foul-proned Jayhawks
The K-State freshman squad rode the scoring of Ernie Kusnyer and Steve Mitchell to a 78-55 blistering of the Jayhawk frosh Saturday night in a preliminary game in Ahearn Field House.
The Jayhawks rushed to an early 19-6 advantage before falling victim to foul troubles. Mike Bossard, KU forward averaging over 20 points a game, fouled out with 3:00 left in the first half without scoring a point. With Bossard on the bench most of the period, and Randy Canfield, 6-10 center, and Leonard Gray, frosh forward, both saddled with three fouls early in the half the Wildcats were able to peek away at the KU lead and finally took a 39-34 half time lead.
The Wildcat yearlings continued to shackle the 'Hawks in the second half and built up an early 15 point lead before five minutes had elapsed. The 'Cats coasted down the stretch to the victory as two other KU players (in addition to Bossard) fouled out. Canfield left with five minutes remaining and Alan Anderson was forced to depart at the 3:30 mark.
Kusnyer tallied 21 points for the Wildcats—17 coming in the final half—and Mitchell, 6-10 center, netted 24 points. Mitchell scored all but three of his points in the opening period.
Gray topped the KU frosh in scoring with 18 and he also pulled down a game high 14 rebounds.
10 KANSAN Feb. 16 1970
Canfield added 12 points and 7 rebounds and Mark Williams, 5-10 scrappy guard, netted 17 points even though he could manage only four of 20 from the field.
Big 8 standings
Conference Games
All Games
| | W | L | Pct. | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas St. | 7 | 2 | .778 | 632 | 583 |
| Missouri | 5 | 4 | .556 | 563 | 557 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 4 | .500 | 525 | 539 |
| Kansas | 4 | 4 | .500 | 497 | 536 |
| Kansas St. | 5 | 4 | .500 | 731 | 608 |
| Colorado | 5 | 5 | .444 | 660 | 608 |
| Oklahoma | 3 | 5 | .375 | 470 | 557 |
| Okla. St. | 3 | 6 | .333 | 558 | 587 |
W 16 L 5 Pct. PF PAU
Kansas St. 14 6 7.62 135 140
Oklahoma 16 14 7.00 1475 1401
Nebraska 13 6 6.84 1384 1363
Kansas 13 7 6.50 1531 1405
Missouri 13 13 6.91 1469 1405
Oklahoma St. 12 9 6.71 1384 1405
Iowa St. 12 10 5.45 1633 1609
Colorado 11 10 5.24 1572 1455
Results Last Week:
Iowa State 80, Kansas State 64;
Kansas奈 69, Oklahoma State 58; Missouri 55, Oklahoma 47; Colorado 76;
Nebraska 99, Oklahoma 74. Iowa State 80,
Kansas State 68; Oklahoma State 64;
Nebraska 69, Missouri 48.
Games This Week:
Monday—Iowa State at Oklahoma
state at Missouri, Colorado
state at Oklahoma.
Tuesday—Nebraska at Kansas
Saturday—Oklahania at Iowa State.
Nebraska at Kansas State, Oklahoma
State at Missouri, Kansas at Colorado.
The largemouth bass is the largest member of the sunfish family and is a close relative of the bluegill and crappie.
Festival of Arts March 30-April 14
Festival of Arts
March 30 – April 14
$5.00 Coupons go on Sale
Feb. 18 - SUA Office
Rumors are running rampant throughout the midwest concerning investigations within the Big Eight Conference.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — The lid is on.
Big Eight faces rumors as KU named in investigation
But nobody is talking. That is, nobody who can shed light on the issues.
The latest word that has been uncanned relates to KU.
Fred Mendell, sports editor of the Hutchinson News, wrote that a KU athletic counselor asked an English teacher at Hutchinson Junior College to change a grade of a football player who is now attending KU. According to Mendell, the teacher was asked to change a "D" to a "C."
"And if there's going to be a denial that the purpose of the call was to get the grade changed, which she the teacher said it was, perhaps said counselor will explain why the call was made." Mendell wrote.
John Novotny, the athletic counselor at KU, said, "I'm not in a position to take issue with anything that's being said."
Coupon holders save $4.50 and receive a free program
Several universities, however, made flat statements that they were not under investigation. Nebraska football coach and athletic director Bob Devaney and KU athletic director Wade Stinson said they were not.
It was then that Wayne Duke, Big Eight commissioner, stepped into the picture.
The rumors revolve around Vince O'Neil, a running back from Plainfield, N.J. He was recruited by K-State, but was sent to Hutchinson Junior College
when he did not pass the entrance requirements for K-State.
Duke said discussion of "alleged violations of athletic rules and regulations represent a real disservice to any individuals or institutions involved" and "for any person or agency to attempt to assess these matters outside the normal operating procedures of the conference is to distort such procedures."
O'Neil played football the fall of 1968, but passed up the sport last all. He entered KU at midterm and apparently will have three seasons of eligibility remaining.
Mendell, however, took it personally.
Duke maintained that his statement was aimed at personnel of Big Eight institutions and not at the press.
"A lot of schools are under investigation," he said, "But that doesn't mean they are on probation. We have been investigated; we don't think anything will come of it."
generalizing."
The ever-intriguing story began several weeks ago when K-State announced assistant football coach Dick Steinberg had resigned, United Press International learned, however, that Steinberg had been fired by the K-State administration for something Steinberg had done while recruiting O'Neil.
When K-State head coach Vince Gibson was questioned about being under investigation by the Big Eight and NCAA, he said, "We don't think anything will come of it. I don't even think we will get a reprimand."
"I don't like being told by Mr. Duke—in 5,000 papers of the nation—the truths I can or can't write any more than that English teacher liked being told she should change a grade to something the student did not earn." the Hutchinson sports editor wrote.
He said six or seven Big Eight schools were under investigation for possible violation of recruiting rules. The next day, however, he said he had been "just
Contact
es are made
dern plas-
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solutions
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fly and
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There was a time when you needed two or more separate
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Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the build-up of foreign deposits on the lenses.
And soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearing periods assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking-storage case with individual lens compartments on the bottom of every bottle of Lenses.
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Let caring for your contacts be as convenient as wearing them. Get some Lensine . Mother's little helper.
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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
Stereo Systems--factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder automatic, good condition, $525. Call 842-1694. 2-17
Very clean 1966 VW 1300 Bug with
snow snow snow snow snow
$950. See at 174k.org 2-16
1968 Ward-Benell motorcycle, 250 cc
from 1:30 to 5:00 at 1416 Tennessee; $250,2-1-46
from 5:00 to 1416 Tennessee; $250,2-1-46
Magnavox annual sale! Don't miss this once a year chance to save on stereos, components, AM-FM stereo radios, transistors and tape recorders! Ray Stoneback's downtown—open Mon. and Thurs. events. 2-16
Tape recorder cassettes reduced! Two hours, only $3.00; 90 min.; only $2.50; one hour, $1.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Tues.—thirteen. 2-6
Magnavac deluxe recorder recorder sold new at $99.95—used one month, cut to $50.00. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Mon.,周三. evenings. 2-16
For Sale: Concord four-track stereo cassette deck. Used very little, buying a larger tape deck. Comes with jacks. $60.00, Call 842-6844. 2-16
'66 Mustang V-8, low mileage, excellent condition. Very reasonable just see to appreciate. 842-9036 after 6:00.
2-16
Recording tape for sale. All sizes and
kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Pro-
fessionally erased. See at 221 Concord
road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
G.E. portable stereo; $45; soul albums;
$26; Topaz ring (5); $4; Playboy
band (9); $7; Hawaiian music
(9); $7; ceramic balls. Call 843-
2854 between 5-10 p.m.
Shelby-1967 GT500, 4-speed, air conditioning, new polyglas tires, excellent condition, low mileage, 2111 Kasolb B103, 842-5992. 2-16
Two f-78-14 Remington tires, good tread, with or without rims, will fit most GM cars. Make offer. Dennis Miller, 842-7000, Rm. 933. 2-16
Guild Slim Jim 6 string with custom black paint and case; excellent condition; new, $275.00; sell for $215.00.
Call Jim Hewmorsh V 3-5740. 2-17
For Sale: 1966 Corvette, 4-speed, 327-
300 hpr., 24,000 miles, 843-7708, 6-9
n-m. $2700. Will bargain. 2-17
CONGA DRUM: nearly new muleskin
fiberglass with legs. $75, 843-626-2.17
TEXACO
Student specials
★ New, experienced manage-
TEXACO
9th & Miss. 842-9413
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
THE HOME in the WALL
Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 J
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
We Care About
8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E.8th
Ampex cassette player and speakers.
Fineest in stereo tape systems. In ex-
ample condition, $130 or best offer
843-7922 talk for Doug Damens
or leave message. 2-19
1968 Chevy Impala. Need money real
19069 very cheap. Call Cali.
19069 anytime.
2-17
Western Civ. Notes—On sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed., Campus Mid House, 411 W. 140 St.
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
Sony TC-8 8-track stereo recorderer tape deck for sale. Six months old. Like new. Call for Karl at 843-9072, after 6. 2-18
1959 Pontiac, air cond. new battery,
fuel pump, generator, brakes. Needs
TLC. Best offer. 842-9936 after 6 p.m.
2-17
For Sale: Realistic 40 changer, $25;
10-watt realistic stereo. Amp, $25;
Regula LKB camera, EE, x-synch,
$35. George, 843-8454.
2-18
Deluxe 2-speaker stereo FM walnut radio, famous brand reduced from $99.90 to $79.90 Rockstoneback 3's, Open Monday and Tuesday nights. 2-18
Clearance! AM-FM radios, famous brands, entire stock of floor samples reduced—transistors as low as $10.00. Ray Stoneback's, downtown. 2-18
Four new wide radial F70-14 new B.F. Goodrich whitewall--final cut to $30-00 plus $2.58 FET each. Ray Stoneback's fast free installation. 2-18
Sunn amp. with two D140F J.B.L.
speakers. Gibson EB-O. Bass with
hardshell case. Band broke up. Phone
Ted, 842-7000. Rm. 813. Best offer. 2-18
TC-50 pocket cassette-corder, 6 months old, worth $125.00 new; need 6 months old, worth $125.00 new; includes tape, earphone, remote switch. switch. Call Jim, 843-7404. 2-18
Hot Rod VW, 76 horse, fully set up
for gymkhanas, 842-1291. 2-19
Austin Healy 3000, Mark III, needs
to restore to orbit the condition,
842-219-1
2-19
68 Bridgestone Super 90, low mileage, 842-2191
2-19
GROOVY. INFLATABLE FURNITURE—many styles for dorm or apartment. Call 842-5801 between 6:30 and 8:00 days. 2-19
USED PORTABLE CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER: Concord F-50, works by 12-lead coaxial plugs (plug) converter. Includes carrying case, microphone, 2 sets of batteries, flashlight, tool to suit best reasonable offer. Call Don Huggins at 843-5220 or 842-6600. 2-17
Skins-Hat competition GS 205 cm.
marker bindings. $115. Call 843-949-6100.
Silverton guitar amp. with speaker cabinet. Has tremolo, reverb, and a foot pedal. $250 only. Only one $130. Call Bill. 843-6490. after five. 2-20
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Ex-schoolbus. Carpeted. Sink and
stove to ready to hook up. Magic pos-
sibilities. $300 plus tow charges. Call
842-5940. 2-18
Exclusive Representative
'62 Norton 750 cc. Beautiful bike.
Best offer. Call evenings after 6:30.
842-5940. 2-18
L. G. Balfour Co.
of
Boyfriend dratted: need to sell Craig 4-track tape player. Car or home unit. Only four months old. Good condition.
Call 842-5088. 2-20
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Recognitions - Paddles
Motorcycle ~300 c.c. single Matchless.
paint, $200 or best offer 2-20
8896
- Favors
- Guards
- Mugs
- Al Lauter VI 3-1571
- Gifts
- Plagues
Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Become a collector,
or just buy a few for the Easter season.
Museum of Natural History Gift
shop collects them from all over the
world. Open weekdays. 8:30 to 4:30.
Sundays. 12:30 to 4:30. 2-20
Rings - Crested - Letters
- Sportswear
- Stationery
WANTED
Typewriters--big selection -- rental purchase plan available. Office supply and furniture. Xerox service. Lawyers Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. 843-3644.
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Interested in a sales career? High earnings and management opportunities. Sign up at Summerfield Business Office. Interviews on Tuesday, February 17, 1970, all day. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Wanted: One bass player who sings; one guitarist who sings and any verterber; two bass players interested in organizing a progressive rock band with excellent drummer skills; all original material, Call Chuck, 842-1359 time, or Rocky, 842-5645. 2-20
Across from the Red Dog
Either a male roommate or two people to occupy a two-bedroom apartment near campus. No lease. Call 842-6211.
2-17
Need one coed roommate to share completely furnished apartment by March with three other girls. Reason for having Sunny, Perky, or at 842-4429. 2-19
VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Female roommate wanted for luxury
Reasonable Call 842-742-88
nings 1-17
NOTICE
Coed needs two girls to share furnished apartment. All utilities paid except water. Call Cindy, 842-8467. 9:20
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc.
henrys
---
Hurry to Henry's
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Q, if you want some honest-to-gooodness 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
6th & Mo. VI 1-2139
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay 10% handling, Dynasty leadership. Call 842-2047 if tents 4 to 10.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-13
fyre boots, fruntime jackets, moissains,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watch bands, hooded collars, purses, vests,
wimming collars, at 812 MEDICAL
PRIMARILY LEATHER
3-2
Student and family laundries done at ar's Laundry, 1903's. Mass. St. Waltham, folded and folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early same day service. In early 3-2
文殊菩萨
Dressmaking and alterations. 20 years
experience. Call 843-2767, 8-5. 2-17
52% of income income tax goes to the
Pentagon - give Melvin less money.
Send up and up (send twice)
Gretchen, 843-9659 1218 Mississippi
after 6 p.m. 18
Furniture waxing and other household work. Flexible hours. Own transportation. $2.00 an hour. 842-4088 evenings. 2-16
Minnie Pearl's
COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
PERSONAL
Call in or Carry Out
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Your own, choose or buy. Your own. PRIMARY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
SERVICES OFFERED
VI 3-8200
Ayn Rand study group being formed:
write David R. Cormier, 928 Rhode Island.
2-19
岛.
Offset printing for yourself, movement or organization at reasonable rates. Bill Lee, 1230 Oread, 842-9402.
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved, our clients. Group Tax, 801 $! Mass., Returns $4.00 and up tf
Gentlemen, would you like your own English tailor? Suits, sport coats, blazers, made to measure. Suit prices are available at satisfaction guarantee. Call 842-4193. 2-16
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax. $ 801^{1}$ Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
Thank you for your patience! The
warehouse is almost through re-stocking its
inventory with interesting new items.
inventory with interesting new items.
8:30 to 4:30 Sunday
12:30 to 4:30 Sunday
Decoupage WORKSHOP
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Oils and Acrylics
Have fun while learning about world affairs. Represent a country in the Model OAS. March 14, 15. Call KU-YO. office. UN 4-3761. 2-18
- Stretcher Frames
- Balsa Wood
Bankmark Services
McConnell Lumber
844 E.13th VI 3-3877
SHAW AUTO
SERVICE
Your headquarters
Stirling stalks and fresh ash wedges awaken you when you dine at the Sailor. We serve only the finest...preparing the selection as you like them with all the season's herbs, spices, and the Sailor's concombre pincushion peppers.
for
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one half miles north
of the Kaw River Bridge
843-1241
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
miDAS®
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
mufflers and
mutflers and shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
TIGER
Thanks!—to the person who turned in my wallet at Learned. 2-16
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work IV 3-3281. Mrs. Ruckman.
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
experienced typist will type themes,
times, term papers, other misc. typing.
Wright, typewriter, typewriter W
Pica type. Computer service. W
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-14
Experienced typist will type term papers, manuscripts, thesis, dissertations, and any other miscellaneous typing. Experienced typist writer and am accurate. Call 842-3789, after 5 p.m. 2-20 Experienced typist theses, thesis, themes, mail. Contact Kathy Grey, 710 Randall Road, 842-6189. 2-20
LOST
Typing. Theses, papers, Experienced,
Electric typewriter. Assistance with
necessary English corrections, English
teacher, M.S. degree. Also English tutoring for foreign students or wives.
Reasonable. 842-9249. 2-20
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
USED BOOKS-READ and TRADE Buy, sell, trade used paperback books: National Science Fiction, Novels, Romance and Comics, Playboy magazines, H & H Furniture Shopping 934 Mass. Book 843-2736. Books 25,000 books.
Missing—brown folio case. Important tape and papers. Reward. Pig N. Notion. 843-6213 or 842-1871. 2-17 One black man's billfold with the initials J.D.V. inside. Urgency needed. Call 843-0836 or 843-2359 and ask for John Valentine. If not in, leave message. 2-18
FOR RENT
Apt., single male. $85 a month, utilities paid. Share bath. 1314 Tenn.
842-2161. 2-18
- Passports
- Applications
- "Please call for appointment"
- Portraits
R
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Bob Blank. Owner
HIXON STUDIO
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today 814 Iowa
TEDDY BICYCLE
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Boy playing the violin
VI 3-1211
DOWNTOWN PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
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VI 1-9868
Professor argued 1954 civil rights case
Wilson views integration
By WILLIAM MORRISSEY Kansan staff writer
A University of Kansas law professor is viewing the struggle of the Southern states fighting forced integration with more than a passing interest.
Paul E. Wilson was counsel for the State of Kansas in the 1954 case of Brown versus the Topeka Board of Education, which resulted in the landmark decision by the U.S. Supreme Court denouncing the "separate but equal" doctrine for education.
Wilson became involved with the case as a member of the Kansas Attorney General's staff in 1952. Shortly after the "Brown" case was appealed, four similar cases from other states were also appealed to the Supreme Court. No briefs had been filed, however, by the Board of Education in the Kansas case. Because of the national importance of the case and the fact that it was the first one to be heard, the Supreme Court requested the Attorney General of Kansas to present the state's oral views. Due to an inflexible schedule, the Attorney General was unable to appear and Wilson was assigned to present the case. He had only ten days to prepare his brief and arguments.
Due to the impact this decision has made on the public school system, especially in the South, the Kansan talked with Professor Wilson concerning the case and his views on the school situation today.
Wilson pointed out that he defended the case from a professional duty to the Court and to
the State of Kansas and not because he believed in school segregation.
Basically, Wilson said, the case rested on the clause in the Fourteenth Amendment which said, "No state shall make or enforce any law to deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction equal protection of the law."
The critical question was whether Kansas segregated school facilities denied a substantial number of children equal protection under the law.
When shown a remark by Sen. Herman Talmadge (D-Georgia), which said the senator was under the impression that the Supreme Court's 1954 school desegregation ruling had insisted students no longer be classified by race, Wilson said the question was whether in providing public education, the students were to have the maximum opportunity to learn and prepare for life in the kind of environment they would be in after school. It's true, he said, that in dealing with quotas and busing we have an intermediate step, in which race is a factor. The educational objective, however, is equality regardless of race and this was the earlier view the Supreme Court took, Wilson said.
Asked how he viewed the effects recent court orders were having on southern schools. Wilson said, "One view is that they've had 15 years and haven't complied. Whatever problems they've had they brought on themselves.
At the same time, the problems are real and ought to be determined in the best interests of the children involved."
Concerning the controversy over the Feb. 1 deadline set down by the Supreme Court for several Southern school districts, Wilson said, "As a lawyer I must accept the decision of the Supreme Court as final. It is the judicial department that has to make the ultimate decision where constitutional rights are an issue."
Regarding busing, he said that possibly a point could be reached where the prejudice that arises from the hours and distances involved in busing would be greater than that of racial imbalance.
Wilson said he suspected there may be as much de facto segregation in parts of the north as the South. "I see no reason," he said, "why we should impose limitations upon the south while we aren't in our own community."
Wilson said he thought the reason the Court had failed to hear the de facto issue in the North was that in the Southern states the local governments have passed laws requiring separate facilities whereas in the North segregation came about by reason of how the communities developed, without the sanction of law. He said it was "easy to solve discrimination by law but hard to break up patterns that arise not from the law but people's habits."
The consequences, Wilson said, involved in de facto segregation were the same. "The fact that
Chicago 'seven'—
(Continued from page 1)
strong personal opinions on a case should not be permitted to impose sentences for contempt of court "without the benefit of a jury."
In New York, Edward J. Ennis, chairman of the American Civil Liberties Union called the summary contempt sentences "unconstitutional." He indicated his organization would probably take part in any appeal as a friend of the court.
While the jury deliberation dragged on, a band of about 60 protesters tried to keep warm in the chilly Chicago night outside the federal building where the trial has been in progress since Sept.24.
They chanted "Jail Hoffman" and "Free the "Conspiracy." They also made a creditable attempt to sing the "Star Spangled Banner" in chorus.
12 KANSAN Feb. 16 1970
As the judge and lawyer stood face to face in a nearly empty courtroom, Hoffman declared he had never sentenced a lawyer for contempt before and Kunstler said no judge had ever disciplined him in his often stormy career of pressing civil rights cases around the country.
tion to "fan the flames of disorder" in the courtroom despite "warning after warning, admonition after admonition," Hoffman said.
Hoffman said, "I am one of those who believe that crime, if it is on the increase, is so in large part because, waiting in the wings, are lawyers who are willing to go beyond professional responsibility in the defense of their clients.
"Some clients know this and it has a stimulating effect on the increase of crime," Hoffman said.
Kunstler said that if he and any other defense lawyer must go to jail, "We are the most privileged of men. We are being punished for our beliefs.
Kunstler had persisted in ac-
"I suddenly feel compassion for you," Kunstler told Hoffman. "Everything else has dropped away."
Weinglass spoke with emotion to the judge of how members of the defense staff had been working until 3 a.m., living on $20 a week, and sleeping on the floor of his apartment during the long trial.
For
Complete
Automobile
Insurance
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
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parents select one school because it is better than another ought to be an occasion for community concern about the less desirable schools. The objective is equality in the schools and to provide every child the opportunity to learn and grow."
In addition to being the Assistant Attorney General at the
time of the "Brown" case, Wilson is the principal draftsman of the Law Revision Committee which drafted the Kansas Criminal Code that goes into effect in July and the proposed Kansas Code of Criminal Procedure which is presently a bill before the Kansas Legislature. He is also the U.S. Magistrate in Lawrence.
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Activity fee cut discussed
By TERRY WILLIAMSON
Kansan Staff Writer
University leaders met Monday with the athletic department in an attempt to find a way to cut student activity fees.
KU Athletic Director Wade Stinson said a drastic cut in athletic funds could mean an increase in ticket prices and a cut back in nonprofit making sports. The department now receives $176,171 of its gross income of $280,000 from the $12 student activity fee. This is 50 per cent of the total activity fee allotment.
"If the fee was cropped," Monte Johnson, asst. athletic director, said, "and ticket sales stayed the same, the price of football tickets would rise to $16 and basketball tickets to $12."
The present $$ football ticket price
and $4 basketball price was put in
effect in 1956 at the student's request for better seating,building of the east stadium. Payoff for the east side expansion is based on expanding enrollment from year to year at $5 a head. If cut, this would have to be made up someplace else.
Stinson said that the athletic department was charged to operate the whole program on revenue it generates; the only money is from student allocation. If its income was cut to $180,000, it would have to make cuts in minor sports.
"The revenue sports," Stinson said, "keep us in business. The others are in the lost column."
Johnson said if the tickets were over $10 there would probably be a decrease in student buying because the students wouldn't accept it.
Bill Ebert, Topeka junior, said all students are charged across the board for athletic fees and not every
student goes to games. The way students are going to look at the situation when confronted with the facts is that they are forced to pay for activities they don't take part in.
The meeting then turned from the specifics of the athletic budget to a heated discussion on the $7.50 activity fee increase for proposed Wescoe Hall.
"If the state isn't going to pay for Wescoe Hall," Peter George, president of Student Senate executive committee, said, "then we're going to have to. We have to get the $7.50 from somewhere, there is no way to draw this money out of an empty coffin."
Dick Von Ende, Abilene, Texas,
graduate student, said the problem
that exists is how to present the $7.50
increase at the Student Senate meeting
on Wednesday night.
BULLETIN
The production of the Daily Kansan was halted for 30 minutes this morning when the majority of employees at the University Printing Service walked off the job in protest over allegedly obscene material contained in a Black Student Union newspaper being readied for publication. Several employees of the Printing Service plan to present their complaint to members of the Kansas Legislature and the Board of Regents. Monty Beckwith, Chicago, Ill., freshman, co-chairman of the BSU communications committee is listed as editor of the paper and the printing order was signed by Henry F. Taylor, Kansas City, Kansas, junior, treasurer of the BSU.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Oil washes Gulf Coast
St. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A smelly blanket of crude oil washed into a chain of Gulf Coast resort islands off this retirement haven Monday. Businessmen took steps to "blunt the damage" to the tourist trade.
The oil, which smudged beaches on the western shore of St. Petersburg after a Greek tanker ruptured Friday, floated from Tampa Bay out into the Gulf Monday. Southwest-ly winds then pushed it into a 20-mile strip of exclusive residential islands and hotel resorts from Indian Rocks Beach south to Fort de Soto Park.
Cambodia massing arms
SAIGON—Cambodia has begun moving antiaircraft guns into a border region to shoot at U.S. planes that attack North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops along the frontier, Allied sources said today.
Cambodia frequently has complained that American aircraft violate its borders. U.S. planes have at times struck into Cambodian territory in retaliation for guerrilla attacks.
Majority supports Nixon
NEW YORK — Almost 60 per cent of Americans polled following President Nixon's State of the Union address and veto of the Health and Welfare Appropriations Bill expressed confidence in the administration's economic policies, it was reported Monday.
Renewal housing assured
A new government order guaranteeing replacement housing for persons whose homes are in the path of federal building projects may slow down some highway and airport construction across the country.
The order, issued Monday by Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe, says no construction will be authorized for transportation projects until the government verifies replacement housing is in place and has been offered to the residents about to be displaced.
Students protest trial
Police battled demonstrators in Berkeley, Calif., and New York City Monday as students and youths protested the contempt sentences given the "Chicago Seven" and their attorneys.
Smaller, peaceful demonstrations were scattered across the country.
--after receiving the case on Saturday and until 10 p.m. EST on Sunday.
80th Year, No. 80
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, Feb. 17, 1970
Defense rejects 'compromise'
CHICAGO (UPI)—The defense in the riot conspiracy trial rejected any idea of a "compromise verdict" Monday and said it was considering asking that the jury, deliberating the fate of the "Chicago Seven" for a third day, be discharged as deadlocked.
Defense Attorneys William M. Kunstler and Leonard I. Weinglass conferred with the defendants in Cook County Jail while other defense lawyers prepared legal moves to free the seven defendants and two trial lawyers from contempt sentences.
The jurors unexpectedly ended their deliberations for the day at 5:30 p.m. CST Monday and returned to their downtown hotel.
There was no explanation for the early retirement. The jury had deliberated until 11 p.m. EST
The jury had deliberated for a total of 30 hours and gave no signal that it is near a decision.
Kunstler told newsmen at midafternoon "the defendants wish us to make a motion to discharge the jury" and that he and Weinglass would confer further on the matter.
Kunstler, chief defense attorney, said both the defendants and their lawyers found the idea of a "compromise verdict" unacceptable. He said they hope the jury will "convict all. Acquit all or wind up in a hung jury."
Kunstler said the seven anti-war protest leaders—charged with conspiring to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention—feel that if the jury is hung, "We might as well end it right now rather than going on."
A notice of appeal seeking a reversal of the contempt judgments against the seven defendants and two lawyers was filed late Monday with the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Thomas P. Sullivan, Chicago lawyer who filed the notice, also moved for release of the seven defendants on bond pending outcome of the appeal. Sullivan told newsmen he would follow the notice with briefs on Thursday. Until then, he said, no appeals court action could be expected.
Police kept a close guard around the home and family of U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman, who jailed the defen-
(Continued to page 12)
A
Photo by Bruce Bernstein
Trial continues in Chicago; KU students plan march
David Owens, graduate student, leads discussion as students plan for today's march for the Chicago "10." The march began at 1:15 and proceeded to the Lawrence courthouse
Costume variations will mark Rock Chalk
Everything from a Raid insecticide can to butterflies and kangaroos will dot the stage in this year's production of Rock Chalk Revue.
Variation in chorus costume design has become especially popular this year. In one of the skits each chorus member portrays a different animal character.
dinated and made by the living groups entered in the show. Some groups began costume work as early as final week of last semester, said Kathy Colton, Omaha junior and Rock Chalk producer.
Costumes are designed, coor-
Individual house costume directors estimate that from 90 to 600 hours have been spent on costume work. Costs will range from about $25 to $300 for cos-
tunes alone in the various skits.
The only real problems reported have been the tails, ears, and some insect antennae that will be attached to the costumes of one group, Miss Colton said. Other chorus members will test their dancing talent in long bell pants and flowing gowns while men in another skit will be
decked in knickers and trimmed in ruffles.
Becky Powell, Des Moines, Iowa, junior is costume director of the between-acts skits. She said about 30 mod-dressed singers, dancers and narrators will participate in the between-act entertainment.
Costume directors for the individual skits are: Carolyn Henry,
Prairie Village junior, for Alpha Kappa Lambda and Kappa Kappa Gamma; Debbie Miller, Moberly, Mo., junior, for Beta Theta Pi and Pi Beta Phi; Cindy Creek, Lake Quivira junior, and Nancy Floerke, Leawood junior, for Sigma Chai and Chi Omega; and Sherry Spivey, Wichita senior, for Tau Kappa Epsilon and Delta Delta Delta.
Frosh attitude passive said survey
Rock Chalk, an annual production of the KU-Y, will be presented on Friday and Saturday, Feb. 27 and 28.
The general attitude of freshmen is that of passiveness and lack of interest in campus improvements and activities, concludes freshman president, Steve Hix, after completing a class survey.
HELP WANTED
Hix characterizes his findings as "very disappointing." The survey was distributed among 2,000 students, but only about 400 students showed enough interest to complete it, Hix says.
He also points out that only two students out of the 400 gave any suggestions to improve class and campus conditions.
NEW YORK (UPI) -The Business Equipment Manufacturers Association is predicting that by 1975 five times more people than are needed now will be needed to operate office machines.
year, but he hopes freshmen will show more interest in the coming election than in the last one, when only about one-third of the class voted.
social functions, but most students don't realize this is their only power or duty." Hix says.
Hix states that almost half the students have no idea of what the class officers have done this year.
The freshman president says he will not run for a class office next
Requested speakers were VicePresident Spiro Agnew, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., William Buckley, Bill Cosby and Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine.
Hix says there are many things he would like to do for improvement of the campus, but that 'the only power class officers truthfully hold is that of planning class parties." He says this is one of the reasons he feels freshmen should be given a chance to run for the Student Senate.
He says that the officers now are working to bring outstanding bands and speakers to the campus next fall. The survey included questions on what bands and speakers freshmen would like to see on campus. Groups receiving the most requests were Simon and Garfunkel, Peter, Paul and Mary, the Fifth Dimension, Crosby, Stills and Nash and the Doors.
2 KANSAN Feb. 17
1970
"The Student Senate is where projects really get done, not at class parties. Class officers are necessary to the class for planning
Pot control subject of bill
Student opinions sought on medical insurance programs
The proposal of Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, to test the control or eradication of marijuana is expected to be reported in Kansas Legislature committee this week.
The bill would set up a steering committee of six members to study the possibilities of action on marijuana. Vogel said the state can take advantage of federal money for the program.
The means of controlling or eliminating marijuana has not been decided. The provision merely sets up the committee to study the problem. Vogel said there may be legislative action on the bill in this year's session if it gets through committee.
Vogel said, "It is common sense to have this study set up. Only one county would be involved in the research. Marijuana control may be worthwhile or it may be impossible. However, before millions of dollars are spent the problem should be studied."
Dr. Raymond Schlegel, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, is asking student opinion on the student insurance program.
The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., is the program now used by the University of Kansas.
That plan is to be reconsidered and students are asked to write to Dr. Schwegler about any troubles they have encountered with the policy or any changes they want in it.
hear particularly about troubles students have had in using the policy off campus.
Schwegler said he wanted to
This is the first year that KU has used the Travelers plan after switching from Blue Cross & Blue Shield.
If students want obstetrical coverage in the plan, Schwegler said, they should remember that in including it, the entire student group would have to share the cost. It can be included if all students are willing to pay the extra fees.
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ATTENTION SENIORS Class of 1970
A factory representative will be in the Kansas Union Bookstore all day Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 16 and 17, 1970
to assist you in placing your orders for Graduation Announcements
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Campus briefs
KU conducts clerk school
The Institute for Public Affairs at KU will conduct the 20th annual City Clerk and Municipal Finance Officer's School Wednesday through Friday. More than 110 city clerks, finance directors, auditors and other officials will attend the conference.
The program will concentrate on responses to operating problems, particularly in accounting, budgeting, the municipal bond market and public relations. Each enrollee will be assigned to a discussion group based on the size and location of his city.
Mrs. Docking to aid fund drive
Mrs. Robert Docking will be in Lawrence Thursday in connection with the annual Lawrence Heart Fund drive conducted by freshmen women from five University of Kansas residence halls.
The drive will begin Wednesday and will be concluded Thursday with Mrs. Docking depositing the proceeds from the drive in the University State Bank.
Mary Rudiger, Evanston Ill. sophomore and chairman of the drive, said the five participating residence halls would compete to collect the largest contribution.
Residence halls involved in the drive are Corbin, Oliver, Ellsworth, Hashinger and Gertrude Sellards Pearson.
Frye to give lecture series
Northrop Frye, Canadian literary critic and scholar, will present a humanities series lecture, Thursday at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
Frye, professor of English at the University of Toronto, will lecture on "The Humanistic Era."
Frye will also speak at 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Friday on "Satire," "Romantic Literary Criticism" and "The Nature of Comedy," respectively. The first lecture will be in the Council Room of the Kansas Union, the second in 122 Fraser Hall and the third in 341 Murphy Hall.
Debate team places in two tourneys
The University of Kansas debate team, coached by Donn W. Parson associate professor of speech and drama, took third and fourth place in two tournaments this past weekend.
At Northeast Oklahoma State College the Squad of John Masterson, Falls Church, Va. freshman, and Bill Russell, Omaha freshman, took third place from a field of 26 teams.
The squad of Bob Prentice, Turon sophomore and Dan Beck, Prairie Village junior, took fourth place in the same tournament.
Feb.17 KANSAN 3
1970
In a tournament at Kansas State Teachers College the squad of Russ Davison, Prairie Village sophomore, and Steve Riel, Kansas City freshman, took fourth place out of 28 teams.
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Two fraternities to appeal tax decision on real estate
Two University of Kansas fraternities declared Wednesday that they intend to appeal a district court decision that they must pay taxes on real estate and personal property. Alpha Kappa Lambda and Sigma Alpha Epsilon will appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court concerning the assessment of $9,-210.58 in taxes paid under protest in 1968.
Douglas County District Court Judge Frank Gray said the fraternities must pay taxes because they are corporations and are not "benevolent and educational" to the extent they should escape local taxes.
The fraternities contended that they were non-profit organizations but the court ruled they do make profits. J. Glen Hahn, Kansas City, Mo., attorney for the two fraternities, said that the real
issue was whether or not the houses are educationally centered.
Hahn said the two fraternities were the only houses presently contesting the issue. All of the other houses on the KU campus are currently paying the taxes. If the appeal is successful, Hahn said the other fraternities might use the case as a precedent.
Hahn said there is a question concerning the money taken in by house fees going to the payment and maintenance of household goals. Kansas law states that such household goods are not subject to taxation, Hahn said.
The case will not go to the Kansas Supreme Court for another 15 to 18 months, Hahn said.
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KAWSNN COMMENT
Trigger fingers
Soldiers in the news, marching across the television screen. Israeli soldiers, brave and confident, reflections of a trigger-happy nation.
Commando raids, air strikes, artillery barrages. Punishing the Arabs. Refusing to give up the fruits of victory. Killing more Arabs. And America applauds.
Hero-warriors, fulfilling the prophecy of the Bible. Reclaiming their homeland. Destroying those who would deny them their Biblical rights. And America loves it all.
America passing out money. For planes, guns, bombs, bullets. Death to Arabs who are hate-crazy because they were driven from their land.
America cheering during the six day war. Choking a little when Israeli planes zap the Liberty, burning and killing Americans.
America reading Exodus, then The Source,
and crying. Forgetting the Arabs have a history. Forgetting they have suffered also.
Yes, the Jews have bled. Bled because people let emotions overcome reasoning. Bled because someone decided they were the cause of the world's ills. And bled still more because someone forgot Jews are human beings.
In American newspapers it's Arab terrorists hijacking planes, but Israeli heroes raiding villages.
But what is an Arab? American answer: an Arab is an oppressor of the Jews. False: an Arab is a person, people, a human being.
And now it's Israeli planes bombing and killing Egyptian civilians by "error." 166 dead or wounded, but it was an error.
When your finger is always on the trigger, errors are likely—the gun can go off.
Joe Naas
The Agnew wit
By MIKE RIEKE
According to Webster's dictionary, a satire is "a literary work in which vices, follies, stupidities, abuses, etc. are held up to ridicule and contempt." By this definition what
better way is there to satirize our Vice-President than to reprint his own words?
In a speech in St. Louis Tuesday Agnew denied that the Republican Party had any Southern strategy and went on
to speak of the present stature of the black American.
In the end
From The Highlands Candle, Las Vegas, N.M.
In the end.
There was Earth, and it was with form and beauty.
And Man dwelt upon the lands of the Earth, the meadows and trees,and he said
"Let us build our dwellings in this place of beauty."
And he built cities and covered the Earth with concrete and steel.
And the meadows were gone.
And Man said. "It is good."
On the second day, Man looked upon the waters of the Earth.
And Man said,"Let us put our wastes in the waters that the dirt will be washed away."
And Man did
And the waters became polluted and foul in their smell. And Man said, "It is good."
On the third day, Man looked upon the forests of the Earth and saw they were beautiful.
And Man said, "Let us cut the timber for our homes and grind the wood for our use."
And Man did.
And the lands became barren and the trees were gone. And Man said, "It is good."
On the fourth day, Man saw that animals were in abundance and ran in the fields and played in the sun.
And Man said, "Let us cage these animals for our amusemen and kill them for our sport."
And Man did.
And there were no more animals on the face of the Earth.
And Man said, "It is good."
And Man said, "Let us dispose of our wastes into the air for the winds shall blow them away." And Man did.
On the fifth day, Man breathed the air of the Earth.
And the air became heavy with dust and all living things choked and burned. And Man said, "It is good."
And Man said, "It is good."
On the sixth day, Man saw himself and seeing the many languages and tongues, he feared and hated.
And Man said, "Let is build great machines and destroy these lest they destroy us."
And Man built great machines and the Earth was fired with the rage of great wars. And Man said. "It is good."
On the seventh day, Man rested from his labors and the Earth was still, for Man no longer dwelt upon the Earth. And it was good.
(Ed. note—The Candle says this adaptation was written by a Pennsylvania high school student.)
"Where on earth," asked Agnew, "has any great minority come so far, so fast, as have our 20 million Black Americans—out of slavery and through segregation to their current station in American society—in the course of a single century? This is a record that should inspire optimism and hope in America—not pessimism and despair."
That quote shows Agnew's folly and stupidity. It holds him up to his due ridicule and contempt. That is satire.
Blacks and whites both will be relieved to know that civil rights is not really a problem. They can look forward to the day-perhaps only another short century away—when a school will not burn to the ground the day before it was to integrate. They can look forward to the day when white parents will not keep their children at home rather than sending them to an integrated school. They can look forward to the day when busing will not be necessary to establish racial balance in any school in the United States.
It seems like only yesterday that blacks were picking cotton and saying, "Yasuh, Massa." And look at them now; they have almost caught up to the white folks. To come so far, so fast, should definitely inspire optimism and hope in America.
Apparently this is the attitude that made the Republican Party, as Agnew said, a force in the South and "a force for good."
A few months ago a letter in "Time" magazine suggested that a new volume be added to the series of "Wit" books. In addition to the present volumes "The Kennedy Wit" and "The Stevenson Wit." a volume of Agnew quotations was suggested. It would be entitled "The Nit Wit."
STARYATION
NIGERIAN RED TAPE
THE MUNACKLE JOURNAL
*Patience, boy. There are certain procedures that must be observed.*
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
"This land that is ours together is a great and good land. It is also an unfinished land. The challenge of perfecting it is the summons of the seventies."—President Richard Nixon.
Whether striving for a Great Society or a Perfect Society, we going to fall short. But I am less willing to pooh-pooh the idealism of such terms than are many people. After all, hasn't it always been man's desire to be Christ-like or Buddah-like? Why then not a society blatantly striving toward what it thinks is perfection?
Clearing the way then for President Nixon to aim at perfection, we should all stand back and just see if he is indeed headed in that direction. The evidence doesn't seem to have both his nose and his finger facing the same mecca of perfection.
But Nixon has deserted, almost completely, other issues which cannot be deserted on the road to perfection.
As Tom Wicker said in a recent column on Nixon's state of the union message, "The net effect was to make this the first state of the union message in a decade that was not devoted primarily, in its domestic proportions, to the inequities and injustices of American life—to attacks of various kinds on poverty, discrimination, hunger, ill health, helplessness and exploitation."
A hungry, oppressed man needs more than clean air and water, and Nixon has not revealed that he is aware of that fact. And if America's hungry and oppressed continue to grow in number, we can count on a continuation of what is, in fact, our march away from perfection.
A Perfect Society? Why not?
But first, before we begin our idealistic and maybe quixotic journey, let's take a look at who we are following and in which direction we are being led. And then before we take that first step in search of sociological gods, let's remember Emerson's admonition:
"When half gods go.
"The gods arrive."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates; $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment 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 STAFF
News Adviser . . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editor Ted Illiff
News Editor Joe Bullard
Editorial Editors Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd
Sports Editors Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver
Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilens
Wire Editor Ken Cummins
Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers
Arts and Reviews Editors Genele Richards, Rich Geary
Assistant News Editors Vicki Phillips, Jim Walker
Assistant News Editors Donna Shrazer, Cass Sexon, John Stewart
Photographers Ron Bishop, Bruce Rernand, Brian Leffling
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . Mel Adams
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks
Advertising Managers Larry Cates, Joanne Bos
National Advertising Manager Oscar Bassinion
Classified Manager Wiley Rhyn
Member Associated Collegiate Press
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Side-splitter
By RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
Woody Allen is a nightclub comedian whose stand-up style has been particularly adaptable to the movies, and over the past few years he has dabbled intermittently in the field, though never with complete success. His first original screenplay, "What's New, Pussycat?" collapsed on the screen because the director had no feeling for its peculiar brand of humor, and his next picture, "What's Up, Tigerilly?" in which his own script was dubbed onto a horrendous Japanese spy picture, was a once-in-a-lifetime oddity. All he has done since then is supply the material for his all-too-brief appearance in "Cinario Royale."
Now he has co-written, directed, and starred in "Take the Money and Run," and, though it sometimes isn't as funny as it seems it should be, at least it is pure, unadulterated Woody Allen.
This is a tightly constructed little spoof of a "case history" type of documentary film, which follows the career of Virgil Starkwell (Allen), an incompetent crook who never makes the Ten Most Wanted list. His life is set before us in interviews—with his parents, his psychiatrist, his childhood cello teacher ("He had no conception of the instrument. He blew into it")—and many short scenes detailing his deprived boyhood, his courtship and marriage, his first bank robbery (which fails because no one can read the note he gives the teller), and his various sojourns in prison. As a crowning touch, the story is told by an authoritative narrator, whose deep voice serves as a brilliant counterpoint to the absurdity.
The analysis of humor is always a sticky business, and it is no less so with Allen's brand. Suffice it to say that his comedy is more verbal than visual; even the sight gags are word-oriented. Fortunately, he believes that, given the premise that a comedy should be funny, it should be funny all the time, so we receive a torrent of one-liners—good one-liners, but that is all we receive. Except for a magnificent series of scenes in which six work-gang prisoners try to escape while chained together, Allen is reluctant to build his humor within a situation, to develop its potential as the silent comedians did.
But this is a funny movie; and an isolated one, considering the trash Hollywood usually cranks out to make us laugh. For a genuine side-splitter—the kind that never lets up—one must go back to the Marx Brothers and W. C. Fields, in whose tradition Allen is certainly following. The least an audience asks of a movie is entertainment and if "Take the Money and Run" lacks the persistence to keep us laughing all the time, it is much more than adequate until Woody Allen's next effort.
BOOKS
ABOVE SUSPICION, by Helen MacInnes (Crest, 95 cents)—Reprint of a famous novel of suspense that appeared shortly before America entered World War II. The setting is Germany, and the characters are a young American and his wife whose European vacation turns into terror. MacInnes is always great fun.
★ ★ ★
THE HURRICANE YEARS, by Cameron Hawley (Crest, $1.25) A big book about big business by the late Cameron Hawley, who became famous with "Executive
Feb. 17
1970 KANSAN 5
Suite" almost 20 years ago. Out of his own business background Hawley wrote several novels, and this work describes Judd Wilder, who drove himself to the top and found that it hadn't been worth it. Though Hawley was never a writer of great ability he told a story well, and this one says, in addition, much about our times.
ROYAL ROAD TO FOTHERINGAY, by Jean Plaidy (Crest, 95 cents)—Historical novel about Mary Queen of Scots. Jean Plaidy also writes as Victoria Holt, and she is a pure romantic. Historical novels and movies seem to be on their way back, and this is a big one.
"ORPHEUS" (KU Film Society)—Jean Cocteau's modernization of a Greek myth; a magnificent and fascinating classic, made in 1949.
On campus this week
* *
Tuesday
"STEEL HELMET" (Special Films)—A battle film directed by Sam Wood, one of the masters of the war genre (1951).
Wednesday
"FURY" (Classical Series)— The first American film by German director Fritz Lang; an exciting drama about mob violence (1936).
Thursday
"PORK CHOP HILL" (Special Films)—Battle action in the Korean War, with an attempt at an anti-war statement. Directed by Lewis Milestone—1959.
Best sellers
Compiled by Publishers' Weekly Fiction
The Godfather—Mario Puzo
The First Lieutenant's Woman—
John Fowler
The Inheritors—Harold Robbins
The House on the Strand-Daphne
Therold Robbins
The House on the Strand-Daphne
du Maurier
Fire From Heaven—Mary Renault
Didn't Shoot Straight Jimmy Brews
The Seven Minutes—Irwin Wallace
Pupet On A Chair—Allstar MacLea
in This House of Brede—Rumer Godden
The Silvering Sands—Victoria Holt
Nonfiction
Concubin
The Selling of the President 1968—Joe McGlinnie
Present at The Creation—Dean Acheson
Mary Queen of Scots—Antonia Fraser
seF The Peter Principle—Laurence J. Peters and Paulup Holt.
American Heritage Dictionary of the
Language-William Morris's self-religion
The Collapse of the Third Republic
William L. Stuart
Ahmoadassor's Journal—John K.
Galbrath
Kenneth K. Galbrath, Cal
The Graham Kerr Cookbook—Gal-
loping Gourmet
The Time--Alexander Kendrila
In Someone's Shadow-Rod McKuen
Official Bulletin
Tuesday
Poetr's Hour: W. S., Merwin reads
Big Eight Room, Kansas
United Union
Columbus, p.m.
Council. Result. Meeting. Forum
Room. Room Union. 4:20 pm.
College Faculty Meeting: Forum Room, Kansas Union, 4:30 p.m.
Room, Kansas Union, 4:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door, Robinson Gymnasium. 4:30 p.m.
robinson Gymnastium, 4:30 p.m.
freshman Basketball Chanute
Freshman Basketball: Chanute
House, J. Jr.; College, Allen Field
House, 5:45 p.m.
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium. 6:45-9:45 p.m.
NORTHROP FRYE (humanities lecture)—Frye, critic, author, educator and professor at University of Toronto will be the fourth speaker in the Humanities Lecture Series speaking on "The Humanistic Era."
Film: "Steel Helmet" Woodruff Auditorium, 7 & 9 p.m.
Auditorium, 7 & 9 p.m.
Film Society: "Orpheus." Woodruff
KU Synhero Club: Natoratium,
Robinson Gymnasium. 7-9 n.m.
Auditorium, 7 & 9 p.m.
KU Synchro Club: Natatorium.
5 p.m.
Basketball: Nebraska. Allen Field
House. 8 n.m.
Jayhawk Rodee Club: Room 2A, Kansas University, 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m.
Christian Science Organization:
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Eldrlech" 8:20 p.m.
The International Association for
Technology Education seeks a
Experiential Experience has openings for
U.S. students who wish to work
in a technology environment. See 226 Strong
Hall for information.
Christian Science Organization:
Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
SAN ANTONIO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (KU Concert Course)—This concert hopefully will entertain the students as well as the Prague Symphony Orchestra did last semester. The musical director is Victor Alessandro.
ENDS TUESDAY
"rib cracking comedy"
—JUDITH CRIST,
TODAY SHOW
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY
AND RUN"
FROM THE AMERICAN
COLOR / BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.
DISTRIBUTED BY CINERAAMA RELEASING CORPORATION
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784
All Week
"THE RIMERS OF ELD-RITCH" (theatre production)—Continuing all week "The Rimers of Eldritch" gives its audience a rewarding experience, making it worthwhile to see.
"rib
cracking comedy"
—JUDITH CRIST,
TODAY SHOW
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY
AND RUN"
FROM THE AMERICAN
COLOR / BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.
DISTRIBUTED BY CINEMAMA RELEASING CORPORATION
7:15 & 9:15
Sat. & Sun. Mat.
2:30
Granada
THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5788
WOODY ALLEN'S
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X
Jerry Gre
ENDS TONIGHT
From the country that gave you"IA WOMAN"
"INGA"and "I AM CURIOUS"
'FANNY HILL' is a "porno-classic!"
— ARCHER WINSTON
"In there with sex and love all the way!"
-N.Y. Post
Fanny Hill
Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroules
Distributed by CINEMATION INDUSTRIES·COLOR by DeLuxe
Mat. DAILY 2:30
Exe. 7:15 - 9:15
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... telophone VI3-1065
steel helmet
february 17
Samuel Puller, USA, 1951
Short: EKYSTONE NOTEL, Keystone Cops
7:00 am and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
pork
chop
hill
february 19
Lewis Milestone, USA, 1959
Short: THE EMIGRANT, Charlie Chaplin
7:00 am and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
fail
safe
february 24
Sidney Lamer, USA, 1964
Short: THE MANDALO
steel helmet
february 17
Samuel Pollet, USA, 1951
Short: KETSTONE HOTEL, Keystone Cope
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
pork chop hill
february 19
Lewis Milestone, USA, 1959
Short: TRE DIMIDANT, Charlie Chaplin
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
fail safe
february 24
Sidney Lumet, USA, 1964
Short: I'M NO ANGEL, Has West
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
war anti-war film series
part II
war
anti-war
film
series
part II
KU CONCERT COURSE presents the SAN ANTONIO SYMPHONY
Victor Alessandro Musical Director
PROGRAM
Carnival Overture Dvorak
Symphony No. 2 in D Major Brahms
Huapango Moncayo
Intermezzo from "Vannesa" Barber
The Pines of Rome Respighi
Hoch Auditorium Thursday, February 19
8:20 p.m.
K. U. I.D.'s admit free—it's a great date
Man-made snow
Ski slope offers fun and jobs
BICYCLE
Photo by Greg Sorber
By GREG SORBER
Kansan Staff Writer
The same mound that served as a lookout for scouts on the Oregon Trail now is used by travelers on skis.
Mont Bleu is a ski resort located just a few miles east of Lawrence. The tree-cleared course is 1,250 feet long with a 220 foot drop, said Rudy Voldrich, manager of the Mont Bleu ski lodge.
Boots secured to the skis . . .
From the top, he said, a skier can hit speeds up to 60 miles per hour before reaching the bottom.
Although the weather in Kansas is not always cooperative, nature is helped along by guns which produce real snow. The snow is made when the temperature falls below freezing and the humidity is 75 per cent or lower. The air guns shoot a fine mist of water which crystalizes into snow. Each of the 15 guns can pump 20 gallons per minute to cover the ski slope.
The Wakarusa River serves as the source of the millions of gallons of water needed each season to produce the snow. About five million gallons of water are pumped in ponds near the slopes. From the ponds, the water is then pumped through pipes to the air guns coming out as snow.
the slopes, during warm weather which occurs occasionally in a ski season, turn into mud. But if the temperature suddenly drops below freezing, the hill can be covered with snow during the night.
Mont Bleu is in its fifth year of operation. The first year saw more than 2,700 ski enthusiasts
10
Photo by Greg Sorber
...and we're ready to tackle the Kansas ski slope
6 KANSAN Feb. 17 1970
LUNCH SPECIAL
SOUP & SANDWICH 50c
Home of the world famous truck stop Pitchers 2-5 p.m. SPECIAL
on the course. An expected 5,000 skiers are expected to have populated the hill by the end of this year's season. The season, Voldrich said, runs from late December to the first week of March. Next year he expects the season to start earlier, the first week of December or late November.
ROCK CHALK CAFE
On a good day, 250 skiers could be on the slope and Voldrich expects the number to double when the new T-bar lift is installed. The lift will allow skiers to sit on a cross bar and ride to the top of the mound. Skiers now grab a continuous rope pull which takes them half way up the course. Now, skiers use only the lower half of the slope.
Skiing in Kansas is unique and Voldrich said people from as far away as Oklahoma City have come to Mont Bleu. Most people, however, come from the Kansas City-Leavenworth-Topeka areas.
Voldrich said the resort also produces 20 to 30 part-time jobs for University of Kansas students. The student-employees work on the ski patrol, operate the tow rope, work in the rental shop, and some also teach beginning skiers.
There are many beginners, Voldrich said, including about 75 per cent of the skiers on the hill. He runs a ski school for beginners assisted by two KU students.
The Mont Bleu rental shop reportedly claims to carry more equipment than its counterparts at Colorado's major ski resorts. Mont Bleu has more than 500 complete sets of skis, boots and poles available to rent.
BACKFIRE
Voldrich, a native of Czechoslovakia, was a Czech contender in the Olympics and later was a judge at the Squaw Valley winter Olympics in 1960.
Voldrich said if the resort continues to grow, new slopes and another lift might be added.
Although there have been a few
injuries on the course, none have occurred this year.
Why a ski resort in Kansas?
"We were living in Kansas."
Voldrich said, "It's a long drive to Colorado."
NEW YORK—The Insurance Information Institute notes that the destructive potential of fireworks is sharply reflected by a Fourth of July conflagration in Portland, Me., in 1866 which destroyed 1,500 buildings and caused $10 million damage. The fire was started by a carelessly tossed firecracker.
Would you like to lose weight and keep it off for good?
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Residents concerned for children
Traffic problem at Stouffer
Excessive speeding and hazardous traffic conditions are growing problems at Stouffer Place, said Mrs. Judy Freed, Stouffer Place resident.
Mrs. Freed is especially concerned about the danger to children playing near the street from careless drivers speeding down Ellis Street.
When asked about the situation, Ernest E. Pulliam, assistant director of housing, refused to comment, calling Mrs. Freed's charge "idle gossip."
"We have done all we can."
Pulliam said "Signs have been posted and the area is patrolled."
Last summer, Stouffer residents presented a petition to the director of housing, requesting a reduction in the speed limit and the posting of signs.
This hasn't been much improvement, Mrs. Freed said.
In compliance with the request, the speed limit was lowered to 20 m.p.h. and several "Slow, Children at Play" signs were posted, along with one "Yield" sign.
"The signs are irrationally put," said Robert Godbout, New Hampshire graduate student and
Stouffer resident. He was referring to the lone "Yield" sign in the south-bound lane at the intersection of Ellis and Bagley Streets.
"Nobody yields," he said, "because we feel the sign shouldn't be there in the first place."
Several residents suggested that stop signs be placed at the intersection. This intersection is especially hazardous since children frequently play near this area. There have been several accidents near the intersection in the past few years. One woman said she had seen several children almost run over after chasing a ball into the street.
Residents who live farther from the intersection do not seem to be as aware of the problem as those who can sit at their windows and see the cars speed by.
are old enough to play outside, she has become worried about the situation.
"Not everyone who uses the road speeds," said Mrs. Freed. "It seems to be the same few residents who do it."
Godbout also mentioned the need for more patrolmen to police the area.
KU student selected to study in Leningrad
One resident suggested that mothers should keep a closer watch on their children so drivers wouldn't have to worry about them running into the street.
In talking with Stouffer residents, a noticeable difference in concern can be seen between those who have small children and residents who are childless.
One woman said she had heard about the problem for several years but now that her children
A University of Kansas coed was among 29 graduate and undergraduate Russian language students chosen in competition to spend the spring semester at Leningrad State University in Russia.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
field trips will be scheduled throughout the semester.
Miss Alpert will live in a university dormitory at Leningrad and will have a Russian student as a roommate.
Louise Alpert, Northbrook, Ill. senior, was the only KU student accepted into the program offered by the Council on International Educational Exchange.
Guadalajara, Mexico
The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, will offer, June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, political science, language and literature courses. Tuition, $160; board and room $155;
Write Dr. Juan B. Rael, Office of Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
Weather
The program includes a 14-week language course, a course on Russian literature and theater, and a lecture series on contemporary Russia, including history, politics, government, civilization, and culture. Students will also be allowed to audit one regular course at the university, and
Sunny and warmer with strong southerly winds 25 to 30 miles per hour today.
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Dwight Boring* says...
A. A. Cunningham
*Dwight Boring
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 February 24,1970
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
K-State lunges far ahead of field as NU, KU meet for second tonight
By United Press International
A blocked shot by David Lawrence propelled Kansas State to a 63-60 victory over Missouri Monday night, allowing the Wildcats to take a giant step toward the Big Eight basketball championship.
Lawrence blocked Pete Helmlock's layup with 1:16 left then scored an uncontested layup at the offensive end with 43 seconds to play to give K-State a 59-56 lead. It remained for Jeff Webb and Bob Zender to sink two free throws each in the waning seconds to clinch the victory.
The win, K-State's third on the road in the hotly-contested Big Eight race, left the Wildcats with a two-game lead over Kansas and Nebraska with four to play. K-State is 8-2 while Missouri, which suffered its first home loss after 13 straight victories, was virtually eliminated with a 5-5 record.
K-State took the lead for good, 57-56, on Eddie Smith's 15-foot jumper with 1:39 to go. Zender led K-State with 13 points, while Missouri's top scorer was Don Tomlinson with 18.
Oklahoma State opened up a deadlocked Big Eight Conference basketball game in the last half of play Monday to hand the Iowa State Cyclones a 72-62 loss, their first in four years at the hands of the Cowboys.
Paul Mullen, 6-7 Cowboy center, led the scoring with 25 points.
The two teams battled on even terms through the first half, going to the dressing room with a 33-33 tie.
Midway in the second half the Pokes opened up with 10 consecutive points to break a 47-47 deadlock and give them the largest advantage of the game.
In the next three minutes of play the Cyclones outscored the Pokes 13-4 and pulled to within one point at 60-61 with two minutes to play.
The Cowboys scored nine points in the closing two minutes of play.
The loss put the Cyclones at 5-6 in conference play. The Cowboys went to 4-6.
Oklahoma kept defending champion Colorado at a seven-point deficit during the final minutes of play Monday to hand the Buffalooes an 84-77 defeat that virtually eliminated the visitors from contention in Big Eight basketball competition.
Colorado's Gordon Tope led the scoring with 23 points. Sooner Bobby Jack trailed with 22.
Both squads had players in double figures but it was from the field the Sooners took command.
Oklahoma hit 32 of 64 from the field for a cool 50 per cent while Colorado could manage only 29 of 83 for 34 per cent.
The Sooners were led only once in the game. Colorado moved to a 4-2 advantage in the opening rounds but Oklahoma went to the dressing room with
a 38-33 halftime advantage.
The loss left the Buffs at 4-6 in conference play. Oklahoma is now 4-5.
* *
With the loser facing virtual elimination from the Big Eight basketball race, Nebraska and Kansas collide at 8:05 tonight in Allen Field House.
Both the Huskers and 'Hawks carry 4-4 marks into the contest and face an uphill struggle to catch league-leading Kansas State at 8-2. The Wildcats disposed of second-place Missouri Monday night, 63-60, and must only win two of their remaining four games to clinch at a tie for the title regardless of what any challenger may do.
Nebraska has already beaten KU twice this season, 78-73 in the Big Eight Tourney, and 84-73 in Lincoln. The victor of tonight's game will hold undisputed possession of second place and trail K-State by two games in the loss column.
It promises to be a running, high-scoring affair as both teams have good speed and like to fast-break. The winner will be the
team with; even an outside chance of catching K-State.
K-State game sold out
All tickets for the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game at Allen Field House March 7 have been sold, KU athletic director Wade Stinson announced last week.
It will be the final regular season game for both of the Big Eight title contenders. K-State currently leads the conference with an 18-2 record and Kansas is tied for second with Nebraska at 4-4.
Frazier world champ; Ellis can't go in 5th
NEW YORK (UPI)—Joe Frazier became the undisputed heavyweight boxing champion of the world Monday night when Jimmy Ellis was unable to answer the bell for the fifth round of their title fight.
The fight established Frazier as the sole owner of the title he had shared with Ellis since Cassius Clay was deposed three years ago after refusing induction into the armed services.
Ellis carried the fight to Frazier in the first round, but in the second and then in the third Frazier asserted his superior punching power and only courage
seemed to keep Ellis on his feet.
only team left in the conference with four losses and the only
Ellis went down for the count of eight in the fourth, barely beating the count. He went down again and the bell sounded at five with Ellis on the floor.
It was Frazier's 25th victory in his unbeaten professional career. He was the Olympic champion in 1966.
Ellis was not able to come out for the fifth round.
Frazier weighed 205 against 201 for Ellis.
ROCK CHA1K
RGUE
improbable history
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—
Feb. 17
KU-Y office.
information booth on campus, Bell's, the sound, Kief sponsored by KU-Y
With cheese 59c
Only 54c
For a giant appetite try a GRIFF'S GIANT HAMBURGER. A snack of a giant hunk of ground beef, fresh lettuce tomato, and onions will taste great after an evening's study. Come in tonight.
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8 KANSAN Feb. 17
1970
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1860-1930
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8
Photo by Steve Fritz
Collision causes . . .
Shun skirts for shorts
Coeds play 'rugged' game
By STEVE FRITZ
Kansan Sports Writer
University of Kansas coeds are nice to look at, easy to talk to, wonderful to be with, until you put them on a basketball court. Then be careful if you happen to get in their way because they will probably run over you.
The girls' intramural basketball teams play hard and they play to win, Joan Lundstrom, Atchison junior, said Monday. There are very few injuries, Miss Lundstrom but, after every game there are plenty of bumps and bruises.
When a coed exchanges her street clothes for a gym uniform the change that comes over her is drastic. She no longer excuses herself for bumping into someone, but rather she will knock somebody down for a chance to get her hands on the basketball.
The girls do not deliberately try to hurt any of the other players, but will do almost anything to block a shot or to get in a
position to score. The bumping and shoving that goes on under the backboards is gruesome to watch.
"The girls love to win," Miss Lundstrom said. "The injuries we have are due to a lack of skill and the over-enthusiasm the girls have."
The games are refereed by members of the officiating class in the Women's Physical Education Department, Miss Lundstrom said. Miss Lundstrom, who plays on a team as well as officers, said, "The referees try to call all of the fouls, but sometimes the games just move too fast."
From a spectator's viewpoint the games are a comedy of horrors. Nearly every error that can be made in basketball (except unsportsmanlike behavior) can be found in the girls' attempt to win.
The girls intramural basketball games are organized by the Women's Recreational Association (WRA). The WRA has each of the 16 teams play at least once a week.
THE DANCE TEAM
It is also in charge of planning the final tournament which is scheduled for the first week of March, Miss Lundstrom said.
... bruises, sore muscles
Photo by Steve Fritz
No feminine spray can stop it.
Coeds play a violent game of intramural basketball. The mad scramble for a rebound is not the time for lady-like behavior. (top picture).
The "other" odor. It starts in the vaginal tract where no spray can work. You can't spray it away. And it's more offensive than external odor caused by perspiration.
The other odor
The result of the girl's intranural basketball games is a group of battered coeds. During the five minute rest at halftime the players take the time to nurse their bumps, bruises and tired bodies. The injuries, ranging from the small bruises to sprained fingers, are caused by the girl's enthusiastic play and lack of skill (bottom picture).
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The following provisions constitute the candidacy requirements of the election procedures for the Student Senate to be held March 17-18,1970
1. A candidate for the presidency and a candidate for the vice-presidency of the student body must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy at least thirty (30) days prior to the general election. This declaration must be accompanied, if the candidate was not a member of the Student Senate for the semester immediately preceding the general election, a petition signed, with names and student number,'by five hundred (500) bonafide members of the student body of the University of Kansas approving the candidacy. Each candidate must pay a five (5) dollar filing fee.
2. Any person wishing to be a candidate for the Student Senate must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy prior to the 2nd of March,1970. This declaration must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee.Candidates for the Student Senate must run from the school in which they are currently enrolled,and the declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a certification from the office of the dean of the school that the student is in fact enrolled in that school.
3. Declaration and certification forms for candidates for the Student Senate can be picked up at the Student Senate Office or in the office of the dean of each school of the University.
4. Candidates must indicate whether they wish to be identified on the ballots as running as independents or as members of a particular political party or coalition.
5. Class officer candidates must submit a declaration of candidacy and a petition containing the signatures of fifty (50) bonafide members of their class to the president or secretary of the Student Senate prior to the 2nd of March, 1970. Class officer candidates may also indicate their desire to run as part of a coalition. The declaration and petition must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee per candidate.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kunan are offered
all students in regard to color,
creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10% handling charge. AR and Dynaco dealership. Revox and other lines available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
'64 Impala Convertible 6 cylinder au-
good condition, good奖金 $252
842-194-689
Recording tapes on sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on used. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord or phone at 843-4836. 2-23
Guild Slim Jim 6 string with custom black paint and case; excellent condition, new, $375.00; sell for $215.00.
Call Jim Hewmorsh V 3-5770. 2-17
For Sale: 1966 Corvette 4-speed 327-
150hp; 434-770-200. p.m. $2700. Want bargain.
CONGA DRUM: nearly new muleskin
fiberglass with legs: 843 843-620 2-17
Ampex cassette player and speakers.
Finest in stereo tape systems. In ex-
pressions. $130 or best offer
843-792-365. Ask for Doug Dannen-
le leave message.
1966 Chevy Impala. Need money real
3097 try it, pay very cheap.
3097 anytime. 2-17
Western Civ. Notes—Now on sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Ed.
Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
1959 Pontiac, air cond. new battery,
fuel pump, generator, brakes. Needs
TLC. Best offer. 842-9936 after 6 p.m.
2-17
For Sale: Realistic 40 changer, $25;
10-watt realistic stereo Amp, $25;
Regula LKB camera, EE, x-synch,
$35, George, 843-845-84. 2-18
Sony TC-8 8-track stereo recorder-
player tape deck for sale. Six months
old. Like new. Call for Karl at 843-
9072, after 6. 2-18
Deluxe 2-speaker stereo FM walnut radio, famous brand reduced from $7.99 to $9.99. Ray Stoneback's. 99 Mass. Open Monday and Tuesday nights. 3-28
Clearance! AM-FM radios, famous brands, entire stock of floor samples reduced—transistors as low as $10.00. Ray Stoneback's, downtown. 2-18
Four new wide radial F70-14 new B.F. Goodrich whitewall--final cut to $30-00 plus $2.58 FET each. Ray Stoneback's fast free installation. 2-18
Sunn amp. with two D140F J.B.L.
speakers. Gibson EB-O Bass with
hardshell case. Band broke up. Phone
Ted. 842-7000. Rm. 815. Best offer. 2-18
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Calvin Bridal
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Tony's 66 Service
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tune-ups
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2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
TC-50 pocket cassette-cordor, 6 months old, worth $125.00 new; need money, cellphone, remote control earphone, remote control switch. Call Jim, 843-7404. 2-18
Hot Rod VW, 76 horse, fully set up for gymkhanas, 842-2191. 2-19
Austin Healy 3000, Mark III, needs
to restore to regime in
condition, 842-219. —219
68 Bridgestone Super 90, low mileage
842-2191 2-19
GROOVY INFLATABLE FURNI-
TURE—many styles for dorm or
apartment. Call 842-3801 between 6:30
and 8:00 weekdays. 2-19
USED PORTABLE CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER. Concord F-50, works by 48 volts. Compatible with plug1 converter. Includes carrying case, microphone. 2 sets of batteries, and one case. A reasonable offer. Call Don Huggins at 843-5220 or 842-6600. 2-17
Skis= head competition GS 205 cm,
marker bindings. $115 Call 843-860-643
Silverton guitar amp, with speaker cabinet. Has tremolo, reverb, and a pedal. Special $250 new or used. 180. Call Bill. 843-8490, after five. 2-20
Ex-schoolbus. Carpeted. Sink and stove ready to hook up. Magic possibilities. $300 plus tow charges. Call 842-5940. 2-18
*842* Norton 750 cc. Beautiful bike.
*842-5090* Call evening events.
2-18
Boyfriend drafted: need to sell Craig 4-track tape player. Car or home unit. Only four months old. Good condition.
Call 842-5088. 2-20
Motorcycle -500 c.c. single Matchless.
paint, $200 or best offer
5896
2-20
Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Become a collector, a
son. Museum of Natural History Gift
Shop collects them from all over the
Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 2-20
Typewriters - big selection . rental
purchase plan available. Office supplies
and furniture. Xerox service
.Typewriter Co., 700 Massa
843-3644
Guitar--6 string Gibson in perfect
Guitar, Guitar, capo, and case 842-0002
842-0002
2-19
"62 Trilium TR-4. Runs good but
minor work. $40 or less.
65-6824
2-19
1965 Mustang Hardtop. 6 cyl., 3-speed transmission, A.C., Radio, Snow Tires.
Excellent condition. Best offer. 843-
9186. 2-17
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, Power steering, 326 wagon, power brakes, low imposition, air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-8002. 2-23
LA PETITE GALERIE
الكامل
LA PETITE GALERIE
"with-it!" fashions
for
Dayligi.it and after-hours
also
Men's wear by Arpeja
Lower level
910 Ky., Lawrence
1968 Chevrolet, Chevelle Station Wagon, 6
offered on $1250.00, 843-978-96
2-17
TR-4, original owner. Red-black top-wire wheels. Good condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Abarth. Judson ignition. Bendix electric fuel pump. Fogs and Driving light. service detailed service history. 843-6659. 2-23
- Reweaving
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweavin
Magnavox deluxe 5" spool tape recorder sold new $89.99 Use it for recording short, tape bargains at Ray Stoneback's downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. nights.
926 Mass.
WANTED
Cood needs two girls to share furnished apartment. All utilities paid except water. Call Cindy, 842-8467. 9-20
Wanted: One bass player who sings; one guitarist who sings and any veritable guitarist. You must be interested in organizing a progressive rock band with excellent drummer and a original material. Call Chuck, 842-1390 any time, or Rocky, 842-6454.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-13
NOTICE
VI 3-0501
Male roommate needed for Crescent Heights two-bedroom apt. Swimming pool and air conditioning. Available March 1. Call 842-5859 2-23
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-goodness Bar-B-Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special-moment from W 2-9301 Closed Sunday, Thursday
Need one coed roommate to share completely furnished apartment by three other girls. Reasonable rent, Call Sunny, Perky, or 842-4729. 2-19
Female roommate wanted for luxury
room. Reasonable. Call 842-742-8600
2-17
Audio discount: the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay 10% handling or Dynaco dealership. Call 842-2047 evenings 4 to 10.
Either a male roommate or two people to occupy a two-bedroom apartment near campus. No lease. Call 842-6211. 27
fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
vests, jacket sleeves, purses,
barrettes, dog collars—at 812 Mass.
PRIMARILY LEATHER. 3-2
Student and family laundries done at Tarl's, Laundry, 1903$^2$. Mass. St. laundry and folded permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service. Bring in early 3-2
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
RUSSIA
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
Minnie Pearls
A
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Call in or Carry Out
V1 3-8200
1730 W. 23rd, Lawrence, Kan
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AND COIN OP.
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SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Our 20 styles to choose or purchase Your own. PRIMARIO LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
52% of the income tax goes to the Pentagon—give Melvin less money. The Pentagon and up (save twerf Gretchen, 84-963-959. 1218 Mississippi) after 6 p.m.
2-18
Dressmaking and alterations. 20 years
experience. Call 843-2767, 8-5 2-17
Ayn Rand study group being formed:
David R. Island, R. Cormier, 928 RH
2-19
PERSONAL
Rallye - Harec and Hounds type. February 21, 1970. Saturday night, Malls first car off 7:30. Rallye Master Chris Patterson. Information. 842-547-2-23
Offset printing for yourself, movement or organization at reasonable rates. Bill Lee, 1230 Oread. 842-9402.
5-17
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
2-27
Thank you for your patience! The
work is almost through re-stocking its
inventory with interesting new items.
On weekdays, 8:30 to 4:30. Sunday,
9:30 to 11:30.
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on all new vehicles. Your Group Tax, 801.5 Miles and $40 up if you buy a new vehicle.
Have fun while learning about world affairs. Represent a country in the Model OAS, March 14, 15. Call KU-Y office, UN 4-3761.
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $ 801^{1}$ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. tf
TYPING
Has the lottery got your number?
Join the National Guard. I know of several openings and can get you in.
Call Sam Cook, 843-1711. 2-19
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. type, documents. Phone 843-9554. Plea Type. Competent service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-14
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call VI 3-2381. Mrs. Ruckman
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxl. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Experienced typist will type term papers, manuscripts, thesis, dissertations, and any other multilanguage typing. Batch average rate: Call 842-3789, after 5 p.m. 2-20
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, themes, misc. Contact Kathy Grey, 710 Randall Road, 842-6189. 2-20
Typing, Theses, papers, Experienced.
necessary English corrections, English teacher, M.S. degree. Also English tutor,
students or students in a Reasonable. 842-9249. 2-20
FOR RENT
Apt. single male. $85 a month, utili-
share. Share bath. 12-14
842-213-181 2-14
LOST
Missing—brown folio case. Important
papers, 843-6123 or 843-1871.
P-1-7
843-6123 or 843-1871.
Furnished effluence apartments. $80 a
month. Call 842-2180 at 2-10 p.m. Tuesday or Wed.
2-10 p.m. Tues. or Wed.
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
Luxurious studio apt. (quiet) at Town Manor. Furnished, a.c., steam heat, parking, single occupancy. Professor or mature student. 843-800-900
USED BOOKS - READ AND TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Western Comics, Maybuy
eBooks, Children's Books, Now boasting
934 Mass. Book 843-2736. Now boasting
25,000 books.
HELP WANTED
Part-time art design to design album cover
Music. 307 E. 9th, 844-4916
House, 307 E. 9th, 844-4916
2-23
One black man's billfold with the initials J D V. inside Urgently need a 843-6268 or 843-2259 in ask for John Valentine. If not in ask message. 2-18 2-18
for
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Contact:
Contact:
Shelley Bray
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
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Committee okays Carswell nomination
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Judiciary Committee overwhelmingly approved Monday the Supreme Court nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell. Debate on his confirmation in the full Senate could begin sometime next week.
The vote was 13 to 4 with the opposition coming from the committee's four Democratic liberals. Sen. Marlowe Cook, R-Ky., abstained when the committee voted but was given permission to vote
later and cast his ballot in Carswell's favor.
Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss., committee chairman, predicted the Senate would approve President Nixon's nomination of the Tallahassee, Fla., federal appeals court judge by a 2-1 margin.
The committee, said Eastland, agreed to give the four dissidents 10 days to file a minority report and would then formally send the nomination to the Senate floor.
The Senate leadership could then call up the nomination for debate the day after it was received.
Eastland said he and another committee member, Sen. Roman L. Hruska, R-Neb., telephoned congratulations to Carswell at Tallahassee.
In Florida, Carswell said, "I am grateful for the favorable vote of the Judiciary Committee in the exercise of its important responsibility." But there would be no celebration, Carswell told news-
men, until after the full Senate votes.
The four dissenting votes came from Sens. Philip A. Hart, Michigan; Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts; Joseph D. Tydings, Maryland; and Birch Bayh, Indiana.
Asked about chances of defeating the nomination on the Senate floor, Tydings replied, "It will be very difficult."
But the liberals did force one concession in the committee. They refused to let the nomination come to a vote on a constitutional amendment—opposed by Eastland—providing for direct election of Presidents. The panel
agreed to vote on that measure April 24.
Opposition to Carswell had centered around a 1948 Georgia political speech in which he vowed to uphold white supremacy; his part in the 1956 conversion of a public golf course threatened by court-ordered integration to a private club; and accusations he has abused civil rights lawyers and litigants while he was a federal district judge.
Ten winning pieces from the 1969 Sterling Silver Design Competition are being shown at KU in the Museum of Art. The display will be shown until Feb. 20.
Museum features silver display
Carswell, however, repudiated his white supremacy speech, denied any racial motivation in joining the golf club, and denied he was ever hostile to any lawyers in his court.
The hand-crafted, one-of-a-kind pieces represent the best work done by student silversmiths today.
The first prize winner is a chess set featuring sterling symbols representing the king, queen, bishop, knight and rook set upon tapered plastic cones which peg into a chess board of inlaid teak and walnut squares.
The Competition, sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America, encourages design
students at the college, technical and graduate level to apply their talents to objects of sterling silver.
The KU exhibit is part of a nation-wide tour, during which the prize-winning designs will be displayed at leading schools and stores in major cities across the country.
Chicago
(Continued from page 1) dants on contempt sentences after the jury retired Saturday.
The security watch was prompted by an anonymous telephone tip that a bomb would be placed in the Gold Coast apartment house where the judge lives. A search turned up no bomb.
Campbell denied their motion but gave them permission to leave the proximity of the federal building and go to the jail, six miles away to confer with the defendants.
Kunstler and Weinglass, who also drew contempt sentences for their conduct in the tumultuous $4\frac{1}{2}$ month trial but remained free for the present, went before chief Judge William J. Campbell to get their clients out of jail and to the federal building for consultations.
Kunstler told reporters work had begun on an appeal of all the contempt sentences. The sentences ranged in duration from four years and 13 days for Kunstler himself to two months and 18 days for Lee Weiner, known as the quietest of the defendants.
12 KANSAN Feb. 17 1970
The seven men—all antiwar militants—were tried on charges of conspiring to incite riots in Chicago during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. If convicted on the charges, they face prison terms of up to 10 years in prison and $20,000 fines.
The defendants are David Dellinger and Rennie Davis, leaders of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam; Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, leaders of the Youth International Party Yippies; Tom Hayden, a co-organizer of the Students for a Democratic Society—SDS; and university professors John Froines and Weiner.
While the "Chicago Seven" sweated out the verdict in the jail, members of their families and friends kept a watch in courthouse corridors of nearby Christ the King Lutheran church.
David Stuhr, York, Neb., senior in the department of design, assembled the show, Stuhr conferred with the executive vice president of the Sterling Silversmiths Guild in New York during semester break to have the display sent to KU, he said.
KU is the first University in the nation to have a silversmithing major, said Dr. Carlyle Smith, head of the department of design. KU is also the first University to have a master's degree in jewelry and silversmithing, Smith said.
With the display, Stuhr said he hopes to encourage more participation of the jewelry and silver-smithing department in national competition.
Festival of Arts March 30-April 14
$5.00 Coupons go on Sale Feb.18-SUA Office
Coupon holders save $4.50 and receive a free program
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
TIDE
8:00-12:00
$1 Admission
Per Pitcher
804 W. 24th
DO YOUR OWN THING NOW! Ideas and people make our bu We're in the retailing, food and p services business. And YOUR can help us do a better job
We're seeking graduates with majors in: Business Administration / Economics / Psychology / Mathematics / Liberal Arts / Marketing / Architectural Design / Mechanical Engineering / Personnel Administration / Accounting / Computer Sciences / Food and Hotel Management / Traffic and Transportation Management / Management Engineering / and Industrial Engineering.
Engineering We want idea-people to turn us on in the following fields:
- RETAILING
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- MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
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- SYSTEMS ANALYSIS
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* MANAGEMENT ENGINEERING
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Here's where YOU come in. We're changing.And growing.And we're looking for bright young people who can help us make our changes work.YOU are one of the new-idea people we're looking for.
HERE'S OUR OFFER: You can start out in management right now. You make good money. You put your own ideas to work and evaluate the results. You move up fast. You work almost anywhere in the world, with opportunity to travel. You're a big part of our operation. And you accomplish whatever your talents lead you to work toward. That's it.
YOU have the opportunity. We have openings. Let's get together and see if our ideas are in the same bag.
Ourrepresentatives will be on campus soon. See your placement director and sign up for an interview NOW!
If you can't make our scheduled interview date, don't sweat it. Write us direct and find out if our ideas are in the same bag. Write to:
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Poem causes walkout
Story on page 20.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
80th Year, No. 81
Wednesday, Feb. 18, 1970
THE STORY OF THE MAN IN THE WILLOW CLOVE
Photo by Joe Bullard
PARKER, JEFF.
Red and blue were the colors of the day
Photo by Ron Bishop
While students gather around Jimmy Green's statue to hear Lawrence Velvel, assoc. prof. of law speak out against the Chicago "Ten" trial, an unidentified protestor paints the statue with red and blue spray paint. An unidentified protestor paints a stenciled fist on the Douglas County court house Tuesday afternoon during a march protesting the Chicago "Ten" trial.
Marchers leave trail
By TOM SLAUGHTER
Kansan Staff Writer
A march to protest the action against the "Chicago 10" ended at the Douglas County Courthouse with one broken window and a pending investigation by the Douglas County Sheriff's office.
The march began at the Chi Omega fountain and turned down Jayhawk Drive, stopping at Green Hall for a speech by Lawrence Velvel, professor of law. From Green Hall, the march continued down Jayhawk Drive and on to the courthouse.
While Velvel was speaking, one student, a beer bottle in his hip pocket, sat on the statue of Jimmy Green, spraying red and blue paint over the statue. The same student later sprayed paint on the wall of the courthouse, using a stencil in the form of a clenched fist.
In his speech, Velvel said the judiciary of the country has become a corrupt tool of the establishment position. Speaking of Judge Hoffman Velvel said, "Hoffman is posing a real threat to our society."
Velvet went on to say that Hoffman's contempt sentences, legally may be no longer than four months. Velvel said Judge Hoffman has evaded the rule by sentencing the men on charges other than those of contempt for court.
The crowd, estimated at 200 students, picked up supporters as they made their
way down Jayhawk Drive. The marchers, many of them chanting and singing, seemed to be enjoying themselves and the warm weather.
As the crowd marched to the courthouse many chanted, "Two, four, six, eight, stamp out the State." One student carrying a toy gun, was asked what the gun meant, he said, "Guns may be important someday. Maybe someday the gun will be the only answer."
The mood of the crowd became hostile, and many of the students wanted to enter the courthouse. After some debate, several marchers were inside, and walked upstairs to the rotunda of the building. As the students were walking upstairs, one of the group broke a window. Several office personnel watched as the crowd milled through the corridors of the building.
Two Kansan staff members were harassed by the crowd inside the rotunda. One of the marchers told a Kansan reporter that if he persisted in taking pictures, he would, "mess you up." Several other photographers were harassed outside the building, as the group painted the fists on the wall.
When the crowd reached the courthouse, a number of the marchers stood on the steps while the fist emblem was painted on the door and an outside wall of the building.
After the group entered the courthouse, many of the marchers dispersed and returned to campus. Police officers arrived shortly after the window was broken, however, no arrests were made at the time. After the window was
broken, the group in the rotunda lef+
broken, the group in the vault. The Douglas County Sheriff's office said no charges have been filed yet, but an investigation is being conducted, and charges may be filed Wednesday.
Ebert heads Alliance
For the last few weeks a new political force at the University of Kansas has been drawing up a platform for the March elections. The new force is the "Alliance" which has chosen Bill Ebert, Topeka junior, as its presidential candidate, and Greg Thomas, Topeka sophomore, its vice-presidential candidate.
Ebert said, "It is certain that the Alliance is a new and viable political alternative. The necessity of a new stance in student politics is in the atmosphere now, and the Alliance takes that stance based on activism and intelligent assault of existing imbalances and problems."
The issues facing Ebert and Thomas outlined in the party's platform include: overpopulation and environmental pollution, academic reform, fee increases, capitol improvements on the campus and student rights.
Alliance has outlined these issues in three major categories: The University's Role in Society, Academic Reform and University Reform.
Issues listed under the University's Role In Society are ecology to combat overpopulation and pollution; Vietnam, women's rights, black studies and the Haskell Institute.
In regard to black studies, Ebert said Alliance hoped to establish a black studies program and black studies major with the use of black resident professors. Concerning the question of Haskell Institute, Ebert said, "The University must work to free the Haskell students through provisions of exchange programs and cultural events."
The Alliance also proposes to make recommendations and changes in the Western Civilization comprehensive exam, eliminate language requirements and restructure college requirements.
College requirements under fire are the credit/no credit system, which
(Continued to page 20)
Campus briefs
Folk artist to perform at Union
Dean Rutledge, folk artist who has appeared at such clubs as Mothers Blues in Chicago and the Poison Apple in Detroit, will perform at the SUA coffeehouse at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Union Prairie Room.
Between his two one-hour performances each night, an open mike will be provided so any member of the audience may sing or play the guitar. Underground movies will also be shown.
Admission cost is $1.
Committee freshmen announced
Seven freshmen have been selected for membership on the Kansas Relays Student Committee.
The committee handles the business end of the Relays said John Mauk, senior co-chairman. Their jobs include sending out entry blanks to the high schools, drawing up the program, making "cheat-sheets" for the press to tell who is participating when and where, relaying information to the press through walkie-talkies for quick results and electing a queen.
The freshmen selected are: Roger Haack, Bird City; Jeff Joyce, Ulysses; Ed Lanning, Lawrence; Joel Mangold, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Peddicord, Wamego; Don Richardson, Ellinwood and Paul Shellito, Wichita.
Mardi Gras trip made by NROTC
The drill team and color guard of the NROTC unit at the University of Kansas participated last week in the Krewe of Iris parade in the New Orleans Mardi Gras.
This was the second year that the NROTC drill team and color guard have been invited to march in a Mardi Gras parade.
Also making the trip was the NROTC rifle team and Sgt. John B. McDonald, USMC and rifle team coach. This team competed in the first annual Mardi Gras Invitational Rifle Match hosted by Tulane University and placed second.
Health grant awarded to KU
The U.S. Public Health Service awarded the University of Kansas a $340,000 health sciences advancement award to study the mechanism of drug action.
The grant, part of a five year $2 million program, will provide for drug research at the K.U. Medical Center in Kansas City and the Lawrence campus. Research will focus on the basic chemistry and physics of drugs, their behavior and mechanism of action.
Diesel technology to be discussed
Mr. Roy Kamo of the Cummins Engine Co. will speak on the future of diesel technology at the meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, at 7:30 p.m. tonight in room 201 of the Mechanical Engineering Building.
Orchestra to perform at Hoch
The San Antonio Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Victor Alessandro, will perform in concert at 8:20 p.m. Thursday in Hoch Auditorium.
The program is part of the Kansas University concert course sponsored by the School of Fine Arts.
Rock Chalk tickets still on sale
Plenty of the best seats are available for the Friday, Feb. 27, performance of Rock Chalk, said Steve Cloud, Prairie Village junior and Rock Chalk staff member.
He said that $1.75 seats are still available for Saturday night's performance. All of the $2.25 seats for Saturday night have been sold. Tickets are now on sale.
Counselor applications available
Applications for resident assistants are available this week in the office of the Dean of Men, said Fred McElhennie, associate dean of men.
All students who will be a junior, senior or graduate student next year are eligible. Applicants are selected on the basis of leadership and must have a "more than respectable grade point average," McElhene said.
Arts festival coupon sale begins
Around 2,200 coupons were sold during registration, said Darrell Reed, Leawood senior and chairman of the Festival of the Arts committee. Each coupon entitles the coupon holder to attend the six performances beginning March 30 and continuing through April 4.
Curricular changes approved
Student Union Activities began coupon sales for the fourth annual Festival of the Arts today.
KU faculty members approved new courses, course deletions, title changes and a change in requirements for a B.S. degree in radiation biophysics at a meeting Tuesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Curricular changes approved were recommended by the educational policies committee in six areas-American studies, biological
sciences, geography, geology slavic languages and literature Spanish and Portuguese.
2 KANSAN Feb. 18 1970
First Rock Chalk producer returns for twentieth show
by ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer
The producer of the first Rock Chalk Revue, Roy Wonder, Burbank, Calif., will return to award the trophies at this year's performance on Saturday, Feb. 28.
This year is the 20th anniversary of the Rock Chalk Revue.
In a letter telling how Rock Chalk began, Wonder said that immediately following World War II there was a revue type of show sponsored by the Kansas Union called College Daze. Wonder was the business manager for this show in 1949. From this Wonder gathered ideas for a campus variety show, he said.
The basic plan developed from a show presented each year at Kansas State University, Wonder said.
Wonder then had to find a sponsor for his activity. He talked to the executive director of YMCA at the University of Kansas. Rev. Dave Riggs, and sold his idea.
"In order to stir interest in this new campus endeavor I made arrangements with the producer of the variety show at Kansas State to write a letter to the University Daily Kansan, in which he complained bitterly at our having stolen K-State's idea. The letter was published in the
Letters to the Editor column. I then responded with another letter to the Kansan with an appropriate rebuttal, which likewise was published, I think we had two or three such exchanges. I don't think very many people knew of the conspiracy at the time. It served its purpose and we gained much campus interest," Wonder said.
"Up to this time we had called the show the Y-Orpheum, like K-State's title, but it seemed appropriate that we establish our own name. The Kansan sponsored a campus contest for a name. A $25 savings bond was offered as a prize for the best entry. I have forgotten the name of the girl who won, but I think she picked a good title in "Rock Chalk Revue." Wonder said.
Wonder has not seen Rock Chalk since his first production in 1950. He is employed as assistant to the vice president for public relations of Lockheed Aircraft Corporation in Burbank, Calif.
Status of college women studied by AWS group
not a man would get a scholarship before a woman, or vice versa.
The third subcommittee is screening various departments to see if there is any evidence of sex discrimination in hiring.
An Associated Women Students (AWS) committee, the Commission on the Status of Women, has been divided into three subcommittees to study the status of college women in three facets of university life, said Suzy Bocell, Kansas City junior and chairman of the committee.
One subcommittee is studying freshman women and how they chose their dormitories. Another subcommittee is looking into the area of financial aid. A question being considered is whether or
They are also investigating which schools have a concentration of women and which show a marked lack of women majors. Subcommittee members are interviewing people in the schools of medicine, architecture and engineering.
the
Rimers
of
Eldritch
february 12
february 21
1970—
8:20 P.M.
experi-
mental
theatre
UN4-39
82
Burgstahler speaks to Ecology Action Club
Pollutants discussed at meeting
Albert Burgstahler, professor of chemistry at KU, spoke to the newly organized Ecology Action Club Tuesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. His topic was "Some Hazards of Legalized Pollutants."
Burgstahler told the audience of 45 people that the 25,000 tons of coal used in production of electrical power annually caused 13 per cent of the country's air pollution problem. He said coal combustion accounted for 50 per cent of the sulphur dioxide released into the atmosphere.
"If the projection for future electrical power needs is realized, we will obviously have to find a better means of producing electricity." he said.
Burgstahler mentioned nuclear power as a possible alternative for producing electricity, but said the problems of radioactive waste disposal were increasing. The possibility of storage tank failure due to radioactive corrosion is estimated as a serious problem.
Fallout from nuclear explosions is also a problem, said Burgstahler. He said Iodine 131, a radioactive isotope which could cause thyroid malfunction in humans and animals, had been found in the milk of cows which grazed in areas receiving fallout from nuclear tests.
Burgstahler speculated that the increasing price of uranium in the quantities which would be needed to produce future power supplies would become prohibitive before the year 2000.
Increasing numbers of cases of chronic lead disease would undoubtedly result unless more precautions were taken in the
The Student Senate tonight will discuss problems concerning building of the proposed Wescoe Hall.
Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student, said Monday that the Student Senate will probably recommend that the $7.50 increase in activity fees to pay for Wescoe Hall be tacked on to the new higher fee increase for next year.
"The $7.50 tack on should be made blatantly clear to the students that it is a building assessment," he said.
Chancellor Laurence E. Chalmers Jr., various University leaders, architects and representatives will be present at the meeting.
Feb. 18 KANSAN 3
1970
Higher fee proposed to build hall
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Albert Burgstahler
production and combustion of motor fuels, he said.
In the question-answer session following his speech, Burgstahler discussed the deficiencies of the "white bread diet" eaten by most Americans. He said too many minerals and vitamins are either lost or destroyed in the processing and canning of meats and vegetables.
"We have untold cases of borderline malnutrition in this country," he said. "People get the calories, but not the nutrients they need."
Using slides, charts and passages from books, Burgstahler illustrated his points as he presented them. He recommended several books to people interested in topics concerning pollution.
Burgstahler cited a study done in Illinois in which high fluoridation levels in soft water caused a greater percentage of Mongoloid births to young mothers.
Prof co-authors book
In speaking of artificial sweeteners, he said that though cyclamates have been taken off the market, saccharin still presented a problem. Burgstahler said one third gram of saccharin per day in the diet of an adult could impair digestion.
He said fluoridated water has been linked to such disorders as headaches, nausea, muscular aches, hypertension and gastrointestinal disorders. He also noted that in soft water areas, fluoride caused more harmful effects than in hard water areas. Other minerals, such as calcium, tend to counteract the adverse effects of fluoridated water, he said.
As an alternative to floridation for preventing tooth decay, Burgstahler recommended vitamin and mineral enriched diets for children and adults. He cited cases in which vitamin and mineral supplements had arrested tooth decay and improved physical and mental capabilities of children and adolescents in separate studies. He said the dental profession and the public were sadly uninformed as to the ill effects of fluoridation, which increased a person's intake of a cumulative poison.
Burgstahler recommended whole wheat bread and unrefined sugar as improvements in diets.
Some antibiotics used on livestock, Burgstahler said, have been shown to cause ill effects on humans. He said Britain had restricted the use of some antibiotics on livestock raised for consumption.
Edward T. Erazmus, associate professor of English, was coauthor of a reader designed to give foreigners a view of U.S. history and major issues in chronological order.
Erazmus, who is director of KU's English Center, prepared the anthology, "English as a Second Language," with Harry J. Cargas, professor at St. Louis University.
An avid opponent of fluoridated water, Burgstahler concluded his speech with a discussion of the proven harmful effects of fluori-
Lead poisoning, he said, might have contributed to the fall of the Roman empire. Burgstahler said lead deposits had been found in the bones of Roman patricians, who made greater use of lead-lined cookware and water pipes than did the plebian classes. Burgstahler said marked damage to bones had been found in the patricians' bones, all of which could be traced to lead ingestion.
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KAWSAN COMMENT
The fair sex meets unfairness
Mae West, surely one of America's greatest contributions to philosophy, said in one of her movies, "Better to be looked over than to be overlooked."
America's Woman has been almost as overlooked as she has been looked over. The rights women have gained have been placatory and unfulfilling of Woman's true design. Woman's true design surely ranks her as Man's mate, not only in family life but also in business, politics and culture.
A thorough poll conducted and published at the University of Colorado this week gave evidence that women are being discriminated against in the hiring practices of that University. The University employs 1,382 male teachers and 162 females, with 65 of the women in women's physical education and nursing. It shows that 39 of 41 department chairmanships are held by men.
While fewer women actually earn the academic requirements to teach on the university level (another bit of evidence against Woman's
undeserved subordinate role), the proportion is far from the 1382-162 ratio of teachers at Colorado.
Similar evidence could be compiled at KU or almost any other university. More tragically, the evidence that Woman is still being considered inferior mounts significantly when one examines other professions.
Many traditionally masculine professions, newspaper work as a notable example, are masculine because of unfounded prejudices against Woman. Woman isn't generally thought too competent for consideration when a city editor's job opens up, even when there are excellently qualified women on the staff eager to take charge.
To a large extent, modern woman, if she is to succeed in a man's world must either emasculate herself or resort to Samboism. She must either forget that she is a woman or constantly be apologetic for it.
Without suggesting that women should be forced into public affairs, one can still insist
that they should be entitled to enter that arena wearing neither male drag nor clown's suit.
As Oscar Wilde said, the value of an idea has nothing whatever to do with who authored it. Similarly, the value of a person's talents and aspirations should have nothing to do with a person's sex.
Possibly the only minorities which have suffered as much in relative unresistance have been homosexuals and the American Indian. America's blacks have set the vocal pace during the past 20 years (and during earlier periods of American history as well) and perhaps other oppressed minorities will begin to thrust their chins as vigorously in the next 20 years.
In the meantime, a woman in most professions will find her career thwarted at a certain stage, past which few women manage to struggle. The boss needs someone he can share stag jokes with, and few can trust the female sense of humor enough to elevate a woman to a position of power.
—Mike Shearer
hearing voices—
To the editor:
What will we call the next major war? The popular name accepted by most is the Third World War, but maybe it won't be. Perhaps The War of Development would be better. The combatants will be the developed nations against the developing ones. These will be North America, Europe, The Soviet Union, Japan, Australia and New Zealand against Latin America, Africa, The Middle East, India-Pakistan and undeveloped Asia.
The issue will be the right of the undeveloped world to develop. Development here meaning industrialization. The reason survival not in terms of economics or ideologies, but life itself. Many people in the United States and other developed countries are realizing that the creation of an industrialized society, such as ours, has been drastically changing the environment. There is now no doubt this has at an increasing rate been destroying the life support system on which we live. Fortunately, more people are attempting to curb and correct this destruction.
But what happens when the developing are told they can not develop because we have not the technology to allow them to do so without by pollution and alteration destroying the fragile base on which we live. They will say this is a lie to keep them in subjection and poverty. They will claim it is their right to develop as we have done and take their place in the sun.
At the beginning this issue will be used and colored by the present ones of racism, imperialism, capitalism and communism. Although development will eventually submerge the others in its waste. The final separation will come along the line of developed versus nondeveloped countries in the world. This is not an exaggeration. For even if the war and issues of stopping further development is (sic) successful the industrialized nations will have to redevelop or undevelop to insure their existence.
Sydney Karl Evans
Eastern Michigan University
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 for a week in May. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 660444. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to gender, race or national origin are necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Others on issues-
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first column in a series which will be open to student leaders. During the next month, the column will also serve as an open forum to candidates to discuss either campus issues or national problems. This column is written by Bill Hansen, a law student, on the Chicago Conspiracy Mis-trial.)
By BILL HANSEN
Events of this past weekend should properly have a rather decided impact on any analysis of where this country is at. Any attempt to analyze a situation requires assumptions which should be founded on something which approaches "fact." There is not one person on this campus who has before him the transcript of the conspiracy trial which is drawing to a conclusion in Chicago. Only the most naive among us would accept the accounts of Ramparts, Vortex or Time. With the nearest record to what occurred missing, let me venture an analysis that is necessarily weakened by our respective ignorance.
Self-rightousness about Judge Hoffman will only serve to cloud the much larger issue of what happened in that courtroom. The crunch was between philosophies which may now properly be measured in light-years, most certainly not in personalities. Law is not unlike many if not most other man-made procedures. Its attempt is to remove the differences between men from the arena of open hositility and provide a forum for the presentation of those differences. On top of the results of that forum is superimposed the structure of previous decisions under like circumstances. It is imperfect and yet it is law. Its significance is its alleged indifference to the parties and the eventual outcome. Chicago has shown very clearly that this last "rational procedure" may very well have been lost to our society. That is something in which we may all justly take the greatest alarm.
Somehow even "law and order" freaks were never able to remove from the image of law its inherent good faith attempt to provide a troubled society some respite from the chaos of the streets. The failure of that Federal District Court in Chicago is not on the bench, but rather in the inability to exclude from the procedure of law in that court the frenzy itself.
God knows that I am not known for any strong position on "law and order." But rejecting a philosophy of increased state authority over its subjects does not even touch the issue of law as a procedure. When one rejects anarchy and selects any procedure in its place, he must, to even flirt with his humaneness and its total education, sense the similarity to a roll of the dice. Candor should compel us to admit that law attempts to load those dice.
Griff & the Unicorn
OH!! NO! CREAK
NOW WOULD BE A GOOD TIME TO FAINT...
HERE I AM... PLUMMETING HELPLESSLY LIKE A SHOOTING STAR TOWARD MY CERTAIN DOOM...NO PARACHUTE AND NARY A HOPE FOR RESCUE...
HOW EMBARRASSING
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970, University Daily Kansan.
When Dick Gregory spoke here recently he called it "forces in nature." When those forces are separated by worlds, that is the point at which "law ends and men begin." When that point has been reached, Mao's equation (power = gun) is only the final absurdity. If the Left really feels that more parades are going to overrule what "Hoffman did" and the Right feels that "Hoffman for President" signs are going to show those freaks on the left what law is all about then may I suggest that at the very least we pause and watch the doors close.
The courts have come through 194 years with this nation—many times tattered, sometimes humiliated, but always with a promise for tomorrow based not on the whim of today's political insanity, but more properly on the total experience of man himself. Indeed, when all is said and done, the "Warren Court" has extended to Americans more hard, concrete, substantive rights than any court in the history of our country. Brown, Miranda, Griswald, Baker, O'Callahan, Leary and many other decisions altered
Very recently I felt convinced that America would "come together" under the crises of ecology and over-population. The events of this past weekend, both here on the campus and in Chicago, have shattered that belief, at least in my head. Men cannot come together when what they are all about is pole-antipole.
significantly the direction of a country content with a philosophy, which emphasized property rights over human rights. It did in fact bring the United States "kicking and screaming into the 20th Century." To say that Chicago has shattered this is pretentious. To say that Chicago has seriously impaired the concept of law itself in this country is quite sufficient.
You don't have to be a graduate student to know that Nixon's call to "lower our voices" is a political sham and that the pressures in this nation are intense and are growing at an alarming rate. You don't have to be a law student to recognize a circus. But I publicly wonder where you have to be to feel the vibrations from a society well down the road to complete collapse?
Certainly it should be clear that there are no evil men, just victims. The events of the past weekend, both in Chicago and on this campus are without an author. That is their tragedy.
THE MUSEUM OF THE WORLD'S FINE ARTS
Photo by Ron Bishon
And this is the...
KU professor, Eugene Bovee points to the model protozoa which he has been making. The models are useful for classroom instruction Bovee said.
Green Beret's family murdered in beds
FT. BRAGG, N.C. (UPI) — Three men and a blonde woman who carried a candle and screamed "acid is great, kill the pigs," slaughtered a Green Beret narcotics therapist's pregnant wife and two daughters in their beds Tuesday, the Army said.
Capt. Jeffrey MacDonald, 26,
an Army physician who "deals
with people who have drug
problems," was stabbed in the arm,
chest and stomach but survived
the bizarre attack.
The word "pig" was scrawled with blood in letters eight inches high on the headboard of the bed where 26-year-old Colette Mac-Donald was stabbed to death. The Army said she was about six months pregnant.
Their daughters, Kimberly, 8, and Kristen Jean, 2, were stabbed to death in their beds in separate, toy-cluttered bedrooms of the three-bedroom apartment on the Ft. Bragg base.
Base Provost Marshal Robert K. Kriwanek called the murders "grotesque" but insisted "there's no indication of any ritual having taken place". However, he said the similarity between the Ft. Bragg killings and the Sharon
McCormack's friend indicted
BALTIMORE (UPI) — Nathan P. Voloshen, Washington lobbyist and friend of House Speaker John W. McCormack, was indicted Tuesday on federal charges he defrauded a Baltimore company out of $10,000 by falsely promising to use his influence to get it a defense contract.
Named in the mail fraud grand jury indictment with the 72-year-old Voloshen were Washington lawyer Darwin Charles Brown and Myrvin C. Clark, an industrial consultant of Long Beach, Calif., who formerly lived in the Washington suburb of Silver Spring, Md.
It was the second federal indictment this year against Voloshen. He and Dr. Martin Sweig, McCormack's suspended administrative assistant, were charged in a 15-count fraud indictment in New York Jan. 12 of improperly using the speaker's office to try to influence government action involving other individuals.
McCormack declined to comment on the new indictment. In the previous case, he said he had no knowledge of the incidents alleged.
Tate murders in Los Angeles "struck us immediately."
Five members of a cult called the "Manson family" are awaiting trial for the Aug. 8 ritual murders of the pregnant actress and her four friends, and another couple killed the following night. In both cases, the word "pig" was scribbled in blood at the scene.
Feb. 18 1970 KANSAN 5
MacDonald, in "satisfactory" condition at the base hospital, told military authorities the attackers were a blonde woman in a floppy hat and muddy boots, a Negro man in a jacket with sergeants stripes, and two white men. The blonde, he said, carried a candle and cried repeatedly "acid is great, kill the pigs, hit 'em again!"
The Army said the attackers may have been on an LSD-acid-trip.
"As a doctor of preventive medicine," Kriwanek said, "Mac-Donald deals with people who have drug problems and are sent to him for treatment. We're looking into every patient he had." His specialty, officials said, was narcotics therapy.
The narcotics problem at Ft. Bragg, headquarters of the Special Forces, has become so severe that local, state and military authorities recently formed a joint narcotics squad.
Eugene C. Bove, professor in the department of physiology and cell biology has become a sculptor of the one-celled animals called amoebas.
Cell models made by KU prof
Bovee turned to modeling the protozoa in order to promote his studies on the relationships of form and movement of the amoeba.
The reason for this new approach to amoeboid studies, Bovee said, is that he can graphically demonstrate to students and other researchers exactly what the various kinds of amoebas look like. He can also represent the various stages of activity and movement these animals go through during their life.
Bovee has constructed some 300 models representing over 50 species of amoebas, all of which are built to scale; that is, they represent the same size in relation to each other just as they would in real life. The models are built to about 1,000 times the normal size of the animals. At this scale, Bovee said, the Amoeba proteus, which is familiar to general biology students, is about two feet long. He said his smallest models of some of the other species made at the same scale are about the size of his thumbnail.
"The relative range of size amongst amoebas varies more
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At that scale of 1,000 times normal size, Bovee said, he could not model the larger amoebas. The reason, he said, is that the so-called "giant amoeba," known as Chaos chaos, would be about 12 feet long and so heavy that he couldn't life it, unless it was made of papier-mache or thin hollow plastic.
Bovee uses dentist's hard modeling plaster for the main body. The extending pseudopods or arms are made of wire, plaster over wire, wood, plastic or
An American automobile, which in 1966 contained about 335 pounds of plastic parts, may use twice as much by the end of 1970.
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whatever else suits the need. Bovee said he paints them white and mounts them on a black background to set off their contours.
Dr. Bovee has exhibited his models several times at regional and national meetings of biologists. He said he once was asked to build a set of models for the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
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Jayhawks move into second place as they crack century mark in downing Nebraska
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor
Roger Brown and Dave Robisch combined for 47 points and 31 rebounds to spearhead the Jayhawks to a 100-87 thrashing of Nebraska in a rough and tumble game Tuesday night in Allen Field House.
Robisch continued his assault on the Big Eight Conference's single season scoring mark by downing 32 points against the 'Huskers. Tuesday night's performance bolstered the 6-9 junior pivot's scoring total to 255 points in only nine conference encounters. His 29.3 points-pergame average ranks an even one point above the 28.3 mark set by another KU great, Wilt Chamberlain, in winning the 1956 scoring derby.
Brown entered the game with 12:21 showing on the clock in the first half and KU trailing the Cornhuskers 21-15. The 6-10 giant responded by grabbing 18 rebounds and scoring 10 points in the first half and played an instrumental part in lifting the 'Hawks to a 54-43 half time margin. Before fouling out with 3:45
54 KANSAS 55
45
44
Photo by Ron Bishop
Oh no you don't . . .
Nebraska's Chuck Jura finds the inside too congested as he tries to force a driving one-hander over Roger Brown.
KU steadily built the margin to 50-41 with 2:05 left before Robisch was forced to head to the KU bench after picking up his third foul. KU, minus its outstanding scorer, rose to the challenge, struck for two quick buckets and strolled into the locker room enjoying a 54-43 margin over the invading Cornhuskers.
on top for good, 36-35, with 6:18 left in the first stanza.
The lowest that Nebraska could cut the deficit in the second half was six points, 75-69, when senior guard Sam Martin bombed in one of the Cornhuskers' many long range jumpers. However, the NU comeback bid was in vain as the Jayhawks quickly stretched the margin to 80-70 on two baseline shots by Robisch and a 12-footer by Russell.
The action in the final two minutes was often erratic and physical as the Cornhuskers continually fouled to gain possession of the ball and the Jayhawks strained to break the magical 100-points barrier. Much to the 10,000 spectators delight, the 'Hawks' finally cracked the century mark on Fred Bosilevac's desperation 25-footer with 3 seconds showing on the clock. It was the first time in the last 65 conference games that KU has scored 100 points and is only the seventh time that any KU squad has scored that many points in a single game.
KANSAN Sports
Robisch's 32 points once again topped the KU scoring attack. He continued his bid to double as both the league's leading scorer and rebounder by hauling in 10 rebounds against the "Huskers." Russell complimented his usually fine floor play by netting 25 points and grabbing eight caroms. Brown followed with 15 and Bob Kivisto tallied 11 points—the fourth straight game that the sophomore backcourt ace has broken into double figures. Lawrence, KU's senior captain, quarterbacked the explosive offensive machine and chipped in 7 points.
Nebraska's hot shooting guards put on quite a show by firing home a variety of cross country missiles. Tom Scantlebury hit for 17, Martin canned 14 and sub Al Nissen added nine points. Leroy Chalk scored 17 and topped the 'Huskers in rebounding with 12. Bob Gratopp hit six of seven from the field to finish with 16 points.
Nebraska converted 38 of 66 field goal attempts for an outstanding 57.6 per cent marksman-
remaining in the contest, the reserve center managed to grab a game high 21 rebounds and net 15 points. Brown is only the eighth KU cager to snare over 20 caroms in a single game.
Three quick buckets by Robisch and a sticky man-for-man press enabled the Jayhawks to jump to an 11-6 advantage with only three and one-half minutes elapsed in the contest. But the 'Huskers exploded on the strength of some deadly outside shooting and reeled off 14 consecutive points before KU could again dent the scoreboard on Chet Lawrence's driving layup. The sudden Nebraska spurt lifted the Cornhuskers to a 20-11 margin with only seven minutes of the game completed.
(Continued to page 7)
The Jayhawks battled back to knot the score 25-25 midway in the opening period when Pierre Russell drove down the lane to can a layup. The lead continued to change hands for the next four minutes until Bob Kivisto converted a charity tooss to put KU
6 KANSAN Feb. 18 1970
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Frosh rebound K-State loss to down Neosho
The University of Kansas freshman basketball team, led by Randy Canfield's career high total of 27 points, rebounded from Saturday night's loss to the Kansas State freshmen and easily defeated Neosho County Community Junior College, 91-66, in Tuesday night's preliminary game.
Canfield, a 6-11 center from Wichita, hit on 11 of 16 shots from the field and 5 of 6 from the free-throw line in leading the Jayhawk yearlings to their eighth win against two losses.
The momentum of the game quickly swung to the Jayhawks as they broke a 2-2 tie into a 10-2 lead in less than a minute and a half. Jerry House, a 6-6 guard from Fayetteville, Ark., hit a 10 foot jump shot with 17:33 remaining in the first half to give KU a 4-2 lead. A Canfield tip shot followed by a Mark Williams layup built the lead to 8-2 before a 12 foot jumper by Canfield expanded the lead to 10-2 at the 16:08 mark.
Two quick baskets by Neosho's Mike Wilson and Mike Dueey cut the lead to 10-6 but a second KU surge built the lead to 17-6 with 13:01 remaining in the half and the Jayhawks were threatened thereafter.
Hawkshit100
(Continued from page 6)
(Continued from page 6) ship from the floor. KU finished with an equally impressive figure by downing 51.3 per cent of its 78 field goal attempts.
Brown's and Robisch's powerful inside play enabled the 'Hawks to build a comfortable 31-18 rebounding advantage over the Cornhuskers in the opening 20 minutes. But Nebraska whitled the margin down in the second half and the Jayhawks finished with only a 42-38 margin for the game.
the victory pushed KU into sole ownership of second place in the action-packed Big Eight title race. KU is now 5-4 in league play and has registered a 14-7 overall record. Nebraska is now 4-5 against conference foes and has a 13-7 ledger for the season.
The Jayhawks will venture to Boulder Saturday night to meet defending champ Colorado. The Buffaloes, tabbed as pre-season favorites to repeat, are experiencing a most disappointing campaign as they now share the conference cellar with Oklahoma State.
Feb. 18
1970 KANSAN 7
Canfield was called for his third personal with 7:35 remaining in the half and retired to the bench with 15 points and KU leading. 30-15.
Leonard Gray, a 6-7 forward from Kansas City Sumner High School, and Williams quickly picked up the scoring pace and the Hawks retired for half time intermission with a 45-30 lead.
The second half was a continuation of KU scoring and rebounding dominance. Canfield, Gray, Williams, and Mike Bossard, a 6-6 forward from Washington, D.C., led the way as KU steadily increased its lead. A Gray jump shot with 3:57 remaining gave the Jayhawks their biggest lead of the game, 87-57.
UPI Top Twenty
Box Score
FINAL BOX SCORE
Nebraska fg-fga ff-fa fa reb turn tp tp tp
Gratopp 6-7 4-5 7 3 1 3 ft tp
Chalk 6-10 5-5 12 3 3 2 17
Scantlebury 3-10 1-2 1 6 3 4 17
Scantlebury 8-15 1-2 6 3 4 17
Martin 7-12 0-0 2 1 2 14
Cauble 1-2 0-0 1 2 1 24
Peterson 2-4 0-2 1 2 1 24
Neyl 4-7 1-2 2 1 1 9
Von Seggern 1-2 0-2 2 0 2 2
White 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0
Totals 38-66 11-21 38 16 23 87
Kansas
Russell 10-fig-fta ftta reb turn pf tp
Russell 10-fig-fta ftta reb turn pf tp
Stallworth 3-3 0-1 8 0 3 2 6
Robich 13-25 6-11 0 3 2 3 20
Robich 13-25 6-11 0 3 2 3 20
Nash 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 11
Lawrence 3-8 1-1 0 3 2 7
Lawrence 3-8 1-1 0 3 2 7
Boslevac 1-1 0-0 0 1 3 2
Brown 6-15 0-5 2 1 3 15
Brown 6-15 0-5 2 1 3 15
Mathews 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 2
Totals 40-78 20-30 42 10 18 100
51.3% 66.7% ... 34 44 87
NEBRASKA ... 43 44 87
KANASAS ... 54 46 100
OFFICIALS—Bernie Saggau, Richard
Geith
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Gray followed Canfield in scoring with 20 points. Williams and Bossard followed with 19 and 14 points respectively.
At this point coach Sam Miranda emptied his bench and the Hawks coasted the rest of the way.
The Hawks dominated rebounding throughout the game and ended with a 72-50 edge in that department.
Gray led KU rebounding with 13 and was followed closely by Bossard's 11 and Canfield's 10.
Williams, a 5-11 Denver product, played his usual good floor
game in addition to grabbing a career high seven rebounds.
However, the team still suffered from a high number of turnovers as KU finished with 23 compared to Neosho's 19.
Neosho County was led in scoring by 6-4 forward Curtis Washington who tallied 17 points.
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CURTAIN CALL'70
Ninth Annual College Auditions for SIX FLAGS
Your talent could win you a star-spangled season at SIX FLAGS, performing for the world's most enthusiastic audiences!
SIX FLAGS needs: VOCALISTS (popular, classical, country and western, rock, barbershop quartettes, folk soloists and groups): DANCERS (tap, ballet, modern, jazz, acrobatic); INSTRUMENTALISTS (banjo players, jug bands, Dixieland bands); VARIETY ACTS (comics, magicians, baton and saber twirlers, ventriloquists, tumblers, trampoline and trampolette artists). ALL KINDS OF TALENT WILL BE CONSIDERED.
If selected, you'll work under professional direction in one of SIX FLAGS' many original variety extravaganzas or specialty shows featured throughout the Park. And you'll have the time of your life as a star member of the famous SIX FLAGS family of performers. Audition open to all age groups including college students. Be there!
AREA AUDITIONS
Thursday, February 19-3:30 p.m. Kansas Union - The Forum Room First Floor University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas (Registration is 30 minutes pror to audition time.)
SIX FLAGS
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12
Photo by Ron Bishop
Battle on the boards
Pierre Russell contests Nebraska's Leroy Chalk (no. 51) and an unidentified KU player for a rebound early in the opening half. Russell netted 25 points and grabbed 8 rebounds against the Cornhuskers. Watching for NU is Bob Grattop (no. 34).
Future uncertain for Ellis
Dundee makes decision to stop bout
NEW YORK (UPI)—Joe Fraier holds the whole boxing world in the clenched left fist hat destroyed Jimmy Ellis. But now what worlds can he conquer in search of another big payday?
Frazier's destructive left slammed Ellis to the canvas twice Monday night and left Jimmy so dazed and helpless he was unable to come out for the fifth round. For the first time since the title was stripped from Cassius Clay 32 months ago, boxing has an "undisputed" heavyweight champion.
"I gonna retire," joked the 26-year-old Philadelphia as he was surrounded by his court in the dressing room. "I'm gonna wait for that bigmouth Cassius Clay to come back, and then I'll whip him just like I whipped his sparring partner."
Who Will Test Frazier?
In less than a minute, however, Frazier had reconsidered his "decision" to retire and was challenging all comers. But the problem now is to find someone who can be sold to that small, wary
group of diehard boxing fans as a genuine threat to the champion.
"I'll fight anybody who thinks he can get in the ring with me," said the bull-necked 205-pounder. "I hear about some of these guys like (light heavy-weight champion) Bob Foster or Mac Foster who want to fight me, but I tell 'em if they don't mess with me I won't mess with them. That's probably the luckiest thing that can happen to them."
Lefthanded praise for left-hooking Joe came from the man who had the title taken away from him for refusing to be inducted into the Army 32 months ago. "I think he's a lot greater than I did before," said Cassius Clay, "but he'd still only be a sparring partner if I weren't retired."
Ellis, who actually had been Clay's sparring partner once, held the World Boxing Association version of the heavyweight title when he went into the ring. The other half of the title, recognized in six states, including New York, belonged to Frazier. Suddenly, in the third round, it became
clear to everyone that Frazier would soon own the whole world.
NCAA and Bruins upcoming
Jolted By Left Hooks
With only a minute gone in the third round, Frazier threw a left hook that jolted Ellis back into the ropes. Ellis tried to escape, circling to his right, but still Frazier pursued. There was less than a minute left in the round when Frazier caught Ellis again, and then he stood there smiling as Ellis flashed back.
"Ellis caught me with the hardest right he's ever thrown in his life in that round," Frazier said, "and I just laughed and told him 'you done threw your best shot, and now it's my turn.' Then I came across with that left hook."
With little over two minutes gone in the fourth, Ellis was hit with another left, and he crumpled slowly to the canvas. He lay there in his own corner not moving for three seconds and then slowly rose to his feet at eight.
Kentucky moves towards SEC championship
By United Press International
By United Press International It might seem almost against the law of averages that UCLA, the winner of five national titles, and Kentucky, the winner of four, have never met in an NCAA tournament game.
But these two schools have
8 KANSAN Feb. 18 1970
never faced each other in a post-season game even though they've won nine of the 22 NCAA titles decided since 1948.
That oversight, though, could well be corrected on March 21 in College Park, Md., when the NCAA title game will be played this season.
But after that first knockdown, it was all over for Jimmy Ellis, a 29-year-old from Louisville, Ky. Ellis survived another 40 seconds until Frazier's left struck again, and this time Ellis hit the canvas hard. He got to his feet at nine and was helped to his corner after the round had ended.
Kentucky celebrated its return to the No. 2 spot in the rankings Monday night by all but clinching its 25th SEC title and another
Maravich scored 46 points as LSU edged Auburn 70-64, Austin Carr poured in 53 as Notre Dame routed Tulane 115-80, Tennessee topped Florida 72-61, Vanderbilt routed Alabama 101-79, Kansas State edged Missouri 63-60 and Utah State beat Arizona State 112-102.
LSU got its first victory at Auburn in 17 years on Maravich's 46-point spree. LSU is now 16-6 and has a good shot at a tournament berth.
trip to the tournaments. The Wildcats, behind Dan Issel's 40-point splurge, clobbered Georgia, 116-86.
The last time the NCAA tournament title was decided at College Park, Kentucky rolled into the finals as the favored team in 1966—but was upset by Texas Western. That was the only year in the last six that UCLA hasn't won the crown.
In other action Monday, Pete
Dundee hit Ellis' knee and asked him a couple questions, and the responses were so slack he refused to let his fighter come out as the bell rang to start the fifth round.
The suddenness and savagery of Frazier's victory was the only thing surprising to the 18,000 fans who paid over $600,000 to see the fight. After all, Frazier had hacked his way through all 24 of his previous pro opponents and his record of 21 kayees had made him a 5 to 1 favorite over Ellis, who has now lost six of his 32 fights.
HURRY!
The deadline for KU's 4th Annual Photography Contest is this Friday, February 20th at 5:00 p.m. Entries are to be turned in at the SUA Director's Office in the Union.
Remember, top prize for the contest is a $300 Pentax Spotmatic.
In addition, remember the change in rules now permits picture stories to be on any number of mounting boards.
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Powerpacked left hook lifts Frazier to undisputed heavyweight champion
NEW YORK (UPI)—The gesture took only a second.
Jimmy Eilis made it so quickly in his dressing room after the fight that it was easy to miss.
Angelo Dundee, his manager, was busy talking but he didn't miss the gesture because he's much sharper and much more understanding than most fight managers.
He felt Jimmy Ellis tap him on the right elbow. Ellis was saying thank you, Angelo Dundee, for what you did out there tonight and thank you for making it possible for me to fight another day.
Ellis' failure to answer the bell for the fifth round against the murderous, brain-scrambling punches of Smokin' Joe Frazier at Madison Square Garden Monday night wasn't his idea at all. It was entirely Dundee's.
Ellis Wouldn't Surrender
Benumbed and befogged as he was, Ellis wanted to keep placing his head in front of that Frazier
buzz-saw, but Dundee wouldn't permit it.
"Why?" Dundee asked, repeating a question put to him. "Because he wasn't doing his thing, that's why. The other guy was cookin' on him and it was too much one way. Look at Jimmy now! I have a fighter, not a cripple. That's the way I work."
"I tested him with 20 questions," Dundee said. "I was banging him on the knees, throwing cold water, rubbing the back of his head, everything, I asked him 'Why aren't you boxing:' He didn't give me an answer I liked. So I just said, 'Forget it!'."
What did he say?
"He said 'No, no, no, no.' I said, 'Not no, ye, yeh, yeh'
Loser Won $250,000
And so the fight was terminated and despite Jimmy Ellis' protestations, he should be glad it was. If ever a fighter graphically personified that movie now showing—"Take the Money and
Run”—Ellis did between the fourth and fifth rounds Monday although, of course, the $250,000 or so he'll probably end up with for the licking he took was the last thing on his mind at that point.
Ellis, clubbed to the floor twice by the bone-jarring Frazier, could only remember being knocked down once when it was all over. Moreover, he walked into the wrong dressing room—Frazier's instead of his own—following the post-fight interview.
"I still remember everything," the loser insisted when he got back to his own room. But then he showed he really didn't by saying, "I didn't know I was down twice, I thought once."
Ellis, unmarked except for a tiny mouse under his left eye, sighed softly as his trainer, Luis Sarria, applied alcohol to his face.
a pretty good fighter," he said of Frazier. "I ain't going to put him down."
"After all the talk, the guy is
Neither did Angelo Dundee in front of all the newsmen when he said, "this Joe Frazier would have licked anyone in front of him."
Later, though, Dundee said his old fighter, Cassius Clay, "would've slapped him all over the joint but what am I gonna do? Cop out by saying that in front of everybody right after he beat Jimmy Ellis?"
As Sarria worked on him, Ellis talked about the fight and about the way Dundee had ended it.
"He says it's a good move. He's my manager and he looks out for me. I'm not going to criticize him. He took me to the championship. So if you ask me whether I think he shoulda stopped it. I say I think he made the right move for me."
Sarria was just about finished. Jimmy Ellis put on his bathrobe again and walked out of the shower enclosure into the main part of his dressing room.
It was at that point he touched Dundee on the elbow and said what he felt inside. Thank you, Angelo Dundee.
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Bruins still No.1
NEW YORK (UPI) — UCLA,
unbeaten in 20 games, remains
the nation's No.1 college basketball
team, but the battle for No.
2 has turned into a real dogfight.
UCLA, which beat Washington State twice and Washington once last week, received 33 of the 34 first-place votes cast by the 35-member United Press International board of coaches today. One coach did not vote.
Less than 100 points separated the next four teams in the balloting. Kentucky moved up into second with 272 points, 67 less than UCLA, and South Carolina slipped to third with 239.
St. Bonaventure remained fourth at 237 while New Mexico State held fifth with 188.
Jacksonville (122) was sixth followed by Pennsylvania, North Carolina State, Iowa and Davidson.
Florida State moved up to 11th, followed by Drake, North Carolina, Houston and Marquette, Notre Dame and Utah tied for 16th, Western Kentucky took 18th, Utah State captured 19th and Columbia took the final spot in the top 20.
Feb.18 KANSAN 9
1970
UCLA, which edged Washington State 72-70 in its first meeting of the week, bounced back with a 95-61 drubbing in their second meeting. The Bruins clubbed Washington 101-85 to run their record to 20-0.
Kentucky had little trouble boosting its record to 19-1 with easy victories over Mississippi State (86-57) and Florida (110-66). The Wildcats received the only first-place vote UCLA did not capture.
South Carolina sandwiched an 81-54 victory over Wake Forest and an 82-65 conquest of Duke around a 68-62 upset at the hands of Davidson, which moved up to 10th with the triumph. The Gamecocks are now 19-2.
St. Bonaventure beat Seton Hall 103-83 and Providence 68-52 to run its record to 17-1 while New Mexico State trounced Montana State 97-73 and Air Force 99-86 to stretch its record to 20-2. Jacksonville walloped Oklahoma City 103-83 and Loyola (La.) 96-75 to advance to a 19-1 mark.
Five coaches from each of the seven geographical areas of the nation comprise the UPI ratings board. Each week they select the top 10 teams in the nation with points awarded on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis on votes from first through 10th.
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KU CONCERT COURSE presents the SAN ANTONIO SYMPHONY
Victor Alessandro Musical Director
PROGRAM
Carnival Overture ... Dvorak
Symphony No. 2 in D Major ... Brahms
Huapango ... Moncayo
Intermezzo from "Vannesa" ... Barber
The Pines of Rome ... Respighi
Hoch Auditorium ... Thursday, February 19
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Karate!
ate!
Yoko Geri
Getting off the ground is only part of the problem. The flying side kick (Yoko Geri) is the result of many hours of hard work.
Karate, one of the world's most exciting and rugged sports, is steadily gaining popularity at the University of Kansas.
Max Muller, Shawnee Mission law student and instructor of the KU Karate Club, said more than 800 students and faculty members had had at least some introductory karate training since the club had been organized in 1965.
"When the club was formed five years ago, only 10 people were interested in learning karate." Muller said. "Now a core group of at least 40 stays with the club every semester."
Karate is centered in a person's ability to use his hands, arms, legs and feet to cripple or disable an opponent, Muller said. It requires agility, speed and most of all concentration.
Muller said the club's goal was not to produce killers, however, but poised and self-confident persons who could defend themselves mentally or physically in any situation.
Terry Rees, Argentine junior and the club's assistant instructor, said Muller stressed the karate philosophy as well as techniques in his teaching. The philosophy is that karate is never to be used unless a person's well-being is endangered.
"Most people get into karate to learn how to defend themselves in a street fight," Rees said. "But after some training they learn how to take a punch without having to return one."
Muller said karate students first learned basic hand and foot techniques. These are then used in kata, he said, an exercise in which a man simulates fighting from four to eight opponents.
From kata, Muller said, a man learns to work with another man on prearranged sparring techniques called bunkais. In these, two men perform the moves of a kata against one another.
When a student is deemed ready by his instructor, he is allowed to participate in free fighting or kumite, Muller said.
Karate ranking is broken into two divisions, Muller said. Kyu division runs from 10th degree to first degree. Beginners or white belts range from 10th to sixthkyu, green belts range from fifth
to third kyu and brown belts range from third to first kyu.
After first brown a man who earns the black belt enters the dan division. Degrees in dan range from one through 10. Muller, who is a first degree black belt, said the highest a man can earn through actual achievement is fourth degree. After that, he
said, degrees are honorary.
"It takes, however, a minimum of two years to earn a black belt," Muller said.
In the past two years, there has been a strong interest voiced by females in an all-women's self-defense course, Muller said.
"This course has proven successful since we started it." Muller said. "Many girls have come in telling how they used the techniques learned in class to defend themselves in situations as simple as putting off a fresh boyfriend."
The women do not learn karate alone, but a combination of self-defense techniques involving judo, akido and other martial arts as well.
Watch out for the little guy
Most students start their instruction in Karate to learn self-defense. They learn that to defend themselves they do not have to be physically large.
KOSAI MUSAKA
It's harder than it looks
Students in the KU Karate Club find the movements their instructor made look so easy an
Judo Training
Aikido
Action is blended with self control
Action is blended with self control Karate does not always involve physical action. KU Karate students must develop self control in order to learn this martial art.
Photos by
Steve Fritz
looks made look so easy are harder to do than they thought.
TOKYO
Improvement takes work
Max Muller, KU Karate Club instructor, works with each of the students to help them improve their techniques, speed, and control.
THE JUDO CLUB OF AMSTERDAM
Fame of former KU couple spreads
By ANN MORITZ Kansan staff writer
The fame of a former University of Kansas couple is beginning to spread over the world and has
recently seeped back to Lawrence from Germany.
Don Scheid, assistant dean of the School of Fine Arts, recently received a letter from Bremer-
New professorship honors businessman
An endowed professorship in excess of $100,000 has been established in the KU School of Business honoring Carl A. "Skip" Scupin of Abilene, former president and chairman of the board of the United Utilities, Incorporated.
Income from the endowment will be added to the regular salary paid by the state to the professor in business administration who is named to the Scupin Professorship.
Principal underwriter of the endowment is United Utilities, Inc., a Kansas corporation whose holdings include the United Telephone System, second largest of the nation's independent telephone systems.
Scupin served with United Utilities for 45 years prior to his
retirement as chairman of the board in 1966. He continues as director of the company.
Scupin is also a director of the Kansas Power and Light Company, City National Bank and Trust Company, Kansas City, Mo., the Abilene National Bank and is a trustee of the Eisenhower Foundation.
Scupin was active in encouraging other members of the United States Independent Telephone Association (USITA) to recognize the need for a special management development course for telephone executives and administrators. Due in part to his efforts, the USITA Management Development Program was established at KU 12 years ago, and has since produced 521 graduates.
Proposal to lower voting age favored
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Nixon administration Tuesday warmly endorsed a proposal to let Americans start voting in national elections at age 18 and termed today's youth "better equipped" for it than ever before.
interests now are in raising their three children. She is a mezzosoprano and is originally from Salisbury, Mo.
NEW YORK—One in every 107 cars registered in the United States was stolen in 1968, reports the Insurance Information Institute. A total of 777,800 thefts represented an increase of approximately 18.8 per cent over the 1967 figure.
But Deputy Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst, speaking on behalf of President Nixon, said the voting age should be lowered only for the election off Presidents and members of Congress, leaving states with the discretion in local contests.
AUTO THEFT ODDS
Kleindienst testified before a Senate judiciary subcommittee considering proposed constitutional amendments to lower the voting age to 18. He was followed to the witness table by former Attorney General Ramsey Clark, who went a step further than Kleindienst by urging adoption of an amendment that would give 18-year-olds the right to vote in all elections—national, state and local.
Kleindienst told the panel that the President after "careful study and consideration" had concluded the lower voting age was desirable.
The Sooters speak German like natives and are full members of the German community. They are wonderful American ambassadors of good will, and reflect much credit on their schools, families, and American home communities, Capt. Rahil wrote.
A few minutes after Clark finished speaking, a group of angry women interrupted the hearing by shouting demands that Congress pass a constitutional amendment guaranteeing equal treatment under the law for men and women. About 15 members of the group, called the National Organization of Women (NOW), held up posters reading "we demand equality" and "equality now."
haven, Germany, telling of the advancing career of Edward Sooter and his wife, the former Sharon Tebbenkamp.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., presiding over the hearing, promised to talk with the demonstrators later and they finally agreed to leave the room. The same group recently interrupted a hearing on birth control pills.
12 KANSAN Feb. 18 1970
"However," he added, "in recognition of the proper role in which the states are called upon to play in our federal system, and
While students at KU, both Sooter and his wife were winners of the district Metropolitan Opera auditions.
in order to make possible prompt ratification of the proposal, the President feels that an amendment permitting 18-year-olds to vote in national elections only is the best solution of alternative extreme positions—those which would leave the matter to each state on the one hand, and one which would provide the right to vote in state as well as national elections on the other."
sic from KU in voice in 1964. He is employed by the Bremerhaven Opera Company at the Stadttheater, where he sings leading tenor roles in such operas as "Samson and Delilah," "Manon Lescaut" and "Carmen." His home was Wichita.
"My purpose in writing this letter, as the senior U.S. military officer in this German-American community, is to provide a report to those among your readers who know Ed Sooter and his charming wife Sharon Tebbenkamp," wrote Capt. G. W. Rahill of the U.S. Navy.
"I have great admiration and respect for this talented young couple for the contributions they are making toward enriching the cultural and spiritual lives of many Germans and Americans," Rahil said.
He described the 10 million Americans aged 18 to 21 as "better equipped today to be entrusted with all of the responsibilities and privileges of citizenship. . .
Kleindienst said the experience of the four states which allow voting by those under 21 indicates this would be beneficial for the nation as a whole. The voting age is 18 in Kentucky and Georgia, 19 in Alaska and 20 in Hawaii.
"Our young people are involved in the political process as no other generation has ever been. We need look no further than the Peace Corps, Vista or the most recent national political campaigns to know this is true," he said.
After their graduation from KU, both Mr. and Mrs. Sooter studied for two years under scholarships at the Conservatory of Hamburg in Germany.
Joseph Wilkins, KU professor of voice, has been keeping in regular contact with the couple during the time they have been in Germany. He said this letter is the latest that has been received. Wilkins taught the couple in voice when they attended KU.
Sooter received a master of mu-
Mrs. Sooter, who received the bachelor of music degree in voice from KU in 1963 and a master of music degree in 1964, also sings with the company. Her primary
PETER COOPER
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School integration questioned
US Senate affirms enforcement
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate tentatively voted Tuesday night to enforce laws against school segregation whether it results from conscious design or accidental housing patterns.
But Sen. Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn., said the 63 of 24 vote was likely to be washed out today when the Senate votes on a liberal amendment. It would kill the proposal to which the wordage
approved Tuesday night was attached.
The vote climaxed a bitter, eight-hour civil rights debate in which both North and South claimed support from the Nixon Administration and accused each other of trying to hoax the public with "tricky" legislation aimed really at maintaining segregation in their respective regions.
Sen. Abram Ribicoff, D-Conn.,
Contest Sunday
Three top photographers have accepted the responsibility of judging the fourth annual KU photography contest sponsored Student Union Activities and Kappa Alpha Mu, honorary photojournalism fraternity.
The photographers selected are Lloyd Schnell, director of photography at the Kansas City Art Institute; Ken Seals, photographer from the Lawrence Journal
Feb. 18
1970 KANSAN 13
World; and Harper Lyon, portrait and commercial photographer from Topeka.
The judging will take place at 1 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The judging is open to any interested student or photographer.
More than 500 prints are expected to be entered in the contest.
Entrants are working for a top prize of a $400 Pentax Spotmatic Camera, plus cash. Last year's contest attracted 496 prints and was the largest in the contest's history.
accusing his northern colleagues of a "sham," sponsored the amendment which passed. It inserted the phrase, "whether de jure or de facto" into a Southern proposal which itself faced more debate Wednesday.
The Dixie proposal, sponsored by Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., would order equal enforcement of desegregation laws North and South. It already contained words intended to eliminate any distinction between segregation by law or custom and that evolving from housing patterns. But Ribicoff offered his "perfecting amendment" to make sure no one misunderstood.
Stennis and his co-sponsors said they were only trying to desegregate schools in Northern cities as well as those in the South. But Mondale said it was "a hoax" aimed at slowing desegregation in Dixie.
Mondale joined Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott in a substitute proposal, scheduled for a vote today. It would order equal civil rights enforcement nationwide, but only against "unconstitutional" segregation.
Unlike Stennis', the Mondale-Scott proposal would not equate the South's old de jure system of
segregation by law or custom with the North's de facto segregation resulting from separate white and Negro neighborhoods.
The Mondale-Scott proposal also would prohibit federally imposed "busing" to achieve racial balance in schools—a provision already part of federal law. Despite the provision, recent Supreme Court decrees ordering immediate integration in some Southern districts have required busing on grounds there was no other minute discriminatory segregation.
"They haul them in, kicking and screaming!" Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D-Ga., said of children
in his state. Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox, one of several Southern governors who came here Tuesday to plead for relief from busing orders listened from the Senate gallery.
Southerners complained that Scott and Mondale were trying to preserve the status quo. "The purpose of this amendment is to preserve segregation in the North!" exclaimed Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La.
"This was written by an insurance lawyer," said Sue Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C. "A Philadelphia lawyer!" retorted Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C. nodding at Scott, a Pennsylvanian.
Bank workmen killed
Two workmen were killed Tuesday morning after falling six stories to the ground from the top of the First National Bank building under construction at Ninth and Massachusetts.
Clarence Earl Rogers, 52, 1321 Pennsylvania, and William Hedrick, in his 20's, Spring Hill, fell when one end of the scaffold they
were working on slipped. They were employed by W. B. Royse Masonry Co., Leawood.
The scaffolding fell when 300 pounds of sand bags slipped from the I-beams holding up the scaffold, Royse said. He said sand bags are the usual method of anchoring scaffolds.
This Sat. Feb. 21st—8 p.m.
THE FABULOUS FLIPPERS
RED DOG INN—Advanced Tickets on Sale Now!
Hear the Flippers New LP on KLWN FM 105.9 Mg. at 9:30 p.m. Wed.
8:30 p.m. Thurs.—10 p.m. Fri. or Live In Person Sat. at 8 p.m. RDI
KU students work on NASA design project
Student travel cards available at forum
For his Doctor of Engineering design project, Bill Tomkins, Victoria, Tex. (center), will lead a team of 12 graduate and undergraduate students in a program that will help NASA in controlling oscillations of the Saturn V moon vehicles. Larry Fagan (left) and Tom Wickstrom (right), graduate students from Kansas City, will assist Tomkins on the project.
International Student Identity cards, which enable the holder to receive reduced rates at European hotels, theaters, car rentals and restaurants, will be issued at the SUA Europe Forum at 7 p.m. March 4 in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
As much as a two-thirds discount on some Inter-European charter flights is made available by the identity card, said Irv Robinson, Prairie Village senior and SUA travel board chairman. Cost of the card is $1.
Tax reform programs set
One-day institutes on the Tax Reform Act of 1969 will be held March 7 at the Kansas Union and March 21 at the Radisson Hotel in Wichita.
The program for lawyers, accountants, and others affected by the new federal tax act will be the same at both locations and will emphasize the effects of the new law on everyday business and estate planning decisions.
Issuance of the identity card is part of preparation for the SUA group flight to Europe which will leave for Paris from New York on June 10 and return to New York on Aug.12.
SUA is arranging the flight only and not a tour, Robinson said. Arranging a tour is difficult, he said, since persons have varied motives for traveling to Europe—some going for work abroad and some to visit the major cities.
Air fare is $249 round trip via Air France Airlines. Funds needed for the two-month stay vary with the individual.
14 KANSAN Feb. 18
1970
KU students, staff and faculty members and their immediate families are eligible for the trip. Immediate family members are spouses, dependent children, or parents living in the household. Members of the immediate family must be accompanied by the eligible member of the university.
While SUA has organized no tours, it provides students with information about tours by other groups. Information about study programs, travel tips and information about different countries is available in the SUA office.
John F. Kennedy was the only President of the United States of Irish ancestry.
A. B. WILLIAMS & JOHN L. HANKS
ADVERTISEMENT
'Pogo' to aid space research
Bill Tomkins, Victoria, Tex.
graduate student in engineering,
is building a lab as part of his
doctoral design project. He also
secured $130,000 worth of equipment loaned to the University of Kansas from NASA in Huntsville, Ala., as well as $10,000 in supporting funds from NASA in Washington, D.C. for his project.
The Doctor of Engineering program, said Kenneth E. Rose, dean of engineering, differs from a PhD in that the Doctor of Engineering is design oriented and trains graduates in directing many people on a large technical problem.
Why are these men laughing? Find out on The Don Adams Special: "Hooray for Hollywood"...brought to you by Budweiser. the King of Beers. Thursday, February 26, CBS-TV, 8 p.m. EST.
KU student builds lab
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On his program, called POGO (Propulsion Generated Oscillation), Tomkins said he has a team of 12 graduate and undergraduate
causing complete failures in some systems of the craft. There is a redundancy of the systems to compensate for the effect, he said.
students working with him.
POGO, he said, is vibrations or oscillations which are indirectly caused by the rocket engines. He said NASA had problems with such vibrations on the Saturn V moon vehicle.
Last summer Tomkins identified his major doctoral project and secured the equipment from NASA. The main portion of the equipment consists of a vibration system called "CYCO" for cycling oscillator. A model of the rocket structure will simulate the vibrations of the Saturn V vehicle and will be controlled by the CYCO machine.
What occurs during POGO, Tomkins said, is that vibrations from the rocket engines transmit through the structure of the vehicle. The fuel tanks vibrate and shake the fluid inside. The fluid oscillates down through the fuel lines back to the engines, and the cycle starts again through the vehicle.
"This closed loop or snowball effect," Tomkins said, "could destroy the vehicle."
Many vehicle components are damaged by POGO, he said.
The project, said Tomkins, is a different approach to the POGO phenomenon. His team's research will be an aid to NASA engineers, who are also working on the problem.
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Civil rights chief quits
Panetta succumbs to pressure
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Leon A. Panetta, young civil rights chief in the Health, Education and Welfare department, resigned Tuesday and said congressional pressure on the White House cost him his job.
In a choked voice, the 31-year-old lawyer from Monterey, Calif., read a letter he had written his boss, HEW Secretary Robert H. Finch, at a late afternoon news conference.
"Despite the achievements of
City clerks school here
The 20th annual City Clerks School and the 3rd annual Municipal Finance Officers School will meet today through Friday to discuss problems of city officials. City clerks as "the operational cog in city government" will also be discussed.
David M. Welborn, acting director, Institute of Public Affairs, said there will be five main areas of discussion: accounting in Kansas, accounting procedures, public relations, bond market alternatives, and how city clerks can effect change.
The program is sponsored by the Kansas Association of City Clerks, the Kansas Municipal Finance Officers Association, the League of Kansas Municipalities, University Extension, Institute of Public Affairs, and the University of Kansas. All sessions will meet in the Kansas Union.
This is the second year the schools have met jointly. Present at the seminar will be city clerks, finance officers, mayors, commissioners, personnel officers, city managers and other interested city officials from Kansas.
Emphasis will be placed on the small-group discussion sessions. These groups, Welborn said, will talk about problems they run into in specific areas. He said he hopes they will be able to accomplish two things, relating to similar problems and identifying unsolved problems in city government.
Members present will be assigned to discussion groups based upon the size of the city represented and its geographical location in the state.
Nearly 120 city clerks and staff personnel are expected to attend.
the office and your courageous support, it is my reluctant conclusion that such pressures have been brought to bear on my position . . . that my resignation is the inevitable result."
Code for students need questioned
"The predominant pressures came from congressional sources and were reflected in the White House," Panetta said.
White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler announced about midday that Panetta had resigned "some time ago." Panetta told reporters he had submitted an unsigned resignation about six months ago when he was under pressure, but did not sign it until Tuesday.
"I think we are working with the best policy on student records," Bickford said. The present policy, he said, is both protective to the student and fair.
Max Bickford, chairman of the State Board of Regents, said he does not believe legislation is needed to establish a code of student behavior. "Each state institution," Bickford said, "has rules to regulate student behavior which are adequate and fair."
Panetta took over enforcement of civil rights laws and regulations under HEW's jurisdiction, including administration of the highly controversial school desegregation guidelines for the South, on March 30. He had encountered criticism almost from the start that he was too liberal in the job.
The Legislature Bills 417, 418, and 421 introduced by Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, call for the Board of Regents to establish a code of student behavior and to release student records and disciplinary action against students of faculty members convicted of a crime arising out of campus disturbance.
Bickford said he is completely in favor of another bill to clarify existing laws. The Bill, number 398, is being sponsored by the Board of Regents, Bickford said.
Panetta said he believed that President Nixon was sincerely dedicated to carrying out his campaign slogan of "bring us together."
Motor trucks make up 15 per cent of the vehicles registered in California.
Discussing pressures he said had forced him out, Panetta commented: "They were maybe equally divided, but the pressures on the Republican side were a lot stronger because it is a Republican administration."
but I do not believe that those around the President and others whose principal goal is not to bring us together but to win the next election are the ones that are primarily responsible for the policies that have resulted in this area civil rights," Panetta said.
"I think the President still is.
in, and that's where it stands.” Finch told UPI. “I’ve been en-deavoring to keep him around. I’m sorry to see him go.”
He said he was "particularly disturbed" on Lincoln's Birthday. Not only did the White House disclose a memo that day opposing busing to achieve racial balance, but Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew attacked the idea of allowing minority groups a certain percentage of available college enrollments, he said.
Feb. 18 1970 KANSAN 15
He discussed his decision with Finch, Panetta said.
Panetta is a former aide to former Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, R-Calif.
"Regretfully, his resignation is
Retardation grant given
The research center in mental retardation at KU received a $127,105 grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development to provide support for staff and facilities. The project is under the direction of Richard L. Schiefelbusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research at KU.
This Is It — Cash and Carry Days
FINAL REDUCTIONS
at the University Shop’s
ANNUAL WINTER SALE
SPORTCOATS
ONE GROUP
Reg. 50.00 to 65.00
Now $25
ONE GROUP
Reg. 55.00 to 70.00
Now $35
SUITS
FOUR GROUPS
Reg. 75.00
NOW
$39
Reg. 95.00
NOW
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Reg. 100.00
NOW
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Reg. 115.00
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$69
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Assorted Mdse.
Reg. 2.50 to 5.00
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Reg. 5.50 to 10.00
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SHOES
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Reg. 27.95 - 31.95
Now ½ Price
Dress Slacks
One Large Group
½ Price
One Large Group
1/3 Off
Wool Shirts
Wool Jackets
Reg. 16.00 - 35.00
Now ½ Price
All-Weather COATS
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Reg. 50.00
Now $39.95
PERMANENT PRESS
PANTS
One Group $8 - $11
½ Price
TUXEDOS
37 Reg.
39 Extra Long
41 Extra Long
Now $20.00
SWEATERS
One Large Group
Reg. 16.00 - 30.00
Now $9.95
(Others 20%-50% Off)
50c
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Reg. 89c to 2.50
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Demonstrators charge courthouse
SEATTLE (UPI)—A thousand demonstrators charged the U.S. courthouse in a massive wedge Tuesday, throwing rocks, tear gas and paint-filled balloons in a protest against the Chicago riot
conspiracy trial.
More than 30 protestors, including a number of women, were arrested as club-swinging police closed in from two sides on the screaming mob.
Magazine's charges denied by restaurant
NEW YORK (UPI)—An attorney representing a restaurant which Sports Illustrated magazine claims was the headquarters of a bookmaking operation supported by Denny McLain said Tuesday night the "allegations are both utterly false and completely irresponsible."
Paul Godola, a Flint, Mich., attorney, made the statement in answer to a copyrighted story to appear in this week's issue of Sports Illustrated stating that McLain contributed money to support a bookmaking operation in 1967 that accepted bets in several sports. The magazine said "members of a Syrian mob with Cosa Nostra connections sponsored the organization."
16 KANSAN Feb. 18 1970
A 31-game winner and the American League's most valuable player in 1968 as the star of the Detroit Tigers, the 25-year-old McLain is reported to be about $150,000 in debt. He earns $100,000 a year from the Tigers and perhaps another $100,000 in off-the-field activities.
McLain could not be reached for comment on the report. He has not been reported seen publicly since Friday, when he met with Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn in New York in regard to an investigation by Kuhn's office into "off-field activities" by McLain in 1967.
The demonstrators lobbed tear gas into the courthouse, sending employees running for protection.
A spokesman for Kuhn said the commissioner would stand on his statement of Friday that "when all the pertinent facts and circumstances have been determined and evaluated, I will have a further statement to make."
Police, who had been stationed inside the courthouse and in a library across the street, quickly closed in on the attacking demonstrators.
Swinging their clubs, the police clashed with the demonstrators, who hurled rocks and balloons filled with pink and blue paint.
As the demonstration began, a large red flag with white lettering was hoisted up the courthouse flag pole. The banner said, "End the war and free the seven," referring to the seven defendants in the Chicago riot conspiracy trial.
Included in the mob were a half dozen saffron-robed members of the Hare Krishna religious sect, noted for its teaching of nonviolence and peace.
Windows as high as the sixth floor of the building were broken by rocks. A tear gas cannister was lobbed through a broken window on the first floor.
Fumes rose up the elevator shaft and sent employees running to the upper floors where they bathed their eyes with wet towels.
One demonstrator, William Thomas Hayes Jr., caught a severe dose of the tear gas while he was inside in an attempt to talk to the U.S. marshall and a federal judge.
be like this," he said. "I don't know what's the matter with them, the demonstrators. I came down thinking it was going to be nonviolent."
"I didn't know it was going to
After the charge on the courthouse was dispersed, a number of the demonstrators moved to the federal office building a few blocks away and smashed several windows.
The demonstrators continued toward the skid row area, where patrons of bars and taverns came out to take a look. Most of the drinkers went back inside, but a
few drunks joined the fray, fighting both police and the demonstrators.
U. S. Attorney Stan Pitkin said those arrested were charged with destruction of federal property and some would be charged with assault.
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KU deals with pollutants
PEOPLE
GOV.
SPACE
AIR
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
Kansan Staff Writer
Key Kansas legislators, most of whom are members of the Ways and Means Committee, attended a symposium on pollution and ecology at KU Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union.
Living space a major worry
Photo by Greg Sorber
The speakers on pollution and ecology were Robert Smith, director of the Water Resources Institute; Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering; Kenneth Armitage, professor of biology; and Robert Aangeenbrug, director of the Center for Regional Studies.
Smith, an expert in water resources, said pollution is a problem all governments must face. The challenge of increasing population is to get maximum use of our natural resources. Smith said the people must have a common bond for environmental solutions. The state of Kansas is less polluted and crowded than most states.
After the symposium, the legislators were guests of the Endowment Association for dinner and the Athletic Association for Tuesday's Kansas - Nebraska game.
Smith also said that the University can contribute to solving Ecology problems. Pollution affects society as a whole, and if the University would work for reform much could be done to improve the present situation.
McKinney, an expert in the technology of pollution, said KU has done much research and has had much success in improving our environment. He said waste is a growing problem, and KU has a patent on a sewage treatment process which has enjoyed success.
With animal waste treatment, McKinney said he has created an oderless process of controlling the smell.
McKinney also said we need to find places to dispose of trash. He said that research must continue on pollution, which will take time, so people must be patient.
Armitage said that KU was doing its part in the pollution and
A specialist in the biological sciences, Armitage spoke about plant and animal life. The wide scope of biology includes the study of climate in relation to plants and animals, the relation of agriculture and pests, the effect of pesticides and the effects of flooding on fish. He also said the effect of urbanization on the environment should be studied further.
Feb. 18 1970 KANSAN 17
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Robert Aangeenbrug, director of the Center for Regional Studies, tacked up a simplified diagram which explained the relationship between ecology and government during a symposium on pollution and ecology for Kansas legislators of the Ways and Means committee Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union. He said the University should do research on pollution and educate the people on the problem.
ecology crisis. He cited the biology department for adding a new curriculum in environmental biology. He also said elementary teachers of the future should be taught the problems of man and environment in relation to human survival.
Aangeenbrug, director of the Center for Regional Studies, said the control of available living space is a major problem. He said
we must evaluate our current resources and decide how to best use them. He said that while Kansas is relatively spacious for its population and has basically clean air, that the polluted and densely populated world environment does effect Kansas. He said the minor pollution problems of Kansas can be managed if they are attacked now.
Aangeenbrug, said the consensus of the people must decide, through their elected representatives, on how to solve these problems. The problem must be defined and then solved. The people must decide where the problem exists and then what can be done to remedy it.
Aangeenbrug said the University should do two things: research on pollution and to educate the people on the problem. Politically, what is needed is vision, leadership, and unity to control the problem.
State Sen. Tom Van Sickle, R-Ft. Scott, one of the guests at the symposium, said the most serious pollution problems in Kansas were the sewage problems in the cities, industrial pollution and car exhaust pollution.
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Class emphasizes intercultural communication
Professor M. Dale Kinkade, head of the Anthropology department and specialist on the North American Indian, was the speaker at last week's meeting of the course on Problems in Intercultural Communication. The course is designed to bridge the communication gap which exists between the American Indian and other races.
KU model UN delegation takes honors in Oklahoma
A group of students from the University of Kansas was named one of the two top delegations at a model United Nations program sponsored by the University of Oklahoma last weekend.
The group represented the United States in the three day session. The other top delegation was a group of University of Oklahoma students representing the U.S.S.R.
During the sessions there were several resolutions passed concerning world affairs. On the Middle East crisis the model U.N. resolved to internationalize Jerusalem and to recognize Israeli sovereignty by the United Arab Republic. It was also resolved that Israel should withdraw to the boundaries which were in effect prior to the 1967 war.
On the subject of the distribution of world wealth it was resolved that a greater transfer from wealthy nations to developing nations was needed.
Bob Ward, chairman of the delegation, said Tuesday that it was risky to be the United States in these sessions. He said one group representing the National Liberation Front of Viet Nam marched into the meeting and pelted the delegates with marsh-mallows and shouted obscenities,
The other members of this delegation were Phil Higdon, Prairie Village senior, Bill Ward, Wichita sophomore, Jim Portwood, Reeland Park graduate student, and Mike Dickeson, Atchison senior.
Ward said most of the delegates were students at OU. He said this was one of the few model UN's in which all countries were represented.
Variety of opinions polled as students march on campus
By JIM CZUPOR
Kansan Staff Writer
Participants in Tuesday's march protesting the Chicago "Ten" trial had varying opinions on why they were marching. The majority of marchers, without explaining themselves, stated their reason for participating simply as, "We're marching because of the trial."
One marcher said, "The Chicago 'Ten' are scapegoats for the whole mess of the Democratic Convention. I don't think its fair and that's why I'm marching."
John Garvey, first year law student from Wichita, said, "I was at the Democratic Convention representing the Mutual Broadcasting System and I was unimpressed with the whole mess. I was shocked by Judge Hoffman's use of the conspiracy law which is not a complete statutory and arbitrary application."
Several people expressed their discontent with the lack of justice as their reason for marching. One marcher said, "I'm marching because of the lack of
18 KANSAN Feb. 18
1970
Still another marcher said, "The whole thing is so absurd. The idea that they can stick you in jail for anything nowdays is scary. If we don't do something now, then we won't be able to do anything at all."
justice at the trial and because a few people can actually be singled out when thousands were involved."
Laura Jorgensen, Glen Elya, Ill., junior, said, "I think the crowd's right in protesting the trial."
But not all marchers were sympathetic to those involved in the trial. Russ Welsh, Merriam junior, said, "The whole thing is screwed up! I'm especially hacked off at the law students. They are the ones who should be concerned about this but they aren't. They just sit on the Green Hall steps and whistle at the girls going by. I did want to go into law school, but now I don't know. I feel helpless."
Others who displayed enthusiasm in the march afterwards declined to admit their interest. One marcher said, "The march never accomplished anything—we're just here to have a good time."
KU, Haskell exchange ideas on communication problems
By CHARLENE MULLER Kansan Staff Writer
Steps have been taken by the University of Kansas and the Haskell Institute to bridge the communication gap which exists between the American Indian and other races in Lawrence.
Because of an arrangement made between Haskell and KU, a course entitled Problems in Intercultural Communication (The American Indian) was offered for the first time this semester to both educational institutions.
Lynn Osborne, professor of speech and drama and coordinator and instructor of the program, said the response to the course was overwhelming.
"We planned to have no more than 30 people in the course," Osborne said. "However, on the first day of enrollment we had to close the class with about 50 students on the roster."
Osborne said there were 26 undergraduate and six graduate students from KU and 13 Haskell students in the class.
Haskell students are taking the elective course at no charge, he said. They are bused to Blake Hall, where the class meets every Monday from 4:30 p.m. to 6:20 p.m. He said that both Haskell and KU students were earning two credit hours in speech and drama for the course.
Osborne said cooperation between Haskell and KU in coordinating the program was outstanding. Francis Heller, dean of faculties at KU, helped Osborne in setting up the program. Working from Haskell were Wallace Galluzi, superintendent, and Jerry Rogers, instructor of North American Indian and Eskimo history.
"They (KU and Haskell) have taken a giant step in the right direction toward breaking down the barriers which exist between them," Rogers said.
Rogers said the communication barrier was two-fold. A language difficulty on the part of Indian students whose primary tongue is not English is the first problem, he said. The second problem, he said, is the mass media which has imparted misconceptions of the American Indian to the public.
"This program allows the participants to understand what potential communication barriers exist between the two cultures. By understanding these barriers, they can learn what hurdles must be overcome."
Included in the curriculum will be an examination of the spectrum of cultural, educational, economic, lingual, philosophical and social barriers to effective communication between Indian and non-Indian individuals and groups. The course will provide a variety of lectures, films, discussions, directed readings and group projects.
Gary Kaplan, Hutchinson sophomore and a student in the class, said one of the better features of the program was mixed Indian and non-Indian interaction
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in group and team projects. In the group project, he said, ten people are involved in doing research on communication problems and making an oral report to the class. The team project is done by a group of three to four people who research another communication problem and write a paper on it, he said.
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Classical Film: "Fury." Woodruff
Antillotron, Kansas Union 7 & 9
p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of
Eldritch." 8:20 p.m.
University Council: 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m.
Students expressed similar ideas on benefits they hope to attain from it.
Some of the problems that will be researched are the Indian and the mass media, communication in the educational system, communication in non-verbal contexts and communication in the home and community.
Pauline Sam, Haskell senior from Cayuse, Ore., said the Indian had been afraid in the past to speak out. This silence, she said, has led to a misconception of the Indian as nonaggressive.
4:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
**AUAP Meeting: Kansas Room, Kansas**
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Film: "Pork Chop Hill." Dyche
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Natatorium
Robinson Gymnasium, 7:30 p.m.
She said she felt this class, although limited in size and time, would provide an avenue for the interchange of ideas and instilling more realistic conceptions of Indians and other races in the students' minds.
Museum, 1:30 p.m.
Architects
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Humanities Lecture: "The Humanistic Era." Northrop Frye, U. of Toronto. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union. 8 p.m.
"There seemed to be a stilted politeness at first," Miss Sam said, "where everyone was afraid of stepping on each other's toes. Now that we are getting to know each other better, the communication is more open and honest."
Experimental Theatre : "Rimers of Feldrich" 8:26 p.m.
Linda Holmes, Kansas City, Mo., junior at KU, said her reasons for taking the course concerned her future career as a microbiologist.
Concert Course: San Antonio Symphony. Hoch Auditorium, 8:20 p.m.
"I think scientists should get out of their labs and learn more about people," she said.
This course, Miss Holmes said, is a good way to bring the two cultures together.
"There has already been much interaction in the course." she
said, "I have already made some friends."
Edward Jensen, Haskell senior from Tuba City, Okla., said that neither culture knew enough about each other. This class, he said, should prove to be a fruitful interchange of ideas between them.
Haskell's superintendent, Galluuzzi who is enrolled in the course as a special student, said he was taking the course not only to learn more about Indian and non-Indian communication breakdowns but also to interact with students on a personal level rather than on his usual administrative level. The course should give both cultures firsthand information about each other, he said.
Osborne said several Indian tribes, including the Navaho, Sioux, Flathead, Yakima, Acoma Pueblo and Hopi were represented in the seminar.
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Bass
WEEJUNS
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
workroom. Woman are offered to
all students with a regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge, AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Recording tape for sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Amppex cassette player and speakers.
Finest in stereo tape systems. In ex-
cellence, cost $160 or best of
$843-7922. Ask for Doug Damnere
or leave message. 2-19
Western Clv. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive,"New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
For Sale: Realistic 40 changer. $25;
10-watt realistic stereo, Amp. $25;
Regula LKB camera, EE, x-synch.
$35, George. 843-8454. 2-18
Sony TC-8 8-track stereo recorder-
player tape deck for sale. Six months
old. Like New. Call for Karl at 843-
9072, after 6. 2-18
Deluxe 2-speaker stereo FM walnut radio, famous brand reduced from $79.90 Ray Stonebear's 292 Mass. Monday and Thursday nights.
2-18
Clearance! AM-FM radios, famous brands, entire stock of floor samples reduced—transistors as low as $10.00. Ray Stoneback's, downtown. 2-18
Sunn amp. with two D140F J.B.L.
speakers. Gibson EB-E Bass with
hardshell case. Band broke up. Phone
Ted. 842-7000. Rm. 813. Best offer. 2-18
Four new wide radial F70-14 new B.F.
Goodrich whitewall—final cut to $30-
00 plus $2.58 FET each. Ray Stone-
back's fast free installation. 2-18
TC-50 pocket cassette-corder, 6 months old, worth $125.00 new; need 6 month old, no longer in tape, earphone, remote control switch. Call Jim, 843-7404. 2-18
Hot Rod VW, 76 horse, fully set up
for gymkhanas, 842-2191 2-19
Austin Healy 3000, Mark III, needs
condition, 842-219-1 and to orig-
ine condition, 842-219-1
GROOVY. INFLATABLE FURNITURE—many styles for dorm or apartment. Call 842-5801 between 6:30 and 8:00 days. 2-19
Ex-schoolbus. Carpeted. Sink and stove ready to hook up. Magic possibilities. $300 plus tow charges. Call 842-5940. 2-18
LA PETITE GALERIE
"with-it"" fashions for Daylight and after-hours also Men's wear by Arpeja Lower level 910 Ky., Lawrence
مسجد الرحمان
66 Service
Tony's
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
THE HILE in the WALL
DELICATESEEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III.
Galactic Bridge
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
910 Kv.
TEXACO
W. 9th
TEXACO
Student specials
★ New, experienced management
★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
- Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
68. Bridgestone Super 90, low mileage
842-1291 2-19
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
Skli=h -a competition GS 205 cm
marker bindings. $115 Call 841-838-
54" - 72" - 90"
- Oils and Acrylics
Silverton guitar amp, with speaker cabinet. Has tremolo, reverb, and a foot pedal. $250 only. Only one year old. $180. Call Bill, B342 at five. 2-20
Motorcycle -500 c.c. single Matchless.
paint. $200 or best offer
5896 2-20
5896 2-20
- Balsa Wood
- Stretcher Frames
'62 'Norton 750 cc. Beautiful bike.
'89 offer. Call evenings at
842-593-2188
2-18
Boyfriend drafted: need to sell Craig 4-track tape player. Car or home unit. Only four months old. Good condition. Call 842-5088. 2-20
Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Become a collector,
on us! But a museum of Natural History Gift
Shop collects them from all over the
world. Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30, 2-20
Bankmark Services
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
Typewriters--big selection rental
purchase plan available. Office sup-
sure and furniture. Sales sup-
Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass.
843-3644. tf
Guitar- 6 string Gibson in perfect
Guitar capo, and case Z
842-0002-3
2-19
*62 Triumph TR-4. Runs good but
needs work $400 or more.
842-5824 2-19
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 328 horsepower, power brakes, low emission air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-8002. 2-23
TR-4, original owner Red-black top-wire wheels. Good condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Abarth, Judson ignition. Bendix electric fuel pump. Dogs and Driving light. Sensor detailed service history. 843-6559. 2-23
Mnavaxov d'luxe 5" spool tape record* sold new $89.90. Used for tapes up to 250. Includes tape bargains at Ray Stonebake's downtown. Open Mon, and Thurs. night.
1963 Chevy 4-door sedan, V-8 automatic, power steering, radio, good tires, in cold call. Bob, 842-602-324
6:00 2:24
1959 Chevy, automatic, very good mechanical condition, clean inside, new tires. $240 or best offer. Call John, 843-6804. 2-24
condition, clean inside, new tires or best offer. Call John. 6804 2-24
Ski boots, size 9; very good condition.
Will sell for $1½ price-$30 or best offer. Call after 2 p.m. 843-9165 2-24
'65 Karmann Ghia, dark red, rebuilt engine and transmission. Good interior. Reasonable. Call 842-1267, ask for Jerry. 2-24
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket racks;
starts and runs only;
mechanically perfect. Only
$500. 843-9588. 2-24
Home of the "Big Shef"
For Sale: Fall. Real hair, long, light
brown. Like new. Call Kate. 2-18
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Old fur coats and capes for sale. Fox,
muskrat, seal, otter, motton, lamb.
$10-$40. Also other strange clothes.
1618 Tenn. #A, 842-6810. 2-24
Gold and silver things by Xom
Earthy, earthy; rings, wedding sets,
and all other forms of body ornament.
Reasonable. Call 842-6120 2-120
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
WANTED
Wanted. One bass player who sings;
one guitarist who sings and any ver-
ters musicians in band or at repertory
torest with an amazing progressive
rock band with excellent drummer
and percussion material. Call Chuck, 842-1339
anytime, or Rocky, 842-5645.
2-20
Need one-coed roommate to share completely furnished apartment by March with three other girls. Read *Kay* at 842-4719, Fetics, Perks, or 2-23 at 842-4729.
Cood needs two girls to share furnished apartment. All utilities paid except water. Call Cindy. 842-8467 3-20
Male roommate needed for Crescent
Heights two-bedroom not. Swimming pool and air conditioning. Available
March 1, Call 842-5859. 2-23
Organist /singer for established local group. Jazz; rock; pop. 842-6848. 2-24
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
henrys
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you are in Chicago, the location is this place to get some Ribs. Chicken, Brisket is our special treat. I V-2510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday if
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Havrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VA 3-4022. 5-13
Eve boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
dress shoes, nurse's skirts,
*hatlets*, dog collars—at 812 MEDICAL
PRIMARILLY LEATHER
3-2
Ayn Rud study group being formed:
David R. Cormier 928 RH
Island 7 19
All Outward Bound alumni call 842-7399 about an Outward Bound promotional forum in early March. Ask for Norm. 2-20
Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. VI13-2139
We Care About
We Care About 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
- Applications
- Portraits
- Passports
摄像师
"Please call for appointment"
HIXON
STUDIO
721 Mass.
Bob Blank, Owner
Your headquarters
SHAW AUTO
SERVICE
for
miDAS
mufflers and shocks 612 N.2nd St. 843-8943
SERVICES OFFERED
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^{1}$. Mass. St. luggage and folded permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service. Bring in early 3-2
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Your 20 pairs to choose or sign. Your 20 pairs. PRIMARIL LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
PERSONAL
Rallye- Hare and Hounds type. February 21, 1970. Saturday night, Mails Shopping Center. Registration 6:30. first car off 7:30. Rallye Master Chris Patterson Information 842-547-600 interested in forming club or just bull sessions contact 842-6600. Ask for John Wegner in Room 758. 2-24
Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to the office or a local bank, and 52% of your income tax goes to the Pentagon—give Melvin less money. Rates=3, 83 and up (save twice) at 843-869-1218. Wish me luck after 6 p.m.
Unele Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Group Tax, 801!² Mass, Returns $4.00 and up. ff
Have run while learning about world affairs. Represent a country in the Model OAS, March 14, 15. Call KU-KU, office IN 4-3761. 2-18
Thank you for your patience! The
inventory is almost through re-stocking its
inventory with interesting new items.
On Sundays 3:30 to 4:30, Sunday
4:30 to 5:30.
Has the lottery got your number?
Join the National Guard. I know of several openings and can get you in.
Call Sam Cook, 843-1711. 2-19
TYPING
Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, tcrm papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter. Will service service service. Service 5-14. Wright Phone 843-9554
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work V 1-3281. Mrs.ruckman,
Typing. Theses, papers, Experienced,
necessary English corrections, English
teacher, M.S. degree. Also English tui-
tter, students or students in
Reasonable, 842-9249, 2-20
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxel. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges Favors
- Guards - Mugs
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers Stationery
- Lavaliers
- Gifts
Station
- Gifts
- Plaques
- Plaques
- Sportswear
Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter
VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Experienced typist will type term papers, manuscripts, thesis, dissertations, and any other miscellaneous typing. I have electric writer and an acedent 842-739-6189. Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, themes, misc. Contact Kathy Grey, 710 Randall Road, 842-6189. 2-20
Typing, IBM Electric, Pica Type. Fast,
dependable service
843-3186
2-24
FOR RENT
Apt. single male $85 a month, util-
ship Share bath 1314 2-18
842-218-1
Furnished efficiency apartments. $80 a month plus electricity. Call 422-375-701.
2-10 p.m. Tues. or Wed. 2-18
Mon.-Fri. (quiet) Town Manager, Furnished, a.e., steam heat, parking, single occupancy. Professor or mature student. 943-800-690.
LOST
One black man's billfold with the initials J D V. inside Urgently needed for 843-0834 or 843-259 and ask message. Valentine. If not in letter. In 2-18
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Part-time sales representative to sell "Adventures in Success," personal development program among KU students. Must be strongly interested in working in own "AIS" program and sales materials. Liberal commission. Call 843-8877 after 5 p.m. 2-20 Counselors wanted for Camp Sonnerset for girls and Camp Cobbosse for boys and require men and women in camp activities, at least 21 years of age preferably with previous camp counselling experience. Camps are located in the State of Maine; resources available in the State of Maine. Write letters to Camp Office. 225 East 57th Street, New York, New York 10022. 2-24
HELP WANTED
USED BOOKS - READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Westerns, Comics, Playboy
Mystery, Sports, History, Military,
934 Mass. Book 843-2736. No boasting
25,000 books.
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Sirloin
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Stirring steaks and fresh whisked asparagus await you when you wake up at the Sifton. Weave only the tight grating the selection as you like them with all the seasoning from the Sifton. At the Sifton are an admirable dining place.
Wolf
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
Open Daily
One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge
8201
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
SNOOPY
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact:
Shelley Bray University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall
Classified Rates
- 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
Printers hold walkout
Employees at the University of Kansas Printing Service walked off the job for 30 minutes Tuesday morning in protest of alleged obscene material in the Black Student Union (BSU) newspaper being readied for publication.
William T. Smith Jr., director of the printing service said, Harambee, the BSU paper edited by Monte Beckwith, Chicago, Ill., freshman, and co-chairman of the BSU Communications Committee, was accepted by the printing service since the service printed a four-page BSU paper last year.
He said, "I considered last year's paper inflammatory but not obscene and I had no idea what they were writing this year so I accepted the job having no reason to assume it offensive."
The employees, however, after seeing the paper considered it offensive as most walked off the job at 10:15 Tuesday morning. After 30 minutes of planning their next action, they returned to work with the understanding that they would halt production of the BSU paper.
"I explained the nature of the material in the publication and he said the University had no policy concerning censorship and there was no choice but to print the paper. Balfour told me as long as we had a duly ordered service voucher we had no choice but to print it."
After looking at the paper, Smith said, "I noticed several things were obscene and immediately called the Chancellor's Office and talked with Dean Balfour."
Smith said that he then went back to the employees' meeting explaining his sympathy toward them about the propriety of the situation. The employees then agreed to try to solve their problem through normal channels of communication realizing the necessity to get their work done. Smith said "They felt more could be done with a formal attitude than had they taken a negative approach."
Harold Fox, a limotype operator at the plant and one of seven people chosen by the employee committee to see what could be done to halt publication of the BSU paper, said that they were going to ask for the opinion of the Kansas Attorney General and see if they were libel to work under those circumstances.
Fox then contacted Max Bickford, executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents. Fox said, before Bickford would make a decision he wanted to talk to the Chancellor. Fox then said, they would hold off the walkout until
Alliance
(Continued from page 1)
Alliance hopes to replace with a system that would permit each student to take any or all of his non-major courses on a credit/no credit basis. Alliance would also emphasize the necessity of integrating the ROTC curriculum into the various schools and departments. Ebert said there would be an attempt to change the enrollment system to one of pre-enrollment so students could have necessary courses reserved
Support for the building of a new hospital is first on the Alliance's list of University Reform. Also included is a plan to oppose year-long residence hall contracts.
20 KANSAN Feb.18 1970
today.
Later in the afternoon Smith said he discussed the matter with BSU editor Beckwith and told him he thought the language was in bad taste. "Beckwith countered," Smith said, "that 'some of the material in the Kansan was in just as bad a taste.'"
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Employes halt production of BSU paper
"As far as I have been able to learn, no guidelines have been set up for these (allegedly obscene) words."
After the morning walkout several of the employees gave some reaction to the material in the BSU paper.
Photo by Greg Sorber
Jack Hurley, Lawrence senior and printing service employee, said, "I think the BSU should have a paper but you're dealing with subject matter of obscene words and ideas that not only contradicts human beings but our whole morality. If we print a paper like this then there are no moral or ethical codes to live by."
Calvin McAlexander said,
"Some of the material was kind
of raw to be on the street for
distribution. Even if my son
could read, I wouldn't want him
to read this."
Ed Rablowsky said. "I don't
Employees of the University Printing Service discussed what action to take to halt the publication of the Black Student Union newspaper which allegedly contained some obscene words. They walked off the job at 10:15 a.m. Tuesday morning and after forming a committee to get the opinion of Kansas Attorney General went back to work at 10:45 a.m.
Weather
Cold wave warning today and tonight. Turning much colder with strong shifting northerly winds 25 to 40 miles per hour and local blowing dust today. Much colder with diminishing northerly winds tonight. Becoming mostly cloudy today followed by clearing tonight. Partly cloudy and cold Thursday. Temperatures falling into the 30s and upper 20s by late this afternoon and evening and into the teens tonight.
think we have to publish this filth. They talk about cleaning up our streets and cities, why not clean up our speech?"
Beckwith, said the obscene material must have concerned three words contained in a poem in the paper. He said those words are "functional terms in the black community."
"This is our language. This is the language used in the black community." Beckwith said.
John Spearman, Lawrence sophmore, and president of BSU, said "This week's paper was composed only by official members of BSU though next weeks paper
will include articles from the community, including high school students."
Spearman said that he understood why this paper might be objectionable to "white middle class Americans," but Beckwith said the paper was for "blacks and the black community."
was singled out was 'because it happened to be a black publication.'"
Beckwith said since the terms used in the newspaper were the language of the black community, he personally thought the protest by the printing service was a "racist slur or adventure on their part." He said many papers have printed obscenities before and "The reason I think this paper
Spearman said that he was not sure whether or not the paper would be printed but, "If it is not printed by tomorrow afternoon, we'll take it some place else."
"What the employees do from here on out," Smith said, "is the employee's business. They want to turn this over to the legislature. I think its their right as citizens.
"I could assume that if we go along with the plan to print the paper they (the employees) will walk off again."
FRIENDSHIP
Which One is the Paulist?
It's easy to tell a Paulist. Just talk with him.
The first thing you notice is that he's 'contemporary'. He lives today, but plans tomorrow with the experience and knowledge of yesterday. That's a Paulist characteristic: the ability to move with the times and to meet the challenges of each era.
A Paulist is also the mediator of his age; he tries to bring together the extremes in today's world and the Church, the liberals and the moderates, the eternal and the temporal.
Next, he is very much an individual. It sets him apart immediately. He has his own particular talents and abilities — and he is given freedom to use them. If you are interested in finding out more about the Paulist difference in the priesthood, ask for our brochure and a copy of our recent Renewal Chapter Guidelines.
Write to:
Vocation Director
Paulist
Fathers
Room 300
415 West 59th Street
New York, N.Y. 10019
--presents
The University of Kansas Experimental Theatre
THE RIMERS OF ELDRITCH by Landford Wilson
Feb.12-21st at 8:20 p.m.
Murphy Hall Experimental Theatre
For reservations call UN 4-3982
Fee increase passes
Student Senate okayed Wednesday night a $7.50 per semester, per student increase in student fees to help cover construction costs for Wescoe Hall.
The increase passed 36 to 30 after five hours of debate in the Kansas Union.
The resolution was presented by Frank Zilm, vice-president of the Student Senate, and proposed that the Senate levy the $7.50 fee increase provided the following stipulations were approved by the University government and the Board of Regents:
- student representation and voting power involving continuing development of Wescoe Hall and future programs and
- student representation in meetings involving selection of architects for future buildings at KU,
- elimination of student fees as any future source of revenue for education facility construction at KU.
The proposal only came about after the discussion was initiated with
a statement by Rick von Ende, vicechairman of Senate Executive Committee (SenEx).
"We have a decision to make," von Ende said. There is something dreadfully wrong in the American political system when political decision makers waste untold millions of dollars on useless and tragic ventures and don't provide for needs of modern society.
"It was a failure of the University not to have the students involved in Wescoe Hall from the start. It was the failure of someone—the architects or the administrators—to make known at an early date the fact that this proposal would cost enough to require student monetary participation.
"It's a tragedy to have to require student fees to construct educational edifices." von Ende said.
The estimated $8 million Wescoe Hall will be a 170,000 square foot, four floor building constructed between Flint Hall and Hoch Auditorium on Jayhawk Boulevard. $5.5 million has been obtained with $3.6 million from state appropriation and
$1.9 million from federal funds. The difference is to be made up by the proposed $7.50 fee increase.
During discussion of the hall, the architectural Firm, Horst, Terrill and Karst of Topeka, were put under fire from the senators. One senator spoke out against interior design of the building complaining of lack of windows in several of the rooms.
In response, Gary Karst said, "I am amazed when I sit here and listen to the problems discussed about the money spent and the complaints about windows for each room. We've approached this in the most economical way we know how."
The sentiments ranged from disgust to realization of necessity but disapproval of the method with both sides admitting frustration and seeking a solution.
"It is a short range, short term goal," Phil Weiss, graduate school senator, said, "...a lot of buck passing is going on. It is a means to an end. When we vote for this, we don't know if this will remain as a precedent."
Zilm said that if we stop the building we will only stop it for one year.
"We are frustrated to what's happening," he said, "but if we turn down what's happening, we also will be passing the buck."
Fred Krebs, graduate school senator, warned, "Right now our priorities are education and care of the students and that's why I'm in favor of the amendment."
As the discussion seesaw between approval and disapproval of the building, student senators began voicing their frustrations from arguments being presented.
R. L. Bailey, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said, "I'm perturbed at what's happening tonight because all of the facts we needed to know were never presented to us before this evening. Why did this happen? We're caught now. We have to make some kind of decision now!"
The meeting moved from the "committee as a whole" upon Zilm's resolution and after more discussion, Dave Awbrey, Student Body president asked a vote to be taken by role call.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Hanoi demands release
PARIS—North Vietnam today demanded the immediate release of five of the "Chicago Seven" and their two lawyers.
"We protest against the fact that the Nixon administration has imprisoned seven persons of the antiwar movement in the United States, including two lawyers," said Nguyen Minh Vy, Hanoi's No. 3-ranked delegate as the 55th session of the Paris peace talks opened.
"We demand the immediate release of these men." Vy said.
Kansas crime increases
TOPEKA—Gov. Robert B. Docking said Thursday his administration will place a stronger emphasis on preventing and controlling crime among young persons.
He said the move was based on recent reports that crime in Kansas is increasing rapidly.
The number of crimes in Kansas has increased 36 per cent in the past four years, according to the reports. The crime rate per 10,000 population increased 32 per cent in the past four years.
--the legislators weren't willing to keep the lines of communications open. He said legislators made a special trip for the forum and few students showed up.
(Continued to page 16)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, Feb.19. 1970
Frizzell said he was tired of hearing students complain that
Frizzell blasts students
"I am no longer going to be open eared to student complaints," said Kent Frizzell, Kansas Att. General, at the Frizzell Forum Wednesday evening in the Kansas Union Forum room.
Frizzell was aggravated over student attendance at the forum.
Speaking to a group of about 40 students, Frizzell said he had brought the state's top legislative leaders to Lawrence in an attempt to narrow the generation gap and facilitate communications between the legislature and the University.
"I am disappointed," Frizzell said, "that on a university campus, so few students demonstrate an interest in discussing issues of interest to the University."
"Students should do more than just give lip service to their complaints," Frizzell said. "They should confront the legislators with their views whenever they get the opportunity."
The idea for the forum originated last year when members of the New Left took over a College Republican meeting at which Frizzell was speaking. He was placed on mock trial and charged with various crimes against the people of Kansas. He and legislators were indicted for being unresponsive and unconcerned with activities on campus.
This year, Frizzell said, it was
the students who were being unresponsive and showing no concern to communicate with legislators.
Frizzell then introduced Sen. Glee Smith, R-Larned and speaker pro-temp of the Senate, who discussed Senate bills 417, 418 and 421. These bills deal with student behavior, student records and requirements for disciplinary action.
Smith stressed that these bills were unnecessary and would undermine the authority of the Board of Regents and the Chancellor.
"Most schools don't need legislative compulsion," Smith said. "They are doing the job at their own discretion."
Technically, Smith said, these bills are dead because it is too
(Continued to page 16)
Not guilty of conspiracy charge
'Seven' hear trial verdict
CHICAGO (UPI)—A federal court jury Wednesday found all the defendants in the tumultuous trial of the "Chicago Seven" innocent of conspiring to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention but convicted five of crossing state lines with intent to incite riots.
The jury of 10 women and two men returned its verdict after more than 41 hours of deliberations over five days. It came 21 weeks to the day after the militant antiwar protest leaders went on trial Sept. 24 before U.S. District Judge Julius Hoffman.
Guilty verdicts on the intent-toincribe riot charges were returned against David T. Dellinger, 53; Rennard C. "Rennie" Davis, 29; Abbott H. "Abbie" Hoffman, 32; Jerry C. Rubin, 31; and Thomas E. Hayden, 29.
University professors John R. Froines, 30, and Lee Weiner, 30, were acquitted on both counts against them. They were charged with plotting to fire-bomb an underground garage near convention headquarters.
Hoffman did not immediately sentence the five convicted men. They face sentences of up to five years in prison and $10,000 fines.
All of the defendants already are in jail serving contempt sentences. The sentences, which range up to almost $2_{1 / 2}$ years, were imposed Saturday and Sunday by the judge for courtroom disruptions during the turbulent. $4_{1 / 2}$ month trial.
Hoffman refused to grant bail after Wednesday's convictions. I have determined they are dangerous men to have at large," he said.
The climactic day of the trial was marked by new violence and courtroom outbursts. The wives of Hoffman, Rubin and Weiner were evicted screaming from the courtroom on the motion of Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard G. Schultz.
The judge will not enter a judgment of conviction until after he hears defense motions, made before the trial started, that some government evidence should be excluded on the grounds it was obtained by wiretap.
The verdict appeared to skirt the most controversial element of the indictment under which the "Chicago Seven" were tried. It is the provision of the antiriot amendment to the 1968 Civil Rights Act which makes it a crime to conspire to cross state lines with intent to incite riots.
If the judge determines the case was obtained by wiretap material, he presumably would have to set aside part or all of the verdict.
The law had never been tested in court. Some legal experts had questioned the constitutionality of the concept of "conspiracy with intent" and had predicted it could well be overturned on appeal if the defendants were convicted.
Defense attorney Kunstler deplored the jury's decision as "a compromise verdict."
"This is the last thing we wanted," Kunsttler told a news conference following the court appearance. "We wanted an acquittal or conviction of all, or a hung jury. We did not want this terrible compromise."
AWS leadership institute scheduled
The Associated Women Students (AWS) will sponsor a leadership institute this weekend.
The purpose of this institute is to help people recognize problems they encounter when entering groups for the first time. These
McConnell to be cadet corps head
Steven C. McConnell, Atchison senior and member of Air Force ROTC, will become commander of the cadet corps for the spring semester.
John O. Irwin, Lawrence senior and last semester's cadet commander, will take over the position of special assistant to the commander. Joseph M. Doyle, Bartlesville senior, will become the deputy commander.
Other seniors appointed to command positions within the Corps include Arthur Aenchbacher, Langley Air Force Base, Va.; Richard Bird, Arkansas City; Harold Domoney, Downs; Steve Mullen, Horton; Kenneth Dickson, Topeka; and Michael Weber, Hutchinson.
problems, some stemming from certain underlying emotional issues, must be resolved before a person can feel at ease in new situations.
Using basic principles of leadership, faculty and students participating in the institute will observe group interaction and learn how to understand this interaction, said Cindy Willis, Overland Park senior and member of the planning committee.
2 KANSAN
Feb. 19
1970
Polish students to arrive soon
Seven Polish students will arrive at KU within the next two weeks to complete the first national exchange of students between the United States and Poland.
How to function as a leader without influencing or submerging your group and how minority groups can be brought out are other areas to be covered in the program.
Four KU students and one University of Michigan student who were accepted for the United States portion of the exchange are already at Poznan University in Poznan, Poland. They will stay in Poland until September.
with Dean Kerkman of the human relations department.
The KU students who left for Poland at the end of January were: Randall Oestreicher, Cambridge, N.M., graduate student, Charles E. Railsback, Wichita graduate student, Thomas R. Simpson, Orrington, Maine, senior, and Janet E. Winchester, Boulder, Colo., junior.
The Institute is being planned to develop leadership throughout the campus. Faculty and students will be interacting on a completely different level than the classroom situation.
The format of the institute, designed by National Leadership Institute, is based on group theory. Each group will ideally learn the dynamics of leadership by creation of a project with their group.
Child rearing costs rise
WASHINGTON (UPI)—It will cost the parents of a child born last year about $5,000 more to raise him to age 18 than it would have had he been born eight years earlier, an Agriculture Department economist said Wednesday.
Parents of a child born last year will spend from $19,360 to $25,000 to rear him to the age of 18-assuming prices during that span remain at 1969 levels.
Using manuals from the National Leadership Institute, Emily Taylor, dean of women; Mrs. Frank Shavlik, assistant dean of women; and James Brooks, assistant dean of men will lead the program. They will be working
The program will begin Friday evening at the First United Methodist Church and will end Saturday evening. A fee of $5 will be charged to cover meals and materials.
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The following provisions constitute the candidacy requirements of the election procedures for the Student Senate to be held March 17-18,1970
1. A candidate for the presidency and a candidate for the vice-presidency of the student body must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy at least thirty (30) days prior to the general election. This declaration must be accompanied, if the candidate was not a member of the Student Senate for the semester immediately preceding the general election, a petition signed, with names and student number, by five hundred (500) bonafide members of the student body of the University of Kansas approving the candidacy. Each candidate must pay a five (5) dollar filing fee.
2. Any person wishing to be a candidate for the Student Senate must file with the president or secretary of the Student Senate a declaration of candidacy prior to the 2nd of March,1970. This declaration must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee.Candidates for the Student Senate must run from the school in which they are currently enrolled, and the declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a certification from the office of the dean of the school that the student is in fact enrolled in that school.
3. Declaration and certification forms for candidates for the Student Senate can be picked up at the Student Senate Office or in the office of the dean of each school of the University.
4. Candidates must indicate whether they wish to be identified on the ballots as running as independents or as members of a particular political party or coalition.
5. Class officer candidates must submit a declaration of candidacy and a petition containing the signatures of fifty (50) bonafide members of their class to the president or secretary of the Student Senate prior to the 2nd of March, 1970. Class officer candidates may also indicate their desire to run as part of a coalition. The declaration and petition must be accompanied by a five (5) dollar filing fee per candidate.
KAWSAN COMMENT
Bear with us
"Three hundred hippies"—the description given by a Kansas City television station—marched from the Chi Omega fountain to the Douglas Co. Courthouse Tuesday afternoon, with a pause at Green Hall to hear speeches decrying the trial of the Chicago 10 (or eight, or seven). Blue and red paint was sprayed on the statue of "Uncle Jimmy" Green; a clenched fist was stenciled on its pedestal and on the door, wall and sidewalk of the courthouse; a courthouse window was broken.
The University's public relations staff was probably agast, as was the administration. For that matter, KU students might add a few drops of nervous sweat, too, because many citizens of Kansas and, more ominously, their legislators, are going to take offense.
Those in the hinterlands (meaning, not derogatorily, anywhere outside campus) have seen the accounts of the ROTC and anti-war demonstrations here last year that destroyed State property. Now, what may be the coup de grace for favorable opinion of the student body has been delivered.
The news that reached the cities and towns of Kansas was probably extrapolated by much of its audience to lump the whole University with the 150 marchers (a more accurate estimate) and the individuals who engaged in vandalism.
But the troubled citizens must understand that the members of the University community who have kept tab on the trial are genuinely concerned with an apparent miscarriage of justice and some of them chose to show their concern by marching Tuesday. Only a scant few bore malice.
Banning all marches at KU would appear to be the remedy, yet that would run counter to the principle of free speech. Crowds do not inevitably run amok, as the Vietnam moratorium showed.
Only an open-minded view of these events by Kansas voters and taxpayers and forbearance by politicians, who could snatch the dissent issue for their own gain, will prevent KU from losing more of its already tenuous financial support.
KU cannot retain its substantial academic standing if it doesn't progress; it cannot progress on its present austerity budget. Unfortunately, the overreaction to last spring's demonstrations remains fertile ground for critics of higher education expenditures and new-found student freedom.
Last Tuesday's actions prove disastrous for KU, it is imperative that all Kansans—in and out of government—think twice before judging the entire University by a few of its erring sons.
Iowa Street hazard
—Monroe Dodd
The February 5 auto wreck at 19th and Iowa Streets, which killed a KU student, is grotesque evidence that traffic conditions on Iowa are less than perfect. Whether a stop light at the intersection could have prevented the collision and subsequently fatality is uncertain. Yet it seems that some added traffic control there and at other points could mitigate the danger along Iowa, scene of an average 40 traffic mishaps yearly.
Lawrence City Engineer Leonard Hoover, though, disagrees, saying that substantive relief could only be provided by completely re-designing the thoroughfare. Anticipating the needs of the University's burgeoning west campus, Lawrence has requested help from the federal government for an overhaul, Hoover says. Unfortunately, the city so far has been unsuccessful.
"Iowa Street is a difficult place to add any constructive temporary improvements," he adds. "The State is aware of the problem. If there's anything concrete and reasonable that can be done, the State would approve it."
Most of us are not traffic engineers, but many of us are drivers and, to drivers, Mr. Hoover's sloughing off the question of temporary improvements is inadequate. There are some obvious places for "concrete and reasonable" changes.
Separate left-turn signals should be added to the 15th Street intersection, which is rife with danger for southbound motorists on Iowa attempting to turn left against two oncoming lanes of 45 mph traffic.
Drivers at 9th and Iowa, where grocery stores and service stations abound, find it risky to turn left from any direction. There, too, left-turn signals would be a boon.
Since March 1969, two motorists have been killed at 25th and Iowa. Gibson's Discount Store, service stations and housing developments near the intersection all feed cars on to Iowa, yet the crossing is vaguely marked and has no electronic controls.
At 19th and Iowa, where the February 5 tragedy occurred, the outlook is dim for stop lights of any kind. Hoover feels that additional controls there would decrease right-angle accidents, but lead to more tail-enders. It seems that a flashing light—amber for Iowa Street, red for 19th—would be a good compromise and better warning to drivers.
Hoover says the State wouldn't approve a request for a stop light at 19th and Iowa (The city hasn't even asked for one) because of its being only a three-way intersection. Yet a road which promises to be a major access route for the new National Aeronautics and Space Administration building now enters the crossing opposite 19th; it will add to the need for a safety device.
And other points of Hoover's argument against temporary improvements appear shaky.
"Every September, 15,000 cars are added to the city by students," Hoover says. "Ordinarily, when students are on vacation, the traffic isn't bad. We can't design all streets for twice the usual amount of traffic."
Those 15,000 cars that Hoover claims students bring to Lawrence are here nine months in twelve. Along with Lawrence residents, the students in reality comprise the "usual amount" of drivers on Iowa.
Speed limits on Iowa can't be lowered, Hoover says.
"I've driven 45 mph on Iowa," he explains, "and I think it's safe. Those who violate the limit at 45 mph would violate it at 35 mph also. People would be mad if the speed limit were lowered."
The speed limit does seem safe, unless a driver is trying to turn left against cars traveling at the speed, or is going 45 mph and attempting to avoid left-turning motorists, or must stop suddenly at 15th Street after barreling down the hills north- or southbound.
Besides, those who would violate a 45 mph limit wouldn't necessarily violate it by as much with a 35 mph marking. And people everywhere are mad at speed limits, but that doesn't bar their existence.
Problems of cost and red tape certainly affect Hoover's thought, yet they don't preclude at least partial efforts to solve a predicament which can only become worse with each year.
—Monroe Dodd
Griff & the Unicorn
BY SOKOLOFF
THANKS TO THOSE GEESE, I'M ON MY WAY AGAIN...
NOT MUCH LATER (NATURALLY)
THIS IS RIDICULOUS...
SIGH IT'S NO USE... I CAN'T KEEP THIS UP ANY LONGER...
I'LL BE OPTIMISTIC AND HOPE I FAIL ON SOMETHING SOFT
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970,
University Dally Kansan.
hearing voices—
To the editor;
Chancellor Chalmers recently noted that budget formulas of this University are rather naive (Kansas City Star, February 11). He then added, with perhaps even greater naivety, that recent changes in University decision-making structures will keep our campus quiet and orderly and that students "don't have to worry about finding a job anymore," and are thus more interested in social problems. While we have had a relatively quiet winter and while some students may be overly confident about their future economic and professional security, the concrete possibilities for campus unrest and unemployment or unsuitable employment for University graduates ought not be so casually dismissed.
The insecurities of such a tight job market are not likely to divert this generation of students from vigorous pursuit of general social reform on and off campus, for it is evident that the governmental policies that are generating our social and environmental problems (as well as the financial crisis on campus) are the policies that will eliminate jobs for University graduates. Indeed, such insecurity could politicize the currently apolitical majority of students. It is doubtful that the current "open" University decision-making process would suffice to insure peace and "orderly" behavior on the campus under these conditions.
The U.S. Department of Labor predicts, for example, an oversupply of educators and other professionals within the very near future (the future of our freshman and sophomore classes). Even this year education majors with certain areas of emphasis and doctoral candidates in many of the traditional disciples are experiencing difficulty in securing employment.
Perhaps things will even themselves out. Continued tightening of the University budget will systematically eliminate the poorer student from the University (as the cutbacks in the work-study program have demonstrated) and thus reduce the number of graduates. Those affluent enough to attend the University would then be able to get suitable jobs. And we would have a quiet, secure, idealistic campus.
But the human costs of just letting things work themselves out would be enormous—denial of education to those seeking it, more extensive deterioration of public elementary and secondary education, continuation of inadequate health and welfare programs, and a decline in biological and environmental research at a time when the discovery of knowledge in these areas is crucial to human survival.
It would be most irresponsible for the University administration and the larger University community to spend their energies exclusively on keeping their backyard clean and adequately fertilized with state funds while the rest of the neighborhood rots out.
It would be more appropriate if the University would seek political and financial support not just for the University, but for the whole range of educational, research and welfare programs that are urgently needed, manned by University-trained people, and dependent upon favorable public policies for their support and growth.
It would be most appropriate if the University community would fight aggressively for a sane social order rather than parrying defensively with possibly well-intentioned but certainly unreasonably frightened local legislators.
Mary Kay Cordill Instructor of sociology and Kansas City graduate student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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KWSAN REVIEWS
RECORDS: Performance marred
By KENNETH CUMMINS
Kansan Reviewer
The musical appearance of the Canadian group Lighthouse, in their first album recorded on RCA was marred by a poor recording.
Lighthouse, a 12-piece group, follows in the vein of music popularized by Blood, Sweat and Tears and Chicago with its blending of brass instrumentation and the traditional rock rhythm section.
Lighthouse goes a step further, though, in the addition of a violin section as a regular part of the group.
This mixture of brass and electric guitar is best displayed in the two selections "Mountain Man" and "If There Ever Was a Time." The former is a more than adequate arrangement strengthened by the drumming of Skip Prokop, formerly with the Procol Harem. Prokop, the leader of the group, also arranged most of the material for this album.
"If There Ever Was a Time" is perhaps the best cut on the album. Especially good is the piano playing of Paul Hoffert, the musical director for the group. Hoffert's keyboard talents are prevalent throughout most of the album but are not fully developed until this selection.
open their mouths "Whatever, Forever" could easily have been the best song on the album except for a poor recording job which left the horns sounding out of tune.
One of the highlights of the album is the unique arrangement of the McGuinn-Clark-Crosby composition, "Eight Miles High." The piano and trumpets add fullness to the guitar-organ rendition, but the selection suffers from the vocal parts which aren't in harmony, perhaps a result of the poor recording.
There are other highlights to the album, such as the violins on "Never Say Goodbye," the trombone solo on "No Opportunity Necessary," or the selection "Ah, I Can Feel It."
But the album suffers most from a performance below the capabilities of the group. But Lighthouse has shown in its first album that it is a talented and able group, one that will be heard from again.
Hoffman, Voight vie
By VERNON SCOTT
'Oscar' returns
UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Newcomers Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight challenge old pros Richard Burton, John Wayne and Peter O'Toole for the best actor award in the 42nd annual Oscar race.
Best actress nominees all are making their first bids for academy awards: Genevieve Bujold, "Anne of the Thousand Days," Jane Fonda, "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" Liza Minnell, "The Sterile Cuckoo," Jean Simmons, "The Happy Ending" and Maggie Smith, "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie."
Hoffman and Voight were nominated for their performances in "Midnight Cowboy." During the 42-year history of the academy several actors and actresses have been nominated for their performances in the same film including Burton and O'Toole for "Becket" in 1964.
Nominated for best picture of the year were "Anne of the Thousand Days," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," "Hello, Dolly!," "Midnight Cowboy" and "Z."
Sentiment lies heavily with Wayne, nominated only once previously in his 40 years as a movie star—in 1949 for "The Sands of Iwo Jima."
Burton gained his sixth nomination for "Anne of the Thousand Days." O'Toole, nominated for "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" is also ran in three previous starts.
Hoffman was nominated for "The Graduate" in 1967. It is Voight's first nomination.
“Z” is the first motion picture ever nominated for an Oscar with English subtitles.
Two of the nominated directors, Sydney Pollack, "They Shoot Horses" and Arthur Penn, "Alice's Restaurant," were nominated for best direction Oscars, but their pictures were not nominated. The three remaining directors nominated were George Roy Hill, "Butch Cassidy," John Schlesinger, "Midnight Cowboy" and Costa-Gavras, "Z."
Apnea is the medical term for suspension of breathing.
The Panama Canal opened Aug. 15, 1914.
Feb. 19
1970 KANSAN 5
Best supporting actor nominees were Rupert Crosse, "The Reivers," Elliott Gould, "Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice," Jack Nicholson, "Easy Rider," Anthony Quayle, "Anne of the Thousand Days" and Gig Young, "They Shoot Horses."
All the best supporting actress nominees were in the running for the first time: Catherine Burns, "Last Summer," Dyan Cannon, "Bob and Carol," "Goldie Hawn, "Cactus Flower," Sylvia Miles, "Midnight Cowboy" and Susannah York, "They Shoot Horses."
Awards will be presented to the winners in each category April 7 when the Motion Picture Academy televis its presentation.
Music, Art Camp conductor returns to campus for concert
The San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Victor Alessandro, will perform in concert at 8:20 p.m. tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
The program is one of a series
One liners..
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Michael Douglas, son of Kirk, has formed his own company, Bigstick Productions, Ltd., to star in a film adaptation of "The Drift," a novel by Lloyd Kropp.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Veteran character actor John Zaremba joined the cast of Stanley Kramer's "R.P.M." which stars Anthony Quinn and Ann-Margret.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Andy Devine will guest star in an episode of television's "Bracken's World" series.
HOLLYWOOD ( UPI )—Chill Wills has been added to the cast of "The Last Movie."
in the 1969-70 KU Concert Course sponsored by the School of Fine Arts.
The Orchestra has travelled throughout the country on numerous concert tours. It is one of the outstanding symphony orchestras in the Southwest.
Alessandro, who comes from a musical family, has been a guest conductor at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp for 13 years. The camp is held on the KU campus each summer for high school students from all over the world.
Music on the program will range from romantic to contemporary. The orchestra will open with Anton Dvorak's "Carnival Overture" and continue with "Symphony No. 2" by Johannes Brahms. A Spanish piece, "Huapango" by Moncayo will follow.
The last two numbers will be compositions by 20th century composers. Samuel Barber's "Intermezzo" from "Vanessa" will be followed by Ottrino Respighi's famous and dramatic tone poem, "The Pines of Rome."
KU students will be admitted to the concert free if they present their KU ID's at the door.
SUA special war anti-war film series
Pork Chop Hill
Short: The Immigrant, Charlie Chaplin
Lewis Milestone, SUA, 1959
7 and 9 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c February 19
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new... and from Sweden
Victor Alessandro
Ben Harvey's juices are all damned up!
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Campus briefs
Pass/no credit slip reminder
Freshman and sophomores in a College within a College are asked to turn their pass/no credit slips in at their college office, the registrar's office announced Wednesday.
Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences may pick up the pass/no credit slips and return them at window 1 of the registrar's office.
Students in other schools may pick up their slips at the registrar's office but must return them to the office of their school.
Students may sign up for the pass/no credit option through Feb. 27.
Advisory committee to meet Friday
The Professional Advisory Committee to the School of Social Welfare at the University of Kansas meets Friday.
The advisory committee consists of social workers, sociology professors, social workers from welfare agencies and professionals in the field of social welfare. They will discuss problems of the school in relation to the profession.
Margaret Gwinn, director of the Department of Social Service at the KU Medical Center, is chairman of the committee.
The session will meet in the Pine Room, Kansas Union from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Pre-delinguent work grant awarded
The National Institute of Mental Health awarded KU a $36,758 grant to continue work at Achievement Place, 1320 Haskell, a home for pre-delinquent boys.
The project will be aimed at developing educational procedures for pre-delinquent boys. Research will focus on social skills, self-care skills, academic skills, and pre-vocational skills.
Achievement Place is supported by funds from local and civic organizations and private contributions. It houses six to eight boys who are assigned there by court action. Assignment comes after the boys are involved in acts which bring them to the continuing attention of local law enforcement officers.
KU to be represented at model UN
Two students from the University of Kansas will attend the Midwest model United Nations program in St. Louis this weekend.
Mike Blakely, Topeka junior, will head the delegation representing Bulgaria in the three and a half day session. Dave Weber, Overland Park junior, will be chairman of the delegation representing Bolivia. Midwestern universities
This event is co-sponsored by several Midwestern universities. There will be 120 delegates representd in this event.
Some of the topics to be discussed will be admission of Red China to the U.N., control of sea beds, admission of micro-mini states, population control, drug traffic control and the Arab-Israeli border clashes.
AE Phis to join Panhellenic
The University of Kansas Panhellenic President's Council voted Monday night to invite Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority to join its association.
Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and Panhellenic president, said that in 1966 the Panhellenic Association gave the sorority three years to develop to a membership of 30 and obtain a house. She said the group lived for two years in Lewis Hall before buying the house where they now live, at 10th and Indiana.
Nancy Riss, Prairie Village senior and president of the chapter, said they would be installed as soon as they were notified by their national chapter that they had been recognized.
Delta Delta Delta offers scholarship
Applications are now available for the annual Delta Delta Delta service projects scholarship worth $350.
All full-time undergraduate women students are eligible to apply. Applicants will be considered on the basis of academic achievement, contribution to campus and financial need. The deadline for all applications is March 1. Applications may be picked up at the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong Hall.
The winner of this local scholarship will automatically be eligible for one of the $1,000 awards given by Delta Delta Delta's national service projects fund. The deadline for the national award applicant is March 15.
Medic professors win grants
Stanley Friesen, member of the surgery faculty, received a $25,000 grant from the American Cancer Society to begin research in gastric factors.
Five research grants totaling $140,982 were given to professors in the University of Kansas School of Medicine.
The other four awards were from the National Institutes of Health for continuation of projects: Daniel L. Azarnoff, medicine and pharmacology, $26,416 for factors influencing cholester metabolism; Albert L. Chapman, professor of anatomy, $46,761 for viral etiology of cancer.
6 KANSAN Feb. 19
1970
leukemia; Stanley Nelson, pharmacology and surgery, $10,073 for metabolic rate and isoenzyme activity in brain tumors; and Santiago Grisolia, biochemistry, $28,866.
Evaluation committee seeks changes through petitions
Educational changes might become a reality, said George Laughhead, Dodge City senior, if students make their requests. He is presently circulating petitions to gain an indication of what students think on certain matters.
Laughead, a spokesman for the Committee on Teacher/Course Evaluation, said that his committee's purpose was to act as a central organizing office for all groups seeking educational changes.
Some educational changes being sought are a change in the grading system and the dropping of the Western Civilization requirement. Also being considered are changes in the foreign lan-
"The real problem before," he said, "was that there was no central organization for changes. Now various student groups know what another is doing in the interest of completing a change."
Official Bulletin
Today
University Council: 108 Blake, 3.30 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club; East Door Robinson Gymnastium; 4:30 p.m.
AALP Meeting; Kansas Room, Kansas Union, 6 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Uldb Eagh Door
Door Jacket
AAPM Meetings Kansas Roan Kana
Film "Pork Chop Hill." Dyche
Auditorium, 7 & 9 p.m.
KU Synchro Club; "Newcomers Show. Natatorium, Robinson Gymnastics."
sas Union. 6 p.m.
Film "Pork Chop Hill." Dyche
Architecture Lecture: Walter A. Netsch, Chicago, Forum Room, Kan-
Humanities Lecture: The Humanist-
istic Voice in Early Modern Europe.
Woodruff Auditorium 8 p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Eldrith" 8:20 p.m.
guage requirement and the evaluation of faculty and classes.
He said that many students won't fill out a petition because they think it won't do any good.
Laughead disagreed with this thought by suggesting that a petition fulfilled two purposes. He said that it gave students a chance to express their personal thoughts so that various colleges would know student opinion. Besides
presenting colleges with actual situations, he said, they also provided statistics.
He stressed that students must be willing to fill out petitions so that when the committee suggests their ideals, they will have facts to back them up.
"The sooner deans and colleges realize the scope of the problem." Laughead said, "the sooner decisions will have to be made."
1
Sink into the most comfortable chair around the Inflatable-at HAAS Hardware 1029 Mass.
THE
CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Ever since the first ship was built for extended journeys in which food supplies were brought aboard, the ships captain always had the finest of the staples available. Often captains had their own supply which was far superior to that of the lower ranking officers and crew. This, in addition to the fact that the ship's captain was considered a king in his own right, led to the prestige of the captain's table. In the early days the captain often ate alone, and as time and knowledge of the sea progressed, the voyages became much longer. History doesn't say whether it was from boredom of eating alone, losing touch with the ship's officers, or the discussion of ships' business during dinner, but the captain began inviting his officers for dinner. This soon extended to the prominent and rich passengers aboard ship and there was much prestige accorded to those who were invited to dine at the captain's table. This tradition has been handed down through centuries and even today aboard luxury liners and tramp steamers alike, there is a certain aura to being invited to dine at the captain's table. Not wanting to set naval tradition back several centuries we feel here, every table is THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE.
Each selection is separately priced for two reasons. First, our unique cash register system requires individual pricing. Second, it is the owners opinion that a customer should not have to pay for something that comes with a dinner that they do not wish to eat, but may order from a menu items that they do wish to eat. Hence, the very economical appearance of certain prices. These low prices certainly do not reflect the quality of merchandise. Quite the contrary; to date we have brought before you the finest we can find, and we plan to continue on this course. We hope that The Captain's Table will be an adventure in fine dining.
Ace Johnson
102
Photo by Cindy Stewart
Remnants of a dying way of life...
If even dying is to be made a social function, then, please grant me the favor of sneaking without disturbing the party.
—Dag Hammarskjold
Campus interviews
The following companies will hold placement interviews next week.
The School of Engineering
Today
Caterpillar Tractor, BS in engineering physics. BS or MS in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial, or mechanical engineering, math majors. Permanent visa required.
Cities Service Oil Co., BS in chemical, civil, mechanical, or petroleum engineering. Summer work available.
State of Minnesota, BS or MS in civil engineering.
Tennessee Valley Authority, BS or MS in civil, electrical or mechanical engineering.
Friday
Coleman Co., BS in industrial or mechanical engineering.
Colgate-Palmolive Co., BS in civil or electrical engineering, chemistry majors. BS or MS in chemical, industrial or mechanical engineering.
National Security Agency, BS MS, or PhD in electrical engineering, math majors.
City of St. Louis, BS in architecture, chemistry, civil, electrical, industrial, mechanical, or petroleum engineering, chemistry majors, combination of civil engineering and business administration.
Monday
Tuesday
American Air Filter Co., BS in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial, or mechanical engineering, and a combination of civil engineering and business administration.
Continental Oil Co., BS in mechanical engineering.
General Electric Co. BS or MS in aerospace, chemical, electrical, industrial, or mechanical engineering, engineering mechanics, engineering physics, chemistry, physics and math majors. Permanent visa required.
Ohio Edison Co., BS in electrical or mechanical engineering
Phillips Petroleum Co., BS in chemical, electrical, mechanical, or petroleum engineering. MS in chemical engineering. PhD in chemical, electrical, or petroleum engineering.
Feb. 26
Armco Steep Corp., for summer program BS in chemical, civil and electrical engineering, for metal products dicision, a BS in architectural or civil engineering, for steel operations, BS in chemical, electrical, industrial or
mechanical engineering, and engineering physics.
Feb. 19
1970 KANSAN 7
Hallmark Cards Inc., BS or MS in industrial or mechanical engineering and math majors. MS in operations research. Permanent visa required.
Kansas State Highway Commission, BS in mechanical engineering. BS or MS in civil engineering. United States citizenship not required.
Feb. 27
Aitchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad, BS in electrical engineering, industrial and mechanical engineering.
Jefferson Chemical Co., BS in mechanical engineering. BS or MS in chemical engineering, chemistry majors (physical chemists).
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., BS in chemical, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering.
Blacks march at Amherst
AMHERST, Mass. (UPI) — About 200 black students marched out of Amherst College Wednesday afternoon following a 14-hour occupation to protest the school administration's policy toward blacks.
The students vacated the building two hours after 10 representatives met with President Calvin H. Plimpton to discuss their grievances.
The blacks, from five colleges in the Amherst area, said their move was only a change in strategy and did not mean their grievances were satisfied.
A college spokesman who inspected the buildings said there appeared to be no damage.
Radical white students called for a mass strike to support the blacks, who said earlier in a statement over the campus radio station their "specific goal was to close the college down."
Michigan campus undergoes clash
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)—An estimated 1,000 window-smashing demonstrators marched across the University of Michigan campus and surrounding business areas late Wednesday to protest police intervention in a clash earlier.
University officials called a rally to protest police intervention drew 500 to 600 people, then turned into a march to residence halls and the surrounding business area. Windows were smashed at the Ann Arbor Bank and two state police cars were damaged.
Also smashed were windows in the home of U.M. President Robben W. Fleming, who had called police to deal with the earlier demonstrations.
University officials late Wednesday called for police reinforcements from the Washtenaw County sheriff's office to handle the march. Thirteen persons were arrested and five persons were injured in the clash Wednesday afternoon when police clashed with protestors trying to stop General Electric Co.
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THE LAND OF GENESIS
Photo by Carolyn Voss
On any Feburary day . . .
A ray of sun slips through the trees on a cold February morning at KU. This scene awaits many students trecking to their classes on an ice covered sidewalk.
A little too much car for the money.
Toyota Corona Sedan.
It's positively ridiculous what you get for the price. 0-to-60 in 16 seconds. A top speed of over 90. Unitized construction. Wall-to-wall nylon carpeting. Even a little too much economy on gas. And a freedom from the kind of troubles that high-priced cars with overly-complex engines run into. It's all a little too much. But why take anything else?
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Use Kansan Classified
Cotton combines lucky charm with recruiting for success
MANHATTAN (UPI) — Lowell (Cotton) Fitzsimmons admits he's "a little superstitious." He also thinks this quiet little town on the Kansas prairie is one of the big recruiting bonuses he has in his favor.
The Kansas State basketball coach is 5-6 and has blond hair, the reason for his nickname. He combines his diminutive size with a crackling personality.
Fitzsimmons became head basketball coach at Kansas State after the Wildcats won the Big Eight championship in 1968 and Tex Winter decided to take the head job at the University of Washington after 15 years at the helm.
"Tex told me about it one day while we were driving to Hutchinson," recalls Cotton, who was Winter's assistant. "I about drove the car in a ditch around Salina somewhere."
Fitzsimmons, in his second year as head coach and the rookie among Big Eight mentors, has driven the Wildcats to a comfortable 8-2 league record and is on the verge of winning Kansas State's 14th conference championship.
He's done it with a club that was picked for a second-division finish in pre-season forecasts. But Cotton has helped his team with his wearing apparel, like Tex often did before him.
Fitzsimmons is doing it with a pair of purple checked trousers.
"I got 'em when we went to the Fort Worth Classic in December," says Cotton. "A faculty representative at TCU had a pair of 'em. I asked him where he got 'em. He had a tailor and he had another bolt of the same material. Ernie Barrett (athletic director) and I got a pair fitted. I got 'em right after the Big Eight tourney and I've been wearing 'em ever since."
"I figured if I couldn't win the league, I might as well look sharp losing." cracks Cotton.
But it hasn't worked out that way. Kansas State has won three road games in league play, two more than any other team. Of 38 Big Eight Conference games, only seven have been won by the visitor.
The trousers aren't the first superstition Fitzsimmons has developed. While he was at Moberly (Mo.) Junior College, where his teams won 224 games and two National Junior College championships in nine years, he wore the same tie tack, a replica of a door knocker. But he lost the tie tack his first year at Kansas State.
"I always wore it," he says. "I got nervous when I misplaced it and couldn't find it. But I lost it the first summer I came out here. I'm still looking for it."
Fitzsimmons has had two back-to-back good recruiting years, which is starting to pay off. He landed 6-7 Bob Zender from Edina, Minn., and 6-6 David Hall from Savannah, Ga., his first year. They've been valuable starters as sophomores this season.
Fitzsimmons believes any recruiting success he's had can be
K-State signs two
MANHATTAN (UPI)—Kansas State coach Vince Gibson signed two Dodge City schoolboy stars to Big Eight football letters of intent Tuesday night, running the Wildcats' total to 17.
Bill Holman, a 183-pound half-back, and Paul Steininger, 215-pound line backer -offensive tackle, poined the Kansas State ranks. Both were consensus first-team all-staters in high school and Holman was first-team All-America for Scholastic Coach Magazine.
Holman scored 53 touchdowns and gained more than 3,000 yards rushing in a three-year career.
traced to the placid pace of Manhattan.
"As any number of sports writers have told me," laughs Fitzsimmons, "it's kind of difficult to get into trouble in Manhattan after 8 o'clock at night. The only way might be to stumble and fall on a sidewalk."
8 KANSAN Feb. 19 1970
Cotton believes this is a big plus on his side, especially in the eyes of the parents of a prospect.
"The way times are today, with all the turmoil, I think Kansas State is sitting in a pretty good place," says Fitzsimmons. "Each school has its pluses and minuses. One of our biggest pluses is that we are, in a sense, a conservative institution.
"A boy will tell you he goes to school to get a degree first and play basketball second. But
LUNCH SPECIAL
really, deep down, he comes to play basketball first and get a degree second. And what time he has for socializing sort of takes care of itself."
Fitzsimmons is a refreshing new face on the big-time basketball scene. In many ways, he's a lot like Winter. That is, he tells it like he sees it.
For instance, after K-State defeated Missouri at Columbia Monday night, 63-60, and pretty well locked up a berth in the NCAA Midwest Regional, Fitzsimmons took his team out to eat.
"Yeah, we really splurged," he says. "We shot the whole budget. We stopped at MacDonald's, picked up a few hamburgers and milk shakes, and headed off down the road. I told you we were a conservative school."
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A-21
Future champ soars . . .
Photo by Sharon Boyle
Small boys need encouragement the freight trains in their minds will only take them just so far Be kind
for small boys need to grow
KU hopes for crown still bleak
By United Press International
By United Press International Kansas defeated Nebraska, 100-87. Tuesday night but as every Jayhawk knows, it's probably too late.
The victory left Kansas with a 5-4 Big Eight Conference record, far behind Kansas State's 8-2. The Wildcats took a giant stride toward the conference title and a berth in the NCAA Midwest Regional with a 63-60 victory over Missouri Monday. All other Big Eight teams have at least five losses.
Kansas' victory at Lawrence was the 32nd by the home team in 39 Big Eight games this season. Kansas State has captured three of the seven games won by visiting teams, which is the biggest reason for the Wildcats' overwhelming lead.
Kansas still has road games at Colorado, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma left, while K-State still must play at Oklahoma and Kansas.
Feb. 19
1970 KANSAN 9
Big 8 athletes shine in meet
KANSAS CITY (UPI) — Performances on the five-lap track in the Houston Astrodome left Big Eight athletes' spirits soaring this week.
Conference athletes registered the best performances of the indoor season in seven events on the big-banked track, which most performers say is better than running outdoors.
Indoor tracks are usually of the eight or 12-lap variety, while the Astrodome surface is almost as big as the four-lap outdoor tracks.
At any rate, three of the best performances were off the track. Kansas' Karl Salb registered a shot put of $67-5^{\frac{1}{2}}$. Kansas' Phil Reaves sailed 24-9 in the long jump and Kansas State's Ray McGill scaled 7-0 in the high jump.
Also registering Big Eight bests in Houston were Iowa State's Fran Long, 47.3 in the 440-yard dash; Kansas' Jay Mason, 8:4.5 in the two-mile run, and Kansas' Brian McElroy, 1:50.2 in the 880-yard run.
ing conference indoor champion in the 600-yard run, moved up to third in that event with a 1:11.8 in a dual meet at Colorado.
Oklahoma's mile relay team, anchored by freshman Travis Newsome, ripped off a 3:09.5 in the mile relay. Although the Sooners' time was the best ever run by a Big Eight team indoors, it was only good for fifth place in the Astrodome Relays.
Conference trackmen will begin tapering off this week in preparation for the Big Eight Indoor Track and Field Championships, to be held here Feb. 27-28.
Ken Swenson, Kansas State's competitive senior, anchored the Wildcats to world indoor records in Houston in the two-mile and sprint medley relays. Swenson's baton-carrying half-miles were 1:47.8 and 1:47.2. Kansas State's two-mile time was 7:23.3 and the sprint medley clocking was 3:17.3. Oklahoma State, anchored by Peter Kaal, had the same sprint medley time but finishing second when Swenson lunged at the tape.
Nebraska's Garth Case, defend-
The first glass-walled building in the world was the Halladie Building constructed in San Francisco in 1918.
VALUE DAY!
FUN DAY!
IT'S George's Sale
LAURENCE
THE VILLAGE SET
See The Fabulous Parade of Values During Our GEORGE'S BIRTHDAY SALE!
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS We've combed all our stores, gathered all the reduced merchandise, and marked it down again! Come share in the savings at our Lawrence store.
COATS - DRESSES - SPORTSWEAR - PURSES - BLOUSES 50% to 75% OFF
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts VI 2-1400
'Hawks land two backs
Two outstanding Iowa high school backs signed Big Eight letters of intent with Kansas Wednesday.
The latest Jayhawk football signees are Vince Leber, 172-pound all-state running back from St. Albert's of Council Bluffs, and Denny Lantz, 180-
pound quarterback and defensive back from Atlantic.
Leber rushed for 1,649 yards his senior year and is regarded as one of the top running backs in Iowa. Lantz, named to the All-Southwest Iowa all-star football team is an all-around athlete.
FRI. SAT.
FRI. SAT.
Direct from
Delaney and Bonnie Concert
TIDE
One Dollar Admission
One Dollar Per Pitcher
8:00 - 12:00
at the
DRAUGHTHOUSE
How To Get
eJJ protein
DR. BREAKFAST
Your Dr. Breakfast Injection
Come to the "Captain's Table" for your quick Dr. Breakfast injection. Choose your own medicine from our menu of eggs, bacon, sausage, french toast, hash browns, pancakes, and more. All are individually priced so make up your own combination. Without a good breakfast, up is down, good is bad, in is out. We all know the "going-without-breakfast" feeling. At the Captain's Table prices are quite reasonable and quality will not be sacrificed. Even our bacon doesn't shrivel up!
Dr. Breakfast will be at the Captain's Table from 7:00 to 10:00 A.M.Come in and get your breakfast injection. (It doesn't hurt!)
THE
CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Across the street from Lindley Hall
Photo by Rick Daughenbaugh
Thou shalt shut up, verily
For those inspired by silence, this portrait hangs in Spooner Art Museum. The stately-looking gentleman seems to be urging the museum visitors to respect the solitude of the gallery.
Isotope contaminates researcher, family
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) - A researcher contaminated himself, members of his family and parts of the Health Department facility in Albany through a radioactive device he was working on at his home.
The contamination was caused by Americium, a man-made isotope which has an atomic half-life of 458 years and which emits alpha radiation.
Authorities said Harris worked for RMD Laboratory in Totowa, N.J., several years ago. He was developing a device which used Americium to help detect counterfeit money.
He moved to New York in 1965 and brought his electronic gadget with him. The Americium used in the machine, however, was returned to Cambridge Nuclear Co., of Boston, Mass., under license and regulation of the Atomic Energy Commission.
Harris Levine, a senior research scientist, was identified Tuesday as the carrier of the contamination by a Health Department statement.
But the machine itself somehow became contaminated and as Levine worked on it at his Albany home, he became contami-
Authorities said there was no health danger to the general public, and that the contamination has been isolated.
Safety on Iowa questioned
Danny J. Jennings may face possible legal action in connection with the car wreck in which David L. Gore died. The decision about Jennings will come when County Attorney Dan Young reviews the accident report from Chief of Police Richard Stanwix. Jennings was the driver of the car which hit Gore's Volkswagon from behind on Feb. 5 at 19th and Iowa.
The Gore accident, the third traffic fatality on Iowa street in the last 13 months, brings up the question of safety conditions on Iowa Street. An important issue related to the Gore accident is whether any type of traffic control will be constructed at 19th and Iowa Streets to prevent an accident of this type in the future.
According to George Williams, director of public works in Lawrence, a proposal has been issued to the state concerning Iowa Street.
The city has passed this proposal, but since Iowa is a state
highway the State Highway Commission must also pass it. The city has asked the state to investigate three possibilities of improvement on Iowa:
- Additional speed zoning
- Possibility of a light
- Any other suggestions of the state after inspection.
Concerning the additional speed zoning, the state has expressed that since Iowa is a highway the chance of speed reduction is slim.
"My personal suggestion would be to put a flashing beacon at the brink of the hill," said Williams. This beacon would be on the north side of the intersection of
There are regulations of the state to be considered before a light may be installed. For example, to warrant a stop light at the intersection of 19th and Iowa, a 600 car average per hour over an eight hour period must pass over Iowa, and in the same eight hours an average of 150 cars must pass over 19th Street intersection with Iowa.
Tax bill given nod by Kansas Senate
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas Senate passed Wednesday a major part of a tax package that would boost state aid to schools by $26 million and provide $4 million in property tax credits for elderly Kansas homeowners.
On a 29-9 vote, the Senate passed a proposal that would broaden extensively the base for the 3 per cent sales tax. The tax would be extended to prescription drugs, repairs, maintenance and cleaning services, component parts of manufactured or produced items, food and drinks served at private clubs and club and organizational fees for sports, recreation and entertainment.
Opposition to the measure centered on extending the tax to services, such as shoe repair, house painting, and club sports, recreational and entertainment activities.
If enacted, new revenue totaling more than $7 million would go into the state's coffers.
10 KANSAN Feb. 19
1970
19th and Iowa, where Gore was killed.
Williams figured that it would take the state approximately 90 days to decide whether any safety measures would be taken. He also said that it would take the city an additional 90 days to complete construction of a stop light if the state gives them permission.
The senate gave tentative approval to a $2\frac{1}{4}$ per cent surtax on incomes above $25,000 of corporations operating in Kansas. The measure would produce an estimated $7.2 million in additional tax revenue.
Preliminary approval was also given an amendment to state individual income tax requirements. It would disallow dividends from banks, businesses, savings and loan associations and trust companies to be deducted from the federal adjusted gross income tax. It is estimated that an additional $738,000 would go to the state as a result of the measure.
The Barbary Ape is a tailless monkey living in Algeria, Morocco and Gibralter.
A measure increasing the privilege tax on banks, savings and loan firms and trust companies by $1/2 per cent, plus a 2 1/4 per cent surtax on net income above $25,000, will raise an additional $720,000.
A floor amendment to the measure that would produce an additional $17 million by imposing a graduated income tax on incomes in excess of $7,000 was defeated by voice vote.
nated. The contamination was carried to the Health Department facility on his clothes and personal effects.
"CHILI SUPPER" at City Community bldg., Feb. 22nd. Serving 12 noon till 6 p.m. CHILI, CHERRY PIE, and DRINK, only 75c. Served "like you like it" by Jayhawk Kiwian Club.
Classified ads get results
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
HAVE A SHOOT-OUT IN PINBALL ALLEY
West End of Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone 913-842-9519
Try the TWO-YEAR Army ROTC program. If you want to go on to grad school, we can show you how to obtain a 1-D classification, serve your country as an officer in the U.S. Army, and receive $50 per month while in school. Only two years active duty required. 1 March deadline, so HURRY!
About To Lose Your 2-S Deferment?
Contact:
Prof. of Mil. Science 203 Mil. Science Bldg. UN4-3311/3312
The Musical Journey of Elaine Nottley
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Festival of Arts
March 30 - Apr.4
Coupons Now on Sale!
SUA Office
$5.00
Mon., Mar. 30-Martin Ritt director
Tues., Mar. 31-Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Wed., Apr. 1-The New York Rock and Roll Ensemble
Thurs., Apr. 2-Barbara Rose art critic
Fri., Apr. 3-Lucas Hoving Dance Company
Coupon holders save $4.50 and receive a free program
Sat. Apr. 4
Navy and Marine students consider KU choice duty
The University of Kansas was considered choice duty by 70 Navy and Marine enlisted men involved in the Naval Enlisted Scientific Education Program.
Through testing and screening, these men have been given a chance at a four-year college education with emphasis in engineering and science. The program includes a summer at Officer Candidate School and a commission as Naval ensign or Marine second lieutenant after graduation from college.
The program is usually limited to four years,, but outstanding graduates are invited by the Navy to continue their educations. KU currently has two Navy men working on doctorates.
About 70 per cent of the men are married and bring their families with them. They continue to receive the pay and allowances for their current grade in the service and may advance in pay grade while in school. They are required to remain in the service four years after graduation, repaying one year of service for each year of school.
After graduation, the men are given their choice of fleet assignments, including the nuclear Polaris submarines or flight training in the aviation programs.
While their husbands are in school, Navy wives in Lawrence have banded together to contribute to community projects. They sew for Navy relief work and are the prime movers behind the Lawrence "Meals on Wheels" program, which provides daily hot meals for shut-ins.
Wagering bill passes in Senate by tight vote; House may oppose
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas House today received the parimutuel wagering bill passed by the Senate Tuesday by the tightest possible vote, 21-18.
The Senate passed the measure despite considerable opposition based on fear that criminal elements might be attracted to the state if the bill becomes law.
Sen. Jack Robinson, R-Wichita, who headed the subcommittee that drafted the measure, predicts House opposition may be less than many anticipate. He claims 50 House votes are assured, and 13 additional prospects are "sitting on the fence." It takes 63 votes for a bill to pass the 125-member House.
Robinson believes the bill may share the same fate as the successful liquor by the drink amendment during the 1969 session, which reversed the path many legislators anticipated when House opposition proved to be considerably less than in the Senate.
If the bill passes the House and the governor, who has not yet made his sentiment known,
Kansas will be the 32nd state to have legalized betting on horse and dog racing.
The possibility of outside criminal elements gaining control over racetrack operations would be barred, Robinson believes, by the requirements in the bill. Stockholders in any track would be required to live in the state at least one year before purchase, and racing commissioners would have to be residents for at least 10 years.
Annual state revenue from the tracks is estimated by Robinson at more than $4 million.
At present there are horse and dog races held in many of Kansas' 105 counties, but nine permit wagering. One of the most noted tracks in the state is in Reno county, whose Republican senator, Frank Hodge of Hutchinson, provided the decisive pivotal vote on the bill Tuesday.
One question still unanswered concerns whether pari-mutuel wagering would be legal under the Kansas Constitution, which prohibits lotteries.
Attorney General Kent Frizzell
has handed down an opinion stating the law would be unconstitutional. But the final decision on the measure's validity rests with the State Supreme Court.
A resolution was introduced earlier in the session to submit to voters next November a constitutional amendment question that would repeal the prohibition on lotteries.
The resolution, however, still is under consideration by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The pari-mutuel bill provides that each county would have an option on whether it wanted a track located within its boundary. It also would create a three-member Kansas racing commission to supervise the activity in the state.
'Era of negotiation' proposed by Nixon
In defense and economic assistance, Nixon said, "We will help where it makes a real difference and is considered in our interest."
The President's grand decision for U.S. foreign policy in the 1970's, contained in a 40,000-word, 119-page document, drew praise from Democrats as well as Republicans, although some questioned Nixon's assertion that "we have no intention of withdrawing from the world."
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon proposed an end to the cold war and a new "era of negotiation" with the Soviet Union Wednesday, starting with joint efforts to end the Vietnam War and avert a nuclear confrontation over the Middle East.
In the first Soviet reaction, the official news agency Tass said that despite a call for a new approach to the problems of peace, Nixon's basic theme was that "the United States continues to lay the accent on military force as
But he made clear that American combat troops were no longer to be sent rushing from one crisis to another around the globe. He specifically rejected future U.S. commitment of ground forces to Vietnam-style guerrilla wars, short of outside aggression, overt conventional attack or a clear threat to vital American interests.
Nixon expressed concern in a special foreign policy message to Congress over growing Soviet missile advances, and promised appropriate U.S. responses to meet the challenge.
Feb. 19
1970 KANSAN 11
the basis of American foreign policy."
The Senate also passed by a slim margin a bill that would permit alcoholic beverages to be served at Cedar Crest, the governor's mansion in Topeka. A vote of 21-17 moved the bill out of the Senate, but it now must clear the House.
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he was pleased that Nixon stressed negotiations and partnerships rather than America's position of predominance in free world affairs.
Although mostly philosophical in tone, Nixon got specific when he appealed to the Russians to abandon dangerous power politics in the Middle East, which he said could draw both nuclear superpowers into the Arab-Israeli conflict. He also chided the Soviets, a major supplier of North Vietnam, for failing to persuade Hanoi to bargain seriously for a peace settlement.
Go to med school and see the world
Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, the ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said the message "represents a complete change in philosophy of the United States, a change much for the better."
The message, drafted largely by Nixon's national security affairs adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, is the first of an annual series the President plans to make on foreign policy.
The World Health Organization has vacancies for two physicians and four paramedical personnel in its smallpox eradication program, reports the staff newsletter of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Positions are available in Indonesia, Afghanistan, the Congo and Zambia.
The Senate was expected to vote today on a proposed extension of the 3 per cent sales tax to gross receipts of many currently exempt items, such as prescription drugs, component parts of manufactured or produced items, food and drinks served at private clubs, dry cleaning and car washing.
Fees charged by organizations and clubs for participation in sports and games, as well as dues for recreation and entertainment would also be subject to the tax.
Med students shown to have few similarities
Medical students at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City are predominantly from Kansas, but besides that fact, they have little to brand them as typical.
A survey of the first-year medical classes of 1968 and 1969 showed the 251 medical students came from 87 Kansas cities and towns, Wichita contributed 35, the largest number from any one city. Out-of-state students were rare. The 1968 freshman class had two students from Missouri and one each from Nebraska, Hawaii, and Wyoming. The 1969 class had only two non-residents, both from Kansas City, Mo.
Slightly less than 50 per cent of the students were married when they entered medical school. Seventeen of the students were women. Medicine was the most common occupation of fathers of medical students, but all imaginable occupations were represented.
A survey of undergraduate majors showed 25 majors represented. Most of the students majored in some area of science, but German, English, agriculture, religion, music and journalism majors were also included.
Don Shaw is now holding court at Raney's Downtown.
Yes, it's true. After 12 years at Raney's Hillcrest Store, the Crown Prince of Cheeseburgers is currently exchanging verbal barbs with the customers at Raney's Downtown, and it is reported that he has already contracted laryngitis in his attempt to speak to everybody. Don assured us, however, that he is so anxious to see all his old friends from Hillcrest Raney's he will gargle motor oil daily until his affliction disappears.
Will it work? Can "Dountless Don" recover in time to greet each and every customer at Raney's luncheon counter? Take a break from business, at lunch or breakfast or anytime until 4:00, and see if Don succeeds.
RANEY Downtown
Use Kansan Classified
Giants know they can buy the GIANT hamburger at Griff's. Now you do too.
WRENSKE
Griff's understands that giants and students have gigantic appetites, especially on Sunday evening. So, Griffs's put a giant hunk of ground beef, fresh lettuce, tomato, and onion on a toasted bun to create the giant of a meal, the Giant Hamburger. Come in for a GIANT this Sunday.
Only 54c
With cheese 59c
Griff's
Griff's Burger Bar
1618 W.23rd
Photo by Rita Hough
Tiny toddler tips tricycle
A young child apparently lost his balance and toppled his tricycle today. The extent of his injuries is not known. His name is being withheld pending notification of other neighborhood children.
Daley hails verdict in Chicago '7' trial
CHICAGO (UPI)—Mayor Richard J. Daley said Wednesday the verdict returned by the jury in the "Chicago Seven" riot conspiracy trial proved "some people did come to our city to create a riot."
"The defendants have had their day in court and received a fair trial and all of us should respect this verdict," Daley told a news conference.
The jury found all of the defendants innocent of conspiracy to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic convention but found five of them guilty of individual acts with intent to incite riot.
"I hope that the jury verdict will put an end to appeals to violence," Daley said. "Hopefully this verdict will dispel any mistrust and suspicion which may still exist and permit us to meet the needs of a changing society within the framework of our constitution."
Daley said the jury should be "commended for its personal sacrifice and sincere examination of 20,000 pages of testimony and for earnestly weighing the testimony of almost 20 witnesses."
Asked about the validity of the law under which the defendants were tried, Daley only said, "I have been speaking out against people moving from one part of the country to another to create riots."
Rep. Roman Pucinski, D-III., Wednesday commended judge and jury in the trial. He said the convictions marked a "historic day in the annals of freedom."
The Chicago Democrat also hailed the conduct of Judge Julius J. Hoffman in the face of what the lawmaker termed an obvious effort by the defendants to wreck court procedure and make the trial impossible.
"This jury today has placed America for the first time on the road back to sanity in dissent," Pucinski told the House. "These citizens deserve the gratitude of the whole country. It was a brave jury."
Rep. William C. Cramer, author of the law the five defendants were convicted of violating, called the decision a "body blow to the forces of anarchy in this country."
"With today's convictions, the rioters, the looters, those who preach anarchy and would tear down this country are on notice" if they don't obey the law they go to iail.
Rep. Louis Wyman, R-N.H., a former attorney general of New
12 KANSAN Feb. 19 1970
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Hampshire, meantime called on the Bar Association to deal with the type of disgraceful conduct he said was practiced by defense attorneys during the trial.
"No attorney is entitled to conduct himself as William M. Kunstler and others did in this case," Wyman said. Pucinski said he understood the New York Bar Association was considering disbarment proceedings.
Clark, who was attorney general at the time the convention disruptions occurred, had been called as a defense witness in the trial, but Hoffman ruled his prospective testimony inadmissable.
Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark, asked by reporters for comment on the verdict, said "I think it's a good sign. The jury exercised discriminating judgment. The jury had its responsibilities, and God bless them, they had a hard job."
Pucinski said the seven defendants came into court with the same intent as they came to Chicago last summer—"to wreck it."
"This jury deserves the eternal gratitude of all Americans."
"But the judge and jury have demonstrated that our institutions are sufficiently strong to protect our citizens," he said.
Pucinski said he also was pleased that in its convictions the jury had set the stage for high court review of the new law making it a federal crime to cross state lines for the purpose of inciting riot. He expressed confidence this law would be upheld.
Rock Chalk
RSVUE
improbable history
ROCK CHA1K REVUE
improbable history
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—Feb. 17
KU-Y office,
information booth on campus,
Bell's, the sound, Kief's
sponsored by KU-Y
MANILA (UPI) — Groups of howling Filipinos broke from an antigovernment rally Wednesday night and marched on the U.S. Embassy, smashing its gates and pelting it with stones, torches and Molotov cocktails for 45 minutes before police arrived to disperse them.
Almost all the windows and glass doors in the office building in the embassy compound were shattered, and several fires flared briefly in the courtyard. The demonstrators broke down steel gates to gain access to the courtyard, from where they launched their barrage of missles against the building.
Riot police arrived 45 minutes later, dispersing the rioters who smashed hotel, restaurant and shop windows as they fled the
Pearson endorses Nixon legislation
US Embassy bombarded
*
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., said Wednesday he Joined Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., in sponsorship of President Nixon's "environment package" of legislation because it is clearly "problem-solving legislation."
The seven bills in the legislative group are a challenge "to begin dealing seriously with a major national problem that can in fact be solved," Pearson said.
neighborhood. Several automobiles were burned.
The bills include authority to deal with old car bodies,car exhaust emissions,water pollution, land conservation and waste treatment, among others, Pearson said.
Police reported later that 78 persons had been arrested, and at least 20 others had been injured.
There were no embassy personnel among the injured, but officials said damage to the building was the worst inflicted on U.S. property here since the Philippines attained independence in 1946.
The Embassy office building houses the consular section, the U.S. property here since the Veterans Administration and several other federal agencies.
Police estimated that nearly 1,000 demonstrators marched on the embassy from a rally in downtown Manila, where nearly 30,000 students, farmers and laborers gathered to denounce President Ferdinand E. Marcos and the U.S.
For Students on the Go, We're TOPS
Wardrobe Care Centers In By 9-Out By 5 Same Day Service
Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th 1526 West 23rd
Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking
Want to help us do something about it?
Welcome to the Effluent Society
Our business is helping America breathe. That's quite a challenge. Wherever air contaminants are produced, we control them.
We need technically oriented graduates to develop, design and sell the world's most complete line of environmental control equipment.
If you're concerned about a future in an industry as vital as life itself, talk with our representative when he visits the campus. He may help you breathe a little easier. American Air Filter Company, Inc., 215 Central Ave., Louisville, Kentucky 40208. An equal opportunity employer.
American Air Filter BETTER AIR IS OUR BUSINESS
AAF
AAF representative will be on campus
February 24,1970
100
Photo by Linda Robeson
Pool remains dormant in spring-like weather
Despite the warm weather, the predicted coming of Spring and the sunshine, the outdoor pool at Ridgelea Apartments remained empty as of Tuesday.
Inquest report filed
EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI)—District Court Judge James A. Boyle Wednesday filed his inquest report and a transcript of the testimony in the death of Mary Jo Kopechne in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's car. The documents were not made public.
Research grants to KU total more than $1 million
Research and training grants totaling $1,824,060 were made to KU through its Office of Research Administration in the three months ending Dec. 31.
Twelve of the 46 grants came from industry and industry-supported foundations and the remainder from seven agencies of the federal government.
The U.S. Public Health Service,
through its National Institutes of
Health, placed 13 contracts at
KU, including three in the
Bureau of Child Research totaling
$541.854.
The National Science Foundation made ten awards, the U.S. Office of Education made five, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration made three.
Industry support was received from the Northern Natural Gas Co., the Research Corporation, Steel Joist Institute, Air Products and Chemical Corporation, Dow Chemical Company, Atlantic Richfield Foundation, Esso Foundation, Realife and Paul Endacott of Bartlesville, Okla.
Nixon promotes war negotiation
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Nixon declared Wednesday the United States would be "flexible and generous" if Hanoi seriously decided to try to reach a negotiated end to the Vietnam War.
In his lengthy foreign policy message to Congress, Nixon offered no dramatic revelations about the prospects for peace at the Paris talks or America's strategy for disengagement. Neither did he give any hint as to how the United States would show flexibility if the Communists get serious.
He recognized that North Vietnam faces "serious and complicated issues in making the fundamental decision to seek a genuine settlement."
"The key to peace lies in Hanoi—in its decision to end the bloodshed and to negotiate in the true sense of the word." Nixon said.
The President chided the Soviet Union for failing to use its influence to get Hanoi representatives in Paris to negotiate seriously.
Feb. 19 1970 KANSAN 13
Judge Boyle, who presided over the four-day secret inquest, filed the documents with Mrs. Sophia Campos, clerk of the Dukes County Superior Court, 41 days after the proceedings ended Jan. 8.
The documents were impounded and will be picked up personally today by Edward V. Keating, clerk of the Suffok County Superior Court.
In keeping with a previous Massachusetts Supreme Court decision, the documents will remain impounded until authorities decide whether to take criminal action against Kennedy or others involved in the case.
Miss Kopechne, a 28-year-old Washington secretary, died last July when a car Kennedy was driving plunged off a bridge on nearby Chappaquiddick Island into a tidal pond.
Libraries publish reader's guides
Want to find out more about the mammoth University of Libraries system?
The University of Kansas Libraries is publishing a series called "Guide For Readers" to inform users of the library just what the KU system has to offer, said Nancy Middleton, assistant reference librarian.
Miss Middleton, who edits the notebook form pages, said that the first 20 sheets deals with the general information on the library, including library services, lending rules, card catalog, interlibrary loans, microfilm, documents, periodicals and other areas of general interest.
The pages may be found on the various desks of the library or upon request at the reference desk on the second floor.
TOPEKA (UPI) — A major overhaul of the 1967 conflict of interest law recently ruled unconstitutional may be unveiled by a senate committee next week.
Interest law ruling may be overturned
The 1967 law was ruled unconstitutional last month when Shawnee County District Court Judge David Prager termed it "an arbitrary and unreasonable classification and discrimination" that denied equal protection of the laws.
Prager was referring to the law's exclusion of state legislators who are attorneys or certified public accountants.
The contemplated amendment would also require an additional disclosure of interest statement to be filed before planned appearances before state officials or agencies.
The sub-committee will also recommend broadening the contents of the required statement itself, to include amount of payment, how paid, and who by.
McCormack support voted
WASHINGTON (UPI) — House Democrats today voted their continued support of speaker John W. McCormack.
At a closed party caucus they rejected, 192 to 23, a proposed resolution of "no confidence" in the 78-year-old speaker, offered by Rep. Jerome R. Waldie, D-Calif.
Waldie had anticipated his liking. Despite criticism of the leadership by many of the party's younger liberals, most of Mc-
Cormack's critics said this was not the time or way to take on the speaker.
The Democratic Study Group (DSG), an organization of more than 100 party liberals including most of the younger members, offered the caucus another approach to the problems evolving from age and the House seniority system.
They proposed to set up a committee to study the seniority system—which automatically elevates to committee chairmanships
majority members with the longest tenure—and to report on possible alternatives.
That proposal will be taken up at the next caucus.
Bill killed by committee
Waldie said his aim was not to topple McCormack now but to draw national attention to the House and to stimulate his colleagues to change the system.
TOPEKA (UPI) — The House Federal and State Affairs Committee Wednesday killed a bill to repeal the Kansas Cultural Arts Commission.
BOWL CHILI, CHERRY PIE and drink choice at the City Community Bldg. this Sunday, Feb. 22nd. The first round only 75c. Reorders at special discount prices. Host, the Jayhawk Kiwanis Club.
Waldie said he had received nearly 1,000 letters since he announced his intentions a few weeks ago and all but a handful were favorable.
Chili Supper
Sun., Feb. 22
4 - 8 p.m.
First Christian Church
10th & Kentucky
75c
Sponsored by
Scout Troop 53
includes chili,
drink and cake
?? WANT HELP IN ??
confidence?
IN THE ROLL AND COFFEE RUT ?
1. Discovering your potential?
2. Gaining more self-
4. Gaining cooperation from others?
3. Problem solving & decision making?
5. Talking with people?
6. Developing goals?
6. Developing goals?
"Adventures In Success" personal development program may be your answer!
Do you answer
Call 843-8877 after 5 p.m.
Rolls and coffee are all right once in a while. But it helps to get out of the roll rut. Try the "Captain's Table" breakfast foods. Satisfy your tummy's morning demands with our pancakes, eggs, ham, or french toast. They're fast to prepare and priced for the student. Go ahead, try it. 7 - 10: A.M.
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE Across from Lindley He'
Across from Lindley Hall
KUOK Presents
William M. Balfour Dean of Student Affairs
in a
Question and Answer Interview
9:00 p.m., Feb.24 on
"University Night Beat" KUOK 630 KL.
Have A Question About University Affairs? DIAL UN 4-3994
1972
Photo by Ron Bishop
Books donated to School of Religion
This set of New Catholic Encyclopedias were presented to the School of Religion Saturday by the Knights of Columbus. At the presentation from left to right were William J. Moore, Dean of the KU School of Religion, Clarence Malone, former president of the Knights of Columbus in Kansas, and Father Brendon Downey, O.S.B., adviser at the Newman Club.
Klippers organized to serve as auxiliary to naval program
Women all over the nation are trying to learn more about the armed services and University of Kansas coeds are no exception.
Seventeen KU women have come together to form the Kilo Klippers, a women's auxiliary unit affiliated with the naval ROTC program.
Cheryl McElhose, Kansas City, Mo. senior, has been the key organizer of the group. She said that the Klippers will be similar in structure to Angel Flight, an honorary women's organization affiliated with Air Force ROTC, except that the officers will have no ranks.
Miss McElhose said the main function of the group would be to assist Hawk Watch, the naval ROTC social committee. They are now making plans for the Navy Ring Dance to be held May 2. They are also planning several
The measure would include the women working in Kansas who are not covered by federal antidiscrimination laws, which is about half the work force.
Women's employment bill approved by Kansas House
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas House tentatively approved a bill Wednesday to bar discriminatory employment practices against women.
A final vote will be taken Thursday on the bill endorsed by four Kansas women's organizations.
It forbids any employer from discrimination in employment, wages or promotions because of sex. It does not affect differentials paid under seniority or merit systems.
The State Labor Commission is authorized to regulate the law. The additional administration is expected to cost about $22,000 a year.
One of the few opponents of the bill was Rep. David M. Mills, R-Akansas City, who noted supporters could come up with no incidents of discrimination against working women in Kansas.
"We come up here time and time again to make life more unliveable," Mills said, "especially for the business community."
Rep. Loyd Andrews, D-Wichita, said although there are no specific cases of abuse to be cited, 50 per cent of the female workers in the nation earn less than $3,000 a year. He also said 31 other states already have a law similar to the one before the legislature.
Human gene may hold answer for cancer cure, doctor says
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—A cure for cancer may be found in the human gene, a prominent researcher reported Wednesday.
Robert J. Huebner, chief of the viral carcinogenesis of the National Cancer Institute, told a news conference at St. Louis University, "We can now wipe out cancer among mice. Our job is to isolate similar genes in humans."
Genes which cause cancer are present in each person at birth, Huebner said, but are not "turned on" until later in life.
"There are certain repressers
He told a nearly empty House chamber that Douglas, 71, has "impeached himself by his own hand" and should be removed from the high court because of his views in a new book, "Points of Rebellion."
"Justice Douglas should resign from the court forthwith and if he does not resign he should be removed," Wyman said in a House speech.
Questions raised on Douglas book
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Louis C. Wyman, R-N.H., said Wednesday that Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas should "resign from the court forthwith" or be impeached because of the views he expressed in a new book.
The book predicts a young people's revolution against "the establishment," with a great risk of violence. Wyman cited a passage in which Douglas suggested that "violence may be the only effective response" in dealing with the establishment.
"Publication of this book," Wyman said, "constitutes sufficient high misdemeanor to warrant removal from the Supreme Court."
14 KANSAN Feb.19 1970
Competition among these cooks is great as they fight for the right to satisfy your individual tastes. And we all know that through competition better products are made available. Our french toast toaster is continuously trying to make her french toast better than our egg fryer's eggs. Come for breakfast between 7:00 and 10:00 A.M. and help decide the final outcome. Each cook will appreciate your order. Whatever your choice, it has to be good. The captain says so.
functions in order to get better acquainted with the NROTC cadets.
or regulators which hold down cancer, but which fail to work in old age," he added. "They fail because of overcrowding, or environmental factors, or chemical reactions, or just plain aging."
Some of the Klippers' future plans include working as ushers at University-sponsored events and various community service projects such as taking disadvantaged children from the Lawrence area to KU football games.
At present, research on cancer-causing genes has been limited to mice, hampsters, rats and chickens, he said.
TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking met for one hour Wednesday with two officials of the U.S. Justice Department to review proposed model legislation on drug abuse.
BIG CHILI FEED . . . City Community Building, 12 noon till 6 p.m. Sunday, February 22nd, CHILI, PIE, and DRINK, only 75c. Serving, the Jayhawk Kiwanis Club.
The House also tentatively approved a bill to increase the interest rate limits on general obligation bonds from 5.5 per cent to 7 per cent and the limit on revenue bonds and temporary notes from 6 to 8 per cent.
Docking met with John W. Dean, associate deputy U.S. attorney general for legislation, and Michael R. Sonnenreich, deputy chief counsel for the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.
On Monday, Huebner received the National Medal of Science from President Nixon at the White House.
Maurice Green, director of the molecular virology institute at the University's school of medicine, is assisting Huebner with the research. About 15 other men and women with medical degrees or doctorates are working on the project at St. Louis University.
"If the same findings are true with man, it would be a giant step towards prevention and eventual cure of cancer," Huebner said.
Docking discussions drug program
Initially, he explained, researchers would probably work on treatments for persons already suffering from cancer. The eventual aim would be a preventive medicine.
The attorney general's representatives presented Docking with a copy of the proposed "Uniform State Controlled Dangerous Substances Act."
It is a sweeping program to control drug abuse within the state.
Across from Lindley Hall
BREAKFAST COOKS FIGHT IT OUT
THE
CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Our egg fryer, French toast toaster, hash browns browner, hammy ham cooker, and even our pancakes pancake-maker desire to introduce you to their individual breakfast specialty at the "Captain's Table."
Stereo 105.9 on your FM Dial
Heavy
KLWN
FM
underground
ten-six night-time
Win a free Panasonic AM/FM Stereo Radio from Audiotronics!
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
international Daily Kansas are offered
to all students to further color to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Recording records for sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Ampex cassette player and speakers.
Finest in stereo tape systems. In ex-
cellence from $100 or best of
843-7822. Ask for Doug Dammens
or leave message. 2-19
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition
Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Hot Rod VW, 76 horse, fully set up for gymkhanas, 842-2191 2-19
Silverton guitar amp, with speaker cabinet. Has tremelo, reverb, and a foot pedal. $250 only. One year use. 1818. Call Bill, Bills 843, after five. 4-20
Austin Healy 3000, Mark III, needs
to be restored to store in the
condition, 842-219-1
2-19
GROOVY INFLATABLE FURNI-TURE—many styles for dorm or apartment. Call 842-5801 between 6:30 and 9:00 weekdays. 2-19
Boyfriend drafted: need to sell Craig 4-track tape player. Car or home unit. Only four months old. Good condition.
Call 842-5088. 2-20
Motorcycle ~500 c.c. single Matchless.
paint 2,000 or best offer
8896
2-20
68 Bridgestone Super 90, low mileage
842-219-1
2-19
Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Become a collector,
son. Museum of Natural History Gift
Shop collects them from all over the
Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30, 2-20
Typewriters—big selection rental purchase plan available. Office supplies and furniture. Xerox service. Typewriter Co., 700 Masseff 843-3644.
*62 Trumph TR-4. Runs good but
doesn't work for $400 or more*
*842-5824* 2-19
Guitar - 6 string Gibson in perfect
Guitar, Guitar, capo, and case
842-8002-923
2-19
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 power brakes, low weight, air conditioned, excellent age, 843-8002
2-23
1959 Chevy, automatic, very good mechanical condition, clean inside, new tires. $240 or best offer. Call John, 843-6804. 2-24
TR-4, original owner. Red-black top-wire wheels. Good condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Arbath, Judson ignition. Bendix electric fuel pump. Fogs and Driving light, service detailed service history 843-6659 2-23
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
We Care About 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
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
Magnavox deluxe 5" spool tape recorder sold new $89.90. Used a little longer, but it still bargains at Ray Stoneback's downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. nights.
1963 Chevy 4-door sedan, V-8 automatic, power steering, radio, good tires, good mechanical condition. In cold, call Bob, 84-6023. 6:00 - 2:24
sk boots, size 9, very good condition.
offer. Call after 2 p.m. 843-9185-2-124
926 Mass.
VI 3-0501
'65 Karmann Ghia, dark red, rebuilt engine and transmission. Good interior. Reasonable. Call 842-1267, ask for Jerry. 2-24
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket seats;
starts; starts and runs ex-
cellenely; mechanically perfect.
$500. 843-9588. 2-24
Old fur coats and capes for sale. Fox, muskrat, seal, otter, mouton, lamb. $10-$40. Also other strange clothes. 1618 Tenn. #A, #82-6810. 2-24
Gold and silver things by Xom.
Earthy, organic; rings, wedding sets,
and all other forms of body ornament.
Reasonable. Call 842-6120 2-24
Fender Bassman amp, Gibson Thunderbird bass, 842-764f, Biff, 2-25
Biggest car bargain in town. '53 Plymouth with 4 new tires, new wheels, battery, new paint. Runs well. $100 Call #82-3436 mornings. 2-25
Capitol Component System, 50
8-track,库形,音响.
8-track,库形, auxiliary. Two speaker sets and headphone outputs. Separate bass controls. 7-25
Charlie. 843-959-69
1964 MG Midget, good condition. $695.
843-0495. 2-25
TYPEWRITER: Olivetti-Underwood
paper with case. Excellent condition.
Good for themes, papers, etc.
$35.00. Call 842-9054 after 5:00. 2-23
Large, comfortable single bed. $20.
Call 843-7504 after 5 o'clock. 2-25
Topsy's just received room-size 21e gallon containers, one's filled with caramel, cinnamon, cheese or plain popcorn. Makes studying real corn.
WANTED
Wanted: One bass player who sings; one guitarist who sings and any veritable musician singing and a trustful organizer of progressive rock band with excellent drummer skills. Includes original material Call Chuck, 842-1393, anytime, or Rocky, 842-5645. 2-20
Need one coed roommate to share completely furnished apartment by March with three other girls. Reason for rent is Sunny, Perky, or at 842-4729 2-23
Exclusive Representative
Organist singer for established local group Jazz, rock; pop 842-6848 2-24
of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Favors
- Guards
Cood needs two girls to share furnished apartment. All utilities paid except water. Call Cindy, 842-8467
- Recognitions
- Lavaliers
- Paddles
- Mugs
Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters
- Sportswear
Loyalists Stationer
Gifts Plagues
Male roommate needed for Crescent Heights two-bedroom apt. Swimming pool and air conditioning. Available March 1. Call 842-5859. 2-23
LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Al Lauter
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
Your headquarters
VI 3-1571
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
miDAS®
mufflers and shocks
for
Aimable boarder to share furnished
all utilities except long distance phone
calls. ideal location. Cigarette smokers
not ideal. apply. Call 843-6671 from
p.m. 2-23
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que if you choose. Chicken is this place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special lunch. V.I. 2-8510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday it
2-20
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roosts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-13
fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watchband, purses, vests,
batcushion collars at 812-32-
PRIMARILY LEATHER at 812-32-
Ayn Rand study group are formed.
David R. Dairy R. Cormier 928 SRB
Island 2-19
All Outward Bound alumni call 842-7399 about an Outward Bound promotional forum in early March. Ask for Norm.
2-20
Student and family laundries done at Tart's Laundry, 1903$^1$. Mass. St. Petersburg, cooled, permanently press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service.
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 styles to choose or purchase. PRIMARA, LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
Rallye-Hare and Hounds type. February 21, 1970. Saturday night, Malls first car off 7:30. Rallye Master Chris Patterson. 842-547-0. 2-23
Railroad or model railroad enthusiasts interested in forming club or just bull sessions contact 842-6600. Ask for John Wegner in Room 758. 2-24
Interested in running for a Student Senate position? If you're interested in being responsible and willing to take responsible role, call 842-3197 after 6:00 p.m.
Need an active voice in University
affairs? Think responsibility!!! Vote
Billbert-Egrem Thomas — The Alliance.
March 17-18. 2-25
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
Gabrielle Bridal
910 Ky.
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURCEN CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Table Tops
HE in the WALL
HLE
At the Captain's Table we serve good food to all the students all the time, not just those students some of them often have lunch there. 2-23 Across from Linden Hall. 2-23
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Some Time — Phone Order
443-765-3018—Wa Deliver 0th & Ill
Le Blond and Hertz (Ju Cris, Inc.)
"The Day of the Pig. Sat., Feb. 22
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $ 801^{1}$ Mass, Returns $4.00 and up tt
Thank you for your patience! The shop is almost through re-stocking its inventory with interesting new items. Book weekdays, 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays, 12:30 to 5:30.
Anyone who witnessed the accident between a green Chrysler and a blue Volkswagen in front of GSP at 1:00, 2-10-70, please call 842-1652, 2-19
PERSONAL
Has the lottery got your number?
Join the National Guard. I know of several openings and can get you in.
Call Sam Cook, 843-1711. 2-19
Gregarious? So are we at the Captain's Table. We enjoy serving the breakfast, lunch and dinners. Come in Across from Lindley Hall. 2-23
Wanted: Handball scouting films of Art Wilkinson. Call P. Haber. 2-19
Up with student action—up with student voice—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert-Thomas—The Alliance. 2-25
Open government for all students.
Faculty Alliances
Ebert-Thomas--The Alliance
2-25
TYPING
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc typ-
theses, term papers, other misc typ-
theses, term papers, other misc typ-
Plen site. Competent. Service. Mrs
Wright. Phone 843-9554.
5-14
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work V3-3/381. Mrs. Ruckman
Typing, Theses, papers, Experienced. Typing is necessary English corrections, English teacher, M.S. degree, also English taught to students or students with Reasonable. 842-9249 2-20
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric, Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-144C 3-2
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Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, themes, misc. Contact Kathy Grey, 710 Randall Road, 842-6189. 2-20
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HELP WANTED
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HAPPINESS IS A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Contact: Shelley Bray
University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
* Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
Classified Rates
Classified Rates
1 time — 25 words or less — $1.00—Add. words $.01 each
3 times — 25 words or less — $1.50—Add. words $.02 each
5 times — 25 words or less — $1.75—Add. words $.03 each
Bill calls for equal desegregation
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
(Continued from page 1)
Filibuster may delay vote
WASHINGTON—A Southern filibuster may delay the Senate's consideration of two important civil rights matters—the voting rights extension and the Supreme Court nomination of G. Harrold Carswell.
During a meeting of the Senate constitutional rights subcommittee Wednesday, Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., the chairman, said he would have "detailed comment" when the voting rights bill reaches the floor next week.
Welfare plan gains support
WASHINGTON—President Nixon's welfare breakthroughs-minimum annual incomes for working families-showed new strength in Congress today. Sources expected approval soon by the House Ways and Means Committee.
Experts said the basic welfare reform of family allowances may win tentative approval as early as the end of this week.
Income plan passes test
WASHINGTON—President Nixon's proposal to give the nation's poor families cash income maintenance payments has proved practical in a three-year experiment in New Jersey, according to Donald Rumsfeld, head of the Office of Economic Opportunity.
He said the $5 million cash experiment involving 364 sub-poverty families in New Jersey showed the proposed welfare reform changes "are in fact practical." He said there was no evidence the people receiving the payments wanted to stop working, but instead used the funds to buy needed family items.
Vietnamization attacked
WASHINGTON—Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., today charged the Nixon administration with turning South Vietnamese forces into "a mercenary army fighting its own people for an unrepresentative government."
McCarthy, in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, renewed his call for a temporary coalition government in Saigon to arrange a cease fire and an orderly withdrawal of foreign forces.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate voted Wednesday to force school desegregation in the North the same as in the South, giving Dixie its biggest victory since the start of the civil rights drive in the 1950's.
Rejecting two Northern counterproposals including one endorsed by the Nixon administration, the Senate passed Sen. John Stennis' amendment to eliminate the distinction between school segregation resulting from Southern laws and that caused by housing patterns, as in many Northern cities.
The vote was 56 to 36.
Stennis, D-Miss., said the amendment would make the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) stop working from "a presumption of innocence outside the South and a presumption of guilt in the South."
He referred to HEW rulings on whether school districts should be denied federal school money on grounds of racial discrimination.
Stennis and his Southern allies said the amendment-if passed by the House and signed by President Nixon—would force HEW to either crack down on the North's de facto segregation or ease up on Southern enforcement.
The Stennis amendment calls for enforcement of school desegregation laws "uniformily in all regions of the United States in dealing with conditions of segregation by race, whether de jure or de facto, in the schools of the local educational agencies or any state without regard to the origin of such segregation."
The Senate first rejected, 48 to 46. Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott's substitute proposal. It would have ordered equal desegregation enforcement North and South, but would not have equated de facto and de jure segregation.
Under present law, federal courts and HEW have cracked down only on school districts which at least formerly practiced de jure segregation, either directly by law or through gerrymandering of school zones.
The Nixon Administration endorsed Scott's proposal on grounds it would not challenge de facto school segregation, North or South, unless the courts first ruled against such racial separation.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., then tried to delete from Stennis' amendment the final words:
Stennis said this would deprive his proposal of its "butting edge," and Javits' bid was defeated 50 to 41.
"Without regard to the origin or cause of such segregation."
Even if his amendment becomes law, Stennis said, "We're going to have continuation of integration in the South." But he said under recent Supreme Court orders requiring immediate integration, "we're suffering terribly."
The bespectacled Mississippiian turned to Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill., and said: "If you have to do that in your area of the country, you will see how it feels to
you, and to us, and you will help us evolve a sound policy."
He made it clear the "sound policy" he sought was a slower pace of integration. "This thing now is destroying the schools!" Stennis said.
Sens. Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn., and Javits said Stennis' amendment was really designed only to slow Southern integration. Present federal law prohibits federally enforced busing of students to overcome "racial imbalance," and Mondale said HEW could not alter Northern de facto segregation without busing students to distant neighborhoods.
Frizzell blasts
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) late for them to get out of committee and since they can't be carried over to the next session, they will be killed.
Rep. Pete Loux, D-Wichita and House minority leader, spoke on the two bills under consideration dealing with marijuana. One bill would change the penalties for possession of marijuana from a felony to a misdemeanor. The other bill would establish a steering committee to work in conjunction with a federal agency in an attempt to eradicate marijuana from a yet to be determined county.
One student asked Loux, if medical science were to give marijuana a clean bill of health tomorrow, would it be legalized.
Loux said, "While it may not be legalized, the penalty would probably be changed from a felony to a misdemeanor."
Smith added that drug legislation was inconsistent right now; possession of LSD is only a misdemeanor while possession of marijuana is a felony.
Frizzell said, "Often we form a set opinion—marjijuana is bad—then we start legislating. The basic question, is it harmful, is ignored."
In open questioning, the issue of lowering the voting age was discussed. One of the legislators pointed out that the legislature cannot pass a bill to lower the voting age. They would have to adopt a resolution to put the question on the ballot and then it would have to be passed in a referendum by the people.
Frizzell was against lowering the voting age. "Old enough to fight, old enough to vote is not a valid argument," he said.
Frizzell said he didn't think the
majority of 18-year-olds were mature enough to vote. They can be swayed too easily by campaign oratory, he said.
Rep. Jim Davis, D-Kansas City, explained the fair housing bill passed by the legislature this session which will go into effect July 1.
Davis said the bill was an example of the state not living up to its responsibility. It acted only after the federal government acted in this area.
Speaker of the House, Calvin Strowig, R-Abilene, gave a short resume of what the legislature has been doing in the area of environmental control.
He said Kansas has several laws on the books but the problem now is with staffing the various departments.
Sen. Tom Van Sickle, R-Fort Scott and chairman of the Senate Ways and Means committee, discussed the problems of financing education, especially with regard to funding building projects.
At the close of the forum, Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and Student Senate president, invited the legislators to "come upstairs to the Student Senate meeting and explain to the students why the legislature isn't going to give us the humanities building."
The forum adjourned to the Student Senate.
Weather
Fair and warmer with northwest winds 10 to 20 miles per hour today. Partly cloudy and not so cold tonight.
Three arrested for part in march
Three arrests have been made in connection with damage done to the Douglas County Court House during a march to protest the action against the "Chicago 10" Tuesday.
Charged with petty larceny are, David McDowell Neff, 19, 1225 Oread, John Robert Sachse 22, Lawrence resident, and Robert E. Schall 22, also known as James Robert Morrison, 1837 Kentucky. Neff is also charged with defacing a public building.
The Douglas County Sheriff's office said five warrants for arrest had been issued but two have not yet been served.
Schall has been released on bond but the other two men are still being held.
The county Attorney's office said the courthouse door, the side of a wall, and a window were also damaged. Warning flags were taken from Southwestern Bell Telephone repairmen in the area.
16 KANSAN Feb. 19 1970
CHERRY PIE SPECIAL
[Image of a pie with a lattice crust. The pie is round and filled with what appears to be a fruit filling, possibly apples or pears.]
Also featuring this week only, "Minnie's Tater Rolls"
FREE
CHERRY PIE with any $3 purchase
Mon., Feb. 16th thru Sun., Feb. 22nd
A. B. ROWLAND
Minnie Pearl's Chicken
1730 W. 23rd
843-8200
G. KAREST '70
Architects operate, remove protruding growth; Wescoe Hall, 21 floors later
This is an artists drawing of the proposed Wescoe Hall to be located between Flint Hall and Hoch Auditorium on Jayhawk Boulevard. The 170,000 square foot structure is estimated to cost $8 million. The four story building will have 57 classrooms, 12 electronic laboratories, and a language laboratory with seating for 2,500 students. The drawing shows the hall looking from the southwest.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 83
Inside Today
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, Feb. 20, 1970
Angel flight pledges ... p. 13
Board hears needs ... p. 9
The Weekend Scene ... p. 5
Frye lectures on 'Era' ... p. 3
Shultz Criticizes Velvel ... p. 16
Hawks face Buffs ... p. 7
Council passes amendment
An amendment to clarify disciplinary procedures concerning the newly amended University Judiciary passed unanimously at the University Council's meeting Thursday.
The council passed an amendment clarifying the "Statement of Principle" which Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and vice-chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said appeared in a number of University publications including student and faculty handbooks. The "Statement of Principle" reads:
Marston McCluggage, professor of sociology and chairman of the Organization and Administration Committee, proposed that "the disciplinary procedures of the University shall take effect following the selection of the new members of the Judiciary in May as provided in the article. Disciplinary procedure until that time shall continue as provided in the original new Senate Code."
A vote to accept or reject the Judiciary will be taken at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the University Theatre. Fifty per cent of the Student Senate members and 20 per cent of Faculty Senate members will have to be present before a vote can be taken.
"The University of Kansas, recognizing essential human dignity and the equality of all men, is dedicated to the principle that all benefits, privileges, and opportunities afforded by the University shall be accorded each person—student, faculty member, or employee—according to his own individual merits, accomplishments and needs, and that no rights or benefits shall be denied to anyone by reason of race or creed or by reason of sex unless
sex is a bonafide qualification. Furthermore, the University is pledged to the establishment of procedures necessary to ensure that no violation of these principles shall ever be present in its affairs. And, in keeping with the proud heritage of Kansas as a free state, the University of Kansas will lead the way in promoting equality of opportunity in every form."
The council also amended section I of the established policy of the Kansas Board of Regents on organization membership, to read as follows:
"The established policy . . . prohibits discrimination on the basis
of race, religious faith, or national origin within the institutions under its jurisdiction. All fraternal and campus-related organizations shall follow this policy in the selection of their members; (A) to race, religious faith, or national origin, and (B) it shall not be a discriminatory practice for an organization to adopt and carry out a plan to eliminate or reduce such imbalance, with respect if the plan has first been filed with the committee established at the institution pursuant to . . . the Regents Policy hereof and the committee has not disapproved the plan prior to the expiration of fifteen days thereafter."
Lawyers plan appeals
CHICAGO (UPI)—Attorneys for the "Chicago Seven," faced with a multiplicity of convictions to appeal, Thursday mapped tactics for battles on two fronts to free their militant clients.
Trial lawyers William M. Kunstler and Leonard I. Weinglass prepared to try to convince U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman Friday that wiretapping tainted evidence was used to convict five men on charges they came to Chicago to incite riots during the Democratic National Convention.
Another team of lawyers bundled together briefs to be presented to the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in an effort to overturn contempt sentences Hoffman meted out to Kunstler, Weinglass and all seven conspiracy trial defendants.
Hoffman scheduled hearings on
the government wiretapping issue for 10 a.m. Friday. If he rules electronic eavesdropping did not play a role in the trial convictions Wednesday, he may immediately sentence David T. Dellinger, Kennard C. Davis, Thomas E. Hayden, Abbott H. Hoffman and Jerry C. Rubin.
The sentences of the five convicted men can run either concurrently or consecutively to the contempt sentences imposed by Hoffman Saturday and Sunday for courtroom disruptions during the 20-week trial.
Thomas P. Sullivan, one of several lawyers handling the appeals of the contempt convictions, said the guilty verdicts returned against the five men Wednesday had complicated the task of preparing the briefs to be filed with the appeals court.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International Rail strike threatens
MIAMI-The nation's railroads and four shopcraft unions broke off negotiations again Thursday night, bringing on the threat of a nationwide rail shutdown.
The breakdown came less than 24 hours before a federal court hearing in Washington; on whether to issue a preliminary injunction to prevent strikes, or a lockout by the railroad.
Official calls for trial study
WASHINGTON—The chairman of the U.S. House Internal Security Committee has called on the Bar Association to conduct a study of the Chicago 7 trial and its news coverage.
Prince Charles will enlist
LONDON—Prince Charles will join the Royal Navy as a $160 a month sub-lieutenant next year, Buckingham Palace announced Thursday. The Prince becomes the first heir to choose a military career.
"I hope I won't be too seasick," Charles told newsmen. "I will have to stock up with seasick pills."
Sinatra testifies
TRENTON—A "fully cooperative" Frank Sinatra appeared before the state investigation commission SIC Tuesday and apparently gave secret testimony concerning what he knows, if anything, about organized crime in New Jersey.
Sinatra's surprise appearance made it likely a petition for dismissal of a warrant for his arrest would be successful.
Campus briefs
Mortar Board distributes forms
All junior women, or women graduating in 1971, will receive information sheets this week for membership in Mortar Board, a senior women's honorary organization. These sheets must be filled out and returned to the Dean of Women's office by Monday, March 2.
Conference on aging to be held
John B. Martin, U.S. commissioner of aging and special assistant to the President for the aging, will address the opening session of the 20th annual Kansas State Conference on Aging at 1 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union.
University Extension organizes the meeting each year for the Kansas Citizens Council on Aging, Inc.
Balfour to speak on talk show
William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs, will be the first guest on "University Night Beat," a talk show beginning Tuesday on KUOK radio station.
Joe Vaughan, Kansas City senior and KUOK news director, said the show, to be on the air Tuesday at 8 p.m., could increase involvement in University affairs.
"It is an open forum designed specifically for students to participate in discussion of activities with various university officials," said Vaughan.
Women's job opportunities filed
The revised women's summer job file is now in the Dean of Women's office at 220 Strong Hall.
Kathy Leary, Shawnee Mission junior and chairman of the Associated Women Students' job placement committee, said the new file is divided into localities instead of jobs. The file contains job opportunities in all states, in addition to listings for all towns in Kansas.
Exam preparation course offered
Lawrence Adult Education will offer a course designed to prepare students for the FAA private pilot written examination.
E. J. Logsdon, director of Lawrence Adult Education, said the course would cover basic aircraft and systems, FAA regulations, navigational principles, course computer principles, radio navigation and airman publication aids.
Dean Ruelen, pilot for Erhart Flying Service, will teach the course
Dean Ruelen, pilot for Erhard K beginning March 4 in room 124 of Lawrence High School. Enrollment for the thirteen week course will continue through the first class meeting.
Twenty-five dollars worth of equipment is needed for the course and can be purchased from the Adult Education office. A $10 course fee and $2 registration fee are also required.
Kansas Senate passes bill to provide for prairie park
In an effort to preserve the remaining areas of the Kansas tallgrass prairie, the Kansas Senate has passed a bill that would provide for a commission to propose plans for the Tallgrass Prairie National Park.
The bill, now being worked on in the House Committee on Federal State Affairs, would give the governor a seven-man commission that would present to the Federal government a workable plan to install the wildlife preserve area.
The proposed 30,000 acre plot would also provide for museums and other facilities for visitors, Bly said.
Wayne Bly, superintendent of the Department of Parks and Recreation in Lawrence, said the main goal of the wildlife preserve is to kept intact the natural growth of the prairie tallgrass and to provide protection for such prairie animals as the bison, prairie antelope and others.
The legislators want the park to be a wildlife preserve and not to just protect the animals or to be made into a recreational area; the distinction being that it would preserve the natural biological and ecological balance of the prairie so that it could retain the same natural beauty that existed when the Indians still hunted buffalo there.
James L. Koevenig, associate professor of botany and biology at the University of Kansas, said the park would provide scientists with an undisturbed area that could be studied for ecological balance.
The western plains consist of three types of grasses: the shortgrass found in western Oklahoma and southeastern Wyoming, the midgrass found in the sandhills of central Nebraska and the tallgrass found in a belt stretching down through eastern Kansas. The proposed park would pre-
Docking to present award to outstanding older citizen
The 20th annual Conference on Aging will meet Monday and Tuesday at the University of Kansas. Gov. Robert B. Docking will present the distinguished older citizen award at the program.
The theme for the conference is "What's Ahead for the Older Kansan?" All speakers and discussion groups will center on this topic.
Docking will also give the main address at the dinner Monday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Other special speakers will be John Martin, commissioner of the Administration on Aging in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C. and David Jeffreys, director of national affairs, American Association of Retired Persons, National Retired Teachers Association, Washington, D.C.
Discussion groups will discuss these topics, "Are We Using Our Community Resources Fully?", "Is Medicare Enough for the Older Kansan?" and "Is a House Enough for the Older Kansan?" There will also be two panel groups to talk on "Consumer Program for Older Kansans" and "Community Groups in Action."
The Conference is sponsored by the Kansas Citizens Council on Aging and KU Extension.
2 KANSAN Feb. 20
1970
E. A. McFarland, director of institutes and conferences at KU, expects more than 150 people to attend.
All meetings will be in the Kansas Union.
ROCK
CHA1K
REVUE
improbable history
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—
Feb. 17
KU-Y office,
information booth on
campus,
Bell's, the sound, Kief's
sponsored by KU-Y
ROCK CHALK REVUE
improbable history
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SPECIALS
SATURDAY, FEB. 21 ADDITIONAL PRICE CUTS ON
SPORT COATS
PATTERN SLACKS
DRESS SHIRTS
SWEATERS
SHOES
JACKETS
WOOL SHIRTS
BLAZERS
WASH PANTS
TIES
WINTER COATS
C.P.O.'s
serve a section of the tallgrass prairie around the flint hills of eastern Kansas where the best remaining areas are located.
MISTER
GUY
920 Mass.
TIDE
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
THE GREETING HOUSE
Dean Rutledge
plus Underground Films
at
MIDDLE EARTH
a coffee house at the union
Feb. 21 & 22
7:30 p.m.
Tickets $1 at SUA Office
Frye lectures on 'The Humanistic Era'
Northrop Frye, Canadian literary critic and scholar, spoke in a humanities series lecture Thursday in Woodruff Auditorium.
Frye, professor at the University of Toronto, lectured on "The Humanistic Era."
In his speech, Frye pointed out the importance of the critic, the early humanist, the changing role of the critic and the importance of poetry to history.
Frye said that he was shocked by the general agreement of students that criticism had no presuppositions. He said he noticed a persistence in the feeling that criticism received its basis from other subjects. He said that people believed literature illustrated other subjects, usually a biography of the author.
Frye said that today's criticism is a psychological or a Freudian criticism. This, he said, has evolved from the old viewpoint of criticism as biological, criticism.
Criticism first took the form of poetry, said Frye. It existed even before the written word, he said, in the form of the free verse.
In a preliterate culture, said Frye, the society was very dependent on verse. This primitive
form of poetry was the teacher of the society. He said that with the development of writing came prose, a continuous form of writing that made way for some theory.
Frye said that with humanism came a new sense of intellectualism. He said the persons who received a humanistic form of education were thought to be an elite group. They were looked up to in the society. The humanist practice, he said, was to do everything with ease. They did not use colloquial or technical language. The goal of a humanistic education, he said, was to produce a gentleman.
Weather
Mostly clear with variable winds 5 to 15 miles per hour today. Tonight . . . clear to partly cloudy and not so cold. Saturday clear to partly cloudy and warmer. Highs today in the 40s. Lows tonight in the 20s. Probability of measurable precipitation—near zero per cent today, tonight and Saturday.
KU organizations to sponsor beauty pageant candidates
University of Kansas organizations have been invited to sponsor entrants in the Miss Wichita pageant, March 28.
This year, in addition to prizes for the winning entrants, prizes will be awarded to the winning sponsor organization.
An introductory lecture on transcendental meditation will be given by Bob Brandt, today at 8 p.m., in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Meditation talk to be held tonight
Transcendental meditation, as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, "is a natural spontaneous technique which allows each individual to expand his mind and improve his life."
Feb. 20
1970 KANSAN 3
Prizes for the winning girl include a scholarship, a mink stole and a wardrobe to prepare her for competition in the Miss Kansas scholarship pageant.
The prizes for sponsors are $50 if their entrant wins the Miss Wichita title, $100 if she wins the Miss Kansas title and $1,000 if she becomes the next Miss America.
Entrants must be a resident of Sedgwick County or attend school in Sedgwick County, be single and never have been married, divorced or had marriage annulled and be 18 years of age by Sept. 7.
Frye said the function of the poet was to produce rhetorical parallels to truth. He said the poet never affirmed or denied because he never made specific statements.
The deadline for applications is March 20. For further information and entry blanks, write to Miss Kakeland Pageant, Box 1010, Wichita.
The critic was looked up to and respected in the humanistic era, said Frye, but today the criticism is more and more a student of society. This, he said, is due to the gradual dissemination of the poetic attitude.
BOWL CHILI, CHERRY PIE and drink choice at the City Community Bldg. this Sunday, Feb. 22nd. The first round only 75c. Reorders at special discount prices. Host, the Jayhawk Kiwanis Club.
Frye said the role of the critic has changed. Every critic today speaks for himself, he said. The critic does not judge poetry or literature, but is judged by it, said Frye.
McCall's
go out in a lot less shoe... it's the "in"
look for today's fashion free thinkers. A. Covered up-front,
but strictly straps from there on back to blocky heel. Red,
Pink, Navy smooth or Black patent uppers. B. Sandalized
platform a la '30's on bold heel. Black shiny Corfam uppers.
FANFARES T.M.
TONIGHT AND SATURDAY NIGHT
Direct from Delaney & Bonnie Concert
— TIDE —
8:00-12:00
$1 admission
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
$1 per pitcher
804 W. 24th
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
KWSAN COMMENT
14.3
Obscenity was mostly yesterday
Obscenity—that vast and mysterious entity which, if we include everyone's definition, includes everything—seems to be begging for an explanation here at KU.
Last year, a dispute over the publication of a poem in the Cottonwood Review resulted in the University's requesting the University of Kansas Printing Service to continue production despite Service employees objections. The Kansan too has had minor conflicts over the definition of obscenity.
Most recently and most dramatically, the Black Student Union newspaper production was halted by a walkout of Printing Service employees, one of whom said, "I think the BSU should have a newspaper but you're dealing with subject matter of obscene words and ideas that not only contradicts human beings but our whole morality. If we print a paper like this then there are no moral or ethical codes to live by."
The editor of the BSU paper said, "This is our language. This is the language used in the black community."
With due respect for the ethical backgrounds of both the employees of the Printing Service and the black students involved in the newspaper, I'm going to attempt to define obscenity. The definition is mine, no one else's.
First of all, it seems trite to say that obscenity is in the mind, so let's turn to the words of Havelock Ellis who said that very truth in less hackneyed terms: "There can be no doubt whatever regarding the soundness of your view of 'obscenity' as residing exclusively, not in the thing contemplated, but in the mind of the contemplating person."
Most of the words and ideas which become obscene in the mind are, and not coincidentally related to sex, the biggest sin in traditional America's background. The idea that sex was at best tolerable (as long as pleasure was not associated with it) goes back
much further than the Bible, but much of Puritanical America's Attitude toward sex was based on Paul's writings in the New Testament, particularly "I Corinthians."
Attitudes toward sex have changed drastically in the past century and particularly in the past two decades.
For several reasons, most young people today are not shocked at all by sexual terms even when in reference to sexual acts which remain largely taboo. Through new freedoms in various art forms, young people have been faced with terms and ideas which once surfaced only in restrooms and alleys.
The new Morality, as it has been somewhat misnamed, is actually an overt acceptance of many covert customs. (The Kinsey Report, now a dated study, showed that both men and women were participating in sexual acts which they still refused to condone or discuss.)
In testimony for the film "I Am Curious (Yellow)," Psychiatrist Dr. Edward Hornick said, "I would assume that this court doesn't need to be told about the double standard about sex in these United States. There has always been one standard of conduct and another of what we do or talk about."
Much of young America has been frustrated for sometime with the hypocrisies and inconsistencies in all levels of society, including sexual mores.
Norman Mailer, also in testimony for the Swedish film, said, "It is not only in the 20th Century that we come to feel that despite the majesties of law, and of religion, that there is something accelerating in the 20th Century at such a fast rate that religion and law, by the very fact that they are institutions, and stable institutions, are not changing quite so rapidly as the nature of life."
The definition of obscenity, too, is changing far more rapidly than codes and dogma. What is obscene to a KU black may not be obscene to a printer at the Printing Service.
Certainly, what is obscene to a printer may not be obscene to the black.
And so who is to decide whether a poem sandwiched in a BSU paper is obscene?
Well, if there is something which is in and of itself obscene (I doubt it), that obscene element should be determined by the readers of the obscenity. The BSU paper was designed for KU blacks, not for the KU printers to take home to the family coffee table, and there seems very little evidence that KU's black population would be offended at the words in question.
There being no absolute evils but only conditional evils, we might look at the motives of the KU blacks who put the paper together. J. A. Hadfeld said, "There is no such thing as an evil in itself. Evil is not a thing, but a wrong function; it is the use of good impulse at the wrong time, in the wrong place, toward a wrong end, that constitutes an evil function."
I agree with Hadfield's definition and I have seen no evidence to convince me that a wrong end was intended. The BSU editors had as their intention neither pollution of the minds of the printers nor pollution of the minds of KU blacks
Every man should have a right to decide what is obscene for himself and every group should have that same right. Since the Printing Service employees are not among the prospective readers of the paper, their refusal to print the paper seems a denial of the BSU's right to determine what is obscene for its members.
Someone once said that morality is only moral when it is voluntary. KU students, no matter what color, are not going to be saved from this mythical immorality which the Printing Service workers think exists.
Our tongues are our own. There isn't room in any man's throat for any voice other than his own.
—Mike Shearer
Others on issues-
By DAVID AWBREV
Student Body President
In response to the controversy concerning freshmen representation in the Student Senate there are several facts which have been ignored.
The Senate Code is a unique document which recognizes the complex nature of the modern multiversity. The Code is based on the realization that each school of the University has concerns and problems which are inherent to its academic mission and bureaucratic structure. That is, the authors of the Code felt that the engineering school should decide its own special problems irregardless of the wishes of the business school, that Corbin College should devise its own response to internal questions and not be dependent on Oliver College. Thus, the central concept of the Code is of decentralization of the governance of the University, realizing that there are certain issues which pertain to the entire University and must be decided by representatives from all the schools. Therefore, the Senate exists not to bother about the policies of the education or journalism school, but to decide on issues of universal concern.
Steve Hix should not come to the Student Senate in order to achieve the representation of freshmen in the Senate, but to the separate Colleges-Within-the-College. If the CWC senators, such as Jeff Lough, feel they cannot reform their college then they are incompetent and should be recalled.
The CWCs and all other schools have complete power to determine how their senators are elected. The only stipulation being that it be done by the entire school.
The Senate Code is dependent upon the involvement of all students within their particular school. The Student Senate, which consists of representatives from all schools, should not interfere with the internal operation of any separate school. The Student Senate must direct itself to the whole range of student problems, and questions relating to the independent schools should be decided by the members of that school.
I hope Steve Hix will continue to achieve freshman representation in the Senate, for I certainly am in sympathy with the lack of voice for this large number of people. However, I refuse to allow myself to dictate to the freshmen or to the CWCs what they need; for I strongly feel that only the freshmen can articulate what they want, all the Senate can do is give direction, but leadership must come from the class itself.
hearing voices—
To the Editor:
Joe Naas, in his editorial "Trigger Fingers" (UDK, Feb. 17) portrays Israelis as "trigger happy." But he doesn't tell us that Israel is a nation of less than three million people surrounded by over ninety million Arabs who openly proclaim their intent to destroy Israel and all of her people.
In short, he doesn't tell us that the Arab terrorists, just as the Arab nations, kill and wage war to wipe the Israelis off the face of the Earth, while the Israeli heroes (his term—but that's one
He doesn't tell us of the billions of dollars in planes, tanks, and other military aid furnished to the Arabs since 1967, chiefly by the Russians, an amount far greater than the Israelis have been able to obtain. He doesn't tell us of the oil which the Arabs but not the Israelis have, which makes the Israeli position in World politics precarious indeed, as by any Biafran will certify.
thing in his editorial he got right) kill in self defense.
He then asks (rhetorically)
"But what is an Arab?" And reply,
"American answer: an Arab is an oppressor of the Jews. False:
[he says] an Arab is a person,
people, a human being." He doesn't seem to realize that the two are not mutually exclusive.
But the fact is that the number of human beings who have been oppressors of the Jews encompasses a good deal of Christendom (even Mr. Naas must be aware of this) and almost all of the Arab
My suspicion is that Mr. Naas, like so many Americans who have rightly reacted with revulsion to our own bloody involvement in Vietnam, has forgotten the distinction between aggressors, and those who would defend themselves against aggression. I hope the time never comes when he has to discover this difference from bitter personal experience.
world (something Mr. Naas seems unaccountably not to have heard about).
Howard Kahane
Associate Prof. in Philosophy
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. 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.
Griff & the Unicorn
SOKOLOFF
A SNOWBANK CUSHIONS HIS FALL.
?
HUH?
GAAH!
HOL' STILL!
DUMGUM IT!!
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970.
University Daily Kansan.
KANSAN REVIEWS CONCERTS: Symphonic delight
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Arts & Reviews Editor
Offering a varied program easily adaptable to all musical tastes, the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Victor Alessandro, performed before a crowd of nearly 3,000 people Thurs. in Hoch Auditorium.
Opening the concert was the vibrant, exciting "Carnival Overture" by Dvorak. The relatively short piece exploded throughout the auditorium leaving its audience with the appropriate mood of brilliance and yet not forgetting the softness of violins in the middle.
Perhaps the poorest selection of the concert if there was one, was "Symphony No. 2 in D Major" by Brahms. The four movements ranged from the melodice, smooth sound of the first two to the more vibrant, exciting experience of the third and fourth. The finale was the most surprising unlike the usual Brahms with a high level of brilliance.
A really delightful selection, "Huapango" by Moncayo had a definite Mexican influence. The composition was very entertaining carrying a pleasant theme throughout with variations from gaiety to bravado.
Intermezzo from "Vanessa" by Barber was very short, quiet and pretty throughout giving the audience a peaceful change and preparing them for the final and longer selection.
"The Pines of Rome" by Respighi contained four movements but was without interruption. The first was playful, fast moving and fun like children playing. The next was of a more pious mood then followed by the flowing sound of birds and ending with a loud, processional, grand build-up to the impression of a magnificent march and a triumphant conclusion.
FILMS: Legend gone sour
BY RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
Ben Hecht was one of the more colorful characters to emerge from that legendary era of journalism in Chicago at the turn of the century. Years later, as a successful reporter, playwright and screenwriter, he set down his reminiscences of the old days in Gaily, Gaily," a lively lexicon of definitive anecdotes of the period. The film version, directed by Norman Jewison, loses quite a bit in the translation; in fact, it is little more than a gross caricature of every worn-out device in movie history.
Here we have young Ben Harvey (Beau Bridges) an unbelievably—inhumanly—naive lad, with a sheepish grin and a bowl-and-scissors haircut, who has yet to have his First Sexual Experience—or any experience at all for that matter. He comes to The Big City, all wide-eyed to change the world with his pen, and is befriendened, first, by The Prostitute With the Heart of Gold (He lives in her baroque bordello thinking it only a rooming house), and, next, by The Salty Veteran Reporter (Who else but Brian Keith?) who gives Ben his First Taste of Liquor. Thrown in for good measure are assorted crooked politicians, bawdy newspapermen, and we even get a glimpse of a young Carl Sandburg, in a McKuenish turtleneck, reciting "Chicago."
There is more than enough material from that raucous era to make a darn good movie, and "Gaily, Gaily" might have been just that, if Jewison and his writer, Abram Ginnes, had not been straining so hard to be charming and witty and stylish. Every time Ben drops his jaw and stares at a female bosom, or backs into something, or his hat falls over his eyes, they undoubtedly expect an uproarious response from the audience. Jewison is a slick, shallow director, whose reputation inflates as the quality of his product goes steadily downhill (Since "In the Heat of the Night," he has become well enough established for the credits to say "A Norman Jewison Film").
"Gaily, Gaily" can be readily compared to "The Rievers," since the two cover much the same ground thematically: the former has to put forth such obvious effort to achieve what comes naturally to the latter.
Feb. 20
1970 KANSAN 5
Classified ads get results
NEW YORK FILM CRITICS AWARD
"Best Actress Of The Year!"
LYNN REDGRAVE
for
GEORGEY
GIRL
JAMES MASON - ALAN BATES
(CO-WRITE)
NEW YORK FILM CRITICS AWARD
7:00 and 9:00 p.m., February 20, 21 Woodruff Auditorium $.50
The Weekend Scene
"TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN"]—Woody Allen's neat little spoof of crime pictures is almost always hilarious.
"THE REIVERS"—A delightful period piece, in set in Faulkner's South and starring Steve McQueen.
"GAILY, GAILY""—See review this page.
"FANNY HILL"—Held over for those who want it.
“SWEET CHARITY”-Another treat from that great playwright Neil Simon who brought us “The Odd Couple,” this movie reaches us from Broadway bringing with it some excellent musical numbers.
BOOKS
ANNIE, COME HOME, by Barbara Michaels (Crest, 75 cents)—Gothic stuff, about an old house in Georgetown and a mysterious presence from the past. It has shades of "The Uninvited" (no pun intended) about it, and those who go for this kind of thing will be vastly entertained.
*****
LITTLE BIG MAN, by Thomas Berger (Crest, 95 cents)—Reprint of a long, funny novel about the Old West, brought out to coincide with the new film featuring Dustin Hoffman and Faye Dunaway. "Little Big Man" is a tall tale about the only man, supposedly, to survive Custer's Last Stand, as well as many other wild western adventures. Drags some, but worth your time.
Official Bulletin
Today
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gym
Today
Popular Film: "George Girl"
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union.
International Film: "Red Beard"
(japanese) Hoch Auditorium, 7:30 PM
Folk Dance Club: 173 Robinson,
7-30-10-20 p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Eldrich." 8:20 p.m.
Swimming: Nebraska. Natorium.
Bobinson, Gymnastics., 2 p.m.
Popular Film: "Georgy Girl"
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
Wooldruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Experimental Theatre: "Rimers of Edinburgh" 8:20 pm
Basketball: Colorado at Boulder. 9 p.m.
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 3 p.m.
Sunday
Ben Harvey's juices are all damned up!
THE MARSHAL PRODUCTION IN COMMON PROJECT
A NORMAN JEWISON FILM
COLOR
M
Historical Archives
"GAILY,GAILY"
The movie of a 19 year old who went to town- who went to town!
starring Beau Bridges Geo. Kennedy NOW!
Eve. Shows 7:15 - 9:15
Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30
"GEORGY GIRL" (SUA Popular Film, Fri. and Sat.)—This 1966 British picture about an ugly duckling who makes good is enjoyable because of Lynn Redgrave, James Mason and Alan Bates.
Granada
THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-5784
Coming May 4 "EASY RIDER"
who love theatre this is a must. Should prove worthwhile with fine acting and directing.
"RED BEARD" (International Series, Fr.)-The latest (1965) film by the Japanese master Akira Kurosawa tells of life in a modern-day hospital. Starring Toshiro Mifune.
"THE RIMERS OF ELDRITCH"
(theatre production)—For those
REAN RUTLEDGE AND UNDERGROUND MOVIES (Middle Earth Coffee House)—The Coffee House is new this year at KU providing something different from the usual movie and pizza date. Added attraction this week-end is an open mike between acts, so for those of you who sing or play an instrument here's your chance to prove yourself before the public.
Even The Movie Roots For This Crook
"rib cracking comedy"
JUDITH CRIST,
TODAY SHOW
WOODY ALLEN'S
"TAKE THE MONEY
AND RUN"
FROM THE AMERICAN
FROM THE AMERICAN COLOR / BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.
DISTRIBUTED BY CINEMA RELEASE CORPORATION
Adults 1.50; Child .75
Eve. 7:20 - 9:15
Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:20
Hillcrest
Tain't Nobody Like 'M
ALEXANDRA CARTER
Steve McQueen "The Reivers"
Panavision®&Technicolor®
A Cinema Center Film Presentation
A National General pictures Release.
Eve. 7:30 - 9:30
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Adult 1.50; Child .75
Hillcrest
X
COLOR by Deluxe
Mat. Daily 2:30
Eve. 7:15
9:05
Varsity
THEATRE ... telphone VI 3-1065
COLOR by DeLuxe
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
From the country that gave you "I A WOMAN"
"INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS"
(YELLOW)
'FANNY HILL' is a "porno-classic!"
— ANCHER WINSTON
"In there with sex and love all the way!"
Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroules
Drawn
Fanny Hill
Hill
new... and from Sweden
HEY!
BIG SPENDER...
SWINGERS ALL...
MEN WERE THEIR BUSINESS!
* DIRECT FROM ITS RESERVED SEAT ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT
Continuous Performances First Time At Popular Prices
MEN CALLED HER 'SWEET CHARITY'
SWEET CHARITY STARRING SHIRLEY MACLAINE
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION®
The Hillcrest
Adults 1.50; Child .75
Eve. 7:10 - 9:35
MEN CALLED HER
'SWEET CHARITY'
SWEET CHARITY
STARRING
SHIRLEY MACLAINE
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION*
Hillcrest
Adults 1.50; Child .75
Eve. 7:10 - 9:35
Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:10
Robisch, Cain nearing Big 8 scoring, rebounding marks
With five games to go, there appears to be little doubt but what KU's Dave Robisch, who is clipping along at a record scoring pace of 28.3 points a game, will replace Colorado's Cliff Meely as the Big Eight Conference's leading scorer.
Now, Robisch's real race is against the record book since it seems virtually impossible for Meely, a junior like Robisch, to overtake the Jayhawk. Meely, who has only four games left, is averaging a very respectable 20.7 a game, but is still 48 points of Robisch's total for one less game.
If Robisch could continue his fantastic scoring pace, he'd replace another KU great, Wilt Chamberlain, as the man with the best average for Conference games, and move past still another Jayhawk, Walt Wesley, to become the most prolific scorer for league games. Wesley carded 377 in 1965. Robisch has 255 so far this season. Even a drop in per game average to 25 points will get him that mark.
Chances are that if Robisch does move past Wesley on the single-season chart, he'll also wreck another Wesley record—most field goals during a league season. Wesley got 150 his big year, while Robisch has already rammed home 91 so far this season.
While Robisch is moving in on the scoring record, Iowa State's Bill Cain is quickly closing in on single-season rebounding marks. Cain, who has three games left, leads the Big Eight with his 15.2 average, a little more than is needed for him to slip past the seasonal high hung up by KU's Bill Bridges of 211. Cain has 167 to date.
Cain has now shoved his full season total to 333, another 22 will move him by former teammate Don Smith for the all-time high Cyclone lead and put him in position to crack the top three on the seasonal chart. To do that, he'll have to grab off 53 caroms in the last three games, giving him a 386 total, one more than Bridges had in 1960.
The slender Cyclone leader has already moved to fourth on the Big Eight's career rebounding list with his 893 total—the 12 he got in his last game shoved him past
Feb.20
1970
K-State's Jack Parr. It will take some kind of board work, though, for Cain to move any higher. Third ranked Bill Stauffer of Missouri had 964 during his three years.
6 KANSAN
For the first time this season,
there aren't new leaders in the two shooting proficiency ratings. Nebraska's Sam Martin still rules from the field with his 54.4 percentage, while Missouri's Doug Johnson is still best at the line with an 88.6 per clip.
Big '8' Statistics
CONFERENCE GAMES ONLY
| Player and School | G | Season | FGA | FGA | FT | FTA | TP | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Robisch, KU | 9 | 91 | 183 | 73 | 95 | 255 | 28.3 | |
| Meely, Colo | 10 | 70 | 191 | 63 | 99 | 207 | 20.7 | |
| Heard, Colo | 8 | 10 | 121 | 68 | 54 | 194 | 17.5 | |
| Gall, Iowa State | 11 | 59 | 140 | 69 | 94 | 187 | 17.0 | |
| Jenkins, Iowa State | 11 | 64 | 139 | 38 | 62 | 166 | 15.1 | |
| Russe, NW | 9 | 53 | 103 | 28 | 43 | 155 | 14.1 | |
|杖渡burg, NU | 9 | 50 | 102 | 19 | 43 | 133 | 14.0 | |
| Tope, Colo | 10 | 50 | 125 | 41 | 58 | 141 | 14.1 | |
| Tomilinson, MU | 10 | 43 | 84 | 51 | 70 | 138 | 13.8 | |
| Cooper, Okla. State | 10 | 43 | 115 | 28 | 41 | 138 | 13.8 | |
| Cooper, Okla. State | 10 | 36 | 74 | 63 | 88 | 135 | 13.5 | |
| Venable, K-State | 10 | 56 | 131 | 21 | 40 | 131 | 13.1 | |
| Vender, K-State | 10 | 56 | 131 | 21 | 40 | 131 | 13.1 | |
| Buck, Okla. State | 10 | 45 | 102 | 35 | 45 | 126 | 12.6 | |
| Coleman, Colo | 10 | 45 | 90 | 26 | 40 | 124 | 11.4 | |
| Martin, Okla. | 9 | 30 | 76 | 42 | 57 | 102 | 11.3 | |
| Hall, Kansas City | 9 | 41 | 99 | 19 | 26 | 101 | 11.2 | |
| Hall, K-State | 10 | 46 | 93 | 19 | 34 | 111 | 11.1 | |
Player and School G
Cain, Iowa State 11
Roblisch, Kansas 9
Meely, Colorado 10
Heard, Oklahoma 8
Chalk, Nebraska 9
Ray, Oklahoma 9
Russell, Kansas 11
Jenkins, Iowa State 9
Hall, Kansas State 10
Creighton, Colorado 10
Smith, Missouri 10
RBDS Avg.
167 15.2
117 13.0
127 12.7
184 10.5
84 10.3
77 8.6
76 8.4
91 8.3
85 8.3
80 8.0
80 7.8
Festival of Arts
Festival of Arts March 30-April 14
$5.00 Coupons on Sale Now! SUA Office
Coupon holders save $4.50 and receive a free program
This Sat. Feb. 21st—8 p.m.
THE FABULOUS FLIPPERS
RED DOG INN-Tickets on sale at the door
Hear the Flippers New LP on KLWN FM 105.9 Mg.at 10 p.m.Fri or Live In Person Sat.at 8 p.m.RDI
Holiday Inn
THE WORLD'S INNKEEPER
23rd at Iowa
Lawrence
Kansas
843-9100
1. Spaghetti Night Every Friday $1.50
2. Noon Buffet Monday-Friday
$1.45
3. Early Bird Breakfast Every Friday & Saturday 10 p.m.to 2 a.m.
Complete Meeting Room And Banquet Facilities
Use Kansan Classified
McCoy's Washington's Birthday SALE of Better Shoes
1
Clunky heels in several colors and styles. Were to $19.00
$6.90
Women's loafers—Maine Airs and others.
Were to $16.00
$4.90 and $5.90
McCoy shoes
813 Mass. St.
VI 3-2091
Second place Hawks collide with Buffs in rematch of last year's top two clubs
KU and Colorado, cream of the crop last year in Big Eight basketball but relegated to also-ran status this season, will try and take out some frustrations when they, the conference's two post-season tournament teams of a year ago, collide Saturday night in Boulder in an important first division game. Tip-off is 8:05 in CU Field House.
B. W. K. BOWEN
Cliff Meely
The Buff ace, top scorer in the conference last year, follows KU's Dave Robisch's record pace this season with a 21.7 mark in conference play.
The Buffs, 1969 champion and NCAA representative who surprised everybody a year ago by taking the Big Eight title with a sophomore dominated team, currently is tied for seventh place after dropping their last two clashes against Oklahoma State and Oklahoma in a recent road swing. The Jayhawks, who played in the NIT last season, are second in the current conference chase but trail K-State by two games in the loss column.
"It would take a miracle for us to win the championship," KU coach Ted Owens says realistically, "but as long as we have a
Feb. 20
1970 KANSAN 7
CHARMANNE
LADY'S $44.75 MAN'S 39.75
SUNRISE STUDIO
BALADA
LADY'S $ 50 MAN'S 55
MASTERCRAFTED IN ELEGANT 14K GOLD
Ray Christian
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
"Special College Terms"
809 Mass VI 3-5432
mathematical chance we are going to fight and scrap as hard as we can to win."
Unless the "miracle" happens, the 'Hawks' string of four straight post-season tournament appearances will come to an end. The Jayhawks may not go to the NIT this year since KU is hosting the NCAA midwest regional. It's NCAA or nothing for KU and to earn that bid Owens' troupe must make up two games on the surging Wildcats.
KANSAN Sports
To tie the Wildcats it would be necessary for the Jayhawks to win their five remaining conference games, including the season-ending match with K-State at Lawrence. Between Saturday night's test at Boulder and the K-State finale, the Jayhawks play Missouri at Lawrence next Monday and Oklahoma and Oklahoma State on the road.
In addition to a sweep of those five games, K-State would have to lose another for KU to tie. The Wildcats (8-2) have home games with Nebraska and Colorado and a road contest with Oklahoma in addition to the one with the Javhawks.
With 6-10 Roger Brown turning in the finest game of his career, KU kept its title hopes flickering with a 100-87 victory over Nebraska Tuesday night.
ECONOMIC MUSCLE
ROME (UPI)—Italian soccer fans spent a record $40 million on the sport last year, and top athletes earn up to 10 times more than the salary paid to the country's President, Guiseppe Saragat.
Brown came off the bench after about eight minutes had elapsed and the Jayhawks trailing, 21-17. From then until halftime he hauled in 18 rebounds and scored 10 points to spark the Jayhawks to the 54-43 lead it held the rest of the night.
The gangling junior from Chicago wound up with a career high of 21 rebounds and season high of 15 points as he became only the eight KU player in history to collect 20 or more rebounds in a game.
Dave Robisch pushed his season scoring average to 27.2 by bucketing 32 points against the Huskers. In nine conference games he's averaged 28.3—the identical figure Wilt Chamberlain hit when the former Jayhawk marvel set the Big Eight mark in 1958.
Also standing out in the Nebraska romp was Pierre Russell, the spring-legged junior, with a personal high of 25 points. His previous peak had been 24 against Western Kentucky.
In this year's earlier KU-Colorado game at Lawrence the Jayhawks prevailed, 75-73, and it took a 38-point salvo by Robisch and a last second bucket by Russell at the buzzer to put them over the hump.
Chili Supper
Sun., Feb. 22
4 - 8 p.m.
First Christian Church
10th & Kentucky
75c
Sponsored by
Scout Troop 53
includes chili,
drink and cake
IN THE ROLL AND COFFEE RUT ?
Rolls and coffee are all right once in a while. But it helps to get out of the roll rut. Try the "Captain's Table" breakfast foods. Satisfy your tummy's morning demands with our pancakes, eggs, ham, or french toast. They're fast to prepare and priced for the student. Go ahead, try it. 7 - 10: A.M.
THE
CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Across from Lindley Hall
Washington
Hatchet Days
Washington's Birthday Sellebration
Saturday - Feb.21
MESSAGE FROM THE OWNER:
Quote—This will be another "sidewalk Bazaar" Bargain Day—the Bargains are Hot . . . but the owner has a chill.
OUR BUYING MISTAKES ARE CLASSIFIED INFORMATION
LOST FOUND or STOLEN
We lost some cotton turtlenecks in our stock room. They should have stayed lost!!! Now we have to sell $3.00 shirts at
99c
We found some Jockey underware. Odds and Ends. Sorry we found them. $1.75 values
We wish that these beautiful but narrow ties had been stolen. No such luck. Now you can have $4.00 ties for just
MEN WANTED
59c
We need men with great taste and of the right size for 18 sport coats at values $45.00 to $55.00
Now at $19.95 and $23.95
99c
A home environment is needed because these sweaters will soon be orphans. Give them a home at these prices. $11.00 and $14.00 values at
NO PHONE ORDERS NO REFUNDS
$15.00 and $20.00 values at
$6.99
$22.50 to $32.50 values at
$9.99
$3.99
Now $24.95
Many have not reached antiquity and are great buys at half price.
ANTIQUES
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
Unique collector's items.
Suits—one of a kind—
THANK HEAVEN!!! One
40 short—one 40 regular
three 40 long—two 42
short. Some even have
narrow lapels. Values
$75.00 to $100.00
Excellent chance to buy London Fog All-Weather coats at 20% off.
The Town
Have fun with us on this day, but don't ask for our expert fitting & tailoring on these clothing items. Strictly Cash and Carry
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
We are too late in season
to carry these expensive
slacks—sizes 28 to 34.
Buy these $14.00 to
$20.00 values at
$5.99
839 Mass.
Shop
NO EXCHANGES
VI 3-5755
CLEVELAND - FREDERICK COOPER
Should a gentleman offer a lady . . .
Beaming face nonwithstanding, this man is not a new father. Ted Cott, New York cigar representative, provided cognac, wine and nicotine for a group of cigar tasters at the Eldridge Hotel Thursday night. Women and song were left to the discretion of the participants.
American view' topic of social welfare talk
Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, spoke before the faculty forum yesterday. His speech was entitled "Social Welfare: An American View."
JOHN BURRALL
Dean Rutledge
plus Underground Films
at
MIDDLE EARTH
a coffee house at the union
Feb. 21 & 22
7:30 p.m.
Katz briefly covered social welfare, American style, and the School of Social Welfare.
Katz said social welfare was defined as "a broad range of many disciplines which include all fields that involve the well-being of each individual in our society." He said social welfare was restoring, maintaining, enhancing and enriching our welfare.
Tickets $1 at SUA Office
Katz said public welfare is viewed mainly as income maintenance, but actually is concerned with more than just income. Social workers are taught to respect the dignity of an individual, to respect human life and in general, how to work with people. One dilemma in the social work field is that too many people working with people are not properly trained, he said.
Students in the field of social work get practice in many differing fields. They may train at the medical centers, mental hospitals, welfare offices or out - patient mental clinics. Katz said the students at KU have a two year masters program as well as a bachelor's degree program.
Social welfare has changed in one important aspect, said Katz. The role of the worker has moved from helping people to change their position in life to the role of an advocate for the individual.
Feb.20
1970
8 KANSAN
Stogies not for old stogies says cigar representative
At a cigar tasting evening Thursday night at the Eldridge Hotel, Ted Cott of New York, said the young male is the prime market for cigars. The cigar no longer represents the old man.
"Cigars belong to young people," he said. "We are taking a low-keyed positive way to influence the young man in law school, business and similar situations."
Cott, representing the Cigar Institute, provided a casual, informal evening for cigar tasters, mainly of the business school.
Cognac and wine were served
Campus Interviews
The School of Business has announced its interview schedule for the week of Feb. 23-27. Interested students should sign up in room 202 in Summerfield Hall.
Feb. 23: The Fleming Co. Inc., BS, BA—sales merchandising, accounting, data processing, general business, and advertising; Hiking Hops Petroleum Co.; Helping MPs Petroleum Co.-hance; Travelers Insurance Co., all degrees, summer work for graduate students at Hartford, Conn.; State of Wisconsin-Depart. Revenue; Business with major accounting; Arthur Young and Co., BS or MS with a major in accounting.
Feb. 24: Continental Oil Co., BS, MBA-finance, accounting, BA-liberal arts for marketing; Continental labor BS or MS and related areas, summer work in education, Ford Motor Co., BS or MS-finance, accounting, business administration; Hallmark Cards, Inc. BS or MS-finance, business administration, other related background. Ph.D. quantitative methods, U.S. citizenship required; Kansas Power and Light Co., BS, business, manager training, GRM. Accounting—accounting, BS, MSP, MBA-finance.
Feb 25: Army and Air Force Exchange Service, BS—business administration, arts, mathematics, retail procurement, accounting, personnel management, summery office for sophomore juniors. Conflict Resolution MS—business administration, statistic formation systems, engineering, computer science: Continental Pipe Line, BS or MS—business administration or marketing, Hallmark Cardss, BS or MS—business, marketing, liberal arts and other related programs for management training program.
Feb 26: General Mills, Inc. (sales)
MBA, MA, MBA, MBA, liberal arts;
economics; liberal arts;
Household Finance Corporation, all degrees for executive training; Intermediate business administration, sales, accounting, finance production; Proctor of Business Administration, BS business, MBA—any major, sales management training program.
Feb. 27: U.S. Department of Labor,
BS, BA, MS, MA, MBA—business,
sociology, public policy science,
sociology, computer programs,
Proctor and Gamble Co. (distributing),
BS—business, MBA candidates, any
major if interested in sales; Syntex
Laboratories, International business;
Bachelor's in business or MSA,
MA, MBA,
only, general business with accounting
or finance background. U.S. citizenship required.
DANCE
TO THE
RISING SUNS
SOUL
RED DOG INN 8:30-12:00 Feb. 20 $2.00 couple Sponsored by International Club—Members Free
with the cigars. The cigars and cognac represent the good life, Cott said.
In response to cigars for women, Cott said that this is the period of new mores—the fashions are freer for women with styles of pants and no bras.
Prof bugs bugs
A study to determine why parasitic mites and ticks select special hosts to feed on will continue at KU under a $32,830 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service.
The director of the program, Joeph H. Camin, professor of entomology, is entering his 13th year of work on the project. Special attention will be given to the sensory behavior of the parasites.
"If a woman can retain her femininity," he said, "she should smoke a cigar."
?? WANT HELP IN ??
1. Discovering your potential?
confidence?
3. Problem solving & decision making?
5. Talking with people?
6. Developing goals?
4. Gaining cooperation from others?
"Adventures In Success" personal development program may be your answer! CALL 841.8957-A5
Call 843-8877 after 5 p.m.
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE
one special group of
Nylon Jackets values to $12.95 now $5.50
button down permanent press Shirts regular values to $8.00 sale priced at $3.69
Ross DISNEY MENS WEAR
811 Mass.
Open Thurs. Till 8:30 p.m.
THE HOME OF THE PILOT
Don Shaw is now holding court at Raney's Downtown.
Yes, it's true. After 12 years at Raney's Hillcrest Store, the Crown Prince of Cheeseburgers is currently exchanging verbal barbs with the customers at Raney's Downtown, and it is reported that he has already contracted laryngitis in his attempt to speak to everybody. Don assured us, however, that he is so anxious to see all his old friends from Hillcrest Raney's he will gargle motor oil daily until his affliction disappears.
Will it work? Can "Dountless Don" recover in time to greet each and every customer at Raney's lunchoon counter? Take a break from business, at lunch or breakfast or anytime until 4:00, and see if Don succeeds.
RANEY Downtown
Planning board hears needs of schools
The schools of Law and Education presented Thursday night their reasons for needing new space to a subcommittee of the University Planning Board in the first of several scheduled hearings.
Laurence Blades, dean of law, and Dale Scannell, dean of education, represented their respective schools.
Blades based the Law School's needs on a program of expansion to 750 students. He said this was an "optimal number" for the faculty and student body.
The present enrollment is 300. The plan submitted to the board was for a law building with 100,- 000 square feet of space. Fifty thousand square feet would be used for library and reading room space, 10,000 square feet for administrative and faculty offices and 10,000 square feet for class room space. He said this plan would increase the class room space by more than four times the present space.
Blades said the inadequacies of Green Hall was a "trite story." There were promises of renovating the hall in 1957 and of a new building by 1968 or 1969, he said.
holds 300. Blades predicts an enrollment of 600 by 1975.
Baccalaureate degrees are increasing by about 15 per cent a year and a greater percentage are going to law school, Blades said. Ceilings set by some of the private law schools on the number of students accepted puts pressure on the state schools, Blades said. KU is the only state law school in Kansas.
Blades said the School of Law was now operating on a "first come first serve basis" and said that they had turned down approximately 120 people that might otherwise have been accepted.
The role of a state school should not be as restrictive as the private law schools and its role should be to provide a legal education for at least each native Kansan who shows the potential, Blades said. He said the school was already tightening the requirements to enter the school.
Blades said there was also a need for smaller seminar rooms similar to the Council Room in the Kansas Union and also for cubicles for private reading.
centered around a need for more administrative and faculty space and room for developmental programs, said Scannell.
Scannell said the undergraduate enrollment of the school had tripled and the graduate enrollment had multiplied four times since 1956.
Fourty per cent of all teaching now is done outside Bailey Hall, the School of Education's classroom building. Scannell said class rooms are in use at all times, except for the one class supplied with the video-tapes connected to the KU Medical Center.
The School of Education's needs
Scannell said there was a need to provide an opportunity for pre-student teaching. He said the school needs five teaching stations by the fall of 1971, preferably off campus centers, and a cooperative elementary school to
"CHILI SUPPER" at City Community bldg., Feb. 22nd. Serving 12 noon till 6 p.m. CHILI, CHERRY PIE, and DRINK, only 75c. Served "like you like it" by Jayhawk Kiwonis Club.
install video tapes into classrooms in order for prospective teachers to observe classroom situations. Also needed are a larger number of small class rooms for instructor-student contact, he said.
The average number of square feet per person of office space in
the School of Education is $72_{1 / 2}$ feet, said Scannell, while the standard set by the University is between 100 and 120 square feet per person.
A possible solution to the crowding, suggested Scannell, might be to build an addition to Bailey's northeast corner.
Would you feel at home with the Quakers?
There's nothing mysterious or exclusive about the Society of Friends, and you may find that the Quakers can help you with an approach to religion that you can't find elsewhere. What do they offer?
First, Quakers like to call themselves "seekers." They don't all claim to have found God yet (so they don't have a creed or a fixed set of beliefs), but they do claim that by following Christian principles seven days a week, you will experience very clearly what God's love means, and that this is the way to be at peace with yourself, and with your neighbours.
Second, they offer the "seeker" the companionship of the local Quaker Meeting.
Meetings are held in Danforth Chapel on Jayhawk Blvd., Sundays 10:15-12:00. For information contact:
Robert E. Hinshow, Clerk M. Tread Meeting of the Society of Friends VI 3-9574
JONATHAN ROGERS
Dean
Rutledge
plus
Underground
Films
at
MIDDLE
EARTH
a coffee house
at the union
Feb. 21 & 22
7:30 p.m.
Tickets $1
at SUA Office
If you’d like to sell a Chevy mag wheel to a Ford owner, sell him the one that fits all Chargers.
E-T DIFFERENTIAL COVER
• TWO MODELS FIT ALL GM CARS
• OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE SOON
Increase the appeal of your machine! Cool that oil and show your class with E.T’s exciting deeply finned and polished differential cover. Attractively packaged and on display at your local E.T Mag wheel dealers everywhere.
WHAT KANSAS BUILDS -
BUILDS KANSAS
GREGG TIRE CO.
814 W 23rd
8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Daily
Closed Saturdays at 4:00 p.m.
842-5451
814 W 23
differential cover
music by ETI
12 BOLT STYLE
CO.
Panel discusses news credibility
"News: Believe it or not" was the title of a symposium held Thursday which drew Forrest Boyd, White House correspondent, and Dick Rosenbaum, bureau chief for ABC television in Chicago. They were members of a panel at Baker University at Baldwin which discussed the credibility of news reporting.
Also speaking in the symposium were Carl Larson, a member of the Emergency Committee for a Re-appraisal of U.S. Overseas Information Policies; Willard Walbridge, chairman of the board for the National Association of Broadcasters; and McDill "Huck" Boyd, publisher and chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Speaking first on "News Believability from our Nation's Capitol," Boyd listed several reasons of non-credibility in news coverage.
Boyd said there is a purposeful lack of clarity in statements from the White House. He said reporters might then reach unjustified conclusions from vague statements.
"When President Nixon says 'let me make one thing clear,' look out because it will likely be obscure." Boyd said.
Boyd said there are mistakes within the media itself, such as misleading headlines, unsupported assumptions and instant analysis.
A reporter's ego and conceit, Boyd said, also interferes with accurate news reporting, and he said he was tempted to write a book entitled "Forgive Us Our Press Passes."
Dick Rosenbaum spoke on "News Believability in Saigon and Mayor Daley's Chicago." He said he could be quite critical of reporters in Viet Nam because news reporters there are sometimes inaccurate.
Speaking about the news believability of the "Chicago 8" trial, Rosenbaum said, "Everyone reporting was fed up with the trial."
Oliver senate passes resolution
The Oliver Hall Student Senate passed a resolution Thursday evening which called for either the abolition, reduction or at least re-evaluation of the language requirements for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Bill Sniffen, Shawnee freshman, said.
Sniffen said he hoped other living groups would follow the example and pass similar resolutions.
"It was a circus in the courtroom; it was too bad cameras were not let into the courtroom," Rosenbaum said.
Larson spoke on the role of the United States mass media in shaping attitudes in foreign countries.
"The U.S. image abroad in recent years has suffered a marked decline to perhaps its lowest point in a half century," Larson said.
"The character of the American people is increasingly described as sick, violent, stupid and arrogant."
"I think it is unwise to veil the negative attitudes of foreign nationals as distortions or misperceptions of reality." Larson said.
"In order for the media to respond adequately to criticism and at the same time maintain its credibility, it must give adequate coverage and perhaps more than average coverage to the critic's arguments," Larson said.
From the critics' point of view, he said, the Agnew blast leveled at the mass media could not have come at a better time.
"As I personally remember the events leading up to Agnew's blast," he said, "it seems to me there had been a definite tendency on the part of the media that I was exposed to to present a one-sided, if not out-right biased, representation of Agnew's activities."
McDill "Huck" Boyd, Republican national committeeman from Kansas, said there is an inherent danger of concentration of power in the media.
Boyd said later that the corporate ownership of newspaper chains made it possible for a columnist to be in 500 papers. He said this destroyed the balance of 500 different opinions.
But he said there should be freedom from censorship, and the responsibility for news coverage should be with the reported.
Willard Walbridge spoke on the influence of broadcast news on community events.
He said the effect of the local news media is profound and alerts the people to danger. The news media created community action, he said.
Walbridge said the thesis of the northwest dominance of the news was false and there was no conspiracy among the media.
"The freedoms of the public are one with the freedom of the press and the media." Walbridge said.
The media had established credibility with the public because of their trust of the media and the media's trust of the public, he said.
the
Rimers
of
Eldritch
february 12
february 21
1970—
8:20 P.M.
experi-
mental
theatre
UN4-39
82
PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
10 KANSAN Feb. 20
1970
THE HOLF in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver^9th & III.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Tony's 66 Service
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your
every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
CHERRY PIE SPECIAL
D
Also featuring this week only, "Minnie's Tater Rolls"
FREE CHERRY PIE with any $3 purchase
Lady Eleanor of York
Mon., Feb. 16th thru Sun., Feb. 22nd
Minnie Pearl's Chicken
1730 W.23rd 843-8200
Freshmen will pledge this spring
Rush schedule conforms to new calendar
By ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer
Sorotities are unique living groups because residents choose or are chosen to become their members.
Last month, the first phase of the 1970 sorority rush was held for all eligible freshmen and other interested women. Invitational parties and bidding will take place in March.
Why is sorority rush at such an unusual time this year, and why is there a six week gap dividing the rush period?
Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and president of the Panchellenic Council, discussed some of the aspects of the present sorority rush at the University of Kansas.
Women's rush at KU has operated in the past two years on a plan of sophomore rush. Before
Kopechne transcript impounded
EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI)—A Court clerk from Boston, traveling under state police escort, took custody Thursday of the judge's report and secret transcript of the testimony into Mary Jo Kopechene's death in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's car.
Feb. 20 1970 KANSAN 11
The documents—under an order from the Massachusetts Supreme Court—will remain impounded until it is determined whether a trial will be held.
Christmas this year, the University Senate adopted a new calendar for the school year beginning in Fall, 1970. It became evident that the rush schedule would also have to be moved to an earlier date. In order to avoid cutting into the summer plans of both the house members and the rushes as early as Aug. 15, we decided to hold rush this spring.
The six week gap resulted from the conflicts which arose in scheduling rush for two consecutive weekends.
Are there as many girls participating in sorority rush as in past years?
Yes. There was a significant increase over last year in the number of girls registering for rush.
Approximately how many girls will pledge?
These figures are not available now because we are still evaluating individual house quotas, or the number of openings for the coming year.
How is the sorority system at KU keeping abreast of the times? How is it coping with criticism?
Sororities at KU are very much aware of the questions and criticisms from both within and without. The entire university environment is in a process of change. Sororites are attempting to achieve continued relevance to a generation of students more mature, more responsible, more concerned, and increasingly independent. Neither as individuals nor as organized groups can we afford to blind ourselves to what is happening in society. It is important that sororites take seriously the concept of awareness in their actions.
How do the sororities here compare to other sororites on other campuses?
I don't have the exact statistics to answer this question. I can say,
however, that KU is nationally acknowledged for a very strong sorority system. In terms of numbers of members, we have one of the largest sorority systems in the Midwest. We are interested not so much in comparing Panhellenic to groups on other campuses, but in developing a system which will meet the unique needs of sororities at KU.
I believe the contribution of sororities to the university environment is concentrated in two areas:
What purpose do you feel the sororites serve here at KU? Of what service are they?
KANSAN features
First, the presence of sororities provides one additional alternative for the student when she chooses a place of residence. The student who chooses to live in a sorority is choosing a unique living situation. She elects a small living group, one where some conformity of membership is insured from year to year.
Second, the participation and leadership opportunities within each house offer a viable opportunity with their self government. These skills are hopefully not left in the houses, but carried over into both academic and extra-curricular pursuits on the hill.
What is your impression of the attitudes expressed by the rushhes?
★ Savings Accounts
★ Personalized Checking Accounts
Your University State Bank is here to serve you and can give you the finest service in:
University
State
Bank
Member F.D.I.C.
★ And all other Full-service Banking Facilities
And our bank is the most convenient for the busy college student. Located close to campus, you can take care of your financial needs in no time. Our 3 drive-in windows will take care of your needs quickly and efficiently or if you have the time, stop and visit with us for a while.
Your community minded bank. 955 Iowa. Telephone 843-4700.
Convenience Counts When You Are In A Hurry...
Many girls going through rush are expecting to find in sororites what others are searching for in communes or human relations groups, for example. The concept of community, the affirming of shared values and the rewards of
close interaction are a few reasons. These rushees are very much aware of the sorority as one alternative of several forms of group living. They have been intelligently questioning the values and goals of the sorority.
KU Students Cleaning Headquarters
KU
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities
1029 New Hampshire
Phone 843-3711
Welcome to the Effluent Society
Want to help us do something about it?
We need technically oriented graduates to develop, design and sell the world's most complete line of environmental control equipment.
Our business is helping America breathe. That's quite a challenge. Wherever air contaminants are produced, we control them.
If you're concerned about a future in an industry as vital as life itself, talk with our representative when he visits the campus. He may help you breathe a little easier. American Air Filter Company, Inc., 215 Central Ave., Louisville, Kentucky 40208. An equal opportunity employer.
American Air Filter BETTER AIR IS OUR BUSINESS
AAF
AAF representative will be on campus
February 24,1970
AIR RANGER
Course studies consolidated
Therapy work moved
(4)
Photo by Judy Gerling
A group of occupational therapy students work on individual projects while an instructor looks on. The department of occupational therapy is consolidating classroom work on the Lawrence campus next semester. Leland D. Miller, chairman of the department, expressed the hope that new quarters for the department would be larger than present facilities.
All classroom work for the bachelor of science degree in occupational therapy at the University of Kansas will be consolidated on the Lawrence campus next semester, Leland D. Miller, chairman of the department of occupational therapy, has announced.
The semester of coursework that has been given at the Medical Center will be discontinued this spring and the 15-hour block of courses will be offered on the Lawrence campus, said Miller.
Previously the O.T. students did three years or 91 semester hours of course work on the Lawrence campus, a 15-hour block of courses at the Medical Center, plus 10 months (18 semester hours) of clinical affiliations on a field work basis. Now they will do all of the academic work on the Lawrence campus.
Miller said local medical personnel and treatment facilities will be utilized to cover the needed clinical medicine areas in the curriculum which teaches the student to use activity to raise the
functional level of disabled persons.
For the past nine years the occupational therapy department at KU has had its offices in Sudler Hall, a house located behind the old Alpha Omicron Pi sorority house.
Every safety regulation there is has probably been broken, said Miller. Besides the lack of space, plumbing and heating systems are inadequate and the machinery used in the workshop in the basement creates a fire hazard, he said.
12 KANSAN Feb. 20
1970
The major problem has been a lack of money. Miller estimated that only $1 out of every $5 that financed the department was provided by the state. The rest is funded through federal grants.
Miller is optimistic, however, since the move from the Medical Center will mean a simultaneous move into larger quarters. The new location is not definite yet, but he said he expected to have more than three times the room the department now occupies in Sudler.
The change should permit better integration of the faculty and curriculum, Miller said. He said that at the Medical Center there was less time for undergraduate
studies and facilities were as critical as on this campus, if not more so.
With the change the occupational therapy curriculum will also be expanded to include more consideration of human function in terms of health and the community beyond the pure medical model.
"We bear the responsibility of being leaders in the profession," said Miller. "In education we have to be at the forefront of what is going on in the field."
In the future there will be a closer liaison with the human development and child research department, said Miller. Through this department occupational therapy majors will be in close contact with people with functional problems.
At KU, occupational therapy is a major leading to a B.S. degree, which in this field is a working degree that constitutes a good and early route into a profession, said Miller.
In the expanded curriculum, clinical affiliation centers will be continued to be used widely, said Miller, since "we are anxious to let the students prove themselves." He said, "We presently have students scheduled and training in such places as New York, Hawaii, Alaska and Texas. If a student wants all his clinical experience in Kansas City, we can arrange that, too."
When KU graduates go out into the profession, Miller said, they find they are in the top 5 per cent of their field.
"Therefore, we know we must be doing something right," he said, "but it will be easier with better facilities."
SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 21,
IT'S
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY
CELEBRATION
AT
Sandy's
CHERRY PIES 10c
CHERRY SLUSHES 5c
ACROSS FROM THE
HILLCREST SHOPPING
CENTER
2120 W. 9th
SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 21,
IT'S
Across from Lindley Hall
BREAKFAST COOKS FIGHT IT OUT
Competition among these cooks is great as they fight for the right to satisfy your individual tastes. And we all know that through competition better products are made available. Our french toast toaster is continuously trying to make her french toast better than our egg fryer's eggs. Come for breakfast between 7:00 and 10:00 A.M. and help decide the final outcome. Each cook will appreciate your order. Whatever your choice, it has to be good. The captain says so.
THE
CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Our egg fryer, french toast toaster, hash browns browner, hammy ham cooker, and even our pancakes pancake-maker desire to introduce you to their individual breakfast specialty at the "Captain's Table."
Use Kansan Classified
Washington's Birthday SALE
Washington's Birthday SALE
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21 ONLY
188 Pairs!
Men's Reg. to $10.98
PERMA-PRESS
CASUAL
SLACKS
$3.00
Sizes 29 to 38
About 50 Pairs!
Men's Reg. to $16.95
8-INCH
LACE BOOTS
$5.00
All Remaining
Men's Reg. to $30.00
PILE-LINED
BUSH COATS
$10.00
About 100 Here!
Reg. to $10.95
ASSORTED
LIGHTWEIGHT
JACKETS
$1.00
(These Will Appeal
to Gals!)
Entire Stock
Men's Reg. $1.19
POCKET
T-SHIRTS
77c
Entire Stock
Men's Reg. $4.98
UMBRELLAS
$2.00
Many, many more great values not mentioned in this ad!
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
740 Massachusetts
1974
Photo by Ron Bishop
Angel flight pledges twenty coeds
Front row from left to right: Elizabeth Pendarvis, Riverforset Ill. sophomore; Lynne Kraus, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Lynne White, Overland Park sophomore. Second row: Vall Belcore, New York, N.Y. sophomore; Peggy Herman, Wichita sophomore. Third row: Susan Daniels, Overland Park sophomore; Janet Kloster, Kansas City sophomore. Fourth row: Rayna Lancaster, Lawrence freshman; Carol Notdhurft, Prairie Village freshman; Kyle Thomas, Shawnee Mission freshman. Fifth row: Susan Harper, Bloomington, Ill. freshman; Mary Meisinger, Wichita sophomore; Chris Renn, Wellington sophomore. Sixth row: Sheila Bracken, Carthage Mo. freshman; Claudia Dale, Shawnee Mission, freshman, Jo Ann Jennings, Oakley freshman. Seventh row: Debby Roscoe, Salina freshman; Cathy Whitney, Topeka sophomore. Eighth row: Valerie Amend, Overland Park freshman; Nancy Nurberger, Indianapolis, Ind. sophomore.
Feb. 20
1970 KANSAN 13
bos
Hey senores, try the Super Shef soon.
It's a delicious meal in itself.
— 100% Pure Beef —
9th & Iowa St.
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF
- 100% Pure Beef -
9th & Iowa St.
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF
Local artist opens exhibit with reception
A former KU student will open an art exhibition with a reception from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday in the Episcopal Church, 1923 Vermont.
Mrs. Herta Galton, 1333 New Hampshire, will have her oil paintings, priced from $75 to $400, on display in the church lobby for the next 30 days.
A native of Vienna, Austria,
Mrs. Galton studied art in Vienna from 1956 to 1962. In 1962,
after her husband accepted a teaching position at KU, Mrs.
Galton and her two children came to Lawrence.
From 1962 until 1966, she was a special student in drawing and painting at KU.
Her first exhibition in Lawrence was in 1965 at the Lawrence Jewish Center. Since then, her work has been displayed in the Kansas Student Union, Lawrence Memorial Hospital and various churches in the community.
She is now teaching art at the Lawrence Park and Recreation Center, as well as giving private art lessons.
Dorms Fraternities
Sororities
order together and save
at the Hole-in-the-Wall
5% discount on $10 orders
10% discount on $20 orders
offer good through February
WE DELIVER 843-7685
THE HOLE in the WALL
9th & III.
Jawhawk Food Mkt.
THE HOLE in the WALL 9th & III. Jawhawk Food Mkt.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Bass
WEEJUNS
Basi
GO WHERE THE ACTION IS!
Go smartly and comfortably . .
in genuine hand sewn Bass Weejuns $ moccasins.
No other casuals have quite the same look, that
happy blend of contemporary styling and real moccasin comfort.
So join the crowd . . . pick out your favorite Weejuns $ today!
Antique tan—other styles in tans and brown.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
Dean Rutledge artist
UNDERGRAVE MOVIE
middle
sba earth
Dean Rutledge
artist
UNDERGRAVE MOVIE
middle
sba earth
Photo by Ron Bishop
Folk artist at Middle Earth
Sandwich boards were carried by Bob Johnson, Shawnee Mission junior and Fred Mayer, St. Louis sophomore, around the campus yesterday advertising Dean Rutledge, a folk artist, who will be appearing tonight and Saturday night at the Middle Earth along with an underground movie sponsored by the SUA.
Scholarship fund increases
To help meet the rising cost of living in residence halls the Greater University Fund Scholarship has been raised from $350 to $400 a semester for the 1970-71 school year, said Robert Billings, director of student financial aid.
Billings said there was a "decrease of 12 to 15 per cent in the
number of the $400 scholarships available because the amount of money to be used for the scholarships remained constant. Billings said the "current funds were already committed for the 1970-71 term, and Sunday was the last day to apply.
14 KANSAN Feb. 20
1970
Deadlines for national defense student loan funds are April 15 for the Summer Language Institute and Junior Year Abroad programs, May 1 for the 1970 summer session and June 1 for 'the 1970 fall semester.
How To Get
eJI protein
DR BELAKEAST
Your Dr. Breakfast Injection
Come to the "Captain's Table" for your quick Dr. Breakfast injection. Choose your own medicine from our menu of eggs, bacon, sausage, french toast, hash browns, pancakes, and more. All are individually priced so make up your own combination. Without a good breakfast, up is down, good is bad, in is out. We all know the "going-without-breakfast" feeling. At the Captain's Table prices are quite reasonable and quality will not be sacrificed. Even our bacon doesn't shrivel up!
Dr. Breakfast will be at the Captain's Table from 7:00 to 10:00 A.M. Come in and get your breakfast injection. (It doesn't hurt!)
THE
CAPTAINS TABLE
Across the street from Lindley Hall
Recent findings may cause changing of recent history
Trentio area, then under Austrian control, would be given to her. She entered the war after Britain, France and Russia agreed that this area, as well as parts of what became Yugoslavia, would be Italy's.
Modern Italian history may have to be rewritten because of a recent discovery of new information on World War I in Italy by Benjamin F. Brown, assistant professor of history at the University of Kansas.
President Woodrow Wilson refused to let Yugoslavia be cut up after the war. This blow to national pride forced Sonnino out of public life and gave rise to the national desires that Benito Mussolini exploited in World War II, Brown said.
Brown discovered information showing behind-the-scenes maneuvering that eventually brought Italy into the war in 1915 on the side of the Entente powers (Allies).
While studying the life of Baron Sidney Sonnino, a little known diplomat from Italy, for a dissertation in history, Brown
discovered that certain of his papers had been removed from his home after his death and returned to the family estate.
With the permission of the present Baron, Brown examined the papers. They showed that Italy was negotiating with her Triple Alliance partners, Germany and Austria-Hungary, and the Entente members, Britain, France and Russia.
The papers showed that Italy's decision to enter the war on the allied side was because Austria refused to tell her what compensations in territory Italy could expect. Italy hoped that the
The monetary unit in Yugoslavia is the dinar.
Santa Fe
SANTA FE RAILWAY
will interview students at the UNIVERSITY of KANSAS
Friday, February 27, 1970 to Review
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Santa Fe is a transportation company serving the southwest by rail, truck and pipeline. We have substantial interests in oil, lumber, uranium, coal, real estate and other enterprises, too.
If you would like more information about a career with Santa Fe where the only limit to your future is your desire, ability and effort. arrange for an on-campus interview. We want to talk with you.
Santa Fe offers career opportunities in these departments: Accounting, Finance, Cost Analysis, Railway Operations, Market Research, Real Estate and Industrial Development.
We are looking for individuals with Masters degrees in Accounting, Quantitative Methods, Business Administration, Transportation and Marketing or Bachelors degrees in Transportation, Real Estate and Statistics.
Schedule your interview with the University Placement Office and ask for brochure featuring Santa Fe career opportunities.
G-MD
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the vertical column are credited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Recording tape for sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Ed.
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Silvertone guitar amp, with speaker cabinet. Has tremolo, reverb, and a foot pedal. $250 only. One year old. 1881. Call Bill, B443, aver five, .4-20
Boyfriend drafted: need to sell Craig 4-track tape player. Car or home unit.
Only four months old. Good condition.
Call 842-5088. 2-20
Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Become a collector,
or just buy a few for the Easter
season. Museum of Natural History Gift Shop collects them from all over the world. Open weekdays, 8:30 to 4:30.
Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 2-20
Typewriters--big selection ... rental
purchase plan available. Office sup-
le and furniture. Xerox service.
Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass.
843-3644.
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-deer hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 engine, power brakes, low ground, air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-8002. 2-23
TR-4, original owner. Red-black top-wire wheels. Good condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Arbath. Judson ignition. Bendix electric fuel pump and Driving light. Manuals, detailed service history. 843-6559. 2-23
1959 Chevy, automatic, very good mechanical condition, clean inside,
new tires. $240 or best offer. Call John, 843-6804. 2-24
Magnavox deluxe 5" spool tape recorder sold here $290.00 with many cassette tape bargains at Ray Stoneback's downtown. Open Mon. and Wed., night 9-5pm.
1963 Chevy, power 4-door sedan. V-8 automatic. Power steering, radio, good cooler, good mechanical cooler starts in cold. Call Bob. 842-6023 after 6:00. 2-24
'65 Karmann Ghia, dark red, rebuilt engine and transmission. Good interior. Reasonable. Call 842-1267, ask for Jerry. 2-24
1963 Oldmobile F-85 Cullass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket reeats;
storage and runs easily;
cennelly; mechanically perfect. 2-24
$500. 843-958-306
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street, the most convenient to campus
us
University State Bank
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
Rock
HIXON STUDIO
Boo Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Bob Blank, Owner
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today 814 Iowa
ski boots, 9 very good condition.
offer. Call after 2 time. m43-9185 - 2-14
Call after 2 time. m43-9185 - 2-14
Motorcycle ~500 c.c. single Matchless.
paint. $200 or best offer
8596
2-20
Old fur coats and capes for sale. Fox, muskrat, seal, otter, motton, lamb. $10-$40. Also other strange clothes. 1618 Tenn. #A, $42-6810. 2-24
Gold and silver things by Xom
Earthy, organic; rings, wedding sets,
and all other forms of body ornament.
Reasonable. Call 842-6120. 2-24
Fender Bassman amp. Gibson Thunderbird bass. 842-7641, 2-25
Biggest car bargain in town. '53 Plymouth with 4 new tires, new 3-string battery, new points and plugs. Runs well. $100. Call 642-843-3466. ins. 2-25
Capitol Component Stereo System. 50 watt amplifier with speakers. Inputs: 8-track, phono, auxiliary. Two speaker sets and headphone outputs. Separate treble and bass controls. $75. Call Charlie. 843-9569. 2-25
1964 MG Midget, good condition. $695.
843-0495. 2-25
TYPEWRITER: Olivetti-Underwood portable with case. Excellent condition. Good for themes, papers, etc.
$35.00. Call 842.945 after 5:00. 2-23
Large, comfortable single bed. $20.
Call 843-7504 after 5 o'clock. 2-25
Topsy's just received room-size 21 gallon containers, one's filled with caramel, cinnamon, cheese or plain popcorn. Makes studying real corny.
1961 Chevrolet Impala. Good shape, good tires. Have rebuilt a foreign car and must sell this one. Inquire 842-1275 after 6 p.m. 2-20
One Eisenbaby baby; one Cosco play-
ing card; one Cosco play-
ing condition, 842-8503,
842-8503
Chrome reversed 15-inch Chevy
wheels, 843-417 Ask for John. 2-26
WANTED
Wanted: One bass player who sings; one guitarist who sings and any verbiage; one vocalist interested in organizing a progressive rock band with excellent drummer skills; all original material. Call Chuck, 843-5645. anytime or Rocky, 843-5645. 2-20
Need one coed roommate to share completely furnished apartment by three other girls. Ready a rent cell. In three other rooms. Reasonable at 842-4729. Perky, Keray. at 842-4729.
Coed needs two girls to share fur-
eal room. Except water, Call Cindy. B42-8467
Male roommate needed for Crescent Heights two-bedroom apt. Swimming pool and air conditioning, Available March 1. Call 842-5859. 2-23
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Organist /singer for established local
garden. Jazz; rock; pop 842-848, 2-24
Amiable boarder to share furnished apartment—$20 per week—includes all utilities except long distance phone calls. Ideal location. Cigarette smokers need not apply. Call 843-6671 after 10 p.m. 2-23
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you can some home to-quee, if you can't get some, get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. IV - P 510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if V - P 511.
NOTICE
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-13
Fyre boots, fringle jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
snow boots, purses,
barrettes, dog collars—at 812 Mass.
PRIMARILY LEATHER. 3-2
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^2$; Mass. St. Sebastian, old and folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service.
Rallye-Hare and Hounds type. February 21, 1970. Saturday night, Malls first car off 7:30. Rallye Master Chris Patterson. Information, 842-5470, 2-23
All Outward Bound alumni call 842-7399 about an Outward Bound promotional forum in early March. Ask for Norm.
2-20
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade leather. Your own to choose design. Your own. PRIMARILY LEATHER. 812 Mass. 3-2
Railroad or model railroad enthusiasts interested in forming club or just boll sessions contact 842-6600. Ask for John Wegner in Room 758. 2-24
Interested in running for a Student Senate position? If you are interested in help and willing to fill a responsible role, call 842-3517 after 6.00 p.m.
- 2125
At the Captain's Table we serve good food to all the students all the time, from lunch until dinner. Time. Open from 7 a.m., until 2:30 a.m. Across from Lindley Hall. 2-23
Need an active voice in University affairs? Think responsibility!!!! Vote Bill Ebert-Greg Thomas — The Alliance. March 17-18. 2-25
Le Blond and Hertz (Ju Cr. Inc),
"The Day of the Pig, Sat., Feb.
26."
PERSONAL
TEXACO
Thank you for your patience! The Museum of Natural History Gift Shop is almost through re-stocking its inventory with interesting new items. Open weekdays 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 2-20
TEXACO
W. 9th
Student specials
New, experienced manage
★ Open 7 p.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
Up with student action—up with student voice—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert-Thomas—The Alliance. 2-25
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011² Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. tf
Gregarious? So are we at the Captain's Table. We enjoy serving the captain and the guests in lunch, and dinners. Come in today. Across from Lindley Hall. 2-23
TYPING
Open government for all students
Open action for all Valeans Valeans
Expert Team - The Alliance. 7-45
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work VI 3-2818. Mrs. Ruckman,
Experienced typist will type term papers, manuscripts, thesis, dissertations, other academic typing have expertise in typewriting and an acumen. Call 842-3789, after 5 p.m. 2-20
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis, themes, misc. Contact Kathy Grey, 710 Randall Road, 842-6189. 2-20
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxl. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- pies, paperwriter, pen writer Pica type. Competent service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-14
LOST
Typing. Theses, papers. Experienced.
Involved in English language
necessary English corrections. English
teacher. M.S. degree. Also English tu-
tutor. Reasonable. 842-9249. 2-20
One lady's dark green billfold—between Union and Balley. Need desperately! Call 843-4010 after 5 p.m. 2-20
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Typing. IBM Electric, Pica Type. Service.
843-1386. 2-24
843-1386. 2-24
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc.
Hurry to Henry's
V
6th & Mo. VI 13-2139
'COUNTRY-FIED' CHICKEN
Call in or Carry Out
Minnie Pearl's
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
VI 3-8200
1730 W 23rd, Lawrence, Kan.
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
For the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
New York Cleaners
Table Tops
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
- Balsa Wood
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Stretcher Frames
- Decoupage Materials
- Oils and Acrylics
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
1741 Hill Manager Apartments
1741 W. 19th, APT. SB, 842-8220
- Balsa Wood Bankmark Services
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
844 E.13th VI 3-3877
FOR RENT
LOW SUMMER RATES
Now showing afternoons at College
2-23
Availability now, furnished room, furnished or unfurnished 2 bedroom apartment. Very large, fully carpeted, plenty of storage space. Most utilities paid including central heat and air conditioning. Located from location on campus business. Lunette facilities, outdoor pool, off-street parking.
Consulleurs wanted for Camp Sonersee
for girls and Camp Cobbossee for
men. The consulresses, some of
skilled in camp activities, last 21
years of age preferably with previous
training. Some consulresses are
located in the State of Maine.
Positions available in all departments.
Full details to Camp Office.
East 57th Street, New York, New
10022
2-24
SERVICES OFFERED
Part-time sales representative to sell Adventures in Success," personal development and client relations. Must be strongly interested in own personal development and invest in own AIS program and sales management commission. Call 8877 after 5 p.m. 2-20
IF YOU need repairs, we need you!
more than the competition. PERFOR-
MANCE ENTERPRISES, 317 N. 2nd
and all poplars. All poplars and sports cars.
2-25
McConnell Lumber
USED BOOKS-READ and TRADE. Buy, sell, trade used paperback books: Educational, Science Fiction, Novels, Romance, Westerns, Comics, Playboy furniture 934 Mass. Book 843-2736. No boasting 25,000 books.
Going to summer school? Nice 2-bedroom apartment to sub-let at Gatehouse for the summer. Inquire 842-5631 after 7 p.m. 2-20
Your KU 1.D. is worth $1.00 off on
Group Tax, Taxi 1.51% Mass. $4.00 up and off.
Taxi 1.51% Mass. $4.00 up and off.
Luxurious studio apt. (quiet!) at Town Manor. Furnished, a.a. steam heat, parking, single occupancy. Professor or mature student. 843-8000.
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Vote bans federal busing
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House and Senate voted Thursday to ban federally ordered busing despite liberal protests that the South was putting the country "on the road back to segregation."
The votes came on separate bills, and on differently worded proposals. But both barred the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) from requiring busing to integrate schools.
The House, adopting amendments to a new $19.3 billion HEW and Labor Department appropriations bill also voted to legalize "freedom of choice" school assignment plans.
Neither the Senate nor House amendments, even if signed into law, would stop federal courts from requiring busing.
The Supreme Court has ruled that busing is necessary in some Southern districts to overcome the effects of unconstitutional school segregation.
But both were designed to stop HEW from forcing any busing as part of the desegregation plans it requires before granting federal school aid funds.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., said the Senate amendment would tell HEW, "If it's all black it stays all black, and if it's all white it stays all white."
The Senate amendment was approved by voice vote, after an even tougher antibusing amendment was defeated, 49 to 36. The Senate also killed, 58 to 24, a Southern amendment guaranteeing every child the right to attend the school nearest his home.
On Wednesday, the Senate adopted a Southern sponsored amendment requiring the same
school desegregation rules for both North and South.
Support by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., was largely credited for the victory.
Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., hailed that vote as "a landmark," the South's first civil rights victory since 1954 and the start of a "change in direction."
Thursday, Sen. John O. Pastore, D-R.I., like Ribicoff a longtime civil rights champion, joined with Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., in sponsoring the antibusing amendment.
Federal law already prohibits federally ordered busing "to overcome racial imbalance," but Ervin complained that "we have passed three times statutes about racial imbalance and HEW pays no attention to them."
At Pastore's suggestion, Ervin added the words, "Or alter racial composition" of any public school. It passed by voice vote, with Javits protesting the two days of Southern victories were putting the nation "on the road back to segregation."
The Senate amendments were adopted to a four year, $35 billion school aid bill. They face a House-Senate conference committee. The House amendments, worded differently and attachd to different legislation, face Senate action.
The House antibusing provision was a "freedom of choice" rider and didn't even mention race. It forbade the government from ordering any child to ride a bus to school against his parents' wishes.
The House action came on a nonrecorded 145-122 vote to reject an effort to nullify the busing and freedom of choice language contained in a new $19.3 million appropriation bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare.
Rep. Jeffery Cohalan, D-Calif,
sought to nullify the busing and
freedom of choice language by
inserting a clause that "except
as required by the constitution."
which would have made the provisions inoperable.
Inserted in the bill by Rep. Jamie L. Whitten, two provisions specify that no money in the bill could be used to force school busing and that no federal funds could be withheld to force a school district to accept a desegregation plan.
Then the House affirmed on a voice vote another provision by Rep. Charles R. Jonas, R-N.C., that would ban the government from drafting any plans that would prevent a student from attending the school of his choice. This would restore the "freedom of choice" plans once used in the South but now outlawed by the courts.
The Senate, however, defeated 49 to 36 an amendment to an aid-to-education bill to prohibit federal courts and agencies from requiring busing of students "to alter the racial composition of the student body at any public school."
Then it tabled—in effect killed—an amendment guaranteeing every child the right to attend the school nearest home. That vote was 58 to 24.
The House action came as it passed 315 to 81 and sent to the
Senate, the big education and welfare money bill that is still $324 million above President Nixon's request, thus inviting a second veto.
Members rejected 189 to 205 a Republican move for a 2.5 per cent cut in the bill's total despite a warning from GOP leader Gerald Ford that rejection virtually assures another veto.
An administration spokesman warned earlier that removal of the authority would invite another veto just as occurred to the original $19.7 billion measure last month because it provided $1.3 billion more for HEW than Nixon had requested.
BIG CHILI FEED . . . City Community Building, 12 noon Hill 6 p.m. Sunday, February 22nd. CHILI PIE, and DRINK, only 75c. Serving, the Jayhawk Kiwanis Club.
7-11 7-11 48c Special
Good thru Sun., Feb. 22
Good thru Sun., Feb.22 Ham Sand., Chips and 7-11 Pop
Bologna 39c/1/2 lb.
Ham 69c/1/2 lb.
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Shultz criticizes Velvel
TOPEKA (UPI)—A KU law professor who took part Tuesday in a student protest against Chicago Judge Julius Hoffman, was singled out for criticism Thursday by State Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence.
Shultz, a consistent critic of student protesters at the University, urged the Kansas Bar Association to disbar professor Lawrence Velvel, who, he said, denounced Judge Julius Hoffman before a crowd of students in front of the KU Law School Tuesday.
16 KANSAN Feb.20 1970
Sen. Lester Arvin, R-Rose Hill, said he thought it "is a shame that he can come to our state . . . teach our young people law . . . almost incite a riot . . . and draw more salary than our district iudges."
"If this continues, I for one am going to be forced to vote against appropriations bills for higher education," Arvin said.
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If You've Been Waiting for the Payoff,
Here It Is!
Lawrence Merchants Offer Up To $150.00 In Discounts With The Lawrence JAYCEES' Coupon Booklet. It's A Horn Of Plenty Priced At Only $5.00.
The Lawrence JAYCEES have organized a coupon booklet ideal for the community and the student. It offers you $150.00 in valuable discounts at 35 stores ranging from food service to recreation. The proceeds will go towards the JAYCEES Community Projects. If you go out to eat often, this booklet is ideal for you, offering you a discount at 18 of your favorite eating places. A few of them are:
Pizza Hut Burger Chef Minnie Pearl's Sandy's
The discount booklet is on sale at these locations:
Douglas County State Bank
First National Bank
University State Bank
Bell's Music Co.
14th Street Barber Shop
Erling's Gift Shop
Shakey's
Taco Grande
Burger Hut
King's Food Host
Or order by mail with this Coupon:
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Chancellor orders inquiry
Shultz attacks Velvel
The Kansas Board of Regents has asked Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. to give them a report on the speech made last Tuesday by Lawrence Velel, associate professor of law, to a group of 250 people gathered as part of a protest against the
THE GUINEA IS THE COPERNICIAN
Velvel
Chicago conspiracy trial.
The Chancellor asked Lawrence Blades, dean of the KU Law School, to make an inquiry into Velvel's talk in the wake of a call by Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence,
that Velvel be fired for participating in the protest.
The major parts of Velvel's speech were:
- An attack upon the courtroom process by Judge Julius Hoffman.
- The oppression of radicals in a historical context of judicial oppression of blacks, of labor, of persons caught in the Selective Service process and of business, by not granting awards for good will in eminent domain cases.
- An attack on the use of contempt citations by Judge Hoffman. Velvel contended that the judge evaded a six-month limit on contempt sentences, without a trial, by combining in a consecutive sentence many terms of less than six months.
- The attempt of the government to break down lawyers who defend radicals. Velvel used the contempt
sentences handed out in the Chicago trial, other sentences, threats and warnings to lawyers from bar groups as evidence which might support the contention.
Velvel said he had not broken any law, adding that he had presented his professional opinion and exercised his right of free speech before the group Tuesday.
In response to the attack from Shultz, Velvel said that he had become unpopular with Shultz as a result of his participation as defense counsel in disciplinary hearings last year for persons accused of disrupting the Chancellor's Review of ROTC and his lawsuit against the President attacking the constitutionality of the Vietnam war.
"I personally would welcome an open hearing with Shultz," Velvel said. "They have no case. I have
spoken from my professional and academic responsibility. My view is that they are trying to purge me because they don't agree with my views," Velvel said.
In response to Velvel, Shultz said, "I don't think a faculty member should encourage people to demonstrate. Not in an area where there is a possibility of trouble."
Shultz said he believed the instructor was entitled to voice his opinions in a classroom but not out in public under circumstances where a riot might develop.
In answer to Velvel's proposal of an open hearing, Shultz said, "I don't think I owe him anything. He owes a lot to the state of Kansas. If I debated everybody that disagreed with me, I wouldn't have time to do anything else."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 84 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, Feb. 23, 1970
Regents approve new hall
Plans for the construction of Wescoe Hall were approved Friday by the Kansas Board of Regents in Topeka. The proposed construction of the $8 million humanities building was outlined earlier in the day by KU Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers.
Other KU building projects were also discussed by Chalmers. They included the Kansas Geological Survey Building, Nune-maker College and several other renovation projects.
Chalmers outlined the funding arrangement decided in a vote of the KU Student Senate Wednesday night. In that decision, the Senators voted to tax students $7.50 a semester and $4 per summer session to finance the construction of the humanities building. The student fee increase would pay for $2.5 million of the
total amount needed to finance the structure.
Chalmers also informed the board of three stipulations which the student senate attached to the fee agreement. Those stipulations include;
- A request for student representation in the selection of architects for future KU buildings.
- One-third student representation on all future KU building constructions.
- Elimination of student fees as a source of financing the construction of academic buildings at KU in the future.
Regarding the stipulations, A. H. Cromb, regent from Mission Hills, said the present board could not bind future boards or the legislature to any elements of the stipulations.
Chalmers later said the first request for student voice in the choice of architects is not in the
Regents' jurisdiction. The State Architect has a list of qualified architects for a project and chooses from them. Any student voice in the selection would have to be approved by the Governor, he said.
Chalmers said the second and third requests can be met within the University. He said he was in support of student participation in building committees, and would try to see that this happens in the future.
The next and final step of the funding proposal is sending it to the legislature. If the proposal is approved there, final designs will be worked out an drawings will be created for the construction of the building.
Chalmers said the official name of the new building will be Wescoe Hall, which maintains a tradition of naming buildings after former chancellors.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Humphrey urges refusal
WASHINGTON—Former Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey says Judge G. Harrold Carswell should never have been nominated to the Supreme Court and urges the Senate refuse to confirm him.
"This is nothing personal," Humphrey said Sunday, "I just think that the court requires not only those who have an absence of conflict of financial matters, but also those who have an absence of conflict of interest on ideological, philosophical, or should I say racial matters."
Resumption of flights urged
JERUSALEM—Prime Minister Golda Meir asked the ambassadors of 16 nations today to help stop attacks against Israel-bound jetliners and to urge seven airlines to resume cargo flights to Tel Aviv.
The mysterious 47-death crash of one Israel-bound plane Saturday and the non-fatal bombing of another carrying mail for Tel Aviv prompted seven of the 12 airlines serving the Jewish state to suspend, temporarily or indefinitely, shipments of freight or mail to Israel.
(Continued to page 12)
Awbrey severs ISP ties
At a crucial Independent Student Party (ISP) platform meeting Sunday night in Wesley Foundation, Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president withdrew his support from the party.
The schism stemmed from Awbrey's dislike of the party's preliminary platform. "What is our identity?" he asked, "anybody could run on this platform."
Heated debate followed as Awbrey advocated a controversial, radical platform while Peter George, Tuck-ahoe, N.Y., law student and ISP student body presidential candidate contended the new platform to be "pragmatic and meeting the needs of KU."
In beginning the meeting, Buzz Fisher, Dodge City, junior and ISP campaign manager, asked for any reaction to the platform when Awbrey broke in, "I don't like it. It's
political rhetoric. Anyone could run on this platform. Why even run candidates if there are not any distinct issues?"
The original ISP strategy George stated, relied on releasing several briefly outlined points relating to relevant campus topics. This would be followed he said by "position papers," concisely explaining those and additional points. The explanation however did not suit Awbrey.
Awbrey said, "This platform isn't controversial like last years'. People will pick this up and throw it down saying blah! Our platform should be a statement of definite, idealogical emotional terms."
Fisher then countered saying ISP had to deal with the problems at KU.
"All right. All right!" Awbrey said, in reference to the platform, "What about education? You only
George said, "You don't want to put all your cards on the table the first day. You fill in the gaps later. You make the foundation first and then complete the structure. You have to show the people you have been thinking and developing your ideas all along."
"It's crap!" Awbrey said. "Look, I'll write a platform."
devote six lines in here to education. Academics is the most important issue we have!"
"Twenty people put this together," Fisher yelled, "and you're not going to tear it apart."
It was finally agreed that the platform needed revision but Fisher warned, "We're working against time.
Awbrey at this point felt he had not gotten his point across. "Look," he pleaded, "Politics isn't rational—it's emotional—no one in this election
is taking a stand on anything controversial. All I'm asking it let's take a stand! Let's tell them (the students) we're going to hit them where it hurts. Then they will get excited and concerned."
George agreed with Abbrey's reasoning but not his methodology. He said, "We need to start out at a certain level and then build up to something vibrant, something dynamic."
They'll be asleep by then, Peter," Awbrey said.
After the meeting, the question was asked of Awbrey if he would continue to support ISP.
"No I won't," he said, "I can't, I can't when one party will win over the other merely because of personalities. We have to come face to face with the issues. These parties are only for the purpose of electing a group of individuals, and are not concerned about issues."
Nicholas and Mark.
Photo by Judy Gerling
'Pull yourself together,' I said . . .
It's not every day that you see someone legging it down Jayhawk Boulevard quite like the man on the right is. But when you do, do you ever have the guts to ask him what he is doing?
Gov. Robert Docking would like third term
Kansas Gov. Robert Docking said Saturday night at a Democratic party fund-raising dinner that he would like to seek a third term as governor.
Docking made the remark before a group of 800 persons at the $25-a-plate dinner. He said if he sought a third term he would campaign on the record his administration established in its first two terms.
However, Docking did not say he had decided to run again. He said that wishes of his family, the advice and counsel of aides and other factors will determine whether he seeks re-election.
He said, "We (the Democrats) have operated state government on this basis: If you cannot afford it, don't buy it."
Docking accused the Kansas Republicans of running the state like an expensive car. "In the past it has been acceptable to the Republicans to operate the state government like it was a plush luxury automobile—a lot of chrome and consuming gas at the rate of 12 miles to the gallon.
"We disagree. In the past three years we have stripped off the chrome and what we hope are the unessentials—and now it is operating like an economy car and getting a lot better mileage."
No Kansas governor has ever served three consecutive two-year terms. The last to try it was Docking's father, the late George Docking, who was unsuccessful in 1960.
Youth camps in Germany offer summer opportunities
If you would like to spend a summer in Europe, but feel you cannot really afford the trip, or if you are the kind of person who thinks that summer vacation is too long and you get tired of doing nothing, then you may be interested in the summer program offered by Aufbauwerk der Jugend (Constructive Youth Work) of Germany.
Joachim Wieler, graduate student in social work from Germany, says there are more opportunities for American students to go to Europe than students are aware of.
Wieler has worked for Aufbauwerk der Jugend for two winters in arranging summer camps. The organization arranges three week summer camps all over Germany.
Participants in the camps are engaged in social work for 35 hours a week, usually divided into seven hours a day Monday through Friday. This work provides for room and board, and health, accident and liability insurance for the entire camp period. Camp participants only have to pay for the trip to and from Germany and a registration fee of from five to ten dollars.
Freshman President Steve Hix said Thursday he would run for the Student Senate this spring, and that he would try to get support to organize a campaign for campus environmental cleanup.
Hix to support campus clean-up
Wieler believes the camps are an excellent opportunity to get acquainted with another culture. He said it was action in terms of social engagement and it gave a person a chance to judge another country by more than "its famous drinks and its 'strange' sanitary facilities."
Hix said he had discussed his plan with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., who said he would support the project 100 per cent.
Hix said his first intention was to organize an environmental protest march in Kansas City, but that Chalmers suggested to start here on campus and then expand the program if it gained support.
It is not necessary to be able to speak German, Wieler said.
He said students who want to work in hospitals and children's day homes where communication with patients is necessary, will have to speak German, but that there are plenty of opportunities in other fields for people who do not speak German.
The camps will be arranged from the beginning of June until
the beginning of September. Participants must be between the ages of 16 and 25, Wieler said a visa is not requested, only a passport. The final camp lists will not be available until the end of March, but persons who are interested may write for an application form now to: Aufbauerwerk der Jugend, 355 Marsh Lahn, Frankfurter Strasse 21, Germany. For more information, contact Joachim (Joe) Wieler at 843-6282.
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Butterfly habits subject of study
Orley R. Taylor, associate professor of entomology at the University of Kansas, is working on a project to unravel the mystery of the sulphur butterfly's mating habits.
Taylor, an ecologist and evolutionist, said he hoped to see how the natural selection process works in the elimination of mating between two different species.
There are two species of the sulphur butterfly, Taylor said. Normally, the butterflies of one species will mate only with others from its own species.
But, Taylor said, during the first hour of the female's life, she will mate with a male from the opposite species. As the female, he said, grows older, she will become more discriminating and mate with males from its own species.
The males, however, are not so discriminating all through their lives. Failure of the females to select proper mates, combined with mating of the males with either species may, Taylor said, be the reason for this hybridization or inter-specie mating.
2 KANSAN Feb. 23
1970
Taylor said he also wanted to see just how fast this process of natural selection to eliminate hybridization took place. His long-range goal is to determine a model that can be used to predict a change in the population due to this hybridization.
Most of Taylor's work is done in Arizona and the Midwest, where the population of the common and familiar yellow butterflies is most abundant. His most important work is done in the field where this process of elimination of hybridization can be better studied. In this way, Taylor said, he can show whether the theories of selection can be proven or disproven.
The idea of hybridization, Taylor said, can be easily seen in the example of mating of horses and donkeys, the end product being the mule. The only problem with hybridization, he said, is that the offspring is normally inferile.
To facilitate Taylor's laboratory work, he has developed a new agar-based food that can allow him to grow the butterflies indoors, a feat which has been difficult to do in the past.
Taylor has been working on this project intensively for three years and said it would probably occupy him for the next 10 years.
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EDSELL
Photo by Randy Leffingwell
First Edsel owners in Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Sanders stand behind their 1958 Edsel. Mrs. Sanders is secretary of the Heart of America Edsel Club, which met Sunday at the Sanders' home. The 22-member blub is a branch of the nation-wide Edsel Owners of America. The national club, organized last year, has a membership of more than 800.
New drug may be used on poisoning victims
EL PASO, Tex. (UPI)—Physicians treating two children and a young woman poisoned by a mercury compound in pork may try a drug used by Harvard Medical School with "gratifying results" in another mercury poisoning case.
The three children are Dorothy Jean Huckleby, about 20; her sister, Ernestine, 8, and her brother, Amos Charles, 13, of Alamogordo, N.M., about 100 miles west of El Paso.
They are being treated in an El Paso hospital for a poison case that has no known parallel. Dorothy Jean now understands conversation and responds. The other two are blind, largely comatose and still in critical condition.
Physicians at Harvard once used a drug called N-acetyl DL penicillamine in a mercury poisoning case unlike that of the Huckleby children.
The Hucklebys' physicians want to study the application of the drug before deciding whether to use it. It may be the younger children's only hope.
Without a previous case to serve as a landmark, physicians fear that the damage to the children's bodies and brains is irreparable.
They will be kept in the El Paso hospital until physicians decide whether to use the new drug. If they decide in favor of the drug, it will be administered in El Paso
If the physicians decide against the drug, Dorothy Jean will be sent to a rehabilitation hospital in Roswell, N.M. Ernestine and Amos Charles will be returned to Alamogordo for nursing care in a hospital.
A recent television news program showed Amos Charles grimacing horribly with his mouth. Physicians said however, he usually is comatose and "just lies there." He has occasional periods of agitation for which they give him drugs. His sister Ernestine "just lies there . . . very quiet."
Their father, Ernest Huckleby,
a janitor in the Alamgordo
Feb. 23 KANSAN 3
1970
public school system, fed his hogs on grain that had been treated with a fungicide -cyane methylmercuri guanadine.
The Agriculture Department in Washington last Thursday banned further sales of the fungicide.
The effects of the mercury compound in the fungicide are slow and cumulative and Huckleby had slaughtered and let his family eat some of the hogs before the hogs began to die.
Dorothy Jean went to the El Paso Hospital in December. The others followed in a few weeks.
The Hucklebs have seven children and 40-year-old Mrs. Lois Huckleby is expecting an eighth in a week. Mercury is in her system, though she shows no outward effects of it. Psysicians fear her child may be affected.
The fastest growing car club in America has come to Lawrence. Twenty members of the Heart of America Edsel Club met Sunday at the home of Mrs. F. C. Sanders, 1613 Vermont, to discuss future Edsel jackets and hats and a future trip to California.
Edsel now collector's car
Jim Gully, central zone governor of Edsel Owners of America, organized the local club last summer. He said the national organization, founded a year ago, now has 800 members.
Retired prof died Friday
Merrell D. Clubb, former head of the Department of English at the University of Kansas, died Friday at the age of 72. He had suffered a heart attack earlier in the week.
Clubb received his BA degree from Pomona College and earned his PhD at Yale University in 1924. He taught at four universities before coming to KU.
Clubb had served for 22 years in the English department before his retirement in 1968. His academic specialty was Old English literature.
Clubb was a Fulbright Scholar lecturing on English literature in Egypt in 1955-56. He also spoke by invitation to the KU Humanities Series in 1967.
Memorial services were held Sunday afternoon in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall.
He is survived by his widow and two sons, Merrell D. Jr., a professor of English at the University of Montana in Missoula, and William G., professor of French at the University of San Francisco. A third son, Roger, a former faculty member of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, died while on a hiking trip in the Grand Canyon.
Median age drops
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The median age of Americans is 27.7 years, down from 29.5 years at the time of the 1960 census, the census bureau reported Tuesday.
The bureau said youth, which it defined as 14 to 24 years, increased by 44 per cent during the decade from 27.2 million in 1960 to 39.1 million last year.
The Immigration and Naturalization Service says 456,614 immigrants entered the United States in 1967.
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After the meeting, Wayne Highnight, president of the local club, talked about the Edsel.
Highnight said the Edsel had become a collectors item. The most valuable one, he said, is the '60 Citation convertible. He said the Wall Street Journal had said the Citation would be worth between $15,000 to $20,000 in 20 years.
Highnight said he thought the reason the Edsel lost $200 million was poor market research by the Ford Motor Co. "It was the wrong size car for the time," he said. "The market was for smaller cars at that time."
The Edsel engine of 410 cubic
inches was designed to go into the Lincoln, Hignight said. It had a built in thermostat with a 440 degree constant operating temperature.
Concerning the Edsel trademark, its horseshoe shaped front grill. Hignight said that Pontiac had come out with a similar front grill and proved it could sell. The people just weren't ready for it at the time, he said.
Other members at the meeting agreed the Edsel was a great car. "I don't think you could find anyone here who wouldn't buy another one if he could get it," said one member.
Chicago 'seven' urge focus on appeal bond
CHICAGO (UPI)—Five men convicted of crossing state lines to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention appealed to their followers Sunday to focus attention on efforts to obtain appeal bond.
U. S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman denied the defendants bond Friday on grounds they are "dangerous," men," after he sentenced them to five years in prison and fined them $5,000 each plus court costs.
"We urge our supporters to focus now on the issue of appeal bond," the defendants said Sunday in a statement issued from "conspiracy" headquarters which remains open in Chicago.
Attorneys for the defendants filed emergency motions Saturday in an attempt to obtain bond for the seven jailed men. Two of the seven—Lee Weiner and John Frones—were found innocent of
all government charges against them and are serving contempt sentences imposed by Hoffman.
The other five men—David Dellinger, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Rennie Davis and Thomas Hayden—have begun to serve jail terms imposed on the riot conviction and also are serving contempt sentences.
"If bond is not granted," the defendants said, "we will be forced to serve most of our five year sentence even if the case against us is later reversed."
"Thus the issue of bond is really the issue of our freedom."
About 5,000 persons massed Saturday at the Federal Building, site of the tumultuous five month trial of the defendants. The demonstrators protested conviction of the five, and contempt sentences imposed on the entire "Chicago Seven." The rally was peaceful.
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KAWSAN COMMENT
Billy mingles
In a recent article for the Associated Press, Rev. Billy Graham discusses a generation which has been almost overdiscussed as it has been misunderstood.
Noting high suicide rates and general dissatisfaction among modern youth, Brother Billy did some investigating.
"I began to go to college and university campuses not only to speak but to listen," he says. "I put on old clothes and a baseball cap and went to a 'love-in' in Winnipeg where several thousand young people were gathered for their happening."
Brother Billy also claims to have appeared at several other youth happenings (sometimes disguised in his baseball cap as a youth and at other times appearing as himself) and to have talked with SDS and Black Panther leaders.
All of this was a part of a study of this age group for which Billy sincerely cares. Unfortunately, Billy concluded that America's youth are divided into two basic groups.
The first group consists of the love-in type, dressed, as Billy puts it, in "garish and gaudy manner." "As I looked at these quaintly dressed young people with their sheepskin coats, their untrimmed hair and their eyes filled with longing and fanciful dreams, I couldn't help but wonder who had failed them."
On the other hand, Billy went "to the other side of the coin" and found athletic, wholesome young people who were "strong, clear-eyed,
clean-cut and were studying their Bibles, singing hymns and praying."
Billy missed.
Contrary to what he discovered through his first-hand, baseball-capped study, modern youth is not divided into two camps, one constantly gazing glassy-eyed at rock groups and the other smiling serenely into St. James versions. Modern youth is much more complex than that, possibly even more complex than previous generations, not because of natural superiority but because of our modern environment.
Many people have tried to put our hearts under a microscope, and a few have found some of our weaknesses and a few have found some of our strengths. Billy found neither.
Further, attempting to align a certain morality with a certain group based on such superficial grounds as that group's attire or choice of hair length is preposterious.
But Billy is no real threat to us, and as a remnant of the past, he deserves a certain amount of kind treatment.
So if someday you find yourself staring into a beer mug at the Gaslight or Chalk and a middle-aged preacher disguised in old clothes and a baseball cap asks you why you're hanging around a bar instead of a barbershop or church (two of America's more closely aligned organizations), whisper kindly, "Shhhhh. I'm Pope Paul."
—Mike Shearer
Who is he?
Who is he?
The one that feels
he's so bad, he can determine
our destiny.
Is gonna tell us what
to dig and what not to dig.
Tell us how we should think
and how we shouldn't think.
Who is he?
The one with the flaky
white skin, and stringy
Straight hair.
Who feels he's a proxy to God,
or the Official administrator to censorship.
The one that's afraid of the truth,
scared to hear what he's been
putting down for years.
Who is he?
The one that's raped us of
our pride, and is trying to
bury our minds.
The one who has the nerve to
declare obscene, when
he has committed every
obscenity, of which we speak.
The one who is scared because
we've put a mirror in front of his face
Who is this man?
Hey, dig baby, now that we have the full impact of your importance, maybe we should like get together—so you can tell us what to print next.
Gloria L. Douglas Montclair, N.J., senior
STEFFMAN 2-67
The Demonstration
hearing voices—
The jury sits in deliberation behind closed doors in the courtroom pending the charges against the ten accused for conspiring to insight a riot in Chicago. All across the nation college students are protesting the charges against the "Chicago 10." As I sit back in my chair relaxing, I ask myself why these students are protesting.
This sure is "The times that try men's souls."
Where should the line of respect be drawn for the law? On what grounds have the accused been brought to trial? I agree that certain aspects of the trial are a circus, but the march on campus had to be the freak show. Students (if they were) gathered at a central location on campus at 1:30 p.m. The march proceeded down the main boulevard of campus and stopped in front of the Kansas law building to hear a speech by a professor of law. One of the longer haired monkeys had managed to climb a statue in front of the law building and spray it with paint. I sat there in bewilderment. God help me if my fellow students are following this barbarian around. Very few students could hear the speech by the professor who may have had something valid to say, but everyone applauded loudly, acting as if they really knew what was going on.
The zoo aspects of the march really came on strong down at the Lawrence Courthouse. I had run ahead to get a good location to shoot pictures of the march for a photography assignment and ended up directly in the center of the march. There was my long haired fellow student with his spray can again.
One of the protest marchers followed with a poem condemning all aspects of our society that centered around our establishment. If nothing else, this student learned how to swear and criticize in college.
I don't know, maybe kindergarten was dismissed early and he stole the can of paint. Anyway he was having fun. One guy yelled, "Don't let him shoot those pictures." I asked him about censorship and he believed in it!
Everyone was passing the beer can around and having a good time. The great Messiah said, "Anybody want to smoke a joint with me," and proceeded to pass it around. That's like a third grader saying you're "chicken" to a friend after his mother had told him not to steal. Talk about Common Sense, where is Thomas Paine? All the children followed the Pied Piper into the courthouse and proceeded to cuss, give the finger, and break windows. What fun! Once again my long haired buddy comes into the limelight. The police had grabbed him after he was pointed out as the trouble maker. "I haven't done a thing, sir," he said. Identical to a little boy lying to his mother. Several of his friends approached the police and asked what the trouble was. "The . . The . . They think I'm the leader," he quivered. "Come with us," said the bearded Moses freeing his people. What a joke!
Some of my friends participated in the march and from what I know of most of them, it was a gorilla theater all right, at the Lawrence zoo.
What purpose did this march serve? Support could have been carried out much more effectively in an organized lecture. Lawyers in Chicago are opposing the trial through legal channels in Chicago. The people in Chicago will probably never know this stupid march was staged, so why have it? So a group of clowns could parade and have fun at other people's expense. If you want to participate, have a constructive organization and leave the children at home.
Grant Dahl Winnetka, Ill., senior
hearing voices—
To the editor:
It is quite comforting to be assured that free press still is present in our land as I am, daily through your articles. I simply hope, or should I say trust that you are reading everything before you write about it (speeches, official news releases, etc.) and that you are completely aware of today's problems. I know that I am not all knowing but I seem to be aware of things which, although common news you apparently have either miss-read or missed.
Continue your devoted endeavors and may your freedom of speech, press, etc., continue.
Wayne Kernes Kansas City, junior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansas Telephone Numbers
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Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year of 2014. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions exerted not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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Julius oinks
CHICAGO—U.S. District Court Judge Julius Hoffman, addressing the court as he sentenced Kunstler:
"I am one of those who believe that crime, if it is on the increase, is so in large part because, waitin the wings, are lawyers who are willing to go beyond professional responsibility in the defense of their clients."
Disciplinary procedures clarified
Photo by William Sellers
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and vice-chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, stands to speak at a meeting of the University Council that passed Thursday an amendment to clarify disciplinary procedures appearing as "Statements of Principle" in a number of University publications.
PARIS (UPI)—French President Georges Pompidou is prepared for "total frankness" in his talks with President Nixon on all world problems, including France's controversial Middle East policy, officials said Sunday.
Pompidou on Monday begins a nine-day state visit to the United States. He will be the third French chief of state to make such a visit in the long history of relations between France and the United States.
Former President Charles de Gaulle made two visits—in 1945
as chief of the provisional government after World War II when he conferred with President Harry S. Truman, and again in 1960 when he was hosted by the late President Dwight E. Eisenhower.
Vincent Aurio, first president of the Fourth Republic, was also the guest of Truman in 1951.
De Gaulle also made two short trips to the United States—for the funeral of President John F. Kennedy in 1963 and before he resigned last April for the funeral of Eisenhower.
On the eve of Pompidou's departure, French officials said Pompidou anticipated "conversations of total frankness" on Tuesday and Thursday with Nixon.
It has been agreed between Paris and Washington that no communiques will be issued after their meeting, sources said.
Major problems will include France's relations with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), international monetary policy and relations between the United States and the growing economic unity of the six-nation European Common Market.
Elk eludes satellite for two days running
JACKSON, Wyo. (UPI) — Monique the elk is going to get another shot of the same medicine unless she stops playing hide and seek with Nimbus III, a nosy satellite whose job it is to keep tabs on her.
The orbiting satellite for the second straight day was unable to spot the 500-pound cow elk Saturday as she romped in the rugged terrain of northwestern Wyoming.
James Lynch, a spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA),
The satellite is supposed to track Monique as part of an experimental project aimed at preserving the habitat of wildlife.
Yablonskis' slaying case investigated
CLEVELAND (UPI)—"Bread and butter" witnesses are to be called when a federal grand jury investigating the murders of rebel United Mine Workers Union (UMW) official Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, his wife and daughter, resumes hearing testimony Tuesday.
Justice Department officials said of the witnesses, "They'll be bread and butter witnesses, no one whose name would make news by itself." They also said they believed they were nearing their goal of finding out who paid to have the murders committed.
In three weeks of testimony, a total of 28 witnesses were called. During last week's sessions, the only three witnesses were officials of UMW District 19, which Yablonsyi said received $3.7 million in union funds illegally from the UMW leadership.
In the first two weeks of grand jury sessions, four Clevelanders with Applachian backgrounds were indicted on federal conspiracy charges in connection with the killings.
The charge was made after Yablonski lost his bid for the presidency of the union to incumbent W. A. "Tony" Boyle last December.
Feb. 23
1970 KANSAN 5
said no one was certain why the satellite wasn't able to pick up information from a 23-pound equipment-packed collar Monique has wrapped around her neck.
"She may have been kneeling down in the herd or perhaps she went up into the trees on the hills," Lynch explained.
Ground crews at the site near the Grand Teton mountains said they have been able to track Monique with a ground receiver. It is just Nimbus III that has not been successful.
"We know where she is—she's right out here in the herd on the national elk refuge," said refuge manager Don Redfearn. "I'm sure there's no question that the radio signal is going out all right."
If she doesn't, Lynch said crews would move into the area, shoot another tranquilizer into her as they did last Thursday and pop on a new bright red collar to replace the one she has been wearing.
Lynch said they would give Monique a few more days to get in touch with Nimbus III.
The National Board of the American Civil Liberties Union is endorsing lowering the voting age to 18 for state and national elections. The endorsement is the result of a recommendation from an ACLU conference in June, 1968 and has been under consideration since that time.
But the major topic, officials believe here, will be France's Middle East policy which the French believe is misunderstood and unfairly criticized in the United States.
Lower voting age backed by Union
James Seaver, KU professor of history and chairman of the local ACLU board, said the measure will probably meet some resistance but it has the approval of the KU ACLU chapter.
Seaver said if the measure passes it could have significant effects on local elections. He cited the bond issues for the municipal swimming pool and the proposed new Lawrence public library as examples where student votes could be important.
Seaver said, students can help lower the voting age by lobbying, mass petition and peaceful demonstrations.
Pompidou is prepared for possible anti-French demonstrations from Jewish groups during his 6,000-mile tour from Washington to Cape Kennedy, San Francisco, Chicago and New York.
"President Nixon is in favor of lowering the voting age so I think the proposal has a chance," Seav-
He is expected to comment fully on France's reasons for selling Libya 110 Mirage planes and other aspects of its mediterranean policy during his address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday.
er said.
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WASHINGTON (UPI)—Secretary Robert H. Finch of Health, Education and Welfare warned the Senate Sunday he would recommend a second Presidential veto of a controversial HEW money bill unless its spending levels are cut further.
HEW advocates veto
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In a letter to Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., chairman of the Senate appropriations subcommittee which must consider the measure, Finch also urged deletion of House provisions barring HEW from requiring "busing" as part of school desegregation plans, and legalizing "freedom of choice" school plans.
However, Finch's letter threatened a veto only on the bill's money provisions.
The possibility of a veto was not mentioned in connection with the southern-sponsored school amendments.
"The quickest and simplest way to solve our problem," Finch said, would be for the Senate to insert a provision permitting President Nixon to hold back some of the spending.
As passed by the House Thursday, the measure totals $19.4 billion.$886 million over a $16.8 billion compromise which the President suggested after vetoing the original measure during a nationwide television appearance last month.
The modern birthstone for the month of April is the diamond.
"Taken in its present form, I would have no choice but to recommend to the President that he veto" the bill, Finch told Magnuson.
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Architecture school plans city project
The University of Kansas School of Architecture and Urban Design, in conjunction with other departments, is currently involved in a planning program
Kaleidoscope exhibits art for children
Kaleidoscope, an experience in the fun of creativity, designed and built by two University of Kansas graduates, is now in Lawrence as part of a nation - wide tour.
Kaleidoscope is sponsored locally by the KU Museum of Art and the Lawrence Art Guild and nationally by Hallmark Cards. It is being held at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont.
Carolyn Yates and Rachael Chambers, originators of the project, graduated from KU in 1958.
The object of the event is to take art experiences to smaller communities with little or no art education or facilities, Miss Yates said. It is aimed at school children from ages 4 to 12. She said the materials used are basically from the scraps of Hallmark products. With Kaleidoscope a child's imagination is stimulated through seeing, touching, listening and creating with the supplied materials. It is designed to encourage the exploration of new ways to creativity, she said.
The experience has left many handicapped children inspired by what they could do with themselves, Miss Yates said. It has stimulated many other children in activities and personal contact with others, she said.
Too many children were discouraged from development of artistic talent, especially boys, by their parents or by a lack of facilities or education, she said. She gave several examples of how the experience had a beneficial psychological effect on many young children. The children show a very obvious element of honesty in their work, Miss Yates said.
"There's no gimmick in the art they produce," Miss Yates said, "and some of it is very good."
The project is supervised by students in the field of art education at KU and people of the Lawrence community. Miss Yates and Miss Chambers also travel across the nation with the exhibition.
The exhibit was organized and created last February, Miss Yates said. It has travelled to several cities and to more than 22,000 children.
Kaleidoscope is open to the public from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. during the week, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays. Adults are encouraged to come on the weekend and children during the week.
Kaleidoscope opened Feb. 18 and will continue through Feb. 27.
Lines muffed by Prince Charles
CAMBRIDGE, England (UPI)
—Prince Charles starred in a press preview of the Cambridge University review Sunday night and forgot his lines.
Charles had just begun the first monologue when he muffed the words.
"What the hell comes next?" quipped the 21-year-old-heir to the British throne. After being prompted, Charles continued, but later forgot his lines again.
"Now you can see why we need the dress rehearsal," he said. "This never happens on the BBC (British Broadcasting Corp.)."
in Kansas City, Mo., called the Westport Project. The purpose of the project is to prevent the historic community of Westport from losing its identity due to newly proposed traffic arteries which would divide the area.
Dave Griffin, assistant professor of architecture, said last fall the city planners of Kansas City, Mo., had proposed two major traffic routes connecting the Plaza with downtown Kansas City.
"These routes would have run through the center of Westport and could have been a hinderance to its continued growth," Griffin said.
KANSAN
Feb.23
1970
Interested citizens from the area were successful in preventing construction of the traffic routes, however, and asked the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design for counter proposals.
Griffin said the Westport Project is not only concerned with proposals for traffic routes, but also with ideas for the continued educational and economic growth of the area.
"We are also concerned with maintaining community identity and with keeping Westport a cohesive unit," Griffin said.
The research and planning for the project is being done by ten fifth-year design students in the School of Architecture.
Griffin said faculty members from the School of Business were working with Westport business owners in planning for future economic growth. Representatives from the sociology department are also helping by gathering necessary sociological data, he said.
programs concerning the West- port area.
taining a variety of proposals. These proposals will include plans for an underground traffic system as well as suggestions for new schools and businesses.
Griffin said the final result of the project would be a detailed report submitted this spring con-
"We don't expect them to accept all the proposals," Griffin said, "but many of them could be very useful." He added that the report would be a base for future
Although the Westport Project is open to students from any field, Griffin said that participation in the project wasn't as good as he expected.
"Here's a chance for kids to tune in to ecology, and they aren't doing it," he said.
Arnold Air Society sponsors group; field trip to Air Force base planned
The KU chapter of the Arnold Air Society is currently planning to sponsor an explorer interest group in Lawrence. This group would consist of anyone interested in any phase of aerospace science. The group will travel to
Forbes Air Force Base to learn more about Air Force personnel, machines and methods.
The Society is also working with Angel Flight in planning some field trips for underprivileged children from the Lawrence area.
Can you imagine what the Picturephone will do to blind dates?
Just one of the many things Southwestern Bell is contributing to making your life more complicated.
6
Planning Board hearings held
KU departments discuss needs for space
By JOHN GOODRICK Kansan staff writer
The departments of physics and chemistry and the School of Pharmacy met Saturday to discuss with a subcommittee of the University Planning Board their needs for space.
It was the second of several hearings planned by the board.
The groups involved stressed the idea that all available space was being utilized and any growth would require additional space.
Previously both departments had met and decided their space problems could best be solved by constructing a new physical science building as close to Malott Hall as possible to house the department of physics, building a major wing on to the south side of Malott to house the School of Pharmacy and letting the department of chemistry take over a remodeled, air conditioned Malott Hall.
The department of physics was represented by Robert Friauf, David Beard and Ralph Krone, professors; the department of chemistry by John Landgrebe, associate professor; and the School of Pharmacy by Howard Mossberg, dean of the school.
Krone said the physics department would need 126,000 square feet of space, 35 faculty members and 140 graduate students by 1980. The department now has
Day planned for schools
TOPEKA (UPI) — Kansas teachers and school boards were urged Sunday to observe March 2 as "save our schools day" in an effort to alert the public to the "seriousness of the threat to their schools."
Melvin E. Neely, executive secretary of the Kansas State Teachers Association (KSTA), made the announcement on a 30-minute television special, directed to school personnel.
He said only a massive public information effort, with details as to effects on local property taxes and school programs, district by district, could head off a crisis which could see many schools close their doors early in the next school year.
"On this day must come the citizen arousal which will convince the legislators and governor that Kansans will never countenance the destruction of their school system on the altar of political expediency," Neely said.
He referred both to the proposals now before the legislature to cut back or hold state aid at last year's level and to the so-called property tax lid bills.
Neely stressed the direct connection between increasing state aid to schools and lowering the property tax. He said without continuation of the $26 million supplemental school aid bill passed last year property taxes would go up about 9 mills statewide, or aboot $9 for every $1,000 of assessed valuation.
Grant to further hormone studies
Two KU professors have received a $30,000 two-year grant from the National Science Foundation to investigate a hormone's effect on living cells.
Paul A. Kitos and Robert T. Hersh, both KU professors of biochemistry, were awarded the grant to study a particular hormone from the adrenal gland to find out how it regulates some of the actions of living cells.
18,000 square feet in Malott. 23 faculty members and 64 graduate students.
Beard said if the department added any faculty it would need additional space.
"We have refrained from hiring people who are needed simply because there is no place to put them," Beard said. Beard said there were three times more students now in physics than there were three years ago.
Feb. 23
1970 KANSAN 7
The teaching laboratories are operating close to capacity, Friauf said. They now have 2-hour labs and Friauf said they would like to have 3-hour labs but it was impossible with the present facilities.
Friau said that the department needed room for developing programs. He said nuclear physics is operating at capacity and they have no area to which they can expand.
"We need to schedule twice as many labs as we have space to," Friauf said. He said in Physics I the department had given up the laboratories, and elimination of other labs might be necessary.
The department of chemistry is "pressed against the wall," said Landgrebe in describing his department's needs for space. "Every nook and cranny is being used," he said.
Landgrebe predicted the department's needs to include 41,000 additional square feet of space, six more senior staff members and 17 more teaching assistants by 1980. The department of chemistry presently has approximately 50- 000 square feet in Malott and 24 senior staff members.
space with several desks and locker space, he said.
A first year teaching assistant has no desk and has no space to talk to his students outside of class unless he talks with them in the halls, Landgrebe said. This problem could be solved by a room with 1,000 square feet of
At present, there is one full time electronics technician. Landgrebe said the department had an immediate need for one more and would need three technicians by 1980.
Landgrebe said there was an overall increasing need for more shop facilities and storage space and that the reading room in the library is "very inadequate."
The laboratories are in constant use from 7:30 a.m. until 5:20 p.m. and on Saturday mornings, he said. By 1976 they will not only be forced into night time operations but this will also cause a need for more faculty.
Dwight Boring* says...
Landgrebe said that because of poor acoustics, "at present we are not able to teach properly."
"You'll find the best answer to your life insurance problems—both now and later—in College Life's famous college men's policy, The Benefactor. Let me tell you about it."
not want to grow past the projected goal of 325 and said, "We intend to be the smallest school on campus and stay there."
Presently the school serves 1,000 pharmacists in the state and for these, the school must graduate about 100 students a year to get the 50 or 60 pharmacists needed yearly in Kansas.
- Dwight Boring
209 Providence
Lawrence, Kansas
Phone 842-0767
He said that the 20-man labs now in use allowed only 3.3 linear feet of bench space for students, which didn't even allow them to lay their notebooks on the bench, and he said that these labs would be more efficient as 16-man labs.
representing
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Mossberg said the School of Pharmacy has "more than doubled in all categories in the past ten years," and, "basically, our backs are against the wall."
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
The School of Pharmacy has written to the Health Science Advancement Award committee for four more needed senior staff members, but Mossberg said, "We don't have four office spaces or four more files."
In 1960 the school had four full time faculty members; now they have 17, and by 1975 are expected to have about 34 members.
The anticipated space needed by 1980 is 120,000 square feet for a school of about 325 students. Presently the school has 200 students and about 20,000 square feet.
Mossberg said the school did
With an increasing awareness of our environment the Environmental Toxicology program newly developing has a good possibility of developing if there were adequate space, Mossberg said.
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feb. 23-28
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feb. 23-28
Buffs hold Robisch to 16
Meely hit 24 to guide Colorado past 'Hawks
By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor
Boulder-Cliff Meely's inside scoring punch and bruising rebounding triggered an explosive Colorado offense that gunned down KU's faint hopes for the conference crown with an 81-73 thumping of the cold-shooting Jayhawks Saturday night in the CU Field House.
The anticipated shoot-out between KU's Dave Robisch, who entered the contest as the Big Eight's leading scorer sporting a 28.3 per game average, and Meely, top scorer in the league last year, never materialized as Meely's short jumpers and high arching one-handers netted a game high 24 points while a hustling Buff defense limited Robisch to only 16 points—his lowest point production of the season.
Meely, who ripped off CU's first seven points, also pulled in 18 rebounds to double as the contest's top rebounder as well as scorer.
The win upped CU, defending league champs, to a 5-6 conference record and dropped the 'Hawks to 5-5 in Big Eight action. KU is 14-8 overall and the Buffs are a disappointing 12-11 for the year.
Both teams started out cold from the field, but KU caught fire first and surged to a 12-5 edge with 15:19 showing on the clock. Meely was the only Buff to down points in the first five minutes.
Meely hit on a follow shot a minute later to get the cold-shooting Buffs untracked. CU exploded for 12 points in the next four minutes to take a 19-16 lead. The clubs traded buckets for the remainder of the opening period and Colorado edged to a 40-36 half time margin.
Robisch, operating from the baseline with 6-10 Koger Brown handling the high post position, was continually harassed by a sagging Buff zone defense but still managed to fire home nine points and grab 7 rebounds in the first stanza. Meely returned to last season's top form by tallying 16 points and grabbing 7 caroms in the opening period.
KANSAN Sports
Robisch moved from the baseline to a high post position in the second half but CU's tough defense kept the Jayhawks' pivot at bay and the supporting KU cast enjoyed limited success from outside. The closest the 'Hawks could cut the deficit was 65-62 when Chet Lawrence hit a 20-footter at the 4:24 mark.
But Meely countered with a 10-
foot turn-around and CU's fiery
guard Gordon Tope drove the lane for an easy bucket to put the Buffs on top 69-62 with only 3:08 remaining.
Colorado converted ten straight free throws in the final two minutes to secure the victory.
KU and Colorado both banged home 30 field goals for the game. The charity stripe proved the difference as the Buffs cashed in on 21-26 tosses and KU hit 13-16.
Colorado finished with a mediocre 41 per cent from the field, but KU experienced its worst shooting night of the year as the Jayhawks could find the range on only 36 per cent of their field goal attempts.
Pierre Russell's 20 points and 14 rebounds topped the 'Hawks in both departments. Robisch followed with 16 points and 13 caroms. Bud Stallworth came off the bench to net 10 points, and Chet Lawrence bombed in four long-range aerials and two free tosses to also finish with 10 points.
Tope, and all-conference guard a year ago, followed Meely in the CU scoring column with 17 points. Sophomore forward Jim Creighton added 15 points and 11 rebounds, and Dudley Mitchell tossed in 13 points.
played a near-flowless final twenty minutes of basketball.
The Jayhawks managed a 49-48 rebounding margin over CU, but turnovers proved costly for KU in the second stanza as the Buffers
KU is now 2-6 on the road for the season and is still looking for its first win on the road against conference foes.
KU will square off against Missouri tonight at 8:00 in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks will be seeking to avenge an earlier 56-53 setback that the Tigers handed them in Columbia.
The Bixby Creek Bridge near Big Sur, Calif., is the highest single-span concrete arch bridge in the world.
Box Score
| KANSAS | FG | FT | RB | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Stallworth | 4-11 | 2-4 | 7 | 2 | 10 |
| Nash | 2-6 | 1-1 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
| Russell | 2-06 | 2-3 | 14 | 2 | 20 |
| Robbins | 7-16 | 2-2 | 13 | 2 | 16 |
| Brown | 2-5 | 2-2 | 8 | 4 | 6 |
| Klivisto | 2-7 | 2-2 | 3 | 2 | 6 |
| Lawrence | 4-12 | 2-2 | 2 | 2 | 10 |
| Team totals | 30-83 | 13-16 | 49 | 16 | 73 |
| COLORADO | FG | FT | RB | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Meely | 8-20 | 8-10 | 18 | 2 | 24 |
| Topo | 6-15 | 5-7 | 1 | 1 | 17 |
| Mitchell | 6-18 | 1-1 | 6 | 2 | 13 |
| Creighton | 6-10 | 3-4 | 11 | 2 | 15 |
| Coleman | 1-6 | 2-2 | 9 | 5 | 4 |
| Jameson | 2-2 | 2-2 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Pickens | 1-2 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Team totals | 30-73 | 21-26 | 48 | 13 | 81 |
SENIORS
Graduation Announcements
will be on sale through
Tuesday, Feb. 24
All orders must be in by that time.
kansas zunion BOOKSTORE
Wildcats cinch tie for top spot
By United Press International
By United Press International Kansas State, the team that everybody overlooked, clinched a tie for the Big Eight basketball championship Saturday night.
The Wildcats did it when Jerry Venable hit his first eight shots in the second half for a 69-62 victory over Nebraska and defending champion Colorado squelched Kansas, 81-73, in Boulder.
The combination left K-State with a 9-2 won-loss record and a three-game lead over Missouri 6-5 with three to play. Kansas and Oklahoma, both 5-5, also retain slim chances for a title tie.
Missouri scored a 72-61 victory over Oklahoma State and Oklahoma won its first conference road game, edging Iowa State, 75-63, in other games Saturday.
Kansas State can claim the title outright with a victory in its last home game Thursday against Colorado or in either of two remaining road games at Oklahoma and Kansas.
Venable, a 6-5 senior, was the difference Saturday. Kansas State trailed by as many as 10 points in the first half before closing to 32-30 at halftime when Jeff Webb connected just before the buzzer.
Venable scored K-State's first nine points in the second half and didn't miss until 7:30 remained and the Cats were in command, 58-49. Kansas State scored nine straight points in a four-minute burst that lifted the Wildcats from a 43-41 deficit to a 50-43 lead with 11:30 to go. Nebraska never got closer than five points after that.
Venable finished with 26 points after scoring only seven in the first half. The Wildcats also got another fine performance from reserve Eddie Smith, who hit five of eight shots for 10 points, Smith, a 6-4 junior, now has hit 12 of 18 shots in K-State's last three victories.
Colorado stopped Kansas by stopping Dave Robisch. The Buffaloes' collapsing zone seldom let Robisch get the ball inside, where he likes to shoot a turn-around jump shot. The 6-9 junior scored only 16 points. Kansas narrowed the gap to 65-62 with $4\frac{1}{2}$ minutes to go, but Colorado spurted away
on field goals by Cliff Meely and Gordon Tope. Meely finished with 24 points, while Tope had 17 and Jim Crightenon 15.
8 KANSAN Feb. 23
1970
Kansas, though it has not lost at home, has yet to win a road game in conference play.
Missouri rode the inside play of Henry Smith, who had 20 points, and the outside shooting of Theo Franks, who had 19, to its victory. Missouri, breaking a two-game losing streak, hit 26 of 46 shots for 56.6 per cent.
Clifford Ray added the first of two free throws with 22 seconds left, then blocked Aaron Jenkins' shot in the waning seconds to preserve the victory.
Oklahoma's victory was the eighth by a visiting team in 43 Big Eight Conference games.
Garfield Heard scored 30 points and made the game's big play in Oklahoma's victory over Iowa State. Heard stole the ball and romped the length of the court for a layup with 1:15 to play and a 74-73 Sooner lead.
| | W | L | Pct. | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas St. | 9 | 2 | .818 | 764 | 705 |
| Missouri | 6 | 5 | .545 | 695 | 681 |
| Kansas | 5 | 5 | .500 | 760 | 704 |
| Oklahoma | 5 | 5 | .500 | 629 | 707 |
| Colorado | 5 | 6 | .455 | 818 | 765 |
| Iowa State | 5 | 7 | .417 | 866 | 897 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 6 | .400 | 674 | 708 |
| Okla. St. | 4 | 7 | .364 | 691 | 721 |
Conference Games
| | W | L | Pet. | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kan, St. | 18 | 5 | .784 | 1669 | 1527 |
| Okla. | 18 | 6 | .727 | 1634 | 1551 |
| Kansas | 14 | 8 | .636 | 1704 | 1573 |
| Nebraska | 13 | 8 | .619 | 1533 | 1532 |
| Missouri | 14 | 9 | .609 | 1601 | 1529 |
| Okla. St. | 13 | 10 | .565 | 1526 | 1487 |
| Colorado | 12 | 11 | .522 | 1730 | 1612 |
| Iowa St. | 12 | 12 | .500 | 1768 | 1756 |
All Games
Results Last Week:
Okahoma State 72, Iowa State 62; Kansas State 63, Missouri 60;
Okahoma 84, Colorado 77; Kansas 100, Nebraska 87; Oklahoma 75, Iowa State 73; Kansas State 69; Nebraska 62; Missouri 72;
Okahoma State 61; Colorado 81;
Kansas 73.
Games This Week
Monday—Missouri at Kansos,
Oklahoma at Nebraska.
Anursday—Colorado at Kansas State.
Saturday—Kansas State at Oklahoma, Kansas at Oklahoma State, Nebraska at Missouri.
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Ever since the first ship was built for extended journeys in which food supplies were brought aboard, the ships captain always had the finest of the staples available. Often captains had their own supply which was far superior to that of the lower ranking officers and crew. This, in addition to the fact that the ship's captain was considered a king in his own right, led to the prestige of the captain's table. In the early days the captain often ate alone, and as time and knowledge of the sea progressed, the voyages became much longer. History doesn't say whether it was from boredom of eating alone, losing touch with the ship's officers, or the discussion of ships' business during dinner, but the captain began inviting his officers for dinner. This soon extended to the prominent and rich passengers aboard ship and there was much prestige accorded to those who were invited to dine at the captain's table. This tradition has been handed down through centuries and even today aboard luxury liners and tramp steamers alike, there is a certain aura to being invited to dine at the captain's table. Not wanting to set naval tradition back several centuries we feel here, every table is THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE.
Each selection is separately priced for two reasons. First, our unique cash register system requires individual pricing. Second, it is the owners opinion that a customer should not have to pay for something that comes with a dinner that they do not wish to eat, but may order from a menu items that they do wish to eat. Hence, the very economical appearance of certain prices. These low prices certainly do not reflect the quality of merchandise. Quite the contrary; to date we have brought before you the finest we can find, and we plan to continue on this course. We hope that The Captain's Table will be an adventure in fine dining.
Ace Johnson
Battle for runner-up position unfolds when Jayhawks confront Missouri
Missouri ventures to Allen Field House tonight to tangle with the Jayhawks in a battle for second place in the Big Eight standings. Tip-off is 8:05 following a freshman tilt at 5:45 between the two clubs.
The Tigers got by Oklahoma State 72-61 Saturday night in Columbia and vaulted past KU into second place when Colorado nipped the Hawks in Boulder.
Missouri has a 6-5 plate in conference play and stands 14-9 for the year. The loss to Colorado dropped the Hawks to a 5-5 ledger in the conference and a 14-8 reading for the season.
K-State has now virtually cinched at least a tie for the conference crown but Missouri head coach Norm Stewart assures Tiger followers that they are not through scratching away yet.
1984
"Our season is not over by any means," the young coach said. "We still have a chance for a good year. Our players have been struggling for three years. They won't stop now."
Don Tomlinson
Missouri still has a chance to eclipse 15 victories, a feat last achieved by the Tigers in 1955-56 when Stewart captained a 15-7 team under Sparky Stalcup.
In two previous appearances under Stewart at Allen Field House the Tigers have won nail-chomping one-point triumphs. In 1968, the Tigers prevailed 67-66 on Tom Johnson's two free throws after the game had supposedly ended and last year Missouri won 56-55.
The Jayhawks will be seeking to revenge a 56-53 loss to Missouri in the clubs' conference opener in Columbia.
Don Tomlinson, leading scorer with a 14.8 mark, will guide the Tigers into action tonight against the 'Hawks. The rugged senior captain has scored over 1,000 points in his three years of varsity play and now needs less than 20 points to displace Bob Reiter in the number three slot among Missouri's career scorers. He scored 23 against KU in the first meeting.
Doug Johnson, 6-5, will join Tomlinson on the Tigers' front line along with center Henry Smith. Johnson boasts an 9 point average and Smith, 6-7, has a
10
Theo Franks
11. 7 scoring figure and leads the Tigers in rebounding.
Gymnasts sweep weekend clashes in Colorado tour
By DON BAKER
Kansan Sports Writer
Missouri claims probably the best pair of guards in the league in Dave Pike and Theo Franks, Pike carries a 12.1 scoring mark and Franks is hitting at an 11 point clip while downing 88 per cent of his charity shots.
The KU gymnastics squad pushed its season's record to nine wins against one loss by winning two weekend matches against Colorado and Colorado State College.
Moving on to Greeley Saturday afternoon the Jayhawks scored an impressive victory over Colorado State College. 165.50-142.80.
Traveling to Boulder Friday night the Jayhawks defeated Colorado 151.70 to 127.55 behind four 9.0 or better performances. Among these was Rich Schubert, Lawrence sophomore, who tied a school record with a 9.2 score on the side horse. Also achieving at least 9.0 scores were Kirk Gardner, Atchison junior, 9.45 on still rings, Terry Blanchard, Ulysses sophomore, 9.15 on parallel bars, and Gerald Carley, Wichita junior, 9.20 on the horizontal bars.
The Hawks took first place in every event and the victory was the first ever for KU against Colorado in Boulder since gymnastics became a conference sport in 1958.
The KU freshman squad will also be looking to revenge an early setback dealt them in Columbia by the Tigers' frosh.
In gaining the victory the Jaya hawks set three school records and drew high praise from coach Bob Lockwood.
Front line subs Pete Helmbaock and Chuck Kundert saw a lot of action in the first meeting of the two teams and will be called on again tonight for added inside strength.
PROBABLE STARTERS
"I'm real happy," Lockwood said. "We did not hit well against Colorado but came back strong against CSC."
Nine point or better scores in addition to Carley came from Gardner, 9.35 on still rings, John Brouillette, Wichita junior, 9.05 on still rings, and Roger Hemphill, Lawrence junior, with a 9.1 on the high bar.
Captain Chet Lawrence, sophomores Bob Kivisto and Aubrey Nash and Russell will all see action against the Tigers at the guard slots
5-10 Roger Brown with success at the middle post in the Jayhawks' last few outings and the junior center will probably be called on tonight against the Tigers. If Brown starts at the post position Owens will either go with Bud Stallworth or Pierre Russell at one forward position and Dave Robisch at the other.
Mo. (14-8, 6-5) Pos-
johnson (6-4)
Johnson (6-5)
Smith (6-7)
Franks (6-2)
Franks (6-2)
Included in the records were highest point accumulation away from home (156.50), highest team point accumulation in the high bar (27.05), and Carley set a school record when he finished with a 9.4 score on the high bar.
Against CSC the Jayhawks took first place in every event but one including a sweep of the first three places in two events.
Ransasa(14-8, 5-5)
Brobish (6-7)
Russell (6-3)
Brown (6-1)
Lawrence (6-1)
Klivisto (6-1)
Lockwood said he was particularly pleased with the high individual scores in addition to the team score because Colorado judges are generally very critical and rarely give high scores.
KU coach Ted Owens has used
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
The next match for KU will be Saturday, Feb. 28 when Nebraska invades Robinson gymnasium for a 1:00 p.m. match. Imediately following the match the Hawks will journey to Salina to participate in the Kansas Open, a gymnastic meet sponsored by the Kansas Gymnasts Association.
Following this Kansas State will visit KU on Saturday, March 6 for the final dual of the season.
Guadalajara, Mexico
The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, will offer, June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, political science, language and literature courses. Tuition, $160; board and room $155.
Write Dr. Juan B. Rael, Office of Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
Now, though, he will join the A's in their spring training camp at Mesa, Ariz., Friday and will stay with the club until the regular American League season gets under way.
"I didn't like all that traveling," DiMaggio said at the time.
DiMaggio served Finley as a vice-president and coach the last two years, then decided not to renew his contract.
I'll work in every phase of the game but only for the duration of spring training," Joe said. "This was at my own request and Charlie agreed."
Feb. 23
1970 KANSAN 9
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Joe DiMaggio, the old Yankee Clipper, is coming back to help Charlie Finley and his Oakland A's this spring.
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The scheduling means that the Big Eight Sooners will be coming to Dallas twice this fall since they also play their annual grudge match with the University of Texas on the neutral Cotton Bowl turf. That game is et for Oct. 10.
"We are very happy to have Oklahoma come to Dallas," said SMU Coach Hayden Fry.
OU signs Mustangs as eleventh foe
SMU upset Oklahoma 28-27 in the bowl game in Houston's Astrodome on a last quarter pass from Chuch Hixson to end Ken Fleming. Previously, the two schools had met only twice, Oklahoma winning 9-0 in 1925 and the 1939 game ending in a 7-7 tie.
DiMaggio joins Oakland staff
DALLAS (UPI) — Southern Methodist and Oklahoma, who put on such a wild offensive show in the 1968 Astro Bluebonnet Bowl game, Saturday announced they had agreed on a two-game "11th game" series, opening in Dallas Sept. 12, 1970.
The two teams will play in Norman, Okla., Sept. 18, 1971 as the season opener again. Game times were left undermined, possibly because of potential television contracts.
KUOK Presents
William M. Balfour Dean of Student Affairs
in a
Question and Answer Interview
9:00 p.m., Feb. 24 on
"University Night Beat" KUOK 630 KL.
Have A Question About University Affairs? DIAL UN 4-3994
DONALD E. HORNER
Photo by Ron Bishop
Entries are judged in KU photo contest
Lloyd Schnell, director of photography at the Kansas City Art Institute, is seen judging pictures at the KU photography contest Sunday in the Kansas Union.
New projects proposed
A presentation of new ideas and directions was made by the executive committee and cabinet of the KU-Y Thursday at the second formal membership meeting this school year in the Kansas Union Javawk Room.
The new ideas were presented in the form of four projects. A trash clean-up project was suggested to show the KU-Y concern for environmental pollution. The project would have students clean up a certain area.
Members discussed cooperating with the Chamber of Commerce which is having a similar cleanup project in Lawrence and surrounding areas.
The second project concerned women's liberation. Jill Wiechman, Cheney, junior and spokesman for the project, pointed out
several examples of inequality among men and women. The KU-Y plans to work with the Associated Women's Students (AWS) in enacting its program, Miss Wiechman said.
A canoe trip in the spring was planned for the members of the KU-Y. The date has tentatively been set for the weekend of April 25.
The percentage commission paid to associates in radiology at the KU Medical center was raised from 50 to 70 per cent, in another action by the board.
Regents raise fees at med center
Concerning University faculty, the board granted leaves of absence without pay for Allan Hanson, KU assistant professor of anthropology and to Dorothy Willner, KU associate professor of anthropology. The board amended board minutes to make the minimum stipend for instructors of off-campus credit courses sponsored by University Extension to be $200 per semester credit hour, effective July 1.
A white racism dialogue was also discussed, with plans including the use of racial dialogue films from the YMCA at Topeka.
In addition to these actions, the board also authorized KU to purchase a travel-all vehicle for use in connection with an anthropology project.
A change in the bookkeeping procedure at the Medical center to permit the writing-off of uncollectable accounts after a one-year period. In the past this had not been possible until three years had elapsed.
A result of a recent comprehensive study, the fee increase puts KU's charges in line with other medical schools.
The Kansas Board of Regents approved a proposal Friday which will increase fees for instate medical students at the Kansas University Medical Center from $500 to $750 per year. The fee increase will be effective in September, 1971.
The board also voted, in another action, to request an appropriation of $40,000 from the present legislature to make emergency repairs on the law enforcement training center at Hutchinson.
10 KANSAN Feb. 23 1970
The KU-Y will be taking over the Captain's Table, 1420 Crescent Road, on March 8, said Betsy Menke, Webster Grove, Mo., junior and co-president of the KU-Y. Proceeds will go to the KU-Y. The Captain's Table will be open from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. that Sunday.
The national YWCA Convention will be held in Houston April 12-19. The National YMCA Convention will be in Kansas City, Mo., April 17-19, Walter Mooney, Wichita junior and co-president, announced.
The election of officers will be March 17 at the KU-Y general meeting. YMCA and YWCA copresidents, two vice-presidents, a secretary and a treasurer will be elected. The nominating committee presented their slate of officers.
The chairmen of programs and the cabinet members will be appointed by the executive officers. Those interested in a position in the KU-Y were asked to contact Rita Matousek or come to the KU-Y office.
Rock
ChA1K
RSVUE
improbable history
Kent Dannen, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student, is the winner of first grand prize in the third annual KU Photography Contest. Dannen received the award for his photograph of three girls performing gymnastic stunts on parallel bars.
Second grand prize went to Kathy Hird, Lawrence senior, for a picture story of life in the Amish town of Yoder, Kan.
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—
Feb. 17
KU-Y office,
information booth on
campus,
Bell's, the sound, Kief
sponsored by KU-Y
Rick Pendergrass, Topeka junior, received third grand prize for a personality portrait of a professor at the University of Missouri.
Grand honorable mentions were awarded to Randy Leffingwell, Wilmet, ill., senior, and Jim Hoffman, Pratt junior.
Judging of the contest was held Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The judges were Ken Seals, Lawrence Daily Journal-World photographer; Lloyd Schnell, director of photography at the Kansas City Art Institute; and Harper Lyon, Topeka portrait photographer.
Contest winners named
There were eight categories in which photographs were entered; news, sports, portrait-personality, abstract, picture story, scenic, human-interest and "X." More than 175 entries were judged.
Winners in each category were:
Winners in each category were:
News: First place: Greg Gorman, Overland Park junior; second place: Ron Bishop, Lawrence sophomore; third place: Leffingwell; honorable mention: Tom Slaughter, Salina junior.
Sports: First place: Dannen;
second place: Ron Bishion; third place: Pendergrass; honorable mentions: Leffwell; Norman
The total length of the Gulf of Mexico coastline of the United States is 1,631 miles.
Baxley, Parsons senior; Bill Sellers, Wheaton, Ill., junior.
Picture Story: First place: Miss Hird; second place: Gorman; third place: Joe Bullard, Ellis junior; honorable mentions: Sellers, Bullard.
Portrait-Personality: First place: Pendergrass; second place: Becky Dowers, Lawrence senior; third place: Robert Segura, Kansas City junior; honorable mention: Larry Birney, Miami, Fla., sophomore; Bullard Baxley.
Human Interest: First place: Jim Hoffman, Pratt junior; second place: Hoffman; third place: Bill Higgins, Shawnee Mission junior; honorable mentions: Miss Dowers; Steve Ewert, Fairway graduate student; Bonnie Shatsky; Larry Taylor, Scott City graduate student; Hoffman, Miss Hird.
Scenic: First place: Chris Shears, Hutchinson senior; second place: Dennen; third place: Birney; honorable mentions: Dannen; Hoffman; Baxley.
Abstract: First place: Leffingwell; second place: Lew Ketcham, Kansas City senior; third place: Segura; honorable mentions: Mark Bernstein, Overland Park junior; Higgins; Jerry Hoffman, Lawrence junior.
"X"; First place: Bernstein; second place: Joseph Lordi, Philadelphia, Penn; senior; honorable mentions: Ewert; Jim Hoffman; Jerry Hoffman.
AWS sponsors lab sessions to teach leadership aspects
A 16-hour laboratory designed to develop the social and personal aspects of leadership was sponsored by Associated Women Students (AWS) last Friday and Saturday.
National Leadership Methods manual states that the laboratory was founded on the belief that leaders are not born, but can develop in "laboratories for learning." Their teaching stresses the difference between the traditional "popularity kid" campus leader, and a truly concerned perceptive leader.
Using a format designed by National Leadership Methods, around 70 participants learned concepts of the human side of leadership.
Participants were divided into 8-member groups at the outset of the lab. During the two days the groups were involved in several
problem - solving sessions. They learned to distinguish types of leadership methods and their corresponding degrees of effectiveness.
The groups also were involved in the creation of several group projects. At a later time groups had to defend their "creation" against the "creations" of other groups.
Near the end of the laboratory, group members were invited to participate in optional "feedback" sessions and were given an opportunity to be evaluated objectively by fellow group members.
Participants were encouraged not only to remember the principles which they had learned, but also to attempt to use them in positions of campus leadership, in an effort to be sensitive and effective leaders.
Want to help us do something about it?
Welcome to the Effluent Society
Our business is helping America breathe. That's quite a challenge. Wherever air contaminants are produced, we control them.
We need technically oriented graduates to develop, design and sell the world's most complete line of environmental control equipment.
If you're concerned about a future in an industry as vital as life itself, talk with our representative when he visits the campus. He may help you breathe a little easier. American Air Filter Company, Inc., 215 Central Ave., Louisville, Kentucky 40208. An equal opportunity employer.
American Air Filter BETTER AIR IS OUR BUSINESS
AAF
AAF representative will be on campus February 24,1970
10:45
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
workbook will be offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Recording tapes for sale. All sizes and kinds. $1.00 on down. Used once. Professionally erased. See at 221 Concord Road or phone 843-4836. 2-23
Western Cliv, Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Typewriters--big selection . . . rental purchase plan available. Office supply furniture. Xerox services Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. 843-3644.
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 horsepower, power brakes, low mileage, motoring, excellent condition, 843-8002. 2-23
TR-4, original owner. Red-black top-
wire wheels. Good condition. New
electrical system. Michelins, Arbath,
Judson ignition. Bendix electric fuel
pump. Fogs and Driving light. service
detailed service history 2–23
842–6659
1959 Chevy, automatic, very good mechanical condition, clean inside. new tires. $240 or best offer. Call John, 843-6804. 2-24
Magnavox deluxe 5" spool tape re-
presser. $199. See the manual only $60.00. See many cassette tape bargains at Ray Stoneback's, downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. night.
1963 Chevy 4-door sedan, V-8 automatic, power steering, radio, good gas mileage, good mechanical condition starts in cold. Call Bob, 842-6023 after 6:00.
1963 Oldmoble F-85 Cultass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket seats;
motion; starts and runs colliently;
manually perfectly run. $500; 843-9588.
2-24
'65 Karmann Ghia, dark red, rebuilt engine and transmission. Good interior. Reasonable. Call 842-1267, ask for Jerry. 2-24
Ski boots. size 9. very good condition.
Can be refinished with a offer.
Call after 2 p.m. 843-9165-214
or e-mail kristen@sunnybrook.edu
Old fur coats and caps for sale. Fox, muskrat, seal, otter, mouton, lamb. $10-$40. Also other strange clothes. 1618 Tenn. #A, 842-6810. 2-24
Gold and silver things by Xom.
Earthy, organic: rings, wedding sets,
and all other forms of body ornament.
Reasonable. Call 842-6120. 2-24
Tony's 66 Service
starting service
be Prepared!
tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
LA PETITE GALERIE
Fender Bassman amp, Gibson Thunderbird bass, 842-7641, Biff. 2-25
"with-it"" fashions
also Men's wear hv Arnein
Daylight and after-hours
Lower level
918 Km² Lowes
910 Ky., Lawrence
THE ATE in the WALL
THE
DELICATESSEN &
Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill.
SANDWICH SHOP
Biggest car bargain in town. '53 Plymouth with 4 new tires, new 3-inch battery, new points and plush Rear well. $100. Call 842-5436 2-25
TEXACO
Capitol Component Stereo System. 50 watt amplifier with speakers. inputs: two auxiliary input seters and headphone outputs. Separate audio and headphone controls. $2,450 Charlie, 843-959-893. 2-25
1964 MG Midget, good condition. $695
843-0495. 2-25
TYPEWRITER: Oliviett-Underwood
portable with case. Excellent condition.
Good for themes, papers, etc.
$35.00. Call 482-9045 after 5:00. 2-23
Large, comfortable single bed. $20.
Call 843-7543 after 5 o'clock. 2-25
Topsy's just received room-s'ze 21% gallon containers, one's filled with caramel, cinnamon, cheese or plain popcorn. Makes studying real corny.
Student specials
Chrome reversed 15-inch Chevy wheels, 843-4170. Ask for John. 2-26
W. 9th
1968 color Coronado 17" TV set, Table
model. Good condition. $150. C2-27
1-28
Paintings, drawings, ceramics, sculpture, jewelry, woodcraft, clothing 9th & Indiana THE OMNIBUS SHOP 2.25
One Ampex stereo tape recorder Model 1160, 2 years old. Great condition. Call Bob Brown, 843-5731 after 5 o'clock. 2-27
TEXACO
★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
★ New, experienced management
Guitar ES-355 Gibson Hollowbody, cherry finish, $250 or best offer; Motorola Reverb, car unit, $20 or best offer. Call 842-845-2727.
Kurt and his team will week! Ampg G15 guitar amp. Best offer takes it. Has reverb, echo, dolly, and cover. Under $100. Call Jim at 843-6707. 2-27
1968 Suzih 125 ecm motorcycle. Excel-for cars and town and mechanical condition. Sales less than $1000. Call $190.00. Call 842-5267. 2-27
Ralial component set model. 36-watt stereo amplifier and FM Receiver. Call 842-2100. Call 842-lptical cartridge made by BSBR. 2-solo 3-a speakers with 8" wofer, 3 tweeter. 842-1200. Room 332 after 7.
6th & Mo. VI13-2139
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Hurry to Henry's
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
WANTED
- Oils and Acrylics
Organist /singer for established local
group. Jazz; rock; pop. 842-6848. 2-24
- Decoupage Materials
EBERT
THOMAS
- Stretcher Frames
McConnell Lumber
henrys
Bankmark Services
- Balsa Wood
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-gooodness Bar-B-Ribs, place to get some Rubs, Chicken in place to open. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf Barn available for barn parties. Spot on roasts and Hayrack, heat and electric furnaces, call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-13 Fye boots, fringe jackets, moosecasins, hiking boots, also custom made belts, michandbs, purses at 812 Mast, gollars collars; at 812 Mast, PRIMARILY LEATHER. 3-2 Student and family laundries done at Tart's Laundry, 1903$^1$, Mass. St. Andrews, folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in same day service. 3-2 SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 pairs to choose or LEATHER, 812 Mast. 3-2 Rallye—Hare and Hounds type. February 21, 1970, Saturday night, Malls over 20 pairs to choose or LEATHER, 812 Mast. first car off 7.30, Rallye Master Chris Patterson. 842-5470. 2-2 Interested in running for a Student Senate position? If you're interested in running for a Student Senate position, form a ballot or fill a responsible call, call 842-3107 after 6.00 p.m. 2-2 Railroad or model railroad enthusiasts for a formal event or just bull sessions at 842-6600 Ask John Wegner in Room 728. 2-2 Le Blond and Hertz (Ju Cris, Inc). "The Day of the Pig." Sat., Feb. 21. 9:29
completely furnished apartment by March with three other girls. Reasonable rent. Call Sunny, Perky, or Kay at 842-4729. **2-23**
Male roommate needed for Crescent Heights two-bedroom apt. Swimming pool in front of Availability March 1. Call 842-5859. **2-23**
Amable roommate to share furnished apartment—$20 per week—includes phone calls. Ideal location. Cigarette need not apply. Call 843-6671 after 10 p.m. **2-23**
The year here! Available on March 1. Need 1 girl to share apt. Good location $65 month. Call 842-9156. **2-27**
Wanted: Crafts of all kinds, paintings, ceramics, needlework, etc. Antiques; bottles, dishes, clothing, jewelry and information. Information 842-7281 evenings. **2-27**
Need an active voice in University affairs? Think responsibility!! Vote Bill Berg-Etrem Thomas — The Alliance. March 17-18. 2-25
NOTICE
DRAUGHT HOUSE
Home of the "Big Shef"
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
DOWNTOWN PLANT
202 W, 6th
401-3, 608
LANDSIDE PARKING
VI 3-4011
DRIVE-IN
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
COIN OP.
VI 3-5304
A
AND COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
PICK UP
9th and Miss.
900 Miss.
PLANNING A TRIP??
19th and La.
Let
STATION
23461
VI 3-9868
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Malls Shopping Center
Make Your
Spring Break Reservations
VI 3-1211
At the Captain's Table we serve good food to all the students all the time, not just some students, some of them are in English class 2:30 a.m. Across from Lindley Hall. 2:23
The Castle Tea Room—fine dining in an enchanting cultural and historical atmosphere. Visit the Castle Tea Room most unique restaurant in Lancee. 2-27
Phinneas P. Phrogg, Impet, and Pooh-
Bear seek good home. Free half-
care box trained no emergencies needed. Call Shelley, F. 542, 892-8964
pain, 2-25
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011½ Mass, Returns $4.00
Gregarious? So are We at the Captain's Table. We enjoy serving the KU student. The best in breakfast, lunch, and dinners. Come in today. Across from Lindley Hall. 2-23
Witness action for peace goals. Volunteer Thomas with a student wolf—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert Thomas—The Alliance. 2-25
Open government for all students. Specify action for peace goals. Volunteer Thomas with a student wolf—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert Thomas—The Alliance. 2-25
The Gospel Blimp." What. 40 min. color film satirizing many Christians of today while showing how to share one's faith. Where. Kansas Union Football. When? That Sunday. 22. 2:30 p.m. Presented by Christians Interested in Action. Free. Everyone invited. 2-23
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work VI 3-3281. Mrs Ruckman.
Experienced typist will type themes,
experimental typesetting.
Have electric typewriter with
Pica type. Competent service. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-14
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street the most convenient to campus
University State Bank
US
We Care About 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
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
S
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 LAN VL3-0330
721 Mass.
Exclusive Representative
of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges Favors
- Guards
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers Stationery
- Gifts
- Plaques
LNB Bldg. #306
- Sportswear
Al Lauter
Rings - Crested - Letters
Across from the Red Dog
Typing, IBM Electric, Pica Type. Fast.
Dependable, dependable. Contact: 2-244
843-1186.
VI 3-1571
LOST
High school ring—gold band with green stone—Thomas Edison High School, Tulsa, Okla. Class of 1968. Engles on sides of ring. Reward. Call Mishawaka high school 842-500-500, female, 2-Missing altar hound. Last seen in area of Gatehouse Apts. Any information please call 842-4029. Reward. $25.00.
HELP WANTED
Musician wanted. Male lead vocalist
Brown, 842-0100 for interview.
Jot Brown, 842-0100 for interview.
SERVICES OFFERED
Counselors wanted for Camp SonerSET for girls and Camp Cobbossee for boys. Require men and women high skilled in camp action, at least 21 years of age preferably with previous camp counselling experience. Camps are located in the State of Maine. Send resumes to Camp Action, 1345 7th Street, New York, New York 10022. 2-24 Wanted: male Lead vocalist.
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
USED BOOKS-READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Fantasy, Humor, JOBboy
Books, H & H Furniture Store
934 Mass. Book 843-2736 Now boasting
25,000 books.
Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 8011$_2$ Mass.$4.00 and up.tf
IF YOU need repairs, we need your business—besides we're less expensive and easier to repair.
MANCE ENTERPRISES, 317 N. 2nd St., 842-1191. Repairs on all popular imports and sports cars. 2-25
FOR RENT
Luxurious studio apt. (quiet!) at Town Manor. Furnished, a.c. steam heat, parking, single occupancy. Professor or mature student. 843-8000.
LOW SUMMER RATES
Now showing afternoons at College
Available now; furnished studio, furnished or unfurnished 2 bedroom apartment. Very large, fully carpeted, plenty of storage space. Most utilities paid including central heat and air conditioning. Located across from the office on campus busline. Laundry facilities, outdoor pool, off-street parking.
Hill Manor Apartments
1741 W. 19th, APT, 5B, 842-8220
Your headquarters
for
SHAW AUTO
SERVICE
miDAS
mufflers and
-
shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Stuffing steaks and fresh fish await you when you die at the Sifter. We give only the final preparation the selection as you like them with all the other sides. The dining experience at the Sifter is delightful on dinner pleasure.
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one mile half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge
843-1431
>
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
(Continued from page 1)
Chicago five seek bond
CHICAGO—The five men convicted of crossing state lines to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention have asked their supporters to concentrate on efforts to obtain appeal bonds.
U. S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman denied bond Friday after sentencing the five to five years in prison and $5,000 fines.
Laird doubts end to draft
WASHINGTON—Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird sees little chance of eliminating the draft and converting to an all-volunteer armed force by mid-1971 as recommended by a presidential commission.
Laird also said he could not see any expansion of the U.S. military role in Laos "as far as ground forces are concerned," although he declined to rule out greater use of air power to aid royal Laotian troops.
Role separation needed
NEW YORK—George E. Reedy, one of President Johnson's press secretaries, suggested Sunday that the United States would be better off if the President were not both chief of state and chief of government.
The White House, Reedy contends in an article in the current issue of Look magazine, has a courtlike atmosphere that shields the President from reality and can warp the political instincts of such a master politician as Lyndon B. Johnson.
[ ]
12 KANSAN Feb. 23
1970
Media criticized
ATLANTA (UPI)—Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew assailed what he called the "liberal news media" for disseminating "drivel," and Chief Justice Warren E. Burger rebuffed a network news team during separate appearances in Atlanta during the weekend.
Agnew's criticism of the press came at a black tie $100-a-plate GOP campaign fund dinner Saturday night that raised $100,000 for the Republican party of Georgia and drew about 400 peace demonstrators.
Burger spoke about the same time at a hotel a few blocks away to a meeting of the American Bar Association (ABA), but only after a confrontation with a newsman of the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) in which he ordered a microphone removed.
Agnew told his cheering audience that demonstrators have no thoughts of their own and are merely reacting to ideas supplied in a "Computer-like operation." He said demonstrations actually stemmed from a fear of confrontation with reason and logic.
"The liberal news media have been calling on me to lower my voice," Agnew said. "I would like to do this, but I will not make a unilateral withdrawal and thereby violate the confidence of the silent majority.
"To penetrate that drivel disseminated by the liberal news media we need a cry of alarm."
He said he would "lower my voice" if the Black Panthers would disavow violence and run candidates in the accepted fashion and if dissidents stop "pledging allegiance to Ho Chi Minh and Mao Tse-tung."
Burger said before appearing at the ABA's midyear meeting, he would allow no television or radio coverage of the speech.
But a CBS broadcast team said it had not been informed of the ruling and attempted to cover the speech.
The confrontation came after a
microphone had been placed on the speaker's podium.
"You're planning to cover this?" Burger asked CBS team chief Phil Jones.
"That's right," Jones said. "I'm a newsman with CBS."
"Well, whatever you are, goodbye and goodnight." Burger replied.
"You don't consider this a public speech?" Jones asked. "We are charged with covering the news, and the chief justice makes news when he speaks publicly. Why can't I cover it?"
"If you have a couple of hours
sometime, come by my office and I'll explain it to you," Burger said. The microphone was removed
In his speech, Burger said that America's complex and expensive system of justice isn't working well, and "tends to become a spectator sport."
He called for prison reform with an emphasis on rehabilitation to cut down on repeat offenders and cited delayed trials, system of appeals and procedural protections "such as the exclusion and suppression of evidence and the dismissal of cases for irregularities" as negative aspects of the system.
Harris gives reasons
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Sen. Fred R. Harris disclosed Sunday that he resigned as national Democratic chairman partly because fellow Democrats suspected he was using the National Committee to build himself up as a presidential candidate.
Harris said the suspicions started when Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts made clear, following his auto accident on Chappaqaidick Island, that he would not be a candidate for the White House in 1972.
He emphasized that the principal reason for quitting was a desire for greater freedom to speak out on the issues. He felt he could not operate effectively as chairman with his motives under question.
Harris said he assumed when he took the chairmanship that he would serve through this year's elections, but changed his mind after his motives became suspect.
"While it had not been a problem for me before," Harris said, "there were some who wondered if I, myself, might be a candidate for president in 1972, and therefore, wondered perhaps if I was using this party post to further my own political ambitions.
"That was not the case, but it did severely hinder my carrying out the duties of the job."
Harris stated flatly he was not a candidate for either the presidential or vice-presidential nominations in 1972.
Harris will bow out as chairman March 5 when the Democratic National Committee meets in Washington to vote on a successor.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy with variable winds 5 to 15 mph today. Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. High today in the 50s. Precipitation 10 per cent tonight and Tuesday.
Tonight!!
MR. YUK
Direct from Detroit
'THE CRADLE'
soul & rock ALL GIRL band
First time in Lawrence
PAT
SUSIE
NANCY
NANCY
Yuk down
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 85
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, Feb. 24, 1970
BSU confiscates UDK's
Members of the Black Student Union (BSU) Monday afternoon seized aproximatesan and dumped many of them in Potter Lake.
BSU members converged on circulation points in Flint Hall, Strong Hall, Murphy Hall, Summerfield Hall, and several outdoor circulation bins on campus, and carried off nearly half of the Kansans printed for the day.
474586
Earlier in the day, BSU members called on Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and demanded that a ruling by Attorney General Kent Frizzell concerning the BSU newspaper Harambie be delivered to them by 2 p.m.
At 2 p.m. the BSU members returned to Strong Hall, and Chalmers told them he knew of no decision by Frizzell. BSU members then replied, "We know what we have to do."
At around 2:30 p.m. the BSU, using several private cars, began collecting Kansans, waiting until delivery was made at circulation points or taking papers directly from ears of circulation drivers.
About an hour later, papers were floating in Potter Lake.
BSU members seize Kansans
Photo by Ron Bishop
Within an hour of the seizure of the Kansans, a meeting of administrative, student, and Kansan officials was held in the Chancelors office.
At the meeting, it was decided that student government leaders and Kansan staff members would meet with the BSU at 11:30 a.m. today, and BSU officials agreed to the meeting. Chalmers suggested that students alone attend the meeting, and the students agreed.
Black Student Union members confiscated the Kansan from the trunk of the delivery car at 15th and Naismith Monday afternoon. The Kansans were also confiscated at the pick up stands along Jayhawk Boulevard.
(Continued to page 12)
BSU paper funds queried
The Black Studnt Union does not have proper authority to print its newspaper, David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president said.
Any appropriations for the BSU were suppose to be sent through the Student Senate and the Student Senate Audit and Finance Committee, Rick von Ende, Abilene, Texas, graduate student said.
Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and head of the Student Senate Audit and Finance
★★
The Black Student Union (BSU) newspaper, Harambee, went on sale Monday after last week's controversial setback with the KU Printing Service.
Last Tuesday, a majority of printing service employees walked off the job in protest over allegedly obscene material. Dissatisfied, the BSU withdrew their paper.
Clarence Reynolds, Kansas City, Kansas, sophomore said, "The paper was printed in Wichita but I don't know where." Monte Beckwith, Chicago, Ill., freshman and editor would not disclose the name of the printing service in Wichita.
The paper sold for 15 cents and was distributed free to blacks.
★★
Committee, said that he thought the Student Executive Committee had to give the BSU authority to spend beyond what it was appropriated in September.
Von Ende said a BSU proposal should be sent to the Student Senate where its next test will be the Student Senate Audit and Finance Committee. Once the Senate has voted on it, he said, the BSU may or may not have its money.
All the confusion centers on how the BSU is to gain money once it has exhausted what the Student Senate allocated for it in September.
In the middle of the controversy is Retonde who does not think he has a responsibility for any of this. He said that last September his committee proposed that all student fundings have the provision for further money should they exhaust their allocated amount if they gained approval.
"They know the proper channels," Awbrey said, "because they made them for speaker H. Rap Brown late last year."
Retonde said that the provision passed but was only applicable to the BSU. He added that he thought the proper authority was the Student Executive Committee.
But then there is the editor of the BSU, Beckwith who does not
care. He said he knows he must have authority to gain funds, but does not understand why he should have to get it.
Fire destroys ROTC building
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—The Army ROTC building on the campus of Washington University was virtually destroyed by fire Monday, and university chancellor Thomas H. Eliot said "There is no doubt that this was arson."
About 200 students cheered flames and booed firemen trying to extinguish the blaze. The FBI was called to help with the investigation of the cause of the fire because the metal and frame building on the northwest corner of the campus is federal property.
"The Army ROTC program will continue uninterrupted, despite the obvious physical inconvenience caused by this destructive crime." Eliot said.
Col. James F. Kudrna, head of the ROTC program, called the incident "utterly shocking."
Authorities said the fire started near the files on the 187 students enrolled in the program but that files were saved because they were in fireproof cabinets.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Bar rejects genocide treaty
ATLANTA—The American Bar Association voted 130-126 Monday against U.S. ratification of an international treaty against genocide, and one opponent of the treaty remarked that "we wouldn't be here if we hadn't committed genocide."
The ABA first rejected the idea shortly after it was proposed 21 years ago.
Court considers conduct
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court today addressed itself to the question of a criminal defendant who shouts at a judge and deliberately disrupts a trial. The outcome could be a guide for the "Chicago Seven" appeal and other similar cases.
Congress hears ABM plan
WASHINGTON—The Nixon administration, ending what was described as a month of quiet but vigorous infighting, went to Congress today with details of its plan to buy another $1.5 billion installment of the Safeguard antiballistic missile system ABM.
Campus briefs
Homes open to foreign students
Foreign students interested in a homestay for spring vacation should contact Judy Hankammer at the People to People office, Kansas Union. room B104.
Families in Lawrence and other Kansas communities are offering their homes to provide an opportunity for the students to become acquainted with the American way of life beyond the KU campus.
The deadline for application is March 10.
American families interested in being hosts should call the People to People office.
Higgins to speak on black capitalism
Connie Mack Higgins, special assistant to the administrator of the Small Business Administration, will speak on the topic "Black Capitalism in the Nixon Administration" at 4 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
One of Nixon's top advisers on black issues during the presidential campaign, Higgins was active in the "Illinois for Nixon" program.
Debate team takes third place
The University of Kansas debate team, coached by Donn W. Parson, associate professor of speech and drama, took third place in a field of 126 teams in a tournament at Dartmouth College this weekend.
The team of Bob McColloh, Mission senior, and David Jeans, Independence, Mo. senior, placed in what Parson said is one of the largest and best-known tournaments in the country.
Jeans was chosen the seventh-best speaker out of 252 students that attended the tournament.
Parson said that winning third place made the KU team eligible to compete in the Tournament of Champions at Chicago in April.
Greek scholarships awarded
The Interfraternity Council, in their regular meeting Thursday night, announced the names of those men who will receive IFC scholarships.
Those receiving the scholarships are Kevin Fitzpatrick, Arkansas City junior, Thomas Bradley, Topeka senior, Daniel Reeder, Fort Worth, Texas, senior, Kelly Pendergrass, Kansas City junior, Steven Fearing, Kansas City sophomore, and Thomas Vrabac, Kansas City senior.
A total of $825 was awarded to the recipients on the basis of scholastic achievement, financial need and Greek activities.
The IFC also announced that applications are now being taken for scholarships for the fall semester.
Free University to hold meeting
The Free University will hold an organizational meeting for University of Kansas students and Lawrence residents 7:30 p.m. Sunday, in the Wesley Foundation.
The Free University office at Cantebury House, 1116 Louisiana, will be staffed from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. this week, said Richard Averill, Topeka sophomore and head of the steering committee.
No previous knowledge of free education is required, Averill said, and anyone who is interested should come or call 843-8202.
Schedules of classes and posters will be distributed later in the week.
Spencer exhibits railroad history
Railroads and their role in the making of history is the subject of an exhibit at Spencer Library.
The exhibit, located in the Regional History department in Spencer, includes several books and maps of old railroad lines. Two model trains, a lantern and other articles from the railroad era are also on display.
Frank Aydelotte, assistant regional history librarian, said the exhibit is meant to dramatize the role of railroads in the making of American history.
The exhibit will be up until the first of May.
Official Bulletin
Today
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door,
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium: 6.45 p.m. - 9.45 p.m.
KU Film Society: "Sons and Lovely-
Auditorium, 3 p.m. 7 p.m. and 9 p.m."
KU Synchro Club; Natatiorum
Robinson Gymnasium, 7 p.m. - 9 p.m.
Film: "Fail Safe." Dyche Auditorium, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Jayhawk Rodeo Club: Room 2A, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken
Classical Film: "The Gaucho"
Ruffl Auditorium, Kansas Union,
7 p.m.
Christian Science Organization:
Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Faculty Recital: Frank Brown, tumbone. Swarthout Recital H, 8pm.
Classical Film: "Three Musketeers"
Woodruff Auditorium, 9 p.m.
Chicago
2 KANSAN Feb. 24
1970
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., Monday joined a steadily-growing group of Senate liberals and announced he would vote against the Supreme Court nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell.
CBS to keep notes private
Cranston was the 17th senator
NEW YORK (UPI)—CBS News correspondent Mike Wallace and producer Paul Loewenwater have refused to discuss their investigation of the Black Panthers with the Justice Department and probably would refuse to do so under subpoena by a federal grand jury, it was disclosed Monday.
Wallace said he and Loewenwater had been asked to sit down and talk voluntarily with Justice Department Officials about a program they did on the Black Panthers, but that they had refused.
Chicago
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"I said it would be a fishing expedition." Wallace said.
Senator to vote on Carswell
The two men have retained attorney Jay Topkis to represent them in the matter in the belief that they might be subpoenaed by a New Haven, Conn., federal grand jury investigating Panther activities. Topkis said his clients might appear before the jury but merely to inform it they will not answer questions.
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Wallace said he received a visit from an FBI agent almost a year ago when he and Loewenwater first started to work on a report on the Black Panthers. He said the agent asked him to pass on to the FBI any information he obtained on the Panthers.
KIEF'S
CBS News President Richard S. Salant said he was apprehensive as a result of the requests for information from Wallace and Loewenwater. He said the requests were "less than reassuring" in view of Attorney General John N. Mitchell's promise Feb. 5 of "prior negotiations" with communications media on requests for confidential information.
to publicly commit himself against President Nixon's nominee to the high tribunal. More are expected.
Thirteen senators have endorsed Carswell so far, and Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott has predicted his nomination will be approved with only 15 to 20 votes against it.
At the same time, Carswell's detractors pointed to a new report from Florida, showing that the U.S. Appeals Court judge chartered an all-white booster club for Florida State University.
The report said that on Dec. 16, 1953, five months after Carlswell became U.S. attorney for the Tallahassee area, a nonprofit club was approved and recorded on the basis of his sworn affidavit.
The charter stated that "the qualifications of members shall be any white person interested in
the purposes and objectives for which this corporation is created."
At the time Carswell and others signed as subscribers and charter members, Carswell was still in private law practice but the document was not submitted to the Circuit Court until the following December by which time Carswell was U.S. attorney.
On the basis of earlier disclosures about Carswell's background, Cranston said "there is nothing in Judge Carswell's subsequent record to show that he has changed the white supremacy views he held as a young political candidate.
The All-Student Council appropriated over 43 per cent of its 1958-59 to Associated Women Students.
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Film relates local resident's life
Leo Beureman, character of a movie bearing his name, could recently be seen driving a tractor remade especially for him. Beureman is deaf, crippled and partially blind. The film tells the story of a handicapped man's struggle to live a useful life.
Regents to receive report on Velvel's protest speech
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Monday that a report on Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, will be submitted to the Kansas Board of Regents in advance of their March meeting.
Chalmers said he had instructed Lawrence Blades, dean of the School of Law, to obtain a copy of Velvel's speech for referral to the Regents.
Chalmers said he had no idea what Velvel had said but added that if anyone had any information regarding the incident, and wished to file a charge, he would pursue it.
Chalmers said that he had no information indicating that Velvel's remarks were incendiary or inappropriate. He added that he had heard some favorable comments about the talk from several reporters who had told him there was nothing "erroneous or scandalous" in what the professor said.
A petition is circulating in the School of Law which supports the privilege of a professor to express his beliefs publicly.
Tom Ashton, Lawrence second year law student and petition sponsor, would not say to whom he intends to present the signatures. He said it was merely an expression of student support of academic freedom.
Geological study concludes today
Today was the final day of the 21st annual Highway Geology Symposium at KU, organized by the State Highway Commission of Kansas and the State Geological Survey of KU.
The meeting, which began Monday, included a field trip into Eastern Kansas.
Wakefield Dort, associate professor of geology, reported at the symposium on his recent experiences in Antarctica.
Centron Inc. of Lawrence has been notified that its motion picture, "Leo Beuerman," has been nominated for an Oscar by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
The film is about the struggles of Leo Beuerman, a Lawrence resident, to live a useful life despite being deaf, partially blind and crippled.
The film depicts a typical day in his life. He came to town each day from his farm just outside Lawrence in a tractor that a relative helped him remake.
The 68-year-old Beuerman had to give up driving the tractor soon after the film was completed because his vision became worse. He now lives in the Wakarusa Manor Nursing Home.
Commenting on future political plans, DeCoursey said he is uncertain at this time if he will run again in 1970. He is considering either challenging Larry Winn for the third congressional district or possibly running for reelection as lieutenant governor.
Oscar nomination made
In town he got around my means of a cart he built, selling pencils and repairing watches to support himself.
"I have visited too many campuses," DeCoursey said, "not to realize the need for people to be big enought to accept others who are different or disagree."
Centron is a film making corporation which usually specializes in movies for industrial and educational use. This film, shot over a period of two years and completed last spring, was done by several Centron staff members.
DeCoursey said he was concerned with the tendency of both sides of the legal spectrum to be intolerant of those who disagree.
The picture has been nominated for an award in the category of documentary short subjects.
The 13 minute color film was submitted to the academy upon
Feb. 24 KANSAN 3
1970
Film tells life of resident
Damage immunity debated by Senate
DeCourse disagreed with Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, on the allegedly undesirable direction in which the University was headed.
KU protests accepted by DeCoursey
James L. DeCoursey, lieutenant governor of Kansas, said Monday that he did not object to student demonstrations. They are good, he said, particularly in the nonviolent manner in which they have been conducted in the last year.
TOPEKA (UPI)—The question of whether or not the state government should be immune from damage suits was lengthily debated in the Kansas Senate Monday.
DeCoursey said he was not sure that the Chicago 10 demonstration at KU last Thursday merited the criticism leveled against it.
But despite articulate opposition to a bill that would render the state immune from liability claims, a majority of the senate gave the measure preliminary approval.
Sen. Glee Smith, Jr., R-Larned, arguing in favor of the bill, said that orderly government in the future depended on its passage.
"We're dealing with ourselves when we deal with the state," he said. All the agencies and branches of state government would be required to purchase liability insurance if the measure is not passed, Smith said, a process that would cost the state hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in insurance premiums.
I will answer this question by analyzing the visual content of the image.
The image shows a person playing a guitar. The individual is wearing a cowboy hat and appears to be deeply focused on their performance. The background is black, which contrasts sharply with the white lines used for the guitar strings and the body of the instrument. There are no discernible text or additional graphics present in the image.
Based on the provided information:
- The person is performing music.
- They are playing an electric guitar.
- The attire suggests a Western style, likely related to rock or blues music.
Therefore, the answer to the question "What type of music is being performed?" is "Rock or blues music."
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the suggestion of William Bowers, the producer-writer of "Support Your Local Sheriff" who saw the film when he visited the University of Kansas last spring.
Centron was notified by telegram Thursday that the film had been nominated, Mosser said.
The awards will be announced April 17.
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KAWSNN COMMENT
Velvel vs. the hacks
By HOWARD PANCRATZ
—Reynolds Shultz, Sept. 21, 1969
"It is not the function of the state legislature to be a watchdog over college campuses, the Board of Regents carries out that responsibility. I never want to see the state legislature become involved outside their proper sphere. I never want them to dictate to the University."
"Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, Thursday called for the firing of two Kansas University professors in the wake of a disturbance Tuesday at the Douglas County Courthouse. . . 'It is bad enough when students take part in such demonstrations, but when a member of the faculty participates it can not be tolerated, especially when state monies are involved.'"
Reynolds Shultz quoted in Feb. 20 Lawrence Journal World
A tragedy which is slowly engulfing the entire nation and pitting politician against educator, politician against minority groups and politician against the Bill of Rights, is unfolding on this campus. How much longer this nation can survive before the extremists on the left and right rip your and my country apart is an extremely pertinent question in the light of recent local and national events.
Under brutal attack at KU is law professor Larry Velvel, a man with more guts than many Americans. A foe of the Vietnam war and a man of liberal tendencies, he has been picked out by a number of Kansas legislators as a University professor who deserves to be fired. He should be sacked, they say, because he addressed a group protesting the action against the "Chicago 10" which later destroyed courthouse property in downtown Lawrence. Moreover, though they didn't say it, Shultz—and those naive enough to accept the views of the learned senator from Lawrence—probably remember that it was Velvel who had the gumption to challenge the constitutionality of the Vietnam war. He did this not by taking to the streets with an unruly host, but by spending the time and effort to fight his case from the lower courts to the highest court of the land, the Supreme Court. This, in and of itself, should indicate the caliber of man Larry Velvel is because no other American, patriot, anarchist, flag-waver of flag-burner, took the same time and effort to find out whether our boys (and your and my friends) were being killed constitutionally in that Southeast Asian nation.
The Supreme Court wouldn't touch Velvel's suit with a ten-foot pole. They dismissed the suit without explanation other than saying Associate Justice Douglas supported Velvel. It was, in judicial phraseology, a "political" question and the Court refrains from political involvement. The Vietnam war had become a confrontation of the "politics of the left and the politics of the right," and you and I, the citizens of this nation—being neither overly left nor right—reaped the harsh results of a Court that abdicated its duty on a constitutional question.
Velvel sought clarification of the war's status not only for those who oppose our involvement in Vietnam but for every Kansan and his children and grandchildren who might be fighting in "police actions" or "brush-fire" wars in the next several decades. He tried to do a service for you and I and it is bitterly ironic that Sen. Lester Arvin, R-Rose Hill, should state that it "is a shame that he can come to our state . . . teach our young people law . . . almost incite a riot . . . and draw more salary than our district court judges."
Velvel has been vocal on campus in both his denunciation of the war and Judge Julius Hoffman. But the important thing is that in no way has this constitutionally guaranteed right to speak interfered with Velvel's performance in the classroom. He does not turn his classes into marathon circuses organized around his own political views. Further, in no way has he incited anybody nor has he had reason to believe what he has said would lead to violence.
The results of the Court decision are that no longer will any President feel it necessary to have Congress declare war. He can justify any troop build-ups or commitments simply by saying, as did President Johnson, "We felt that if we made a declaration of war the Chinese would feel they were obligated to come to North Vietnam's aid. So we didn't ask Congress for a declaration of war." Secondly, this means that a soldier can die in a war he can rightfully refuse to serve in—that is, a war that has not been Congressionally approved.
The extremely unfortunate incidents of Tuesday, Feb. 17 at the Douglas County Courthouse are as much a part of Velvel's doing as Reynolds Shultz's part in the rise of Fidel Castro to power in Cuba. What this should emphasize to people who took part in the courthouse episode is that you can get a man, who is basically sympathetic to your cause, in a heck of a lot of trouble by acting in an unlawful manner he does not condone.
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. Supported by the University of Kansas class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 86044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Supported by the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
BUSINESS STAFF
I would suggest that it is people like Velvel—people who are certified lawyers with sound educations and keen minds as well as being patriotic Americans—who should be in the forefront of any criticism directed at the possible unconstitutionality of a war or the possible dereliction of duty by a federal court judge. Simply, they know more about it than anybody else.
Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield
Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks
Assistant Managers Larry Cates Other Bassinss
National Advertising Manager Omar Bassinss
Classified Manager Shelley Bray
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser . Mel Adams
NEWS STAFF
Ackman, Robert A. *Adviser* ... James W. Murdoch
Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson
Campus Editor ... Ted Iill
News Editor ... Joe Bullard
Sports Editors ... Mike Shearer, Joe Nass, Michael Bean
Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver
Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkens
Women's Page Editors ... Linda Leyd, Carolyn Bowers
Arts and Reviews Editors .. Geneile Richards, Rich Geary
Assistant Campus Editors .. Vicki Phillip, Beth McLeod
Assistant News Editors .. Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart
Photographers .. Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein,
Ben Shraer
It has been increasingly the "in thing" among politicians to lambast the brain-trust of this nation. Ironically, it is this brain-trust of college educators who often know more about a subject because of first-hand knowledge and years of study than the politicians do themselves. Shultz, a man who once told me he wondered if he were fit to represent Lawrence because of his lack of education and who said "it is not the function of state legislators to be a watchdog over college campuses," is hardly the man to judge the moral and judicial aspects of Larry Velvel's involvement in current events. Not only does the man miss the finer points of these matters, but he also has no conception of the way the keystone of our nation—The Bill of Rights—operates.
Member Associated Collegiate Press
"Ren" is a great guy to drink a beer or two with as you shoot the breeze, but his environment and upbringing have so prejudiced his outlook that the only safe place for him, Kansas and the United States is down on the farm in retirement.
hearing voices—
To the editor:
Comment on Bill Hansen's column in the UDK (2/18/70):
Bill Hansen states: "Certainly it should be clear that there are no evil men, just victims. The events of the past weekend, both in Chicago and on this campus are without an author. That is their tragedy."
I wonder if Mr. Hansen really believes what he wrote; if so, the implications are far-reaching: Lyndon Johnson was a victim in 1965 when he began the massive build-up of American troops in Vietnam. Dow Chemicals was a victim when it made the decision to manufacture napalm. Nixon is a victim when he moves the current war into Laos. And I am a victim when I show contempt of Julius Hoffman.
The events on this campus and in Chicago are not without authors. I accept responsibility for my actions and I hold others responsible for theirs. I personally believe that there are "evil" men because decisions (particularly ones like the decision to manufacture napalm), are the creations of men—not just things that happened.
Amarette Callaway Kansas City, Mo., senior
To the editor:
The war in the Middle East does not continue because Israel is a "trigger-happy nation," as Joe Naas seems to feel. The war does not continue because Israel wants to give "Death to Arabs" as Mr. Naas infers. The war continues because the leaders of the Arab world, which stretches from Morroco on the Atlantic Ocean to Yeman on the Indian Ocean, claim that Israel, a country smaller than New Jersey, wants to encircle them.
Mr. Naas says "America passing out money. For planes, guns, bombs, bullets." (His Grammar.) This statement is completely false. All Israeli arms are purchased with hard currency by the Israelis. This money comes from Israeli citrus sales in Europe, tourism and diamond exports to Europe. None of this money comes from the U.S. Government. If Mr. Naas was to read the newspapers closely he would find that Israel is asking to buy U.S. arms, not to get them as a gift.
Mr. Naas states that "Arabs . . . are hate crazy because they were driven from their land." This is historically untrue. In 1948 Palestine was partitioned into two states, one Jewish and one Arab. While the Jews accepted the partition the Arabs did not. In May the neighboring Arab states invaded Palestine. An order came from the Arab Higher Command ordering Arab civilians to evacuate the Jewish areas. The order left no doubt that Arabs who stayed behind would be considered traitors by the Arab Armies. As a result of this Arab order nearly 600,000 Arabs fled from Israel. Luckily all of the Arabs did not flee Israel and Israel now has numerous Arab cities and towns. The most famous of these cities are Nazereth, a large city in eastern Galilee with an Arab mayor, Acco in western Galilee and Um el Faham, the largest Arab city in Israel, located in the Shomron hills.
The total number of Arabs in the State of Israel is now 350,000. They have all citizenship rights, including self government in their villages and the right to send representatives to Israel's parliament, the Knesset, where eight Arabs sit as members. Indeed, the only legal difference between Arab and Jew in the State of Israel is that the Arab does not have to serve for two years in the Israeli Army, although he can sign up if he so wishes.
The question that now arises is what can we do? Frankly I don't know. I lived in the Middle East for a year. I've seen Israel, Jordan and parts of Egypt and Syria. I've talked with Arab and Israeli and worked with both, but I don't know the answer, but this much I do know, writing bombastic, sarcastic and frankly dishonest articles as Joe Naas and his colleagues of the New Left do on this issue, and every other issue that they deem to write about, will not advance the cause of peace one iota and will merely rub salt in open wounds.
Jonathan Jordan Washington, D.C., junior
★★
To the editor:
To those who still believe in how they're selling: In a shop of barber chairs, rubber plants and candles, music leaks out the mail vent. I wander along, stroking and picking at things; this pretty mass-produced, hand-made junk with impressive tags like "made in Berkeley" or "from heads in heaven." I allow a smile to form: 4 quarters it will cost me for a nice krinkly scroll-type copy of Desiderata.
I am caught unsuspecting, but then I ponder, how can it be that people who have liberated themselves from the dreams and tears of money, still act under the same influence, only under a disguise of indifference? Supposedly different from their fathers, attachment to objects still persists. Strange, but then so is the fact that our air stifles our trees, but that's altogether different, isn't it?
So I rummage through some lovelies, which can only be allowed in a wealthy society, and I wonder why I can't afford anything.
Jennifer Henderson Topeka Sophomore
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Tale of doomed love
By RICHARD GEARY
BY RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
"A Walk With Love and Death" is the kind of movie many people will be wary of, because it appears to be a mere trend follower. There are definite echoes of "Romeo and Juliet" in any story of two young lovers trying to escape a world gone mad; and here, the tragedy takes place during the Hundred Years War, with a peasant revolution thrown in for even more dimension.
The distinction of this eloquent little motion picture is in its refusal to take vulgar advantage of its sensational elements. Director John Huston and screenwriter Dale Wasserman have chosen not to exploit any "alienated youth" theme, or a revolution or anti-war theme; there is no parallel-seeking between medieval and modern times. Instead, they concentrate upon the human relationship at the center of the story.
Heron of Voix, a Parisian student, traverses his war-ravaged country in a spontaneous journey to the sea. He meets Claudia, a daughter of aristocracy, whose family and home have been destroyed by the angry peasants, and they wander together, as the raging conflict closes in about them.
The two stars, Angelica Huston (the director's daughter) and Assaf Dayan (the general's son), are both very pleasing to watch and give professionally restrained performances; and, indeed, there is a sense of restraint and refinement about the entire film. Such restraint and refinement that, at times, it seems as if it will waste away to nothing, were it not for the visual presence of the two lead actors. Occasionally, Wasserman's dialogue becomes overpoetic, as do a few of Huston's lingering shots of the lush French countryside; but who can blame them for getting carried away, once or twice, with the lyrical subject matter?
With his usual skill, Huston gives attention to minor characterizations: A traveling group of religious fanatics; a band of gypsy actors; Claudia's revolutionary uncle (played by Huston himself); arrogant knights; equally arrogant peasants are presented with a brilliant eye for detail. Small incidents stand out also; the young couple emerging from a chapel to find their horse being eaten by peasants; a glimpse of a wife-seller at an inn; a visit to a monastery, its inhabitants in a state of perpetual penitence.
The larger, more important scenes, though, are not as intense as they might be, because of the film-makers' reluctance to underscore their drama.
It is almost impossible today to find a love story between young people that has not been buried beneath layers of "significance" and social importance. The issues are certainly there in "A Walk With Love and Death," but this modest, deliberately "small" film has no pretensions. It exists to please and does a fine job of it.
RECORDS: Engelbert joins select
By WILLIAM D. LAFFLER
NEW YORK (UPI)—Engelbert Humperdinck, who often has appeared as a guest star on television, now has a show of his own and let us hope it will remain on the screen for a long time.
For Engelbert undoubtedly belongs in that select crowd of singers peopleled by Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, the late Russ Columbo, and Vaughn Monroe.
If Engelbert were to be paired with any of the above, it would be with Sinatra for essentially Humperdinck is a balladeer, technician and craftsman.
His latest hit, "Winter World of Love," is on its way to a gold record the platter awarded by RIAA to the artists whose discs reach the one-million sales mark.
It is included in "Engelbert Humperdinck" (Parrot PAS 71030), a long-play album distributed by London Records. But there are several fine numbers in this selection, among them "I'm a Better Man," "Love Letters" and "Didn't We."
While Engelbert is undoubtedly best on slow-tempo songs, he is vibrant on fast-paced numbers, such as "Aquarius" and "Let the Sunshine in."
And Glen Campbell should like the way Engelbert handles "Gentle on My Mind."
This is one of those rare LPs which is entertaining from beginning to end, for almost an hour. And, for this reason, it is a tribute to the showmanship of Engelbert Humperdinck.
BOOKS
ARUNDEL, by Kenneth Roberts (Crest. $1.25)—Reprint of one of the best historical novels written in America. "Arundel" is the story of a group of young men from Maine and their march to Quebec under the command of Gen. Benedict Arnold, early in the Revolution. If you'd like several hours of absorbing, exciting adventuring back into the past, here is your book.
*****
14 GREAT TALES OF ESP, edited by Icella Purnell Stone (Gold Medal, 75 cents)—A collection of stories about the human mind and the so-called unseen world. A number of good writers—Iasca Asimov, Frederic Brown, Eric Frank Russell, and others—are represented.
Feb. 24
1970 KANSAN 5
SCANDAL IN THE PENTAGON, by William McGaffin and Erwin Knoll (Gold Medal, 75 cents)—An expose that purports to show our the establishment and the military-industrial complex (to use two readily graspable terms) are out to sell democracy down the river. McGaffin is a Chicago Daily News man and Knoll is Washington editor of The Progressive. Both publications are reputable.
THE MAFIA TALKS, edited by Joseph Volz and Peter Bridge (Gold Medal, 75 cents)—A record of secretly taped conversations made in the office of Sam "The Plumber" DeCavalcante. The FBI bugged the office and produced the results: labor unions, construction industry, vending machines, garbage collection, policemen, politicians, murder, law enforcement.
*****
"Fail Safe" (Special Films)—Suspense-filled drama about nuclear annihilation. Directed by Sidney Lumet-1964.
"Sons and Lovers" (KU Film Society)—1959 British film of the D. H. Lawrence novel. Directed by Jack Cardiff.
On campus this week
Senior Recital (Swartout Recital Hall) - Judith Mathers, soprano, 8:00 p.m.
Tuesday
"Derring-Do Revisited" (Classical Film)—Two silent films starring the master of athletic heroism, Douglas Fairbanks: "The Gaucho" and "The Three Musketeers." (One showing each).
Faculty Recital (Swarthout Recital Hall)—Frank Brown, trombonist, 8:00 p.m.
"Casablanca" (Special Films)—The ultimate in movie nostalgia, starring Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Peter Lorre, Sidney Greenstreet, Claude Rains, et al. Directed by Michael Curtiz—1943.
Best sellers
Faculty Recital (Swarthout Recital Hall)—Ramon Salvatore, pianist, 8:00 p.m.
Fiction
THE GODFATHER—Mario Puzo
THE UEENTENAT—WOMAN
John Fawler
LDE THE GANG THAT COULDNT SHOOT STRAIGHT —Jimmy Breslin
THE INHERITORS—Hardee Robbins
THE STRAND—Daphne du Maurier
FIRE FROM HEAVEN—Mary Renault
THE GANG THAT COULDNT SHOOT STRAIGHT—Jimmy Breslin THE SEVEN MINUTES—Irving Wallace
IN THIS HOUSE OF BREDE—Rumer Godden
MUSIC
TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT—
Graham Greene
THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1987-Joe McGinister
DON MCCLINN
JOE McCLIINN
PRESENT AT THE CREATION—
Drew Aheenberg
Dean Acheson
THE PETER PRINCIPLE—Laurence L.
Lee
J. Peter and Raymond Hull
AMERICAN HERITAGE DICKI-
TON
AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTION-
MENT
AMERICAN HERITAGE
IMAGE
=Wilbur Martz, dildr-icar
IMAGE
THE GRAHAM KERR COOKBOOK
-Galloung. Gourmet.
Goulinet
AMBASSADOR'S JOURNAL—John
K. Gobershaw
THE COLLAPSE OF THE THIRD
PUBLIC-William L. Shirer
PRIME TIME—Alexander Kendrick
THE MOONES'S SH AUDO-W Rod
McKuen
One liners...
United Press International
HOLLYWOOD — "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," dealing with Soviet prison camps in the Stalin era, will be filmed on location in Norway starring England's Tom Courtenay.
HOLLYWOOD—Yvonne De Carlo will return to the screen for a cameo role in "The Delta Factor," based on a Mickey Spillane novel.
HOLLYWOOD—Rex Harrison has replaced Richard Harris in the title role of "Serooge" because of conflicting schedules.
HOLLYWOOD—"The Delta Factor" was delayed three months awaiting actor Chris George to complete his role with John Wayne in "Chisum."
HOLLYWOOD—Stuart Phillips has completed six songs for the sequel "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls."
HOLLYWOOD—Gordon Wile, former director of "Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In," will direct an hour musical-variety special, "The Haunted Mansion" for Disney.
HOLLYWOOD—Bruce Davidson, who co-starred with Kim Darby in "The Strawberry Statement," will play a guest star role in an episode of television's Medical Center."
HOLLYWOOD—Richard Lang, son of famed director Walter Lang, will make his own directorial debut in a segment of television's "Julia."
I. S. M. KLEIN
So It's Rated M;
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Steve McQueen
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Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
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'Dancing Donkey' opens as second children's play
The second production in the Children's Theatre Series at the University of Kansas will be "The Dancing Donkey," by Eric Vos of the Children's Professional Theatre in Holland.
The only public performance is Sat., at 2 p.m. at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall, The Wed., Thurs., and Fri. performances are reserved for city and county school children in grades one, two, and three. Tickets for these shows will be available through the schools.
"The Dancing Donkey" is the story of a wandering Friar from Asia and his talented donkey, Arlecho, who dances when he's happy. On their travels they encounter two pretty girls as well as two scoundrels who decide to steal Arlecho and make a fortune. For a time the Friar is outwitted and loses Arlecho, only to buy him back from the scoundrels. He finally teaches the scoundrels a lesson, retrieves his money, and reforms the men so that the two girls can marry them.
The play is part of an increasing international repertory of plays for children and has been produced in Italy, France, Yugoslavia, Denmark, Norway, Finland, England and Czechoslovakia as well as Holland.
Winters works for safety
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Comedian Jonathan Winters has been named honorary president of the National Safety Council and will tape a series of spot radio announcements to be broadcast across the country.
The cast: Friar—Art Sloan, Norton sophomore; Arlecho—Philip Davis, Topeka sophomore; Billy Badd—Steve Scott, Prairie Village sophomore; Ernie Pug—Bruce Brownlee, Prairie Village sophomore; Amelia—Kathryn Mitchell, Topeka freshman; Azelia—Roberta Eaton, Wichita sophomore.
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improbable history
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
time—7:58
price—$2.25 - $1.75
tickets on sale—
Feb. 17
KU-Y office,
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SUA special war anti-war film series
Fail Safe
Sidney Lumet - director
Short: I'm No Angel-Mae West
Feb. 24-7 and 9 p.m.- DYCHE -75c
JOHN HUSTON CREATES A LOVE STORY FOR TODAY!
20th Century Fox presents
A Walk with Love
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and Death
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Ends Tonight
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TODAY SHOW
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Tigers on prowl ...
Dave Robisch experiences Missouri's collapsing zone defense but that wasn't all the 'collapsing' the Tigers did as they fell to KU, 63-45.
Cotton 'planned' it all
By CHARLIE SMITH UPI Sportswriter
Cotton Fitzsimmons thinks his most brilliant coaching move of the season may have occurred when he drew up Kansas State's schedule.
Fitzsimmons had a reason.
The second - year basketball coach, whose team clinched at least a tie for the Big Eight championship Saturday night, slipped in an exhibition game right after the semester break.
"Two years ago," he recalled his first season, when he was an assistant to Tex Winter, "our first game after the mid-term break was at Oklahoma and we lost, 82-67. That put us in a terrible bind. The best we could do was 9-5 and we had to win seven of our last nine to do that."
Fitzsimmons got the hint. This season he scheduled Athletes in Action, a touring team of athletes representing Campus Crusade for Christ. Since they do not represent a college, their games do not count in the won and lost columns of the teams they play.
"All we did was get a game in before we had to play one for keeps," said Fitzsimmons. He's glad he did. Athletes in Action startled the Wildcats, 66-60.
"They pinned our ears back and that was good for us," said Fitzzimmons.
Kansas State followed the exhibition loss by going to Oklahoma State and winning and the Wildcats have never looked back.
Saturday they clinched at least a share of the conference title with a 69-62 victory over Nebraska. That victory, coupled with Kansas' 81-73 loss at Colorado, left Kansas State with a three-game lead with three to play. The Wildcats can win the title outright Thursday night when they play Colorado in a regionally televised game in Manhattan, Kan.
UPI Top Twenty
Team Points
1. UCLA (24) (21-1) 330
2. Texas (1) (19-1) 161
3. S. Carolina (1) (21-2) 241
4. St. Bonaventure (1) (19-1) 231
5. N. Mexico St. (21-2) 187
6. South Carolina (1) (19-1) 129
7. Pennsylvania (23-1) 107
8. Iowa (15-4) 95
9. Florida St. (21-3) 43
10. St. Louis (19-1) 21
11. T Houston (20-3) 29
12. N. Carolina St. (19-4) 19
13. Davidson (19-4) 18
14. Georgia (19-1) 15
15. Notre Dame (19-5) 15
16. T Columbia (20-3) 12
17. N. Carolina (17-8) 13
18. Wisconsin (19-2) 13
19. Utah (17-7) 12
20. Kansas St. (18-5) 7
The Kansas Jayhawks, amidst flying objects thrown from the crowd, defeated the Missouri Tigers Monday night, 63-45, to maintain the fading hope of catching Kansas State in the Big Eight basketball race.
KU hopes for title tie
The Jayhawks, now with six wins against five losses in league play, trail K-State, 9-2, by three games with only three to play. The loss mathematically eliminated Missouri from the championship race as the Tigers now stand 6-6 in league play and 14-10 overall. KU is now 15-8 overall.
However, with 10:16 remaining in the first half, Chester Lawrence hit a 25-foot jump shot to give KU a 13-10 lead. Dave Robisch and Bob Kivisto each added two free throws before a 20-foot Kivisto shot pushed the lead to 19-12 with 6:55 remaining.
The victory was the 12th straight for Kansas in Allen Field House as the Jayhawks have not been defeated at home this year. The early going of the game found both teams tight and playing deliberately with neither capable of gaining a substantial lead.
At this point Robisch was caught throwing an elbow and the ensuing technical foul lead to the first of three delays resulting from objects being thrown to the floor.
Nebraska received strong scoring support from center LeRoy Chalk with 17 and forward Bob Gratton with 14.
By DON BAKER
Kansan Sports Writer
Theo Franks converted the free throw for Missouri but play had hardly resumed until more objects were thrown to the floor and with 6:09 remaining the game was delayed again.
Garfield Heard paced Oklahoma with 33 points.
The Tigers responded by getting two quick baskets from Doug Johnson and Pete Helmback and with 5:13 left in the
Oklahoma also is 5-6 with the loss.
'Hawks slam Mizzou
Chalk grabbed 19 rebounds to lead the Huskers to a 49-35 command in that department.
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LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI)—Tom Scantlebury scored 22 of his 28 points in the second half Monday night to lead Nebraska to a 79-66 Big Eight Conference win over Oklahoma.
half the Hawks led only 19-17.
Missouri started the second half with a brief rally and with 15:30 left in the game Henry Smith sank a free throw to reduce KU's lead to six, 37-31. However, any thoughts of a comeback victory vanished when the Tigers went the next seven minutes and 15 seconds without scoring while KU sank nine free throws to make the
score 40-51 with 9.60 remaining.
As did Missouri, the Jayhawks found field goals hard to come by as they went for over 11 minutes without one. A Robisch tip shot with 5:21 left broke the drought and gave KU a 49-39 advantage.
Missouri's Chuck Kundert then re-entered the game to hit a pair of field goals before Kivisto dropped in two free throws to end the first half scoring with KU leading, 33-23.
But KU regained the momentum with six straight points, two by Kivisto and four by Roger Brown, to make the score 25-17 with 4:04 remaining.
score 46-31 with 9.05 remaining
Robisch, 6-9 junior, once again led KU in scoring with 23 points. Brown and Kivisto were also in double figures with 12.
After two throwls by Missouri's Don Tomlinson, Pierre Russell sandwiched an 18-foot jumper between two Robisch baseline jumpers to give KU its biggest lead of the half. 31-19.
Robisch has now scored over 1100 points in his career. Only Wilt Chamberlain, Clyde Lovellette, and Walter Wesley have scored more for KU.
Henry Smith, a 6-7 junior college transfer, led Missouri with 14 points and 10 rebounds.
Coach Ted Owens expressed satisfaction with the KU performance. He termed it the best defensive effort of the season and pointed out in particular Pierre Russell, who held Missouri's leading scorer, Don Tomlinson, to only four points, all coming from the free throw line.
---
Huskers down cold Sooners
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THE GREEK TRAGEDY. Constantine Tsoucalas. A vivid description of the present political crisis in Greece and its historical antecedents. A Penguin Special Original. $1.45
THE PEASANTS OF NORTH VIETNAM. Gérard Chailand. The author, a history professor and strong opponent of American involvement in Vietnam, provides the most complete account available of life in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. Reporting on his travels through the Red River delta, he describes the economic and social organization of the village communes and records the voices of a people victimized by war, and by thirty years of foreign oppression and aggression. A Pelican Original. $1.65
TESTAMENTS OF TIME. Leo Deuel. The story of how archaeologists have recovered the lost documents of ages past and what these texts tell us of ancient civilizations. A Pelican Book. $3.45
Look for these and other new Penguins—at your campus bookstore now.
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KANSAN Feb.24 1970
WEDNESDAY NIGHT:
(back from the Filmore East)
MORNINGSTAR
singing their latest release
VIRGIN LOVER
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KANSAS
14
MISSOURI
71
21
Photo by Ron Bishop
It's a bird, it's a plane . . .
Frosh rally behind Bossard, avenge early loss to Mizzou
Mike Bossard, 6-6 forward, led the KU freshmen from behind to avenge an early season 82-65 beating at the hands of the Mizzoz froush as the Hawks stormed past MU in the match 89-68 last night in Allen Field House.
Bossard, who was held to seven points in the first half, finished the game with 28 to lead the Hawks. He also grabbed 15 rebounds, blocked several shots and stole the ball a number of times.
Missouri jumped to an early lead behind the shooting of 6-7 Bill Foster. Their biggest lead came at 11:50 in the first half when Jerry Stock hit a short jumper to run the score to 23-10.
KU came charging back with the not shooting of Randy Canfield and Mark Williams. They combined for 20 of the Jayhawks 26 points during the last 10 minutes of the first half. The score at halftime stood 42-38 with Missouri leading.
Feb. 24
1970 KANSAN 7
KU battled back in the second half with Bossard leading the way with a 10 for 10 performance from the field as he put the Jay-hawks ahead for the first time with a lay-up with 10:23 left in the game.
The remainder of the game was almost all KU. Missouri became rattled and threw the ball away several times and failed to score for five minutes as KU jumped to an eight point lead.
All of Missouri's hopes of winning ended during the last two minutes with Mark Williams dribbling out the clock and drawing fouls. He hit seven free throws in the last two minutes.
KU with an outstanding hustling performance. The 6-6 forward was all over the court, stealing the ball, grabbing rebounds and scoring points. His 28 points were the second highest total of the season for him.
Bossard showed the way 101
This victory pushed the freshman season record to 9-2 overall and nine in a row at home.
MISSOURI
| | FG-FGA | FT-FTA | REB | TURN | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Tomlinson | 0-4 | 4-4 | 5 | 7 | 5 | 4 |
| Johnson, D. | 1-1 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 5 | 2 |
| Smith | 5-11 | 0-6 | 10 | 6 | 4 | 14 |
| Franks | 1-7 | 2-4 | 5 | 0 | 3 | 4 |
| Pike | 5-12 | 0-2 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 10 |
| Holmhock | 1-3 | 1-7 | 4 | 2 | 4 | 3 |
| Kundock | 2-6 | -1 | 1 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
| Maurer | 1-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Flaker | 1-2 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| Griffin | 1-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Allen | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Totals | 17-52 | 11-18 | 33 | 24 | 27 | 45 |
Kansas-Missouri Stats
| CANSAS | FG-FGA | FT-FTA | REB | TURN | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Robich | 3-6 | 2-4 | 12 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Robich | 5-14 | 13-7 | 9 | 3 | 3 | 23 |
| Brown | 5-11 | 2-3 | 3 | 2 | 5 | 12 |
| Lawrence | 2-6 | 2-4 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 6 |
| Kivisto | 2-5 | 8-9 | 6 | 6 | 2 | 12 |
| Stallworth | 1-5 | 0-2 | 6 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Nash | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mathews | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Totals | 18-44 | 27-39 | 34 | 14 | 16 | 63 |
Tourneys extends bids today
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) gets a 60-minute beat on the National Invitational Tournament (NIT) Tuesday in extending post-season basketball tournament bids to independent powers.
The 10 independents and eight conference champions make up the nine-game, first-round schedule at six sites March 7. The winners and seven other conference champs move into the East, Mid-east, Midwest and West regionals March 12 and 14.
The NCAA extends at-large invitations to compete in its championship tournament at 9:30 a.m. local time, one hour before NIT bids are tendered in New York.
St. Bonaventure, New Mexico State and Jacksonville—the nation's Nos. 4, 5 and 6-ranked teams in last week's United Press International major college ratings—are among the strong contenders for the NCAA's 10 independent berths. Fifteen conference champions automatically qualify, giving the NCAA championships a 25-team bracket.
Regional titlists advance to the finals March 19 and 21 at the University of Maryland.
First-round games March 7 will be played at the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton and St.
MORNINGSTAR
John's in the East; at Dayton in the Mideast; at Texas Christian University in the Midwest, and at Brigham Young University in the First-round pairings will be announced late Tuesday or early Wednesday.
The East Regional will be played at South Carolina; the Mideast at Ohio State; the Midwest at the University of Kansas, and the West at the University of Washington.
Chicago
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KUOK Presents
William M. Balfour Dean of Student Affairs
ina
Question and Answer Interview
9:00 p.m., Feb. 24 on
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Have A Question About University Affairs? DIAL UN 4-3994
Want more effective communication
Sensitivity groups popular at KU
By LINDA WRIGHT Kansan Staff Writer
Sensitivity training and T-group exercises have recently captured the interest of young people across the nation. Students at KU are no exception. Hundreds enroll each semester in Speech 141, Human Relations in Group Interaction.
Dean Kerkman, clinical psychologist at Watkins Hospital, attributes the interest to students' desire to be more effective in social and interpersonal communications. Speech 141 tackles the growing problem of overt conflict in inter-group relations.
The course, said Kerkman, also allows the student to be more actively involved in the educational process rather than just being a passive recipient.
There are about 260 students enrolled in 15 sections of Speech 141. Two sections were added
KANSAN features
during enrollment to meet student demand. The maximum class size is 18.
Format for the class varies with the instructor. There are lectures and discussions of assigned reading material. The instructor, called a trainer, may suggest and implement activities to illustrate problems the group faces. He is mainly interested in the group process and its facilitation.
During the semester exercises in verbal and non verbal communications are conducted to stimulate interaction among students and increase self-aware-ness.
Most students think participation in a T-group is rewarding.
Regi Markillie, Jacksonville, Ill., senior who is enrolled this semester in Speech 141, said "The course has good possibilities. Everyday you are in class with people, but you never really get to know them. By the time you get to be a senior, you figure there has got to be more to being a student that just going to class.
"I began to think about all the people I never really got to know and I thought maybe this human relations course would give me a chance to get to know my classmates better."
Miss Markillie said she hoped the class would give her a better idea of how people felt about her. This knowledge would enable her to approach people in an unstilted manner and to put them at ease.
8 KANSAN Feb. 24
1970
Gayle Burrow, Beaver Falls, Ark., senior, took the course last semester. "It can be a rewarding experience if the class can react freely and express themselves," she said, "but my class was really up-tight and it prohibited total interaction.
"Also, the T-group situation provides an excellent opportunity to throw off inhibitions and act without repercussions from society. However, when you try to act freely in society, you sometimes find the communication techniques learned in the T-group are not always accepted or viable."
By the end of the semester, it is hoped the student will have an increased understanding of the communications process and the potential for individual, group, and organizational change and growth. Kerkman said.
human relations at KU is still experimental. Special sections have been enrolled, such as counselors and dormitory officers or black-white groups.
Various departments require, or strongly recommend, Speech 141 as part of their curriculum. These include the School of Social Work, School of Education, nursing education, music therapy, occupational therapy and personnel management.
The undergraduate program in
A large per cent of the course enrollment is elective. Students enrolled one semester represented 47 majors, with many from the social sciences.
Although it has just been recently that national interest focused on human relations interpersonal communications, study and research in this area has been conducted since the 1930s when behavioral scientists first questioned many traditional assumptions and policies in the management of human affairs.
A department of human relations was established at KU in 1949, and existed as a separate department until spring, 1967.
The department's primary goal during this period was to provide training to graduate students as professionals in the field, to develop innovative educational methods and to conduct field research.
partment was merged with the speech communication division, which placed human relations in the doctoral program.
In 1967 the human relations de-
KU is one of the few universities which offers a doctoral program with emphasis on training, research and consultation in this aspect of communications, Kerkman said.
Plans for the program include continued research into laboratory methods and structure.
"To rely on the fact that people like it or demand it does not answer the question of the validity or reliability of the methods," Kerkman said.
Tonight!!
MR.
YuK
Swing to
'THE CRADLE'
soul & rock ALL GIRL band
First time in Lawrence
PAT
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Yuk down
FALL EDITION
1970 JAYHAWKER
Distributed Feb. 25-26-27
Strong Rotunda
You can still purchase a 1970 Jayhawker during distribution for $7.00
B
Photo by Rich Pendergrass
That's a lot of bull . . .
With the increase in traffic in Lawrence in the past few years, it is probably safer to travel around jumping from car to car as this experienced traveler does. How do you suppose he got up on the first one, though?
Kennedy urges action lowering of voting age
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., urged Congress Monday to lower the voting age to 18 in time for this year's elections.
Kennedy suggested that reduction of the voting age could be incorporated into the already-embattled extension of the Voting Rights Act and need not endure the delay of "many years" posed by a constitutional amendment.
Kennedy's proposal was included in testimony he planned to give the Senate constitutional amendments subcommittee last week but had to postpone because of illness. He released the statement Monday.
Kennedy said, "because of the urgency of the issue, and because of its gathering momentum, I believe there are overriding considerations in favor of federal action by statute to accomplish the goal."
Feb. 24
1970 KANSAN 9
Noting that 67 senators have sponsored a constitutional amendment lowering the voting age to 18 in all elections and that President Nixon has given it firm support, Kennedy said "I am hopeful we can proceed to the rapid implementation of our goal."
An administration - backed, House-passed extension of the 1965 Voting Rights act, now before the Senate Judiciary Committee, broadens its provisions to all states but dilutes it by putting the burden of proof on those claiming to be discriminated against.
Senate liberals, including Kennedy, want to replace the administration plan with a five-year extension of the current law affecting only seven southern states which must prove they are not discriminating to escape the law's provisions.
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Dean tours Central America for improvement program
The improvement of educational facilities in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Kansas is one of the main objectives of a trip to Central America by Thomas M. Gale, associate dean of the college.
Gale, also director of Corbin College and chairman of the Latin American Area Committee, left for Central America on Feb. 16 and will return March 11. He will visit Panama, Costa Rica, Guatemala, San Salvador and Mexico.
Final collections and a review of data on a technical assistance project to several Central American universities will be included in Gale's work in Central America, said George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The project has been conducted by the College at KU for three years in conjunction with the Agency for International Development (AID). In this project, all universities concerned are developing a better program in the field of humanities and social sciences, Waggoner said.
facilities, Waggoner said.
Gale will also be making arrangements for a six-week seminar for Latin American university presidents and deans. The seminar, directed by Dean Waggoner, is another of the College's programs to improve educational
Gale will be conferring with previous participants in the seminar and meeting with officials of U.S. embassies in Latin American countries. Gale will also
select nominees for the next seminar in the fall.
The seminar series began in 1960 at the University of Chicago, and has been at KU for the last seven years, said Waggoner.
Architecture student illustrates grievance
Two weeks ago, a student in the School of Architecture and Urban Design painted a line on the third floor of Marvin Hall marked "The Dean's side" and "Our side." The line was drawn across the east wing of the third floor to separate the rooms used by the fourth-year design classes from Dean Charles Kahn's office.
"The dean's place is in his office. There are enough qualified
The design student who painted the line, and who wishes to remain anonymous, said the action was taken because of grievances against Kahn. The student said many students were unhappy with several course changes in the school and many people also felt that Kahn was bothering students working on design projects.
instructors," he said.
One student, however, felt that the action was unwarranted. "The line represents one person's feeling," he said.
Kahn wasn't available for comment but one student said that the day after the incident an informal meeting was held between Kahn and the fourth-year design students. He said the meeting was successful and that relations between Kahn and the students were improved. "The problem isn't solved yet, but things are better," he said.
Reactions to the sign were varied but most students seemed to approve. "It was the first time I saw all the kids come to class with smiles on their faces," the student who painted the sign said.
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10
Woodrow Wilson's scholars
Woodrow Wilson Fellowship designates from KUare: (from left) 1st row. Penelope Lamb, Hutchinson; Diane Beyer, Lyons; Joyce Goering, Moundridge. Second row. Stephen Reed, Wichita; Mrs. Elizabeth A. Scalet, Ottawa; Edith M. Lord, Kingman; Michael Hagler, Topea; Mary Ann Stewart, Independence; Marilyn Jane Hoskinson, Oksaloosa; and Christopher Saricks, Lawrence. Third row. Michael Williams, Topeka; Warren Harral, Larned; Susan Prather, Wichita; and William Nye, Leawood. NOT PICTURED: Louise A. Alpert, Northbrook, Ill.; Joseph G. Carter, Overland Park, and Ralph E. Cooley, Palm Harbor, Fla.
Kansas older citizen honored
By CURT CHAUDOIN Kansan staff writer
Mrs. C. Loudell Frazier, Topeka, retired head of the division of services for the aging, State Department of Social Welfare, received the 1970 Distinguished Older Citizen of Kansas award, Monday.
Lt. Governor James L, DeCoursey, acting in the absence of Governor Robert Docking, made the presentation at the 20th annual Kansas State Conference on Aging at the University of Kansas. Nearly 175 persons attended.
The award is given each year by the Kansas Citizens Council on Aging.
Before making the presentation, DeCoursey spoke on the importance of the field of aging. "It is necessary to have an active, working organization to preserve the rights of older citizens," DeCoursey said.
DeCoursey said many persons are forgetful and don't realize older people have earned the right to be respected. It has not been recognized. We must watch, he said, that older people receive consumer protection, guard against misrepresentation and make sure people on fixed incomes are not susceptible to injustice.
In her speech, Mrs. Frazier commented on the increasing importance of aging persons. She said we must continue to use our skills and know-how in changing not only the image people have
10 KANSAN Feb.24 1970
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Malls Shopping Ctr.
of older people, but also the image the elderly have of themselves.
She said senior citizens must learn to accept age because it can be meaningful if one remains independent and useful to society.
Mrs. Frazier retired Jan. 1, 1969, but has remained active as a volunteer in community and civic interests.
John B. Martin, commissioner, Administration on Aging, Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C., gave the address at the opening session, at 1 p.m., in the Kansas Union
Forum Room.
Martin said the state of Kansas in its concern for older citizens has a good program.
Martin said the fastest growing per cent of our population is between the ages of 80 and 100 years. He said in three years there will be 20 million people over 65. So, he said, when talking about the "aging population" one was talking about 50 of the 200 million people in our country.
We must initiate new techniques, actions, and thinking in this area of concern because of mere numbers of the aging.
The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation has appointed 17 University of Kansas seniors as Woodrow Wilson designates. Fifty-two awards were made in the five-state region of Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and South Dakota.
Wilson scholars named
This year 1,152 seniors in the United States and Canada were appointed "designates" in recognition of their high potential as future college teachers. They were selected as "the most intellectually promising of the 1970 graduates planning careers as college teachers" from among more than 12,000 seniors nominated by more than 800 schools.
The University of Kansas, which tied with the University of California at Los Angeles for sixth place in the number of seniors listed as "designates," also has seven seniors who won honorable mention.
The KU seniors named Woodrow Wilson Designates are: Louise A. Alpert, Northbrook Ill; Diane C. Beyer, Lyons; Joseph G. Carter, Overland Park; Ralph E. Cooley, Palm Harbor, Fla.; Joyce E. Goering, Moundridge; Michael R. Hagler, Topeka; Warren D. Harral, Larned.
Marilyn J. Hoskinson, Oksaloosa; Penelope J. Lamb, Hutchinson; Edith M. Lord, Kingman; William W. Nye, Leawood; Susan J. Prather, Wichita; Stephen L. Reed, Wichita; Christopher L. Saricks, Lawrence; Mrs. Elizabeth A. Scalet, Ottawa; Mary A. Stewart, Independence; Michael T. Williams, Topeka.
Honorable mention went to Janet L. Bare, Wichita; Judith A. Dellinger, Wilmore; Mrs. Mary Hane Harmon, Cedar Vale; Mary Ann Heinman, Overland Park; Walter R. Stromquist, Charleston, Ill.; Lester P. Sutton, Goodland; Steven D. Turner, Pittsburg.
By May9 75 Days 2400 Pages
Best Wishes
SOCIAL CONTRACT
BURGUNDY
Aesthetic and Literature in the Middle Ages
HUSSELL
READING VAPOR LAW
THE ADHERENCE of Law
Voltaire
MARVELS FROM THE TENNEWS
THE MERCURIES OF HELLOUVIA ENGLAND
Existentialism
BRAU MANN
How to Read a Book
HERITAGE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION
LAUTY AND TOMORROW
Salem Publishing
M
evelyn wood reading dynamics
New Camaro. Feb.26th.
We've never announced a car at this time before. But then nobody's ever announced a car like this before.
Super Hugger
If it were an ordinary sportster, we'd have introduced it at the ordinary time.
Instead, we took the time to build a whole new Camaro.
We started with a sleek new shape and a low road-hugging stance.
And added more hood. A faster fastback. Wider doors. And new deeply contoured bucket seats.
The instrument panel wraps around you. With enough dials to make you think you're piloting a 747.
There are four transmissions. And six power plants up to the Turbo-Jet 396 V8 that you can order.
Pick the one that best suits your driving. Then go pick on an open road.
And make it one with plenty of twisting turns. Because Camaro has a remarkable new suspension. And standard front disc brakes for a leech-like grip on the road.
New Camaro. The Super Hugger.
COL.
Other sportsters always feared it might come to this.
And they were right. Only their timing was wrong.
Putting you first, keeps us first.
CHEVROLET See it. At your Chevrolet Sports Dept.
See it. At your Chevrolet Sport
GM
MARK OF EXCELLENCE
Camaro Sport Coupe with RS equipment.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the local newspaper are required to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and DNaco
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive; "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Ed.
Campus Map Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Typewriters--big selection ... rental
purchase plan available. Office sup-
lease and furniture. Xerox service.
Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass.
843-3644.
1959 Chevy, automatic, very good mechanical condition, clean inside, new tires. $240 or best offer. Call John, 843-6804. 2-24
1963 Chevrolet 4-door sedan, V-8 automatic, power steering, radio, good mechanics, good mechanical starter in cold Call Bob. 842-6023 after 6:00. 2-24
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Cullass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket racks;
gear conversion; starts and runs
mechanically; perfectly. Only
$500. 843-9588. 2-24
65 Karmann Ghia, dark red, rebuilt engine and transmission. Good interior. Reasonable. Call 842-1267, ask for Jerry. 2-24
ski boots, size 9, very good condition.
Check out our online offer. Call after 2 p.m., 843-916-9, 2-24
Old fur coats and capes for sale. Fox, muskrat, seal, otter, mouton, lamb. $10-$40. Also other strange clothes. 1618 Tenn. A#, 842-6810. 2-24
Gold and silver things by Xom.
Earthy, organic; rings, wedding sets,
and all other forms of body ornament.
Reasonable. Call 842-6120. 2-24
Fender Bassman amp, Gibson Thunderbird bass, 842-7641, Biff, 2-25
Biggest car bargain in town. 53
Plymouth, ear bargain $4 new, less,
nothing, battery, call phone.
Runs well. $100. Call 842-3436 morn-
ings. 2-25
Capitol Component Stereo System. 50
8-track, phone, auxiliary. Two speaker sets and headphone outputs. Separate control mass controls. 75-25
Charlie, 843-9569
1964 MG Midget, good condition. $695.
843-0495. 2-25
Large, comfortable single bed. $20.
Call 843-7540 after 5 o'clock. 2-25
THE HITE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Some Time - Phone Order
843-7685 - We Deliver - 9th & III.
LA PETITE GALERIE
"with-it" fashions
for
Daylight and after-hours
also
Men's wear by Arpeia
Lower level
910 Ky., Lawrence
Galvia
Bridal
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 011KU
910 Kv.
Minnie Pearl's
"COUNTRY-FIED" CHICKE
Call in or Carry Out
VI 3-8200
1730 W 32nd, Lawrence, Kan
Chrome reversed 15-inch Chevy wheels, 843-417 Ask for John. 2-26
Topopy's just received room- $z^{2}$ 1e$^4$ gallon containers, one's filled with caramel, cinnamon, cheese or plain popcorn. Makes studying real corny.
New York Cleaners
1967 color Coronado 17" TV set, Table
Good condition. $150. Call 2-727
Paintings, drawings, ceramics, sculpture, jewelry, woodcraft, clothing 9th & indiana THE OMNIBUS SHOP
One Ampex stereo tape recorder Model 1160. 2 years old. Great condition. Call Bob Brown, 843-5721 after 5 o'clock. 2-27
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Guitar ES-355 Gibson Hollowbody, cherry finish, $250 or best offer; Motorola Reverb, car unit, $20 or best offer. Call 842-8645. 2-27
Must sell this week! Ampge G15 guitar amp. Best offer takes it. Has reverb, echo, dolly, and cover. Under $100. Call Jim at 843-6707. 2-27
1968 Suzuki 125 cc motorcycle. Excellent for trails and town. Has less than 2,000 miles—good mechanical condition. Approx. $190.00. Call 842-526-9267.
Realistic component stereo set. 36-watt stereo amplifier and FM Reciver. Lab 24 turntable with Shure elliptical cartridge made by BSK1. 2 speaker makes with BSK1. tweeter: 842-1200. Room 332 toower 7 p.m. 2-27
Automatic radio 4 and 8-track car tape player, can't tell from new, locks included. Must sell. Karl at 842-1047.
Ankle bracelets loaded with bells ... 12:30 to 4:30
other imports from Asia on sale at the Museum of Natural History Gift ... 8:30 to 4:30, Sun. 3-2
12:30 to 4:30
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 air conditioner, power brakes, low mileage, air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-8002. 3-2
'55 Buick Well it runs! Good for
it. But it costs! Call 843-1894-1
2-26
Toe rings! from India and Nepal at
the Tara Club in Dubai. Shop. Put in your order now so that you are ready for sandal weather.
Measures 8:30 to 4:30. Sunday is
to 4:30. 3-2
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Home of the "Big Shef"
WANTED
BURGER CHEF
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
Try One Today 814 Iowa
Organist / singer for established
group. Jazz; rock; pop 842-6848 2-24
Your headquarters
Finish the year here! Available March
Month. $65/month. Call 842-9156. 2-27
/30
Wanted: Crafts of all kinds, paintings,
ceramics, needlework, etc. Antiques:
bottles of clothing, jewelry and
valuable books. Information on
all 842-7281 evening. 2-27
Need one or two male students to take
over lease in Jayhawker Towers. Rent
$58, all extras included. Phone 842-
7125.
3-2
miDAS
NOTICE
Luxurious furnished apartment for rent—need female roommate—you will have your own room. Block from campus. Reasonable. Call 843-1894.
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you have some honest-to-gooodness Ribs, some good ribs from Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat. I V-9514. Closed Sunday, Tuesday.
fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
sports shoes, purses, barrettes,
dog collars—at 812 MES
PRIMARILY LEATHER. 3-2
for
mufflers and shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903'1. Mass. St. Joseph's School, folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service. 3-2
Interested in running for a Student Senate position? If you're interested, help and willing fill a responsible role, call 842-3197 at 6:00 p.m.
Railroad or model railroad enthusiasts interested in forming club or just bull sessions contact 842-6600. Ask for John Wegner in Room 758. 2-24
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 styles to choose or wear. PRIMARA LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-2
Need an active voice in University affairs? Think responsibility!!! Vote Billbert-Egrem Thomas — The Alliance. March 17-18. 2-25
The Castle Tea Room—fine dining in an enchanting cultural and historical atmosphere. Visit the Castle Tea Room with most unique restaurant in Larchence. 2-27
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-13
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Phinneas P. Phrogg, Impet, and Pohb-
Bear seek good home. Free half-
Slanee knives box trained, no rea-
tion kinks needed. Call Shelley, P.
after 5, 842-8964. P. 2-25
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801 $1 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. tt
Up with student action—up with student voice—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert-Thomas—the Alliance. 2-25
Open government for all students.
For all affiliations
Elbert-Thomas—The Alliance. 2-55
Battenfield—beware the Ides of March!
2-24
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work V 3-2818. Mrs.ruckman
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-2
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing equipment. Compiler/writer.
Pica tape. Competent. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service
5-14
Ttyping, IBM Electric, Pica Type. Fast,
dependable service.
843-3186 2-24
LOST
Missing—eight month old, female, tricolor basket hound. Last seen in area of Gatehouse Apts. Any information please call 842-4029. Reward $25.00.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
HELP WANTED
Counselors wanted for Camp Sonersee for girls and Camp Cobossee for men and women. We have skilled in camp counseling with least 21 years of age preferably with previous camp counselling experience. Camp Camps in Maui, Maui Positions available in all departments. Write full details to Camp Office. 59th Street, New York, New York 10022-2-24
Musician wanted. Male lead vocalist.
Brown, 842-0100 for interview. If
Brown, 842-0100 for interview.
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
Opportunity Unlimited. Excellent in-
come. Phone 842-2935 or 842-6631. 2-
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troop Tau, 8011$ Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
IF YOU need repairs, we need your help. We are less expensive than the competition. PERFORMANCE INTERPRISES, 317 N. 2nd Street and 4th Avenue in all imports and sports cars. 2-25
Tutoring offered in undergraduate math and engineering courses. Math 146 and some upper-level engineering courses. Call 842-7123. 3-2
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
USED BOOKS—READ AND TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Westerns, Comics, Playboy
Massage, Fashion, Furniture Book
934 Mass. Book 843-2736. Book
25,000 books.
parking.
LOW SUMMER RATES
FOR RENT
Available now: furnished studio, furnished or unfurnished 2 bedroom apartment. Very large, fully carpeted, plenty of storage space. Most utilities paid including central heat and air conditioning. Located across from Stouffer Place on campus busline. Laundry facilities, outdoor pool, off-road bike.
LOW SUMMER RATES
Now showing afternoons at College
Hill Manor Apartments
1741 W. 19th, APT. 5B, 842-8220
8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th
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
Want to Make Some Easy Money?
Sell what you don't need with a Kansan Classified.
Classified Rates
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Each additional word ___
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One Time $1.00 01
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Clip and fill out the form below. Bring it by the Ad office, 111 Flint Hall (with the cash), or mail your ad to us! c/o Shelley Bray, Classified Ad Manager, 111 Flint Hall. Please include check or money order for the full amount.
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Senator calls for black unity
By CHARLENE MULLER
Kansan Staff Writer
Colorado State Sen. George Brown Jr., said Monday that the black man could no longer tolerate continued abuses of white racism.
Brown spoke to Lawrence High School students, launching LHS Black Heritage Week.
"This is our country." Brown said. "If we are to be free it must be on
S. JAMES CURTIS
this land and we must help make the terms of our freedom."
The senator called on the white man to be maladjusted to injustices
against the black man. He said he could never adjust to segregation and discrimination, economic unfairness, abandoned minorities, rat-infested housing, inadequate wages and poison streams of poison minds.
"I will never adjust," Brown said, "to those who think of integration as a dream of tomorrow rather than as a dream of today."
Brown called on the white man to develop attitudes of understanding and to listen with understanding. This will create a meaningful and relevant system for all, he said.
In the last half of his speech, Brown appealed to the black youth to be proud of themselves and to prove themselves. He said black students had a responsibility to themselves to do well in school, to
keep their bodies healthy and to love one another.
"Unity is as important as pride," he said. "The black man's 11th commandment should be: 'Thou shalt not tear each other down.'"
Brown said if the black youth did not get involved in the agenda for change, they were part of the problem.
At the end of his speech, Brown received a standing ovation from both assemblies.
Brown, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Brown Sr., 1215 New Jersey Street, was born and raised in Lawrence. He received a degree in journalism from KU in 1950 and joined the staff of the Denver Post, where he was night city editor until one year ago. At that time he became executive director of the
Metro-Denver Urban Coalition.
His political career began in 1955 when he was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives. A year later he was elected to the state Senate, a post to which he was re-elected in 1960, 1964 and 1968.
He has received a number of awards for his work in human relations, including the American Civil Liberties' Carl Whitehead Human Relations Award and a similar award from the Denver Cosmopolitan Club. In 1958 he was named by Esquire Magazine as one of the nation's "Fifteen Bright Young Men" in the field of politics.
Other activities at LHS during the week include a lecture on black art by the Hank Smith Art Gallery of Kansas City, Mo. and a talent and fashion show.
Shultz attacks West
Regents approve new hall
Photo by Tom Slaughter
Papers down the drain
An uncounted number of the Kansans seized by members of the Black Student Union were finally found in Potter Lake. Students walking by the lake were seen picking out the dryer copies to read.
Diamonds
Women Want Them Men Give Them We Have Them
Christian's
DIAMONDS
JEWELRY
"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
809 Mass.
CHINA GIFTS
Kansans confiscated
(Continued from page 1)
The BSU demands to Chalmers concerned suspension of the Harambee last Tuesday. Employes of the KU Printing Service walked out for 30 minutes protesting an alleged obscene poem in the Harambee. The BSU asked Frizzell to rule on the legality of the walkout. Frizzell did not immediately make a statement, so the BSU had the paper printed by a private firm in Wichita.
Monday they went to Chalmers for a decision, but they
12 KANSAN Feb. 24 1970
didn't get it. The result was $8,000 worth of publication lost and a lake full of papers.
Weather
Cloudy with some fog and light drizzle this forenoon. Becoming partly cloudy most sections with fog lifting by late afternoon. Continued mild with variable winds 5 to 15 mph today. Tonight clear to partly cloudy and colder with winds shifting to the north 10 to 25 mph. Wednesday clear to partly cloudy and colder. Highs today 52 to 62. Lows tonight in the 20s.
at least triple
your reading
efficiency
and
pass the western
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or
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SOCTAL CONTRACT
HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION
HOW TO READ A BOOK
EXISTENTIANISM
How to Read a Book
THE RIGHTS OF ELECTION IN THE UNITED STATES
HOW TO DEMONSTRATE YOUR HERITAGE
HOW TO BE A MEMBER OF A FUNERAL OR PHILANTHROPOLOGY CLUB
HOW TO READ A BOOK
EXISTENTIANISM
HOW TO DEMONSTRATE YOUR HERITAGE
HOW TO BE A MEMBER OF A FUNERAL OR PHILANTHROPOLOGY CLUB
evelyn wood VI 3-6424 reading dynamics
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Harambee status uncertain
Controversy continues
For the second day, the Black Student Union (BSU) met with KU administrators in an attempt to get the BSU's controversial newspaper, the Harambee, approved for University publication.
Tuesday's developments included five separate meetings;
- Tuesday morning the BSU, David Awbrey, student body president, and staff members of the Daily Kansan met for 30 minutes to discuss the dumping of Kansans into Potter Lake Monday afternoon.
Photo by Rich Pendergrass
- Noon Tuesday the BSU, Kansas staff members, and student government leaders met with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. in a question and answer session.
- Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. the University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) met in special session and unanimously passed a resolution placing full responsibility on any "person, board, or other agency which determines the form and content" of any publication funded through or produced by a University agency.
- Tuesday afternoon the Chan-
(Continued to page 20)
Chancellor answers questions on BSU paper
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., discusses censorship and answers questions concerning the Black Student Union's newspaper Harambee, during a meeting Tuesday with BSU members, student government leaders and Kansan staff members. The meeting was one of five held Tuesday to discuss the status of the BSU paper.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1970
Weather
80th Year, No. 86
Variable cloudiness and colder with northerly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Colder tonight and warmer Thursday. High today lower 40s. Low tonight 18 to 22. Probability of precipitation near zero today and tonight 10 per cent Thursday.
Three to run for top office
A. M.
George
The main programs of the Independent Student Party (ISP) involve two areas, the student as a student and the student as a citizen.
"We hoped we could lay out a general framework," Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., first year law student and ISP candidate for student body president, said, "as non-partisan as possible. Our program has broad and general ideas from which we can operate on later. We didn't lay the program out in priorities."
The emphasis of the student as a student is on the issue of women's rights on the campus and national level.
George said the University discriminates actively against women, an example was there were not many women professors.
"This is an attitude we've (Continued to page 20)
Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and student body presidential candidate for Alliance, outlined the party's major issues in a Kansan interview.
"Basically," Ebert said, "We're aiming at a higher standard of education involving the total educational experience at KU."
"All we're going to talk about," Ebert stressed, "are the things we can accomplish at this University." Ebert named ecology and academic reform as two of Alliance's most important issues.
Ebert said that another area Alliance stressed was academic reform. "We're concerned with the college requirements. These need change so that students may exercise more choice in choosing their
"Ecology," Ebert said, "demands the student's immediate concern."
(Continued to page 20)
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Ebert
A. E. M.
Miller
David Miller, Eudora junior, will be seeking the position of student body president in the March 17-18 campus election. He along with student body vicepresidential candidate Dan Beck, Shawnee Mission junior, will be running as independents.
Miller said one of the issues would be Wescoe Hall because the student senate approved a student fee increase to finance it without the students voting on the bill.
"Why didn't the students have a chance to vote?" asks Miller.
He said he favored use of a referendum to cope with the problem. Unless we take it to the state legislature now,he said,we may be paying for other campus buildings.
Miller also wants to abolish the Western Civilization Comprehen-
(Continued to page 20)
By United Press International
UDK News Roundup
Busing clause weakened
WASHINGTON—Senate leaders of both parties agreed Tuesday on a strategy to weaken antibusing amendments to the controversial Health, Education and Welfare HEW appropriations bill but remained at odds over the measure's spending provisions.
US turns over army base
SAIGON—The United States turned over one of its biggest bases to the South Vietnamese army today as part of President Nixon's third phase withdrawal of 50,000 more troops from the war zone.
U. S. generals in formal ceremonies transferred the headquarters of the 18,000-man U.S. 1st Infantry Division at Lai Khe to the Saigon government.
Motel trial goes to jury
FLINT, Mich.-The 12 men and women who make up the jury in the Algiers Motel federal conspiracy case today will be told to decide what even legal experts disagree on—whether the defendants conspired to commit a crime.
Speech boycott threatens
WASHINGTON — French President Georges Pompidou gives a major address to a joint session of Congress today with a sizable number of House members threatening to boycott to protest France's sale of Mirage jets to the Arabs.
---
Campus briefs
Velvel to speak on 'Seven'
Lawrence Velvel, professor in the KU School of Law, will speak before the Faculty Forum meeting tomorrow at noon. His topic is the "Chicago Seven" trial.
Copies of petition backing the right of a faculty member to say what he believes were presented Tuesday to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., legislators and the Kansas Board of Regents.
Petition supporting Velvel presented by law students
The Faculty Forum meets at the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread.
Tom Ashton, Lawrence second year law student, said he presented the petitions to Sen. Glee Smith, R-Larned, president pro tem of the Kansas Senate; Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence; Sen. Lester C. Arvin, R-Rose Hill, and to the Board of Regents and Chalmers.
The petition was circulated in support of Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, after Senators Shultz and Arvin called for his dismissal following Velvel's speech Feb. 17 in which he addressed participants in a demonstration protesting the "Chicago 7" case.
Ashton said the petition contained 190 signatures, an estimated 80 per cent of the students in the KU School of Law.
"Circus City, U.S.A.," is located in Venice, Fla., winter home of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken,
Hamburgers,
etc.
Hurry to Henry's
6th & Mo. VI3-2139
Small world luncheon scheduled
The Small World Organization will have a luncheon from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 13 in the Fellowship Hall at the First Presbyterian Church.
This group has been formed by Lawrence women to help the wives of foreign students adjust to the United States, particularly by teaching them the English language.
The women will prepare typical dishes from their home countries for the luncheon. Admission to this fund-raising event will be $1.
Luso-Brazilian programs planned
The Committee on Luso-Brazilian Studies at KU has scheduled four remaining programs this spring. They will be Mondays at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room at the Kansas Union except for one site change.
p. m. in the Oread Room at the Kansas Union except for one site change. Fredric Litto, assistant professor of drama, will speak on "Brazil's Black Theatre" on March 9. George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will speak on "The Problems of Higher Education in Brazil" on April 6. Philip Humphrey, director of the Museum of Natural History, will discuss the "Ecology of the Amazon River" on April 13 at 612 Louisiana Street. John S. Vincent, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese will speak on "Jorge Amado: Brazil's Most Widely-read Novelist" on May 11.
Welborn invited to conference
David M. Welborn, associate professor of political science, was one of 15 persons invited to a small conference on "Educating Administrators for Post-Industrial Society: A Program for Public Affairs School." Lyndon B. Johnson will conduct the conference at the University of Texas March 3-6 in Austin, Texas.
Head of survey to resign
Frank C. Foley, director of the State Geological Survey at KU since 1954 said Tuesday that he would resign the position effective July 1. Foley said he planned to devote his time to teaching and research in his specialty, groundwater geology. He is scheduled to go to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to complete reporting on a manpower survey conducted in West Africa in 1968 by an international team on which he represented ground-water geology.
Appropriations for state schools largest in history
The appropriation bill for state colleges and universities passed by the Kansas Senate last week is larger than the budget recommended by Gov. Robert Docking. A vote on the bill may come in the House of Representatives this week.
The Senate bill carried an appropriation of $194,098 million for the state colleges and universities. This is $111,648 above the governors recommendation.
Of the governors recommended budget, $55,629,364 would have been in KU's total operating budget for the fiscal year beginning in July, 1971. This amount is made up of an operating budget, $44,124,873; auxiliary enterprises, $8,532,008; capital improvements, $2,972,483; and $75,000 for improvements in Green Hall.
2 KANSAN
Feb.25 1970
Rock ChA1K
RSVUE
improbable history
ROCK CHALK
improbable history
20th anniversary
date—feb. 27-28
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116
JAYHAWKER
RICHARD LOUV
EDITOR
THE MYSTERIOUS
LAND OF
OZ
See for yourself . . .
The mysterious land of Oz has answered the equally mysterious question of the Jayhawker yearbook. The first edition of the '70 Jayhawker will be distributed beginning today in the Strong Hall rotunda.
New facilities considered
Watkins found inadequate
Factors under consideration by the Student Senate Health Committee and the University Planning Board regarding the possible construction of a new hospital for the University of Kansas have been outlined by Brad Smoot, Sterling sophomore and committee member.
The committee is considering the following:
- The traffic flow to the health center, both by vehicles and pedestrians.
- Whether students go the the hospital from class or from their residences.
- The expansion of the campus and campus building.
- The types of illnesses or injuries with which students go to the hospital.
- The location of the living areas.
- In December the subcommittee submitted the statement to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr;
- The availability of parking and emergency access for students. Construction costs at various locations.
"In view of (1) the Report of the Student Senate Committee on Health, (2) the recommendations of Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, and (3) the findings of the previous University Planning Council, the University Planning Board finds that the physical plant of the Student Health Service is notably inadequate and that there is an urgent need for a major capital outlay for student health facilities."
The health committee report included the following statements:
- The physician-student ratio is 1:2,000 when it should be 1:1,-000 according to the American College Health Association.
- Waiting area for Watkins is in hallways when there should be rooms capable of handling 50-100 persons.
- The present physical plant was designed in 1930 and does not conform to the current standards of hygiene and safety.
- There is insufficient space for laboratories, X-ray facilities and food production.
Laird advocates funds for building of missile installation in Missouri
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The administration asked a sharply divided Congress Tuesday for money to thicken its planned shield against a Soviet nuclear strike by adding a new antiballistic missile installation in Missouri.
It also proposed to begin
Feb. 25 KANSAN 3
1970
broadening the controversial system to guard the population against a potential Red Chinese threat, but ran into firm opposition from key Senate supporters.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, contending the $1.5 billion request was the minimum necessary to protect the nation, asked for authority to construct a new ABM site to guard a Minuteman silo field located at Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo., and to increase the number of missile interceptors for two sites Congress authorized last year-at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., and at Grand Forks Air Force Base, N.D.
Kansas City junior. Martha Fankhouser, Lyons sophomore, Smoot and Schwegler.
- Inadequate parking exists for the patients and staff, and emergency and delivery vehicle access is needed.
The report also included two possible long-range solutions. One was the addition of a new wing to the existing hospital structure and the second was construction of a new hospital.
The purpose of the interceptor increase would be to protect the offensive missiles in these three areas from the possibility of a Soviet attempt to knock them out and destroy the backbone of the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
Smoot also said the subcommittee and the health committee along with Schwegler were looking for possible sites for a new hospital.
Members of the Student Senate Health Committee are David Blahna, St. Louis Park, Minn., graduate student and chairman of the committee, Frank Bangs, Wichita junior, Susie Bocell,
Court favors pay television
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court cleared the way Tuesday for establishment of the nation's first permanent pay-television system by leaving an appeals court ruling allowing the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to license such operations.
Pay television, strongly opposed by many movie owners, has never been offered on a nationwide basis. But the Zenith Radio Corp., which conducted an experiment with pay-TV during the mid-1950s in Hartford, Conn., hailed the Supreme Court's action as "a victory for freedom of choice for the TV-viewing public..." Zenith can develop of a subscription television system.
An FCC spokesman said the regulatory agency had received no applications for permission to begin pay-television operations immediately and that it would be at least several months before the commission agreed on the technical requirements pay-TV stations will have to meet.
Under pay television, a viewer pays a fee for any program he chooses to watch.
DON'T CALL MARIA
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Historians say that of the first settlers of the small community along the Los Angeles River in 1781, which later became the West's greatest city, only five were women—and four of them were named Marla.
FALL EDITION
1970 JAYHAWKER
Distributed Feb. 25-26-27
Strong Rotunda
You can still purchase a 1970
Jayhawker during distribution
for $7.00
KWSNN COMMENT
Tripping over hurdles
This editorial was not my first choice.
My first choice was pre-empted by the University of Kansas Printing Service, protector of campus morals, and my second choice was nixed by the Kansan Board.
Following yesterday's meeting with the Black Student Union (BSU) and KU's administration, the Kansas's managing editor, campus editor, news editor and editorial editors decided to kill a scheduled page and to print the poem from the BSU Harambee which had caused the KU Printing Service workers to walk off the job and demand a ruling from the Attorney General.
We decided to print the poem in direct violation of the Kansas Obscenity Guidelines to show our support for the BSU, which has asked the yet unanswered question, "Why has the Printing Service refused to print 'obscenities' for the BSU which they had printed for at least two other campus publications?"
The Printing Service quickly refused to print the poem. Refusing to make a new editorial page, I wrote a three-sentence editor's note which was to be the only print on an otherwise blank editorial page. The editor's note, which merely said that the Printing Service had adjudged us obscene and that freedom of the press does not exist here at KU, was ordered removed by the Kansan Board yesterday afternoon, with editor Ken Peterson and news adviser James
W. Murray dissenting. The other members of the Kansan Board are Lee F. Young, acting Dean of the School of Journalism; Melvin E. Adams, associate professor of journalism and business adviser; and Jerry Bottenfield, business manager.
The Kansan Board said, in effect, that it would have ruled against publishing the poem as a violation of the Kansan Obscenity Guidelines even if the Printing Service had not axed it. The Kansan Board, our readers should know, has obligations to legislators, alumni, etc.
The Kansan's obligation remains, however, to the students, including the black students whose newspaper was snubbed by the Printing Service.
In coming issues, the Kansan will be speaking in more depth about the BSU's attempt to issue its paper and about the reaction of the Printing Service, KU Administration and Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell, whose opinion is being sought.
In the meantime, we recommend you all buy a copy of the Harambee, now on sale after the BSU took the paper all the way to Wichita to have it printed.
In fact, buy two, and send a copy to a legislator, alumnus, etc.
—Love and Peace, Mike Shearer
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
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Increased funding needed in doctor shortage problem
Plans to alleviate the physician problems of Kansas are subject to limitations of anticipated funds, said Dr. George A. Wolf Jr., provost of the University of Kansas Medical Center and dean of the School of Medicine.
The Medical Center's proposal, developed by the faculty last fall and included by the Board of Regents in its fund requests, combines long-term and short-term methods of attacking the shortage of physicians. Approximately $1.5 million is needed for the plan for the first year. In comparison to this figure, Gov. Robert B. Docking has recommended $300,000 in his budget message for the first year.
The Medical Student Assembly of the University of Kansas Medical Center has expressed similar concern in a press release on the manpower shortage of health personnel in Kansas.
"Kansas is just not getting enough doctors to meet the needs of its people," the release stated. "Thirty-six of Kansas' counties have more than 2,000 people per physician. The national average is 756."
The statement said that only 25 per cent of the total budget of the Medical Center has been provided by tax dollars from the state. The rest has come from the federal
Committee to research new weapons
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Police commissioners in the city of St. Louis and St. Louis County announced formation Tuesday of a committee to investigate development of a "non-lethal" weapon for police officers.
The group immediately sent a letter to the director of Law Enforcement Assistance Administration LEAA in Washington, asking for federal funds.
The committee said, "A survey to determine the current state of the art of non-lethal weapons research as reflected in law enforcement and other research journals, will be undertaken immediately."
Arthur B. Shepley Jr., executive director of the Law Enforcement Foundation, has agreed to commit "a maximum of $5,000 expense money for the committee to pursue LEAA funding of the research and development effort," the committee said.
In the letter to LEAA Administrator Charles H. Rogovin, the committee said the development "of an effective non-lethal weapon is a most important and timely research subject."
"We anticipate a sophisticated study employing representatives from the fields of law enforcement, medicine, related physical sciences and weapons manufacturers.
government, which has made cutbacks in this area, and from earnings for services rendered.
"Newly graduated physicians are attracted to those states where the people and the legislature support medicine," the statement reported.
Feb. 25
1970 KANSAN 5
"Most importantly, it is necessary to fully fund the requested regular budget of the University Medical Center to maintain quality of present care so that the planned expansion can take place. Without the support of the people of Kansas there will be no chance of meeting the problem before it is too late. Our state will continue to attract and train considerably fewer doctors, nurses and other medical personnel than we need. All the people of Kansas will lose," the statement read.
- Approximately $215,000 for the development and improvement of internship and residency training programs in hospitals in the state which, with assistance from the Medical Center, will encourage graduates of other schools to come to Kansas for such training.
- Efforts to solve the problems of the diminishing number of physicians and health professionals in the state include the following:
- About $900,000 the first year for the raising to adequate levels the stipends of existing internships and residency positions.
- About $70,000 the first year for the creation of a new department of family practice which will include a residency program for post-graduate training for those physicians who want to go into family practice.
- About $120,000 the first year for the implementation of new curriculum framework, allowing a medical student to complete the M.D. degree in three calendar years, rather than four. To implement this curriculum the administration at the Medical Center said in the budget request there is urgent need for eight more fully funded full-time clinical faculty members.
$150,000 for the first year for planning for an eventual increase in the size of the entering class in medical school from 129 to 170 students. This planning includes careful definition of the physical plant requirements such as basic science teaching laboratories, and a new teaching hospital.
Wolf said that the freshman medical class entering in September 1970 has been selected, and the total is 129 students. Existing facilities were built for classes of 100 to 110 students and many of the hospital facilities are 30 to 40 years old.
The initiation of each of these programs, Wolf said, except the early planning for an enrollment increase, involves a commitment by the legislature to continue them. Increased funding will be required in future years to do this.
If the Kansas legislature appropriates the $300,000 recommended by the Governor, the School of Medicine will be able to take significant steps on all the important proposed programs this year, except for internship and residency stipends, Wolf said.
"As soon as budget funds are assured," Wolf said, "we can start looking for a chairman of the new family practice department and we can proceed with development of its program. We can begin to work with hospitals, for example in Wichita, Topeka and Kansas City, which want to develop affiliated intership or residency programs."
"Our annual requests for funds from the state general revenue funds have been consistently reduced by 15 to 20 per cent. This consistent under-funding is bad for the quality of our programs and morale," he said.
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Citizens urged to draw up petitions
Lawrence area lacks pollution control
Air pollution control measures are sadly lacking in the Lawrence area, said James A. Noon Jr., director of Air Pollution Control for the Kansas City and Wyandotte County Board of Health.
Noon and Richard Michaels, his associate, spoke before the Ecology Action Organization Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
Noon said when hearings concerning the problems of air pollution in the Kansas City vicinity were held in April, 1969, Douglas County was to be included in any measures taken to control pollution.
But several public officials, including a Lawrence city council member, requested Douglas County be exempt from controls. He said pollution from the area was not part of the regional problem.
Noon called it an example of
political maneuvering, and cited the local Co-op plant as a definite cause of serious pollution.
Noon also said Douglas County had no air pollution control board in any form.
Noon and Michaels discussed the problems of pollution in the Kansas City area, and cited the visibility problems at Fairfax and Kansas City Municipal Airports.
Both men criticized the "piecemeal" method of regulating pollutants which are instituted by the Federal Government. Noon said criteria for the maximum limits of pollutants researched are distributed one at a time. "It's a very inefficient and ineffective process." Noon said.
Michaelsaid tolerance criteria can change,just as the tolerance level to radio-active fallout has been lowered substantially in the past decade as scientists have learned more about its effects.
"Arbitrary levels don't solve
Crime parallels movie
ATLANTA (UPI)—"We knew about the South, and we had been uneasy about driving through it," the long-haired leader of a rock band sadly recalled.
He had seen the movie "Easy Rider," in which two motorcyclists are abused by people who thought their hair was too long. As Buck Rogers drove toward Atlanta, a drama incredibly parallel to the movie began unfolding.
Rogers, leader of a group in Albany, N.Y., called the Buck Rogers Movement, and his wife were in the front seat of their gold convertible. Harlan Cornelius, the 24-year-old bearded, long-haired lead guitar player, was in the back seat working up a list of songs the group could do
in their Atlanta nightclub book-ing
About 60 miles outside the city, another car pulled alongside. A young man inside yelled, "Fink." Rogers replied to his companions, "There's your easy rider."
"I heard the first shot, then as he drove past, I saw the kid with his arm out of the window."
6 KANSAN
"Then Harlan said, 'I've been shot,' and he put his hand to his head." Rogers said.
Feb.25
1970
Tuesday Cornelius was in satisfactory condition, but too weak to talk with newsmen. Doctors say he may lose his left eye. Police still were looking for the assailants.
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During the question-answer session which followed the speech, Noon was asked about the types of pollutants emitted by the Coop plant. He said carbon monoxide and nitrous oxides were serious pollutants.
As a means of promoting pollution control in the Douglas County area, Noon suggested interested citizens should draw up petitions calling for control, and have them signed.
he said, "and send them to the Governor. I'll guarantee results."
"On the government's list of control regions, Kansas City ranks 14th of 52 problem areas," Noon said.
the problem," he said. Noon mentioned the air quality control regions set up across the nation. He said the Kansas City region is the only one which has an ordinance limiting the amount of pollutants which can be detected in the air.
The criteria for pollution limits, Michaels said, are based on incidences of damage to vegetation and corrosion in delegated areas.
"Have them notarized, and make copies so they'll be legal.
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The Air Pollution Control lab is responsible for testing air samples and determining the amount of the various pollutants found in the samples. Michaels said the samples were not taken at the street level, but from about 12 feet above the ground.
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Disadvantaged promised aid
Connie Mack Higgins, special assistant to the administrator of the Small Business Administration (SBA), said that the SBA doesn't want to see a man living on the wrong side of the tracks if he is capable of being a millionaire.
Higgins, one of President Nixon's top advisers on black issues in the presidential campaign, spoke about "Black Capitalism in the Nixon Administration," Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union.
The title "black capitalism" is a misnomer, Higgins said, since the SBA is now concerned with not only the blacks but with Indians and Appalachian residents.
"We want to develop people who develop capitalism," he said.
Higgins explained that the major work of the SBA is to guarantee loans for disadvantaged persons. SBA guarantees loans up to $350,000.
Banks won't loan to disadvantaged persons, he said. The bank, however, collects state taxes which the person pays, so the bank holds his money, yet he is unable to obtain a loan from the bank.
SAMBUTA FUJIMANI
Connie Mack Higgins
Higgins cited examples of the SBA's capitalism program. Under the program, a call list is
operated in which a weekly bulletin is sent to everyone whose name is on the list. The list states offers for black development and tells what businesses are being bidded on.
A franchise program is being operated, also. "Many people feel that the franchise is the proper way to get the minorities into the economic mainstream," Higgins said.
Lists of franchises and people to contact are provided by the SBA, he said.
Under the 406 Program operated by the SBA, grants are given. A grant is given, for example, to a man who, starting in Philadelphia, is building a chain of black-operated shopping centers in the mid-Atlantic states.
Higgins said that the SBA is attempting to develop individuals. Education is not a deciding factor in obtaining the guaranteed loan, he said. "We want people who will work 25 hours a day," he said.
Interfraternity Council states stipulations for 1970 rush period
Rules regarding men's rush for 1970 were announced by Dave Andersen, Interfraternity Council vice-president for rush, Thursday night in the regular meeting of the IFC.
This year's rules include;
Any male, approved for admission to the University, is eligible to participate in rush and is encouraged to do so.
During the period between July 1 and August 18, member fraternities of the IFC may pledge 50 per cent of their fall pledge class and no more than this.
Rushees may sign a fraternity pledge card form July 1 through August 18.
The fraternity pledge card must
be signed by both the rushee and a parent and dated at the time of the signatures. The pledge card must be mailed to the Office of the Dean of Men within 48 hours after the required signatures have been obtained.
If a rushee violates his pledge by signing another fraternity's pledge card, he is then automatically ineligible for pledging for one semester.
During the period between August 18 and August 23, there will be no pledging.
Students who do not pledge during the summer must participate in formal rush week to be eligible for pledging during that period.
Scholarship to aid blacks
The Kansas Board of Regents announced the unveiling of a $15,000 scholarship program drive which will enable black students to attend the Kansas University School of Journalism.
Elmer C. Jackson Jr, told his fellow regents of the scholarship drive which is being launched in connection with the 50th anniversary celebration of The Call, a weekly newspaper that is published in Kansas City, Mo.
KU administrators and the regents were asked to attend a dinner on April 24 where the newspaper's 50 years of service would be honored.
Roy Wilkins, executive director of the National Association for
the advancement of Colored People, is to speak at the dinner. Wilkins is a former editor of The Call.
Feb. 25
1970 KANSAN 7
The scholarship drive will honor Miss Lucille Bluford, managing editor of the paper and a KU graduate.
No rushees are permitted in fraternity chapter houses or annexes from midnight, August 18, to August 20.
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
No pre-train dates will be allowed. A pre-train date shall constitute any party, or organized function, with more than one rushee present between midnight August 18, and 7:30 p.m. Thursday, August 20.
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During rush week, fraternity men will not contact a ruslee at any time other than the regularly scheduled rush dates.
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Each and every rushee must fill out a rush registration card and send it to the IFC office in the Kansas Union before he may legally pledge. These cards are available in the Rush Book and may come in prior to or accompany the pledge card.
Violators of any of the above mentioned rush rules will be subject to judiciary action by the IFC Judiciary Council.
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Marquette refuses Midwest bid
NCAA extends post season invitations
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — The National Collegiate Athletic Association's prestigious postseason basketball tournament lost 10th - ranked Marquette to the National Invitational Tournament Tuesday because the Warriors felt they were being treated like "patsies" by the NCAA
The NCAA quickly named unranked Dayton (17-7) to fill the void in its 25-team bracket and the Flyers were just as quick to accent.
Al McGuire, Marquette coach, said the Warriors' refusal to accept the bid resulted from the NCAA's plans to move his team out of the Mideast Regional and into the first-round of the Midwest Regional at Texas Christian March 7.
"I'm disgusted," McGuire said. "We take basketball seriously here. Maybe it was something between me and the committee. I don't know."
McGuire, who said he was "shocked" at the NCAA's plans to move his team into the Midwest, charged the NCAA had "buckled under" to a power complex within its ranks in asking the Warriors to play anywhere but in the mideast.
"They've treated us like little brother." he said.
Tom Scott, Davidson athletic director and NCAA tournament Committee chairman, said "Our selection committee ranks the teams in each region and Marquette was third in the Mideast, behind both Notre Dame and Jacksonville," Scott explained. "We have only two at-large
berths in the Mideast and so, the third team is the 'swing' team—the team we can, according to the book rules, move to another regional.
"Our purpose is to select the 10 independent teams we consider the best in the country and we certainly feel Marquette is one of those teams." Scott said.
"They speak out of both sides of their mouth," McGuire said. "First they speak about schedules, then records. We can't do any better than we did. What do we have to do? 23-0?"
McGuire felt that because he had four starters back from the team that was runnerup to Purdue in last year's Mideast tournament, because his team had the best record normally of the independents in the Mideast, and because his team had been in the Mideast tourney two successive years, Marquette should stay in the Mideast.
KANSAN Sports
"I am very disappointed," McGuire said.
Dayton, which will be making its sixth NCAA trip as Marquette's replacement, joined nine other at-large selections named earlier Tuesday, including St. Bonaventure (19-1), New Mexico State (21-2) and high - scoring Jacksonville (20-1), the nation's
Nos. 4, 5 and 6-ranked teams in this week's United Press International ratings.
Also invited were Houston (20-3), tied with North Carolina State as the nation's No. 11 - rated team, 15th - ranked Notre Dame (19-5), Utah State (18-5), Villanova (17-6), Niagara (19-4) and Long Beach State (21-3).
All except Jacksonville, the nation's No. 1 scoring team this season with an average of 103 points a game, Niagara's Purple Eagles, led by a standout Calvin Murphy, and Long Beach State have appeared previously in the NCAA's University Division championships.
Pairings for nine first - round games March 7 will be announced Wednesday.
First - round winners will advance to the four regionals—East, Midwest and West—on March 12 and 14. The finals are slated for March 19 and 21 at the University of Maryland, site of Texas - El Paso's then Texas Western 72-64 championship game upset of Kentucky in 1966.
Top-ranked UCLA will be shooting for its fourth consecutive NCAA cage crown and its sixth in the last seven years, a string broken only by Texas - El Paso's title in 1966. The Bruins will be one of seven conference champions who draw first-round byes into the regionals.
St. Bonaventure, led by 6-11 pivot and All-America candidate Bob Lanier, the nation's No. 5 scorer (30.7) and No. 8 rebounder (16.6), was one of five teams selected from the Eastern Time Zone and coach Larry Weise said the Bonnies' decision to accept "unanimous."
Jayhawks only team left to catch K-State
Kansas State can clinch the title outright with a victory over Colorado in a regionally televised game Thursday night in Manhattan, Kan.
Those two games left Missouri with a 6-6 record and Oklahoma at 5-6. Now only Kansas, with a 6-5 conference record, retains any mathematical chance of catching Kansas State, which is 9-2 with three games to play.
Kansas, which has not lost a home game nor won a road game in conference play, won when
Two more teams were mathematically eliminated from the Big Eight basketball race Monday night, although league-leading Kansas State was idle. Kansas jarred Missouri, 63-45, and Nebraska pummeled Oklahoma, 79-66.
By United Press International
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI)
—Bob Gibson, four times a 20-game winner in the past five seasons, reported to the St. Louis Cardinals camp Tuesday and talked about winning 20 again.
Gibson reports to Cardinal camp
"Somehow," said the $125,000 pitcher, "there's a feeling of uncertainty every year about this time. You say to yourself, 'can I do it again?' But then you press forward and try again. A pennant has to be the team goal, 20 games the individual goal."
The Tigers, down 33-23 at halftime, pulled within six at 37-31 before hitting the cold snap. Kansas scored nine straight free throws to pull away at 46-31.
Missouri went seven minutes without a field goal in the second half.
Gibson, 34, was four days behind other pitchers in arriving.
Tom Scantlebury scored a career high 28 points, including 22 in the second half, for the Cornhuskers. Leroy Chalk had 17 and Bob Gratopp 14 for Nebraska. Garfield Heard paced Oklahoma with 33 points.
Dave Robisch led the Jayhawks with 23 points, while Roger Brown and Bob Kivisto added 12 each. Henry Smith scored 14 and Dave Pike 10 for Missouri.
There are no games scheduled until Thursday's Kansas State-Colorado contest. Saturday contests will match Kansas State at Oklahoma, Kansas at Oklahoma State and Nebraska at Missouri.
8 KANSAN Feb. 25 1970
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The two contests Monday night increased the Big Eight's home-court advantage to 37-8 in conference play.
Weise said the groundwork for the team's decision to accept the NCAA invitation was set two years ago when the Bonnies were drubbed twice—by North Carolina and Columbia—in the East Regional when Lanier was a sophomore.
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West - at Brigham Young (doubleheader): Big Sky Conference champion vs. Long Beach State and Western Athletic Conference champion vs. Utah State. Regionsale-March 12 and 14.
Midwest - at Texas Christian (doubleheader): Dayton vs. Houston and Southwest Conference champion vs. New Mexico State.
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East-at South Carolina: Southern Conference - St. Bonaventure winner vs. Atlantic Coast Conference champion and Ivy League-Niagara winner vs. Middle Atlantic-Villanova winner. Winners meet March 14 for Regional title.
tallest front line in the annals of college basketball, averaging 7 feet, and the country's leading reboucher in 7-2 center Artis Gilmore.
"Those losses will certainly be a factor in our play in this year's tournament," Weise said. "We certainly haven't forgotten what happened . . ."
Houston will be making its fifth NCAA trip in seven years and coach Guy Lewis said the invitation "was something we set out to accomplish back in October." Lewis' 1967 Cougars finished third in the NCAA classic and wound up fourth in 1968.
Mideast - at Ohio State: Mid-
American - Notre Dame winner
vs. Southeastern Conference
champion and Ohio Valley -
Jacksonville winner vs. Big Ten
champion. Winners meet March
14 for Regional Title.
New Mexico State acceptance assured the Aggies of their fourth straight trip to the NCAA and Jacksonville's Dolphins have the
"As an independent," Lewis said of the invitation, "it is ultimate."
Johnny Dee, Notre Dame coach, said he was pleased to accept for the Irish, noting that "this is the first time Notre Dame has ever gone to a major tournament three years in a row and the second time any Notre Dame team ever has won 20 or more games three years in a row."
Mideast - at Dayton (doubleheader); Mid-American Conference champion vs. Notre Dame and Ohio Valley Champion vs. Jacksonville.
The NCAA Tournament Pairings:
1st Round-March 7
Conference champion vs. Villa-
nova.
East - at St. John's: Southern Conference champion vs. St. Bonaventure; at Princeton: Ivy League Champion vs. Niagara; at Pennsylvania: Middle Atlantic
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'Red letter days' approach as tourney bids are on the line for the conference champions
By United Press International
By United Press International Feb. 24 was one of those red letter days in the life of a college basketball coach because that's when the bids go out for the National Collegiate Athletic Association and National Invitation Tournaments.
Ten independents and 15 conference champions filled the NCAA tournament, and the NIT got to choose from everybody that's left. NCAA bids went out 60 minutes before the NIT's.
Second-ranked Kentucky practically assured itself the Southeastern Conference title and the NCAA bid that goes with it Monday night by beating Alabama, 98-89, on a 47-point performance from senior center Dan Issel.
Kentucky's hold on first place in the conference was strengthened when Tennessee limited
Pete Maravich to only 30 points and knocked over Louisiana State, 88-87. And it was no secret that the NIT hoped to land Maravich and LSU's trained Tigers after having to pass them up last year because of an unimpressive record.
Third-ranked South Carolina also won Monday night, beating Wake Forest, 67-51, but the victory has no effect on determining which tournament will wind up with the Gamecocks. The Atlantic Coast Conference has a championship tournament at the end of each season to determine the NCAA participant, and the runner-up traditionally goes to the NIT.
The Independents, however, were scrambling to make favorable last-minute impressions on the tournament selectors since
bids don't automatically come to them like conference champions.
Among the ranking independents, No. 5 New Mexico State rallied for 60 points in the second half to crush Boise State, 105-79, as Jimmy Collins hit 25 points and Sam Lacey added 20; All-America candidate Austin Carr scored 50 points to pace No. 15 Notre Dame to a 121-114 victory over Butler; and No. 10 Marquette, paced by guard Jeff Sewell's 29 points, overcome stubborn Xavier, 81-73.
Several other top independents in line for tournament play also scored victories with Cyril Baptiste hitting for 24 points, including two foul shots in the final 43 seconds, to lift Creighton over Providence, 68-64; Georgia Tech trouncing Tulane, 84-75; and Nate Williams tossing in a free throw with one second remaining
to give Utah State an 80-78 triumph over the Air Force Academy.
Ohio Valley Conference champion Western Kentucky, tied for 16th in the ratings, got 24 points from Jim McDaniels to beat Dayton, 76-63.
New Royals gain praise from Metro
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI) — Three off-season acquisitions of the Kansas City Royals came in for special praise from manager Charlie Metro Tuesday.
Two of them, pitcher Bob Johnson and center pitcher Amos Otis, came in the December trade with the New York Mets which sent third baseman Joe Foy to the world champions.
good," Metro said. "Of course, it's still early. Otis has shown a very quick bat in our first two days of hitting practice."
"Johnson's pitching is far above our expectations at this point and Nick Willhite is looking real
Johnson led the Texas League in earned run average with a fancy 1.48 last year while compiling a 13-4 record for Memphis. Willhite, a 29-year-old lefthander who has played for four major league teams, was signed as a free agent last week after missing most of the 1969 season with a shoulder ailment.
Indictment links Dean to gambling conspiracy
DETROIT (UPI)—Jerome "Dizzy" Dean, whose "very helpful" information led to several arrests in a government gambling crackdown, was one of five conspirators named Tuesday in a federal indictment charging 10 other men with gambling conspiracy.
Dean, the Hall of Fame pitcher, was not indicted. But U.S. Attorney James H. Brickley indicated he might be called to testify at any trials.
Feb. 25
1970 KANSAN 9
The indictments, handed down by a 23-member grand jury Feb. 16, were sealed until Tuesday because one of the men indicted was being tried on another charge.
Though federal investigators hinted at the beginning of the crackdown into an alleged sports betting ring based in Detroit that well-known sports figures might be involved, there were no such names among the 10 indicted.
All 10—seven of them from Michigan and three from Mississippi—were arrested Jan. 1 or
shortly after and have been free on bond.
The only "new" name in the nearly 2-month-old investigation was Paul Dean Jr., believed to be Dean's nephew. He, too, was named as a co-conspirator but not as a defendant.
Denny McLain, the star Detroit Tiger pitcher under indefinite suspension from baseball for alleged involvement in Flint, Mich., bookmaking activities in 1967, was not named on either list. McLain testified before the grand jury two days after the sealed indictment was handed down.
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Maddox involved in restaurant ruckus
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Gov.
Lester Maddox of Georgia called a Negro congressman a baboon and an ass Tuesday when the lawmaker threatened to throw him out of the House restaurant for giving away souvenir ax handles.
Maddox and Rep. Charles C. Diggs, D-Mich., one of the House's nine black members, engaged in a shouting match that some feared would result in blows, but a plainclothes police officer stepped in and stopped the argument.
"I was sitting there enjoying my broiled salmon steak when a member identified to me as Congressman Diggs threatened to throw me out," Maddox said afterwards.
"I challenged him to go ahead and do it. I told him he was acting more like an ass and a baboon than a member of Congress," he said.
Diggs, whose account differed
only in detail, objected to Maddox passing out autographed, full-sized ax and pick handles to congressmen and restaurant employees. The handles recall Maddox' days as an Atlanta restaurant owner when he used ax and pick handles to bar Negroes from his Pickrick Chicken House.
Maddox entered the House restaurant after testifying against extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act at a Senate subcommittee. At the hearing, he tangled with Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind.
"This is discriminatory," Maddox said of the present act which applies only to seven Southern states. "It's illegal. It's unconstitutional. It's un-American. It's un-Godly."
"Amen," said Bayh, provoking laughter.
"And phoey on anything that says any different," replied Maddux. Then, in his final words before the subcommittee, he told Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., "The
South shall rise again, senator."
Maddox is permitted in the House restaurant because as a governor he is one of the public officials who enjoys "the privilege of the house floor."
Accompanied by a Georgia highway patrolman, he brought with him his customary box of autographed ax and pick handles, which he says he gives away strictly on request.
Shortly after the incident in the restaurant, Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., another of nine black House members, denounced Maddox' conduct on the House floor and said he was preparing a resolution declaring the governor unwelcome in the House restaurant from now on.
Speaker John W. McCormack,
it was learned, personally directed that Maddox' ax and pick handles be cleared from the dining room. He sent Democratic leader Carl Albert to the restaurant to pass on McCormack's instructions to Rep. John C. Kluczyski, D-Ill., chairman of the House Restaurant Committee, who was having lunch at the time.
Environment meeting scheduled April 17-18
The Midwestern Conference on the Environment will meet April 17-18, at the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
The purpose of this colloquium is to inform students from a seven-state region (Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas) about the problems affecting our environment.
William M. Hannay, coordinator of the program, said the conference will serve as a "kick-off" for the April 22 teach-in for the midwest.
Stewart Udall, Senators Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, and Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., Jesse Unruh, Dr. Lee DuBridge, William Scott Jr., Vic Yannacone, Paul Ehrlich and Barry Commoner have been sent invitations to be panelists in the scheduled discussion groups.
Topics for the panel groups will be "The Effect of Man on the Environment," "The Effect of the Environment on Man," "Technological Solutions," and "Political Solutions."
Under these topics subjects such as population, pollution,
Feb. 25 1970 KANSAN 11
"urbanitis," crime, health, noise programming, waste management laws and individualism will be discussed.
Fifty-five colleges and universities, state and local government officials, state and national legislators and representatives of private sectors have been invited to attend.
Guatemala selected for field site
The second largest sugar plantation in Guatemala is the site of a field center established by the Organization for Tropical Studies (OTS), of which KU is a member. The 10,000 acres plantation is in El Salto, which has a population of 3,000.
Kluczynski said he told Madad-
ko the handles would have to go,
but the Georgia governor pro-
tested they were only souvenirs.
Don Roberto Dorio, president of the operation, gave OTS housing for 20 to 25 persons plus a classroom for $100 a month rent. The rent is put into a fund by Dorio to help support Guatemalan students in OTS studies. A pilot study research program and two courses already are in progress.
"I said they looked more to me like something that could lay open the side of a man's head," Kluczynski said. "I said maybe you can distribute them in your restaurant but not in mine and I run this one."
At about that time, he said, Diggs appeared and his heated argument with Maddox began.
The group told Maddox passing out pick and ax handles was inappropriate, Diggs said. Maddox said he didn't see why anybody should be offended. Diggs replied that he certainly was, and that he was sure his feeling was
Diggs" account differed only in detail. He said when he heard what Maddox was doing he got restaurant manager Kermit Cowan and Rep. John C. Kluczynski, D-Ill., chairman of the House Restaurant Committee to accompany him to Maddox' table.
shared by other Negro congressmen and blacks generally.
"I told him he was the guest or the House, and obligated to abide by its rules of decorum. He said he had as much right here as I did. I said I was a member and he wasn't and he had no right here at all. Then things started heating up. He got red in the face, threw down the money for his lunch, and got up," said Diggs.
It was about then that "the FBI man"—later identified as a District of Columbia plainclothes officer assigned to the Capitol—moved in, apparently to make sure no blows were exchanged.
Would you feel at home with the Quakers?
There's nothing mysterious or exclusive about the Society of Friends, and you may find that the Quakers can help you with an approach to religion that you can't find elsewhere. What do they offer?
First, Quakers like to call themselves "seekers." They don't all claim to have found God yet (so they don't have a creed or a fixed set of beliefs), but they do claim that by following Christian principles seven days a week, you will experience very clearly what God's love means, and that this is the way to be at peace with yourself, and with your neighbours.
Second, they offer the "seeker" the companionship of the local Quaker Meeting.
Meetings are held in Danforth Chapel on Jayhawk Blvd., Sundays 10:15-12:00. For information contact:
Robert E. Hinshaw, Clerk M. Otle Meeting of the Society of Friends VI 3-9574
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Couple met because of skull find
Writing team composed of prof, wife
BY LOUISE STANG Kansan staff writer
In 1964, a fisherman reeled in a human skull from a lake near Austin, Texas. Excited, he took the skull to the police. Thomas W. McKern, then consultant at the Crime Lab of Texas Highway Department, found that the skull was that of a Japanese male. But how did a Japanese skull end up in a Texas lake?
McKern, now professor of physical anthropology at the University of Kansas, said the story of the skull was printed in the local newspaper. Within a week the police received a letter from an Air Force officer stationed in Austin, who explained that he had once bought the skull from a museum in the Philippines. Later, the officer married, and his wife could not stand having the skull in the house, so he threw it into the lake.
McKern's wife Sharon said she met McKern because of the skull. "I was collecting skulls, but I didn't have a Japanese one, so I asked him for it," she said.
"He wouldn't give it to me then, but it's half mine now, anyway."
"A clam had got inside the skull," she said, "but it got so big it couldn't get out and died in there."
The skull is now in the McKern residence. Looking inside it, one can still see the remainder of the clam.
Mrs. McKern is also an anthropologist. She holds a bachelor's degree in physical anthropology and is trained as an osteologist (identifying skeletal material). She is affiliated with the anthropology department at KU on special research projects.
The McKerns are also freelance writers. McKern is editorial adviser of anthropology for Science Digest. In the March issue of "Highlights for Children," the couple has an article on "Indian Magic and Medicine."
"I can't write," said McKern,
"Sharon does the writing. She also has a background in writing for children."
The McKerns have written two books on human rights and development for junior and high
school students. The first one, "Human Origin," is a textbook and was published last August. The second book is a tradebook and will be out by the end of this year.
The couple said the market was good for textbooks on evolution on the junior high and high school level. Little has been written on the subject for this age group, and the literature available has been written mainly by biologists, said McKern.
Stories and articles written by the McKern's have appeared in "Nature and Science," "American Junior Red Cross News," "Friends," "Mankind," "Children's Friends" and "Jack and Jill." McKern has also done a series of 28 lectures on evolution for educational television.
McKern said he and his wife receive many letters from the public. "Some are "crack-pot" letters and some come from people who show genuine interest in our work," he said.
There are still many people who are opposed to the teaching of evolution as they find it to conflict with religion, McKern said.
Neither of the McKerns are in favor of organized religion, but they said they still did not see why evolution has to conflict with religion.
"We are trying to explain how human life developed, not how it started," Mrs. McKern said.
The first fraternity at KU was founded in 1872.
Former KU athelete named medical dean
Former KU basketball player, Robert L. Van Citters has been appointed dean of the School of Medicine at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Van Citters, 43, received the bachelor of arts degree in 1949 and his doctor of medicine in 1953 from the University of Kansas. He has been associate dean for research and graduate programs at Washington since 1968.
Van Citters took a residency in internal medicine and cardiology at the KU Medical Center and
12 KANSAN Feb. 25 1970
went to Washington in 1958 as a research fellow in the cardiovascular training program. In 1963 he was named to the Robert L. King professorship of cardiovascular research, sponsored by the Washington State Heart Association.
He served on the National Institute of Health task force for developing an artificial heart and he was recently a consultant to the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases in Pakistan. This month he will receive the Theodore and Susan T. Cummings Humanitarian Award of the American College of Cardiology at its annual meeting in New Orleans.
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Church council attacks betting bill
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas Council of Churches Tuesday attacked the pari-mutuel wagering bill now being considered in the House of Representatives as "socially destructive, economically unsound, and morally corruptive."
The council represents 10 Protestant denominations in Kansas, with some 480,000 members.
The Rev. J. Edward Nelson, Topeka, council president, said gambling to produce either public or charitable revenue would be detrimental to personal, family and community life.
Mr. Nelson, pastor of the Trinity Lutheran Church in Topeka,
said, "We observe that with legalized gambling, crime, welfare and underworld burdens mount. Legalized gambling spawns illegal gambling, and not infrequently, anticipated revenues fall below promotion promises."
The Rev. William F. Keucher, representing 65,000 Baptists, criticized the measure on economic grounds. The bill would legalize betting on horse and dog races.
In 1963, a total of $4 billion was bet by about 57 million persons throughout the country, he said, representing an average of $70 per person.
"We do not think the Kansas economy and the small business man in our state will be helped
A KU Women's Hall of Fame is being organized by the Associated Women Students (AWS) to recognize outstanding women graduates and faculty or staff members of the University of Kansas, said Joyce Campbell, Topeka junior and AWS Women's Recognition committee member.
AWS hall of fame honors KU women
The plans call for the selection
TOPEKA (UPI)—A caucus of Senate Republicans Tuesday opted to seek passage of Gov. Robert B. Docking's property tax lid bill, which many Senators view as unworkable.
The decision virtually assures the Governor's bill will become law. The measure was passed by the House Monday by a vote of 76-47. It is expected the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee will pass the measure out of committee for debate and final vote on the Senate floor by Monday.
Tax lid bill assured of passage
Sen. Glee Smith, R-Larned, president pro tem of the Senate, said a "substantial majority" of Senate Republicans demonstrated support for the Docking lid proposal, despite the fact that "most Senators regard it as unworkable."
The only alternative considered at the caucus, were a combined tax lid measure utilizing features of bills proposed by Sens. Robert Bennett, (R-Prairie Village), and Frank Hodge, (R-Hutchinson), and the prospect of no tax lid at all.
14 KANSAN Feb.25 1970
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of one woman to represent each of the following fields: education, journalism, religion, fine arts, social work, medicine, liberal arts and sciences, law, urban design, engineering, architecture and pharmacy. More than one woman may represent a field if the contributions of each are equal in that particular area.
The purpose of the Hall of Fame is to provide successful models for women students to follow in choosing their careers and becoming effective citizens, said Miss Campbell.
by skimming off $70 of a person's discretionary spending income."
Nominations should be sent, along with a resume of the nominee's activities to the AWS office, 220 Strong Hall. The deadline for the nominations is March 29.
Mr. Keucher attacked what he said were the "fictions that have accompanied the bill."
The Hall of Fame designates will be named on Honor Night, the annual AWS program which recognizes notable contributions made by KU women students.
No state that has legalized pari-mutuel wagering, except Nevada, receives more than 4.5 per cent for tax revenue purposes, the Topeka minister said. "It is apparent that we cannot begin to finance the demands or needs of our state from the revenues of legalized gambling," he said.
Mr. Keucher also attacked the idea that legalized betting would create a more attractive tax climate in the state that would attract new industry and business.
“This is the biggest fiction of them all,” he said. “The favorable tax climate argument has been thoroughly disproved in the state of Nevada,” where he said the number of manufacturing establishments was exactly the same in 1954 as it had been in 1904.
He also said Nevada has the highest crime rate in the nation, even though gambling provides
"Legalized pari-mutuel betting spawns the small bookmaker who canont live with the services furnished by organized gambling," he said.
the state with 19 per cent of its revenues.
Mr. Keucher also charged that legalized gambling would inevitably attract organized crime to the state.
Church, charged that the bill would encourage the state to develop economic dependence on "a practice which produces no increase in real resources, as legitimate productive enterprise does, but simply takes money from the many and redistributes it to the few."
The Rev, Jack Bremer, district director of Christian Social Concerns for the United Methodist
A public hearing on the bill will be at 3 p.m. next Tuesday by the House Federal and State Affairs Committee.
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'Twas brilling and the slithy toves . . . '
Sunlight dancing on a rippled lake, caught by a frame of overhanging branches, creates a scene of quiet beauty and the promise of approaching spring.
Pueblo crew member protests war policies
ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Lee R. Hayes, radioman aboard the U.S.S. Pueblo when it was captured by the North Koreans, said Tuesday that peace moratoriums are "a stab in the back of our men in Vietnam."
Hayes, 28, of Columbus, Ohio,
said, "We ought to be asking our
leaders in Washington to win the
war. I'm not a general, but the
last three chiefs of staff have said
we could win the war."
Hayes, a second class petty officer aboard the Pueblo, was responsible for maintaining radio contact with the Japanese. He said, "Our communications were perfect until the North Koreans boarded the ship."
Hayes said the ship's officers "did the only thing they could do" in surrendering the ship and he added that the court martial of Cmdr. Lloyd Bucher was "unwarranted."
Feb. 25
1970 KANSAN 15
"If they charge one man, they charge us all," Hayes said. "The charges were placed so the facts wouldn't come out."
"Sometimes I had my doubts that America was behind us, especially when I was being beat on," he said. "I don't think this country had to wait 11 months to do something about us. Of course, there are still some Americans who have been prisoners of various countries for years."
Hayes said that while in prison "We were given lectures on Communism. They tried to discredit the Bible and told us that God had been shot down by the Russians. They said the United States would fall from within because of apathy."
Hayes is now a member of the John Birch Society and travels throughout the country to deliver speeches.
Hayes said he had been hocked on some college campuses by members of the Students for a Democratic Society.
The Gaucho
the Three Musketeers
HAIRBANKS
Wed. Feb. 25 - 7:49:00
UNION AUDITORIUM - 75¢
State school appropriations upheld by Supreme Court
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court Tuesday upheld for the second time the right of a state to provide proportionately more money to wealthier school districts than it does to poor ones.
The court's brief order affirmed a lower tribunal's dismissal of a suit asking the courts to order equality of educational facilities in school systems run by the state of Virginia.
The Supreme Court, in effect, went along with a U.S. district court's opinion that the courts lack the knowledge, means and authority to dictate the educational quality in various sections of a state.
Last year, the high court unexpectedly agreed with a lower court in an Illinois case that states have no constitutional duty to bring about such equalization
The Tuesday decision was on a suit brought by 11 families with school age children in the county of Bath in western Virginia. It challenged the state system under which larger amounts of state funds are allotted to school districts drawing relatively high revenues from local property taxes.
Test tube baby possible
LONDON (UPI) — A British medical team said Tuesday it hoped to create the world's first test tube baby by the end of the year. Other doctors said the experiment could usher in an era of biological nightmares.
Dr. Patrick Steppe and a team of researchers at Cambridge University announced on British Broadcasting Corporation television (BBC) they expected to replant the egg of a 34-year-old woman, which would be fertilized in a test tube, into her womb within six weeks.
Mrs. Sylvia Allen, who has been unable to have children during her seven years of marriage, said on the program that batches of eggs had been taken from her five times, and fertilized in a hospital test tube.
Steptoe said Tuesday the researchers were waiting for the perfect egg before venturing to fertilize it for implantation into Mrs. Allen's womb.
"This will probably take place in about two to six weeks," said
Dr. Steptoe.
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- Refused to consider an appeal by nine Roman Catholics, including two priests, sentenced to prison for burning draft cards in Maryland, but also refused to examine dismissal of federal charges against 10 persons who burned draft records in Milwaukee.
News of the experiment, which follows years of research by Dr. Steptoe and his team, was greeted with skepticism by British doctors.
- Agreed, in a Mississippi case, to hear a challenge to effects of the 1965 Voting Rights Act on local election procedures in the south.
- In other actions, the Supreme Court:
- Sidestepped the controversy over state abortion laws, letting stand a California Supreme Court opinion that such statutes must not broadly invade a woman's right to protect her life or to decide whether to have children.
- Let stand a ruling in a Louisiana case that a work seniority system outlawed by the 1965 Civil Rights Act cannot be applied in future promotions of black employees.
Alfie's Fish & Chips is Queen Victoria!
It's also Hyde Park, the Tower of London and Old London Bridge. Aiffle's crispy, flaky fresh fried whitefish and crunchy, light chips are served steaming hot. With a special, secret sauce you'll find nowhere else in the colonies. Truly, "it's said, 'There's a great hit'
Truly, 'tis said, "There's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite!"
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Sample our Savings for... the fun of it
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A savings account just for the fun of it? Why not. Come in to The Douglas County State Bank this week. We'll help you start a savings program designed to make your fun plans happen.
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Judge prohibits statements before trial
CHICAGO (UPI) — A federal judge, noting defense publicity tactics in the trial of the "Chicago Seven," Tuesday prohibited defense attorneys and defendants in another trial from making any statements on their case pending its disposition.
U. S. District Court Judge Edwin J. Robson issued the sweeping order in the trial of 15 persons charged with destroying draft records in a South Side Selective Service office in a raid on May 25, 1969.
"I'm just going to control this trial," Robson told William C. Cunningham and Patrick Hughes, defense attorneys, when they objected to the surprise order.
Robson, whose courtroom is just down the hall from that of U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffman where the "Chicago
Seven" were tried on riot conspiracy charges, scorned the tactics used by William M. Kunstler, chief defense attorney in the trial which ended Friday with the sentencing of five men.
Robson said Kunstler "repeatedly and brazenly" violated local district court rules and the canons of professional ethics by making "continuous inflamulatory public statements concerning jurors, witnesses, evidence, the judge and rulings by the court" during the trial of the "Chicago Seven."
The judge noted that Cunningham was co-counsel with Kunstler in a case involving a similar raid upon a Selective Service office in Catonsville, Md.
"From his association with Kunstler," Robson said, "he
occurs when counsel and parties engage in a strategy designed to inflame public passion and prejudice."
(Cunningham) should also be aware of the irreparable damage to our legal system and to the dispassionate rule of law which
Robson denied motions to dismiss the indictment and to disqualify himself from hearing the case and set a trial date of May 4.
Each month approximately 5,879 pay checks are issued to University of Kansas employees.
16 KANSAN Feb.25 1970
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Departments want more space
By JOHN GOODRICK
Kenan Staff Writer
The departments of mathematics and computer science, the University Libraries and the Computation Center asked the University Planning Board Tuesday night for more space and to be centrally located.
Bailey Price, KU mathematics professor presented the space problems of the department of mathematics emphasizing three main points. They were: 1) "The offices of the senior staff are separated from the junior staff by at least a third of a mile," 2) the library space is too small, especially the reading room and 3) the department of mathematics is rapidly increasing and has no room to expand to in Strong Hall.
Estimated space needs for the department by 1980 are 25,525 square feet including 5,000 square feet for the mathematics library, said Price. The department now has a total of 13,488 square feet.
Price said he predicted a 50 per cent increase in growth and space needs in the next ten years. The department now has the fourth largest enrollment of student hours on campus, 16,150, surpassed only by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education and the department of English. By 1980 the department expects an enrollment of 25,000 student hours, Price said.
The staff of the department now consists of 30 senior staff members and 36 "equivalent full time assistant instructors. By 1980 Price said he expects to 50 to 55 senior staff members and 50 to 55 assistant instructors. By this fall Price said there will be three more senior staff members.
Price said site requirements would be to be "centrally located in the classroom area of the campus."
Director of University Libraries, David Heron, said that library space was directly related to student enrollment and emphasized the library's need for growth.
Heron said there was a need for a Science and Technology Library with between 80 and 900
Official Bulletin
Wednesday
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Classical Film: "The Gaucho."
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
71.
Faculty Recital: Frank Brown, trombone, Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 p.
- Classical Film: "Three Musketeers."
Woodruff Auditorium, 9 p.m.
University Senate: University Theatre, 3:30 p.m.
East Door,
Robinson Gymnastics 4:30
Film: "Casablanca." Dauci-
udy.
KU Synchro Club; Natoratolum,
Robinson Gymnasium, 7-9 p.m.
pianist. Swarathout Reecial Hall, 8 p.m.
pianoist. Contessa, 9 d.phe.
Auditorium, 9 p.m.
Feb. 25
1970 KANSAN 17
Bridge Over Troubled Water
Bridge Over Troubled Water
Simon and Garfunkel
BRIDGE OVER
TROUBLED WATER
reg. $5.99
now
$399
KIEF'S
square feet and some area for expansion. He said that Watson Library needs an addition or replacement and that the stacks were crowded.
$399
When a member of the hearing board asked Heron what would most facilitate the libraries needs, consolidation or branch libraries, Heron answered, the major disadvantage to branch libraries was simply the distance factor and not administration.
KIEF'S
Paul Wolfe, Computation Center Director, said "Nearly every administrative office depends on the output of the computation center."
He said the Center operates on a 24 hour basis and through customer consulting and services "1,000 people walk through on a daily basis."
In the Green Book put out by a sub-committee of the Board of Regents Wolfe said the committee gave "high priority to adequate facilities to computers."
Wolfe said that use of the computers was rapidly increasing and that many departments were using machine readable tapes for much material, including the works of Shakespeare to analyze his writing.
Development in the Computation Center include the possibility of "low cost input output devices," and network computer development including a large computer facility with smaller outlets all over the campus. Also
The center needs to be centrally located, Wolfe said, because many campus administrators are directly connected with the center and need to be at its home site.
mentioned was the possibility of drive in windows similar to several banks where one could drive in, drop off their programs and return for the results later.
Earl Schweppe, KU computer science professor, said the department of Computer science, though only in existence a little over one year officially, has onetenth the space now that they will need in five years.
The department now has 2,608 square feet and Schwepppe said for a useful plan in ten years they will need 30,000 square feet
Schwepep said that they now have 25 graduate students and in five years they expect 100. He said the faculty growth is about three persons a year, and compared the growth of his department to that of the mathematics department.
The department needs are similar to the computation centers Schweppe said. "The same material we need for students, administration and faculty is the same needed by the computation center," he said.
Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
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- Lavalliers
- Gifts
- Sportswear
Rings - Created - Letters
Al Lauter VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
SOPHOMORE CLASS PARTY FREE BEER with TOGETHER
MARCH 6 at
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
The Future of the Manufacturing Industry
We need help making the world turn.
Like it or not, money is what makes things happen in this world. In business. In government. In all the worldly affairs of man.
It takes money to discover medicines, to rebuild ghettos, to educate children, to feed, clothe, and house humanity. Money is an essential ingredient in solving man's day to day problems—and in promoting his century to century progress.
In short, money makes the world turn. We're the world's largest bank and putting money to work is our business. We think it's an important enough
business to hire the best people we can find to run it. A Bank of America personnel representative will be interviewing on your campus soon. If you want to make a career of making the world turn, make an appointment.
MARCH 9 & 10
BANK OF AMERICA
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
VIVA
POR LA NÚMERO DE 1970
May we see your ID first, sir . . .
Tickets to this year's Rock Chalk Revue were presented to Chancellor Chalmers by Rock Chalk staff members, Dave Reibstein, Topeka junior, and Steve Cloud, Prairie Village junior. Rock Chalk will be presented Friday and Saturday nights.
Pollution laws reinforced
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas Senate Tuesday recommended for passage a measure that will strengthen existing legislation on air pollution.
The bill, which contains an all-encompassing definition of air pollution as "the presence in the
18 KANSAN Feb.25 1970
outdoor atmosphere of one or more air contaminants," is expected to be passed by the full senate today.
If enacted, the present eightmember Air Quality Conservation Commission would be empowered to hold pre-publicized public hearings, with full subpoena and cross examination powers.
Conference to scrutinize Peace Corps, US agencies
The success of the Peace Corps and other U.S. agencies will be a topic of discussion at the 20th annual Latin American Conference at the University of Florida.
George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Kansas, will be a featured speaker at the conference. His talk will consist of a summary of the conference from the U.S. point of view entitled, "A North American Report."
Waggoner will leave for the University of Florida at Gainsville on Wednesday, Feb. 25. The conference will last three days. It is sponsored by the Center for Latin American Studies at the University and will be entitled, "The United State's Presence in
Latin America: Universities in Transition."
The conference will examine how successful U.S. technical aid programs have been in Latin America along with an evaluation of the U.S. philanthropic organizations there, Waggoner said.
Those attending the conference will be analyzing Latin American universities and how much they should pattern themselves from universities in the United States, Waggoner said. Reform methods of U.S. universities will be discussed and the relevance it may have to those in Latin America, he said.
The conference will be limited to a working core of about 12 scholars and specialists on subjects discussed, Waggoner said.
Death penalty advocated in hijackings
world wide must crack down hard on politically-motivated attacks against civilian airline traffic.
MONTREAL (UPI) — Airliner hijackers and saboteurs should be put to death where possible, and dogs trained to smell out explosives should patrol international airports, the head of the International Air Transport Association said Tuesday.
"In some countries, there is a death penalty, in others not. In any case, I am for the application of the death penalty where that penalty is applicable. The crime is murder," Hammarskjold said.
Knut Hammarskjold, director-general of the Association, said in an interview that governments
Participating members are specially invited. Half of the group attending will be from Latin America and half from the United States.
Mansfield urges lower voting age or raise draft age
"If they (18 year olds) are denied this right," Mansfield said, "we seriously consider as part of any future draft or conscription law that no man be subject to the draft unless he can vote—and that would mean 21."
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield urged Congress Tuesday to lower the voting age in all elections to 18 or considering raising the minimum draft age to 21.
Mansfield conceded that setting voter qualifications was the basic responsibility of the states, but that some legislatures had recently refused to lower the voting age.
Mansfield suggested that the voting age should be lowered either through constitutional amendment or by legislation.
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MALLS
23rd and La.
VI 3-0895
HILLCREST
9th and Iowa
VI 3-0928
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
office will be deemed credited
to all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and DYNac
dealership. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
Western Clv. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Edition, Campus Mid House, 411 W, 14th St.
Typewriters—big selection . rental
purchase plan available. Office sup-
le and furniture. Xerox service.
Lawrence Typewriter Co. 700 Massif
843-3644.
1959 Chevy, automatic, very good mechanical condition, clean inside,
new tires. $240 or best offer. Call
John, 843-6804. 2-25
---
1963 Chevy 4-door sedan, V-8 automatic power steering, radio, good good mechanical condition, starts in call. Call Bob, M4-6023-0.
6:00 2-25
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket rafts;
starts, starts and runs ex-
cellently; mechanically perfect.
$500. 843-9588. 2-25
'65 Karmann Ghia, dark red, rebuilt engine and transmission. Good interior. Reasonable. Call 842-1267, ask for Jerry. 2-25
Gold and silver things by Xom
Earthy, organic; rings, wedding sets,
and all other forms of body ornament.
Reasonable. Call 842-6120 2-25
ski boots, size 9, very good condition.
offer. Call after 2 p.m. 843-916-25
or call directly 843-916-25
Old fur coats and capes for sale. Fox, muskrat, seal, otter, mouton, lamb. $10-$40. Also other strange clothes. 1618 Tenn. A#, 842-6810. 2-25
Fender Bassman amp. Gibson Thunderbird bass, 842-7641. Biff. 2-26
Biggest car bargain in town. 53
Plymouth with 4 new tires, new 3-
battery, new point, and phone.
Runs well. $100. Call 842-343-606
m-2-26
Capitol Component Stereo System. 50 watt amplifier with speakers. Inputs: 8-track, phone, auxiliary. Two speaker sets and headphone outputs. Somate treble and bass controls. $75. Call Charlie. 843-9569. 2-26
1964 MG Midget, good condition. $695.
843-0495. 2-26
Large, comfortable single, bed. $20.
Call 843-7543 after 5 o'clock. 2-26
Chrome reversed 15-inch Chevy wheels, 843-4170. Ask for John. 2-27
1067 color Colorado 17" TV $15 set Table
model. Good condition. $150 Call 324-
Topsy's just received room-s'ze 22' gallon containers, one's filled with caramel, cinnamon, cheese or plain popcorn. Makes studying real cocktail. 2-66
Paintings, drawings, ceramics, sculpture,
paintery, woodcraft, clothing
9th & Indiana THE OMNIBUS SHOP
2-26
One Ampex stereo tape recorder Model 1160, 2 years old. Great condition. Call Bob Brown. 843-5721 after 5 o'clock. 3-2
Guitar ES-353 Gibson Hollowbody,
cherry finish, $250 or best offer.
Motorola Reverb car unit, $20 or best
offer. Call 842-8645.
3-2
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street, the most convenient to campus
University State Bank
Home of the "Big Shef"
1968 Suzuki 125 cc motorcycle. Excellent for trails and town. Has less than 2,000 miles—good mechanical condition. Approx. $190.00. Call 842-5287.
Must sell this week! Ampg G15 guitar amp. Best offer takes it. Has reverb, echo, dolly, and cover. Under $100. Call Jim at 843-6707. 3-2
Realistic component stereo set. 36.
watt stereo amplifier and FM Receiver.
Lab 24 turntable with Shure eclipse
cardiograph speaker with 8 woofer,
3 tweeter, 842-1200. Room 332 after 7
p.m. 3-2
Automatic radio 4 and 8-track ear
music included. Must sell Karl at 842-1047-
included.
Ankle bracelets loaded with bells
are sold at China's other imports from Asia on sale at
the Museum of Natural History Gift
market. Daily only 8:30 to 4:30, Sunday
12:30 to 4:30.
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 engine, power brakes, low-mileage, air conditioning, excellent condition, 843-8002. 3-2
BURGER CHEF
MARKETING
Too rings!! from India and Nepal at
their mall. Shop in your order now so that
you are ready for sandal weather.
usually 8-30 to 4-30. Sunday 12-
to 4:30.
'55 Buick. Well it runs! Good for
to travel to New York. Cheap. Call 843-1894.
2-26
New refrigerator, apt. size—bench type, only 98.95 at Ray Stoneback's, downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. nites. 189.95 3-3
Try One Today 814 Iowa
Norelle Stereo cassette changer. Up to 6 hours of continuous uninterrupted music. Now $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
Handmade Originals - India prints, tie-dye dresses, men's shirts, pants, mini skirts, mini skirts, bead earrings, at Lepidoptera Creations, West 5th st.
Famous Brand Components now at giveaway prices: Complete Outfits, were $219.90, now $149.90, AM-FM Set, were $49.90, now $39.90, Sphers, were $49.90, now $39.90, Hurry in and save up to $100.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
'69 VW Bug. 12,000 miles, still new.
warranty in effect Call 3-5
3-5
Old Zenith console stereo phono with AM-FM radio—needs repair, however radio plays beautifully. Come in downtown at $5.00. Ray Stonehouse 3-3
Kustom K-100 guitar amp. with spkr cabinet, (2-12" skrs.), trem., reverb, like new, $250 or best offer, must sell Steve, 842-8068. 2-27
Beautiful Ring Set-14k white diana
beautiful ring set-14k white diana
diamond center, baguettes each side:
14K Keepaise wedding band with
1200 dollar price $2100
Special $1275 $843-9057 3-3
1968 Corvette convertible, w vinyl hardtop, 327-350, 4-speed, power steering, 19,000 miles abundance 50,000 mile warranty, $3475 or best offer 843-9057, 3-3
2-wheel trailer; metal frame; wood box; 6" x 4" x 842-8660. 3-3
One silent buffalo—a real bugar. Call anytime, now or then. 842-6303. 3-3
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence. Kansas 66044
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared!
rune-ups starting service
PHILIP'S
66
starting service
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
WANTED
Organist /singer for established local
local Jazz; rock; pop. 848-624-285
3-10
Finish the year here! Available March 3
$85 mail. Call 812-9156, 3-2
Wanted: Crafts of all kinds, paintings,
ceramics, needlework, etc. Antiques:
bottles, glass, clothing, jewelry and
fabrics; valuable information call
842-7281 evening. 3-2
Need one or two male students to take over lease in Jayhawker Towers. Rent $58, all extras included. Phone 842-7125 3-2
Wanted. Tickets for the KU-K-State game. Call 842-0283. 3-3
Luxurious furnished apartment for rent—need female roommate—you will have your own room. Block from campus. Reasonable. Call, 843-189-184.
Want to buy used motorcycle, prefer
any good bike 842-7447 2-27
Roommate wanted, male student to share my large pad, campus at back door. I always see everything, even maid service once a week. Call after six p.m. 842-837-7. 3-3
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you are visiting, there is this place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat. I V-2 8510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moissains,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
barrettes, purses, vests,
barrette and dog collars—at 81-3
PRIMARILY LEATHER
81-3
NOTICE
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade leather. Our 20 items to choose design your own. PRIMARIA LEATHER 812 Mass. 3-3
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's. Laundry, 19031. Mass. St. Paul's Church, olded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early for same day service. 3-3
Interested in running for a Student Senate position? If you're interested in receiving help and willing to fulfill the available role, call 817-246-226 after 6:00 p.m.
Railroad or model railroad enthusiasts interested in forming club or just burl sessions contact 842-6500. Ask for John Wegner in Room 754. 2-25
The Castle Tea Room—fine dining in an enchanting cultural and historical atmosphere. Visit the Castle Tea Room, one of most unique restaurants in Lorence. 3-20
Need an active voice in University
affairs? Think responsibility!!! Vote
Bill Berg-Ertg Thomas — The Alliance.
March 17-18. 2-26
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-14
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
This ad good for 1 one-hour cassette tapes when presented at time of purchase, except expires. Records for $49.90 - off; expires March 3-1 Rockey backpack's, downtown 3-1
Lepidoptera Creations for men and women. 19 West 9th Street. Select your own India print for custom made clothing. 3-3
PERSONAL
Phinneas P. Phrogg, Impet, and PoohBear, seek good home. Free half-Slames knees, box trained, no rear legs. Call Shelley, P. after 5. 842-8964. P. - 2-6
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. **tf**
See the new Sibcals at Weaver's Shoe Shop, second floor, 901 Mass. 2-27
Up with student action—up with student voice—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert-Thomas—the Alliance. 2-26
Attention apen necklace giver: Reveal yourself! Linda. 2-27
Open government for all students.
Ebert-Thomas—The Alliance. 2-26
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call V 3-2381. Mrs.ruckman,
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc typ-
ing jobs. Call 843-9554. Pica聘. Competent service. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
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BSU newspaper discussed
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
cellor, William Balfour, dean of student affairs, and several students traveled to Topeka to speak to Kansas Attorney General Kent Frizzell concerning a ruling dealing with the refusal of the University Printing Service to print the BSU paper.
- Tuesday at 2:15 p.m., members of the BSU gathered on the steps of Strong Hall to protest alleged mistreatment of the BSU by the University, the Chancellor and the Daily Kansan.
The Harambie controversy began February 18, when University Printing Service employees held a walkout in protest of allegedly obscene material which appeared in the BSU newspaper. The printing service employees refused to print the paper thinking they could be held liable for the publication.
Thirty minutes later, the employees were given permission to appeal their case before the Attorney General. The production of the Harambee was then halted indefinitely, awaiting the ruling from the Attorney General.
Monday the Harambee appeared on campus after the BSU had the paper printed in Wichita.
In the student meeting Tuesday morning, the discussion of Kansans being dumped into Potter Lake Monday was never brought up. During the brief meeting the
BSU advocated that staff members of the Kansan halt publication of the student paper to draw attention to what the BSU claims is discrimination against blacks at the printing service.
Following the meeting between the BSU, Awbrey and the Kansan staff, the groups moved to the Chancellor's office for an hour long meeting at which the BSU once again outlined their case against the printing service.
The BSU asked the Chancellor to stop using the printing service to print University publications.
The BSU said they thought if the University would take a definite stand on the issue that this might prompt a quicker decision from Frizzell.
Chalmers replied that the operation of the University depends on the daily material printed by the printing service. He said suspending the use of the printing service would solve no problems and probably would not result in a quicker reply from the Attorney General's office.
A suggestion was offered that the University and the Kansan go somewhere else to have their publications printed. Chalmers said state law required that University publications paid for by either state or student funds must be printed by a state shop.
Chalmers stressed that any
speculation or any discussions on what the University would or would not do after the Attorney General's decision would be pointless. He stressed that a decision from the Attorney General would be necessary before any further action could be taken.
The SenEx resolution said:
The resolution passed by SenEx Tuesday afternoon was necessary to provide guidelines on the liability of the University concerning student publications, said Charles Oldfather, professor of law and chairman of SenEx.
"Any publication funded through or produced by a University agency is the responsibility of the editor of the publication. Such editor bears full civil and criminal liability for the form and content of the publication. Each such publication must identify the responsible editor.
In this regulation, the term "editor" means the person, board, or other agency which determines the form and content of the publication."
Oldfather said, "The necessity of passing this regulation resulted from the BSU incident. We were looking for a rather specific statement which we thought existed but didn't. The problem has never been noticed before and no place was provided for an efficient overall statement of policy."
Political race begins
(Continued from page 1)
Ebert
own programs."
"Our goals are long-range, in the one to five year range," he said, immediate changes for example might be something like dorm contracts."
Ebert's running mate, Greg Thomas, Shawnee Mission sophmore, said that the difference between Alliance and the other partys was in implementation of their program.
"My main reason for getting into the campaign," Thomas said, "is to better the black students situation on campus."
Ebert said, "Greg and I got together, not because of a black/ white difference, but because we were in agreement with the things needed to be accomplished by students at this university."
George
learned to accept," George said. "We've got to start breaking it down. We have to educate people to the problem and why it exists."
The issues are practical education and women's rights said Sharon Baucom, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and ISP candidate for vice-president of the student body.
For women's rights, she said women are "niggers in a male-oriented society. Why should women be condemned because they can have children and men can't?"
"I am a college woman aware of what is going to affect me on the outside," Miss Baucom said. "I'm ready now as a college woman to help make effective changes."
Other issues are education, reorganization of student government, minorities in the University, University finance and student housing.
She said the Student Senate had the power to start initiating changes.
George proposed that the student body president be made
20 KANSAN Feb. 25
1970
stronger through presidential advisers.
Major programs under the student as a citizen are citizenship at 18, Student Power, Inc., ecology, the Free University and Vietnam.
"The president of the student body hopes to represent the students as a campus and as a community." he said.
"Student Power, Inc. would get students involved in things. It would provide manpower for the community." George said. "It would be a commitment by students to give so much time a week."
The vote at 18 would give students a real say in all policies, George said. If we had an effective voice in our own government, other problems could be solved more easily.
George said through education, support to organizations such as Zero Population Control and speakers people would be faced with the problem of ecology.
"We have to reverse the current trend," he said, "or we're going to die. If we don't change now, disintegration is inevitable."
George said the campus and society had to be involved and educated on interests relevant to everyone. The society should be examined in a broader context.
"I do not think the comprehensive exam fulfills the intended goal," he said, "that of helping us to understand our civilization better. It seems to be detriment to that goal."
sive examination and a reduction in the foreign language requirement.
duction of the foreign language requirement to two principal courses. After completion, he said, the student would be able to decide whether he wanted to take more.
Miller
"Too many students are kept from the degree they want because of the language requirement," he said, "particularly in the college."
Miller said that he favored re-
He said that he did not favor the $6 cut from the present $12 student activities fee, because it would result in football tickets costing about $20 and basketball tickets costing about $17.
Beck said that he thought it would be an issue oriented campaign forcing the student to vote.
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Beck proposes a new program—a TV network. He said that its function would be to bring the University issues and politics before the student each evening. This would be done to bring the issues back to the student, rather than making the student look for them.
Chalmers said the resolution was needed, but that it may not help in cases of prosecution.
"The county attorney would handle any case involving obscenity in University publications. He would have the option of either respecting the University regulation, or by-passing it and prosecuting on the basis of state statute." Chalmers said.
After the meeting with Frizzell in Topeka, Chalmers said the Attorney General assured the University that he was working as quickly as possible to have a decision formulated.
Chalmers said, "During the legislative session the Attorney General's office is swamped with requests for decisions on bills on the floor. But it seemed to me that his office had put our problem near the top of the priority list."
Balfour said the University could probably expect a decision either today or Thursday.
During the BSU gathering on
the steps of Strong Hall Tuesday afternoon, John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and president of the BSU, said the University would publish the BSU newspaper. He said the University may have to drive 630 miles to get the paper printed, but if necessary the BSU would "kick the University's ass all the way."
Spearman said the University and the Student Senate had failed the BSU.
Concerning the refusal of the printing service to print the BSU paper, Spearman said, the Chancellor "refuses to deal with the problem of racism, because that is what it is."
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Attorney General rules on Harambee
Paper not obscene
Kent Frizzell, Kansas Attorney General, ruled Wednesday that the content of the Black Student Union newspaper, Harambee, was not obscene.
In a letter to Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents, Frizzell said the employees at the University of Kansas Printing Service would not incur criminal liability for their participation in printing the newspaper.
Frizzell based his decision on the 1957 landmark Supreme Court ruling in Roth vs. United States, better known as the "Fanny Hill" case, which said it must be established that a) the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest in sex; b) the material is patently offensive because it affronts contemporary community standards relating to the description
or representation of sexual matters; and c) the material is utterly without redeeming social value.
"Judged by these standards," Frizzell said, "I am unable to say that the material in question is legally 'obscene.' While it is patently offensive to contemporary community standards, by no stretch of the imagination does it appeal to a 'prurient interest in sex.' The effect is probably quite the opposite."
Commenting on his personal opinion of the Harambee, Frizzell said, "The poems on pages three and seven can fairly be characterized as indecent, vulgar and offensive. The language employed is customarily reserved for the graffiti found in public restrooms.
"The material on page one is highly inflammatory, and is obviously designed to generate racial unrest, violence and disruption. Both categories offend my personal sense of decency and good taste," he said.
Frizzell added that nowhere in the newspaper was there a masthead customarily found in legitimate publications indicating the persons responsible for the editorial content. Frizzell said he could well understand why the promulgators of that material might desire to preserve their anonymity.
Monte Beckwith, Chicago, Ill., freshman, is the managing editor of the Harambee.
Frizzell also said it was particularly regrettable that the publication is financed by public funds derived from all of the students at the University and is produced on state owned facilities.
However, he said, the issues raised by these circumstances were a matter of policy to be determined by the University administration under any applicable policies of the Board of Regents.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said, "The ruling means that the printing service will be directed to print the publication."
Chalmers also said the newspaper was subject to the recent SenEx ruling that publications identify the responsible editor.
The opinion of the attorney general doesn't set a precedent, Chalmers said, and the state still holds a printer and publisher liable for any material printed.
Chalmers said it was still conceivable that future BSU newspapers, if considered libelous by the printing
(Continued to page 16
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 87
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, Feb. 26, 1970
Alcohol policy questioned
Chancellor E. Laurence Chamers Jr. said he believed a major clarification and modification of state law is necessary on the issue of having beer served in the Kansas Union.
To have beer in the union, Chalmers said, much rests on a recommendation which the Legislature is awaiting from the Legislative council on whether or not 3.2 beer should continue to be considered a malt beverage, or whether it should be classified as an intoxicating liquor.
"The law was set many, many years ago and was obviously intended to have a totally different impact from what the one has today, particularly with reference to the issue of beer. The question of students drinking beer today isn't really a big issue."
Unlike the sale of cigarettes, which was within the jurisdiction of the Board of Regents, any change in laws concerning alcohol must be decided in the Legislature.
The Chancellor cited the drinking at football games as one example of the degree to which the law is ignored.
In comparing the situation in Kansas with that in other states, Chalmers cited Florida and Wisconsin as examples of states that have had great success with alcoholic consumption laws far more liberal than those in Kansas.
It was rumored by Florida students that a statute similar to Kansas' existed in Florida until
"Laws that are casually violated and not enforced cease to have much significance," he said.
law students made a careful check of legislation back to the beginning of statehood. They found no record of such a law, and the University of Florida subsequently equipped a room as a "Hofbrau" tavern serving beer and German food, offering an attractive atmosphere and live entertainment. It has become a financial success.
Chalmers said the University of Wisconsin had the oldest history of a liberal alcohol policy, having adopted it some 30 years ago. It has had a successful history, both in terms of breaking even financially and in terms of no special problems with student behavior. However, the Chancellor pointed out that situations such as those at Florida and Wisconsin
(Continued to page 16)
Thomas stays with party
By JIM RYUN Kansan Staff Writer
Greg Thomas, Topeka sophomore and student body vice-presidential candidate of the Alliance, was photographed confiscating University Daily Kansans Monday with several members of the Black Student Union (BSU). Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and presidential candidate on the same ticket, said Wednesday that he had no intention of dropping Thomas as his running mate.
"I was not aware of the undercurrent about Greg's position," Ebert said. "People up to this point are continuing to support us."
"It is impossible to say who will be supporting us," he said. "That is up to them when they go to the polls, it is a matter of individual position."
Ebert said that he did not know what position the BSU would take in the campaign.
Ebert said he still wanted Thomas because he had a good deal of experience as a student senator and rapport with a large segment of the student body. He also thought that Thomas was independent as well as dependable.
"Greg had to do it because of his position in his black community." Ebert said. "He just felt that he had to do it as a person. Whether it was right or wrong I do not know.
"If you were black you would have been there too. It is an act of conscience that I cannot question." "I do not understand the BSU's tactics," Ebert said, "but they picked the wrong target."
He said he could not say what Thomas did was right or what he did for himself was right.
"I do think it will affect us in a positive or negative manner." Thomas said, "and if it is negative then it is because people don't understand."
Thomas said people who did not understand wound give him less support and because he was directly or indirectly involved with the BSU, he would probably receive more support from the BSU.
He said he was involved in confiscating Kansans for two reasons. He was Greg Thomas, an individual, and he was black and wanted to equate things at the University.
Thomas still thought he was right in agreeing with Darryl Bright, Maywood, Ill., senior and past BSU president, that they did not know of any University policy that limited the number of Kansans a student could take.
"I am personally involved by myself and to myself," Thomas said. "I do not want this act associated with Bill or the campaign."
(Continued to page 16)
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Shriver resigns post
WASHINGTON — Sargent Shriver said Wednesday he had submitted his written resignation as U.S. ambassador to France to President Nixon.
Shriver told reporters his resignation had been on Nixon's desk "for several months or several weeks." But asked if he was leaving the Paris post, Shriver said "in all frankness, I don't know."
Elk found dead
JACKSON, Wyo.—Monique the wild elk was found dead in the National Elk Refuge Wednesday, probably from pneumonia. She was being used in an experiment by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to trace the migratory habits of the elk.
AMA opposes fee limit
WASHINGTON—The Nixon administration has encountered opposition from the American Medical Association to its new plan to impose limits on the fees doctors and hospitals can collect for treating patients under Medicare.
Rejection of bail urged
CHICAGO—The government, echoing the charge by Judge Julius J. Hoffman that the "Chicago Seven" are dangerous men, has asked a federal appeals court to reject their request for bail.
Fifth civilization found
NEW YORK—A British-born archaeologist, Geoffrey Bibby, based in Denmark announced Wednesday the discovery of a fifth great ancient civilization in South Arabia which may prove to be the true cradle of civilization.
The work of Bibby and 80 other archaeologists, most of them Danish, has produced evidence that the legendary civilization of Dilmun, mentioned in only a few Assyrian cuneiform documents and lost for 3,000 years, ranks with Egypt. Babylon. Sumer and the Indus Valley civilizations.
---
P. G. H. S.
Photo by Judy Gerling
Spring - and a young woman's fancy . . .
Cassey Eike, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore (left), and Nancy Dodge, Omaha sophomore, model two of the gowns which will be shown at the Associated Women Students spring bridal fashion show at 2 p.m. March 8 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Trousseau and sportswear outfits will also be shown.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A Negro congressman introduced a resolution Wednesday declaring Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox unwelcome in the House restaurant where he had distributed ax handles as symbol of his resistance to desegregation.
Petition would bar Maddox
The congressman, Rep. Charles
The University of Kansas Extension Center has announced in a news release that the 1970 Packaging Seminar will be held on March 16-18 at the Plaza Inn in Kansas City.
Packaging seminar to be March 16-18
Gene Probasco, coordinator of the seminar, said 12 speakers from Connecticut, New York, California, Illinois, Washington, D.C. and other packaging centers will participate in the three day program.
Detroit 'four' found innocent
Probasco said the rapidly growing profession of packaging engineers indicates the demands placed upon the existing professionals and their problems to cope with purchasing of packaging materials, shipping, storing, and design of packages.
FLINT, Mich. (UPI) — Three white former policemen and a Negro former private guard were found innocent Wednesday night of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Algiers Motel occupants the night three black teenagers were killed during the 1967 Detroit riots.
This will be the second year the KU Extension has presented the seminar. Probasco said the 1970 Packaging Seminar will be a "dynamic program" and one which will "surpass the precedence of excellence set by last year's program."
The all-white jury deliberated nine hours before returning the verdict.
When the innocent verdict was announced, Mrs. Genevieve
U. S. District Court Judge Stephen J. Roth gave the case to the six men and six women jurors at 10:47 a.m. after five weeks of trial. He told them they were dealing with a criminal case, "not the social issues of the day."
August, pregnant wife of one of the defendants, gasped in relief. If convicted, the four could have received a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and $10,000 fine.
Former Detroit Patrolmen David Senak, 25, Ronald W. August, 31, and Robert Paille, 34, and Melvin Dismukes, then a private guard, were charged with conspiring to "injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate" eight Negro youths and two white prostitutes in the motel July 26, 1967, and to violate their civil rights.
Norman Lippitt, one of three defense attorneys, said the prosecution had "failed miserably" to establish a conspiracy.
Scriven has been on the faculty at Berkeley since 1967 after having taught at Minnesota, Swarthmore, and Indiana. In 1955-56, he was research associate in the philosophy of science at the University of Minnesota.
Philosopher featured in Humanities series
2 KANSAN Feb. 26 1970
A Berkeley philosopher who prefers the off-tackle smash to the end-around deception in his approach to current problems has chosen "Violence" as the topic for his Humanities Series lecture, Tuesday, March 3, at the University of Kansas. Michael Seriven, professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, will speak at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Besides the main lecture, four public forums will be led by Scriven during his KU visit. All will be in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, and all are co-sponsored by Student Union Activities.
The forums schedule is: 9:30 a.m., Monday, March 2—"Abortion and Contraception"; 1:30 p.m.—"Obscenity, Perversion, and Indoctrination"; 7:30 p.m.—"Addiction, Insulgence, and Abuse"; 9:30 a.m., Tuesday, March 3—"Corruption, Subversion, and Education."
Scriven was born in Beauilton, England. After receiving the B.A. and M.A. degrees in philosophy at Melbourne University, he was awarded the Ph.D. at Oxford University in 1956. He received a National Science Foundation grant in 1968-68, a U.S. Air Force research grant in 1967-68, and was Miller centennial lecturer at the University of Illinois in 1967.
He is a consultant to the Behavioral Research Laboratory and to the U.S. Office of Education, and in 1963 was consultant to the Rand Corporation. In 1962-63, he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Sciences. He has been a visiting professor at Wesleyan University and Harvard University.
THE HOLE in the WALL
The defense conceded Senak, August, Paille and Dismukes separately made racial slurs, ripped the clothes off the prostitutes, beat the Negroes, played "death games" to frighten motel occupants and extract confessions about alleged snipers, and finally shot two youths—Fred Temple, 18, and Aubrey Pollard. 19.
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The judge said the defendants were not on trial for murder, for assault or for failure to perform their functions. He pointed out August and Dismukes already had been acquitted of murder and felonious assault respectively.
In a 90-minute closing argument Tuesday. Assistant U.S. Attorney Kenneth McIntyre told the jury "your only possible verdict is guilty."
McIntyre contended the defendants conspired to punish the motel occupants "to get even for the Detroit riots."
Diggs, D-Mich., said he also was considering filing a slander suit against Maddox as a result of their shouting match in the restaurant Tuesday.
When Diggs objected to the ax and pick handles, Maddox called him an ass and a baboon. Diggs said Wednesday he particularly objected to being called a baboon because "it has a racial connotation."
Maddox, in Atlanta, said Wednesday that Diggs "has flipped his lid, man."
He said Diggs' petition was signed by "every biased, prejudiced person in Congress."
"I have never seen that kind of expression of bitterness and hatred and contempt," Maddox said of Diggs appearance during the incident Tuesday. "I never experienced that in a human being before."
Diggs, claiming support from the North and South, circulated a letter to House members inviting them to join him in sponsoring the resolution to declare Maddox persona non grata in the restaurant.
The resolution, cosponsored by the House's eight other Negro members, would express the "sense of the house that Gov. Maddox is not welcome as a guest in the House restaurant."
House rules permit governors to use the dining facilities, and Maddox brought a box of ax and pick handles with him Tuesday after he had testified before a Segate subcommittee.
The autographed hardwood handles recall Maddox' days as an Atlanta restaurant owner who resisted desegregation by barring Negroes while carrying ax and pick handles.
Quintuplets thriving after premature birth
NEW YORK (UPI) — Quintuplets born six weeks prematurely to a 27-year-old New Jersey woman who had taken fertility drugs were thriving Wednesday after three of them overcame breathing problems.
Three daughters and two sons were born to Mrs. Margaret Kienast of Far Hills, N.J., within a 10-minute period late Tuesday at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center.
"For a complicated delivery we couldn't hope for the babies to be in better condition than they are now," said Dr. Stanley James, the hospital's chief pediatrician. "Three of the infants were having breathing difficulty but as of this morning all signs say they are making a successful adaptation."
Mrs. Kienast had taken the fertility drug Pergonal even before the birth of her other children, a 4½-year-old daughter and an 18-month old son. She and her salesman husband, William, 38, had been warned to expect triplets and possibly quadruplets.
The quints, ranging in weight at birth from 3 pounds, 4 ounces to 4 pounds, 6 ounces, were placed in incubators and were reported "receiving calories" shortly before noon EST. Their condition Wednesday afternoon was described as "good to excellent."
The mother was also in good condition and conferred with her husband on names for the babies. In the meantime, the fifth set of living quintuplets in the world were identified only as A, B, C, D, and E.
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Danger worst in 30 years
Avalanche strikes European Alps
GENEVA (UPI)—Switzerland sounded warnings of the worst avalanche danger in 30 years in the European Alps Wednesday in the midst of snow slides that have killed 44 persons in three countries this week.
The latest fatal slide occurred in Austria, where two persons were killed in an avalanche that struck the Tyrolean village of St. Leonhard Wednesday afternoon. A 14-year-old boy was missing.
Rescue workers in Austria, France and Switzerland, some of
them using pneumatic drills, still dug through tons of snow and ice seeking survivors and trying to open roads covered by avalanches Monday and Tuesday that hit the villages of Reckingen in Switzerland, Lanslevilland in France and St. Sigmund in Austria.
Thirty Persons died at Reckingen, eight at Lanslevillard and four at St. Sigmund.
The danger will become even greater as long as snowfall continues in the Alps, said the director of the Swiss Avalanche Research Center, Melchoir Schild.
He said a lack of fresh snow in the early winter turned the Alps' snow cover into ice, forming a slippery surface for the heavy snows that came later. He said such conditions had not existed in the Alps since the early 1940s, and the danger of slides would continue until there were several days without fresh snow.
Only light snow fell over most of the Alps Wednesday, and the Swiss Radio warned skiers not to venture above treelines on unprotected slopes.
Police evacuated hamlets and closed roads threatened by snow
slides from the Rhone Valley village of Reckingen, where 14 victims already had been counted. The 30 persons killed there made it Switzerland's worst avalanche since August 1965 when 88 men died in a slide.
In France, where an avalanche 15 days ago killed 39 at Val D'Isere, a slide Tuesday at Lanslevillard killed eight persons. A slide Monday killed four at St. Sigmund, where four others had died in another avalanche two weeks ago.
"The avalanche snow has become like ice, in places so compact that one can only penetrate it with pneumatic drills," said Col.
Andre Maillol, who is directing rescue work at Lanslervillard.
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Two little girls from Alabama, victims of a complicated kidnap plot, were found unharmed Wednesday in a Kansas City suburb and later reunited with their father.
Two Alabama children kidnapped, recovered in Kansas City suburb
Two alleged abductors were arrested—one in nearby Liberty, Mo., and the other in Jacksboro, Tex.
The FBI said Tina Cain, 3, and her sister Tiffany, 2, kidnapped Monday from their home in Butler, Ala., appeared "well cared for and happy."
Police acting on a tip found the touse-haired blondes in an automobile parked outside a Liberty residence. Inside the house, they arrested John Charles Messick, 21, of Tucson, Ariz., who relatives said was to have married
the children's mother last week. FBI Agent Karl Dissly said Messick offered no resistance. His first request, Dissly said, was for a Bible.
Messick, a University of Arizona liberal arts student, was later arraigned on charges of forcible kidnap and held on $25,000 bond.
Donald Bradford Jones was arrested later at the home of his stepfather in Jacksboro, Tex., a small town north of Fort Worth. Jones, 23, is a stepbrother of the children's mother, Mrs. Debra Cheryl Cain, 19, of Tucson.
The children's parents are separated and their father, Alan Cain, 24, an oil worker, has had legal custody of the girls for a year. Cain was reunited with his children at the Kansas City Municipal Airport. They then flew to Fort Worth for a reunion with Cain's mother.
KU Senate assembles to consider policies
The University Senate meets today in the University Theatre, marking their first assembly of the spring semester.
The agenda for the meeting includes presentation of the following recommendations: a statement of principle on organizational policy; academic regulation revision; six Senate Code amendments and the University Senate's Executive Committee's regulation passed yesterday holding the editor responsible for any publication funded through or produced by a University agency.
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Committee approves modifies welfare bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Ways and Means Committee will approve President Nixon's basic welfare reform plan of providing annual incomes for
State legislators pass school bill
Faculty Recital: Frank Brown, trombone, Swarthout Recital Hall, 8
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door,
Reunion, Carmichael, 415-836-2700, Audi-
tive.
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas House of Representatives Wednesday tentatively approved a bill providing for collective bargaining between teachers and boards of public schools or community junior colleges.
Also passed and sent to the Senate was a resolution asking Congress to restrict daylight savings time to the period between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
Rep. Duane "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield, made the major amendment which restricted the negotiable items to wages and other working conditions. Before the amendment, negotiable items could have been interpreted to mean such items as school curricula.
University Senate: University Theatre. 3:30 p.m.
Official Bulletin
Thursday
Film: "Casablanca", Dyche Auditorium, 7 p.m.
Club: Club, Natitarium
KU Synheyo Club: Natatorium,
Robinson Gymnasium, 7-9 p.m.
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnasium
KD Dance Club: 173 Robinson
*Popular Film; Way Out West* & *Hortor-
tor 1000*, Kansas University, 7 & 9:30 p.m.
Rock Chalk Revue: "Improbable History." Hoch Auditorium, 7:58 p.m. Big Eight Track Meet: Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo.
p. Film:
* "Barefoot Contessa" * Dyche
Auditorium, 9 p.m.
*
Feb. 26 KANSAN 3
1970
Gymnasium, 7.30 p.m.
Popular Film: "Way Out West" &
working families, but change it to provide a multi-million windfall for the states, sources said Wednesday.
Without revealing any details of the welfare reform plan his committee has worked on for weeks, Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., said he was certain a bill would be agreed upon Thursday for House action in several weeks.
Weather
Sources said the committee agreed with the basic thrust of Nixon's proposal to give working families a minimum annual income. A family of four with a breadwinner would get $1,600 under his plan and enough food stamps to raise the allowance to $2,464 a year.
Fair and warmer with southwest winds increasing 20 to 30 miles per hour today. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Turning cooler Friday. High today mid 50s. Low tonight near 30. Probability of precipitation near zero today, 5 per cent tonight and 10 per cent Friday.
The contemplated extra windfall to states may be reduced somewhat Thursday before final approval, a source said, since the committee plans to boost the minimum monthly payments to disabled, blind or aged adults on welfare to as high as $100. Present minimums for adult recipients vary, but are considerably lower than that.
Under the original administration formula, the states would save a total of $501.5 million in welfare costs, but the committee devised a new money-saving formula that boosts this to more than $755 million.
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KAWSAN COMMENT
Sparing knuckles
(EDITOR'S NOTE: I have recently been impressed with the depth of high school thought as evidenced in the Wichita South Southerner. High school editorial pages have come a long way from the "school spirit" days.-M. S.)
From The Wichita South Southerner
By a vote of 70 to 15 on the floor of the Senate recently, the 5th amendment to the constitution was virtually destroyed.
This vote allowed the passage of a dangerous provision of the new.federal narcotics bill just passed by the Senate.
Briefly, this bill would, in its entirety:
Ims provision is part of a bill which has been labeled "the no-knock" bill. The no-knock bill would permit surprise, no-knock, drug raids by the police.
open wide the door to discrimination by creating more discrepancies than there already are
more discrepancies than there already are in the trials and basic rights of Americans.
—violate the 5th amendment guarantee against involuntary, self, incrimination
—violate the 4th amendment prohibition of unreasonable search and seizures.
endanger the basic rights of all Americans and dissolve and make invalid many ideas that were formulated by and deemed worthy enough by our founding fathers so that a war was fought over these basic concepts.
The common reaction would seem to be "as long as I obey the law, this no-knock bill won't affect me."
But it already has.
For in allowing the dissolution of these rights of criminals, some of the most basic rights of all Americans have been revoked.
Carla Roberts
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
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On Hays, Shultz, Israel...
To the editor:
Now that I am enrolled in an "institution of higher learning," I am told the opposite. And this time my teachers are representatives of the State government.
When I was younger, my parents taught me to be tolerant and open-minded. They taught me not to judge others, because there is no absolute assurance that at any time my judgment will be guaranteed 100 per cent correct.
The UDK has given extensive coverage to the actions and opinions of Senator Shultz. And in each article that I read, I tried to approach it with an open mind, with an attempt to see his point of view. While I often disagreed with his thinking, I was able, in many cases, to understand his reasoning. But the latest statement by Mr. Shultz and one of his associates defies any attempt at logical reasoning on my part to arrive at comprehension of what has been said.
Tucked away on the last page of the Kansan Friday, was the notice that "Shultz, a consistent critic of student protesters at the University, urged the Kansas Bar Association to disbar professor Lawrence Velel, who, he said, denounced Judge Julius Hoffman before a crowd of students in front of the KU Law School Tuesday." If the article had ended here, I do not think I would have been as flabbergasted as I was when I read on. Mr. Shultz's colleague, Senator Lester Arvin emphatically states, "If this continues, I for one am going to be forced to vote against appropriations for higher education." And Senator Shultz has previously made statements along the same line.
I can only conclude by quoting Professor Ralph Perry in the introduction to the Liberal Arts and Sciences Catalogue.
If Senator Arvin feels that Professor Velvel is employed by the University to mouth the pontific proclamations of the established society, if he feels that it is the purpose of a University to program the students with the "unadulterated" facts, allowing no room for individual thought, if he feels that the largest educational institution in the state is to be denied the funds to educate because one group of men have the courage to say what they believe, then I can only ask, "Where did my parents go wrong?" Because they taught me to be tolerant of other's opinions, and not to condemn an entire institution on the basis of original, individual, logical thought.
"Education is liberal in so far as it invites and qualifies men to choose deeply and fundamentally, to choose ends as well as means, to choose remote as well as immediate ends, to choose from many rather than from few possibilities. Liberal education, so construed, makes successive generations of men aware of the widest range of possibilities by the discovery of new possibilities forgotten. It does so in order that men may choose with the utmost amplitude of freedom—in order that their lives may be filled to the maximum extent by what they thoughtfully and wittingly choose them to be. . .."
Senators Shultz and Arvin, as parents you emphasize the importance of being well rounded and open-minded. Please give us that chance.
Walt Karniski
Prairie Village
Sophomore
* *
To the editor:
I have three comments about your recent column concerning the questionnaire we used to use.
Dear Mr. Shearer:
1. As soon as I learned of its existence, I had its use stopped. It would have been easy for you to have ascertained that fact. Good journalism would seem to me to have required you to check rather than imply that it was still in use.
3. Before you condemn an entire college for what I agree was a mistake, why don't you visit us and find out that stereotypes don't really make very good journalism?
To the editor:
2. "Criteria" is the plural of "criterion". Do sophisticated journalists such as you not need to have a command of English?
John W. Gustad President, Fort Hays Kansas State College
The editorial by Mr. Naas entitled "Trigger fingers" is, at best, very naive.
To discuss the Israeli bombing raids against military targets near Cairo without mention of the daily artillery exchanges along the Suez Canal is to present only half the picture, a policy Mr. Naas himself condemned.
The UN chief observer in the Sinai, General Odd Bull, has repeatedly reported that the exchanges on the canal have been started by the Egyptians. This is public record. The casualty toll for Israel is 14 dead per week which when adjusted to the U.S. population would correspond to 1,800 U.S. casualties per week. This is an unacceptable situation for Israel, as it would be for the U.S. Their response has been the bombings of military targets in Egypt—probably not the response Egyptian or Russian leaders envisioned. Consequently, it is the war situation that precipitated the accident at the metal works factory. Israel has many times publicly resolved to stop the bombings as soon as Egypt adhers to a cease fire on the canal. Nasser cannot dictate his style of war.
Sidney Fiarman Research Associate
**\* \* \***
To the editor:
Professor Howard Kahane's letter to the editor (UDK, Feb. 20) is typical of the inconsistent double-standard position which many "anti-opression" groups in this country "used to take" with regard to the Palestinian Problem. I say "used to take" because the chain of events since the 1967 war has exposed the real identity of World Zionism and its
imperialistic, racist, and expansionistic base—Israel. Zionist propaganda is no longer able to present Israel to the world as the "peace seeking little country surrounded by 90 millions of aggressive Arabs," thereby transforming the real problem of the whole crisis—The Palestinian Problem—into a refugee problem, for the UN to work out. Many Arab puppet kings and rulers have also used the Zionist transformation to suit their own personal purposes.
The emergence of the armed Palestinian resistance has put into focus the only possible solution for a long lasting peace in Palestine—The Palestinian Democratic State. Its basic principles are:
1. Abolition of the Zionist entity in Palestine (this does not mean the removal of Jews from Palestine) and replacing it with a secular democratic state open to all, Christians, Moslems, and Jews, alike.
2. Acceptance of the right of Jews to Palestinian citizenship, but rejection of any right of the Jews to a national presence.
3. Beginning from the point of view that the mere fact that a man is Jewish does not give him any prerogatives or additional rights, such a those which the Zionist usurpation and the establishment of the State of Israel attempt to ensure for him. Nor does the mere fact that a man is Jewish exclude him from the practice of his rights of equality and participation which are denied him by anti-Semitism and racialist ideologies.
4. Emphasis that although the Jews have no real historical, religious or political rights as a group in Palestine, the Palestinian Democratic State must guarantee the rights of Jews as individuals among those who opt for membership in this state.
Griff & the Unicorn
SOKOLOFF
WHO ARE YOU?
MY NAME ULYSSES. WHAT YOU DOINK IN SNOWBANK?
I MUST HAVE FALLEN IN WHEN I GOT TOO TIRED TO FLY...
I D'D GO BACK HOME NOW IF ONLY I COULD GET BACK INTO THE AIR
ULYSSES CAN HELP. FOLLOW ULYSSES.
WHY NOT? I'VE GONE THIS FAR...
Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970,
University Daily Kansan.
Now I ask: How can a professor of philosophy interpret the above goals set forth by the Palestinian commandos by his generalization, "Israel is a nation of less than three million people surrounded by over 90 million Arabs who openly proclaim their intent to destroy Israel and all of her people?"
Fawwaz T. Ulaby Assistant Professor Electrical Engineering
- * *
To the editor:
To the students and faculty of the University of Kansas:
Sunday afternoon a deception was put over on the students and faculty of the University of Kansas. At the fourth annual photography contest, the judging was of such questionable quality as to inaccurately represent the abilities of the University's photographers.
Partly due to the mishandling and misinforming of the judges, and partly due to poor organizing of the contest itself, the judging became a one-sided exercise in tasteless baffoonyery. Because two of the three judges unfortunately assumed that the William Allen White School of Journalism sponsored only a photojournalism contest, they admittedly underplayed their opinions as art critics to accept the opinions of the third, news photographer, judge. By doing so, they effectually created a one-judge photo-circus, and as such, destroyed the validity of the contest.
It is unfortunate that, for the large number of photographers who entered pictures which did not fit the qualification of newspaper publishability, that this was the major criterion of print judging. Because of this severe limit in photographic subject matter and quality, some of the finest photos made by the University's photographers are not even on display in the Kansas Union. They were eliminated from the exhibition by the actions of one imperceptive newspaper-oriented judge.
On behalf of the many photographers whose best works were not exhibited, I apologize to the students and the faculty of the University of Kansas for not being able to put our best foot forward. Hopefully, next year will be different.
Randall B. Leffingwell
President of Kappa Alpha Mu, and co-organizer of the Fourth Annual KU Photography Contest.
THE LIBRARY
Photo by Ron Bishop
This looks like a job for B & G
Hopefully the students' conduct was more orderly than the many boxes scattered behind the Jayhawker pick-up counter at the rotunda in Strong Hall. Wednesday was the first day students could pick up the first edition of the Jayhawker yearbook. The Jayhawker can be picked up at Strong through Friday.
Police arrest KU student in connection with march
Donald R. Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., senior, surrendered to police Tuesday after a warrant for his arrest had been issued charging him with breaking a window in the courthouse during the "Chicago Seven" march Feb. 17.
Assistant County Attorney John M. Elwell, who filed the information on Jenkins, said he was charged with malicious destruction of property under $50.
Others arrested in connection with the march were not KU students.
John McBride, 18, Emporia, is charged with destruction of a 'no-loitering' sign in the courthouse, painting the Jimmy Green statue in front of the KU School of Law and taking a construction warning flag. Robert Lee Schall, alias James Robert Morrison, 23, Lawrence, faces felony and misdemeanor charges in Lawrence
Municipal Court. He is charged with taking a construction warning flag and possessing marijuana, a charge he incurred in 1968. John R. Sachse, 22, Lawrence, is charged with taking a construction warning flag, taking a sign from the courthouse warning against soliciting in the building and possessing marijuana, a charge filed as a result of items found on his person at the time he was booked into jail. David M. Neff, 19, Lawrence, is charged with painting the statue of Jimmy Green, taking a construction flag and defacing a public building by painting a clenched fist on the courthouse.
Conflict of interest bill fails referred for further study
Neff remains in jail with a federal detainer placed on his release because of a Selective Service Act violation. The others have posted bond to appear for trials March 5 and 6.
TOPEKA (UPI) - A new and stronger conflict of interest bill traveled a tortuous path in the Kansas Senate Wednesday that ended in failure to receive that body's recommendation.
The measure that would have repealed much existing legislation on the subject, was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee for further study after two hours of debate failed to resolve differences over the bill's provisions for filing disclosure of interest statements.
Sen. Norman Gaar, R-West-
wood, who defended the bill, said
referral of it to the Senate Judiciary Committee would amount
to killing the measure. But Sen.
Steadman Ball, R-Atchison,
chairman of the committee, said
the bill would be revised and re-submitted to the full senate before the session was over.
The decision to refer the bill for further study came despite an amendment by Gaar which struck an objectionable provision for many that would prohibit lawyer-legislators from appearing before state officials or agencies on behalf of paying clients.
In other action, the senate passed an air pollution bill that would strengthen the powers of the Air Quality Conservation Commission. The measure would
provide for public hearings by the commission on the issuance, suspension or revocation of permits
for equipment, machines or devices that are considered contributory to air pollution.
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Reaquest for $100 million
Nixon asks aid for Asian development
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon asked Congress Wednesday to pledge $100 million over the next three years to the Asian Development Bank's special fund for long-term, low-interest loans for public works projects.
The bank, formed in 1966, now has about $1 billion in ordinary capital representing contributions by 33 Asian and non-Asian countries. The bank's usual loans are for 15 years at about 7 per cent interest.
Boycott flops
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A proposed boycott by members of Congress of French President Georges Pompidou's appearance at a joint meeting of the House and Senate failed to have any visible effect on attendance.
One congressman, Rep. Lester Wolff, D-N.Y., walked out on the speech in symbolic protest of French Middle East policies, but did it so unobtrusively and so early that most of the people in the House chamber did not see him depart.
Only about a dozen seats were empty in the chamber. Some of the audience consisted of page boys and House staff employees, but well over half of the active members of both the House and Senate attended.
Pompidou was given a standing ovation when he was introduced and again when he concluded. There was applause at the conclusion of each segmented translation of his speech.
Catholic Church opposes creation of life in test tubes
VATICAN CITY (UPI) — A Vatican spokesman said Wednesday the Catholic Church opposes the principle of creating life in a test tube but declined further comment about such an experiment being planned with a couple in London.
The spokesman, Msgr. Fausto Vallainc, made the comment in reference to the experiment announced Tuesday by Dr. Patrick Steptoe and a team of researchers at Cambridge University. They plan to withdraw an egg from Mrs. Sylvia Allen, 34, fertilize it in a test tube with sperm from her husband and then replant it in her womb.
Mrs. Allen has been unable to have children during her seven years of marriage.
"In general, the Roman Catholic Church is opposed to experiments of this kind," said Msgr. Vallainc. "But each case should be dealt with on its merits. I do not know the circumstances of this case and, therefore, I do not want to make any comments about it."
6 KANSAN Feb. 26 1970
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Other countries have pledged $128 million to the special fund, officials said.
"concessionary loans" to developing Asian nations for financing of roads, power plants, harbors and other public works projects, payable over longer periods of time at rates as low as one per cent.
The U.S. contribution to the special fund would have to be used to buy American exports except in cases specifically authorized by the U.S. governor on the Asian Bank's board. Repayment would be in dollars.
VI 3-1571
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Across from the Red Dog
Pearson asks to soften blow
In a message to Congress, Nixon said the U.S. contribution would "demonstrate the strong U.S. interest in the economic development of Asia." The bank, he added, had demonstrated "a unique capability for acting as a catalyst for regional co-operation."
Nixon proposed committing $25 million to the special fund in the current fiscal year, $35 million next year and $40 million in fiscal 1972. Each contribution would be smaller than that of other donors as a group and would not be the largest single contribution, to assure that the bank remains predominantly Asian.
University State Bank
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senator James B. Pearson, R-Kan., asked for two things Wednesday to soften the blow of sudden changes in defense needs.
He proposed to the senate:
That it pass a resolution by Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., for a joint committee on security affairs. The committee would bring "the real policy issues" of weapons systems into the open, Pearson said.
US
but it would help to elevate the quality of debate and more sharply delineate the real policy issues."
Congress to pass judgment on complex weapons systems," Pearson said. "It would not eliminate debate and differences of opinion,
That it support proposals to a national economic conversion commission, which would deal with the adjustments to be made in communities affected by defense cuts and the like.
The committee Tower's proposal envisions "would be concerned with the broad, long range questions of national security policy and through a program of contract research and investigative hearings could significantly improve the ability of
WASHINGTON (UPI) A House subcommittee cleared the way Wednesday for expected passage of a compromise wheat support plan which would retain present minimum price support guarantees for farmers.
Wheat supports cleared in House expected vote
The plan poses a major policy challenge to Nixon Administration officials, who have been trying to work in harmony with House farm leaders in developing new farm legislation. In order to endorse the new plan, administration leaders would have to retreat somewhat from their proposals for more flexible wheat support floors.
The agricultural subcommittee, headed by Rep. Graham Purcell, D-Tex., developed the wheat plan in a recent series of closed-door meetings.
The path for action on the measure was opened when the subcommittee voted to reject an earlier proposal backed by a coalition of 27 farm organizations. The coalition program would have authorized increased support payments to wheat growers.
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A teeny tiny teepee?
This strange contraption, whatever it is, suddenly appeared on the lawn in front of Strong Hall Wednesday. Just as suddenly it was gone and no one was sure just what it was or what it was doing there.
Cradle toboggan rescues baby from snow avalanche
RECKINGEN, Switzerland (UPI) — The wooden cradle of 11-month-old Ursula Karlen acted as a toboggan Tuesday when a snow avalanche crushed this Alpine village, carrying her unharmed through the disaster that killed
her mother and seriously injured her father.
Feb. 26 KANSAN 7
1970
"I saw the avalanche coming down and I couldn't believe my eyes," said Christian Steffan, who fled his own home in his pajamas. "In the middle of the huge, tossing avalanche, there was this cradle being thrown about on top—just like a toboggan."
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Panther hearings halted
NEW YORK (UPI)—The presiding judge at pre-trial hearings for 13 Black Panthers charged with a bombing conspiracy recessed the preceedings Wednesday after three weeks of disruptions by the defendants and spectators.
State Supreme Court Justice John M. Murtagh blamed the defendants' "contemptuous behavior" for his unusual move. He said he would consider favorably a written motion to resume the hearings only if it accompanied by "an unequivocal assurance that the defendants are now prepared to participate in a trial under the American system of criminal justice."
Murtagh had warned Tuesday that he had "a formula" which he would impose in a week or two if the defendants did not behave. But when the Panthers shook their fists and shouted "All power to the people" as they were brought into court Wednesday, Murtagh announced, "The continued misconduct persuades me to use the formula without further delay."
"The court declares the proceedings recessed indefinitely," he said. "The hearings are proceeding at snail's pace and are continually being interrupted. The defendants are unwilling to proceed . . . the court has no alternative."
Reduced tax proposed
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate, at the urging of two of its flying members, voted Wednesday to trim one penny from a proposed seven cent a gallon tax on general aviation airplane fuel.
Sens. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., and Howard W. Cannon, D-Neb., both licensed pilots, convinced Sen. Russel B Long, D-La., chairman of the Finance Committee, to accept the sixcent tax. Long's committee had earlier gone along with the House in approving the seven cent levy.
Four of six defense attorneys later held a news conference at which they declared they had frequently admonished their clients "to conform to standard courtroom behavior" and speak only when asked questions. However, they said, the Panthers refused to be silent.
"This (the recess) is probably a milestone in judicial history," said Charles T. Kinney, one of the attorneys. "We intend to be as careful in framing our response as Murtagh was in forming his little formula."
Twelve of the defendants have been jailed since their arrest last April 2 in lieu of bail ranging
from $50,000 to $100,000 each. One of the two women defendants, Mrs. Afeni Shakur, posted $100,- 000 bail three days before the pre-trial hearings began Feb. 2. The money and securities were raised by clergymen.
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McLain will get 'life sentence'
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) — Denny McLain's sentence will be for life—no matter what Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn decides.
The suspended Detroit Tiger pitcher may be reinstated in the near future and told that he can resume his baseball career "free of taint." Not so. Denny will carry the scars of the current scandal as long as he lives. Nor will time lessen the wounds he has inflicted on himself.
At 25, Denny could pitch another 10 to 15 years. He could win 30 games again and wind up his career with 200, 300 or even 400 victories.
But life in baseball will never be the same again for Denny because he committed the one sin which his peers will never forgive. He dragged baseball's good name into the gutter from which it was lifted 50 years ago. He linked baseball to a gambling scandal.
Every sport has its own "thing." Pro football thrives on its organized violence. Hockey players have their love affair with pain. Boxing's code is that a real champion loses his title face down. Baseball's "thing" is that no gambling scandal should touch it.
Will Never Forget
Relatively disinterested observers may scoff at it but Denny will learn over the years that baseball men will not forget. They will remember just as they have remembered Joe Jackson, Chick Gandil, Ed Cicotte, Claude Williams, Buck Weaver, Swede Risberg, Happy Felsch and Fred McMullin for a half century.
These were the members of the Chicago White Sox who were charged with a conspiracy to fix the 1919 World Series with the
Cincinnati Reds. They were tried by a federal grand jury in Chicago and acquitted but that made no difference to Judge Kenesaw (Mountain) Landis, baseball's first commissioner. On the very night of their acquittal, Judge Landis banned them from baseball.
But that was only the beginning of the lifetime sentence. Long past an age when their playing careers would have ended, the eight were still paying the price for their alleged involvement with gamblers. Their names were stricken from many of baseball's "official" record books. They were never invited to Old Timers' Day celebration. None can ever be elected to the
M. E. (Bill) Easton, assistant professor of physical education at the University of Kansas, and Wes Santee, one of the top long distance runners in the mid-1950's at KU, have joined the Kansas City Royals to instruct them in the fundamentals of running.
KU helps Royals
Easton was track coach at KU from 1947 to 1965 and developed eight Olympians, including Santee.
"We feel that with the success we've had teaching other phases of athletics we can do the same with the Royals," Easton said.
He said that some of the same techniques of proper running which were used in track could also be used by the ball players running after a fly ball or sprinting around the bases.
8 KANSAN Feb. 26
1970
"If we can add a half-step of speed to the players," Easton said, "I think we will have done a good job."
Easton and Santee joined the Royal's staff in Arizona last Monday and will be with them for a week.
Hall of Fame although two or three may have been good enough to be elected.
Years later when both were old men, Ty Cobb walked into a liquor store operated by Jackson. Cobb walked around the shop for 15 minutes without any recognition from Jackson. Then he asked his old rival if he hadn't recognized him.
Insists on Innocence
"Sure, I did," said Jackson, who batted .375 in the 1919 World Series and insisted he was innocent of any wrongdoing. "But I didn't think you would want to talk to me."
"The thing that makes me most proud," said Frick, "is that there never was a hint of scandal during my term of office."
How big an offense has Denny committed against the baseball establishment?
McLain's sentence—that of his peers—will become more severe as time goes by. Now Denny wants to clear up his debts and resume his career as a super star. He may be reinstated by Kuhn. But he will be hounded for the rest of his life. Newsmen, TV
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But, along the way, how could you forget that primary responsibility to the game? How could you let yourself and baseball become involved in that shadowland
Poor Denny, you had so much. No one resents a young businessman ballplayer making all he can on the side. No one resents that you played the organ in Las Vegas night spots or that you ran a paint company. No one resents that you fly your own airplane or were forming an advertising agency. No one even cares much about the unpaid bills.
men and radio broadcasters will mark the fifth, the 10th, the 20th, the 30th, etc., anniversaries of Denny's suspension and tell the story all over again for new generations of baseball fans.
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which it had avoided for so long? How could a smart guy like you play such a fool?
You have shown baseball three faces—that of the fireball, that of the flake and that of the fool. You have thrilled us with your fireball career on the field and amused us with your flaky remarks and attitudes.
But it's that third face, the face of the man who involved baseball in its first gambling scandal in a half century, which will never be forgotten.
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Something New, Something Different, Some Place To Eat
Question: Where to eat?
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Try coming to the Captain's Table. Enjoy something new. Enjoy the Captain's Table. (It's some place.)
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Lunch. . . . . 10 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
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KANSAS
40
Photo by Ron Bishop
And when I blew it . . .
Officials Ben Dreith (left) and Pat Haggerty yuk it up during time out in Kansas-Missouri game Monday night. Haggerty had just called a foul on the Tigers but his whistle didn't work so he decided to forget about the infraction. Looking on are Dave Robisch (right) and Bud Stallworth, who didn't seem to get the joke.
Kansas gals shoot straight
The University of Kansas women's rifle team captured third place in their division in the third annual "Pheasant Shoot" conducted at the University of South Dakota, Vermillion, on February 13, 14 and 15. Results were announced last week.
KU's Carol Waltz, Orange, Tex.
Feb. 26
1970 KANSAN 9
junior, placed third in the individual standings in the women's division with a score of 501 points.
The women's team compiled 1, - 878 points behind Kansas State with 1,932 points and the University of South Dakota with 1,942 points.
Other shooters and their scores for the KU team were Mary Arnold, Holton junior, 494; Barbara Westervelt, Parsons junior, 442; and Tana Monroe, Columbia, Mo., junior, 441.
Future holds promise
Miranda retains optimism
By DON BAKER Kansan sports writer
With the present basketball season nearing an end it is obvious that any hope of KU catching Kansas State in the Big Eight basketball title race is slim. A Wildcat victory over Colorado tonight would end the race. It is also no secret that many people are already looking ahead to next year as being one that the Jayhawks could regain the conference championship and go a long way toward the NCAA title
Assistant basketball coach Sam Miranda shares this optimism.
The nine win-two loss record of the freshman team substantiates Miranda's statement. The two losses, to the K-State and Missouri freshman teams, both came on the road and the officiating of both games has been openly criticized by both Miranda and assistant coach Gale Catlett.
"I think we have a good chance to go a long way next year," he said in an interview Wednesday. "We only lose one (senior Chet Lawrence) and we've got a good group of freshmen."
On paper the freshman team is impressive with the likes of Leonard Gray, Randy Canfield, Mike Bossard and Mark Williams. But Miranda has not been similarly impressed with its results.
"We have only been mediocre up until the last game," he said.
"On the second half of the Missouri game we played well as a team for the first time."
Miranda would not blame the losses on the officiating directly but made it clear that it definitely effected both games.
The results of the game support Miranda's analysis. Trailing 42-38 at halftime, the frosh roared back to win handlely 89-68. Bossard, a 6-6 forward, led the comeback with a perfect 10 for 10 shooting effort from the field in the second half and ended with game high totals of 28 points and 15 rebounds.
"Overall this has not been an outstanding year," Miranda said. "But you must remember that the freshman program at KU is a learning process. Don't get me
wrong—we try to win every game we play. But our main purpose is to get them ready for varsity basketball. Some of our poorer freshman teams have produced exceptional varsity players."
Miranda did not mean to imply that this year's frush team is bad by any standards. Canfield, 6-11 center from Wichita, and Gray, 6-7 forward from Kansas City, Kan., were highly sought by colleges throughout the nation and Bossard and Williams were the most highly prized preps in the Washington, D.C. and Denver areas respectively.
33
He did say that until the Missouri game the team had been disappointing in that it lacked consistency and had not reached its full potential. He further said that it would take a repeat of the effort displayed against Missouri to defeat Kansas State when the two teams end their seasons in Lawrence on March 7.
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As for next year Miranda said he thought several of this year's freshman team could compete quite well at the varsity level with some having a shot at being a starter.
He said, "I don't think our boys returning are going to roll over and die, however, so it's going to be a hard battle for a sophomore to make the starting five."
CHRIS GEORGE—HEAVY
In addition to the freshman and varsity teams Miranda also concerns himself with the tedious chore of recruiting.
He said, "Within the state we are presently interested in three or four boys. Overall we are looking at around 10 prospects."
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Chris George, star of the defunct "Rat Patrol" television series, will play a villainous sheriff in "Chisum." John Wayne's new western.
"Everyone knows we're after Tom," Miranda said. "He's a fine ball player with good promise."
Miranda was non-committal as to specifically who KU was looking at with the exception of one, that being Tom Kivisto, East Aurora, Ill., product and the brother of KU's sophomore guard Bob Kivisto.
As soon as the present season is completed KU recruiting efforts will be stepped up in an attempt to sign the country's top talent.
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Eugene White, an artist specializing in paintings of negroes, will display his collection today in the Kansas Union. White said he tries to contribute to black awareness through his paintings. The display at KU is part of a nation-wide tour.
Black awareness stressed in art display at Union today
To help contribute to the black awareness movement, artist Eugene White's works of art are being displayed today in the lobby of the Kansas Union. White's display, titled "Works in Black," is part of his 28th tour of the United States.
"I have been told there is a powerful, violent beauty in my artistic expressions of black people, combined with a poetic beauty of the black idiom," White said.
"I was interested in art at a very early age," he said, "and being a grass roots person, born in a very complicated time for black boys in the South, I became discouraged with school."
White, who owns an art gallery and studio in San Francisco, has studied in several art schools and
colleges. He describes his drawings as being the kind of experience only a black could ever know.
"College students are the ones who have the knowledge to help the black cause," White said. "They are the ones with the knowledge to help black people in the future," he added.
White explained that one picture of him sitting in jail is a self portrait representing a projected symbol of living black experience.
Another picture is of two young Negroes titled "Mischievous." "It portrays the boys being scolded by their mother and waiting for punishment from their father," he said.
In the background of the portrait is a bible on a table. White said the bible is a "heavy book"
that can be a help for some people and a crutch for others.
White said his pictures attempt to show that common people can contribute to society. He said that blacks do not have to be "super niggers" to compete with whites.
"I think today's uprisings have brought a lot of self awareness on our part that will not vanish as quickly as it did a few years ago," he said. "I feel that we have a real motivating force of historical development in art to embrace our past," he added.
White said his exhibit is not just for interested blacks but for whites as well.
"I feel that through this medium I can create a more profound, vivid and truthful picture of the raging blacks of our struggle," he said.
KU, CU to offer study program inside Soviet Union this summer
The University of Kansas and the University of Colorado, in cooperation with the Council on International Educational Exchange, will conduct for the fifth consecutive year an intensive Russian language program in the Soviet Union during the summer of 1970. A total of eight credit hours from either university will be given for the program.
Stephen Parker, associate professor of Russian literature, said this KU-CU program is one of seven throughout the United
States. Applicants can be from any university in the country.
The nine week program from June 22 to September 4 will consist of six weeks of intensive study at Leningrad State University.
The students will then have two weeks of scheduled travel throughout Russia. The final week will be left to the students to travel throughout Europe.
A total of 210 students,including 45 from the KU-CU group. will stay in a dormitory at Leningrad State University. Students
will attend classes from 9:00 a.m.
until 1:00 p.m. Monday through
Saturday.
Scheduled in the afternoons for the students are such excursions as trips to famous Russian authors homes, including Pushken, Blok and Dostoevsky, and a tour of historical places of interest in Leningrad.
"This is an excellent program," said Parker, "because it not only offers the students a chance to travel, but also an intensive study of the Russian language under an excellent Soviet staff."
The University of Kansas Student Senate Committee on Teacher and Course Evaluation released preliminary findings of its survey Wednesday.
Results announced on evaluation survey
The survey was run in 83 volunteer classes from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Journalism and the School of Engineering.
George Laughead, Dodge City junior and chairman of the evaluation committee, said the survey confirmed expectations that teachers who volunteered to use the survey on experimental basis would be more interested in education and thus receive above average ratings on their teaching abilities.
About 76 per cent of the students rated their classes from fair to excellent compared with other courses taken at KU. Most students reported that their teachers were technically competent in preparation for class, stating general course objectives, integrating lecture topics, showing general enthusiasm, stressing application of knowledge and responding good-naturedly to corrections by students.
The survey revealed a deficiency in faculty administration
in examination procedures and distribution of grades. Students surveyed felt their instructors did not explain their grading procedures clearly. Students also complained that exam questions generally were not stated fairly or clearly.
The primary inadequacy of education in the surveyed courses was lack of intellectual stimulation beyond the basic requirement of the course the survey said. To a great extent students did not feel inspired to take another course in the same or in a related field.
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Foreign students eligible for summer study program
Students from abroad who will be completing their studies this spring are eligible to participate in an exchange program called Summer Crossroads. The program is sponsored by the Institute of International Education and is designed for foreign students to express opinions and share experiences of their American education.
The program is conducted in three locations during three consecutive weeks in June. The program in Colorado Springs runs June 7-13, in Los Angeles from June 14-20 and in St. Petersburg, Fla. from June 21-27.
Students participating in Summer Crossroads will stay with
10 KANSAN Feb. 26
1970
local families and take part in structured discussions, social events and sightseeing. Students must pay for transportation and personal incidentals, but guest families will cover other expenses. A limited number of travel grants are available from the State Department, however.
Interested students can apply through their foreign student adviser. Applications are due by May 1.
Art price record
NEW YORK (UPI)—An anonymous buyer broke the world auction record for a painting by Dutch impressionist Vincent Van Gogh by paying $1.35 million Wednesday night at an auction.
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FREEDOM IN THE WATER
Photo by Ray Sellers
Ballets performed on stage of water
Some people get their kicks in unusual ways, but to these six girls this seemingly unusual water formation is no game. They are members of the KU Synchro Club, and they perform periodic water ballet shows at the Robinson Gymnasium pool.
School day proclaimed to stress needed funds
Whether or not Kansas public schools will have enough money to complete next year's school term is the purpose of the March 2 "Save Our School Day," said Melvin Neely, executive secretary of the Kansas State Teachers Association, Wednesday.
"I have no doubt that schools in Kansas will have to shorten their terms next year if more state money is not given to school districts," Neely said.
According to the Foundation Act of 1965, Neely said, that the state should provide a minimum of 40 per cent of the state's education budget.
He said that the 26 million dollars the legislature has allotted for supplemental school aid is totally inadequate and the extra 17 million dollars needed from the state will have to come from an increase in taxes.
"Save our Schools day is not a
Strike days high
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A total of 3.7 million man-days of work were lost through strikes last month, the highest figure for any January since 1946, the Labor Department reported Wednesday.
Feb. 26 KANSAN 11
1970
teacher walkout, boycott or strike," Neely said. There will be no school closing, he said, without the boards of education agreeing that this is the best way to present the problem to the people.
"If any appreciable time is cut from the school day on Save our Schools Monday," Neely said, "teachers will be expected to make it up. An hour or two of classwork can be made up, but the damage that financial starvation of our schools can do to the education of a child cannot be repaired in the future."
Governors' support asked for Nixon welfare program
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon ignored the simmering desegregation issue at the National Governors' Conference Wednesday and asked the governors to help push his welfare program "over the top."
The annual mid-winter conference, intended primarily to press Congress for action on programs of federal aid to the states, faced a concerted effort by several Southern governors to bring the school desegregation issue formally to the conference floor.
Nixon confined his remarks at
a mid-afternoon speech to a plea for governors' support for his welfare programs and antipollution fight.
He said there was "at least a 50 per cent chance" that his welfare proposals, featuring his family assistance plan, would be passed by Congress. He told the states' chief executives that their personal lobbying while here could put the program "over the top."
He warned, however, that his program is limited by budget restrictions and asked them not to
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pressure for an increase in the immediate outlays for the program.
Nixon also asked their help in rekindling congressional interest in his plan to distribute a portion of federal tax revenues to the states without strings.
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In testimony before senate committee
Doctor cites undue alarm on pill
WASHINGTON (UPI) Congressional investigators were told Wednesday they had created undue alarm about birth control pills and the result could be more unwanted, unloved, neglected and abandoned children.
Dr. Alan F. Guttmacher, president of Planned Parenthood, said Senate subcommittee hearings on alleged hazards of oral contraceptives had needlessly "created a sense of great alarm" that had triggered a "stampede" away from the pill.
Guttmacher said "the pill is the most effective means yet known to prevent a very serious affliction, unwanted pregnancy. At least 750,000 children born each year were unwanted at the time of their conception. Undoubtedly a significant proportion lead to unloved, neglected and abandoned children."
Senators must ask for action
David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said Wednesday the Student Senate can not take any action against individuals who destroyed the University Daily Kansan until the senators request it.
It is a real legal problem, he said, with three options possible; any student senator can request the Student Senate to bring charges against the individuals involved; the Kansan staff can bring charges; an individual student can bring charges for infringement on his rights.
12 KANSAN Feb. 26 1970
Three members of women's liberation, a militant feminist group hissed Guttmacher when he told the small business subcommittee that doctors should be educated about the pill, but not their women patients, who he said lacked the medical background to understand.
But Guttmacher argued that it
was useless to try to educate women about the side effects of the pill. Rather than knowledge, he said, "you get a panic reaction."
Sen. Gaylor Nelson, D-Wis. the subcommittee chairman, said the investigation had done what the Food and Drug Administration failed to do—inform the public the pill is not perfect.
Guttmacher, however, said the subcommittee had done more
than that, citing a poll that reported 18 per cent of pill users had stopped using it and 23 per cent of the rest were considering quitting.
A segregationist, Wallace put together a third party presidential movement in 1968 and picked up 13 million votes. He has said he would do "whatever is necessary" to keep the movement alive.
George Wallace to seek Alabama governorship
Because of the possible tie between his gubernatorial bid and the presidential race, the man Wallace would fight it out with—Gov. Albert P. Brewer — has placed emphasis on a promise to be a "full time governor."
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI)—George C. Wallace is expected to announce Thursday he will seek a new term as Alabama's governor—a move many see as the forerunner of another bid for presidency.
Wallace has been increasingly critical of President Nixon's school desegregation policies in recent months, and should he win a second term as governor, he would have a power base from which to launch a presidential campaign.
The two men would meet in the Democratic primary May 5. Because Alabama Republicans do not plan to field a candidate in November, the primary is, in effect, the election.
Three other candidates beside Brewer have formally qualified to run. They are former Gov. James E. "Big Jim" Folsom, Dothan businessman Charles Woods and segregationist Asa E. "Ace" Carter. The field is the smallest in years.
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He said the subcommittee had unduly alarmed women about such side effects as blood clotting and cancer.
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
300.00
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a wedding band to match.
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FALL EDITION
1970 JAYHAWKER
Distributed Feb. 25-26-27
Strong Rotunda
You can still purchase a 1970 Jayhawker during distribution for $7.00
Mrs. Dayan calls France pro Arab
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Mrs. Moshe Dayan, wife of Israel's defense minister, said Wednesday she does not believe French President Georges Pompidou is sincere in his statements that France is not pro Arab and has close relations with Israel.
Pompidou, speaking before Congress in Washington Wednesday, said his country has never intended to "be detrimental to any nation nor to serve another."
He also called for an Arab-Israeli settlement under conditions arranged by the United Nations and the big four.
Mrs. Dayan dismissed the suggestions.
"That is not the answer," she said at a news conference here.
"It's so easy for us to understand the Arabs, and only people who do not understand both sides should sit down and talk."
She said the Arabs "could easily sit down and negotiate. But as long as they don't sit down I doubt that there will be an end to the crisis in the Middle East.
"If my husband and Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser sat down together they would have great understanding," she added.
Referring to reports that the United States is about to sell another 25 planes to Israel, Mrs. Dayan said, "I'm delighted that more planes will be sold to us, but it still will not balance the
arms race."
She said, "Egypt has had more planes and supplies from the Russians than we've had from the United States or from all over the world."
Mrs. Dayan, who is on a fund-raising tour of the United States, said the Jews in this country "should feel the responsibility of Israel. Israel could not survive economically without help from Jews in the United States."
She skirted questions about the
recent alleged Arab terrorist bombing of a Swiss airliner in which 47 persons were killed and the machine-gunning of a tourist bus in the northern outskirts of biblical Hebron.
Mrs. Dayan did comment, however, on the recent explosion aboard a jet airliner carrying her son. She said, "The Arabs didn't know he was aboard. They could have kidnaped him before he left because some Arabs were in the airport lounge with him."
UMW official indicted by federal grand jury
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) — Sillous Huddleston, the father of one of four persons already under indictment in the murder of former United Mine Workers (UMW) official Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, was also indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury.
Huddleston, 61, president of a UMW local in La Follette, Tenn., was indicted and then arrested by FBI agents shortly after he appeared before the federal grand jury and refused to testify.
The indictment, similar to those handed down against the four other suspects, charged Huddleston with conspiring to kill Yablonski, who was to be a witness before a federal grand jury in Washington.
Friends urge freer access
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—A report prepared for the American Friends Service Committee and scheduled for publication Thursday urges freer access to contraceptives, more sex education, and repeal of abortion laws as answers to overpopulation.
The committee said Wednesday the report "explores the moral issues involved in man's increasing control over birth and death and arrives at 'some answers for today.'"
The report was made by a Quaker working party and grew "out of Quaker concern for the quality of human life."
"We must control our fertility and bring population and resources into balance," the group reported. Toward this end "contraception is preferable to abortion but . . . abortion performed under proper conditions is preferable to the birth of an unwanted child."
- Freer access to contraceptives.
- The group urged implementation of five proposals:
- Publicly supported family planning and abortion services for the general public as part of accepted medical care.
- Repeal of all abortion laws.
- Availability of counseling and social services to women requesting abortion.
Feb. 26
1970 KANSAN 13
Home of the
"Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
BURCER CHEF
Huddleston, father of Annette Lucy Gilly, was also charged with possessing a fund which would be used to finance the conspiracy against Yablonski.
Huddleston spent about 10 minutes before the panel investigating the Yablonski slayings. In previous appearances he had pleaded the fifth amendment.
"I did not answer their questions," said Huddleton, whose local is part of UMW District 19. "I was instructed not to by my attorney. If you answer one question you have to answer them all."
Huddleston's daughter and her husband, Paul Gilly, 36, were charged with being the alleged "payoff pair" in the slaying of Yablonski, his wife and daughter. The other two suspects are Aubran Wayne Martin, 23, and Claude Edward Vealey, 26.
The latest indictment said Huddleston allegedly invited various other persons, whose names are unknown to the grand jury, to join in the conspiracy. He also was accused of meeting in La Follette with Paul Gilly on several occasions to discuss the terms of the conspiracy to kill Yablonski.
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said the arrest of Huddleston was part of the FBI's "continuing nationwide investigation" in the murders.
The Yablonskis were killed in their Clarksville, Pa., home Dec. 31. Their bodies were not discovered until Jan. 5. The murders occurred about a month after Yablonski lost a bitterly contested election to unseat incumbent UMW president W. S. "Tony" Bovle.
"If you ask my opinion it was a bunch of coal operators," said Huddleston. "They don't want to sign contracts, they do not want to pay for labor."
Huddleston said neither he, his daughter nor son-in-law were connected with the slayings.
for fine fabrics shop POUND'S
NEW IN LAWRENCE
- Brand Name Fabrics
- In Stock Service on Patterns
- VOGUE-BUTTERICK
- McCALL-SIMPLICITY
POUND'S FABRICS, INC.
925 MASS LAWRENCE
SOPHOMORE CLASS PARTY
with
FRIDAY, MARCH 6 TOGETHER AT THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PROFESSORSHIPS
Photo by Bruce Bernstein
The recent recipients
A plaque listing the recent recipients of KU professorships has been hung in the Alumni Association Office in the Kansas Union. The award, which has room for 100 names, was a gift from the class of 1965.
First flight of super jet held
NEW YORK (UPI) — Trans World Airlines inaugurated the first domestic 747 superjet service Wednesday with a non-stop flight from Los Angeles to New York.
"It was a sweetheart of a flight," said Capt. J. E. Frankum.
14 KANSAN Feb. 26 1970
the pilot, who is also TWA vice-president for flight operations. He made the flight on his 49th birthday.
Gallerie Bridal
Galerie Bradel Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv.
BURNT BUK
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into the
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Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
837 MASS.
VI 3-4255
State amendment asked
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)—The Kansas House of Representatives Wednesday passed and sent to the Senate a proposed constitutional amendment to reduce the number of state elective officers.
Eighty-four votes or a two-thirds majority was needed, and the proposal passed on a roll call tally of 95-20. If the Senate approves the proposition, it will be placed before Kansas voters in November.
Under the amendment, Kansans in 1974 would elect only the governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state and attorney general. The present elective offices of auditor, treasurer, printer and insurance commissioner would be abolished.
The new elective officers would serve four-year terms instead of the current two-years.
The governor and lieutenant governor would also run as a team similar to the president and vice-president on the national level.
Apparently fearing the proposal might fail in the lower chamber, Speaker of the House Calvin A. Strowig, R-Abilene,
held a caucus of House Republicans and lectured them on the importance of the measure.
Strowig also spoke on the House floor before the vote emphasizing that they were actually voting on whether the people should have an opportunity to vote on the amendment.
"I know there are things in this proposition that I and you may disagree with, but you are to decide whether the people will have an opportunity to vote on this," the GOP leader said.
"At that time, you and they will have an opportunity to register your objections if any."
LUNCH SPECIAL
SOUP &
SANDWICH 50c
Home of the world famous truck stop
Pitchers 2-5 p.m. Special
ROCK CHALK CAFE
bell bottom
CLOTHES
GIFTS
STROBE CANDLES
UNDERGROUND
INCENSE
LAMPSHADES
JEWELRY
SCARVES
PIPES
INDIA PRINTS
STRAWBERRY FIELDS
712 MASS.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
company manual are offered to
all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
handling charge. AR and Dynaco
deseriality. Revox and other lines
available. Phone 842-2047 evenings.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—On. on Salel Revised, comprehensive—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Edition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Typewriters--big selection ... rental
purchase plan available. Office supplies
and furniture Xerox service.
Typewriter Co., 700 Mass.
843-3644
Fender Bassman amp, Gibson Thun-
derbird bass, 842-7641, Biff. 2-26
Biggest car bargain in town. '33 Plymouth with 4 new tires, new 3-4 battery, new points and plugs. Runns well. $100. Call 825-3436 winks. 2-26
Capitol Component Stereo System. 50 watt amplifier with speakers. Inputs: 8-track, phone, auxiliary. Two speaker set and headphone outputs. Separate treble and bass controls. $75. Call Charlie, 843-9569. 2-26
1964 MG Midget, good condition. $695.
843-4039
2-26
Large, comfortable single, bed. $20
Call 843-7549 after 5 o'clock. 2-26
Chrome reversed 15-inch Chevy
wheels, 843-4170. Ask for John. 2-27
Topsy's just received room-s'ze 2e 1 gallon containers, one's filled with caramel, cinnamon, cheese or plain popcorn. Makes studying real combo. 2-26
Paintings, drawings, ceramics, sculpture, jewelry, woodcraft, clothing 9th & Indiana. THE OMNIBUS SHOP 2-26
1967 color Coronado 17" TV set. Table model. Good condition. $150. Call 842-5075. 3-2
One Ampex stereo tape recorder Model 1160, 2 years old. Great condition. Call Bob Brown, 843-5721 after 5 o'clock. 3-2
1968 Suzuki 125 ce motorcycle. Excellent for trails and town. Has less than 2,000 miles—good mechanical condition. Approx. $190.00. Call 842-5287.
Must sell this week! Amppeg G15
guitar amp. Best offer takes it. Has
reverb, echo, dolly, and cover. Under
100. Call Juml at 843-6707. 3-2
Guitar ES-355 Gibson Hollowbody, cherry finish, $250 or best offer; Motorola Reverb, car unit, $20 or best offer. Call 842-8645. 3-2
Realistic component stereo set, 36.
watt stereo amplifier and FM receiver. Lab 24 turntable with Shure el-
solo 3A speakers with 8" woofer. tweter. 842-1200. Room 332 after 7 p.m. 3-2
Automatic radio 4 and 8-track car tape player, can't tell from new, locks included. Must sell. Karl at 842-1047. 3-2
Ankle bracelets loaded with belts . . .
silver and gilded wedding belts . . .
other imports from Asia on sale at
the Museum of Natural History Gift
Shop. Open daily 8:30 to 4:30, Sunday
19:30 to 4:30. 3-2
W 9th
TEXACO
W. 9th TEXACO
★ Student specials
★ New, experienced management
★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
Toe rings! from India and Nepal at the museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Put in your order now so that you are ready for sandal weather. Open daily 8:30 to 4:30. Sunday 12:30 to 4:30. 3-2
'55 Buick Well it runs! Good for
car use, it gets it well!
Crawley Call 843-1894 - 2-26
New York Cleaners
New refrigerator, apt. size—bench type, only $9.95 at Ray Stoneback's downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. nites. 3-3
Norelco Stereo cassette changer. Up to 6 hours of continuous uninterrupted music. Now $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 356 horsepower, power brakes, low air density, air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-802-00. 3-2
Handmade Originals-India prints,
tie-dye dresses, men's shirts, pants
outshee, maxi skirts, mini skirts, bags,
droppers,迪帕蕾 Creations 13-
9 West 9th Street.
Famous Brand Components now at giveaway prices: Complete Outfits,
$149.00 up to $149.90. AM-FM-Chip,
$269.00 up to $319.90. Sprks, were $499.90, now $399.90. Hurry in and save up to $100.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
'69 VW Bug, 12,000 miles, still new,
no warranty in effect. Call 3-53
Old Zenith console stereo phone with AM-FM radio—needs repair, however FM radio plays beautifully. Come "n" the show! $2.50. Ray Stoneberg downstown. 3-3
Kustom K-100, guitar amp, with spkr cabinet, (2-12" skprs), trem., reverb, like new, $250 or best offer, must sell Steve, 842-8068. 2-27
1968 Corvette convertible, w/vinyl hardtop, 327-350, 4-speed, power wheels, 50,000 miles warranty, $3475 or best offer. 843-9057, 3-3
Beautiful Ring Set-14k white dia-
cent ring, 13K wedding band,
diamond center, baguettes each side;
14K Keepsae wedding band with
120th anniversary card;
Special $1275. 843-9067. 3-3
2-wheel trailer; metal frame; wood box;
6*x4*'x4'; 842-8660. 3-3
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
26 More VI 0501
One semi buffalo=a real bug. Call anytime, now or then. 842-6303. 3-3
1966 Dodge Charger, dark green w/ white pistle stripe, 426 Hem, auto a., c. A. American marmorics. Goodyear裤衫 giraffes stock, sells cheap. Call Larry, 842-6952
1989 Dogge Super Bee 6 Pack. Excel-
842-6000. Room 1033. Rohm Cohlin-
842-6000. Room 1033.
VI 3-0501
Offer limited. We have 10 K-State/KU tickets for sale. Call 842-191-3, 1-2
Magnavox portable stereo and a Wolff-
magnavox portable stereo in 1x2
condition Call 842-4597
6-string Gibson in perfect condition.
guitar, cap and case. $100. 842-0002.
www.gibson.com
UN 4-3474
926 Mass.
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
Ceramics, mugs, pots, bowls, vases.
Ceramics, Indiana THE OMNIS
SHOP 3-2
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17 = 38
1966 Volkswagen Seatan - for sale by
original owner, only 23,000 miles, air
conditioning, rear seat, front seat,
seats, pop-out windows, perfect con-
trol, $1159, call 842-2920 after 5 p.m.
Finish the year here! Available March 1.
Need 1 girl to share apt. Good location,
$65/month. Call 842-9156 3-2
WANTED
Wanted: Crafts of all kinds, paintings,
ceramics, needlework, etc. Antiques:
tables, dishes, clothing, jewelry and
furniture. Information only
842-7281 tweniens. 3-2
Need one or two male students to take over lease in Jayhawker Towers. Rent $58, all extras included. Phone 842-7125
Luxurious furnished apartment for rent—need female roommate-- you will have your own room. Block from campus. Reasonable. Call 843-189-184.
Roommate wanted, male student to share my large pad, campus at back door. Tennessee at front has every call after once on once a 3-8 Call after six p.m. b48-8277-3 3-
Want to buy buy motorcycle, preferably 350cc or larger. Will pay cash for any good bike. 842-7447. 2-27
Wanted: Tickets for the KU-K-State game. Call 842-0283. 3-3
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-goodness B-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 f
Female roommate wanted, as soon as possible, to share 2-bedroom furnished apartment with junior girl $18/month. Month Call 82-352-280, 1810 W. 25th-4
Apt. F
NOTICE
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
gloves, knee pads, purses,卫衣,
barrettes dog collars—at 812 MUSEUM
PRIMARILY LEATHER 3-3
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^{1}$. Mass. St. Joseph's School, olded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early 3-3 or same day service.
Interested in running for a Student Senate position? If you're interested in receiving help and willing to provide role, call 842-3197 after 6:00 p.m.
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Your own, choose to choose. Your own, PRIMARY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-3
Need an active voice in University affairs? Think responsibility!! Vote Bill Ebert-Greg Thomas — The Alliance, March 17-18. 2-26
The Castle Tea Room - fine dining in an enchanting cultural and historical atmosphere. Visit the Castle Tea Room with most unique restaurant in Lancee. 3-2
- Decoupage Materials
- Oils and Acrylics
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Stretcher Frames
- Balsa Wood
McConnell Lumber 844 E.13th VI 3-3877
Balsa Wood Bankmark Services
McConnell Lumber
Lepidoptera Creations for men and women. 19 West 9th Street Select your own India print for custom made clothing. 3-3
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE cracks eggs, slices ham, bakes, fries, all this and more for the KU student? Of course, how else could we make you the most delicious breakfast! Across from Lindley Hall. 3-2
See the new Sibacus at Weaver's Shop
shop, second floor, 901 Mass. 2-27
This ad good for one-hour cassette tapes when presented at time of purification. Norrie has cost $49.90; he expires March 5th. Rocky Stoneback's downtown. 3-3
Phinnea P. P. Prohog, Impet, and Pooh-bear seek good home. Free half-Slainse knives, box trained, no re-covering. Call Shelley, Caller 5, 842-8964. 2-26
We are now open till 5:30 p.m. we-ckw-
kry Tare's Laundry 1903's Mass. 3-4
PERSONAL
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE. Right on campus. A great place for breakfast, lunch, and or dinner. Come in today from 8 a.m. to 3:00 a.m. Across from Lindley Hall.
On Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and a half miles north of
the Kaw River Bridge
843-1431
Your headquarters
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011, Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. ff
U.S. Choice Steaks Select Seafoods
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
Up with student action—up with student voice—up with responsible leaders—vote Ebert-Thomas—The Alliance 2-26
Attention opn necklace giver: Reveal yourself! Linda.
2-27
24TH SIRLOIN
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-14
Stirling steams and fresh select appetizers await you when you dine at the Sirium. We serve the finest in the selection as you lay them with all the care that is intended to heighten at the Sirium for uncommode dining.
T
Always Pleasurable Dining
for
TYPING
Open government for all students.
Open government for all students.
Elon Thomas - The Alliance. 2-26
British surplus wool fire brigade jack-
ing hoods. 15 W, 9th. 3-4
The Hodge Paddle, 15 W, 9th.
Sirloin
Authentic London Bobbies capes.
The Hodge Podie. 15 W. 9th. 3-4
miDAS®
Tie-dyed Wallace Beery shirts. $5.50
The Hodge Pad. 15 W. 9th. 3-4
experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing materials, paperwriter Pica
Pica type. Phone 843-9554 service. M-15
Wright. Phone 843-9554
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call VI 3-2818. Mrs. Ruckman
mufflers and
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs. Troxl. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1440. 3-3
shocks
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Tony's Service 66
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 60444
Thesis Typing—10 years experience—Marlene Hilgay *Hilgay* 5.00 at 843-
6n48 (8.00 to 5.00-842-0111) 4-3
HELP WANTED
Musician wanted. Male lead vocalist.
John Brown. 842-0100 for interview.
Opportunity Unlimited. Excellent income for few hours. Students welcome. Phone 842-2935 or 843-6621. 3-2
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU LD. is worth $1,00 off on pres-
cription drugs and $50 off Taxpayer
Tax; 8011's Mass. $4,00 and up.
Tutoring offered in undergraduate math and engineering courses. Math 146 and some upper-level engineering courses. Call 842-7123. 3-2
LOST
IF YOU need repairs, we need your business—besides we're less expensive than the competition . . . PERFORMANCE ENTERPRISES, 317 N. 2nd St., 842-1191. Repairs on all popular imports and sports cars. 2-26
Missing—eight month old, female, tricolor basset hound. Last seen in area of Gatehouse Apts. Any information please call 842-4029. Reward. $25.00
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
USED BOOKS—READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Romance, Westerns, comics, Playboy
Fashion, Sports, Furniture Book
934 Mass. Books 843-2756. Stacked
25,000 books. 3-3
Need entertainment for your next party? Talented folk group available with intensive night rates. Have done extensive night training. 82-628 or 872-7546. 3-3
LOW SUMMER RATES
Available now; furnished studio, furnished or unfurnished 2 bedroom apartment. Very large, fully carpeted, plenty of storage space. Most utilities paid including central heat and air conditioning. Located across from street faces on campus busline. Laundry facilities, outdoor pool, off-street parking.
LOW SUMMER RATES
Now showing afternoons at College
Hill Manor Apartments
1741 W 19th, APT 5, 843-8220
We Care About
What You Wear
And If You Care
Bring Your Shoes To
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
T
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
PLANNING A TRIP??
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Let
Malls Shopping Center
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
幼儿音乐会
VI 3-1211
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
DRIVE-IN AND COON OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
K
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La
9th and Miss
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
Serling opens symposium
(Continued from page 1)
Rod Serling, noted author and originator of the television series the "Twilight Zone," spoke on subjects ranging from the Vietnam war to the mass media in the keynote address of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium at the University of Missouri at Kansas City before an audience of approximately 800 Wednesday night.
The topic of his speech was "Relevance in the Media."
Serling said the United States should wind up the Vietnam war tomorrow and should bring the troops home the next day.
He said there were men in jails
in South Vietnam simply because they ran against the present government in the elections.
"This is the kind of freedom we are fighting for?" he questioned. He also said the fact that men died for a cause did not make the cause just.
"If you add one more death to a bad cause it is nothing more than premeditated murder," he said.
"If we showed more combat film, if we could better understand the pain of war, then men who are big with their mouths (for war) would take a dim view of anyone going up a hill with an M-16 in their hands," he said.
"We must communicate more. The bullet seems to be the present day method of political conquest," he said.
(Continued from page 1) were still the exception rather than the rule on state college and university campuses.
Policy questioned
present law covering alcoholic consumption on state property if liquor by the drink was approved.
"It would reflect that a majority of the citizens of the state, today, have a different attitude toward the consumption of alcohol from the one they had just a few short years ago," he said.
(Continued from page 1)
In view of the upcoming Kansas referendum on liquor by the drink, Chalmers was asked if he could forsee possible changes in
Serling said the President must not be allowed to speak without the validity of his statements being questioned.
"Whenever it's documented that the majority of citizens has changed its attitude, it makes other changes at least easier, if not more likely," he said.
16 KANSAN Feb.26 1970
In his speech he said films such as "Easy Rider" related to our time but often these films lacked
artistic qualities. He named "Midnight Cowboy" and "The Graduate" as films which not only related to our time but also were artistically well made.
He said that sex should be brought out of the shadows, Violence, he said, is more destructive to children than is sex.
"You start by locking up a few magazines," he said, "and you may end by silencing a nation."
be censored. He said the question was where does censorship end.
There is not much, Serling said, he could think of that should
He said that the salvation for our country lay in the college campuses.
"Their dedication, their care will pull us through," he said.
Harambee not obscene
(Continued from page 1) service employees, could be submitted to the attorney general for another ruling.
John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and president of the BSU, said the ruling showed that "the people (the printing service employees) had no right to impose middle class standards on a black newspaper."
Spearman said the printers' walkout was "a racist reaction; the liable issue was just a cover-up."
When asked what the BSU would do if the printers walked
"America has been a repressive society," he said, "and the printing service employees were reacting to the paper's advocacy of freeing the people by whatever means necessary."
out again, Spearman said, "We will force the University to fire them."
William T. Smith Jr.n director of the printing service, said if the BSU brings in another properly signed order and if the money had been incumbered he would follow whatever orders were given him by Dean of Student Affairs William Balfour, but he said he did not know what the employees at the printing service would do.
J. Richard Foth, Assistant Attorney General, said the new
There is no law, he said, that would judge this issue obscene. He said that for any publication the University could not tell the printers to do something if they could be held liable for it.
Kansas criminal code which will go into effect July 1, 1970, will make some difference in the responsibility of the printers for libelous content.
When asked why Frizzell did not hand down the decision by the 2 p.m. Monday deadline set by the BSU, Foth said neither the BSU, the chancellor nor anyone else was in a position to demand a decision. Foth said it was a matter of priorities, then he pointed to a stack of papers related to pressing decisions in other areas.
Foth said it was his personal opinion that the University should not act as a censor. The students, he said, should assume adult responsibility for adult action.
RADIO SHACK Associated Store George Corbett, Owner
RADIO SHACK®
Associated Store
George Corbett, Owner
NEW LOCATION
1000 Massachusetts
Phone: VI 2-1566
Open 10-8:30 a.m. Daily
SALE!
OUR 36-WATT FULL FEATURE AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER WITH
WALNUT CASE! MAGNETIC CARTRIDGE PRE-AMP! TUNING METER!
FREE
The $19.95 value walnut cabinet that others charge for separately.
TUNING METER
Zero-in on FM stereocasts and AM stations alike with pinpoint precision.
HEADPHONE JACK
Conveniently located on front panel. No switching. Jack automatically turns speakers off for stereo headphone listening when headphone plug is inserted.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 88
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, Feb. 27, 1970
BSU presents 'demands'
A five-page list of demands from the KU Black Student Union (BSU) was presented to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. Thursday.
The list was presented by BSU chairman John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore.
The BSU demanded that the following administrative positions be held by blacks by September 1: Campus provost, associate dean of faculties, associate dean of student affairs, associate dean of men, associate dean of women, associate director of admissions and associate director of financial aid.
The BSU also demanded that by September 1971, the University have
at least five deans and associate deans, and that at least one be appointed by September this year. Other PSU dorments were
At least 10 per cent of the freshman class be black; every school at the University have at least one full-time black faculty member by September this fall; and within two years 10 per cent of faculty members be blacks.
The BSU demanded that every department at the University have a black faculty member by next fall and also five black graduate students, including one instructor.
The demand list said that the University Senate Executive Committee
was to have two black students immediately, and that all University committees were to include blacks.
The BSU further demanded that KU create a black studies department to hold the same number of faculty members as other college departments.
Copies of the demands will be distributed to the various administrators for them to prepare a response, Chalmers said.
The Chancellor also said he would prepare a response himself and that he hoped to present the response to the BSU late next week.
The BSU statement said, "Our position is clear. We have requested
no more than our dignity permits for those things which this place should have, before it dare call itself a University. We have been done a great wrong and now demand only that it be righted.
"We intend to dedicate ourselves to see that this document becomes a living reality. Our suffering has a limit. We think it very 'inappropriate' to talk of 'appropriateness,' we want ACTION," said the statement. Regarding the alleged obscene material in the BSU paper, Harambee, Spearman said he had not been asked about considering litigation to test Kansas statutes pertaining to obscenity.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Meany enters rail talks
WASHINGTON — AFL-CIO President George Meany threw the prestige and power of himself and his office into an effort today to settle a railroad union contract dispute that has frustrated 15 months of bargaining and threatened to bring on a nationwide rail shutdown.
Campuses quieting down
Like a fever, the student revolution appears for now to have run its course. But nobody is saying the violence is gone for good.
"There is still a great deal of seething discontent on some campuses," said M. Brewster Smith, chairman of the psychology department at the University of Chicago. Other academicians agree.
Roommates poisoned
MONTREAL—Police hunted today for an American student charged with trying to kill his four Canadian college roommates by putting the larvae of a pig parasite in their food. Two of them nearly died.
Deputy given new trial
SAIGON—The government granted a new trial today to the neutralist national assembly deputy sentenced two days ago to 20 years at hard labor for having ties with the Viet Cong.
Chau had appealed in letters to President Thieu and President Nixon to help him prove his innocence. The extensive news coverage of his trial put Chau in the role of a martyr being persecuted by the Thieu regime.
Specifically, the deputy, Tran Ngoc Chau, was charged with meeting eight times with his brother, Tran Ngoc Hien, a North Vietnamese agent who since has been captured and interned.
Oil plagues beaches
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.—The tide pushed a five-mile long crude oil slick back toward shore today and the Coast Guard said the slimy mass was a possible pollution threat to resort beaches.
Meeting plans campaign
"What this meeting is about." Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and Alliance student body presidential candidate said, "is to let everyone understand the issues."
The meeting Ebert referred to, drew nearly 60 Alliance supporters Thursday evening in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Ebert outlined the party's campaign for the next three weeks and urged candidates to become familiar with the Alliance platform. "It's more complete than ISP's platform," he said, "and I refuse to put something so broad and general down as they have that you can't glean any information out of it."
He also reminded candidates of
"the students past lack of involvement," which he blamed on student government.
Greg Thomas, Alliance vicepresidential candidate said, "We are unified here tonight to go out and do something for the University."
When asked which were the more important issues of the campaign, Ebert said, "We have plans for a survival studies program that will result in utilizing a group of people knowledgeable about the problem. Also we plan to educate the students, facing them with the immediate needs of these problems.
supporting their programs and revise the Western Civilization program all in an attempt to let the student work out his own academic program.
"Also we plan to eliminate areas of discrimination with the Haskell Indians by developing exchange programs, such as allowing them to come to our concerts."
"We plan to assist in the current Black Committee Studies,
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student reminded candidates that they could "draw 'pyramid-voting' by pooling slates of candidates." He urged candidates to get together in their respective colleges and identify themselves with the Alliance party which would help the voters in linking candidates to the Alliance ticket.
Rioters destroy bank
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI)—Gov. Ronald Reagan declared a "state of extreme emergency" in Santa Barbara Thursday and said he was prepared to declare martial law to halt renewal of rioting which saw a campus mob of 1,500 seize a three-block business district and burn down a bank.
Reagan said he was asking the state attorney general to investigate whether William Kunstler, attorney for the "Chicago Seven," had crossed state lines to incite a riot in a speech at the University of California at Santa Barbara which preceded the six-hour rampage.
A $250,000 Bank of America branch was destroyed by arsonists as a "symbol of great corporations supporting the war in Vietnam." A coin laundry was also gutted, four real estate offices broken into and windows smashed in a delicatessen and other buildings in the Isla Vista district a few blocks from the UCSB campus.
The decree authorized the Santa Barbara County Sheriff to call on all other law enforcement agencies for help. Reagan also gave authority to state officials on the scene to call in the California
National Guard without further action by the governor.
Reagan said the persons who beat and showered rocks on sheriff's deputies were "cowardly little bums."
The Bank of America headquarters in San Francisco, the world's largest banking system, termed the burning of its Isla Vista building an act of "insurrection" and offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those who set the fires.
Deputies were summoned from two neighboring counties and a force of 450 helmeted officers swept into the Isla Vista district at 2 a.m. to break up the six-hour rampage a few blocks from the campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara.
Attorney William Kunstler had addressed a crowd of more than 5,000 students at the UCSB football stadium Wednesday afternoon, exhorting them to make the defendants at the Chicago trial a symbol. Kunstler said he did not consider sporadic violence a "good tactic" but then added:
"I think we have to show the so-called establishment a voice that's strong and clear and then they'll have to judge their future course accordingly."
Almost all the students left the stadium peacably and dispersed, but a small group gathered in a park and as night fell the crowd grew, many of them non-students. They marched down the Embarcadero Del Mar and forced sheriff's deputies to retreat from a three-block area which they held until the mass assault by officers.
A Bank of America branch office was broken into and drapes and furniture set ablaze until the entire two-story structure was burned to a shell while onlookers shouted: "The Bank of America breaks human laws. Death to corporations."
Thirteen fire companies responded to the alarm, but the firemen were forced to turn back when the rioters hurled rocks at them and threw garbage cans filled with stones at the vehicles. The vault of the bank withstood the flames.
Twenty-six police officers were injured, with four of them taken to a hospital. One deputy suffered a possible concussion and another sustained a slash in the chin that required 15 stitches.
Student dissidents denied the lawyer's appearance was the cause of the violence. They blamed "police harassment" and the firing of a professor.
Campus briefs
Education board to be formed
The selection committee for the student advisory board of the KU School of Education recently met to discuss selection of members for the board.
The first student advisory board will be made up of 15 members of the School of Education. Members will represent the areas of elementary education, physical education, art education, music education, secondary education and the Graduate School.
The student selection committee will interview education majors who are qualified and interested in the advisory board.
After the advisory board is chosen, two faculty members will be selected from a group of five suggested by the School of Education, or the Administrative Committee.
Individual interviews for the student advisory committee will be conducted by the selection committee, March 8, March 15, and April 5.
Thomas appointed captain
John M. Thomas, a lieutenant of the traffic and security department at KU, has been appointed to the newly created position of captain in the department.
The appointment is part of the reorganization of the department begun last September when the position of director of security was authorized. That position is vacant because of the death of E. P. Moomau.
Thomas will be in charge of the department until a director is appointed.
Thomas' responsibilities will include helping to formulate and implement traffic control, management and organization; police management; and scheduling and establishing routine for the security and traffic staff.
Children's drama class offered
A class in creative dramatics for children in the third and fourth grades will be offered by the department of speech and drama. The group will have a limited enrollment of 16 and will serve as a demonstration for University students in creative dramatics.
Classes will meet from 4:30 p.m. to 5:20 p.m. Wednesdays from March 5 to April 20 in room 235 of Murphy Hall. Parents may enroll their children in the class by calling the speech department March 3 or March 4. A $1 charge will be made for the entire series.
The group will be under the leadership of Mrs. Kathryn Reed, Overland Park graduate student in children's theatre and creative dramatics.
Hi-Y seminar to meet Saturday
The 23rd annual Hi-Y Youth in Government seminar will meet Saturday, Feb. 28, at the University of Kansas. This is one of three such seminars to be held this Saturday. The other two locations are Manhattan and Wichita.
The program is sponsored by the YMCA.
Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, will be the legislative representative to the conference in Lawrence.
The purpose of the "pre-legislative" conference is to teach juniors and seniors in high school the starting procedures of bills, election of officers and general parliamentary procedure in the Senate and House of Representatives.
Soil conference scheduled
The 19th annual Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering Conference will meet Friday, March 13, at the University of Kansas.
The theme for the program is field and laboratory testing.
Presiding will be David I. Henderson, chairman of the Soil Mechanics and Foundations Technical Division of the Kansas City section of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), and Roy J. Leonard, professor of civil engineering at KU.
Topics of discussion include "Field Testing in Engineering Geo-
eld Testing in Engineering Geophysics," "Recent Innovations in Dynamic Laboratory Testing," and "Soil Mechanics at the University of Kansas."
2 KANSAN
Feb. 27
1970
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HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION
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Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced Thursday the creation of the Chancellor's Committee on the University's Effect on its Physical Environment.
Chalmers announces committee on physical environmental goals
The chancellor said the problem of environmental pollution is a matter of increasing social concern in this country.
"Since the University of Kansas is the largest single enterprise within the City of Lawrence," the chancellor said, "we should be leading the pace in our community with reference to environmental pollution. It would seem appropriate to examine our practices and procedures and to determine whether there are ways in which we could reduce whatever adverse affect our activities might have upon the Lawrence environment."
The committee will be made up of faculty, students and administrators. Chairman of the committee will be Ross McKimney, the Parker Professor of civil engineering. Members are: Robert L. Smith, director of the Water Resources Institute and chairman of the civil engineering department; James L. Koevenig, associate professor of biology and botany; Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., graduate student and a student member of the Senate Executive Committee; Debra Mitchell, Liberty, Mo., junior; Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, and Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for finance.
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Velvel says 'Seven' charges ambiguous
Lawrence Velvet, KU associate law professor, told the Faculty Forum Wednesday his impressions of the "Chicago Seven" trial which concluded this week.
Velvel said the validity of the trial, of the charges and of the judge's conduct in the trial should be questioned.
The charges, Velvel said, of crossing a state line with the intent to riot are too ambiguous. If several persons sat in a room and commented on a demonstration in a neighboring state, and then one participant in the conversation went to the riot and was arrested, the entire group could also be charged with conspiracy to cross a state line to incite riot, Velvel said.
Velvel alleged the reason Judge Julius Hoffman refused to permit former Attorney General Ramsey Clark to testify and refused to allow the defense to cross-examine Mayor John Daley was he was "clearly hostile" to the defendants.
An example of Hoffman's hostility, Velvel said, was the severity of the contempt rulings against the defendants and their
lawyers. The contempt power is a power which no one but the judge has, the power to lay down the law, prosecute and act as judge and jury all at once, Velvel said.
Justice Hugo Black of the U.S. Supreme Court said a judge was a man, Velvel said. Black inferred that a man could get his feelings and dignity hurt and his spirit aroused, so the courts must beware of allowing a judge to get too much power, Velvel said. "A judge must not be able to judge his own cause," he added.
If the judge waits until the end of a trial to sentence the defendants on contempt charges, he said, a new judge should rule on the case so that emotions of the case are removed. The defendants presented no evidence and had no opportunity to make a case against their sentences, Velvel added.
The U.S. Supreme Court has cut back on the judge's contempt power in the past two years. Hoffman tried to circumvent this ruling by sentencing each contemptuous act separately — and each was for less than six months, Velvet said.
Students bare facts at birthday suit party
CHICAGO (UPI) — "I just walked over to see what was coming off." James W. Vice, assistant dean of students at the University of Chicago, said.
What the dean found was 147 male and female students frolicking nude in a university swimming pool.
"It was all very good natured," he said.
The mass skinny-dip was sponsored by the Students for Violent Non-Action (SVNA), a campus group dedicated to the absurd.
Ostensibly, the Wednesday night swim was billed as a "Happy Birthday Frank" party in honor of Frank Malbranche, who is said to be chief of the SVNA. Everyone was invited to "wear your birthday suit."
Malbranche, however, is mythical and is a play on the name of
Nicolas de Malebranche, 17th and 18th Century French philosopher. Philosophical games have been among the more popular sports at Chicago ever since the school abandoned Big Ten football.
The SVNA, which is recognized as a student group by the university, obtained a permit from the school for use of the pool.
The students gambled about in the water for about two hours and then retired to the showers where they lathered up together before returning home.
Vice was asked if there was any university regulations against such an event.
"Well, I don't really think anyone ever thought to write a rule against this sort of thing," he said.
Welfare bill approved by House committee
The law ceases to be fair when it punishes persons because they don't approve of what many persons are doing, he said. Hoffman, he added, has violated nearly every procedure in fairness of the law.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Ways and Means Committee Thursday approved President Nixon's plan to reform the nation's welfare system by giving cash subsidies to 3.8 million "working poor" families.
The proposal, carrying a $4.4 billion price tag that would double federal outlays for public assistance, has been called revolutionary because it rejects the traditional view that welfare benefits should go only to those who are both penniless and helpless.
Nixon himself told the governors' conference Wednesday he originally had little hope for early action on the "family assistance plan." But the committee's informal decision, to be made final next week, could bring a showdown vote in the House by mid-March.
The only condition of the new benefits would be the willingness of employable adult members of poor families to accept jobs when
The committee also decided to give so-called "adult" welfare recipients larger guaranteed benefits than Nixon had asked.
The bill would extend guaranteed benefits to an estimated 20 million persons in families that earned some income but remain below the poverty line or otherwise did not qualify for welfare.
Feb. 27 KANSAN 3
1970
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The number of senators publicly opposing Judge G. Harrold Carswell for the Supreme Court rose to 19 Thursday with the addition of Sens. George S. McGovern, D-S.D., and Jacob K. Javits, R.N.Y.
available or train for jobs that require skill. The program also proposes to make day care facilities available for widowed, divorced or deserted mothers with school age children.
Both based their opposition to Carswell on his civil rights record. McGovern said Carswell's legal career had been marked by "racism and mediocrity."
Opposition to Carswell increases
The entire trial was one transaction, thus the contempts would constitute only one act with one six month sentence each, Velvel said.
Seven" type in the U.S. the Vietnam War has not been allowed to be brought into trial, Velvel said. The law must have a sense of justice to represent the people, he said, and the law has to have a public opinion sanction.
Fourteen senators have announced they will vote to approve Carswell's nomination when the Senate takes it up sometime in March.
Every trial of the "Chicago
But Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., one of the first to oppose the 50-year-old jurist, told reporters Thursday, "I still expect him to be confirmed."
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KWSAN COMMENT
Theater of the abstruse
Puffy gray clouds rolled back, gently introducing the sun's warm beams to the Journalism School office one afternoon not long ago. A list of Daily Kansan business managers—1957-1961—and their high school graduation ranking had caught my eye as I settled into one of a group of chairs set there for errant students and prospective job interviewees. I heard undergraduates greeting professors with customary deference outside the door; two of them were bridging the generation gap via a discussion of the Four Noble Truths and the eightfold path.
The serenity of it all would have eased me through the final honeydewed corridor of the journey to Blissful Sleep, had I not been jolted into awareness by a sudden clatter, interspersed with random expletives, coming from the far side of the office.
"Asterisks! Ampersands! Dollar signs!" the mimeograph machine shouted in its husky, ink-nourished voice.
"Yes, and per cent signs, question marks and parentheses, too." returned the machine's antagonist, a graduate student intent on making 34 copies of his term paper. "But what business is it of yours whether I print these things? Asterisks, ampersands and what-have-you are just substitutes for obscenities, profanements and vulgarities, which, because of their irredeeming social insignificance, I have chosen to delete. Besides, why should a machine be allowed to preach to me about what's right and wrong?"
"My big toe!" the machine shouted derisively.
(Having conceded this 20-inch Gestetner 300 its ability to talk, I allowed it the factual offense of referring to its big toe, although I could observe no such appendage.)
"Asterisks, ampersands, dollar signs and whatever
what-have-you's are, a form of typographical pyrotechnics that I find more loathsome than the words themselves," retorted the machine. "And they waste more ink than dashes do."
"Why, if I printed a paper like this," it continued, "then there are no moral or ethical codes to live by. Even if my son could read, I wouldn't want him to read this."
(By then, I was so enthralled with the argument that I wrote of the machine's claim to a family as an unfortunate deviation from the proper bounds of allegory.)
"And as for my business in telling you right from wrong, I've been around here a lot longer than you, sonny, and I know what should appear before women and children's eyes and what shouldn't." said the loquacious mimeograph, now assuming a patriarchal tone.
Here, I felt, was a philosophical slip on the part of this amazing collection of nuts and bolts. The only people I could imagine who might see the paper were a couple of codgerly professors, the graduate student's father (who would get a good laugh out of it) and the student's girl friend, who, being a coed, was used to lascivious asterisks.
"Well, you've never liked graduate students anyway," the machine's would-be operator sputtered, and I agreed, remembering that the machine had often left ink blotches on some of my friends' papers.
In order to rectify the mimeograph's blunt injustice to him, the graduate student bolted out of the room. Soon, he returned, carrying a stack of mimeographed course syllabi—printed earlier on that very machine—which he had evidently purloined from the second floor cubbyhole of an assistant professor.
Rushing past the already confused secretary, he tossed the stack of syllabi out the window, from which they drifted down upon a campus policeman who was entering the building to investigate the ruckus.
"Good day, officer," I nervously greeted the entering cop as I began to edge toward the door.
Bent on discovering the cause of the trouble, the policeman failed to notice me, and I made good my escape.
Safely out of range, I turned to watch him appear from the office; he had in custody neither the loud-mouthed machine nor the irate graduate student, but the secretary.
The graduate student peeked through the office doorway, his mouth open in astonishment. The mimeograph machine would have done the same, but it was not endowed with mobility.
The policeman guided his prisoner through the building exit, berating her for her "permissiveness," "aimless drifting," and "super tolerance" in the face of the disputants' preceding threats to academic dignity and the well-being of the state's taxpayers.
Already flustered by the existence of a talking Gestetner 300 and especially one which was capable of ethical judgments, I strolled into the newsroom condemning the machine, the graduate student and the policeman for their absurd actions and reactions.
I decided to make some substantive protest to this miasma of irrationality, so I grabbed a copy pencil from the hands of an alarmed girl reporter and scrawled "*&$* the draft" all over the walls.
And I felt a lot better.
—Monroe Dodd
hearing voices—
(Editor's note: the views expressed in "hearing voices" are the writers'; they do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the University Daily Kansan, its news, editorial or business staffs, or the Kansan Board.)
To the editor:
The reason for the KU Printing Service walkout stated by the Kansan as "...protesting an alleged obscene poem in the Harambee" was only one fact resulting in the walkout.
If we were to leave the public with only obscenity as the factor for protest, the purpose would be lost. The Harambee is in circulation now, perhaps people will see for themselves.
The paper Harambee advocates violence. One article in the paper defines the need for violence stating that "... politics grows out of the barrel of a gun."
Other statements: "An unarmed people are slaves, or subjected to slavery at any given time;" "Free all Political Prisoners." I feel the blacks should develop their culture, but not through violent overthrow of the United States.
If the Printing Service were to print this advocate of violence then the University of Kansas, the governmental bodies of Kansas, and the Printing Service itself—a Civil Service organization—would in essence be non-opposed to the overthrow of the United States and the release of "political" criminals.
This would be a violation of our moral freedom we enjoy in the United States and make us a product of mockery.
Jack L. Hurley Lawrence senior and Printing Service employee
✕ ✕ ✕
To the editor:
Realizing that it is impertinent for a guest to comment publicly on the internal affairs of his host country, I nevertheless feel it pertinent, as a KU student, to voice my support for Professor Lawrence Velvel in the "Feb. 17" affair. Senator Shultz's intimidation to fire or disbar Professor Velvel, and Senator L. Arvin's threat to vote against future appropriation bills for higher education not only represented an attempt to gag the academic community, but also violated Professor Velvel's freedom of speech and assembly as guaranteed, I am sure the legislators are aware of, by the United States Constitution. These acts of victimization and coercion are not dissimilar, at least in spirit, to those practiced in totalitarian countries where the ruling party, with its so-called masses (silent majority!) is always presumed to be right.
Ho-Leung Fung Hong Kong graduate student
Griff & the Unicorn
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Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970.
University Daily Kansan.
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THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
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KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Another peep show
BY RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
Most X-rated sex-exploitation films seem to be made for audiences of masochists: those who are willing to sit through what seems like hours of painfully bad movie for a few seconds of poorly filmed sexual titilation. Eroticism on film can be healthy and refreshing, but it needs to be surrounded by reasonably good cinema.
"The Libertine" seems, at first, to be of higher quality than its predecessors. For one thing, two name stars top its cast list: Catherine Spaak and the excellent French actor, Jean-Louis Trintignant; in addition, it sports a fairly sophisticated advertising campaign, and Italian production, rather than American or, worse, Swedish. Most skin flicks fall outside the realm of regular film criticism, but this one apparently asks to be taken seriously as legitimate entertainment. But can it?
No one will be too surprised to find the normal, atrocious dubbing, abominable acting (except for Trintignant), and abyssal photography (This one's in color). But the story holds the germ of something quite intriguing: a young widow discovers that her husband led a double life as a sado-masochistic sex pervert; her reaction is of disappointment that she was not included in his revels; so she begins to study and dabble in various types of exotic relationships; and is finally brought down to earth by a level-headed young doctor. Promising comedy material, if only it could be handled with intelligence. The script is filled with double entendres of a subtler nature than usual, and it has a few lines—and one or two scenes—that are genuinely funny. But the subject cries out for consistency of style and an eye for character, not to mention technical competence, and above all, the filmmakers need to realize that nudity and sexual activity presented without taste and imagination can look downright ugly.
A good smutty movie should be exhilarating, not depressing.
BOOKS
RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AND CONSCIENCE: A CONSTITUTIONAL INQUIRY, by Milton R. Konvitz (Viking Compass, $1.35)
—A scholarly essay on an important subject by a man who
has written, or in some cases assembled, several worthy volumes in recent years on First Amendment questions. In a time when conscience has driven some young men to Sweden and Canada and others to prison, and when the Supreme Court has come under attack for positions taken on church-state questions, the book is particularly timely.
Feb. 27
1970 KANSAN 5
"VIVA MAX"—Pretty childish comedy about a modern-day Mexican general who recaptures the Alamo. Peter Ustinov, Jonathan Winters and Harry Morgan give it intermittent life.
The Weekend Scene
"THE REIVERS"—Superb little comedy-drama, in its third week.
"THE LIBERTINE"—See review this page.
"LOCK UP YOUR DAUGHTERS"—Bawdy British comedy, trying to catch the "Tom Jones" wave about six years too late.
"WAY OUT WEST" (SUA Popular Film—Fri. and Sat.)- Western spoof with Laurel and Hardy; 1937.
"HORSEEATHERS" (S UA Popular Film—Fri. and Sat.-The Marx Brothers decimate a college in one of their best movies; 1932. (Both films shown twice.)
ROCK CHALK REVUE (Fri. and Sat.)—The biggest thing on the weekend schedule, this hopefully will prove to be original, entertaining and well done. All Greek fans are especially urged to attend.
"THE COMPUTER WORE TENNIS SHOES""-The Disney version of fun on a college campus.
RECORDS: Doors' album welcome change
By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer
The Doors' new album, "Morrison Hotel," is a welcome change from their last album, "Soft Parade." They have kicked out the brass that had seemed to put a strain on their style and philosophy and have gone back to the erotic type of music of their first two albums. In fact, "Hotel" approaches their first album, which has become a classic and would be extremely difficult to equal since it ushered in the innovative style of the group.
The key to the music of the Doors' is eroticism—sexual eroticism. The philosophy comes through in the vocals of Jim Morrison. This philosophy is love is sex, sex is death, and love is the only spiritual death we can hope for. Hotel doesn't reach the same erotic level of the boy-gets-girl climaxes of the first album, but it has its moments.
This philosophy comes through best on "Maggie M'Gill and Roadhouse Blues." The latter features the erotic strains of a harmonica against a driving blues guitar and the piano playing of Ray Manzarek. The Doors have added a more definite blues tone to the music since their appearance three years ago.
In "Waiting for the Sun" guitarist Bobbie Krieger contrasts melodious strains with a hard driving rhythm. Morrison is telling us to cast off those things in our life which we know are false and wait for the sun.
"This is the strangest life I have ever known," he sings, and then screams his plea to get back to the simple truths. Again on "Ship of Fools" he urges us to climb on board and sail away from a smog-filled world to a place where we can see the sun—and ourselves.
Krieger has developed the uncanny talent of being able to play so slow that the listener isn't even aware of his presence in the composition. When you suddenly realize it you rise up, thinking you have discovered a hidden truth in the music. And this gives you another reason for liking the Doors. Krieger displays this technique on the selection, "Ship of Fools."
This technique is nearly switched to Manzarek on the cut, "Indian Summer," where a soft, haunting organ creeps along behind Morrison's images of fragrant, prenatal summer days.
The imagery of the music comes alive before us in "Queen of the Highway," a song about the brutal love cycle. Morrison is telling us that we, the epitome of evolution,
have descended from savages. The erotic climax brings to the mind images of savages "dancing in a whirlpool." In the strong rhythm and blues number, "You Make Me Real," Morrisson again speaks of identity through sex and survival as a sex desire.
"Land He" is another song that talks of going back. This time the going back is a return to the adventurous life of the sea. "I'm going crazy from living on land," Morrison sings.
Much of the message of the Doors' music is not found in the words, but in every part of the total composition. They are the masters of eroticism in music, and to convey their message successfully they must be captured at the right moment when their music is reaching its fresh, erotic climax, and before it becomes stale from repetition. That moment depends as much on the musicians reaching their climatic state. This album, captured at just such a moment, presents a vivid, listening experience.
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THIS THEATRE IS OFF LIMITS!
During the engagement of "CAN HEIRONYMUS MERKIN EVER FORGET MERCY HUMPPE AND FIND TRUE HAPPINESS?," we must advise our patrons that the picture Playboy Magazine devoted 10 pages to is
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There are some scenes so explicit, so realistic, so natural that "IT MAKES 'BLOW-UP' LOOK LIKE SHIRLEY TEMPLE IN 'LITTLE MISS MARKER'!"
Anthony Newley · Joan Collins · Milton Berle
"Can Heironymus Merkin ever forget Mercy Humppe and find true happiness?"
co-starring Bruce Forsyth · Stubby Kaye and George Jessel as "The Presence"
A Universal Pictures Limited, Tarah Corporation Production · A Regional Film Release · Technicolor"
"BARBARELLA"
The Space Age Adventure Whose Sex Ploits Are Among the Most Bizarre Ever Seen
Starring Jane Fonda Special Guest David Hemmings
Bonus Saturday "LADY IN A CAGE"
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Coming A Film By Richard Brooks
By Richard Brooks
She's got everything a woman could want.
She's still missing
"The Happy Ending"
Starring Jean Simmons Nominated "Best Actress" NEXT ATTRACTION
Varsity
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Agnew says 'Seven' are 'social misfits'
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew told the nation's governors Thursday that defendants in the conspiracy trial of the "Chicago Seven" were a "handful of oddballs who deliberately set out to disrupt the most basic protection of our country, the dignity of the courts."
Agnew criticized the defendants and other "social misfits" in a speech at the mid-winter meeting of the National Governors Conference. He saved his denunciation of the "Chicago Seven" until the final minutes of his speech and drew a round of applause when he finished.
It does not matter, he said, whether or not everyone agrees with all the rulings of federal Judge Julius Hoffman.
the new technique of judicial disruption is spreading like wildfire through the country. The tactic is to provoke and inflame in the hope that over-reaction will obliterate the true nature of the proceeding.
"Courts are becoming carnivals. Laws are flouted. Criminals commit their despicable acts against society in the name of political activity."
Hoffman sentenced all seven defendants and two of their defense attorneys to jail terms for contempt of court. Five of the seven were convicted on charges of crossing state lines to incite a riot.
Agnew told the governors that the "overriding and compelling issue in the United States today is will the government of this country remain in the hands of
than television cameras."
the front pages of our newspapers."
Twenty-five years ago, Agnew said, "the tragic-comic antics of social misfits would have brought the establishment running after them with butterfly nets rather
its elected officials or will it descend to the streets."
"It is in this inordinate attention to the bizarre," Agnew said, "this preoccupation with the dramatic, this rationalization of the ridiculous that we threaten the progress of our nation."
He urged the governors to demonstrate leadership and "drive these bizarre extremists from their pre-emptive positions on our television screens and on
Advertising students travel to New York
Five students and one faculty member from the University of Kansas School of Journalism will be participating in the "Inside Advertising - Marketing Week" program in New York March 1-6.
"The program is sponsored by the Ad Club of New York and is the best program of its kind for students in advertising," said Mel Adams, associate professor of journalism and adviser for the group.
Students making the trip are: Jerry Bottenfield, Pittsburg senior; Jim Czupor, Lawrence senior; Rod Osborne, Hutchinson senior; Shelley Bray, Bartlesville, Okla., senior and Joanne Bos, Lena, Ill., senior. Adams will accompany the group.
Adams said the purpose of the program was to attract the top advertising students in the nation to eventually work in New York.
During the program students will be exposed to some of the top men in the advertising field and will be interviewed for jobs by firms and agencies, Adams said.
About 1 million persons in Mexico still speak Nahua, language of the Aztec Indians.
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HIXON STUDIO
"In the name of national security," Mansfield told the governors, "this excess threatens to jeopardize our national security.
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
KU Students Cleaning Headquarters
Mansfield told a joint Capitol meeting of the National Governor's Conference Executive Committee and congressional leaders that America's "urgent need is to shed what has long since become an obsessive and excessive foreign involvement."
launderers and dry cleaners
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It has led us into Vietnam. It could lead us to re-enact that tragedy elsewhere."
The Montana senator did not mention Laos by name but he and others have been clamoring for President Nixon to reveal the U.S. involvement in Laos warfare.
Angry students protest at University of New York
The bricks, stones and chunks of ice were hurled at the campus guards as they advanced toward the group. At least one campus policeman was knocked unconscious as the police force retreated. He was carried from the area by two companions.
WASHINGTON (UPD)—Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield warned the nation's governors Thursday that an obsession with national security could lead the United States into more wars like the one in Vietnam.
Phone 843-3711
Mansfield said the governors could "help rectify the balance" between essential defense expenditures and fulfilling the needs at home.
Administration officials believed the disorders stem from a boycott of basketball practice by black members of the team in November. The blacks demanded that coach Leu Sorfustini be fired, that a Negro coach be added to the staff, and that blacks be given a greater share of athletic grants-in-aid.
Feb. 27
1970
Mansfield warns governors against security obsession
more than 500 dissidents surrounded the Hayes Hall administration building at the campus. Within two hours, the crowd swelled to an estimated 1,000 of the school's 23,000 student enrollment.
In a meeting with Chairman Wilbur Mills, D-Dark., of the House Ways and Means Committee and Rep. John W. Byrnes, R-Wis., top ranking GOP committee member, a delegation of governors appealed for greater federal help in meeting welfare and health costs.
"It will avail us little to pursue our national security zealously all over Southeast Asia and all over the world and multiply our missiles if, at the same time, we permit neglect of our domestic needs to bring down our national house from within."
6 KANSAN
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)—More than 1,200 angry students hurled bricks, stones, heavy boards and chunks of ice in turning back 30 helmeted city and campus police Thursday in violence that erupted for the third straight day on the State University at Buffalo campus.
Two policemen suffered minor injuries and two demonstrators were arrested for disorderly conduct. Students drifted back to the interior of the campus at sunset and the confrontation cooled down.
At its height, more than 175 campus and city police and Erie County sheriff's deputies were at the scene.
The
Captain's Table
Ever since the first ship was built for extended journeys in which food supplies were brought aboard, the ships captain always had the finest of the staples available. Often captains had their own supply which was far superior to that of the lower ranking officers and crew. This, in addition to the fact that the ship's captain was considered a king in his own right, led to the prestige of the captain's table. In the early days the captain often ate alone, and as time and knowledge of the sea progressed, the voyages became much longer. History doesn't say whether it was from boredom of eating alone, losing touch with the ship's officers, or the discussion of ships's business during dinner, but the captain began inviting his officers for dinner. This soon extended to the prominent and rich passengers aboard ship and there was much prestige accorded to those who were invited to dine at the captain's table. This tradition has been handed down through centuries and even today aboard luxury liners and tramp steamers alike, there is a certain aura to being invited to dine at the captain's table. Not wanting to set naval tradition back several centuries we feel here, every table is THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE.
Each selection is separately priced for two reasons. First, our unique cash register system requires individual pricing. Second, it is the owners opinion that a customer should not have to pay for something that comes with a dinner that they do not wish to eat, but may order from a menu items that they do wish to eat. Hence, the very economical appearance of certain prices. These low prices certainly do not reflect the quality of merchandise. Quite the contrary; to date we have brought before you the finest we can find, and we plan to continue on this course. We hope that The Captain's Table will be an adventure in fine dining.
Ace Johnson
Sun Penumbra Umbra Moon Earth
Partial eclipse to shade Lawrence
This drawing shows what happens when the moon blots out the sun in a total eclipse. The umbra or "cone of totality" sweeps across the land giving people a chance to view this rare and unusual occurrence. Residents in northern Florida and Georgia will see the sun totally eclipsed whereas Kansas will see only a partial eclipse March 7.
Solar eclipse to occur
By MIKE RADENCICH Kansan Staff Writer
On Saturday, March 7, an age-old but still unusual phenomenon will occur in the morning skies. The sun, always a symbol of life to man, will slowly be covered by the finally conquered last frontier, the moon.
This phenomenon, known as a solar eclipse, has always captivated the interest and, oftentimes, the fear of man since the Stone Age. In medieval times, it was the subject of great fear and was always thought of as a sign signifying the coming of the end of the world.
Today civilization considers the solar eclipse an interesting and fascinating natural occurrence.
Scientists, especially, see the solar eclipse as a rare opportunity to observe the otherwise invisible solar prominence or flame.
Once every three or four years the moon, when in its "new moon" stage, becomes lined up with the sun in such a fashion that it passes directly in front of the sun. In a certain part of the world, the shadow cone produced by this eclipse traces what is called a "path of totality" across the earth's face.
People in the path of totality see the sun become completely hidden by the moon. At the exact moment of totality, the sky becomes dark and the normally invisible daytime stars can be seen.
Other areas not in the totality zone see the sun only partially covered and experience no nightlike darkness.
N. W. Storer, professor of astronomy at the University of Kansas, said he planned to travel to Florida where the zone of totality will pass.
Storer said the total eclipse, which will begin at 10:57 a.m. Saturday, would be visible to people along a band stretching from northern Florida up through Georgia and the southeastern seaboard states. He said that the path of the total eclipse would be approximately 90 miles wide and would pass through Tallahassee.
Storer said that for the Lawrence area the height of the eclipse would occur at 12:10 p.m. when 63 per cent of the sun's diameter would be covered.
Storer strongly emphasized the need for precaution when viewing the eclipse. He said that people should not look directly at the sun without adequate protection since the sun's rays could permanently damage the eyes.
The best kind of protection to use, he said, is welder's goggles or a piece of film negative that is completely black. Storer said the easiest guideline to follow in using exposed film was if normal
DEATH TOLLS
NEW YORK—Accidents, the fourth most frequent cause of death, killed approximately 115,000 persons in the United States in 1968, says the Insurance Information Institute. Only heart disease, cancer, and strokes claimed more lives.
Feb. 27
1970 KANSAN 7
light did not pass through it it could be used.
Storer, who has previously seen three total solar eclipses, said he would visit Valdosta College where a large number of astronomers will meet to view the eclipse. He said Valdosta, Ga. is approximately in the center of the path of totality.
The University Senate met Thursday afternoon in the University Theatre, but not for long. The meeting which was scheduled to begin at 3:30 p.m., but recessed 30 minutes later due to lack of a quorum.
University Senate meeting lacks quorum,calls recess
Before any announcement was
Enlistments fall in Guard
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Negro enlistments in the National Guard have fallen since the Guard has been used to quell riots, a defense Department official said Thursday.
Although the Guard has grown by 11,000 men since December, 1967, the earliest date for which figures were available, the number of Negroes had dropped by 320 by last December, to barely 1 per cent of the force.
Col. William Shimer, head of the Guard's equal opportunity employment office, attributed the drop to the trend of using the guard in civil disturbances.
Even Tom Jones Never Had It So Good! "Lock Up YourDaughters"
"More gropings, seducings, plunging necklines,
plots and counterplots than 'Tom Jones'!"—Playboy
Even Tom Jones Never Had It So Good!
"Lock Up Your Daughters"
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A DOMINO PRODUCTION COLOR
Ends Tommorow
Eve. 7:15
9:10
THE Hillcrest
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Rated R
Adults 1.50
"More gropings, seducings, plunging necklines, plots and counterplots than 'Tom Jones'!"—Playboy
Even Tom Jones Never Had It So Good!
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A DOMINO PRODUCTION COLOR
Ends Tommorow
Eve. 7:15
9:10
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
Rated R Adults 1.50
Hurry ... This May Be My Final Week!
Steve McQueen "The Reivers"
Panavision® & Technicolor® A Cinema Center Films Presentation A National General Pictures Release
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Adult 1.50; Child .75
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
"More gropings, seducings, plunging necklines, plots and counterplots than 'Tom Jones'!"—Playboy
Even Tom Jones Never Had It So Good!
"Lock Up Your Daughters"
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A DOMINO PRODUCTION. COLOR
Ends Tommorow
Eve. 7:15
9:10
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
Rated R Adults 1.50
Hurry . . . This May Be My Final Week!
Steve McQueen "The Reivers"
Panavision' & Technicolor' A Cinema Center Films Presentation. A National General Pictures Release.
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Adult 1.50; Child .75
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
The NOW Movie Of Our Year Starts March 4th
"ASTONISHINGLY PERFECT!" "GO.SQUIRM!"
—ARCHER WINSTEN, NEW YORK POST —LOOK MAGAZINE
"WILL KNOCK YOU OUT OF YOUR SEAT!"
—ABC-TV
"EXTRAORDINARYACHIEVEMENT!"
—NEW REPUBLIC
"THE IMPACT IS DEVASTATING!"
—JUDITH CRIST, NEW YORK MAGAZINE
"A MAJOR RAKEHELL FILM!"
—TIME
"The REAL THING!" "STUNNING!"
—PENELOPE GILLIATT, THE NEW YORKER —CBS RADIO
"ROUSING, RHYTHMIC, SPLENDID!"
—andREW SARRIS, VILLAGEVOICE
"A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY."
—PLAYBOY
"ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!"
—JOSEPH MORGENSTERN, NEWSWEEK
easy Rider
PETER FONDA · DENNIS HOPPER
JACK NICHOLSON
STARTS WEDNESDAY
Hurry . . . This
May Be My
Final Week!
Steve McQueen
"The Reivers"
Panavision® & Technicolor' A Cinema Center Films Presentation. A National General Pictures Release
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Adult 1.50; Child .75
THE
Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
A. H.
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND 10WA
The NOW Movie Of Our Year Starts March 4th
"ASTONISHINGLY PERFECT!" "GO.SQUIRM!"
—ARCHER WINSTEN, NEW YORK POST —LOOK MAGAZINE
"WILL KNOCK YOU OUT OF YOUR SEAT!"
—ABC-TV
"EXTRAORDINARY ACHIEVEMENT!"
—NEW REPUBLIC
"The IMPACT IS DEVASTATING!"
—JUDITH CRIST, NEW YORK MAGAZINE
"A MAJOR RAKEHELL FILM!"
—TIME
"The REAL THING!" "STUNNING!"
—PENELOPE GILLIATT, THE NEW YORKER —CBS RADIO
"ROUSING, RHYTHMIC, SPLENDID!"
—ANDREW SARRIS, VILLAGEVOICE
"A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY."
—PLAYBOY
"ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!"
—JOSEPH MORGENSTERN, NEWSWEEK
9!"
STARTS WEDNESDAY March 4 at the
Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student then motioned to recess until next Thursday. The motion carried unanimously.
made, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University counted those members present. Of the 200 faculty and 48 student members needed for a quorum only 125 faculty and 17 student members appeared.
Despite the poor showing, a few members still wanted to discuss the agenda. Howard F. Stettler, professor of business administration, suggested calling a meeting of the committee as a whole to discuss the issues and then present the remaining members ballots by mail. Others however wanted to recess until next Thursday.
Granada
TALATRE ...telephone VI 3-5728
ought to reschedule the meeting for next week at the same time. If this occurs again, we may be in a real bind, because we may never get a quorum and we need a quorum to meet and change 'the existing quorum," said Charles H. @ldfather, presiding senate chairman.
"I have an inclination that we
One hundred years ago, the enrollment at the University of Kansas was 152 students and eight faculty members.
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Eve. 7:20 & 9:05
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:20
Adult 1.50
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Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30
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Cowboys first on agenda
'Hawks begin roadswing to Oklahoma
Now that K-State clinched the Big Eight title with a 79-69 win over Colorado last night, the KU Jayhawks will venture to Stillwater to strengthen their hold on the conference's runner-up spot when they clash with Oklahoma State State afternoon.
The talented Hawks, unbeaten at home but just like everybody else on the road, visit the Cowboys for a regionally-televised game in Gallagher Hall. Tip-off is 2:10.
The Jayhawks, 15-8 on the year,
stand 6-5 in the league. KU is 6-0
at home and 0-5 on the road in
the conference. Henry Iba's Cowboys are 13-1 overall and 4-7 in the Big Eight.
Leading the 'Hawks will be junior Dave Robisch, the Big Eight's leading scorer with a 28 point average and the second place league rebounder with a 13.0 average. Robisch, a 6-9 southpaw, banked in 31 points against the Cowboys earlier in the season—the most points allowed by the Pokes to an individual this season.
PROBABLE STARTERS
Cowboys in Allen Field House, will once again start at the post position. Senior captain Chet Lawrence and Bob Kivisto, who turned in one of his better performances in Tuesday's conquest of Missouri, will hold down the backcourt for the 'Hawks.
Pierre Russell, 6-3 junior, and the club's second top rebounder next to Robisch, will start at the other forward position. Roger Brown, who grabbed 10 rebounds in the 69-58 KU victory over the
Coach Iba will stay with his usual lineup of Rick Cooper and Bob Buck up front with Paul Mullen at center and Sparky Grober and John Robinson at the guard spots.
O-STATE Po-
Cooper (6-5) F
Buck (6-6) F
Mullen (6-7) C
Grober (5-10) G
Robinson (6-2) G
BOERS
KANSAS
Robishie (6-9)
Russell (6-3)
Brown (6-10)
Lawrence (6-1)
Kivisto (6-0)
Robisch moves towards league scoring mark
KANSAS CITY (UPI) Kansas' Dave Robisch's lead in the Big Eight basketball scoring derby is about as safe as Kansas State's bulge in the conference race.
Robish had a 63-point edge over runnerup Cliff Meely of Colorado, who is scoring at a 21-point clip in as many contests.
Statistics released by the conference office Wednesday and based on league games only shows the Jayhawks' burly 6-9 junior pivot carrying a 26.7 average through 11 games.
son and Grober have chalked up 10.2 and 8.6 averages respectively. Mullen, the team's tallest starter standing at 6-7, has totaled 234 points for a 10.1 average.
The only other Big Eight cager averaging 20 or more points is Oklahoma's Garfield Heard with a 20.3 mark.
Other individual statistical leaders include Iowa State's Bill Cain in rebounding with a 15.6 average, Iowa State's Gene Mack in field goal shooting with a .585 percentage and Missouri's Doug Johnson, who is sinking better than 85 per cent of his free throws.
K-State, which holds a three-game bulge over Kansas in the Conference race with only three games remaining, is the team leader in rebounds. The Wildcats are averaging 55.2 per cent of the caroms.
Other team leaders include Nebraska, hitting 46 per cent of its field goal shots, and Oklahoma State in free throw shooting with a .755 percentage.
Cooper tops the Cowboys in the scoring column with a 12.4 average but he is followed closely by Buck who sports a 12.3 points per game mark. Buck was OSU's top scorer against the Jayhawks in Allen Field House when he netted 15 points. He also led the team in rebounds for the season with 182 caroms in 23 encounters
BIG EIGHT STATISTICS CONFERENCE GAMES ONLY Scoring
Player and School | G | FG | FGA | FT | FTA | TP | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dave Robisch, C. Kansas | 11 | 103 | 213 | 88 | 114 | 294 | 26.7 |
| Cliff Meely, F. Colorado | 11 | 78 | 211 | 75 | 109 | 231 | 21.0 |
| Cliff Meely, F. Colorado | 11 | 78 | 211 | 75 | 109 | 231 | 21.0 |
| Bill Cain, C. Iowa State | 11 | 65 | 157 | 71 | 60 | 201 | 16.8 |
| Tom Scantlebury, G. Nebraska | 11 | 65 | 133 | 44 | 61 | 174 | 15.8 |
| Pierre Russell, F. Kansas | 11 | 65 | 134 | 43 | 50 | 163 | 14.8 |
| Pierre Russell, F. Kansas | 11 | 65 | 134 | 43 | 50 | 163 | 14.8 |
| Gordon Tope, G. Colorado | 12 | 56 | 140 | 46 | 65 | 158 | 14.4 |
| Henry Smith, C. Missouri | 12 | 56 | 138 | 43 | 52 | 172 | 14.3 |
| Henry Smith, C. Missouri | 12 | 56 | 138 | 43 | 52 | 172 | 14.3 |
| Rick Cochran, K. Kansas State | 11 | 67 | 148 | 25 | 46 | 157 | 14.3 |
| Rick Cochran, K. Kansas State | 11 | 67 | 148 | 25 | 46 | 157 | 14.3 |
| Bob Buck, F. Oklahoma State | 11 | 53 | 116 | 39 | 49 | 147 | 13.2 |
| Don Tomlinson, F. Missouri | 12 | 43 | 92 | 62 | 79 | 148 | 12.3 |
| Don Tomlinson, F. Missouri | 12 | 43 | 92 | 62 | 79 | 148 | 12.3 |
| Paul Gender, F. Kansas State | 11 | 46 | 98 | 41 | 53 | 133 | 12.1 |
| Paul Gender, F. Kansas State | 11 | 51 | 109 | 31 | 53 | 133 | 12.1 |
| Scott Martin, G. Oklahoma | 11 | 35 | 90 | 53 | 71 | 123 | 11.2 |
| Dave Collins, F. Iowa State | 11 | 51 | 147 | 31 | 38 | 123 | 11.1 |
Rebounding
Sharp-shooting guards Robin-
| Player and School | G | RBDS | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bill Cain, C, Iowa State | 12 | 187 | 15.6 |
| Cliff Moody, F, Colorado | 11 | 117 | 13.6 |
| Dave Robisch, C, Kansas | 11 | 139 | 12.6 |
| Garfield Heard, F, Oklahoma | 10 | 106 | 10.6 |
| Leroy Chalk, C, Nebraska | 10 | 115 | 10.5 |
| Pierre Russell, F, Kentucky | 11 | 102 | 9.3 |
| Henry Smith, C, Missouri | 10 | 92 | 8.3 |
| Jim Creighton, C, Colorado | 11 | 91 | 8.3 |
| David Hull, C, Kansas State | 11 | 88 | 8.0 |
| Aaron Jenkins, F, Texas State | 11 | 82 | 7.8 |
| Chuck Jura, F, Nebraska | 11 | 85 | 7.7 |
| Clifford Ray, C, Oklahoma | 11 | 84 | 7.6 |
The conference crown was the Wildcats' ninth in the past 15 years.
MANHATTAN (UPI) — Jerry Venable scored 31 points Thursday night in leading Kansas State University to a 79-69 basketball victory over Colorado and the Big Eight Conference championship.
Wildcats win to clinch title
8 KANSAN Feb. 27
1970
Kansas State jumped off to an early 25-17 lead but Colorado pulled to within one point and went in to the dressing room at the half a 36-35 underdog.
In the second stanza, the lead changed hands freely with K-
State grabbing a 54-47 advantage late in the going. But with 5:32 to go, Cliff Meely and Gordon Tope brought CU to within one at 60-59. Seconds later, Meely fouled out and Kansas State waltzed in for the Big Eight title.
The victory gave the Wildcats a berth in the NCAA Midwest Regionals at Lawrence.
Tope and Meely combined for 43 points to pace Colorado.
The home court win was Kansas State's 16th straight and left the Wildcats at 10-2 in the league and 19-5 for the season. Colorado dropped to 5-7 in Big Eight play and 12-12 for the year.
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Maravich can make or break NIT
LSU's 'Pistol Pete' will be attraction in Garden
NEW YORK (UPI) Pete Maravich can make or break the 33rd National Invitation Tournament.
The floppy-haired sharpshooter from Louisiana State University, the leading scorer in college basketball history, is the only "name" player guaranteed to sell tickets and television exposure for the NIT this year.
The NIT Selection Committee Wednesday named four of the 16 teams—LSU, St. John's, Marquette and Georgia Tech—for this year's tournament, but LSU and Maravich are the main attraction.
The tourney opens on March 13, but LSU is sure to be saved for a national television contest on Saturday afternoon in its opening game. If Maravich could propel the Tigers 17-8 to the semifinals or finals, the NIT will be guaranteed a lot of excitement. Without him, the NIT could lose a lot of luster since tenth-ranked Marquette 19-3 is
the only team in the top ten likely to be in the NIT this season.
While Maravich may be good for the NIT, it's also true the NIT could be good for Maravich. The SU senior has never had a chance to showcase his talents in New York with all the resulting exposure to be national media. One or two 60-point, record-breaking performances at Madison Square Garden might boost his price in the bidding war between the NBA and the ABA.
"I've always dreamed of playing in Madison Square Garden," Maravich said, "the people in New York really appreciate basketball and I think we can really put a show on for them."
Marquette was an automatic NIT choice because it rejected an NCAA bid on Tuesday. Marquette was disturbed because it was asked to switch from the Mideast to the Midwest Regional in the NCAA. Marquette, a loser in the NIT finals in 1967 to Southern Illinois, could be the
Robinson and Orioles pleased with contract
MIAMI (UPI)—Frank Robinson thought back to his first contract.
"It was $400 a month," he said. "I thought it was a great contract."
The one he signed with the Baltimore Orioles Wednesday wasn't bad either. That one will pay him $120,000 this year.
Robinson, who signed in time to join Baltimore's outfielders and infielders in their opening workout, said he was happy and so did the Orioles' brass.
"He has given us four years of fine service in the face of some physical handicaps," said Harry Dalton, the Orioles' vice-president and director of player personnel.
The signing was announced Wednesday, after which Robinson suited up and began his 18th year in pro ball.
When the workout was over, he talked about how some of his views had changed since coming to the Orioles from the Cincinnati Reds four seasons ago. He conceded, what with his four years in Baltimore and his two winters of managing the Santurce club in the Puerto Rican League, that he has come to feel differently about baseball's so-called establishment.
"When I came over here from Cincinnati, I had an open mind," Robinson said. "I've had a good relationship with this ball club, and it has helped me see both sides clearer."
Robinson, in his 10th season with the Reds, was anti-establishment. Now that he has a closer relationship with the Oriole's front office than he ever did with the Reds, plus the fact he handled players himself in Puerto Rico, Robinson sees the other side of the coin.
"No doubt, there should be a greater general understanding between players and management," he says. "All ballplayers have their own estimation about what they're worth, but by the same token the owners can't keep giving out money endlessly. When you're a ballplayer and you get into a certain bracket you have to take into consideration that raises aren't going to be large. You can't expect to jump from say, $15,000-$20,000 to $150,000-$160,000 in one year."
In this day and age some players double their salaries in one year. It has taken Robinson five years to do it since he was with the Reds. He's not complaining though.
Bonnies, Niagara win; headed towards NCAA
By United Press International
By United Press International Pro basketball scouts know there's a gold mine in northwestern New York state because a couple of nuggets named Bob Lanier and Cal Murphy keep shining.
That gold put fourth-ranked St. Bonaventure and Niagara in the NCAA Basketball Tournament and there are some who believe one of these schools can strike it rich in the championships.
Murphy, the mighty mite of college basketball at 5-10, netted 24 points, four less than teammate Mike Samuel, as Niagara stopped Syracuse, 91-83, and boosted its record to 20-4, the Purple Eagles' best mark in 14 years. Bob McDaniel led Syracuse with 24 points.
Lanier, St. Bonnies' 6-11 center, scored 23 points Wednesday night in leading his team to a 91-68 victory over Canisius. The victory raised the Bonnie record for the season to 20-1.
Feb. 27
1970 KANSAN 9
Neighboring Duke squeezed past 11th-rated North Carolina State, 71-69, but it took a torrid 58 per cent shooting average to pin the loss on the Wolfpack. Forward Rich Katherman paced the Blue Devils with 22 points, including a first-half spurt that moved Duke into a 40-27 intermission lead.
Charlie Scott's farewell home game for 16th-ranked North Carolina was enough impetus for the former Olympic Star as he scored 28 points to muffle Virginia Tech, 98-70. Scott is averaging 29.6 points a game.
Louisville, in a good position for an NCAA or National Invitation Tournament bid as the Missouri Valley Conference champion or runner-up, routed Georgetown, Ky., 107-85, with the help of Mike Grosso's career high 33 points. Jim Reid led the losers with 22 points.
Ohio University, the Mid-American Conference leader, positioned guard Kenny Kowall at forward in the second half and he responded with a game total of 28 points as the Bobcats ripped Loyola of Chicago, 93-70.
NIT favorite.
St. John's will be trying to give Lou Carnesceca the same kind of farewell it gave Joe Lapchick in 1965. The Redmen won the tourney in Lapchick's last game before retiring. This will be Carnesecca's farewell to St. John's before he joins the New York Nets. St. John's has appeared in the NIT 18 times and has won it four times. Both marks are
records.
Georgia Tech will be playing in the NIT for the first time and made its only other post-season basketball appearance in 1960 when it played in the NCAA.
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Trackmen to battle for fifth consecutive crown
The Jayhawk track team is rated a solid favorite to win its fifth straight Big Eight indoor track championship in the meet that begins Friday night in Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City.
Exceptional team depth is the strong point for the Hawks in their quest for their 16th title in 21 years.
"On paper, we are the team to beat," Coach Bob Timmons said Wednesday, "but the meet isn't run on paper. There are many good competitors in the conference."
Although the Hawks return only one champion from last year's team, Karl Salb in the shot put, several other KU athletes are rated to be favorites in their events.
Among those Jayhawks who
have a good chance to win is Salb's teammate, Steve Wilhelm, who won in an earlier meeting with a toss of 65-3. Salb has the league leading throw of 67-5½.
Phil Reaves of Kansas has the longest long jump in the conference with a leap of 24-9, but he could be pushed by Missouri's Mel Graw whose best effort is only $3/4$ inches shorter.
In the two-mile Jay Mason of KU has the best time with a run of 8:44.5. His chief competition figures to be Peter Kaal of Oklahoma State. Either of these two could snap the Big Eight indoor record of 8:51.0.
Freshman Brian McElroy has a good chance of taking home the 880 crown for the Hawks. His league leading time of 1:50.2 is almost two seconds under the event's standing record.
Celtics struggling for final playoff
By United Press International
The halcyon days of playing on three Boston Celtic championship teams may be over for Don Nelson, but the flavor lingers. The Hub City star scored a career high of 40 points Wednesday night in leading Boston to the 147-124 victory over the San Diego Rockets.
Boston, $4\frac{1}{2}$ games away from the fourth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Division, set a league record by scoring 54 points in the final quarter. The feat erased previous highs of 52 for a single period held jointly by Boston and Baltimore.
The Celts needed all the help they could muster in countering the 46 points scored by Elvin Hayes. Trailing by four points entering the last quarter, Boston tied the score at 108-all and then went on an 18-4 spurt to put the game on ice.
Milwaukee closed to within six games of first-place New York in the East by defeating Baltimore, 115-113; Chicago whipped San Francisco, 112-104; Philadelphia humbled Detroit, 122-105, and Seattle upset Atlanta, 120-112, in other NBA games.
Braves picked N. L. favorites
LAS VEGAS (UPI)—The world champion New York Mets are only 9-2 favorites to repeat as National League titlists and are rated behind Atlanta, San Francisco and St. Louis, according to the first line on the coming baseball season by Las Vegas odds-makers.
The line, issued through the Del Mar Sports Book by oddsmaker Bill Dark, while not breaking the leagues down by division, listed the Braves first as 3-1 picks to take the National League title.
Next came the Giants at 7-2 and the Cardinals at 4-1. After them the Mets and then Chicago 5-1, Los Angeles 6-1, Cincinnati 7-1, Pittsburgh 12-1, Houston 15-1, Philadelphia 30-1 and Montreal and San Diego coupled as a single entry 150-1.
Baltimore was listed 2-1 to repeat as American League champions. The rest of the junior circuit order were: Oakland 3-1, Minnesota 4-1, Boston 5-1, Detroit 6-1, California 10-1, Cleveland 10-1, New York 15-1, Chicago 20-1, Washington 30-1 and Kansas City and Seattle as an entry 150-1.
10 KANSAN Feb.27 1970
Baltimore, losing Kevin Loughrey in the second period with cracked ribs when he was hit by Lew Alcindor's knee, played with seven men in the second half against Milwaukee. But the Buckets showed a bit more power as Alcindor netted 27 points, Jon McGlocklin scored 24 and Flynn Robinson tallied 22. It was three quick baskets in the fourth quarter by substitute Len Chappell, however, that stopped the Baltimore attack. Earl Monroe paced the Bullets with 27 points.
A 12-3 surge midway in the fourth quarter clinched Chicago's win over San Francisco. Reserve Shaler Halimon scored eight of the Bulls' last 12 points to help push the Warriors deeper into sixth place in the West. Bob Love of Chicago topped all scorers with 32 points, while Jerry Lucas led San Francisco with 20.
The Big Eight record of 16-3 in the pole vault appears in danger with Mike Wedman of Colorado and Jan Johnson of KU set to battle toward the 17-foot mark. Johnson who was injured two weeks ago in the Houston Astrodome meet is now ready to compete.
Philadelphia, which hasn't lost to a visiting Detroit team since 1965, kept the whammy alive on Hal Greer's 29 points. The Pistons couldn't score from the field for the first 7:29 of play as the 76ers ran off a 2-4 lead. Dave Bing's 32 points were the highlight of the Detroit effort.
Field goals by Barry Clemens and Dick Snyder and Bob Rule's two foul shots with less than four minutes to play pushed Seattle past Atlanta. Rule finished with 27 points. Atlanta, led by Lou Hudson's 32 points, dropped its lead over second-place Los Angeles in the west to $ \frac{1}{2} $ games.
Coach Timmons said his 'Hawks were very fortunate that they had no major injuries or sickness to weigh them down in this meet.
The 440 shapes us to be close battle with any of six runners capable of winning the event. Julio Meade of Kansas is expected to push the leader in this event, Fran Lang of Iowa State.
Marcus Walker of Colorado appears ready to take both the 60-yard low and high hurdle events. Mike Bates of Kansas could slip by Walker in the highs as his :07.1 is only a tenth of a second behind Walker. The meet record in this event is :07.1.
The mile is up for grabs with the defending champion, Jerome Howe of Kansas State returning to competition after a leg injury. Peter Kaal of OSU has shaken his previous injuries and is rated the favorite. Doug Smith and Mike Solomon of KU have times among the leaders.
Ray McGill, of Kansas State, could dominate the high jump and possibly break the record. Coach Timmons said both Larry Reineke and Gary Johnson of KU have a good chance of placing high in this competition.
Earl Harris of OSU has a share of the world record in the 60-yard dash with a time of :05.9. He is closely pursued by seven others which include Mickey Mathews, Frank Johnson and Phil Reaves, all of Kansas.
The KU mile relay team composed of Marvin Foster, Randy Julian, Mike Larimore and Julio Meade will battle with Oklahoma for both the title and the meet record.
Coach Timmons said the 'Hawks strongest competition in the team title race will be K-State, Nebraska and Colorado in that order.
Timmons said that pre-meet forms can not always be expected to hold up, especially in this meet. He said the large and biased crowd puts a lot of pressure on the performers and this has caused numerous upsets in the past.
Not only were the Jayhawks in good physical shape, he said, but they were also definitely in good mental shape which could be just as important.
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Senate questions Docking's claim
Salary increases not covered in budget
TOPEKA (UPI) — Senate Republicans Thursday questioned the claim of Democratic Gov. Robert Docking that proposed salary increases for state employees can be paid from his budget balances.
Sen. Glee S. Smith Jr., R-Learned, Senate president pro tem, told newsmen after the caucus that implementation of the proposed $13.8 million salary increases would result in a general fund deficit for 10 months in fiscal year 1972.
He said the governor's projected general fund balances for each month over the next two years would not cover the salary increases expected to be recommended about April 1 by a Chicago consulting firm, Public Administration Service.
The State Finance Council Monday recommended appropriation of the $13.8 million during this session of the legislature, so the money will be available when the final recommendations are ready. The $13.8 million is the estimate of the amount of money that will be needed.
"The governor's figures don't support his statement that he'll have provisions for it," said Smith, referring to Docking's recommended budget.
The $26 million supplemental state school aid bill and the $4 million property tax relief bill for elderly Kansans may require the use of some of the budget balances, because tax reform measures expected to pass would finance only about two-thirds of the $30 million needed
Smith said the caucus discussed other revenue possibilities, including broadening of the sales tax to cover presently exempt consumable items and changing income tax exemptions.
The senator also said there was no strong feeling demonstrated at the caucus for delaying the salary increases.
The caucus discussed additional state aid to junior colleges, allowing them to raise tuition $5 per credit hour, and providing $1.8 million of state money. Bills that would do both are under consideration this session.
While Smith said the caucus
did not consider the conflict of interest bill which was referred to a Senate committee this week after failure to receive passage
in the Senate, he revealed the measure may be passed out of the Senate Judiciary Committee Friday in a compromise form.
House measure to prohibit public school teacher strikes
TOPEKA (UPI) — Teachers in Kansas public schools and junior colleges would be able to bargain collectively but prohibited from striking under a measure passed by the Kansas House of Representatives Thursday and sent to the Senate.
The House vote was 90-12.
Teachers would be represented in negotiations with public school or junior college district boards by professional employee's unions or groups. These unions would be required to meet with the board at least once every year prior to issuance of the annual teachers' contracts.
Missouri state senator not charged as bigamist
HILLSBORO, Mo. (UPI) State Sen. Earl R. Blackwell, D-Hillsboro, has not been charged with bigamy because his wife will not cooperate, G. William Weier, Jefferson County prosecutor, revealed Thursday.
The prosecutor said he asked the senator's first wife, Dorothy A. Blackwell, to sign an affidavit that she did not receive notification of a divorce from Blackwell. He said she has not returned the affidavit.
Blackwell married his second wife, the former Carolyn Sue Ravenscraft, in Las Vegas last summer. She was his secretary in his Jefferson City office.
There is no record of divorce in Missouri, and according to the state constitution, a legislator must forfeit his seat if he moves outside the state during his term of office. However, Attorney General John Danforth has said that he does not believe residency
established outside the state for the purpose of divorce can be interpreted as breaking the residency requirement for a legislator's seat.
Orchestra plays musical Namath
NEW YORK (UPI) - The New York Philharmonic announced Thursday that it has commissioned a new musical work for Joe Namath.
The announcement was verified by Andre Kostelanetz, conductor of the Philharmonic's spring promenade concerts, who said the idea of a musical work for Joe Namath came to him during the January 1969 Superbowl game.
Interviews
School of Engineering 111 Maryur Hall
The following companies will hold placement interviews next week.
Monday
School of Engineering, 111 Marvin Hall (All require U.S. citizenship unless indicated otherwise.)
Humble Oil & Refining Co., BS, MS, or Ph.D. in chemical engineering, BS in mechanical, mechanical, mechanical or petroleum engineering. A permanent visa is required.
Skelly Oil Co. BS or MS in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial, mechanical or petroleum engineering. A permanent visa is required.
Westvaco Corp., BS in engineering physics. BS in chemical, civil, electrical, or mechanical engineering, chemistry and physics majors.
Tuesday
Black & Veath consulting engineering, chemical, civil, electrical or mechanical engineering. BS in a combination of engineering and business administration.
Chicago Bridge & Iron CO., BS in engineering, BS or MS in mechanical engineering, BS, MS, or Ph.D. in chemical engineering. Summer work is avail-
Gulf Oil Corp., BS in mechanical or electrical engineering. BS or MS in petroleum or chemical engineering. Summer work is available.
Humble Oil & Refining Co., BS or MS in civil, electrical, mechanical or chemical. BS or MS or Ph.D. in chemical engineering. A permanent visa is required.
Atlantic Richfield-Hanford Co., BS or MS in chemical engineering, chemistry majors. BS in industrial or mechanical engineering.
Union Electrical Co., BS in electrical or mechanical engineering.
Thursday
Westinghouse Electric Corp. BS in electrical, industrial, or mechanical engineering. A permanent visa is required.
Columbia Gas of Pennsylvania, BS in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial, mechanical, or petroleum engineering. A permanent visa is required. Granite City Steel Co.. BS in architecture, electrical, or mechanical engineering.
Bell Systems, BS in chemical engineering, engineering physics, or a combination of civil engineering and business administration. BS or MS in chemical, industrial, mechanical or petroleum engineering, math and physics majors.
St. Louis-San Francisco Railroad, BS in civil or electrical engineering.
Feb. 27 KANSAN 11
1970
Friday
Honeywell, Inc. BS or MS in electrical or mechanical engineering.
School of Business,
202 Summerfield Hall
Monday
Department of Health, Education and Welfare audit agency, BS, MS, MBA in accounting; Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp., BS, MS, MBA in business; Pat McMackie, Mithe & minor accountants and management consultants; the Quaker Oats Co., BS in business, accounting, production, or sales management.
Tuesdav
Union Oil Co. of California, marketing opportunity, any BA | BS with chemistry minor (nine hours), sales experience, or Audit Agency BS, MBA in accounting; Bell System (AT&T) Southwestern Bell, Western Electric) BS in business, accounting, economics, communication and management (U.S. citizenship)
General Telephone & Electronic-
Business accounting; New York Life Insurance
Co., Topека, business majors, liberal
economics majors sales and
management.
U.S. General Accounting Office, BS,
MS, accounting, professional account-
ing and management positions; Gulf
Oil Company's finance, computer science (U.S.
citizenship); Hallmark Card Co., BS,
MSc in physical arts, secretarial skills, both shorthand and counting, personnel management and marketing; Lybrand, Ross Bros. &
Accounting, accounting majors with BS or MS deg. law degree if interested in taxation.
Wednesday
Thursday
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. BS, bsc in fire safety arts, sales management, control and management; Frisco Railway Co. (a.m. only) training program in transportation.
Garvey, Inc. BS or MS in accounting; Sperry & Hutchinson, BS or MS in business administration, arts, sales, marketing, any degree considered if interested in retailing; Unable to account, accounting, BS in business administration with at least 12 hours in accounting.
AETNA Life & Casualty, any degree, sales management, administration and analytical positions, MBA for sales; sales manager for Corp., BS, MBA in industrial sales, summer training for seniors; Firestone Rubber Co., BS in business, BA in liberal arts, General Electric, finance and accounting, BS or MS in business administration, accounting majors, others considered for position and finance and accounting; W. T. Grant Co., business administration, accounting, personnel administration, retail operations, The Jones Store Co., BS in business, BA in liberal arts, merchandise trainee.
Friday
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Israeli planes attack inside Egypt
MIDEAST (UPP)—Israeli warplanes returned to the attack deep inside Egypt Thursday, hitting missile bases north and west of Cairo and shooting down three Egyptian MIG21s in an air battle north of the Egyptian capital, Israeli spokesmen reported.
The Israelis struck to within 19 miles of Cairo even as Russia's navy commander said in the government newspaper Izvestia
that the powerful new Soviet Mediterranean fleet is keeping vigil in order to impose a "sobering effect" on the U.S. 6th Fleet and Israel.
A Tel Aviv spokesman said the three Soviet-built MIGs claimed downed were part of an Egyptian formation that tried to intercept Israeli planes bombing an Egyptian SAM2 ground-to-air missile base in the Duhme sector of the
Nile delta, 75 miles north of Cairo.
It was the first Israeli raid deep into Egypt since Feb. 17 when warplanes attacked two missile bases 19 miles south of Cairo. There have been only two such Israeli air penetrations since an Israeli jet bombed an Egyptian steel mill near Cairo Feb. 12, killing 70 civilians in an attack Israel said was a mistake.
The Egyptian spokesmen said eight Egyptian soldiers were wounded when Israeli planes struck an Egyptian military camp west of Cairo. He said the Israeli planes were met by antiaircraft fire.
of the Suez Canal.
Airline pilots threaten strike for more security
The front is the same Palestinian guerilla organization that initially claimed and later denied responsibility for the Swissair airliner crash Feb. 21 outside of Zurich in which 47 persons were killed.
LONDON (UPI) — The International Federation of Airline Pilots, which represent 46,000 commercial pilots throughout the world, threatened Thursday to call a 24-hour strike unless steps are taken both to tighten airline security and to solve the "underlying political problems" that threaten it.
At the same time, a spokesman for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) said in Jordan his group reserves the right to attack any airline serving Israel. And Arab governments were reported to be considering reprisals against any nation that applies sanctions against Arab airlines.
The strike threat issued by the international pilots union came 24 hours before an emergency meeting here of the International Transport Workers Federation, which also will discuss recent attacks on airlines and steps to
A Cairo military spokesman said the Egyptian planes knocked out Israeli tanks and weapons emplacements in the canal raids, but the Israelis said they suffered no damage.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Former President Lyndon B. Johnson has suggested that the President and his family always use military aircraft because of the danger of hijackings in commercial planes, the White House said Thursday.
LBJ concerned about hijackings
Connie Stuart, staff director for Mrs. Nixon, said Johnson wrote a memo urging the Nixons and future presidential families to use government planes even on private trips. He made the recommendations for the "safety of the First Family and because of hijackings," Mrs. Stuart said.
Mrs. Nixon, her staff, and 35 reporters, will use one of the presidential jets during a five-day swing of college campuses next week. "Those in charge of security . . . feel it is proper," Mrs. Stuart said.
Newark teachers ratify contract
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) — Newark teachers ratified by acclamation Wednesday night a new contract with the city, ending the longest school strike in New Jersey's history.
Union officials announced immediately after the vote approving the 3.5 million contract that teachers would go back to their classrooms today.
The settlement granted an average salary hike of $2,200 establishing a range of $8,000 for beginning teachers to $13,100 for experienced teachers with a bachelor's degree.
The money issue was settled shortly after the strike began, but positions hardened on both sides over the question of settling grievances and promotions by seniority.
12 KANSAN Feb. 27 1970
prevent them. The transport Workers Federation is affiliated with unions in every area of the transport industry in 80 nations.
The pilots federation, in announcing the strike threat, said final decision on the strike would be put off at least until the group's annual meeting here March 11.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon explained to Congress Thursday how he wants to save $2.5 billion a year by eliminating or reducing some low-priority federal programs, starting with the tea-tasters.
Nixon wants to eliminate tea-tasters
In a special message to the House and Senate, Nixon outlined 57 "savings actions" he wanted to take to help him attain the $1.3 billion surplus he wants in the federal budget for the year beginning July 1.
Nixon conceded that most of the programs he singled out as having "outlived their usefulness or need drastic revamping" were strongly supported by special interest groups. He predicted resistance to many of the changes and urged Congress' help.
He said many of the programs involved were just "a drop in the bucket" in the $200.8 billion budget he proposed for fiscal 1971 but said the costs added up
"As an extreme example," Nixon said, "the government since 1897 has had a special board of tea-tasters. At one time in the dim past, there may have been reason to single out tea for such special taste tests, but that reason no longer exists.
"Nevertheless," Nixon added, "a separate tea-tasting board has gone right along, at the taxpayers' expense, because nobody took the trouble to take a hard look at why it was in existence."
The Israeli army spokesman said the three MIG kills were scored in a dogfight 75 miles north of Cairo. Earlier, Israelis planes blasted another Egyptian SAM base 19 miles west of Cairo, according to Israeli authorities.
The tea-tasting program costs $100,000 a year.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Air Force Thursday asked eight companies to prepare designs for a new fighter aircraft it never expects to use.
Companies asked to submit design and development proposals were: Fairchild Hiller Corp., Bay Shore, N.Y.; General Dynamics Corp., Fort Worth, Tex.; LTV Aerospace Corp., Dallas, Tex.; Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Burbank, Calif.; McDonnell Douglas Corp., St. Louis, Mo.; Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., Bethpage, N.Y.; North American Rockwell, Inc., Anaheim, Calif., and Northrop Corp., Hawthorne, Calif.
The international fighter will be similar to the F5. Since 1965, more than 1,100 F5s have gone to 16 nations, including South Vietnam.
The new plane is designed to meet the needs of American allies and probably will never be put into the Air Force inventory.
Plane designs sought but won't be used
Egyptian planes launched the daylong aerial action Thursday morning, attacking Israeli outposts along the northern sector
Democrats without chairman
O'Brien cited the lack of a consensus for his refusal to take the job he held after former
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Lawrence O'Brien, facing opposition from Democratic governors angry because they hadn't been consulted, rejected Thursday an offer to resume the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee.
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey got the Democratic presidential nomination in 1968.
Humphrey, head of the party, later accepted an invitation by the Democratic governors to discuss a new chairman at a breakfast meeting here Friday. At first Humphrey had not planned to attend, but he changed his mind at the last minute Thursday.
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Coed tells why
Abortion joins sadness, indecision
(Editor's note: The following is a KU coed's account of a therapeutic abortion, legally given in Kansas upon the signed statement of three physicians after proof that continuation of pregnancy will harm the mother's physical or mental health. The name is fictitious.)
Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kansas Carol is a pretty, sensitive unmarried coed who recently had a therapeutic abortion (TAB) at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
She sat at her desk in a KU residence hall, and talked calmly of her experience.
"At first I didn't know what I was going to do," she said. "When I called the lab and the nurse told me the test was positive, I tried to sound happy, but I really felt awful."
Carol said her greatest problem was not knowing who to talk to. She didn't want her parents to know about her condition.
"I found out just before going home for Thanksgiving vacation. We had a houseful of guests, so my mom didn't have time to notice how upset I was," she said.
After returning to KU, Carol finally talked to a friend whose cousin is a medical student at KUMC. He helped her make an appointment for consultation.
Her first trip to the Medical Center was pretty unpleasant, she said. She was frightened, and there were so many questions to be answered.
"They told me when I would have been due, and that made me feel just great," she said ruefully. "I really broke down once, but there was a very nice nurse who calmed me and made me feel much better about the whole thing."
Carol talked to a resident gynecologist at the Medical Center, who referred her to two psychiatrists for letters of approval needed before she could have a TAB.
Who's whose Pinnings
Kerry Anderson, Tulsa, Okla. junior, majoring in elementary education, Delta Delta Delta, to Steve Neill, Clay Center senior, majoring in psychology, Kappa Sigma.
Joyce Kaltwasser, Kirkwood, Mo. junior, majoring in physical therapy, Delta Delta Delta, to Bob Lewis, Tulsa, Okla. junior, majoring in psychology, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Hannah Johnson, Tulsa, Okla. sophomore, majoring in liberal arts, Delta Delta Delta, to Mike Meredith, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, majoring in pre-medicine, Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Jane Ann Geraughty, Overland Park sophomore, majoring in elementary education, Delta Delta Delta, to Robert B. Hines, Overland Park junior majoring in psychology, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Rebecca Ashley, Edina, Minn. junior, majoring in physics to John E. Selk, Seneca junior, majoring in civil engineering, Theta Tau.
Vicki Phillips, Tulsa, Okla. sophomore, majoring in journalism, Alpha Delta Pi, to Joe Bullard, Ellis junior, majoring in journalism, Sigma Nu.
Sharon Schlup, Paducah, Ken. junior, majoring in social studies to Chester Lawrence, Vienna, Ill. senior majoring in physical education, Sigma Nu.
Debbie Simpkins, New Canaan, Conn. junior, majoring in English education, Sigma Kappa, to Alan H. Simons, Valley Falls senior majoring in journalism.
Jo B. Werner, Kansas City, Mo., junior majoring in piano, Chi Omega, to James Paul Cobb, McGue, Ark. junior majoring in radiation-biophysics.
"It made me happy to know I was carrying a child, but I knew it was the wrong time and the circumstances couldn't have been worse," she said, "I know I couldn't have gone through with having the baby, but having an abortion really messes you up."
Nancy Alexander, Kansas City sophomore majoring in physical education, Pi Beta Phi to Dick Almond, senior majoring in English.
Nancy Calkins, Overland Park junior majoring in elementary education, Pi Beta Phi to Fred Bosilivac, Shawnee Mission junior majoring in pre-law, Phi Delta Theta.
"My mother worried about me because I seemed so unconcerned right after the operation. It really bothered me though. I'm still depressed about it," she said.
Sue Beard, Shawnee Mission freshman, to Charlie Smith, Mission sophomore, Phi Kappa Theta.
"I felt great," she said. "But later I became very depressed. I've thought about the whole thing so many times since it happened, and it's kind of confusing."
Marilyn Morgan, Shawnee Mission freshman majoring in elementary education to David B. Feeingold, Kansas City, Mo., junior majoring in psychology.
Carol tried to explain her feelings.
Kansas law requires that a woman obtain the signatures of three physicians who have determined that she will suffer mental or physical harm if she completes her pregnancy, before she may have a legal abortion.
Kansas now raises fewer hogs than it did in 1909.
Kermit Krantz, head resident physician of obstetrics and gynecology at the Medical Center, was the third physician to approve Carol's abortion.
KANSAN features
"I called the doctor who was to perform the abortion the day I went home for Christmas vacation," Carol said. "I wanted to have it done the first week of January so my parents wouldn't have to know, but he said I was too close to the three-month limit. He said it had to be done two days before Christmas, or not at all."
Therapeutic abortions are usually performed through a dilation and curettage (D&C) operation, which entails scraping the lining of the uterus to which a fetus attaches. It is very dangerous to perform a D&C after the third month of pregnancy.
"I either had to tell my parents, or do some pretty fancy lying. I can't lie to my parents, but I couldn't think of a way to tell them," she said.
"I called my minister and told him all about it," she explained. "He said he would go home with me and help me break it to my parents. It's difficult to tell your folks you're scheduled to have an abortion in three days."
Carol said her parents were "just great" when she told them.
"Dad hugged me and told me everything would be all right. I really needed their support," she said.
Carol was admitted to the Medical Center on a Tuesday. She was put on the maternity floor, which she said unset her.
"There was another girl who shared the room, and she was scheduled for a TAB the same day I was to have mine," Carol said. "We gave each other a lot of moral support. It helped us to know that neither of us had to go through it alone."
Carol went into surgery at 8 the next morning. By 11:30 a.m. she was back in her room, and no longer pregnant.
Feb. 27
1970 KANSAN 13
Swing into Spring
10
What picture means Spring to you? Tulips growing . . . robins returning . . . a baseball bat in a child's hands. Spring is lots of pictures of playing outside. But most of all, Spring is over too fast! Now's the time to get the best pictures. If this year is to be your first adventure in taking color slides or snaps of Spring, or if you would like help in selecting a new camera or film to use, we'll be happy to assist you. We have the new KODAK INSTAMATIC® Cameras and the latest KODAK Films. So come see us—before Spring is over.
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Private school tuition rises discourages middle classes
By United Press International
With tuition, room and board at many of the better private secondary schools rising to the $4,000 a year range, such education is pricing itself out of the market for most of the middle class—even the upper middle.
The $25,000 to $30,000-a-year executive, himself possibly a product of a private school, has to think pretty hard about those prices, especially with his children's college education still ahead.
The recent fast rise in tuition at private schools has tended to exclude them from students other than those whose families are very affluent or those of limited means who are attending on full scholarship because the institutions are seeking an economic and racial mix. Typically, the modest scholarship funds of the private schools have gone to academically promising students from low-income families.
Now, however, the nation's largest residential schools for boys and girls have come forward with a unique financing plan for the forgotten people in the middle income range.
Mount Herman and Northfield schools, the brother-sister institutions in East Northfield, Mass., are offering student loans with the principal sum payable over a 10-year period—after the student has finished college. Interest will be charged at the rate of 5 per
Tax bill passes Kansas House
A bill to remove tax-exempt status of dormitories and student union buildings at state colleges and universities passed the Kansas House Thursday. Also given preliminary approval was a bill authorizing utilization of $2.5 million in revenue bonds for construction of Wescoe Hall.
The real estate tax on dormitories and student unions increases student fees from $7 to $19, Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents, said. Dormitory rents are to rise from $92 to $183 annually. The cost to students and their parents totals $3 to $4 million a year.
Due to increased construction of private student housing and an increase in enrollment at two-year junior colleges, campus residence halls have suffered occupancy problems.
Freshmen and sophomores now utilize more resident hall housing than upper classmen.
Bickford said freshmen enrollment has not increased greatly since 1968 because of increased enrollment at junior colleges.
The junior level enrollment has increased because of transfer students from the two-year junior colleges, Bickford said.
Official Bulletin
Todav
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnasium, 7 p.m.
Dance Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium, 7:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
p.m.
Popular Film; Way Out West
and large-feathers; woodruff
Auditorium.
Broadway, 8-20.
Rock Chalk Revue: "Improbable History," Hoch Auditorium, 7:58 p.m. Big Eight Track Meet: Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo.
Foreign Students: People-to-People Homestay Program for Spring break. Sign up in People-to-People office by March 10.
Children's Theatre: "Dancing Donkey"
University Theatre. (open to the public).
Basketball: Oklahoma State at Stillwater, 2 p.m.
Popular Film: "Way Out West" and
"Rustuff Auditorium,
7 p.m. and 9 p.m."
*history*. Boeh Audortium, 7:58 p.m.
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cent annually during the college years and on the unpaid balance during the next 10 years.
Rock Chalk Revue; "Improbable History." Hooh Auditorium, 7:58 p.m.
Howard L. Jones, president of Northfield and Mount Herman schools, says a recent survey of 6,000 former students in the 35 to 45 age bracket showed that two-thirds were interested in sending their children to the schools but that half needed financial assistance. Jones concedes that in their zeal to help
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium, 1:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 3
Sunday
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson
Announcement of the plan comes at a time when the cost picture of secondary and higher education in privately financed schools is not opening many new options. The news will be welcome to these parents who feel strongly about the value of private education.
Cricket Club: east of Robinson Gymnasium, 11 a.m.
the disadvantaged, private schools overlooked the extent to which the sharp tuition rise was discouraging middle income families.
Governor candidacy announced Thursday
14 KANSAN Feb.27 1970
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI)—Alabama's George C. Wallace announced Thursday he would be a candidate for governor and immediately sounded the racial school issue battlecry which he apparently still hopes will put him in the White House.
With his opposition tuning up on the theme that Wallace would be only a "part-time" governor because of his interest in the presidency, the newly-announced candidate lost no time in saying he has no interest in national politics if the people of Alabama are "satisfied with the action taken with respect to state schools."
But he quickly added: "Should you not be satisfied, I would only have an interest in national involvement should you, the people
of Alabama feel that I might make some further contribution to the fight. . ."
Wallace, who served as Alabama governor from 1962-66, put together a third party presidential movement in 1968 and picked up 13 million votes in his bid for the nation's top office. He has vowed to keep the movement alive.
Unquestionably the most popular politician in recent Alabama history, Wallace successfully ran his wife for governor in 1966 when he was prevented by the state constitution from succeeding himself.
But many believe he stands a good chance of being beaten in his current bid.
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Demonstrators protest in San Francisco
Pompidou and wife visit Cape Kennedy
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — French President Georges Pompidou visited Cape Kennedy Thursday and made a make-believe landing on a make-believe moon before flying across the continent to see San Francisco.
The French president began his coast-to-coast tour after concluding his talks with President Nixon in Washington.
His first stop was Cape Kennedy, and after a three-hour tour he said he hoped that "this will be for the sake of all mankind, and one day we Europeans may also go to the moon—with a roundtrip ticket."
Speaking at the base of the Apollo 13 rocket which was undergoing a practice countdown on its oceanside launch pad for its April 11 launch, Pompidou said he was impressed "by the scope . . . of this entire achievement" and by "how modest, simple, and unassuming are all the people who share this endeavor."
"It is a magnificent result of the science, technology, industry and of the human virtues of the American people." he said.
Pompidou, accompanied by his wife and astronaut John W. Young, simulated the lunar landing in an Apollo spacecraft trainer. A miniature Eiffel Tower had been placed on the mockup of the lunar landscape for the occasion.
After leaving the simulator, the president and his wife looked at a full-scale model of the Apollo lunar module, and Young showed the president a television camera like the ones astronauts use on the lunar surface, a model of the nuclear generator and other moon experiments.
From there the party went to the moon rocket assembly building and Pompidou inspected the base of the Apollo 14 rocket, being prepared for launch to the moon next fall.
At the end of the Cape Kennedy visit, the Pompidous flew to San Francisco where demonstrators outside his hotel protested the sale of French jets to Libya
Carrying lighted candles and singing both the "Marseillaise" and the Israeli national anthem, the crowd of 500 gathered four hours before Pompidou's arrival and left before he got there.
Starting a combination statevisit and sightseeing tour following his talks in Washington with President Nixon, Pompidou toured American spaceflight facilities at Cape Kennedy Thursday and then flew to San Francisco.
Today he will visit one of the world's largest atom-smashers in nearby Stanford, speak to the Commonwealth Club of California, and, with his chic wife, act as host at a glittering reception in a replica of the French
Black heritage week prompts drama at LHS
Douglas Turner Ward's play "Day of Absence" was presented Thursday evening at Lawrence High School as part of the Black Heritage Week observances.
Mrs. Roosevelt Calbert, guidance counselor at LHS, said the comedy-satire concerned race relations in the South. One morning the white people awoke to find the blacks had mysteriously disappeared. The police no longer had anyone to beat, the Ku Klux Klan no longer had anyone to terrorize, the housewives no longer had maids to order around and no nannies to tend the babies, the mayor no longer had bell boys to run his errands.
television screen. Finally the blacks returned as mysteriously as they had left, Mrs. Calbert said, and a new understanding and respect is born in the whites for them.
In its panic, the white community tried to persuade the blacks to return by flashing pictures of brooms and mops on the
Palace of the Legion of Honor.
The play, a minstrel in reverse, was portrayed by all black students in white face.
Several KU students helped with the production including Horace Bond, Lawrence doctoral candidate in drama; Linda Jones, Netawaka senior; Veda Monday, Kansas City senior; and Frances Robinson, Kansas City junior.
The Sumner High School concert band concluded the week's activities today by performing in dual assemblies. Sumner is a predominantly black high school in Kansas City.
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The rally in Union Square outside the St. Francis Hotel, where Pompidou and his wife had an elegant eight-room suite, drew about 500 persons, a moderate crowd in San Francisco, where rallies by radicals and militants has drawn thousands in the past and often ended in violence.
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rally to protest French plans to sell Mirage jet fighters to Libya, kept the demonstration peaceful. It was purposely held before Pompidou's arrival in order to avoid any confrontation.
The crowd sang both the "Marseillaise" and the Israel anthem, "Hatikvah," and lighted candles at the end of 90 minutes of speeches to symbolize light and
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Time, exemption requests heard on pollution control
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPI) Contractors asked for special exemptions and a municipal leader pleaded for more time as the state Air Conservation Commission heard testimony Thursday on three proposed statewide air pollution control regulations.
The regulations would require reporting of waste burning, and place tighter restrictions on open burning and upon incinerators. Staff members of the commission pointed out there was nothing in the proposed regulations to prohibit residents from burning trash and leaves at their homes.
Greed called factor in Medicare troubles
Florissant Mayor James J. Eagan, president of the Missouri Municipal League, told four of the seven commission members present for the hearing that adoption of the restrictive measures would cause chaos in cities because they could not meet the requirements within the two years given. Eagan suggested it would take municipalities between two and five years to provide sanitary landfills or install the proper incinerators, and financial help must be received from the state or many communities could not do the job at all.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Undersecretary John G. Veneman of Health, Education and Welfare told investigating senators Thursday that simple greed is a major factor in driving the Medicare program toward bankruptcy.
HEW was accused of lacking the courage to institute a reform proposal opposed by the American Medical Association. The reform involves government-set maximum fees to doctors and hospitals for services to persons over 65 covered by Medicare.
Feb. 27 1970 KANSAN 15
"These regulations can cause a chaotic situation that would add to instead of solve the problems of the cities," Eagan said.
Garms said the open burning restrictions would make it almost impossible in some areas to clear land for highways, and could run the cost up significantly. Herzog said the 60 days notice required before certain asphalt, concrete or rock crushing operations could be started would impose an undue hardship on highway builders.
The assistant counsel for the State Highway Commission, John Gladden, asked that highway contractors be exempted from certain provisions which he said would cause undue difficulty in getting roads repaired or built.
Norman Roberts, who operates a fee fishing lake near St. Joseph, said an automobile salvage yard in Andrew County, about one-half mile from the St. Joseph city limits, had caused considerable death and illness because of the pollution of the area. Roberts presented,a petition containing the names of more than 40 area residents.
A St. Joseph area resident, however, asked for immediate relief in his area.
"We ask that action be taken within 30 days." Roberts pleaded. "Sixty days will be too late for some of us."
No decision on the regulations was expected for several weeks. Additional written testimony will be accepted for seven days.
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Name release requested
PARIS (UPI)—Discarding his customary prepared speech for the second straight week, U.S. Ambassador Philip C. Habib today urged the Communists at the Vietnam peace talks to release the names of American prisoners.
Bill calls for end to drilling operations
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A bill calling for an end to oil drilling operations in the Santa Barbara Channel and for a federal takeover of Union Oil Company's drilling platform was introduced Thursday by Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine.
Muskie, chairman of the Senate Air and Water Pollution subcommittee, said the bill would prohibit new exploration or drilling beyond the three-mile limit in the channel.
"One of the most pressing aspects of the problem of men missing in action is that families on both sides are anxious to know whether their men are alive or not," Habib said.
Muskie made no estimate of how much the federal government might have to pay for taking over existing mineral leases off California but noted that a top justice department official had recently suggested such action might be a "non-compensable exercise of the police powers of the sovereign."
Citing a recommendation by a special presidential study panel
HUTCHINSON (UPI)—A flaw in a ring described as the symbol of a bride's "most recent and cherished engagement" brought a court suit in which James and Wenda Eisenhour of St. John, Kan., asked $21,428, including $20,000 in punitive damages.
Ring flaw causes suit
The suit filed Wednesday in Reno County District Court said the ring was purchased Feb. 15, 1969, in Hutchinson for slightly less than $1,000, with the understanding that it was worth $1,500. Later, the complainants said, they discovered the ring was "practically worthless" because of an internal fracture.
Actually, they said, the ring's value was $150.
In a suit naming a former Hutchinson jewelry store and a Los Angeles diamond importer who reportedly guaranteed the ring, Eisenhour, now serving in Vietnam, asked $15,000 in punitive damages for his humiliation. His wife asked $5,000 in punitive damages, partly because the jeweler kept the ring for two months after she complained of its quality and during that time she was "without any symbol of her most recent and cherished engagement."
Conservation forces win key House vote
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House voted Thursday to kill a controversial bill designed to allow increased logging in national forests by refusing even to debate the measure.
The House, by a roll call vote of 228 to 150, rejected a resolution that would have brought the bill to the floor for two hours of debate before a final vote on the measure.
The bill, bitterly opposed by conservationists, would have earmarked all revenues from the sale of national forest timbers to pay for measures to increase the timber yield of the forests.
While it would be technically possible to bring the bill back for another try, the refusal even to reconsider it made this unlikely.
16 KANSAN Feb.27 1970
for continued pumping to relieve pressure from Union Oil's leaking well, Muskie said any needed pumping should "not be left to oil companies concerned primarily with profits."
Joining Muskie as cosponsors of the bill were Sens. Birch Bayh, D-Ind.; Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo.; Joseph M. Montoya, D-N.M., and Jennings Randolph, D-W.Va.
Oil slick forms after boat collision
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)—A towed barge slammed into a motor boat in the mouth of the St. Johns River late Thursday night, spilling an estimated 7,000 gallons of gummy "binker C" oil into the bay.
The crude oil, which stretched for miles and surrounded Blount Island near Danes Point, gushed through a three-foot hole in the hull of an Eastern Seaboard barge, which had a capacity of 20,000 gallons.
Coast Guardsmen scrambled to contain the slick, which bulged to 500 yards wide at one point, with spill booms and hoped an outgoing tide would keep the slick from ruining the shores of the St. Johns.
"This, too, is a problem easily resolved through a system of immediate identification of prisoners held by each side. Our side has notified the International Committee of the Red Cross of the names of prisoners we hold." Habib said.
Habib's remarks were relayed to newsmen in the form of a six-paragraph transcript. Before entering the session, Habib announced he had no prepared text "in the interests of seeking meaningful negotiations.
Before today's session Hanoi diplomats, for the first time, told a visiting American woman the fate of her missing husband-flyer. They told Mrs. John O'Grady of Las Vegas, Nev., that he was not in a prisoner of war camp.
The Hanoi negotiator ignored the matter of prisoners in the text of his remarks released to newsmen. He said the key to peace in Vietnam is in Washington. He said the Nixon administration is seeking to impose "American-style peace" in Southeast Asia.
The statement came from Nguyen Minh Vy, third ranking member of the North Vietnamese delegation, who charged that President Nixon's policies as outlined in his State of the Union message Jan. 18 will further deadlock the Paris conference.
Nixon asserted in his speech that Hanoi holds the key to a
Ninth inmate captured
WICHITA (UPI)—The ninth of 12 Sedgwick County Jail inmates who escaped in a mass break Sunday night was apprehended today.
Miller said he and Isiah C. Rhone Jr. fought but the two suffered only minor hurts before the prisoner was handcuffed.
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breakthrough in the Paris meeting. Vy disputed this and said an eight-point plan outlined by Nixon would continue the presence of American troops in Vietnam as an international gendarme.
Both Vy and the Viet Cong delegation denounced what they called further U.S. escalation of the war in Laos and said this was additional proof the United States aims to extend the war throughout the Indochinese Peninsula.
The Communist proposals for
total U.S. troop withdrawal and replacement of the Saigon administration are "flexible and generous."Vy said.
Saigon negotiator Pham Dang Lam accused the Communist side of blocking progress from the start with their "stubborn position, negative attitude and warlike acts." He called on them to drop their demands for U.S. withdrawal and overthrow of the Saigon government and said Hanoi still hopes to impose a Communist regime on the South.
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University Planning Board hears
Departments cry for more space
By JOHN GOODRICK
Kansan Staff Writer
The geography department has lost three potential cartographers (map makers) because of space problems, Thomas Smith, KU geography professor, told the University Planning Board Thursday.
The planning board heard the needs for more space and space re-arrangement from the departments of geology and geography and the School of Architecture.
Smith said the main space problem in the geography department is a lack of seminar rooms, a need for a staff and student meeting space, and a need for a better map library. A second major department problem is it is in four buildings, he said.
The location of the department, in one word, is "awful," Smith said. He said the need to bring the staff and classrooms together in one building. He said the clustering needed could best be solved by a major building built on the west side of campus close
Power plant threatened
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The government may take a Florida utility company to court to halt part of a nuclear power plant project which it says could pollute Biscayne Bay, the oceanfront where President Nixon owns a vacation compound.
Interior Secretary Walter J. Hickel Wednesday asked the Justice Department to take legal action against the Florida Power and Light Co. to stop it from building a six-mile canal. The canal would carry water from the plant south of Miami to Biscayne Bay and Ord Bay.
Hickel said the water would be heated and could cause a thermal pollution of the two bays which he referred to as "two of the cleanest bodies of water remaining in America." Thermal pollution involves the introduction of heated water into naturally colder water, a condition which can cause unusual organic growth and changes in the water environment.
Hickel asked the company to stop digging the canal earlier this week, but the utility turned him down. The Justice Department said Hickel's request will be "studied to see if there is any possible course of action" that it may take.
Hickel has opposed the canal project for the past year, but Wednesday marked the first time he has resorted to legal action to stop it. Biscayne Bay is a national monument and the Nixon Florida vacation home fronts on a section of it.
Voting rights bill nearing passage
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Southerners skirted a possible setback in the Senate Judiciary Committee Thursday and moved the administration's controversial voting rights bill to the Senate floor for debate scheduled Monday.
The action set the stage for a series of critical Senate debates and votes on issues involving civil rights and conflicts between President Nixon and Congress' Democratic majority.
Starting today Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said, the Senate will take up a controversial Labor-Health-Education appropriations bill carrying Southern anti-busing amendments, then the voting rights measure, and the nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell to the Supreme Court.
Feb. 27
1970 KANSAN 17
to the earth science library and the computation center.
Smith said he anticipated between 80 and 90 per cent growth by 1980. The department's present growth gives "no indication of it tapering off yet. This is true at the graduate and undergraduate levels," he said.
A good map library should be close to the general area of Lindley Hall for easy access, he said. When asked if an addition to Lindley would be suitable Smith said it would depend on "how much we can get and what quality."
Lindley does not have indoor plumbing, and the geology department has an abnormal space need for the operation which they have, said Louis Dellwig, KU geology professor.
Dellwigh said, "no graduate student has office space in Lindley, and that is certainly a disadvantage." He added, "It is most undesirable to have the staff move out of the building."
All the department's laboratories double as lecture rooms, he said. Dellwig said the laboratories are presently being used all the hours of the day, part of the night and Saturday mornings. "In the point of view of storage space we have nothing," he said.
Dellwig said the departments over-all goals included to draw the Paleontological Institute back
into the department, enlarge the Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology to meet future needs, return the working map library to the department and provide teaching and research space. He said for these goals the department will need between 60 and 70,000 square feet of space which could not be housed in Lindley.
Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture, said there was a need for the combining of the interests of the fine arts departments with the school to raise the standards of the present libraries. He said of the 65 other Architecture schools around the nation our library falls in the lower 25 per cent, but would be raised to the upper 10 per cent under his plan.
The present library space is 700 square feet although with the 6,000 volumes the school has, it needs 2,606 square feet to be adequate.
He said the studios in Marvin Hall are operated on a "hot desk" principle for freshmen and sophomores which means that the desks are being shared. Kahn said this was a definite disadvantage since it created competition for tables in the evenings.
The research area space now is zero. The department could now use 3,620 square feet and by 1975 7,260 square feet.
Other space needs of the department include Achievement Space, the enlargement of the student store, photography graphics and jury rooms, and more sculpture studios.
New pre-trial formula unveiled to keep order
Researcher found leak may lead to cancer cure
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)—A University of California researcher Thursday reported detection of a chemical substance which leaks from cancerous cells and causes normal living cells to "grow wild" as though they were malignant.
But when some of the defendants entered the courtroom Wednesday shaking their fists and shouting, "power to the people." Murtagh said "the continued misconduct persuades me to use the formula without further delay."
NEW YORK (UPI)—State Supreme Court Justice John M. Murtagh unveiled a new "formula" Wednesday to maintain order in the pretrial hearings for 13 Black Panthers charged with a bombing conspiracy.
Three weeks of continued disruption prompted the judge's action and the devising of his "formula" to deal with it. He warned the six defense lawyers Tuesday he had developed a formula which he said he would implement in about two weeks.
He recessed the proceedings "indefinitely" and said he would consider a written motion to resume the hearings only if it was accompanied by "an unequivocal assurance that the defendants are now prepared to participate in a trial under the American system of criminal justice."
After Murtagh recessed the hearings indefinitely Wednesday, four of the defense lawyers held a news conference and said they had frequently admonished their clients "to conform to the standard courtroom behavior." They said they warned the Panthers to speak only when asked questions.
"The court declares the proceededions recessed indefinitely," he said. "The hearings are proceeding at a snail's pace and are continually being interrupted. The defendants are unwilling to proceed . . . the court !'as no alternative."
Dr. Harry Rubin, professor of molecular biology, said the discovery may provide clues to the biological changes in cancer that allow runaway growth in and around malignant cells.
The lawyers said the Panthers refused to be silent, however.
"This recess is probably a milestone in judicial history," said defense lawyer Charles T. Kinney. "We intend to be careful in framing our response as Murtagh was in forming his little formula."
The Panthers are charged in an alleged plot to kill policemen and bomb public facilities including department stores, subways and the Bronx Botanical Garden.
The next Board Hearing will be 9 a.m. Saturday with the Theatre, the Art Museum, the department of fine arts and visual arts.
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Wife gets news from Vietnamese
PARIS (UPI) — North Vietnamese officials in Paris Thursday broke a six-month silence on the fate of missing Americans in Vietnam by telling an American Air Force wife that her husband is not a prisoner in North Vietnam.
The diplomats gave the news to Mrs. Diana O'Grady of Las Vegas, Nev., and her seven children. The probable conclusion was that her husband was dead. It was the first time since wives and relatives of U.S. servicemen missing in Vietnam started coming to Paris six months ago that Hanoi representatives have given an immediate response to a query.
"Thank God I've got an answer, Thank God I've got an answer," Mrs. O'Grady said, choking back sobs and walking away from newsmen after emerging from the North Vietnamese permanent diplomatic mission sited in a Paris Left Bank district.
The frail blonde housewife, accompanied by her children, ranging in age from 5 to 17, said the Hanoi officials were "very polite and nice."
"They told me my husband is not a prisoner in their camps in North Vietnam. He is not a prisoner at all and they feel like now it's up to my government to say he's dead," Mrs. O'Grady said, her voice shaking with emotion.
"It hurts a lot," she said but explained it helped to know something after three years of waiting.
House tentatively approves motor fuel tax distribution
TOPEKA (UPI) — A bill tentatively approved Thursday by the Kansas House of Representatives would overhaul the current formula for distribution of motor fuel tax revenue.
A final roll call vote probably will be taken Friday on the controversial measure which has pitted rural members against urban members. It was tentatively approved on a vote of 56-44, but 63 votes will be needed for final passage.
A major amendment proposed by Rep. Jack Turner, R-Wichita, was adopted. It restores the formula originally proposed in the bill introduced by 67 urban law-makers.
It would distribute 43 per cent of the nearly $90 million collected
Philippine students riot at U.S. Embassy
each year to cities on a basis of population, and the remainder to the counties on a proportional formula based on dollar amount of motor vehicle registrations and average daily miles driven. Each county would also be guaranteed at least $20,000 a year.
MANILA (UPI) — Students hurling Molotov cocktails clashed with riot police in front of the U.S. Embassy Thursday night, then scattered throughout the city's bay area smashing windows of cars and shops in a demonstration that continued until daybreak.
About 100 police guarding the embassy used tear gas and bamboo truncheons to drive back an estimated 1,000 persons who marched on the compound after
Manila hospitals reported 25 persons were treated for injuries. Three were policemen, nine bystanders and the remainder student demonstrators. There were no serious injuries.
the government denied a demonstration permit to the Nationalist Movement for a Democratic Philippines.
The demonstrators hurled four firebombs at the embassy without causing damage. Last week they smashed through the embassy gates and broke 100 windows in the compound before police arrived.
The riot followed the disclosure that a U.S. Air Force sergeant, Raymond L. Minor, 35, of Pedricktown, N.J., shot and killed a suspected Filipino burglar at Clark Air Force Base north of here.
Committee approves modified bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Appropriations Committee, seeking to avert a second veto, Thursday approved a $19.4 billion labor-health-education money bill with a provision allowing President Nixon to trim it by 2 per cent.
The committee also accepted language in the House-passed measure legalizing "freedom of choice" school assignments and prohibiting the federal government from requiring busing as part of school desegregation plans.
The measure was sent to the Senate, where it faces certain challenges on giving Nixon discretionary authority to cut the bill and on the school desegregation riders. It will probably come up for Senate action Monday.
In January, Nixon vetoeed the first appropriations bill Congress approved to finance the Labor Department, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), and the Office of Economic Opportunity in fiscal 1970, which began last July 1. He called the $19.7 billion level too costly and inflationary.
In passing a second bill, the House trimmed the total to $19.4 billion—about $320 million more than Nixon requested—and administration officials indicated it would also be vetoed.
who have not yet received information about their menfolk.
18 KANSAN Feb.27 1970
Turner's amendment goes further, however, and guarantees no county would receive less than it did this year. The money to do this would be raised by reducing the so-called "shrinkage allowence" from 3 per cent to $1\frac{1}{2}$ per cent and using part of the expected growth in the state highway fund.
Only about 170 of the estimated 400 to 600 men believed to be in prisoner of war camps have been able to confirm they were alive by writing to their families.
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The urban representatives originally introduced the measure to revise the 1936 formula because they felt it was favoring the rural counties. It was extensively amended in committee and again Thursday on the floor.
Her husband, Lt. Col. John O'Grady, was shot down over the Ho Chi Minh Trail in April, 1967.
Mrs. O'Grady said she made a plea for other relatives of aproximately 1,400 U.S. servicemen missing in Southeast Asia
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Students suggest residence hall options
By CLANCEY MALONEY Kansan staff writer
At a brainstorming session last night in Lewis Hall, 100 selected students and faculty advisers involved in the Association of University Residence Halls suggested about 200 ideas to improve the University of Kansas residence halls by next fall.
"We wanted positive suggestions for viable options for stu-
Explorer searches for Columbus' ship
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI)—It was an August morning three years ago that Fred Dickson climbed aboard a small plane piloted by the overseer of a Haitian sisal plantation to take a look at "this thing that keeps me awake at night."
Today, Dickson, an ex-Yale swimming star, student of Spanish literature and former mail-order house Sears junior executive, is outfitting an expedition to return to the reef where he believes Christopher Columbus' ship, Santa Maria, went to the bottom 478 years ago.
He has an agreement with "Papa Doc" Duvalier's regime in Haiti and encouragement from some of the top marine archeologists in the United States. He has formed the "Santa Maria Foundation," with some respected scientists on its board of directors.
As the light plane winged its way free of Haiti's northern coast that morning in 1967, pilot Donald Lundquist dipped a wing and swung out over Caracol Bay.
At a point about six miles east of Cape Hatien he put the nose down and pointed to a ship-shaped mass of coral, perfectly visible under about 12 feet of gin-clear water.
"I knew we had found what we were looking for," said Dickson, who had planned to comb a broad expanse in the "sphere of probability" where the Santa Maria may have been lost. "We didn't even bother to finish the search pattern."
In the weeks that followed, Dickson, an expert scuba diver, probed the coral formation for clues to its history. He dug holes and made test borings. He found bits of worm-riddled wood,
It seemed almost too easy.
Weather
Partly cloudy today through Saturday. Cooler today and tonight. Northerly winds 10 to 15 miles per hour today. High 45 to 50. Low tonight near 20. Probability of precipitation 10 per cent today and tonight 20 per cent Saturday.
Feb. 27
1970 KANSAN 19
chards of pottery, a copper bolt about 10 inches long, and nails containing 60 per cent silver, indicating they may have been made from Spanish armor, as historians say Columbus did.
The artifacts were sent to the University of Pennsylvania, where thermo-illuminescence tests were conducted by the Department of Marine Archeology.
"The tests showed that the pottery dated from about 1475 A.D. plus or minus a hundred years," said Dickson. "But, admittedly, these types of tests are of little value on materials less than 1,000 years old."
"Every single authority I have talked with says we have sufficient evidence to warrant further exploration." Dickson said.
With assurances of protection assistance from the Haitian government, Dickson, in turn, will stock a museum to be built at Cape Hatien with shipwreck reliics. Some of the artifacts will also go to a museum in Port au Prince. "A reasonable amount" will become the property of the Santa Maria Foundation, a non-profit corporation.
The explorers will use two 19-foot outboards powered with 105-horsepower engines to commute from Cape Hatien to the reef six miles away. A 100-foot barge will serve as a work platform.
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dents living in University residence halls next year," said Mrs. Donna Shavilik, assistant to the dean of women. "We want to preference ideas so that we can send out the new options to entering freshmen as soon as possible."
- that the freshman women's program be done away with and freshman women be integrated into the upperclass dormitories.
- coeducational floors and one semester contracts instead of the nine-month, two-semester contracts which will be instituted in the fall.
SOCIAL CONTRACT
This contract is a written agreement between two or more parties to perform certain tasks. It contains the terms and conditions of the agreement, including the scope of work, payment details, and any other relevant information.
One important aspect of this contract is that it establishes the rights and obligations of both parties involved. It outlines what each party can expect from the other, such as payment timelines, quality standards, and any restrictions on their actions.
Another crucial element of this contract is that it provides a framework for resolving disputes. If there are disagreements over the terms of the contract, the parties can reach an agreement through mediation or arbitration.
Finally, this contract is a legally binding document that must be signed and executed by both parties in order to be effective. It should be made public to all parties involved, so that they can review it and confirm its validity.
By signing this contract, both parties agree to履行约定事项,并承担相应的责任。双方在任何情况下都应遵守合同的规定,遵守任何形式的违约行为。如果发生纠纷,双方应通过调解或仲裁解决。
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- language floors or wings.
- itemized statements of the dorm budgets for each student.
- 24-hour visitation privileges,
dependent on floor approval.
of the ideas, she said, had been suggested before, but only within the smaller groups involved in AURH.
Bill Robinson, assistant to the dean of men, said that the students should throw out as many suggestions as possible within the time allotted to them. He said they should not limit their suggestions to one hall or program.
Mrs. Shavlik said the best ideas would probably be instituted for the 1970-71 school year. The brainstorming session, she said, was only to collect ideas, not decide anything definite.
After the brainstorming session, each group chose one topic to discuss. After discussing their topics for about an hour, each group gave a general summary of their discussion.
Mrs. Shavlik said that the ideas would be reviewed early next week and the most useful and easily instituted ones would be used in the residence hall program next year.
She said that the brainstorming session had been called to bring individual suggestions to the attention of the entire group. Most
Among the possible revisions were that staff members in each hall be trained in first aid and drug treatments. In the service area, the groups suggested such services as a dormitory wake-up service and test file. About 25 suggestions were given concerning food service in the dorms, including less breaded meat, seconds on all meals and student approval or control of the menus
Among the various options suggested for residence hall living arrangements were:
"We're only looking for some guidelines from the students living in the residence halls," she said.
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Caution, crumbling steps . . .
A caution sign and the podium were placed at the top of the steps of Watson Library Thursday to keep students off the potentially hazardous surfaces until they can be resurfaced.
Four charged in beatings
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (UPI)—Four persons were charged with maiming Thursday for the "religious cult" beatings of a young mother and her teen-age sister because they were believed to be witches.
Charged in absentia were the mother's husband, Donald Richard Garman, his sister, Mrs. Sarah Brown and Mrs. Brown's husband, W. A. Brown. The fourth person accused was the victims' mother, Mrs. Maria Ferez.
20 KANSAN Feb. 27
1970
The victims of the beatings and month-long torture were Mrs. Sheila Garmon, 28, and her sister, Cindy Perez, 16. They were reported in fair condition Thursday in Washington General Hospital. Their bodies were covered with bruises and the faces of both women were cut.
Mrs. Garmon said she and her sister had been beaten regularly for a month for allegedly casting a spell on Mrs. Garmon's 5-year-old daughter, who suffers from epileptic seizures.
Mrs. Perez to "give us 20 lashes a day until he returned."
Mrs. Garmon told authorities her husband left town last Sunday with his sister and brother-in-law and left instructions with
Washington County Prosecutor Mahlon Gibson said "it appears there was more or less a religious cult" involved in the torture. He said chains and ropes were found during a search after Mrs. Perez was taken into custody.
EMBEZZLEMENT BONANZA
NEW YORK—Sticky-fingered employees are costing American businesses an estimated $1.8 billion a year or $5 million a day in embezzlement losses, according to the Insurance Information Institute.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird predicted Thursday that only 210,000 men would be drafted in the 1970 fiscal year instead of the 225,000 he had estimated in January.
Draft cut predicted
Laird said progress in Vietnamization and reduction of the size of the armed forces would allow the smaller draft quota.
The secretary made the comments on a radio interview show CBS' "Classroom USA: At Issue—The Draft" taped in Washington but monitored in New York for broadcast later Thursday night.
Drug apostle waits for pot sentence
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UPI) — Dr. Timothy Leary, 50, in jail here awaiting sentencing on a marijuana possession conviction, will be taken in custody to Texas this weekend for sentencing Monday on another marijuana case.
Leary was convicted here with his wife and son of marijuana possession Feb. 19 and Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan immediately revoked his bail and ordered him to jail.
McMillan cited the LSD apostle's published advice to turn on drugs and declared, "You are an insidious, detrimental influence on society."
Main income is beef
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Members of Congress from Kansas asked the Agriculture Department Thursday to extend the May 1 livestock grazing deadline on diverted acres to May 15.
They contended the great plainss area has been too dry for proper use of production.
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Kansas House considers proposal
Bill would allow a teachers' union
TOPEKA (UPI)—A collective bargaining procedure between teachers and the boards of public schools and community junior colleges would be created under a bill before the Kansas House of Representatives.
The house votes today on the measure which was given preliminary approval Wednesday after long discussion and major amendment.
The bill would provide for the organization of professional employee's unions or groups, and require at least one meeting between the group and board every year prior to the issuance of annual teacher's contracts.
The measure would forbid any strike, walkout, or boycott by any teacher or teacher organization. This is generally prohibited in collective bargaining systems for public employees.
The major amendment to the bill was sponsored by Rep. Duane "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield. If would restrict the negotiable items to wages and other working conditions. Before the amendment, negotiable items could have been interpreted to mean school curriculum, he said.
Another amendment adopted would require the meetings between the teachers and the board to be public.
One of the critics of the measure was Rep. William Bunten, R-Topeka, who said the collective bargaining procedure would be "degrading to a grand profession, force good teachers to leave and protect the incompetent."
Bunten said teachers cannot be adequately represented collectively, and they should be treated individually on a merit basis.
Rep. Ervin Grant, R-El Dorado, disagreed, noting teacher r groups are asking for collective bargaining rights.
"This bill is a compromise between what the teachers wanted on the one hand and what the school boards wanted on the other hand," he said.
Grant said the bill is very necessary because he's been told in some rural school districts teachers have absolutely "no voice."
The house also tentatively approved a bill to recognize the governor's committee on criminal
Lamb charged will be tested
OLATHE (UPI)—Thomas P. Lamb, charged with the kidnapings of two young women and the slaying of one of them, will receive psychiatric testing by the Menninger Foundation at Topeka with the state paying the bill, under a ruling Wednesday by Johnson County District Court Judge Harold R. Riggs.
In granting a defense motion, Riggs held that Lamb, previously declared an indigent, is entitled to "the same investigative and other services" as defendants who are able to pay for them.
Lamb is charged with kidnapping and killing Miss Karen Sue Kemmerly, 24, whose body was found in a cornfield near Olathe in December, less than a month after Lamb was paroled from state prison, and with the kidnapping in January of Miss Patricia Ann Childs, who was freed unharmed when her father turned $3,500 over to the kidnapper. The ransom was recovered with Lamb's arrest shortly afterward. One of Lamb's court-appointed attorneys, George A. Lowe, told the court the Meninger Foundation had indicated costs of an evaluation at $1,200 to $1,600.
Salem was the original name for Jerusalem.
Feb. 27 1970 KANSAN 21
administration. It administers federal funds Kansas receives through the Safe Streets Act.
Preliminary approval was also given a resolution asking congress to limit Daylight Savings Time to the period between Memorial Dav and Labor Dav.
The Senate wrestled with a bill to reform the state's conflict of interest law Wednesday, but in the end referred it back to the judiciary committee for more study.
Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, said referral of the bill back to the committee would amount to killing the measure. But the chairman of that committee, Sen Steadman Ball, R-Atchison, said the bill would be revised and re-introduced before the session is over.
islators from appearing before state officials or agencies on behalf of paying clients.
The decision to refer the bill came despite an amendment by Gaar which struck a provision that would prohibit law-leg-
Gaar also reduced from five to two years the waiting period required before former legislators could become lobbyists.
The sponsor of the motion to refer the bill, Sen. E. W. Strahan, R-Salina, termed the bill "a proposition nobody can live with."
The basic purpose of the measure is to require legislators to file annual disclosure of interest
statements with the secretary of state, and require legislators who are lawyers or certified public accountants to file an additional statement prior to appearing before a state official or agency.
The Senate also passed a bill to strengthen the powers of the Air Quality Conservation Commission, and tentatively approved another bill on environmental problems which would license users of pesticides and regulate application of such chemicals.
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Rock Chalk '70
POLICE STATION
Rock Chalk spirit is high and the cooperation between participating groups has been impressive, said Kathy Colton, Omaha, Neb., junior, and producer of the 1970 Rock Chalk Revue.
The skirts are of a better quality this year, she said, and the costumes and sets are brighter and more colorful. Individual skirts held dress rehearsals on Wednesday and Thursday night of this week.
Over 40 other people have been working on the Rock Chalk staff and stage crew alone since production plans began, Miss Colton said. Directors and lead characters began work with the orchestra on Saturday, Feb. 21, and the chorus members on Sunday. Skits have been rehearsed in Hoch Auditorium all week.
Rock Chalk will be presented to the public on Friday and Saturday nights.
Trophies will be awarded to those who place in the overall judging. Separate awards will be given for the best original song, the best sets, the best script, the best costumes, the best male and the best female performer and the best production number, she said.
The overall winners of Rock Chalk will be judged on a basis of 50 points, Miss Colton said. The points will be evenly divided among the singing, dancing, costuming, sets, and acting.
As of Wednesday evening, there were still plenty of tickets available for Friday's performance, said Dave Reibstein, Topeka, junior, and member of the Rock Chalk staff. Only a few tickets are left for Saturday evening.
Photo by Ron Bishop
Rock Chalk Revue is sponsored by the KU-Y. It serves as the major money making project for all the KU-Y programs, said Tom Moore, director of the KU-Y. It finances such programs as the Big Brother and Big Sister program, Operation Tutor Match, Model OAS, Youth Friendship, Children's Hour and Freshman Camp.
I'll be here for you.
Photo by Ron Bishop
FABER FESTIVAL OF THEATRE
Photo by Judy Gerling
PAUL PAT SHOP
Photo by Judy Gerling
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Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Stereo Systems—factory cost plus 10%
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Chrome reversed 15-inch Chevy wheels. 843-4170. Ask for John. 2-27
1967 color Coronado 17" TV set. Table model. Good condition. $150. Call 842-5075. 3-2
One Ampex stereo tape recorder
Model 1160. 2 years old. Great condition.
Call Bob Brown. 843-5721 after
5 o'clock. 3-2
Guitar ES-355 Gibson Hollowbody, cherry finish, $250 or best offer; Motorola Reverb, car unit, $20 or best offer. Call 842-8645. 3-2
Must sell this week! Ampg G15 guitar amp. Best offer takes it. Has reverb, echo, dolly, and cover. Under $100. Call Jim at 843-6707. 3-2
1968 Suzuki 125 cc motorcycle. Excellent for trails and town. Has less than 2,000 miles—good mechanical condition. Approx. $190.00. Call 842-3267.
Realistic component stereo set, 36.
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iptical cartridge.
so3A-14 speakers with 8 woofer,
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Automatic radio 4 and 8-track car tape player, can't tell from new, locks included. Must sell. Karl at 842-1047. 3-2
Ankle bracelets loaded with bells
silver and gold
Ankle bracelets loaded with bells ... wedding bells
other imports from sale at the Museum of Natural History Gift
museum daily 8:30 to 4:30, Surv. 3
12:30 to 4:30
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 power brakes, power brakes, low pressure, air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-802-603 3-2
New refrigerator, apt. size—bench type, only $89.95 at Ray Stoneback's downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. nights 3-3
Toe rings! from India and Nepal at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Put in your order now so that you are ready for sandal weather. Open daily 8:30 to 4:30, Sunday 12:30 to 4:30. 3-2
Norelce Stereo cassette changer. Up to 6 hours of continuous uninterrupted music. Now $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 3-3
Handmade Originals—India prints,
tie-dyes, dresses, men's shirts, pants
on large, maxi skirts, mini skirts, beads,
cards, and drapes of Aequatoria Creations.
West 9th Street 3-10
TEXACO
W. 9th TEXACO
Student specials
★ New, experienced management
★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
- Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
SAVE YOURSELF AFINE
$12.95
Single Muffler Installed
for any American car.
$12.99
720 East 9th VI 3-0950
T. I.R.E. co.
Famous Brand. Components now at giveaway prices: Complete Outfits, $219.00 up to $149.90. AM-FM-Chic, $269.00 up to $139.90. Spkrs, were $499.90, now $99.90. Hurry in and save up to $100.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
'69 VW Bug, 12,000 miles, still new,
$1,750, warranty in effect. Call 842-
2547. 3-3
Old Zenith console stereo phono with AM-FM radio—needs repair, however FM radio plays beautiful. Come on! $5.00. Rock Stonebacks' downtown. 3-3
Kustom K-100 guitar amp, with spkr.
cabinet, (2-12" skprs), trem., reverb,
like new, $250 or best offer, must sell.
Steve, 842-8068. 2-27
Beautiful Engagement Set-14K white diamond engagement ring, AAAI 1et diamond center, bakettes each side; 14K Keeepsake wedding band with three bakettes. Appraised 2100. Feb. Special $1275. 843-9057. 3-3
1968 Corvette convertible, w/vinyl hardtop, 327-350, 4-speed, power window, 50,000 miles warranty, $3475 or best offer. 843-9057, 3-3
2-wheel trailer; metal frame; wood box;
6'x4'x4'; 842-8660. 3-3
One gentle buffalo—a real bugar. Call anytime, now or then. By 4203-6, 303-
1969 Dodge Super Bee 6 Pack. Excellent condition. Call Cathy Rohman
842-6600, Room, 1033. 3-2
1966 Dodge Charger, dark green w/ white pin stripe, 426 Hemi, auto. a/c., interior image. Goodyper panel gas tires. Goodyper panel gas tires. Goodyper panel G
Offer limited. We have 10-K-State (KU) tickets for sale. Call 842-1913- 3-2
6-string Gibson in perfect condition,
guitar, capo and case, $100. 842-0002.
3-4
Magnavox portable stereo and a Wollenak-s tape deck, both in excellent condition. Call 842-4597. 3-2
Ceramies, mugs, pots, bowls, vases. 9th and Indiana. THE OMNIBUS SHOP. 3-2
1966 Volkswagen Sedan—for sale by original owner, only 23,000 miles, air conditioned, sat's, pop-out windows, perfect condition, $1195, call 842-292-15 p. 5 m.
850 ocm Holley 4-barrel, $75. One Weland high-rise manifold (fits 383 or 440), $30, 7,000 miles on each. Call Stevra Strahm, 843-1711. 3-3
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket seats;
good condition; starts and runs ex-
ectly; mechanically perfect. OPEL
$500 843-9588 3-5
WANTED
Finish the year here! Available March 1. Need 1 girl to share apt. Good location. $65 / month. Call 842-9156. 3-2
Wanted: Crafts of all kinds, paintings,
ceramics, needlework, etc. Antiques:
dishes clothing, jewelry
other information. Information
842-7281 evenings. 3-2
itp
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
UN 4-3474
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Table Tops
Need one or two male students to take
over lease in Jayhawker Towers. Rent
$58, all extras included. Phone 842-
7125. 3-2
Roommate wanted, male student to share my large pad, campus at back wall, even at first once as last thing, even made sure once as a work. Call after six p.m. 842-8377 one more 3-
Want to buy used motorcycle, preferably 350cc or larger. Will pay cash for any good bike. 842-7447. 2-27
Wanted: Tickets for the KU-K-State game. Call 842-0283.
3-3
Female roommate wanted, as soon as possible, to share 2-bedroom furnished apartment with junior girl $74. To call 842-3280, 1810 W. 25-4
Apt. F.
Wanted—1 or 2 tickets to K-State game March 7 Call 842-4676. 2-27
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. St. B-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 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tt
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moissains,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watchbands, sashes, purses, vests,
socks, garments at 812 MEDIA
PRIMARILY LEATHER
Student and family laundries done at art's Laundry, 1903's. Mass. At Wellesley tied and folded perman press on thumbnails. Bring in early for same day service. 3-3
The Castle Tea Room—fine dining in an enchanting cultural and historical atmosphere. Visit the Castle Tea Room with most unique restaurant in Lawrence.
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Over 20 style to choose or purchase. PRIMARY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-3
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Haytrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laptid, TV 3-4032. 5-14
See the new Sblices at Weaver's Shop,
shop second floor, 901 Mass. 2-27
This ad good for 5 one-hour cassette tapes when presented at time of purification. Recordors for $49.00—off! expires. Rock Stoneback's, downtown 3-3
HE HIE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11th
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
The Sirloin
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday
One and one half mile north of the Kow River Bridge
143.121
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
843-1431
Lepidoptera Creations for men and women. 19 West 9th Street. Select your own India print for custom made clothing. 3-3
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE cracks eggs, slices ham, bakes, fries and more for the KU student? Of course, how else could we make you the most delicious breakfast! Across from Lindley Hall. 3-2
We are now open till 5:30 p.m. week-
days. Our 75c laundry is worth a
try. Tarr's Laundry $1903'. Mass 3-4
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE Right on campus. A great place for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Come in today. Call us at 2:30 a.m. At gross rate Lindley Hall. **8-2**
Objectivist Study—to consider works of Ayn Rand and others, 7.30 Monday, 3-3 Oread Room, Kansas Union
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved, our clients.
Troup Tax, 8011 Mass, Returns $4.00 and up
tt
Attention napel necklace giver: Reveal yourself! Linda.
2-27
Don't miss Mickey Allen's new boots! He waited a long time for them and likes them very much. Compliment him. Make him happy; he's broke 3-5.
Tie-dyed Wallace Beery shirts. $5.50
The Hodge Paddle. 15 W 9th. 3-4
British surplus wool fire brigade jackets 12-button, double-breasted at $18. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 3-4
Miss Ineeda Fella. Become one of the 'Heavenly Bodies' with Moon Shoes from Armenbsen's 819 Mass. They're they're you! Sincerely G-3 about it!
Authentic London Bobbles' capes.
Waterproof, black Fantastic at $14.
The Hodge Podge 15 W. 9th 3-4
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call Work VI 3-2818. Mrs Rückman
experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typetips. Please contact Mica Pica. Compete. service. Service Wright. Phone 843-9554 5-15
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Badges - Favors
- Guard -
- Guards
- Mugs
- Recognitions
- Raddle
Mugs
- Recognitions - Paddles
- Lavaliers Stationery
- Gifts
- Sportswear
- Plagues
Al Lauter
Rings - Crested - Letters
VI 3-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today 814 Iowa
SERVICES OFFERED
Opportunity Unlimited. Excellent income for few hours Students welcome Phone 842-2935 or 843-6621. 3-2
Musician wanted. Male lead vocalist.
Full time. Extensive travel. Call John
Brown, 842-0100 for interview. If
Your KU I.D is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Group Tax, 80112 Mass $4.00 and up, if
Tutoring offered, in undergraduate math and engineering courses. Math 146 and some upper-level engineering courses. Call 842-7123 3-2
HELP WANTED
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
Typing, Theses, papers Experienced Electric typewriter Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher M.S. degree Also English tutoring for foreign students or wives. Reasonable. 842-9249 3-5
ENTERTAINMENT
USED BOOKS--READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Roadside humor, layboy magazine,
H. & H. Furniture
934 Mass. Book 843-2736 Now boosting
25,000 books...3-3
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts,
theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona
electric. Call Mrs Troxl. 2409 Ridge
Court, VI 2-1400 3-3
Now showing afternoons at College
departments.
1741 W. 9th, APT #820
Need entertainment for your next party. Talented folk can available with the rates. Have done tensive night club work. Call 842-6287 842-7546 Call 3-842-6287 842-7546
1741 W 19th, APT 5B, 843-8220
Thesis Typing—10 years experience—Marlene Higley. After 5:00 at 843-
6048 (8:00 to 5:00—842-0111). 4-3
FOR RENT
Your headquarters
Available now furnished studio, furniture or unfurnished 2 bedroom apartment Very large fully carpeted, plenty of storage space. Most utilities paid including central heat and air conditioning. Located across from place on campus busline Laundry facilities, outdoor pool, off-street parking
LOW SUMMER RATES
miDAS®
mufflers and
shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Playing Music
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17=18
for
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP
900 Miss
VI 3 -5304
K
COIN OP. PICK UP
LAUNDRY STATION
19th and La. 2346 lowa
19th and Miss. VI 3-9868
METROPOLITAN
BICYCLE
Let
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
PLANNING A TRIP??
Malls Shopping Center
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
V13-1211
Newsmen lash out against censorship
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—A pair of leading journalists lashed out against government suppression and censorship of the mass media Thursday at the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium which is being held on the campus of the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
A. R. B. C. P. R. S. L.
Journalists discuss government censorship
Jack Newfield, assistant editor of the Village Voice, and Sander Vanocur, NBC News correspondent, spoke on "The Power and Responsibility of the Press" during the second day of the five-day symposium.
Newfield opened his speech with an outline of the failure of the "old journalism."
Photo by Greg Gorman
Journalists Jack Newfield and Sander Vanocur gave half-hour talks on "The Power and Responsibility of the Press" at the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium at UMKC. Both men advocated the need for a greater versatility in the news.
He said the failure was not just in the journalism schools that have impersonal factories which produce clerks of facts or the monopoly ownership of newspapers in too many cities.
"My root criticism of old journalism," Newfield said, "is that it is blind to an important part of the truth, that it doesn't print all of the truth all of the time."
Newfield cited examples such as the New York Times refusal to print stories of Pulitzer Prize winner Anthony Lucas on the Chicago conspiracy trial and the refusal of the Washington Post to print the story of operation "Phoenix" involving the secret training of GI's in assassination and torture techniques.
"All these corporate institutions feel they are part of the elite that runs the country," Newfield said. "And the men and women who control these monsters are not neutral, they have a mind set, a life style and political values concealed under a rhetoric of objectivity. But the values are institutionalized by the
24 KANSAN Feb. 27 1970
Times, Associated Press and CBS into corporate bureaucracies."
The corollary to the mass media's presumption against insurgency, Newfield said, is its bias in the direction of all authority.
"The presumption of truth is always with the President, university dean or local police chief." Newfield charged. "The burden of proof is always on the powerless and inarticulate poor."
Newfield listed three strategies for democratizing the mass media and particularly the press.
- "Make multiple ownership of television and newspapers in any one city a violation of the anti-trust law.
- "Begin organizing professional working journalists into radical caucuses inside their shops. They could demand participatory democracy inside the city room. By this I mean reporters would have a say in what stories are assigned. This would take power away from aging editors and conservative unions and give it to the reporters who are closer in touch with realities.
- "Need of a new journalism which would be more personal and subjective. A writing based on personal participation and open advocacy. Writing that is subjective rather than objective. It has a respect for detail and fact. The new journalism is what Norman Mailer uses in his memoir, poetry, essay and short story, to tell it more how it really is." Newfield said.
The new journalism breaks down artificial barriers between leisure and work, between public and private knowledge. It is used by writers committed to writing not about the world, but changing the world, he said.
Vanocur's speech dealt mainly with governmental censorship of the news.
"The government ought to get away from our throats," he emphasized." The government has license power and seems anxious to use it. I don't mind being harassed but being censored," he asserted.
Vanocur said editorializing is what Vice-President Agnew called "Instant analysis." He said the commentators had two hours to prepare. "Does that disqualify them? Some know a good bit more than the Vice-President," he said.
"To refrain from commentary is not instant analysis but it is democracy," Vanocur declared.
"Our view of the truth is closer than the government's," Vanocur said. "At least by competing we have come closer to the truth than by acting as a transmission belt of the government's views."
Vanocur attacked the familiar excuse of the government whenever they are criticized. The public officials say, "If you only knew what we know but cannot tell you.'
It is expressions such as these, Vanocur said, that have lead to our becoming involved in Vietnam when we have no business being there.
THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES
BROADWAY LIBRARY
NEEDED: A NEW LIBRARY IN 1970
BILLY RUSSELL
SAN FRANCISCO
EMPLOYEES
VOTE YES MARCH 3,
Lawrence Library Bond Committee-
THE LIBRARY NEEDS:
★ TOTAL LIBRARY AREA OF 35,000 SQUARE FEET
★ BOOK CAPACITY OF 140,000 VOLUMES
★ READING ROOM CAPACITY OF 200
★ INCREASED PARKING FACILITIES
★ MORE CHILDREN'S FACILITIES
MORE ADULT READER SERVICES
★ AUDITORIUM CAPACITY OF 100
★ MEETING ROOM CAPACITY OF 20
★ STREET-LEVEL ENTRY FOR THE AGED AND HANDICAPPED