THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 89
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, March 2, 1970
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Snow cripples Canyon
GRAND CANYON, Ariz.-Snow plows labored early today to free nearly 600 tourists stranded at the Grand Canyon by a massive snow storm which blanketed the area with up to three feet of snow.
Cuba seizes U.S. vessel
MIAMI—A converted U.S. fishing vessel reportedly seeking sunken treasure in the Caribbean remained in Cuban custody today after it was seized by the Cuban coast guard near Cay Lobos.
A State Department spokesman in Washington confirmed the boat, identified as the Jocelyn C. skippered by Sten Carlson, 37, of Chatham, Mass., was in Cuban hands.
LOS ANGELES—A vial of gravel brought back from the moon by the Apollo 11 astronauts is missing, apparently stolen while on display at a fund-raising dinner. The FBI has been called in to try to trace it.
Asked if the boat was on a U.S. government mission, he replied: "Absolutely and unequivocally no."
Moon gravel stolen
A NASA spokesman at the space center in Houston said public display of lunar material must be cleared through the agency. He said their records did not indicate such a request had been made.
Blast rips ROTC room
BOULDER, Colo.—An explosion knocked out one wall today of a room housing the Air Force ROTC facilities at the University of Colorado.
The explosion, at 12:30 a.m. "totaled out one room," according to a witness, and knocked out one wall of another room.
Protests upset Pompidou
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (UPI)— French President Georges Pompidou, angry because of demonstrations along the route of his state visit to the United States, was reported Sunday to be considering cancellation of his two-day visit to New York City and returning to Paris although French and State Department spokesmen said they were unaware of any such plans.
According to French sources Pompidou had said he would cancel the final 48 hours of his trip which included a meeting with U.N. Secretary General Thant and a gala dinner in the grand ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria, if he was not guaranteed demonstrators would be kept away from him and his party.
However official State Department and French spokesmen said
they had "no knowledge" of any change from the official schedule.
Pompidou's appearances at all stops have been greeted by demonstrators protesting the recent sale of Mirage jets to Libya which could be used against Israel in the Middle East conflict.
Pompidou was spending the night here as the personal guest of U.S. protocol chief Emil Mosbacher in his suburban home and was unavailable to newsmen.
There was no question Pompidou had been upset with the demonstration in Chicago Saturday night. There were 1,000 demonstrators here at the Westchester County airport too when he landed Sunday, but Pompidou saw them only briefly as a limousine whisked him to the Mossbacher home.
It was different Saturday night.
Before boarding his jet at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, Pompidou said the "carefully organized" demonstrations against him Saturday night had "put a shame on the face of America."
Speaking in French to newsmen with Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago and Illinois Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie standing by, Pompidou said the demonstrators would "defeat their own cause. They will not defeat the Franco-American friendship which is above such impolite demonstrations.
"I send my salutations to the great majority of the population of Chicago who, I am sure, is ashamed of all that," Pompidou said.
Citizens express concern
TOPEKA (UPI) — An estimated 300 to 500 citizens are expected to converge at the Kansas statehouse today as part of "Save Our Schools (SOS) Day."
The Kansas State Teachers Association (KSTA) is organizing the statewide expression of "concern over an impending money crisis in public education" in the state.
Dr. Melvin E. Neely, KSTA executive secretary, said thousands of Kansans will take part, not all of them teachers.
Neely said a survey of the 215 KSTA-affiliated local teachers associations in the state's 311 school districts was made to see what local plans are for the day.
Only a few schools will close, he said. Most of them are in south
central Kansas, and most will close only for a half day.
Neely said the KSTA declared Monday "SOS Day" so that teachers, administrators and school board members throughout the state may join in informing citizens in their districts of "the desperate plight Kansas schools will face unless the legislature acts to avert a crisis in the next few days."
The KSTA official said special activities are planned in most districts. They range from passing out handbills to cutting programs back to nothing except the "three r's."
Most of those who come to Topeka will arrive early today for coffee and briefings at KSTA headquarters prior to heading for the statehouse. Their visit will
coincide with a hearing scheduled at 10 a.m. by the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee on Gov. Robert B. Docking's proposed property tax lid bill. It has already passed the house.
Also of concern to the visitors will be proposed legislation on increased state aid to schools and a bill to improve teacher retirement.
BULLETIN
Tonight at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room in the Union a mandatory meeting will be held for all Student Senate and class officer candidates to discuss election procedures.
Today is also the last day for filing for candidacy for office.
Kappa, AKL skit wins first
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity walked away with most of the honors Saturday night at the twentieth annual Rock Chalk Revue, winning five of the seven categories including the coveted first place trophy.
The Kappas and the AKL's skit, "The Man Who Got Liberty's Talents" or "For Whom the Bell Tolls," took the awards for the best set design, the best costume design, the best original script, the best original song, and best production number, making them top point scorers and winners of the first place trophy.
Taking the second place trophy was the Sigma Chi-Chi Omega skit, "Ark! Ark! Will Zondoo Do?" or "Are We Just Knocking Around in Space?" Dennis Jennings, who played
Debbie Corley, who played Gladys Alexandra Ford in "What Have We Got Us: An Epiglottis?", the sketch presented by Delta Delta Delta sorority and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, received the award for best actress. The skit received an honorable mention award.
Captain Bipwell in the Sigma Chi-Chi Omega skit won the award for best actor.
The other act of the revue, "Speakeasy and Carry a Tall Bud" or "June is Busting Out All Over," by Pi Beta Phi and Beta Theta Pi also received an honorable award.
FAIL BUT SHOP
A near capacity crowd watched the revue and responded enthusiastically to the humor. The in-between acts consisted of several popular songs, with accompanying dance routines and several comic sketches.
AKLs and Kappas in winning skit
Alpha KappaLambda and KappaKappaGamma exposed the true story of Paul Revere's ride in "The Man who Got Liberty's Talents or For Whom the Belle Tolls."the first place skit in Rock Chalk Revue.
Campus briefs
Delta Sigma Pi to hold rush party
Delta Sigma Pi, the professional business fraternity. will hold a rush party at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawker Room of the Holiday Inn.
Delta Sigma Pi is a professional organization established to promote a closer affiliation between business students and the world of commerce. Anyone having questions concerning the party or Delta Sigma Pi can call Boyd Davies at VI2-4887.
Beethoven's talents featured
An exhibit on Ludwig von Beethoven is on display in Watson Library.
The display, located in the documents section, is being displayed to commemorate the 200th birthday anniversary of this musical composer.
The exhibit, which will be shown until March 15, includes some manuscript facsimiles of his music, books, records and other copies of his works.
Junior class party Friday
The junior class will give a class party Friday at 8 p.m. in the National Guard Armory. The music will be provided by "Ivory Tower," a Chicago band.
Admission is free for juniors with class cards, and others will be charged $1.50. Fee beer will be available.
Sorority offers scholarships
A $1,000 undergraduate scholarship and a $3,000 graduate scholarship are being offered to women students in fields related to rehabilitative work by Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.
The rehabilitation scholarships will relate to work with the mentally disturbed, the physically handicapped, the socially deprived, the aged and other groups handicapped by circumstances of birth, environment, disease or accident.
Applications are available in the scholarship and awards office in Strong Hall basement. The application, references, college transcript and a statement of interests should be submitted to the College scholarship office by the end of February.
Metzler to speak on environment
Dwight F. Metzler, deputy commissioner of health for New York, will be the department of civil engineering's spring seminar guest speaker. Metzler will speak on the young engineer's role in environment quality at 10:30 a.m. Friday in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union. Metzler is in charge of the billion dollar pollution abatement program in New York.
Berkeley professor to lecture
Michael Scriven, professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkley, will speak on "Addiction, Indulgence and Abuse" tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Scriven, who is billed as "a scholar who deals with present day problems," is part of the University of Kansas Humanities Lecture Series at KU from today through Thursday.
At 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Scriven will again speak in the Jayhawk Room on "Corruption, Subversion and Education." In 121 Fraser at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, he will talk
Courts criticized law, order needed
Mar. 2
1970
Sen. John McClellan, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate permanent investigating subcommittee, said the situation in which courts have allowed "codling of criminals" has "further deteriorated" since he first used the "codling" phrase in 1965.
"The Supreme Court has contributed, I think, substantially to this deterioration in law enforcement in the country," McClellan said. He accused the court of a "sorry record" of reversals of convictions.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A veteran Senate rackets investigator said Sunday the United States could achieve a "law and order society" with a more stable Supreme Court, defensive weapons in the home and citizens willing to cooperate with police.
2 KANSAN
Additional football game next fall not to increase price of tickets
David G. Miller, chairman of the athletic seating board.
An eleventh football game will not affect the prices of football tickets, said Monte C. Johnson, assistant athletic director, and
Johnson said the price of the tickets does not depend on the
number of games played, but on advertising and how students handle their activity fees.
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Planning Board holds more hearings
Future, present space needs discussed
By JOHN GOODRICK Kansan staff writer
John McKay, dean of visual arts, summed up his department's needs by saying they don't need any additional space because they don't have any present space on which to add.
Visual Arts, the Art Museum, University Theatre and the School of Fine Arts representatives spoke to the University Planning Board Friday night about not only future needs for space, but about an urgent need for more space now.
There are 800 fine arts majors now, and McKay said there was currently not adequate staff or facilities for them. He said if the present enrollment kept up, in ten years there would be 1200 fine arts majors.
The average time spent by students in Visual Arts in their studios is three hours for each hour of credit, McKay said. He said first year students spent an average of 21 hours in the studio a week, but by the time they got to be seniors they would spend an average of between 36 and 40 hours a week there.
McKay said the department was presently spread out over several buildings on and off campus, including Strong Hall, Bailey annex and the football stadium.
nex and the football stadium.
The current use of space by Visual Arts is 48,000 square feet. McKay said they had a need for 88,500 additional square feet which would bring the total to 136,550 square feet, but he added,
"in ten years this wouldn't be adequate."
"Unlike all of the other groups that expressed a need for space," McKay said, "our department
Mar. 2
1970 KANSAN 3
"We would be enthralled by any building," he said, though it would be advantageous to be located close to the art museum.
does not require a central location on campus."
"We are running against the wall in every direction," said Leland Miller, occupational therapy professor.
"Our bag is human function. Most occupational therapy courses need heavy laboratory services and because of a lack of space our program is becoming sub-standard," said Miller.
The last semester a student spends in occupational therapy he used to spend at University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. Recently it was decided to move all the students back to Lawrence, "to . . . to nowhere," Miller said.
The department does not even have the same mailing address as the University, Miller said. He said everything sent to them through the University got sent back to the post office and re-addressed and then delivered to them because their building is off campus. He said it was "imperative for us to move on campus."
Peter Thompson, drawing and painting assistant professor, said since 1964 their enrollment had depended upon available space. Since the 1964-65 school year the department has stopped accepting students from the College of Liberal Arts, since the 1966-67 school year they have accepted only those students in the School of Fine Arts, and presently the department has stopped accepting graduate students.
Despite the curtailment of student enrollment there has been a 30 per cent increase in the enrollment in drawing and a 60 per cent increase in the enrollment in painting.
PEACE YOU
Peace Corps
Information & Applications
Call: Mario Karr-V12-6917 or
See: Dean Clark Coan-St. 226
"Contemporary theater is leaning toward more audience participation rather than observation," he said. Dykes suggested a thrust type stage, with a seating capacity of 1,000, to accommodate this type of production. He said on this type of big scenery stage props would not be used but extensive lighting would.
director, said that much of education had been spent on making a job for tomorrow, but in the last few years there had been a trend "pointing toward the inner man and to the fullest development of the inner man."
Thompson said it was "crucial" that students saw the art of fellow students, faculty and other artists and emphasized the need for exhibition space.
"It is an understatement to say our space need is critical. Our requests are for right now. We are desperate," said Downer Dykes, professor of design.
"This semester we had to disenroll 20 freshmen and sophomore students so our seniors could take a needed course to graduate." said Dykes.
The sculpture studio underneath the bleachers of the stadium was extremely crowded, he said. Industrial design, operating in one-third of Bailey annex, has been told that "corrective measures will be taken" to solve the inadequate space problem. The department now operates on a "hot desk" program where more than one student uses the same desk.
Some key problems to the design department's need for space
are; present studios are being used full time from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. every day and some evenings; using the "hot desk" program; ceramic studios operating at full capacity and turning down students who want to take courses; and the lack of a glass facility.
Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, in support of Visual Arts, said enrollments in Visual Arts, despite curtailment, had grown faster than almost any department.
The School of Fine Arts needs an additional 18,976 square feet, including 40 practice rooms, 25 teaching studios, 11 faculty offices and more, he said.
Gorton described Hoch Auditorium as an "unfortunate palace of enchantment" which was overshadowed by basketball. He said Hoch needed new dressing room facilities, seating, stage rigging, an electric organ and an acoustical shell.
Jed Davis, University Theatre
Bret Waller, Art Museum director, described Spooner Hall, the museum, as the oldest building on campus and a fire trap. He said that during the summer months the temperatures soared above 100 degrees in the upper floors of the building which did irreparable damage to paintings.
THE
CAPTAIN'S
TABLE
Something New, Something Different, Some Place To Eat
Question: Where to eat?
A lot of places to choose from, right?
You get hungry in the morning.
You're famished in the afternoon.
Tired of the same places.
You're always looking for some place different.
Some place that is better than most.
Some place close to campus.
Try coming to the Captain's Table. Enjoy something new. Enjoy the Captain's Table. (It's some place.)
Breakfast ... 7 - 10 a.m.
Lunch... 10 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Dinner ... 2:30 p.m. - 2:30 a.m.
The Captain's Table
Across the street from Lindley Hall
The
The Captain's Table Across the street from Lindley Hall
KANSAN COMMENT
Justice: a weapon?
Julius Hoffman wasn't the villain of the Chicago melodrama.
Somebody had to be the judge; it didn't really matter who got the job. If anything, it was fortunate that someone as incompetent as Julius was on the bench, since he left several good points for appeal.
For this was a political trial—it was over before it began.
After a similar case, the Dr. Spock trial, John MacKenzie wrote in the Washington Post, "In political cases the outcome is predetermined 99 per cent of the time... The important decision isn't made by the judge, much less the jury. It's made by the policeman, or prosecutor, or politician who decides who is going to be arrested and what the charge will be."
The outcome is predetermined because the government is doing the arresting, the prosecuting and the trying. And it's also the government that is being challenged by men like
Dr. Spock and the Chicago Seven. How can objectivity be possible?
When the ruling order is threatened, it uses its own apparatus to eliminate the opposition. The government will rarely support a movement aimed against itself.
Clarence Darrow once said of the American Judicial system, "It is a serious reflection on America that this worn-out piece of tyranny, this drag-net for compassing the imprisonment and death of men whom the ruling class does not like, should find a home in our country."
In the Chicago case, as in all political trials, the judicial system became a weapon with which the ruling class could crush dissent.
Upon hearing the verdict, the defendants remarked that the real trial would be in the streets. Such a trial would be no less valid than the one that took place in the courtroom.
hearing voices—
Joe Naas
Global gangsterism
To the editor:
In view of the American Bar Association's opposition to U.S. ratification of the U.N. convention on genocide ("We wouldn't be here if we hadn't committed genocide" UDK, Feb. 24, 1970); and in view of continuing U.S. participation in the world's tradition of genocide, I would be grateful if you would reprint the following statement recently made by Jean-Paul Sartre in Peace News, London, January 30, 1970:
THE WORLD RULE OF GANGSTERISM
In order to conquer the Biaffrans, the nations of the world have allowed the prosecution of a slow war, of hunger and disease. They have tolerated a pseudo-Labour Great Britain and pseudo-Socialist Russia competing with each other to send the most efficient people and the most murderous weapons, to allow killers to operate under the most favourable conditions.
Mutilation, bombardment of hospitals and markets, murder pure and simple, not to mention the imposition of an almost complete blockade—nothing has been omitted from this war. And it has carried with it the approval of almost all African states, Arab states, the states of the third world, social-democratic states, fasoist states, and others—not to mention the Secretary-General of the United Nations, U Thant, who has given his murderous blessing to the great cause of united petroleum in Nigeria.
There can be no justification for such ignominy. It has no name, but by virtue of it, the Jews were turned into soap, and the Sudanese negroes into game. The South American Indians were slowly exterminated because of it, the
Kurds in Iraq were disposed of, and so were the communists in Indonesia. By virtue of it, millions of citizens have been deported by the Soviet Union, and tanks have been sent into Czechoslovakia.
The Biafran issue totalises all of this. But it also marks the beginning of a decidedly new era in human affairs.
An era in which any country will, in the face of any other, or all of them put together, be able to profess it is doing almost anything for the sake of virtually any principle it cares to name.
Let the killers and the stock-
phrase ideologists of the world rejoice. Their reign embraces the earth.
Judith Kahane
Sudith Kallane
Lawrence graduate student
★ ★ ★
To the editor:
Each year thousands of people flock to the Indianapolis 500 Memorial Day Race to satisfy their bloodlust. For this excursion, one must rent a hotel room for three days a year in advance, spend $25.00 on a ticket to the tracks, and waste $2.50 for each mint julep. Why go to Indianapolis to see bloodshed when one can get a much better price for a seat at 19th and Iowa in Lawrence, Kansas? Think of the revenue the state of Kansas is losing when we could erect bleachers at this intersection, maintain a concession stand, and guarantee a wreck or fatality and plenty of blood, since there are forty accidents here yearly. We would have it all over Indianapolis, which only runs once a year. We can sell hot dogs, soft drinks, pop corn, and programs to make it worthwhile for each spectator to spend his money in the lovely sunflower state. He
will be able to enjoy himself for one third the price of Indianapolis, and one tenth the trouble. Not only that, but there would be commercial appeal involved. Television and radio stations could vie for the rights to a live network broadcast. The lucky victims who survive the collisions could put their memoirs on the best-selling racks with such titles as "19th and Iowa—I Was There!" Such stories could only rank second to those of Edgar Allen Poe's chillers which have fascinated millions.
If only the city of Lawrence would observe this modest proposal, within at least five or six years the city would reap more than enough profits to be able to afford the installation of stop lights at 19th and Iowa that are now so much beyond that city's budget.
And there are such things as contributions, even though such an idea would demand that residents and city officials would have to open up their apathetic eyes. If each student at KU alone contributed one fourth of his T.G.I.F. money for this week, sufficient funds could be raised to buy stop lights and slow cars down. If even half the lives of people killed in automobile accidents were saved, it would be well worth the venture.
Marsha Bryan
Kansas City sophomore
Cathy White
Shawnee sophomore
\* \* \*
To the editor:
Why do we have to buy it (Harambee) and the blacks get it free?
Mary Westerhaus Marion senior
Griff & the Unicorn
Griff &
DUN WORRY, GRIEF... WE
GUN GET YOU FLYING. SOME-
HOW, I GET SPONDS FOR
SOUR MEANTIME
WOWCH!
WHERE HE
GUN TO ??!
DUN WORRY, GRIFF... WE
GUN GET YOU FLYING SOME-
HOW. I GET SPoONS FOR
SOUP MEANTIME
SOKOLOFF
WOWCH!
WHERE HE
GUN TO ??!
David Sokoloff 1970
Sorel's News Service
Edward Forel, 70
(with apologies to Michael Angelo Bonomolo.)
Lord and Order
MONTREAT, N.C.—Billy Graham has thus far refrained from commenting on Administration proposals for "preventive detention," but a clue to his thinking can be found in the current issue of Decision, one of his house organs: "The Christian is going to be faced more and more with the need to maintain the delicate balance of social change on the one hand, and the loyalty to his country and to the system in which he was reared on the other. 'The powers that be,' the Bible says, 'are ordained of God' (Romans 13:1), and the Christian citizen is committed to uphold the law and order that is necessary for the functioning of society. Therefore, the Christian must be deeply concerned that a small minority element in society is out to destroy that order."
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
A classic, Mark Twain explained, is a book that everybody wants to have read but nobody wants to read.
Books, whether they be classics or popular reading, can be made attractive. Bright covers can sell books and lure minds into what is still the most rewarding media.
The binding of Lawrence's Public Library is more than frayed. The old building and all of its inadequacies are acting as a deterrent rather than a lure. The old facilities are keeping classics "books that everybody wants to have read but nobody wants to read."
The $1,575,000 bond issue tomorrow could bring Lawrence up to the level of several major Kansas cities and put it far ahead of others. Nothing should be more important to Lawrence than the maintenance of a very important educational tool—the library.
The price is high, but if the library isn't built now it will go higher. But the loss will be far more than monetary.
I grew up in rural Kansas and never saw a library until I was in the fourth grade. I missed many great children's classics, books which I hope to pick up after I reach senility. In Lawrence, there is no excuse for a child to miss the treasures that an adequate library could offer.
If you're a Lawrence voter, vote yes tomorrow
Do it for tomorrow
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 the holidays. Permission is required to publish a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence 69044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without restrictions. Registration required. Accessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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KANSAN REVIEWS
ROCK CHALK: Here once again
By GENELLE RICHARDS
Arts & Revisions Editor
Arts & Reviews Editor
Although it contained several good points, Rock Chalk Revue never ceases to be somewhat of a disappointment. But one must remember that it is not a professional performance.
Considering what they have to work with plus the fact that it doesn't claim to be professional, then the performers and directors do a relatively good job.
The first skit by the Tri-Delts and the TKE's entitled "What Have We Got Us: An Epiglottis?" was the worst of the evening. One saving factor was the excellent voice of Debbie Corley as Gladys Alexander Ford.
But unfortunately this is the only good point for the script was poor showing little originality and the actors seemed to be reciting their lines.
The second skit by the Pi Phi's and the Beta's entitled "Speak Easy and Carry a Tall Bud" or "June is Busting Out All Over," was very good exhibiting many essential points.
All of the performers appeared to have practiced a great deal therefore, giving good performances in their singing, dancing and acting.
The script contained many funny lines and the costumes were colorful along with the set, both obviously taking some time to complete.
Linda Lewis as Mama and Robin McDonald as Alfonso demonstrated talent and ability to sing therefore giving good characterizations.
The entire skit was enjoyable and entertaining and caused the evening to pick up quite a bit, with the best yet to come.
Perhaps the best skit of the evening was "The Man Who Got Liberty's Talents" or "For Whom the Belle Tolls" by the Kappa's and the AKL's.
Although it may have been the best, the factor that greatly caused this was the film in the last part of the skit. It was extremely funny and creative employing such figures as Governor Docking and Chancellor Chalmers.
veloped their characters fairly well.
Other points made for an overall well-done skit and those would include, originality, music and lyrics, authentic costumes and a colorful set.
The chorus was excellent displaying ensemble qualities in their dancing and singing. With everything combined the skit was essentially the best of the evening.
The final skit was entitled "Ark! Ark! Will Zondoo Do?" or "Are We Just Knocking Around in Space" by the Chi Omega's and the Sigma Chi's.
Three very good performances were turned in by Spook Russell as Captain Bipwell, Jane Mackender as Flora and Larry Cates as Elvis. They all showed a great deal of work on their characterizations and their performances were very entertaining.
The skit was clever with some old songs rejuvenated adding new lyrics. The chorus performed these songs well with a colorful set and wearing costumes that were just as colorful representing members of the animal kingdom.
Their set was the best of the evening showing a great deal of work and originality.
While the skits were on the average relatively good and entertaining, the in-between acts were almost a complete disappointment.
Robert Deadmon had an excellent voice as did some of the other singers but the song selections were poor and didn't seem to be what the evening demanded.
The dancers were also very good but the overall effect of the in-between acts left something to be desired. They just never seemed to be what they could be and didn't come up to the expectations of the audience.
If given the chance to judge the Revue, I would have given the following awards to these people and skits: Best Ski—the Kappa's and the AKL's; Best Female Lead—Linda Lewis as Mama (Pi Phi's and Beta's); Best Male Lead—Jim Terry as Paul Revere (Kappas's and AKL's); Most Originality—Kappa's and AKL's; Best Music and Lyrics—Pi Phi's and Beta's; Best Costumes—Kappa's and AKL's; and Best Set—Chi Omega's and Sigma Chi's.
People may say, and they surely will, that Rock Chalk Revue was poor and disappointing, and in some places it was. But, these people don't consider the basic fact that Rock Chalk does not claim to be professional and entertain as if it was Broadway
Keeping this fact in mind and viewing the Revue with an open mind, it was not a bad evening of entertainment and if one tried it was possible to enjoy it.
BOOKS
THE BRAINS TRUST, by R. G. Tugwell (Viking Compass, $3.25)—One of the best histories of the early Roosevelt administration, by one of the men who helped make the history. Rexford Tugwell was part of that group of scholar-politicians who came to be called "the brains trust," who helped to shape the Roosevelt campaign in 1932 that led to the election. The approach is, of course, personal, and it will not appeal to those who must see
POETRY OF THE 'UNDERGROUND' IN BRITAIN, edited by Michael Horovitz (Penguin, $2.25)—A collection representing work of the "secret" generation of British poets whose work heretofore was found only in little magazines and the like. Writers are generally unknown in America.
FDR either as the God-figure or the Devil-figure of the 20th Century. The book won the 1968 Bancroft Prize in History.
Mar. 2
1970 KANSAN 5
EILEEN MORRIS—Miss Morris will give her senior recital performing on the organ.
Monday
"LIFE IN THE THIRTIES"
(Films of Fact and Fiction)—This new series of films plays only on Monday offering a wide variety of movies to satisfy most tastes.
On campus this week
Tuesday
"WAR HUNT" (Special Fim Series)—This film comes to us in the Evil Children Series. An
RECORDS
By WILLJAM D LAFFLER
But Al came along after the traditional New Orleans jazz had been almost buried by Dixieland, Kansas City and Chicago bands.
NEW YORK (UPI)—If Al Hirt had been born 50 years sooner he probably would have become a jazz immortal.
The good-natured bear from Bourbon Street gets a fine chance to show his versatility in the score which Hugo Montenegro, Ralph Dino and John Sembello composed for the movie satire, "Viva Max!"
He can blow a real jazz trumpet whenever he feels in the mood to do so yet he has to be flexible to face the changing times which produce a Harry James, Dick Ruedebush or Herb Albert.
Al's trumpet gives the movie's sound-track a genuine south-of-the-border flavor. He also recorded a special arrangement of "Viva Max!" by Montenegro (RCA Victor LSP-4275) that is dazzling from beginning to end.
While Al never stops amazing the listener with his mastery of the trumpet, particularly on "Viva Max Hat Dance," he steps back occasionally to let the drums tell their tragicomic tale.
This recording of "Viva Max!" is pure entertainment. Unlike some movie scores which are too deeply involved with the scenario, "Viva Max!" can stand alone as a record which can be played many times for relaxed enjoyment.
One liners...
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Norma Crane has been signed for a costarring role with Sidney Poitier in "They Call Me MISTER Tiberi" for the Mirisch Company.
* *
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Comedienne Kaye Ballard will play a cameo role in "Which Way to the Front," in which Jerry Lewis stars as well as directs.
✩ ✩ ✩
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Warner Bros. in preparing an original screenplay, "Let's Get a Close-Up of the Messiah," for feature production.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Greek-born belly dancer Helena Kallianiotes has signed for a featured role in National General's "The Baby Maker."
\* \* \*
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Former Paramount executive Bernard Donnenfeld and directors Robert Wise and Mark Robson have formed a new independent production company titled the Filmmakers Group.
***
NO GABBER
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPI)
—Gov. Alexander McNair was inaugurated the first Governor of Missouri on Sept. 19, 1820, and delivered the shortest inauguration speech in the state's history.
he congratulated the Legislature on the "happy change" from territorial status to statehood and recommended only a method for providing for the naming of presidential electors.
American film, it is directed by Denis Sanders and made in 1962. For those of you who like to laugh at stupidity then you may enjoy the short of the Three Stooges in "NO CENSUS NO FELLING."
MICHAEL SCRIVEN (Humanities Lecture)—Professor of Philosophy at the University of California at Berkeley, he will speak on "Violence." Open public forums will be conducted Monday on "Abortion, Contraception"; "Obscenity, Perversion"; and "Addiction, Abuse." On Tuesday the topic of the forum will be "Corruption, Subversion, and Education."
Wednesday
"IL POSTO" (Classical Film Series)-This Italian film by Ermanno Olmi was made in 1961.
LITTLE SYMPHONY — Under the direction of Thomas Gorton the Little Symphony will present "Gregorian Chant" by Creston. "Sinfonietta" by Poulenc, Three Concert Arias by Mozart and "Concerto in F minor" by Chopin. Soloists will be Jane Abbott, pianist; Kenneth Smith, bass; and Charles Hoag, double bass.
Thursday
"FORBIDDEN GAMES" (Special Film Series)—Also in the Evil Children Series this film is from France and was made in 1952 by Rene Clement. For those who love Shirley Temple this is a chance to see her in "DUNKIN DORAS DONUTS."
MARY WESTERHAUS — Miss Westerhaus gives her senior recital performing on the piano.
VIVA MAX!
WILL CAPTURE
YOUR HEART???
NOW SHOWING
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"Hilariously Now Showing"
WATT A WAY TO PLUG A BRAIN GAP!
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The NOW Movie Of Our Year Starts March 4th
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!"
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—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, VILLAGE VOICE
"A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY."
—PLAYBOY
"ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!"
—JOSEPH MORGENSTERN, NEWSWEEK
easy Rider PETER FONDA DENNIS HOPPER JACK NICHOLSON
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Gain first conference road win
Jayhawks overpower Oklahoma State
By DON BAKER
STILLWATER — The Kansas Jayhawks, behind the scoring and rebounding of Roger Brown and Dave Robisch, gained their first conference road victory of the season Saturday by blasting Henry Iba's Oklahoma State Cowboys, 78-58.
The regionally televised game saw the Jayhawks strengthen
KANSAN Sports
their meaningless hold on second place in the conference as they pushed their season record to 16-8 overall and 7-5 in the conference.
The Cowboys controlled the game tempo for the first nine minutes as they built a 14-10 lead. Coach Ted Owens then replaced conference scoring leader Robisbich with sophomore Bud Stallworth and KU responded by scoring the next 10 points to take a 20-14 lead with 8:25 remaining
in the half. Brown led the Jayhawk surge with six straight points.
Robisch returned to the floor to pace Javahawks scoring the remainder of the half as KU took a 35-28 half time lead. The 6-9 Springfield, Ill. junior hit 10 points during the last eight minutes of the half.
By intermission both Robisch and Brown had scored 13 points but just as important the two big men had combined to haul down 15 rebounds, 4 more than the entire OSU squad.
KU struck quickly in the second half as Aubrey Nash's driving layup and a Pierre Russell 20-foot shot propelled the lead to 11, 39-28, with 18:53 remaining.
The Cowboys managed to play even with the Hawks for the next six minutes before a 15 foot jump shot by Bud Stallworth with 12:27 left started a Jayhawk explosion of 11 straight points and a resulting 59-39 lead with a little more than 10 minutes remaining to play.
KU maintained the margin for the next six minutes before OSU, behind Rick Cooper's three
straight jump shots and John Robinson's two free throws, made the score 70-56 with 2:41 showing on the clock.
Two KU sophomores, Neal Mask and Bob Kivisto, took charge at this point with both getting four points in the time remaining to make the final score 78-58.
Robisch and Brown ended the game with 24 and 22 points respectively. Russell added 13 and Stallworth came off the bench to get 8.
Cooper paced OSU scoring with 14 points.
The Jayhawks enjoyed one of their better shooting games as they finished with 58 per cent accuracy from the field while connecting on 77 per cent of their free throw attempts.
KU dominated rebounding throughout the game as the Jayhawks finished with 40 compared to the Cowboy's 21. Brown, a 6-10 Chicago junior, grabbed 17 to pace all rebounders. Many of Brown's rebounds came off the defensive boards as he repeatedly denied the Cowboys more than one shot at the basket.
In an interview after the game Owens said with a laugh that it felt good to win on the road.
"This was a good game for our confidence," he said. "Nash and Stallworth came back and Brown
continues to get stronger, proving he can be effective."
"If we can win the next two it will give us great confidence for next year," he said.
The game marked the last meeting between Owens and Henry Iba, the Cowboy's immortal coach who will retire after this season.
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Gymnasts muscle by Cornhuskers
The KU gymnastics team, behind seven 9.0 or better performances, easily defeated Nebraska Saturday afternoon 158.50 to 144.20.
Terry Blanchard, Ulysses sophomore, Stan Clyne, Wichita junior, and John Brouillette, Wichita junior, combined for a score of 27.00 to establish a team record in the parallel bars. Blanchard won the event with a score of 9.05 followed by Cline's 9.00 and Brouillette's 8.95.
In winning KU established two team records.
The Jayhawks have now won 10 straight dual matches since losing their opener to highly regarded Iowa State.
Coach Bob Lockwood said he was particularly pleased with this record because Marc Joseph, Lawrence freshman, was right behind Brouillette with an 8.90 score.
6 KANSAN
Mar. 2
1970
The second record came in high bar competition where Gerald (Continued to page 8)
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Jayhawks capture fifth straight indoor crown
HARRIS
Photo by Ron Bishon
Where's everybody else?
Photo by Ron Bishop
Another winning effort
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Shot putter Karl Salb's record heave of 65 feet, $8\frac{3}{4}$ inches literally shot KU into command of the 42nd annual Big Eight Indoor Track Championships Saturday night as the Jayhawks swept to their 16th consecutive title and their 16th in the last 21 years.
KU was in fifth place after four events when Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop gave the Jayhawks a 1-2-3 sweep in the shot put and a lead that they never relinquished.
Four meet records fell and two others were equalled before a near sellout crowd of 8,750 watched as the Hawks easily outdistanced runner-up K-State, 67-37.
Missouri finished third with 35 points, followed in order by Nebraska, 29; Oklahoma State, 20; Oklahoma, 18; Iowa State, 10; and Colorado, 8.
Salb's throw bettered his own meet mark of 64-11½ set a year ago and KU Jan Johnson, who edged Colorado's Mike Wedman in the pole vault, set a second meet record with a leap of 16 feet, $6\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Wedman vaulted 16-0.
K-State's Ken Swenson was the meet's only double winner, taking the mile in 4:09.3 and the 880-yard run in a record 1:51.9 clocking.
Swenson edged KU's Doug Smith by one-tenth of a second and Missouri's Mike Kelly by a half a second in the mile and overcame a 20-yard deficit to nip KU's Jim Neilhouse at the wire in the half mile. Neilhouse was also clocked in 1:51.9.
The previous meet record in the 880-yard run was set by Jim Ryun of KU, who was clocked in 1:52 in 1967.
K-State's Ray McGill set the fourth and final meet record by defending his title in the high jump with a leap of 7-1. It bettered by one inch the old mark set in 1967 by Missouri's Steve Herdon.
COLD WEATHER FIRES
K-State's Luci Williams won the high hurdles in a recordtying time of 7.1 and Missouri's Mel Gray equaled the meet mark of 6 seconds flat in winning the 60-yard dash event.
Other outstanding performances for KU included Jay Mason's 9:02.2 clocking in winning the two-mile run, Doug Smith's second place time of 4:09.4 in the mile, and a one-two finish in the 1.000-yard run with Brian McElroy turning in a winning 2:10.6 to edge out teammate Roger Kathol.
You'll want to, when you see ours. Like — fit. With the kind of tailoring that's up to the neat fabrics and patterns we're known for. Send up a few pair in your spring wardrobe, and set yourself to grab some attention.
SEND UP FLARES
NEW YORK—Fire losses usually are higher in the winter than any other time of the year, says the Insurance Information Institute. Although other factors are involved, this is a result mainly of heating hazards.
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1970 KANSAN 7
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15
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Scramble for second place continues
Hawks tangle with NIT-hopeful OU
By STEVE SHRIVER
Assistant Sports Editor
has his sports editor.
The ice has been broken. But
it's too late.
Kansas won its first conference
DENVER
BASKETBALL
Garfield Heard
road game of the season, trouncing Oklahoma State, 78-58, but must face NIT-hopeful Oklahoma tonight in Norman, Okla., in the mad scramble for second place.
The Jayhawks had been 0-5 on the road prior to Saturday afternoon's regionally televised game with the 'Pokes in Stillwater, Okla. But they still trail Big Eight champion Kansas State by $2 \frac{1}{2}$ games with only 2 to go.
The Sooners are fresh from an 80-73 victory over K-State Saturday, and could push their overall record to 18-7 by beating the 'Hawks tonight. That would greatly enhance their chances of receiving a bid to play in the NIT in New York's Madison Square Garden.
However, Oklahoma has been plagued by internal problems and will miss the services of four players including 6-9 center Clifford Ray, Reserves Harry Brown, Bob Wooten and Vester Marshall, along with Ray, all missed practice last Thursday afternoon.
Troubled Sooners rebound to trip conference champs
Ray, Brown and Wooten reportedly quit the squad while
By United Press International
By United Press International The Big Eight basketball race may be over but the run for the runnerup spot continues.
Oklahoma's troubled Sooners kept their post-season tournament hopes alive Saturday night by knocking off champion Kansas State, 80-73, at Norman, Okla., while Kansas closed in on second place with a 78-58 victory at Oklahoma State.
Oklahoma, paced by forward Garfield Heard's 31 points, held off a frenzied Kansas State rally in the final two minutes Saturday
In the only other Big Eight game last Saturday, Missouri clinched a first-division finish with an easy 80-63 home court rout of Nebraska.
Gymnastics
(Continued from page 6)
Carley, Wichita junior, Roger Hemphill, Lawrence junior, and Brouillette combined for a team score of 27.25. Carley received the highest score with a 9.25 followed closely by Hemphill's 9.20 and Brouillette's 8.80.
Lockwood expressed satisfaction with the results.
"Overall the effort was good," he said. "I'm real pleased with the performance."
He also had special praise for Kirk Gardner, Atchison junior, who received a 9.30 score on the still rings, and Topea sophomore Ron Faunce who scored 9.30 on the long horse. Brouillette also drew mention with his 51.7 in all round competition.
The total results were as follows:
Floor exercise: Clyne (KU) 8.90, Bradfield (KU) 8.8, Johnson (NU) 8.7.
Side horse: Schubert (KU) 9.0.
Brouillette (KU) 8.8, McWilliams
(NU) 8.0.
Rings: Gardner (KU) 9.3.
Brouillette (KU) 8.8, Hannah
(KU) 8.45.
Long horse: Faunce (KU) 9.3.
Bradfield (KU) 8.85, Reising (NU) 8.85 (tie).
Parallel bars: Blanchard (KU) 9.05, Clyne (KU) 9.0, Brouillette (KU) 8.95.
High bar: Carley (KU) 9.25.
Hemphill (KU) 9.20, Brouillette
(KU) 8.80.
All round: Brouillette (KU)
51.7, Joseph (KU) 45.9, Batten
(NU) 41.45.
8 KANSAN Mar. 2
1970
night to take the Big Eight champion Wildcats 80-73.
The Sooners, playing before 4-500 fans, their largest home crowd in five years, captured the lead on Heard's tip-in with 2:10 remaining. Until that point, the lead changed hands 19 times and was tied 34-all at the intermission.
Guard Jeff Webb paced Kansas State with 18 points and forward Jerry Venable hit 17.
Oklahoma climbed to 17-7 on the season and an even 6-6 in the Big Eight, Kansas State, which has already claimed the conference championship with a 10-3 record, fell to 19-6 overall.
Henry Smith led all scorers with 21 points Saturday night as Missouri rolled to an easy 80-63 Big Eight basketball verdict over Nebraska.
Marshall was indefinitely suspended by coach John MacLeod. MacLeod would make only one comment: "I consider practice an awfully important part of our program."
Smith, who connected for 17 of his tallies in the first half, helped Missouri forge a 39-30 lead at intermission in the lopsided battle.
The Tigers, who also paced three other players in double figures, held a 23-point advantage in the second stanza before sending in reserves enabling the Cornhuskers to cut the gap. High for Nebraska was Bob Gratopp with 17.
In the two schools' latest encounter, KU bombed the Sooners, 78-41, in Allen Field House. OU entered that contest in the face of disciplinary action, too, as leading scorer and rebounder Garfield
Heard was forced to sit out the game after missing practice.
The Sooners had previously beaten KU in the Big Eight Tourney, 68-64, in overtime, for OU's first victory ever over a Ted Owens coached team. Oklahoma went on to win the tournament title en route to their best non-conference record in 14 years (11-1).
points against the Wildcats. The 6-6 senior forward has hit over 30 points in three out of the last four games and has moved into second place on the Big Eight scoring chart. He holds a slim edge over Cliff Meely of Colorado at 22 points per game and is fourth in rebounding with an 11.3 average.
Heard continued his late season scoring spree by pumping in 31
The First National Bank of St Paul, Minn., is 102 feet tall.
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FIRST CAMPUS DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TERMS OF LEAVE
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'Seven' attorneys draw crowd at rally
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The defense attorneys and one of the defendants at the "Chicago Seven" trial drew a crowd of about 5,000 persons Sunday to a protest rally in suburban Sepulveda but police reinforcements held in reserve were troubled mainly by a traffic jam.
William Kunstler, the lawyer whose appearance at the University of California at Santa Barbara last week preceded burning of a bank and other mob violence, flew here from Chicago to speak at the demonstration along with Tom Hayden, one of the five convicted of crossing state lines to incite riot.
Hayden was released on $25,000 appeal bond yesterday.
KU students in Costa Rica
Five KU students are in San Jose, Costa Rica, as part of KU's three junior year abroad programs.
The students left Feb. 20 and will return in December. The office of International Programs in cooperation with the University of Colorado sponsored the program. Participating students take four to five courses each semester there, totalling nearly 15 hours of work.
Those participating in the year in Costa Rica are Susan Armstrong, Flint, Mich.; Deborah Briant, Prairie Village; Tim Fagan, Galena; Justin Hunt, Conway Springs; and Valle Portuguez, Prairie Village.
The other KU Junior Year Abroad Programs are at the universities in Bonn, Germany and Bordeaux, France. Summer Institutes in Rome and Copenhagen offer liberal arts courses not requiring proficiency in the foreign language. The Summer Language Institutes in Barcelona, Spain; Eutin and Holzkirchen, Germany; Guadalajara, Mexico; Leningrad, Russia; and Paris, France are designed to gain proficiency in the language of the respective countries.
Patriotic general to get promotion, raise
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A barely noticed move is under way in Congress to award an extra star and a $200-a-month raise to the general who urged National Guardsmen last November to protest against antiwar demonstrations.
The effort to promote Air Force Maj. Gen. Winston P. Wilson to lieutenant general is not directly related to Wilson's Nov. 3 suggestion that guardsmen match moratorium activities in the middle of the month by driving with their headlights on and flying their flags and shining their porch lights at home.
Mar. 2
1970 KANSAN 9
Kunstler told newsmen when he arrived at the airport that he felt the attention given to the burning of a Bank of America branch "a picayunish matter" compared to the bombing in the Vietnam war.
Los Angeles Police Chief Edward M. Davis had sought in vain a court injunction to prevent Kunstler's appearance. Authorities at San Fernando Valley State College and UCLA withdrew invitations for his appearance but an organization at UCLA known as CASE (Committee for Awareness and Social Education) made arrangements for him to speak on the grounds of the Unitarian Church.
Rainfall during the morning subsided and the nearby San Diego Freeway and surface streets were jammed with automobiles on the approaches to the church. There were 30 "monitor teams"to keep order, each consisting of a lawyer and a minister. There were seven doctors at a "first aid station."
The speeches by Kunstler, Hayden and lawyer Leonard Weinglass were cheered by the crowd of young people who departed quietly after the rally. Kunstler exhorted the crowd to "keep your cool today and keep it tomorrow" but to remember "we are past protest, we are now in the period of resistance."
Dublin ready for Kennedy
DUBLIN (UPI)—Irishmen deluged newspapers and radio stations with calls for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's itinerary Sunday as the nation prepared a favorite-son welcome for the Massachusetts senator.
His first move will be an Irish army helicopter ride to New Ross, five miles from the Kennedy ancestral home at Dunganstown.
Kennedy and his wife Joan were scheduled to arrive by plane Monday for a two-day visit to the land of the Kennedy forebears.
New Ross and Dunganstown were abuzz with activity and excitement and jammed with newsmen. Local residents ridiculed a newspaper report that the government would ignore Kennedy's visit and officials were busy organizing red-carpet treatment during his stay.
"It would be a government in exile if it didn't," said one New Ross man.
Kennedy was scheduled to spend a couple of hours in New Ross as a guest of the minister of lands, Sean Flanagan, where he will meet his cousins and tour the memorial park to the late John F. Kennedy.
On Tuesday night, Kennedy will be the main speaker at Trinity College's Historical Society. The occasion is the bicentenary lecture on Edmund Burke, an Irish parliamentarian who championed the cause of the American colonies during the War of Independence.
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712 MASS.
Bus schedules stopped in 1966
North Lawrence without service
By DAN OSBORNE Kansan Staff Writer
Except for a 25-day trial run in 1967, the 2,094 residents of the low-income area of North Lawrence have been without bus service since August, 1966.
Duane Ogle, manager of the Lawrence Bus Co., said the North Lawrence route yielded substantial returns prior to the 1951 flood but had failed to do so since then.
Ogle said that in August, 1966 the City relieved him of the route because of its failure to yield sufficient profit. In December, 1967, after pressure from concerned residents, the Lawrence Bus Co. and the city of Lawrence agreed to a trial bus route for North Lawrence. The residents were promised a 90-day trial but the route was suspended after 25 days.
The East and North Lawrence areas were combined for the trial run and were serviced by a 1959 passenger car which Ogle leased from his father-in-law. Ogle said the car serviced the areas every half-hour and ran 11 hours a day.
Ogle said the basic cost for the trial run totaled $616.53 and total revenue was $144.25. It was because of these figures that the city relieved the company of the route after 25 days, he said.
Many North Lawrence residents, however, are not satisfied with the results of the trial run. A North Lawrence resident, Mrs. Arthur Johnson, cited an instance when the bus driver failed to stop for her during the trial run.
"He came down the middle of the street without even glancing at the bus stop." she said.
Mrs. Frances Donner, also a North Lawrence resident, said during the trial run a taxi cab would often trail the bus. She
identified the driver of the cab as a former bus driver.
John Taylor, president of the North Lawrence Improvement Association, said, "Taxis are robbing us blind."
"It costs me $1.15 each way for a taxi to the First National Bank," he said, "and the driver always tries to make the route longer."
Another argument voiced by North Lawrence residents is that they did not need the bus service every half-hour. They argue that having the service that often only served to increase costs during the trial run.
High school students also suffer from the lack of public transportation. Although junior high school students in North Lawrence are bussed to South Junior High School by the local school district, nearly 80 high school students living in the area have no public transportation to school.
Taylor said many of the students used their parents' cars to get to school but that this often created a hardship for parents who need transportation to work.
Taylor said Ogle would agree to transport high school students only if he could guarantee 80 passengers a day. He said they would be charged a 50c fare each way. KU students are only charged a 15c fare.
Taylor said only two of the five board of education members voted for a bus from North Lawrence to the high school.
Several North Lawrence residents have raised questions regarding the ownership of the Lawrence Bus Co. Research by the Kansas yielded no conclusive answer to the question but revealed several inconsistencies.
The franchise granted to the Lawrence Bus Co. by the city of
Lawrence in 1962 stated the Rapid Transit Bus Co., which preceded the Lawrence Bus Co., did not cease operation until 1959. The corporation charter for the Lawrence Bus Co., however, was dated 1957 and the president of the corporation was listed as the former owner of the Wichita Rapid Transit Co.
Ogle said in 1957 members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce donated money to buy the company from the Wichita Rapid Transit Co. An amended version of the corporation charter for the Lawrence Bus Co. dated 1963 still
listed the president of the corporation as the same man whose name appeared on the 1957 document. The document dated 1963 is the most recent on record.
Regardless of the questionable ownership of the bus company the people of North Lawrence need bus service.
Ogle said he was opposed to the idea of a subsidy. He estimated the cost of subsidizing the entire Lawrence area at $200,000.
"It wouldn't be fair to the taxpayers to have to support such a measure," Ogle said.
Norman Steffen, chairman of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission, support the bussing of No. 9th Lawrence residents.
"My contention is that public transportation should be the responsibility of the city," Mrs. Johnson said. "It should be available to all citizens and the fare box should not be a criterion for service. If the city has to subsidize it, okay," she said.
"I would advocate whatever could be worked out for transportation from North Lawrence," he said, "especially where limited finances for transportation make a hardship for families."
10 KANSAN Mar. 2
1970
He said that although "the American Negro is making extraordinary progress . . . there would seem to be countercurrents that pose a serious threat to the welfare of the blacks and the stability of the society, white and black."
"We may need a pertod in which Negro progress continues and racial rhetoric fades," Moynihan suggested. He also said the administration needs a more coherent "approach to a number of issues."
Moynihan also suggested that attention to the Black Panthers may have given them martyrdom.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The White House said Sunday it had received a memorandum from presidential adviser Daniel P. Moynihan suggesting that the race issue "could benefit from a period of 'benign neglectism.'"
Requirements altered in Poli Sci department
'Rhetoric' end suggested
This "patch"
Budweiser®
In addition to the requirement changes, the department has named specific advisers who are available for students who are interested in specific career preparation. Advisers are available for students that are considering public service, law, foreign affairs, and the graduate school as their specialty.
The department of political science has announced several changes for students majoring in political science. The changes deal with the requirements for the undergraduate major and the student's career preparation.
The department has abolished the sophomore methodology course as a requirement, and the student's three options have been dropped.
The course offerings in the political science field have also been changed. Twenty-seven courses have been affected by the recent changes. Of the 27, eight were dropped, 15 were given new titles, and four are new courses. The new courses deal with urban politics and administration. In the near future, the department will offer a course in black political theory.
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Defense Department to defend ABM
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Defense Department now has taken steps to meet the central scientific criticism of its proposed safeguard antiballistic missile system. In the process, opponents say their worst fears about the workability of the system have been confirmed.
The ABM expansion proposed by Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird last week contained two major design changes:
- Work will begin on a new radar system that will be smaller and less expensive so it can be deployed in greater numbers.
- More short range Sprint missile interceptors will be added to the ABM sites at Grank Forks Air Force Base, N.D., and Malstrom Air Force Base, Mont.
These two steps, according to scientists who have studied the ABM in detail, obviously were taken because of concern—inside
the Pentagon and out--that the ABM could be overwhelmed by a simple numerical increase in Russian offensive missiles.
This was a central argument last year in the unsuccessful Senate fight to scuttle the ABM. Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., argued to little avail that the ABM, as it is presently conceived, would not offer a shred of protection to the nation's Minutemen missile fields.
The reason, Symington and others contended, was that the ABM, its radars and its computers were so expensive that the Soviets could simply match every Safeguard missile with an offensive missile of its own. Thus, if 100 Spring missiles and their guiding radar were deployed, the Russians could neutralize them by simply building 100 new offensive missiles—and do it far more cheaply.
Finch says busing is bad move
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Secretary Robert H. Finch of Health, Education and Welfare said Sunday the courts were "moving in the wrong direction" by requiring busing of pupils to achieve racial balance in schools.
Moreover, Finch said, "the administration, having taken the oath to support the Constitution, is confused by what the courts have said . . . We have a very confused set of decisions . . . that go to both ends of the spectrum with regard to the question of busing, for example."
Finch criticized the court decisions during an interview with Metromedia radio news.
He cited a Federal Appeals Court ruling involving Orange County, Florida, "which says in effect the neighborhood school is the important concept, and that must be preserved at all costs."
"... Then you have decisions like Charlotte, in the Carolinas, in Los Angeles, which I think are totally unrealistic because they say that you shall take the percentages in the district as a whole and apply those and force those on each district, or each school within that district."
In Charlotte's case, said Finch, the district had to buy 400 new buses. And in Los Angeles, he estimated 500 new buses were needed.
Mar. 2
1970 KANSAN 11
"That's not the best use of your resources," Finch said, "because you're trying desperately to keep the doors open, to pay faculty, to pay janitors.
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Symington claimed he had a Pentagon-prepared chart that
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showed this precisely in dollars and cents terms—but the Pentagon classified the chart "secret" and refused to release it to the public.
Last year, in frequent appearances before Congressional committees and newsmen, Defense Department officials managed to skirt this issue and divert the public's attention to the need for some response to the alarming Sovietity build-up in offensive missiles.
Throughout last year's debate, leading scientists also argued that the ABM's missile site radar—which spots incoming missiles and guides the Spring interceptors to meet them—was so big and exposed that it could be knocked out
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Consequently, the Russians could "blind" the ABM, if they chose, merely by firing enough small missiles at the radar to exhaust the Spring interceptors defending it. The Minutemen would then be left defenseless if the Russians chose to knock them out with huge SS9 silo-busting rockets.
SUA Board
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Officer Interviews March 17 Board Interviews March 19
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Dear Dad,
TOYOTA
How is everyone at home? I had some trouble getting a good schedule during enrollment but I like all of my classes.
Dad, with the start of this semester, I would like to discuss the possibility of you financing me on a new or used car. I can't begin to tell you how much fuller campus life can be with a car. As my grades were good, I feel that I can adequately handle the extra responsibility of a car.
I have done some looking around for cars in this area. I looked at Chevys and Fords, but after talking with friends and to Bill Spencer, the salesman at Competition Sports Cars, I feel that the TOYOTA CORONA is the best deal. It gets great gas mileage-25 miles to the gallon-and needs very little servicing-and all of this for the low price of $1950 new.
Please write soon and let me know your feelings. Love,
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Jazz Group
Photo by Ron Bishop
Paul Gray's Gaslight Gang performed a benefit show for the Lawrence Friends of Music Sunday in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium. Proceeds from the show will go for music scholarships for Lawrence grade and high school students.
ROTC commandant predicts more protests
The ROTC program at the University of Kansas is in good shape and should continue to grow, said Maj. Jorome A. Durbin, cadet commandant of KU's Army ROTC.
He said, however, he could see a bad spring, both nationally and at KU, for anti-ROTC demonstrations. A reason for this, he said, is the demonstrating groups are more organized and have more "experience" than in previous years.
When asked if the decline of the war as a political issue might cause some people to let up on ROTC, Durbin said, he did not think so. There are many issues to concentrate on such as pollution, and crime, that people seem to just blame it all on the
armed forces establishment, he said.
Durbin said that he thought a double standard was being applied to the cadets. Too many people on campus looked upon a cadet as a paragon of virtue. These people needed to realize that cadets were students, just like anyone else, he said.
Durbin defended ROTC when discussing the suggestion that the entire program be dropped from the curriculum. He said false impressions had been created about the difficulty of the program.
By the year 2001, the population of the world is expected to be between six and seven billion.
ISP lists major goals
There was a short organizational meeting of the Independent Student Party (ISP) Sunday night at the Wescoe Foundation to distribute ISP's program number one . . . education.
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student and ISP candidate for student body president, listed four main educational needs. All schools and the College should have 50 per cent student representation with full voting rights on all committees; students in all schools and the College should have complete choice in taking courses either for grades or for Credit/No Credit; all general requirements for graduation from all schools, and the College should end and traditional departmental structure should be eliminated.
"ISP demands all possible options be left to the students," George said. "The basic inertia of the University to change must be destroyed, and students of all ages made free to learn."
New technique found
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — A University of California surgeon revealed a new technique Sunday to remove potentially deadly blood clots from the arteries leading from the heart to the lungs.
The method was presented to the American College of Cardiology by Dr. Jerome Harold Kay.
12 KANSAN Mar. 2 1970
The maximum penalty for first degree murder in Kansas is death by hanging.
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March 4, 5, 6
Increased salaries are a factor
Medical Center in money crisis
By BOB WOMACK
Kansan Staff Writer
The most immediate problem facing the University of Kansas Medical Center involves a lack of sufficient operating funds, said Russell H. Miller, Director of the Medical Center.
Miller said that without additional monies to provide better salaries, the Medical Center couldn't meet competition from other Kansas City hospitals. He predicted if needed state support is not forthcoming, the Medical Center would have greater and greater difficulty attracting adequate personnel.
"We're having real difficulty maintaining our present operation at the level we think it needs to be," Miller said. Because of inflationary factors, costs are rapidly increasing for the Medical Center. Increased salary scales are a factor in the increasing costs.
The Medical Center faced a near crisis in personnel last week, in which 85-90 employees might quit their jobs if a controversial pay category established by the State Finance Council had taken effect.
The Medical Center participates in a program which gives conscientious objectors an opportunity to work as orderlies, bookkeepers, clerks, laboratory aides, and maintenance personnel in lieu of military service. An idea developed within the Finance Council that these employees should be paid at the minimum level of salary equivalent to the pay as a new recruit in the armed forces.
The Medical Center officials expressed concern that these men would quit their jobs and go to work for other hospitals in the Kansas City area which also participate in the CO program.
Miller said it would have been almost impossible to replace CO's because, "We are very un-competitive in hiring young men in the Kansas City area, and the CO's are the single largest source of young manpower we have been able to identify."
A Medical Center official said the concern to the Board of Regents, the Chancellor, and the Governor, and last week the finance Council rescinded its action to create the special low-paying classification for CO's.
Miller said, "We're quite relieved that this action was rescinded because we believe it was discriminatory as we understand the interpretation of the attorney general's office."
Mar. 2
1970 KANSAN 13
Miller said the Medical Center had made an urgent recommendation that the minimum scale paid to clerical help, institutional workers, and maintenance personnel be increased to help attract workers in these areas.
The Medical Center did not receive the $150,000 they requested from the Legislature to continue their land acquisition and long range planning. Miller said a similar request would be made this year.
"Unless plans can be made fairly promptly, within the next year or two, we are going to fall behind quite rapidly," Miller said.
The second greatest problem facing the Medical Center now concerns the need for additional facilities to accommodate the teaching programs as they now exist, Miller said. He said the prospect for increased enrollment was very much limited by the present physical facilities.
Not only planning, but continued construction is a definite necessity for the Medical Center, Miller said. Obsolete hospital facilities must be replaced.
Land acquisition is a real problem for the medical Center, because it is surrounded by homes. A consulting firm and committees of faculty members have been working to develop careful long range plans, despite severe limits on funds for such planning.
Miller said the Medical Center would have to look for additional funds in the near future in order to implement the increased enrollment plans.
A $2 million project heavily financed by private sources in the mental retardation field is now under construction. The second step in this project, a clinical
Rhodesia gets free
SALISBURY, Rhodesia (UPI)
SALISBURY, Rhodesia (UPI)
—Rhodesia became an independent republic of 4.5 million blacks ruled by 241,000 whites today, severing the country's 80-year link with the British throne.
Virtually no fanfare accompanied the cutting of the ties.
"We just think of it as a dull little occurrence," a government spokesman said. "It was a sort of automatic thing. Once the constitution had been approved there was nothing else but this to happen."
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"This has been exceedingly helpful and without this kind of cooperation, I think our land acquisition opportunities would be almost non-existent," Miller said.
training center for the care of children with birth defects and for mental retardation research, depends on whether the state appropriates $425,000 in additional funds, Miller said.
The University of Kansas covers 930 square acres, not quite as much as the Kodak plant in Rochester, N.Y.
The third major project will be started in July, he said. This is a critically needed central heating plant.
Miller emphasized the importance of the cooperation of the Endowment Association in acquiring land for future expansion. They can move quickly to acquire property when the owner wants to sell. The Medical Center later buys the property from the Endowment Association—if money is available.
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SPEED-READING LESSON
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• You’ll see why President Kennedy invited Evelyn Wood to the White House to teach his advisors and the Joint Chiefs of Staff how to read faster.
• You’ll actually be taught how to read and study faster during the exciting Speed-Reading Lesson.
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We want you to decide for yourself the value of becoming a Speed-Reader, Evelyn Wood style.
You’ll find this Special Free offer of increased reading speed to be an exciting and unusual experience.
For the first time we are offering a Special Speed-Reading Lesson to provide you with a glimpse of what it’s like to be able to read and study almost as fast as you can turn pages...and you’ll actually participate in the techniques that will improve your reading and study speed on the spot!
Limited Seating Available at Each Lesson. Because of limited seating capacity, we ask that you please call the number listed below to Reserve Your Seat. Choose the time most convenient to your schedule and call now for Your Personal Reservation.
Limited Seating Available
CALL VI 3-6424
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RAISE YOUR READING RATE 50% - 100% FREE A SPECIAL MESSAGE TO WESTERN CIV STUDENTS
In order to help you prepare for the Western Civ. Comprehensive May 9, we will raise your reading speed 50-100% , free.
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London or Lawrence?
"What's that building looming ahead in the heavy fog?" "It's Spooner Art Museum." "And how did you deduce that?" "Elementary, my dear Watson. It's written on the wall."
Status of halls, Union not changed by tax bill
Passage of a bill to tax residence halls and student union buildings would not change the constitutional fact that these facilities are tax exempt conditionally, according to the opinion of the Senate Committee on Assessment and Taxation.
The bill, which passed the Kansas House of Representatives Thursday, was designed to remove tax-exempt status of dormitories and student union buildings at state colleges and universities.
However, a Feb. 16 response from a member of the tax committee, Sen. Donald Christy, R-Scott City, told Keith Jorgensen, Mission junior and president of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), that
14 KANSAN Mar. 2 1970
"the tax committee was of the opinion that these facilities were tax exempt conditionally and that the passage of the bill would not change the constitutional fact of the matter."
Christy said, "We have been issued in the committee an assurance that the Attorney General is writing an opinion that they are exempt by Constitution. Thus, whether the law is passed or not, really makes very little difference."
If the bill is valid and becomes law, student fees would probably have to be increased and dorm rents would rise. Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for finance, said the student fee increase would be at least $7 per year per student to cover the tax on the Kansas Union. This would cover the estimated yearly taxes of $245,000 on the Union building and its contents.
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Libraries need more space bookshelves full in 2 years
A cry for more space is being heard from the corners and book-shelves of the University of Kansas Libraries.
Heron said that with the ever increasing number of students using the library and the number of books that are added, plans for such growth would have to be made.
Watson Library, the central building of the library system will be out of bookstack space in two years, and the science library in its cramped quarters on the sixth floor of Malott has already run out of space and is storing books in Spencer, said David W. Heron, director of libraries.
The present library, which at its beginning was a room in Fraser Hall, was last improved in 1964 when space was added on to the east and the west book stacks were built. At the time of the planning it was said this would take care of growth for 10 years, but by the time it was built five years had been lost.
A report on the library's needs and problems was presented at a University Planning Board subcommittee hearing last Tuesday.
The library at that time had reading room for 10% of the university population.
Since Watson has an open stack policy, changes are needed to accommodate graduate students who do all their work back in the stacks, Heron said. As it is now the desks and lighting for study and research are few and not the best.
Parking is also a problem for the users of the library. Parking spaces on Jayhawk Boulevard do not quite fill the needs of library patrons.
The Spencer Library, which added one third to the total library space, Heron said, "has not only directly added three years to the life of the Watson Library stacks but is already being used for storage of overflow from the science and law libraries."
There are four science libraries. They include the one on the sixth floor of Malott, a math library in Strong Hall, an earth science library in Lindley, and the engineering and architecture library in Marvin Hall.
The science libraries are most desperately in need of space and facilities now, Heron said.
Heron said of the science libraries, "The interrelevance of the sciences and the evolution of interdisciplinary research brings increasing complaint that related resources are in several different buildings, and there is considerable demand for duplication as a result. I propose for your (the University Planning Board subcommittee's) consideration a science and technology library, containing 80-90,000 square feet to allow for expansion and request that the planning for it be started at the earliest possible moment."
In Malott the study area in the library is filled in the late morning hours with students and people doing research. Bookstack space has already run out,
Three suggestions made for the improvement of the Watson Library at KU are expansion of the present building, replacement of it, or construction of an undergraduate library. Heron said these suggestions were presented to the subcommittee.
Heron said, with boxes of unpacked books for the library in storage in Spencer.
"The quantity and quality of library space are important to the quality of library service." Heron said. "Crowded stacks become disorganized and difficult to use; it is not easy for someone to study in a reading room which is noisy, hot or crowded."
ALERT
BELL SYSTEM
Recruiting Team On Campus
Thursday, March 5, 1970
Representing
American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department Bachelor's and Master's candidates Electrical Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-west states initially.
Bell Laboratories Research and Development — B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S.
Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments-E.E.; M.E.; E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics.
Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West.
Western Electric All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military research and management training.
Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern States.
Sign Interview Schedule in Placement Office
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the newspaper to all students without regard to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus Campus Mud House, 411 W. 14th St.
Typewriters—big selection rental purchase plan available. Office supplies and furniture. Xerox service. Lawyers. Typewriter Co., 700 Massif 843-3644.
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; Motoria 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 824-5267.
Realistic component stereo set. 36.
watt stereo amplifier and FM Receiver.
Lab 24 turntable with Shure el-
vee S7500 speaker. Room B1800,
soolo-3A speakers with 8 woofer,
3 tweeter. 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 bells . . . 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 12:30 to 4:30. 3-2
1966 Pontiac Le Mans 2-door hardtop, wire wheels, power steering, 326 windshield, power brakes, low mileage, air conditioning, excellent condition. 843-802-90. 3-2
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
New refrigerator, apt. size—bench type, only $89.95 at Ray Stoneback's downtown. Open Mon. and Thurs. 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
Famous Brand Components now at giveaway prices: Complete Outfits, were $219.90, now $149.90. AM-FM-880, for $399.90, now $399.90. Spkrs, were $499.90, now $399.90. Hurry in and save up to $100.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
Handmade Originals—India prints,
tie-dye, dresses, men's shirts, pants
outfits, maxi skirts, mini skirts, beads,
dressers, dapper creators Dovertape.
West 9th Street. 3-10
Old Zenith console stereo phonow with AM-FM radio—needs repair, however radio plays beautifully. Come 'n get it. $25.00. Rock Stonehouse downtown. 3-3
Beautiful Ring Set-14K 14K diamond engagement ring, AA11耳 diamond center, baguettes each side; 14K Keepake wedding band with three baguettes. Appraised $2100. Feb. Special $1275. 843-9057. 3-3
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street the most convenient to campus
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VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17-18
'69 VW Bug. 12,000 miles. still new.
warranty in effect. Call 3-528
1968 Corvette convertible, w vinyl hardtop, 327-250, 4-speed, power window, 325-mile units, mile warranty, 50,000 mile warranty, $3475 or best offer, 843-9057, 3-3
1960 Dodge Super Bee 6 Pack xcxcellent
842-6500, Room. 1033. Rohling Cohn:
842-6500, Room. 1033.
2-wheel trailer; metal frame; wood box;
6'x4'x4'; 842-8660.
3-3
One senile buffalo—a real bugar. Call anytime, now or then. 842-6303. 3-3
1966 Dodge Charger, dark green w/ white pin stripe, 426 Hemi, auto. a.c., P.S., american woods, Goodyear park, American rocks, sell cheap. Call Larry, 842-6952.
6-string Gibson in perfect condition.
guitar, cap and case. $100 842-002-00
6-string Gibson in perfect condition.
guitar, cap and case. $100 842-002-00
Magnavox portable stereo and a Wollensak tape deck, both in excellent condition. Call 842-4597. 3-2
Ceramics, mugs, pots, bowls, vases,
Indiana, Indiana THE OMNI
SHOF 3-2
1966 Volkswagen Sedan—for sale by original owner, only 23,000 miles, air conditioner, power windows, seats, pop-up windows, perfect condition, $1195, call 842-2920 after 5 p.m.
850 ctm Holley 4-barrel, $75. One Weland high-rise manifold (fits 383 or 440), $30. 7,000 miles on each. Call Steve Strahm, 843-1711. 3-3
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Culass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket seats;
good condition; starts and runs cruc-
sion; highly almost perfect. Only
$500. 843-9588. 3-5
Electro-voice 90 watt amplifier wi
film finish. like noo
842-4897 after 6 p.m.
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodorant
Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz. Retail price per
24-can case $16.54 Sell price per case
only $5.00, Steve Cohen, UN 4-4575
Maxi-coat, size 13, all wool, ginger color, beautifully made. From Kansas City store, worn twice, need money to repair车 $35.84-353.57 3-6
Classic in its own time, 1961 XK150
Jaguar Coupe. Black with red leather
interior. Mint condition, all original
equipment. One previous owner. Price
$2.95, no trades. Call Topeka, 913-269-6942 at 6:30 p.m.
3-6
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:
jewelry, clothing, jewelry and
other valuable junk. Information call
842-7281 evenings. 3-2
Emergency! Need two tickets to KU-
K-State game this Saturday. Call 843-
8292. 3-6
Your unwanted stereo albums, old and new, are worth money to you. Interested? Call 842-5595 anytime after 3:30 p.m. 3-4
I need a ride!| Topeka to KU, Tues.
Fri. Must arrive by 8:30 and can leave
at 3:30. Address: 409 Watson, Topeka
Phone 233-0327
3-6
Roommate wanted—one girl to share nice apt. at Ridge House. $65 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 842-6331 between 10 and 4 or 843-1131, Ginger. 3-4
Need one or two male students to take over lease in Jayhawker Towers. Rent $58, all extras included. Phone 842-7125.
Guitar instructor wanted. Am inter-
viewed by music teacher and com-
pany methods. Call Linda, 843-237-3,
3-6
Fred's Auto Painting
1328 W 9th Ph. 842 048
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487
Roommate wanted, male student to share my large pad, campus at back door, now I have a mess. I've even mailed service once a week. Call after six p.m. b482-8377 3-3
Home of the "Big Shef"
Tickets for KU-K-State game—842-
6217. 3-6
Female roommate wanted, as soon as possible, to share 2-bedroom furnished apartment with junior girl $79. Call 842-3820, 1810 W. 25th-4
Apt. F.
NOTICE
Wanted: Tickets for the KU-K-State game. Call 842-0283. 3-3
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moccasins,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
watch bands, sashes, purses, vests,
sweaters and jersey tights at 812 MUSEUM
PRIMARILLY LEATHER
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest to-go-goodness Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some, Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903$^1$. Mass. St. Petersburg, cooled, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early same day service. 3-3
The Castle Tea Room—fine dining in an enchanting cultural and historical atmosphere. Visit the Castle Tea Room, the most unique restaurant in Lancaster. 3-2
BURGER CHEF
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Our 20 sandals to choose. Your own. PRIMARILY LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-3
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-14
This ad good for 1 one-hour cassette tapes when presented at time of purpureation. Receipt for $49.90—offer expires. March 5th Ray Stoneback's, downtown 3-3
Try One Today
814 Iowa
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
We are now open till 5:30 p.m. week-
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THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE Right on campus. A great place for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Come in today and be at 2:30 am. Across from Lindley Hall. 3-2
Objectivist Study—to consider works
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Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis, or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accuracy. Call VI 3-281, Mrauckman work.
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Your KU L.D. is worth $1,00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 8011; Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Tutoring offered in undergraduate math and engineering courses. Math 146 and some upper-level engineering courses. Call 842-7123. 3-2
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates are 12.18 Mish, 843-869-34-1 6 p.m.
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Editors discuss censorship
PATRICIO BACCHINO
Ginzburg, Kunkin and Jordan discuss censorship
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Three editors of relatively open styled magazines and newspapers tore at the basic structure of modern censorship Friday afternoon at the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium held in the auditorium of the University of Missouri at Kansas City (UMKC).
Ralph Ginzburg, editor of Avante-Garde; Art Kunkin, editor of the Los Angeles Free Press; and Fred Jordan, editor of Evergreen Review, spoke out against censorship in all forms Friday afternoon at the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Symposium which was held on the UMKC campus.
Ralph Ginzburg, editor of several magazines including Avante-Garde, Fact and Eros; Art Kunkin, editor of the Los Angeles Free Press; and Fred Jordan, in charge of various activities including being managing editor of Evergreen Review, spoke on "Censorship: A Doilie for Your Mind."
Ginzburg said, "Jefferson and those guys had the right idea." He said our founding fathers and the colonists realized the necessity of a free press to safeguard the integrity of our government, and added he wished some of our government officials now would recognize this.
"We are intelligent enough to decide what we want to read," he said. Censorship for young children should be at the discretion of the parents. "The last thing we need is the Government to draw the line for us," Ginzburg said.
"No graftti, no film, no movie has no social redeeming value," Ginzburg said. He explained that if one were a sexiologist he might study the writings on john walls to study sex drive expressions. He said any definition of pornography or obscenity could be demolished and also what each is was a "matter of taste."
A recent Supreme Court ruling on Ginzburg's magazine ruled Eros was not obscene but the manner in which it was presented was, Ginzburg said. He said this was the only ruling of its kind since or before the ruling. The Supreme Court fined him $42,000 and condemned him to prison for five years.
16 KANSAN Mar. 2
1970
Ginzburg read from Eros, "Eros is a child of its time." He said he believed today's youth were fighting against censorship because today's corruption was of a more subversive-type and said, "The youth today just won't take any bull."
Despite the aggression that has confronted him in the way of censorship he said that dealing with unconventional material as in Eros or Fact is highly rewarding.
Ginzburg said almost any field one may go into, writing, teaching, even being a doctor, there will be some form of censorship and he added, what ever form it takes to "stick by your plans."
Kunkin in his presentation urged writers not to write for the tens of thousands of people but because you have something to say.
He said, to sum it all up in two words, "Censorship sucks!" Kunkin said censorship was a totally negative concept and added, "You don't feed your system with poison to get rid of your germs."
Before the Watts riots in 1965, the Los Angeles Free Press filled its columns with the problems of the black people. Kunkin said because of this they got national recognition by many newspapers. He said kids went out pedaling the paper after this not for the money, but for the "cause."
The way one deals with censorship he said was, "If someone says no to you, just keep on saying yes." He said, "The death of censorship is by saying, yes."
"There is no pornography, not political nor sexual," he said. Kunkin asked, "Where do you
draw the line? Do you bar the kids from the zoo."
Jordan told a story about a colleague of his who was thrown in jail because of something he wrote. Jordan said it must be a type of honor that a society would think one writer could print something so powerful as to be a danger to that society."
He said subversive ideas can be a "necessary correction for a weak society bent on self-destruction."
Jordan said a particular Russian author said the "Tropic of Cancer," a sensually arousing book, "celebrated the buckedle
down man who refused to settle down to society. To write, publish and sell a book like the "Tropic of Cancer" is more of a threat than to write, publish and sell a pamphlet advocating overthrowing the government," he said.
If one is too poor to buy equipment to make a movie in his own house Jordan said a person ought to have the right to go to a movie theatre and pay to see the movie he wants to see. "I don't want to be forced not to read a book or a film," he said.
Tape programs are being experimented with by CBS and
other stations Jordan said, and added it may soon be possible to place a tape program in your television and see the movies you want to see in your home.
"There is no need for censorship for national security reasons or any other reasons," Jordan said. He said "the less censorship the better."
Jordan said he believes in the "free market place of ideas," and later added, "Censorship perverts legality."
The first archaeological society met in London around 1585.
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Student election candidates listed
Story on page 9
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.90
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 3, 1970
Students speak against bill
By MARILYN McMULLEN
Kansan Staff Writer
TOPEKA-Four University of Kansas students spoke against Kansas Senate bill 434 at a House of Representatives committee hearing Monday.
The students were; Gordon Jones, Pittsburg senior; Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior; Kent Longenecker, Fairway senior; and Barb Blee, Bonner Springs senior.
If passed, Bill 434 would remove statutory tax exemptions from residence halls and union facilities at the six state-operated colleges and universities in Kansas.
The bill was passed by the Kansas Senate and is presently being reviewed by the House Assessment Taxation Committee.
Jones told the committee that taxation of residence halls might prove to be a hindrance to higher education. With a possible $80-$150 increase in residence hall fees, he said, prospective students might not be able to afford rising costs.
He explained that the University's adoption of year-long residence hall contracts next fall, which would require students to purchase contracts for a nine month period, might cause a greater number of students to live
in apartments rather than pay the high price of living in a residence hall.
Robert M. Stark (R-Salina) asked Gordon if he thought it was fair to other property taxpayers in the state that residence halls and union facilities did not pay taxes. Gordon replied that private industries and private residence facilities made profits, while university residence halls and union facilities did not.
Gordon added that the main concern of students was that the tax burden would be passed on to them.
"Apartment complexes, which do make profits, will probably increase their rent rates if the bill passes," Gordon said. "With a flood of students moving into apartments, landlords aren't likely to charge the same rates they charge now."
Longenecker presented assessment figures to the committee and explained that scholarship halls and married students apartments operated by the universities would also be taxed.
Franklin D. Gaines (D-Augusta) asked Longenecker if married students and faculty members lived in residence halls.
Longenecker replied that married students lived in apartments maintained by the universities and located on state property. Faculty members, he said, did not live in residence halls.
Miss Hoefer noted that residence halls are subsidized by the state, and said she also believed students would move into apartments rather than pay the added expense of living in residence halls.
Max Bickford, executive secretary of the Kansas Board of Regents, spoke against the bill from the standpoint that taxation would probably cause university residence halls to have trouble meeting occupancy quotas. He noted that KU has not begun the construction of a new residence hall in three years.
Bickford was asked what rate KU residence halls charged students.
"Nine hundred dollars per year," he answered.
"Do you think that's the right rate?" asked Lawrence Slocombe (R-Peabody), chairman of the committee.
"That is what they must charge to meet expenses and bond payments," replied Bickford.
Sloccombe remarked that each student attending a state college or university in Kansas represents a $1,000 deficit to the state.
J. Byron Brooks, (R-Manhattan) noted that students moving out of residence halls and into apartments could cause difficulties in paying off bonds. He added that he didn't think the bill would help.
Only six counties in Kansas would benefit from taxes on residence halls and union facilities. These taxes, classified as property taxes, would go directly to the county in which the college or university is located, and not to the state.
Miss Blee, past president of Panhellenic Council at KU, was asked by Slocome how the cost of living in a fraternity or sorority house compared with the cost of living in a residence hall. Miss Blee said the cost of living in a house averaged $200 a year more than the cost of a residence hall.
Miss Blee added that the committee should consider the educational facilities offered in university residence halls. Besides the libraries and meeting rooms, she said, some classes were held in KU residence halls, and the College-Within-the-College Program at KU allowed incoming students to attend classes with other students in their living groups.
NO MONEY NO EDUCATION
Save Our Schools
Photo by Ron Bishon
Lawrence school illustrates problem
A sign on the Woodlawn School in North Lawrence tells the story as 500 Kansas school teachers and local government officials delivered notice Monday that they will hold legislators responsible for local fiscal problems if a lid is imposed on property taxes and budgets.
BSU re-submits paper
William T. Smith Jr., director of the KU printing service, said the Black Students Union (BSU) has re-submitted a work order for their controversial newspaper, Harambee.
Smith said the paper would be printed as soon as the editor of the Harambee was named in the paper. Smith said the naming of the editor is in compliance with a resolution passed by the Student Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) last week.
Smith said the resolution made it implicit that all publications printed by student groups clearly name the editor and those responsible for publication.
Smith said that when John Spearman, president of BSU, placed the order, Spearman said the editor of the paper would contact Smith Monday. Smith said that as of late Monday, he had not been contacted by the BSU.
Monte Beckwith, Wichita freshman and managing editor of the BSU newspaper, said the SenEx ruling that any publication funded by the University have the name of the editor listed in the publication was made after the BSU had taken the paper to the printing service. He said the ruling was "not real" if it applies to this issue.
Beckwith said he was not going to put his name on the publication. He said it was common knowledge who the editor was.
Beckwith said in the next issue of the paper he would be "more than happy" to indicate that he was the editor.
It is possible that the issue
may be discussed at a SenEx meeting held today.
Committee denies racist statements
The Human Relations Committee of the University of Kansas has denied that any racist comments were made by head track coach Robert Timmons. The so-called racist statements were attributed to Timmons in leaflets distributed on campus last week.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr. Friday ordered an investigation to identify the source responsible for the allegations and threats to Timmons.
Robert B. Sanders, assistant professor of biochemistry and chairman of the Human Relations Committee in a statement said "The University of Kansas Human Relations Committee announces that it is categorically untrue that Coach Timmons, or any other member of his staff, made the statements attributed to Timmons in a recent duplicated flyer distributed on the campus.
"Coach Timmons' comments on black students and athletes were, in fact, complimentary. Coach Timmons and his staff were in agreement with the policy of the HRC that encourages the correction of imbalances.
"The Kansas Relays staff has therefore, initiated affirmative action to provide for a new system of nominations and method of judging that will result in the selection of three queens, at least one of whom will be black. The three queens will have equal recognition and equal responsibilities," Saunders said.
"In light of the findings by the Senate Human Relations Committee refuting the state-
(Continued to page 6)
Campus briefs
Faculty Forum to hear candidate
The Faculty Forum will meet at noon Thursday in the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread.
The guest speaker will be Michael G. Glover, Lawrence senior. He is running for the Legislature from the 39th district on the Democratic ticket. Glover will speak on his candidacy and the issues on which he will run.
A hot lunch will be served for $1.00 cost. Reservations should be made by noon Wednesday by calling 843-4933.
Scriven to speak on violence
Michael Scriven, professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, will speak in a Humanities Series lecture today at 8:00 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union.
Scriven's speech is entitled "Violence."
Scriven has agreed to meet with individual classes and groups to discuss topics of a number of pressing moral and social problems. These topics include abortion, obscenity, addiction, corruption and subversion, perversion and indoctrination.
Summer schedule announced
A preliminary summer session schedule indicates 715 courses in 65 departments at KU in the eight weeks session June 8 to Aug. 1 will be offered
Although a majority of courses are upper-level for graduates, school teachers and veterans, programs will also be available to new high school graduates who want an early start.
Most of the classes and much of the laboratory work will be offered in air-conditioned facilities.
The KU School of Law will offer two 5-week summer terms.
University Extension has scheduled 26 on-campus schools and conferences during the summer. Several will be credit courses.
Nader to lecture on consumer rights
Ralph Nader, researcher and crusader for consumer rights, will speak at the University of Kansas March 9 at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
Nader, who will lecture on consumer rights, has done research in areas such as meat-packing practices, automobile safety, televisions and corruption in corporations.
The program is sponsored by Student Union Activities, KU, KU School of Law and the Student Bar Association.
Engineers to meet tonight
The Institute of Electrical and Electron Engineers (I three E) will hold their first multi-group chapter meeting tonight at 8:30 at the Center for Research in Engineering Science Building.
The meeting will cover five fields of engineering. Topics to be discussed include engineering in medicine and biology, man-machine systems, nuclear science, system science and cybernetics, and the science of electronics.
Physics professor to help college
Ralph W. Krone, professor of physics at KU, will be visiting scientist in physics at Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio, March 9 to March 10. He will lecture, meet with students and assist faculty with curriculum and research problems.
The visit by Krone, an authority on low energy nuclear structure, is part of a program conducted
by the American Institute of Physics, funded by the National Science Foundation.
KU faculty salaries deteriorate as consumer price levels increase
A study by the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors shows that faculty salaries at KU have been deteriorating.
During the academic years 1967-68 and 1968-69, the increase in average salary for the four academic ranks was between 6 and 8 per cent. When allowance was made for the increase in the price level, real salaries generally increased between 2 and 3 per cent per year.
In 1969-70 however, average salaries for all ranks except instructor increased by less than the increase of the price level.
Consequently, according to the report, the average real salary for the three highest academic ranks was lower in September 1969 than it was in September 1968.
The report said the prospects for the next year were not bright. Since September, 1969, consumer prices have been increasing at an annual rate in excess of 6 per cent.
lature, and if the prices continue to rise at their present rate, the average real salary at KU would decline next year. On the average, there would be no merit salary increments.
Governor Robert Docking has recommended a budget for the University that would provide for a 6 per cent increase in faculty salaries. If this recommendation is approved by the Legis-
Among comparable universities, KU ranks in the top five in the production of Woodrow Wilson Fellows and Rhodes Scholars. It ranks among the top 10 on other measures of academic excellence. However, when KU salaries and compensation levels were compared with those of other (AAUP) institutions, KU's ranking declined to 15th.
Bid announced for new hall
2 KANSAN Mar. 3
1970
A bid of $257,589 by Casson Construction Co. of Topeka was the apparent low bid for construction of Irene Nunemaker College building at the University of Kansas.
Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment Association, announced the bid and said that preparation of contracts was underway.
Bids were received Feb. 26 for construction of the 10,000-square-foot structure, funded by a $350,000 gift from Irene Nunemaker, New York City, to KU's $18.6 million Program for Progress campaign. The gift also includes furnishings and equipment for the building.
The building will be constructed at the southeast corner of 15th and Engle Road. It will provide an administrative center for Irene Nunemaker College, one of KU's Colleges-Within-the-College, divisions of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Many students in Nunemaker College will be housed in nearby Lewis and Templin Halls.
Administrative offices, faculty offices, a student advisory board room, an audio-visual room, a library and an apartment for visiting lecturers will be located on the top level of the two-level building. The lower level will contain a student workroom, lounge, public restrooms, classrooms, seminar rooms and mechanical equipment.
The building is expected to be ready for use by the second semester of the 1970-71 academic year.
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Fee increases might affect students
Students show discontent in recent poll
By JOHN GOODRICK
Kansan Staff Writer
A recent survey shows that 43 per cent of the student body might be restricted from continuing their education at the University of Kansas because of recent fee increases recently approved by the Board of Regents for next year.
In the survey sent out by the University Planning Board, the board asked questions to learn student feelings on University matters to help in the board's construction of a ten year plan for the University.
The fee hike question referred to concerned the raising of fees for in-state students by $120 and a $250 hike for out-of-state students.
Of those students polled, approximately 41 per cent said they would need substantial financial assistance to continue here, and about two per cent said they will not be able to attend KU next year because of it.
Of the 493 persons who answered the survey, given to five per cent of the student body excluding the School of Law, 83 per cent were between 18 and 25, 60 per cent were juniors or higher, 72 per cent had a grade point average of 1.6 or higher, 60 per cent lived in either residence
halls or apartments, 52 per cent were subsisting on parental or family aid and 60 per cent had cars at KU.
On a question rating the present enrollment system, approximately 56 per cent rated it satisfactory and 38 per cent rated it very poor. Thirty per cent said they were not able to enroll in all the classes they wanted because they were closed. Approximately 41.5 per cent of those students polled said there was at least one class in their major in which they could not enroll. Fifty eight per cent of the students preferred a half computer-half manual enrollment where a student pre-enrolls by choosing courses, teachers, and times prior to the end of a semester and then during normal enrollment picks up the computerized schedules and works out conflicts.
One part of the poll consisted of asking how important and how satisfied students were with certain situations on the basis of a zero to 100 rating. The items that were rated the highest were the importance of having professors teach junior-senior courses in one's major with a rating of 85, the next highest was the importance of having pleasant living conditions with a rating of 81,
Electric analog computer used in geography classes
The process of solving a complex geographical problem simply by the use of an electric analog computer is now being used in geography classes at KU.
Small and compact, it turns electric current into almost anything the student wants it to represent in solving problems in modern geography.
Robert Nunley, professor of geography, attempted to find a machine that would bridge the gap between the geographer's lack of
This is the first semester that a commercially produced electric analog computer has been available for students in geography classes.
necessary mathematical knowledge for solving complex equations and the solutions to complex geographic problems. This led to the machine's development.
The machine was designed a year ago by George Dalke, a KU graduate student in electrical engineering, and partner in Interpretation Systems Incorporated, a Lawrence firm that works in the geo-science area and is designing the machine.
Mar. 3
1970 KANSAN 3
It is a tool that will measure almost anything that concerns human geography. The geographer can use it to study the spatial relationships of human geography by being able to plot the areas of influence of cities, the growth and spread of towns, the importance of highways and population density.
provement of the quality and quantity of the physical facilities.
On a question concerning the crowded conditions of Watkins Hospital, 54 per cent of the students preferred the construction of a new health facility near the center of campus, accessible by automobiles and pedestrians.
ceiving a rating of 70. Students were least satisfied with the student health facilities, which received a rating of 39.
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Approximately 84 per cent of the students said for their major it was more important to increase the quality and quantity of the instructional staff over the im-
and the third highest was the importance of the library facilities with a rating of 70. The lowest rating was the importance of the public transportation on campus. Students were most satisfied with the aesthetics of the campus, the living conditions and the number of professors teaching junior-senior courses in one's major, all re-
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KANSAN COMMENT
Spiro on descent
After Facsimile Vice-President Spiro Agnew brilliantly compared America's radicals to animals and then said he would trade "the whole damn zoo for a platoon of the kind of young Americans (he) saw in Vietnam," I knew Agnew had finally come to understand Mark Twain's theory on Man's descent from the higher animals.
"I have been studying the traits and dispositions of the 'lower animals' (so-called)," Twain said, "and contrasting them with the traits and dispositions of man. I find the result humiliating to me. For it obliges me to renounce my allegiance to the Darwinian theory of the Ascent of Man from the Lower Animals; since it now seems plain to me that that theory ought to be vacated in favor of a new and truer one, this new and truer one to be named the Descent of Man from the Higher Animals."
A newly-found understanding of this Twain-
ian theory is the only explanation for Agnew's comparing American radicals with those species of beings which don't know napalm, nuclear armament, wiretapping, pollution or hate itself.
But in showing his new understanding of Twain's theory, Agnew has yet to make application of the advice implicit in the theory: that we should emulate the Higher Animals. For Agnew still seems to fit Twain's vision of Man as the unrepentant Lower Animal.
"In the course of my experiments I convinced myself that among the animals man is the only one that harbors insults and injuries, broods over them, waits till a chance offers, then takes revenge. The passion of revenge is unknown to the higher animals." Twain said.
Did Twain know Agnew?
Or was Twain merely a supercilious sophisticate?
Mike Shearer
The waves abate
A week having passed since copies of the Kansan took a dunking at Potter's Lake in an "act of conscience," as one participating black student called it, the waves have begun to abate.
There seems little need to drag out all of the issues again and stir up tension, but one issue still hangs heavy-at least in the air around the J-school. Several persons, including some persons whose opinions are extremely valuable, want to know why the Kansan responded to the action by taking up the black students' cause instead of criticizing the destruction of what took many man hours and many dollars to produce.
I don't think, as one friend suggested, that we equated blackness with blamelessness. I don't think we were reacting entirely as The Guilty White Liberal.
There are five reasons why I played the part I did in our decision to run the black students' controversial poem and our subsequent decision to criticize the Printing Service and the Kansan Board for censoring us:
1. ) We had been asked, very pointedly and rightly, what we had actually done to show that we had sympathized with the blacks in their dispute with the Printing Service. Unfortunately, we had very little to offer in evidence of our sympathy.
2. ) The power basis of the Printing Service, as printer of all major campus publications, made it a far more dangerous censor (with constant contact with publications) than the blacks (who obviously could not have kept up their censorship of the Kansan every day.) The censorship power of the Printing Service, which has since been curbed by the ruling of Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell, would have had a much more direct and devastating effect on the freedoms of all students in the long run.
3. ) We sincerely did not want the issue to become, as it was inaccurately described in an Associated Press story, as a feud between the Harambee and the Kansan. The feud, if it must be described as one, was between students and the Printing Service. Although we regretted the confiscation a great deal (and not only because of the money loss—mainly because of the apparent loss of the confidence of some black students), we were unwilling to widen what we feared might be a campus racial split.
4. ) A hasty call for punitive action seemed, to me at least, neither our duty nor good advice. The University Disciplinary Board is the proper organ for deciding whether punitive action should be taken. Our main concern was not vengeance; it was that our circulation would begin again without unnecessary alienation of any students.
5. ) As writer Chuck Stone says, "I don't have to sit down to my typewriter every time a riot erupts and condemn violence, because I
hate and despise violence, murder, lawlessness ab initio—from the beginning." Without meaning in any way to compare the confiscation with any major form of violence, I believe that a certain amount of lawlessness was involved in the controversial act, a lawlessness which the participants intended to have an effect on all of us. In fact, the act did bring the censorship to the attention of those who were content to ignore it, but at the same time the act was a costly one—particularly to the Kansan.
Atty. Gen. Frizzell's ruling should make everyone's duties more clear and should help relax the tension we all felt last week.
Our intentions, however they might have appeared to those who thought we had lost all sense of reasoning, were good.
The effect of our actions may be told in the strengthening or in the weakening of student-student relationship.
-Mike. Shearer
Patriotic hymn
Here is a little relief from the hum-drum reports which every day cut down America's environment.
By JOHN GOODRICK
Grab a piece of apple pie and sing this familiar tune to the good old American "Yankee Doodle."
"Yankee Doodle went to town.
A riding in his internal combustion chambered, duel cam, double exhaust, high performance, V8 Chevy Super Sport.
Rolled up the windows, turned on the air conditioning, and dehumidifier to get away from industrial (of course) pollution.
He stuck a feather in his hat,
Sorel's News Service
Keep it up because remember "black is beautiful" and at this rate in a few years not only our downtown buildings will be beautiful, but also our residential homes and our lungs.
Yankee Doodle dandy.
And called it baloney.
Yankee Doodle keep it up,
Mind the music (otherwise known as noise pollution)
And your step (don't walk in Fairfax without a gas mask)
And with the girls be handy. (internal combustion chambered, duel cam, high performance V8's make you sterile!)
If you find it difficult to sing these words to "Yankee Doodle" and find yourself choking on your apple pie, try singing it to God Bless America or America the Beautiful. Most any true blue (now available only in sickly-green and off-yellow) AMERICAN song will do.
JOHN L. BURTON
Strict Constructionist
IRWINTON, Ga.—"The defeatist and the isolationist of 1941 is a brother under the skin of the Communist front party of Henry the Treacherous Wallace today who plays Stalin . . . We shall not ever sit idly by while the sneaking and persistent efforts of the Communist snake slithers its way into the vitals of our nation."—From a 1948 campaign speech by Judge Carswell.
hearing voices—
The destruction last week of several thousand copies of the University Daily Kansan was an unwarranted act of vandalism as the Kansan certainly has no quarrel with any organization on this campus.
To the editor:
If the State or KU administration was the target it was also an ineffective action, as the Kansas receives no state funds.
The real losers were the students. They were deprived of a newspaper they had paid for. I fail to see how any individual or group would hope to accomplish its goal through theft of property from those whose support it is seeking.
If the University Printing Service was the target it was an ineffective action, as it is paid by the Kansan for the number of papers published. It doesn't make any financial difference to the University Printing Service if the papers reach the students or the bottom of Potter Lake. Distribution is carried out by students employed by the Kansan.
I do not feel it is the obligation of the Kansan Board to wrangle over the situation. The Kansan Board is not an administrative or student governing body. This is a matter involving the rights of the entire student body. There are duly elected student representatives charged with the obligation and responsibility to discipline those who would infringe upon student rights
I feel certain that the student Disciplinary Board will not sit idle and allow disruption at the hands of a few—but will take some disciplinary action to protect the interests of those whom they represent.
Mel Adams Business Adviser, UDK
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.
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser... James W. Murray
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editor Ted Iliff
News Editors Joe Bullard
Editorial Editors Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd
Sports Editors Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shmurve
Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Willems
Wire Editors Ken Cummins
Writing Editor Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers
Arts and Reviews Editors General Richards, Rich Geary
Assistant Campus Editors Vicki Phillips, Nila Walker
Assistant News Editors Donna Shrader, Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart
Photographers Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffellwenn
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BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . Mel Adams
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National Advertising Manager Oscar Bassinson
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Member Associated Collegiate Press
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T
Measure to go to Docking
Congress approves marijuana bill
TOPEKA (UPI)—A measure easing the penalites for possession of marijuana cleared its last legislative hurdle Monday when the Kansas Senate agreed with House amendments.
The measure, which now goes to the governor, makes possession of marijuana a misdemeanor instead of a felony. Selling marijuana remains a felony.
The Senate also passed a bill to raise the minimum age for an unrestricted driver's license from 16 to 18, except for graduates of driver's education courses.
Another measure was also approved to repeal the present $2 per head bounty on coyotes.
A measure stiffening penalties for persons found guilty of promoting the sale of obscene material to both adults and minors was given tentative approval.
Persons found guilty of promoting obscurity to minors would be required, at the court's discretion, to post a surety bond up to $50,000 which would be forfeited if a second offense was committed within two years.
Violation would be punishable as a misdemeanor on the first offense, with fines of from $2,500 to $5,000 and/or jail sentences. Second or third convictions would be felonies, however.
Penalties for promotion of obscene materials to adults would also be increased, providing for fines of from $2,500 to $5,000, and/or jail sentences for second offenders within two years of their
first offense. But only third offenders would be charged as felons.
Student gets grant
Barbara Lehman, Atchison graduate student, has been awarded the George C. Marshall Scholarship to Denmark to study jewelry design and silversmithing.
The $3,000 award from the American-Scandinavian Foundation is given to 15 American students each year.
She is the third jewelry and silversmithing student from KU who has received a grant to study in Scandinavia in the last five years.
Astronauts quarantined after flight
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The space agency said Monday it will quarantine the Apollo 13 astronauts for three weeks after they leave the moon next month because of the possibility that life may exist in the hilly terrain they will explore.
The first two moon landing crews also were quarantined, but because no evidence of extra-terrestrial life was found some scientists thought there was no longer a need for such precautions.
However, mission director Chester Lee told at a news conference that the decision has been made to place Apollo 13 astronauts James E. Lovell, Thomas K. Mattingly and Fred W. Haise under similar quarantine restrictions.
Lee also said that if Apollo 13 is not launched April 11, the mission will be delayed until the next launch opportunity on May 10.
The astronauts are scheduled to be launched from Cape Kennedy April 11. Lovell and Haise will land on the moon's hilly Fra Mauro formation April 16 while Mattingly remains in lunar orbit.
Mar. 3
1970 KANSAN 5
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!"
—Rex Reed, Holiday Magazine
ROBERT REDFORD · KATHARINE ROSS
ROBERT BLAKE · SUSAN CLARK
"TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE"
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE · TECHNICOLOR · PANAVISION
TOMORROW!
Mat. Daily 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE · Telephone VI 3-1065
"A WOMAN'S PICTURE... good-humored, thoughtful, often very beautiful!" Roger Greensun. New York Times
COLUMBIA PICTURES
presently
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A PALOMAR PRODUCTION
TECHNICOLOR"
THE
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Adults 1.50; Child .75
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Some people will say "The Damned" goes too far. We don't think so.
In Technicolor® From Warner Bros. Rated X
STARTS WEDNESDAY
NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED
THE Hillcrest
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"The LIBERTINE'
COMES ACROSS
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WITH WRY
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—Harper's Barron
"Catherine Spaak
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with envy,...and
decides to become
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—Bah Salaam, WIHS Radio
Makes
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look like a
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—ABC.TV
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presents
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COMES ACROSS
INCREDIBLY
WITH WRY
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AND TASTE."
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"Catherine Spaak
is Curious Green,
with envy...and
decides to become
a one-woman
Kinsey sex survey."
-Radley Metzger
presents
"Makes
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Playboy Penthouse
look like a
nursery school!"
-ABC.TV
"THE LIBERTINE"
Rated X. No one under 18
admitted. I.D.'s required.
THE Hillcrest
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER & 9TH AND 10TH AVE.
VIVA MAX!
WILL CAPTURE
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Eve. 7:15 - 9:05
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WATT A WAY TO PLUG A BRAIN GAP!
WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS'
The COMPUTER
Wore TENNIS SHOES
TECHNICOLOR
"Hilariously Now Showing"
WATT A WAY TO PLUG A BRAIN GAP!
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS
The COMPUTER
Wore TENNIS SHOES
TECHNICOLOR
Parked by BUMA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. 1989 Walt Disney Productions
AND MORE HI-FLYING HI-LARITY
WALT DISNEY productions
IT'S TOUGH TO BE A BIRD!
TECHNICOLOR
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Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30
Eve. 7:10 - 9:15
Adults 1.50;
Child .75
The NOW Movie Of Our Year Starts March 4th
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MEN'S WINNIE NIMMY KIDS’ GAME
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"A MAJOR RAKEHELL FILM!"
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-CBS RADIO
*DOUSING PUBLYTIMIC CELEBRATIONS*
'ROUSING, RHYTHMIC, SPLENDID!'
"A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY."
"ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!" JOSEPH MORGENSTERN. NEWSWEEK
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easy Rider PETER FONDA DENNIS HOPPER JACKSON
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I provides drug sellers punishment
Professional pushers to get worse
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The administration Monday called for legislation which would punish professional sellers of illegal drugs more severely than pushers who operate merely to support their own addiction.
"We must take into account in legislative measures the critical distinction between the addict who sells drugs for support of his habit and the calculating exploiter who is in the illicit drug business for its immense profits," said Dr. Roger O. Egeberg, assistant HEW secretary of health.
He and Dr. Morton G. Miller of the National Institutes of Health outlined for the Senate District of Columbia Committee the thoughts of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare for fighting drug abuse and drug-related crime.
They argued that imprisonment of addicts for making illegal sales ignored the need for curing their addiction. "This distinction is critical if we recognize that incarcerator alone is no cure for addiction," said Egeberg, the nation's top health officer.
Both doctors argued for more treatment and rehabilitation of drug offenders and Miller asked for legislation to permit "self-initiated voluntary commitment" of addicts in cases where no criminal charge is involved.
"We are talking now about organized crime moving into the
banking industry, insurance, real estate, securities, manufacturing and government."
Selerno said he didn't think organized crime wanted to take over the government completely.
"It doesn't mean organized
crime would tell the man what to do 24 hours a day," he said.
But when the big contract comes in, the big favor is needed, you've got to pay because you owe."
only enough power to make sure government did little to control their profits.
Selerno is now a consultant for the justice department and the National Council on Crime and Delinquency.
Women's liberation today's program topic
A specialist in women's liberation from the National Student YWCA staff, Betsy Gwynn, will speak at McCollum Hall at 7:30 p.m. today. Her talk will be about
Judge blocks union strike
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A federal judge Monday blocked four shop unions from striking individual railroads, but the chief union negotiator said the ruling might force a nationwide walkout against all rail lines.
"The possibility of a nationwide rail shutdown looms larger because of a misguided opinion by the judge," William W. Winpinger, vice president of the International Association of Machinists, said.
He said organized crime wanted
U. S. District Judge Howard Corcoran ruled eight hours before the expiration of federal restraining orders prohibiting the unions from striking less than all the railroads and barring the carriers from shutting down nationwide to retaliate against "whipsaw" strike tactics.
Winpisinger said officials of the four shop craft unions planned to meet today to decide whether to call a nationwide strike.
Committee—
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
ments alleged to have been made by Coach Timmons, I have requested the assistance of the appropriate administrative officers of the University of Kansas and the faculty and student body leaders in the identifications of the person or persons responsible for the circular containing the libelous statements about Coach Timmons and threatening his life," Chalmers said.
"In addition to facing possible civil or criminal charges, the person or persons responsible for writing, duplicating and distributing the circular are subject to University discipline."
Sanders said Monday he would not want to speculate why anyone would distribute the leaflets.
6 KANSAN Mar. 3
1970
TEXACO
W. 9th
TEXACO
Student specials
the issues concerning new freedom for women.
★ New, experienced manage-ment
- Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
She will be accompanied by Barbara and Mark Alter and Roxanne Dunbar, speakers in the field of women's liberation. Alter has been instrumental in organizing a group of men to analyze the role of women in America, said Tom Moore, director of the KU-Y, which is sponsoring the program. Miss Dunbar and Mrs. Alter are leading figures in the field of women's liberation, Moore said.
Mr. and Mrs. Alter and Miss Dunbar will speak again at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Corbin Hall. Their topic is entitled, "Confronting the Issues."
The public is invited to all programs.
Denise Sanders, USA, 1962
Short: NO CENSUS NO FEELING
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dyche 75c
A separate workshop for men and women will be at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday. The men's workshop will be concerned with men in relation to women's liberation. The workshop for women will center around caste and class analysis of women's oppression, Moore said.
The four speakers will be at the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana, at 10 p.m. Wednesday. Their topic will be "Strategies for future at KU."
AUTO EMERGENCIES
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Automobile starting trouble—battery, starter and ignition system failure—was the basis for most calls for emergency assistance during 1968, says the American Automobile Association.
war hunt march 3 forbidden games marc
Rene Clement, France, 1952
Short: DUNKIN DORA'S DOMUTS, Shirley Temple
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
the innocent
S march 10 Jack Clayton, USA, 1931 Short: MANAGED MONEY, Shirley Temple 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Forum Room, Union 75c village of
the damned march12
Wolf Rilla, Britain, 1960
Short: PARDON MY FUFS, Shirley Temple
7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dyche Auditorium 75c
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Prosecution exemption begins at 23
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court ruled 5 to 3 Monday that youths who refuse to register for the draft are exempt from prosecution when they reach their 23rd birthdays. The government had claimed the statute of limitations ran until age 31.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, along with Justices Byron R. White and John M. Harlan, dissented with White declaring from the bench the decision "represents the kind of free-wheeling judicial authority that courts ought to avoid."
But the majority opinion by Justice Hugo L. Black held that Congress had specified a five-year statute of limitation in the Selective Service law. This means, Black said, that the government must bring prosecution between
a youth's 18th birthday when he is required to register and his 23rd.
The government had claimed that each day a youth failed to register was a new offense which could extend the statute of limitations until age 31.
Court says Maddox can't run
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court refused Monday to give Lester Maddox authority to run for a second consecutive term as governor of Georgia. Maddox promptly hinted that he might run his wife for the office.
Maddox had asked the high court to overturn a section of the Georgia constitution barring governors from succeeding themselves. The court refused to consider the case, holding it was outside its jurisdiction.
Maddox said the court refused to help him because it was influenced by "socialistic and communistic political philosophy."
The maximum penalty for failure to register is five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
"I thought the Supreme Court would have a different standard for Lester Maddox and the people that want to vote for him than it has for the Socialists and Communists and parasites," Maddox said in Atlanta.
However, Maddox said it wasn't important that he personally continue as governor. What is important, he said, is that the governor be "someone who speaks like Lester Maddox."
Maddox said he would talk with his wife Virginia about
whether she should run for governor in the September Democratic primary. He said he would have a political announcement March 16.
Laos arena is worsening
WASHINGTON (UPD) —Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said Monday "we are in it up to our necks" in Laos.
KU club sponsors meet
Black acknowledged that the statute of limitations sometimes "may permit a rogue to escape" but added: "We do feel that the threat of criminal punishment and the five-year statute of limitations is a sufficient incentive to encourage compliance with the registration requirements."
The second annual Jayhawk Karate Tournament will be held March 7 at the Community, Building, 11th and Vermont Street.
Eliminations will begin at 10:30 a.m. and the finals at 7 p.m.
Max Muller, Prairie Village law student, instructor of the KU Karate Club and director of the tournament, said admission for the eliminations would be 50 cents and $1.50 for the finals.
All persons with belt rankings of white, green, brown and black are eligible to compete in both
Mar. 3
1970 KANSAN 7
The ruling reversed the 1967 conviction of Robert I. Toussie of Brooklyn, N.Y., who had refused to register for the draft on grounds he was a conscientious objector. The indictment came eight years after Toussie's 18th birthday.
kata (form and style) and kumite (free fighting).
Muller said this year in addition to individual competition, there would be team competition in which any college or commercial academy could enter a team of five men. Teams from Oklahoma University, Wichita State University, Colorado State University and KU will be featured.
The ruling did not apply to other such draft violations as refusal to report for induction.
"The time is short," Mansfield said in a Senate speech.
DUTCH PRODUCING PAPER
"The time is now to face up to the implications of this worsening situation in Laos."
He said the presence of American military advisers in Laos "cannot be camouflaged any longer."
It is useless for either the United States or North Vietnam to maintain the "fiction" that the 1962 Geneva Accord guaranteeing the neutrality of Laos was being upheld, Mansfield declared.
THE HAGUE (UPI)—The production of the Dutch paper industry last year totalled 1.2 million tons, as compared with 1.1 million tons in 1967 and 1.07 million tons in 1966.
"We are both in it—North Vietnamese and Americans—and we are in it up to our necks."
Mansfield said close U.S. connection with Laotian government forces had resulted in "a further 'Americanization' of the war in Laos . . . which seems to be matching the effort to 'Vietnamize' the situation in South Vietnam."
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March 3
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SWEATERS $10.00
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Candidates
Student election candidates listed
At a meeting for Student Senate and class officer candidates Monday night in the Kansas Union Forum Room, election procedures were discussed.
The following is an incomplete list of candidates, party or coalition designation and academic area from which they are running. Following the name of each academic area is a number, showing that many seats are available
Presidential candidates: Peter George (ISP), Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student; Bill Ebert (Alliance); Topeka David, Miller (indp). Eudora junior.
Vice-Presidential candidates: Sharon Baucom (ISP), Kansas City, Mo., sophomore (Greg Thomas (Alliance), Beck (indn). Shawnee Mission junior.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (14): Robert Logan (ISP), Kansas City (KS), University of Kansas (UK), senior; Lyle "Buzz" Fisher (ISP), Dodge City junior; R. L. "Puff" Bailey (ISP), Lincoln, Neb. senior; Dennis M. "Buzz" Fisher (ISP), Lincoln (ISP), Laura Friesen (ISP), Clay Center junior; Don Gerber (ISP), Atchison junior; George Laughhead (ISP), Lincoln (ISP), Macauley senior; Norma Lake (ISP), Macauley senior; Stierwalt (ISP), Overland Park junior; Gary Waldron (ISP), Lawrence senior; Tim Williams (ISP), Kwung Hon, Cong Tong, Jonathan Gorber, C. Peng Goplerud (indp), Iowa City, Iowa, senior; Allan Blumenthal (indp); Bangna (Indep), Okaigin, Don Miller (Alliance), Iola junior; Edward M. Aten (Alliance), Overland Park junior; John S. Friedman (Alliance), Shawnee Mission, Oakland (Indep), Don Miller (Alliance), Iola junior; Edward M. Aten (Alliance), Overland Park junior; John S. Friedman (Alliance), Shawnee Mission, Oakland (Indep), Don Miller (Alliance), Wichita junior; David S. Awbrey (indp), Hutchinson senior; John S. Louis junior; Randy A. Youle (Alliance), Wichita junior; Tim Smith (Alliance), Wichita junior; Terrie Webb (indp), Clearwater junior; Mark Biddle (Alliance), Kansas City junior; Larry D. Knight (indp), Hutchinson junior; Louise Linda R. Sheehy (Alliance), Garden City junior; Kelley Pendergill (Alliance), Kansas City
Education (9): Cathy Bott (Alliance), Hutchinson junior; Anne Boydston (ISP), Des Moines, Ia., junior; Jennifer Johnson (ISP), Tess Frey (ISP); Prairie Village junior; Harry G. Gianakan (indp), Bryn Mawr, Pa., junior; Leanne Gray (ISP), Lawrence junior; William B. Kisse (ISP), Overland Park Junior School, Mission junior; Molly Laflin (Alliance), St. Louis junior; M. J. Logan (Alliance), King City, Mo.; junior; Mary Meduene (Alliance); James Morone (IDP), Brooklyn junior; Gayle Trig, (ISP) Welksley, Maine, Junior; Judy Visi (ISP)
Engineering (6): Harold Burger (indp), Queen's Wall, N.Y., sophomore, Thomas Coulter junior, Thomas Coulter (ISP), Braintree, Mass., sophomore; William B. Herpin Jr. (ISP), Columbus, Miss., sophomore; Travis Prairie village freshman; Michael E. Howell (ISP), Vandalia, Mo., sophomore; Mike Miller (ISP); Rick Stucky (Alliance); Earl Clark (indp), Delphos Hood (indp), Holsington, freshman
North College (5): Jeff Dunn (ISP),
Leaward freshman; Barbara Beckt (ISP)
Topeka sophomore; Nick Sou-
kler (ISP), Daniel Hufford;
R Kelly (ISP), Prairie Village sophomore;
Jean Stevenson (ISP). Leawood sophomore; Hohn Martin Prohosky (ISP)
Sandro (Alliance) or Garrett Sandro (Alliance) or Wichita freshman; Sam Conroy (Alliance). Florence sophomore; Terry M. Lee (indp).
Wellington freshman; Robert "Tuck" Koehler (indp). Barbara Beckt (man); Lewis R. Scott (Alliance). Lawrence sophomore; Barbara Gail (Alliance), Scotland. S.C., sophomore; Stanley R. Plummer (Alliance). Lakin freshman; Barbara Buckman (Alliance).
PHONE LAG
NEW DELHI (UPI)—An applicant for a telephone in India must wait an average of four years and four months to get one. And because of an increasing shortage of resources the waiting period is expected to be five years by 1974.
KANSAN 9
HAROLD'S SERVICE
PHILIPS 66
HAROLD'S 66 SERVICE
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
Oliver College (60): Julie Boll (ISP); Michael Moffet (ISP); Jack Lutz (ISP). Prairie Village freshman; Michael Mann (ISP); Bill O'Neill (ISP); Karen Kuchan (ISP), Shawnee Mission freshman; Gary Jacobs (Alliance); John Berry (Alliance); Emerson (Alliance); Topoka sophomore; Sheriene E. Burns (Alliance); Anthony freshman; Brad Smoot (Alliance); Marilyn Toneman (Alliance);
Pearson College (5): Norma Decker (ISP), Tecemseh freshman; Arthur R. Levin (ISP), Glencoe, Ill., sophomore; Richard G. Kinsley, sophomore; Rick McKelvoy (ISP), Edgerton freshman; Al Mannino (ISP) Overland Park sophomore; Kenneth Hagan, nursing senior; Mike O'Neal (Alliance) City freshman; Scott Shoffner (Alliance); Hawthorne, Calif., sophomore; Jim Lee (Alliance), Fl� Scott sophomore; Kenny Baldwin freshman; Bob Belcher (Alliance); Michael Sundemere (indep), Raytown, Moe, sophomore; John Pederson freshman; Daniel Gillick, sophomore; Ruddick (indep), Mission sophomore; Michael Lewis (indep), Kansas City freshman; James Sanders (indep); Greggie Sanders (indep); Willie Sloane sophomore; John Siege (alliance), Shawne Mission freshman.
Centennial College (5): Peterson (ISP); Marsha Hildreth (ISP), Leawood sophomore; Sandy Johnson (ISP); Cherry Herr (ISP); Kansas Athletic Admiral Moin (ISP), Rafsen乔, Iran, sophomore; Byron C. Saunders (Alliance), Washington, D.C., sophomore; Janet Corber (Alliance), Arlington, Va., sophomore; Shannon C. Stinson (Alliance), Kansas City, Mo, sophomore; Shannon C. Stinson (CC), Great Bend freshman; Kathi Vrentas (CC), Colette L. Kocour (CC); Michael Lee W. Mize (Alliance); Les Schwartz (Alliance), Les Wailis (indp).
Corbin College (5): Karen Baucom (ISP) Kansas City, Mo, sophomore; Eric Eaton, Boston, sophomore; freshman, Sheila, Fairfield, ISP). Scott City sophomore; Richard Lauer (ISP), Evanston, Ill., freshman; Ann Reed (ISP) Topena freshman; Don Wheatley (ISP) Boles Alliance, Dodge City sophomore; Melody Zody (indp), Wichita
sophomore; Lynne J. Piller (Alliance)
sophomore; sophomore; Ann Wal-
drup)
Pharmacy (2): Blaine Knox (ISP),
Valley Falis junior; Don Hill (indp),
Smith Center senior; Karen Barker
(Aliance); Beloit junior
Graduate (15): Karen Wade Laub
(ISP); Frederick Oettle (ISP), Gody-
berg, Ill. II, grad student; Surendra Bri-
nley, Ill. III, trac graduate; grad student;
Dave Blinha (ISP), St. Louis Park, Minn., grad student; Robert Brown (ISP), Boise, Idaho, grad student; Jack Casey (ISP), Faria V.
Curtis (ISP), John Doyle, Garden City grad student; John T. Patterson (ISP), Plainfield III, grad student; Gene Roberts (ISP); Harriette Stallworth (ISP), Hartsele, grad student; Joe Van Zandt
(ISP).
Architecture (2): Ronald D. Lyle
(ISP), Parsons senior; Roger Little
(ISP), Kirkwood, Mo., senior; Mike
Haggans (Alliance), Nevada, Mo.
(ISP), Pete Martin (Alliance),
Frankfort junior; Pete Martin (Alliance),
Prairie Village freshman
Business (2): Larry Carile (ISP), Caney senior; Scott Smith (ISP), Owain land Park senior; L. B Carpenter (BC), Oklahoma City, OKa; junior, David K. Lane (indp), David or K. Lane (lance); Kansas City, Mo. sonhour
Law (2): Melvin L. Jenkins (ISP),
Halifax, N.C., law student; John L.
Irisfelt (ISP); William H. Ward (indp).
Whitla, N.C., law student; Ann
Reed, (indp). Parsons law school
Journalism (2): Julie Smith (ISP), Shawnee Mission sophomore; Tom Gleason (ISP), Ottawa senior; Geoffrey Noyes (Assistant City junior); Mark A. Bernstein (Junior Stillwell junior; Vince Frye (Alliance); Shawnee Mission junior; Tom Slaughter (indp), Salina junior; Joe H. Bullard (indp), Ellis Junior; Rich Lovie (indp), Wichita junior; William Louv (Alliance), River Forest, IL, junior;
Social Welfare (2): Jerrie Moorra
(ISP): Shawnee Mission senior; Marsha Dixon (indp), Toppea junior;
Jessica (indp), Shawnee Mission
senior.
Fine Arts (4): Hali Pawl (ISP),
Topeka senior; Lea Orth (ISP), Bushon
junior; Richard W. Averill (ISP),
Topeka sophomore; Debby Quite
(ISP), Vila Park, III; sophomore;
Janice Marie Jones (indp), Macon;
Mo., junior.
miller
beck
Senior: President; James E. Nichols,
Hiawatha; Randy Andrews, Wichita;
Vice-president; Steven Childs, Fowler;
Ed Wood, Wichita; Secretary;
Kathy Bruning, Overland Park; Patricia Rich, Leawood, Treasurer; Pat Riley; Pratt; Suzy Bocelle, Kansas City.
Junior: President; Andrew Bukaty,
Kansas City; Michael Helbert, Salina,
Vice-president; Dan Evans, Salinas
John Robinson, Prairie Village. Sec-
retary; Marsha Brin, St. Louis Trea-
er. Ann Ladewig, Shawnee Mission.
Sophomore: President; John Wulf,
Morton Grove, II; Jeff Stinson,
Douglas Robertson; Scott H.
Kreamer, Olathe. Secretary; Cindy
Winn, Overland Park.
PEACE YOU YOU
Peace Corps Information & Applications Call: Mario Karr-V12-6917 or See: Dean Clark Coan-St. 226
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Gymnast flies high...
Gerald Carley, Wichita junior, executes a flying dismount off his routine on the high bar Saturday against Nebraska. Carley hit a 9.25 on this one, has a career best of 9.3, and has been consistently above the 9.0 barrier all season long.
NCAA field shapes up; champions clinch spots
By GARY KALE UPI Sports Writer
In the Midwest Regionals at Texas Christian, it's Dayton vs. Houston and Rice against fifth-ranked New Mexico State. The Western Regional at Brigham Young places UTEP vs. Utah State and Weber State against Long Beach State.
The first-round pairings for Saturday's openings of the 1970 NCAA basketball championships were completed after UCLA, Iowa, Davidson, Rice, Temple, U. of Texas at El Paso and Ohio University clinched conference titles.
The Eastern Regionals pit Southern Conference champion Davidson against fourth-ranked St. Bonaventure at the home court of St. John's University in New York; Temple, the Middle Atlantic Conference champ, against Villanova in Philadelphia, and seventh-rated Penn, the Ivy League titlist, against Niagara at Princeton, N.J.
A Mideast Regional doubleheader at Dayton, Ohio, pairs Ohio University, Mid-American Conference king, opposite Notre Dame and Western Kentucky with Jacksonville.
Top-ranked UCLA, seeking its fourth straight NCAA title,
routed California, 109-95, Saturday night for its fourth consecutive Pacific Eight crown. The Bruins, with a first-round bye, meet the Long Beach State-Weber State winner at Seattle, Wash., March 12.
Iowa withstood a spectacular 61-point effort by Rick Mount to hand Purdue its first home court loss in 30 games, 108-107, and clinch the Big 10 title.
Davidson earned a post-season berth in the NCAA by beating Richmond, 81-61, for the Southern Conference tourney title.
Rice won its first Southwest Conference title in 16 years with an 82-73 victory over Texas Christian, UTEP edged Utah, 83-82, for the Western Athletic Conference crown and Temple gained its tourney berth by nipping St. Joseph's, 63-59.
Second-ranked Kentucky, which faces Ohio U.-Notre Dame winner in a second-round Mid-east Regional game at Columbus, Ohio, March 12 avenged its only loss of the season by topping Vanderbilt, 90-86.
Third-ranked South Carolina overpowered North Carolina State, 85-69, with the help of John Roche's 31 points. The Gamecocks, undefeated in regular Atlantic Coast Conference
play, must do it all over again in the ACC tourney if it intends meeting the Davidson-St. Bonnie survivor in the second-round Eastern Regional at Columbia, S.C.
St. Bonaventure, ranked No. 4,
boosted its record to 21-1 by
crushing Niagara, 104-68, Sunday.
No. 5 New Mexico State exeacted 15 turnovers from Utah State en route to a 104-92 triumph.
Seventh-ranked Pennsylvania tied the Ivy League record of 14-0 for a season with a 97-63 decision over Cornell.
★★
Kansas 77 FG FT PF TP
Russell 3 1-1 5 7
Robisch 12 2-4 4 26
Brown 4 1-2 3 9
Kivisto 3 1-1 0 7
Lawrence 7 4-5 1 18
Stallworth 2 0-0 6 4
Stallworth 2 0-0 6 4
34 9-15 5 7
Okla, 82 FG FT PF TP
Jack 4 3-4 1 11
Heard 7 6-7 4 20
Yule 7 2-3 4 16
Ayers 3 3-3 2 9
Martin 5 7-8 0 17
Hardin 1 1-8 1 3
Jones 2 2-2 1 6
Jones 20 24-28 11 83
KANSAS 39 38-77
OKLAHOMA 43 39-82
NIT may bid today Big month for titles
NEW YORK (UPI)—The selection committee for the National Invitation basketball tournament was expected to name two, or possibly three, more teams today for the 33rd annual tourney scheduled for March 13-21 at Madison Square Garden.
Four teams, Louisiana State, Georgia Tech, Marquette and St. John's already have accepted.
10 KANSAN Mar. 3 1970
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Sooners hope for NIT bid
OU nips Hawks in last 37 seconds
By DON BAKER Kansan sports writer
The high-flying Oklahoma Sooners moved into a tie for second place in the Big Eight basketball standings last night by defeating the Kansas Jayhawks, 82-77.
KANSAN Sports
Playing before a sell-out partisan home crowd the victory put the Sooners a giant step forward in their bid for a NIT invitation.
Oklahoma is now 18-7 overall
Amendments offered
Two amendments to the Student Code will be introduced Wednesday at the regular meeting of the student Senate.
The elimination of the western civilization, comprehensive exam and lowering the maximum number of foreign language hours to 10, will be introduced by David Miller, Eudora junior. Miller said he was trying to make sure there was a quorum of Student Senate members at the meeting to discuss the issue. Less than one-fifth of the members were present for last week's meeting.
compared to KU's 16-9 mark. The Sooners, Jayhawks, and Missouri Tigers are all tied for second place with 7-6 conference records.
The Sooners took command from the start and for a few minutes looked as if they would run away with it. With 13:33 remaining in the half OU led 17-6 before KU began to rally.
The Hawks scored eight of the next ten points to cut the OU lead to four, 18-14.
Oklahoma retained momentum however until the 5:55 mark when Aubrey Nash, KU sophomore guard, hit for two to give the Jayhawks their first lead. 30-29.
The determined Sooners quickly rallied though and left the floor at half time with a 43-39 lead
Chester Lawrence, 6-4 guard, kept the Hawks in the game with 13 first half points.
The Jayhawks took the lead for only the second time in the game with 14:01 remaining in the game when a Pierre Russell follow shot made the score 50-49.
The Sooners again rallied until a Roger Brown layin with 10 minutes showing on the clock made it 56-55 in favor of KU.
With OU fans yelling louder than ever the emotion packed game saw the Sooners control the tempo until the 5:55 mark when a Brown tipin gave KU a 66-65 lead.
The two teams traded baskets for the next three minutes before a Garfield Heard layup and a Scott Martin free throw gave the
After he retired from pro football, Christman went into radio and television work and had been the color man on college football telecasts since they began.
CHICAGO (UPI)—Paul Christman, 51, a former All-America football player at the University of Missouri, and a television commentator on college and professional football, died Monday of a heart attack.
Christman was admitted to suburban Lake Forest Hospital about midnight Saturday and placed in the cardiac unit. The hospital said that about 12:45 CST Monday "he had a severe heart attack and expired."
Mar. 3
1970 KANSAN 11
Christman dies of heart attack
Christman broke into prominence as a single-wing tailback under Don Faurot at Missouri. Following a tour of duty in the service as a Navy lieutenant,
The three-day Kansas Relays to be run for the first time over the Jayhawks' new Jim Hershberger all-weather track is scheduled April 16-18.
The decathlon, a popular segment of the Kansas Relays for a number of years, will be returned to the Jayhawk track carnival this year and four other events are being added for the first time.
Christman, a star collegiate quarterback at Missouri in the early 1940s, later quarterbacked the old Chicago Cardinals, now the St. Louis Cardinals, to their only National Football League championship, in 1947.
Decathlon returns; Relays add events
New events announced last week by Relays director Bob Timmons are a master's mile for runners 35 and older, a marathon run of 26 miles plus two separate mile walks, one for high school walkers and the other open to all competitors.
Sooners a 72-69 lead with less than two minutes to play.
KU countered with a Lawrence free throw but a three point play by Martin put OU ahead 75-70 with only 1.09 remaining.
However, KU's doom was soon to follow as Oklahoma reeled off seven straight points to put the game away. The downfall began at the 0:37 mark when KU's Dave Robisch was called for both goal tending and fouling on a John Yule follow shot. The Sooner center sank the free throw and the Jayhawks were behind 75-78
Sooner fans began to rest easy but a three point play by Bob Kivisto followed immediately by a Lawrence steal and assist to Kivisto it 75-75 and it was anybody's game again.
Christman joined the Cardinals in 1945 and formed part of the "dream backfield" of Charlie Trippi, Pat Harder and Elmer Angsman.
Heard and Martin followed with two free throws apiece to make it 82-75 before Robisch got a tipin at the buzzer to make it 82-77.
He was traded to Green Bay in 1950 after helping the Cardinals to the NFL title in 1947. Christman served as a part-time coach with the Detroit Lions after retiring in 1950 and began broadcasting Cardinal games in 1958.
Robisch ended the game with 26 points to lead all scorers. Lawrence, who played the best game of his college career, added 18 to the KU total.
He broadcast college games and American Football League games for the American and National Broadcasting Companies from 1959-67 before joining the Columbia Broadcasting System as a football commentator and analyst in 1967.
Oklahoma had four players in double figures as Heard headed the list with 20 followed by Martin's 17, Yule's 16 and Bobby Jack's 11.
He is survived by his widow,
Inez, two sons and a daughter.
WSU adds 11th foe
WICHTTA (UPI) — Wichita State will meet Texas A&M in the "11th game" of four football seasons beginning in 1970, it was announced today.
All games will be regular season with three played at College Station, Tex. The only game slated for Wichita is the 1972 contest.
The series will begin Sept. 12, 1970.
The difference in the game came at the free throw line where the Sooners hit 24 of 28 compared to KU's 9 of 15. This offset the Jayhawk's 34-29 advantage in field goals.
The taller Jayhawks also outrebounded the Sooners. 54-38.
Kansas will close out its season Saturday night when it hosts Big Eight champion Kansas State. The game is already sold out.
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Music profs named to convention
Gerald Carney, Paul Haack and George Duerksen, professors of music education at KU, have been appointed by the Kansas Music Educators Association (KMEA) to serve as state representatives in a national project of the Music Educators National Conference (MENC).
The appointments were made at the KMEA convention held in Wichita Feb. 20 and 21.
Carney, who is currently president of KMEA, will be the Kansas representative to the MENC Convention to be held in Chicago March 4 and 5. He will evaluate work done by the 50-member Goals and Objectives committee, which will review MENC's position on the preparation of music educators.
"The Goals and Objectives committee will study the relevance and philosophy of teaching procedures in an effort to improve the education of music teachers," Carney said.
Committee findings, Carney said, would be turned over to a national commission, along with his evaluation of the committee's work. The national commission would then draw up workable plans for utilizing the suggestions of the Goals and Objectives committee.
Haack, who teaches music education from an esthetic and historical approach, is a member of the committee concerned with esthetic education.
Each member of the committee, he said is asked to outline goals for MENC to uprise in promoting esthetic education.
"Curriculum development is the first concern of music education," said Haack. "Music education must be esthetic education."
Haack said that "esthetics."
when applied to anything was practically impossible to define. He said he believed the focus of esthetic music education needed to be on the inherent expressive quality of music, through which the meaning of the composition could be understood.
"We must be concerned with the value in music which helps man to understand himself," said Haack. "A student of music must gain insight into the nature of man. For this to be accomplished, music must be taught in
context."
"Esthetic education should broaden a person's understanding of music, not limit it to a study of one style of music," he said.
Haack said all forms of music had social relevance, which could help students to understand all types of social factors.
Duerksen will serve on the 30 member committee on research in music education. He said that the committee would formulate plans to facilitate
12 KANSAN Mar. 3 1970
Duerksen is concerned primarily with laboratory and behavioral research, but said that some colleges tend to concentrate on research in music history.
more research in music education through MENC. He said that the committee would also suggest that MENC serve as a clearing house to provide information to colleges about the types of research being done.
"We need to formulate plans of action," Duerksen said. "One being considered is a nation-wide
competition for undergraduates who do research in music education. Cash prizes would be offered to the students completing outstanding research projects."
MENC has a student chapter at KU. It has 58,000 members nationally.
WAYNE'S 201ST
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — John Wayne began his 201st motion picture in Durango, Mexico, as the star of "Chisum," playing the largest cattle owner in the world.
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LBJ suffers chest pains, enters hospital
SAN ANTONIO (UPI) —Former President Lyndon B. Johnson, who left the White House for a life of ease on his Texas ranch, entered Brooke General Hospital Monday suffering chest pains.
His wife, Lady Bird, was at his bedside.
The 36th President suffered a heart attack when he was a U.S. senator. He complained of pains in his chest 10 days ago.
Dr. J. Willis Hurst, Johnson's heart specialist, said weekend tests showed "minor change" in the former President's electrocardiogram and "there is no evidence of any recent heart attacks."
A statement released by Johnson's office in Austin, Tex., said:
"However, President Johnson has experienced considerable discomfort in his chest over the weekend and as a precautionary move, Dr. Hurst and Dr. William H. Moncrief Jr., commanding general of Brooke General Hospital, felt it advisable for him to enter the hospital for treatment."
Johnson, 61, a robust 6-3, 20-pounder, often bragged of his formula for success. He gave it in two words: "hard work."
Those two words almost cost him his life 15 years ago when he suffered a heart attack in Washington that kept him idle for six
Meningitis scare hits St. Louis high school
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—The state's largest high school had extra nurses on duty Monday after one of its teachers contracted meningitis.
Mrs. Burman Dyer, 22, an English teacher at McCluer High School, was in critical condition at St. Louis County Hospital. She entered the hospital Saturday after visiting her husband, who is in basic training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
The Army base reported 17 cases of meningitis during February and said that three soldiers have died from the disease. An Army spokesman denied that new recruits are being worked to exhaustion or that those who ask to go on sick call are being harassed However, Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo., and Rep. James Symington, D-Mo., have called for an investigation.
Mrs. Dyer visited her husband Feb. 22 and was exposed to the students and teachers at McCluer last week before entering the hospital. McCluer has 4,100 students.
"Mostly what the extra nurses are doing is answering the telephones and trying to explain the situation to panicky parents," a school spokesman said.
Mar. 3
1970 KANSAN 13
The school said that it was interviewing each of the students and teachers that came into contact with Mrs. Dyer last week. Those who reported any problems with their upper respiratory systems were being asked to immediately consult their doctors.
UN fellow studies oil engineering
A senior oil field development engineering student, Braj Nandan, is attending the University of Kansas as a United Nations fellow under the office of technical cooperation of the United Nations.
A native of India, Nandan came here the first of February and will be studying mathematical modeling of petroleum and water reservoirs, an area in which the University department of petroleum engineering has attained international recognition.
He will develop computer programs to predict the future production performances of oil fields and use his modeling methods on oil fields in India.
The great fog banks that form off the northern California coast in summer are sometimes 100 miles thick.
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months. He later described that heart attack as "bad as a man can have and still live."
Johnson had no further heart trouble, but during his presidency he had two serious operations.
On Oct. 8, 1965, he underwent gall bladder and kidney stone surgery and a year later had double surgery for a throat condition and an abdominal hernia.
Johnson summoned photographers after the gall bladder operation for a memorable picture of him pointing to the scar.
Johnson has lived on his LBJ ranch near Johnson City in central Texas since he left the White House in January, 1969.
"These are the kind of days and nights I choose to have," he told friends last month on the first
anniversary of his retirement from public office.
Johnson entered the San Antonio Hospital Monday at 1:15 p.m. CST.
"This is something I've never been able to do before," said the man who ran for his first elective office 33 years ago. "I do just what I want to do but sometimes Mrs. Johnson intervenes."
An unidentified telephone caller informed police at 6:50 a.m. that the sample would be placed in a mail box. It was later picked up by police and FBI agents.
Stolen moon dust returned
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — A small vial of moon dust stolen from a display at a fund-raising dinner during the weekend was returned anonymously Monday.
The tiny vial of moon dust was taken Saturday night while two off-duty policemen watched over $25,000 worth of diamonds on another floor of Bullock's department store.
The two-inch long glass tube, containing 2.3 grams of the gravel, disappeared from a pedestal while hundreds of guests enjoyed a $100-a-plate buffet on the floor below.
Police Chief Edward M. Davis said the location of the mail box where the vial was recovered would not be revealed at the present time.
"This is a valuable piece of investigative information to confirm or eliminate suspects and the investigation continues," Davis said.
The returned sample was analyzed and authenticated by Dr. George Weatherill, the UCLA geologist to whom the dust was entrusted for scientific research
The sample was loaned by UCLA to the Saul Winstein and Doheny Eye Foundation for the charity fund-raising affair. A spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said such public display of lunar material must be cleared through the agency and its records indicated such a request had not been made.
Slip into the Captain's Table between, before, or after class. Sit down at one of the many captain's tables. Then think FOOD. Your mouth begins to water as you imagine eating those delicious eggs, ham, bacon, french toast. . Can you imagine it? Can you taste it: You can order it at the Captain's Table. From 7: -10 A.M.
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The Captain's Table
Across the street from Lindley Hall
What to do if you don't have a carpet ball
Centuries-old pastimes seem sedate now
By JAN MAXWELL Kansan Staff Writer
The average University of Kansas student spends his spare time indulging in a variety of odd pastimes. For example, the majority of the student body drinks beer to whittle away extra hours. Another large group of students spends spare time shooting the
cue at a well-known Lawrence establishment. Now let's take a trip back in time and imagine ourselves living in the 18th or 19th century.
The Spencer Library has a variety of puzzles and pastimes of the 18th and 19th century on display.
If you had lived during this
Scholarships given to high school seniors
The stipends vary from small honorariums to full support, depending on the student's need.
Summerfield scholars are: Linden Appel, Bushunt; John K. Brungardt, Derby; David M. Buchner, Prairie Village, Shawnee Mission East High School; Theodore Burk, Scranton, Santa Fe Trail High School; Frank L. Chance, Kansas City, Washington High School.
Twenty Kansas high school senior men and 13 Kansas high school senior women who have proven their academic excellence have been chosen to be Summerfield and Watkins-Berger scholars at KU for the 1970-71 school year.
Summerfield scholarships awarded to men students, and Watkins - Berger scholarships, awarded to women students, are the highest honor KU can bestow on a graduating senior from a Kansas high school. The scholars were chosen after two days of highly competitive examinations and interviews at KU.
Barry A. Cipra, Overland Park, Shawnee Mission East High School; Delmer Harris, Concordia; Ronald J. Hill, Wichita, Wichita High School East; Michael P. Kappelman, Wichita, Wichita High School East; Bruce Keplinger, Overland Park, Shawnee
Watkins-Berger scholars are:
Gwen E. Adams, Osage City;
Mary F. Dillon, Wichita, Mount Carmel Academy; Linda D. Ferrel, Valley Falls; Linda L. Hoppes, Sharon Springs, Wallace County High School; Claudia McAllister, Great Bend; Sara A. Martin, Liberal; Barbara Pike, Wichita, Wichita High School Southeast.
Mary J. Schism, Topeka, Washburn Rural High School; Ellen C. Schultze, Prairie Village, Shawnee Mission East High School; Susan Smith, Shawnee Mission, Shawnee Mission East High School; Jill Whitley, Lawrence; Becky J. Williams, Hill City, and Nancy Zabel, Wichita, Wichita High School South.
Richard W. Lindberg, Kansas City, Washington High School; Howard Marchbanks, Salina; Andrew Melnykovych, Overland Park, Shawnee Mission South High School; David Newkirch, Wichita, Wichita High School East; Joel Payne, Kansas City, Washington High School.
Mission South High School
R. Kent Power, Wichita, Wichita High School East; Steven Randall, Newton; Douglas Underwood, Ottawa; Gregory Van Sickel, Topeka, Hayden High School; and Danny Watson, Silver Lake.
'High priest of pot' sentenced for snuffbox drug smuggle
"He poses a threat to the community," the judge said after sentencing Leary. "His conduct has been such that he openly advocates violation of the law. He poses a danger to other persons."
Leary was convicted Jan. 20 at Laredo, Tex., of transporting from Mexico into Texas three ounces of marijuana hidden in his 18-year-old daughter's underwear. A month later he was convicted in California-with his wife and son of possessing marijuana and LSD. He will be sentenced in California on March 11.
14 KANSAN Mar. 3
1970
"These are the times which test the depth of our faith and patience." Leary's wife, Rosemary,
HOUSTON (UPI) — A federal judge called Dr. Timothy Leary a "threat to the community" Monday and sentenced the high priest of drugs to 10 years in prison for smuggling a snuffbox of marijuana into the United States from Mexico.
The silver-haired Leary, clutching a cornco pipe, took the sentence with a smile, grabbed his miniskirted wife and kissed her for 10 seconds.
"Love cannot be a prisoner," shouted the 50-year-old former Harvard lecturer as he was hustled handcuffed through a courtroom crowd by two burly U.S. Marshals. He was taken to the Houston airport for a jet flight back to California.
Leary's lawyer, Mitchell Standard of New York City, said he will appeal to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans to get bond which was denied by U.S. District Judge Ben Connally.
read Monday from a prepared statement. "But love is free."
"Judge Connally is right. My husband is a menace to society," said Mrs. Leary, wearing rose-colored glasses which made her teary eyes look even redder. "We are a menace to the community which makes a mockery of the Constitution.
"If he were a thief he would be out on bail," Mrs. Leary said.
time, you would more than likely be living in a large colonial house with long, carpeted hallways. And, of course, you would own a polished stone carpet ball. The ball would probably be made of marble. You would use this smooth round stone to play bowling games in your halls.
The proper young lady of this time, instead of chasing boys, would sit on her love seat and look through her stereoptic at the various three-dimensional cards she and her friends had collected.
should be glad that 20th century pastimes are not limited to puzzles and games.
A jigsaw puzzle was not cut, as are the puzzles of today. The 19th century jigsaw curiosity was a set of cubes with a different picture on each side of the cubes.
Possibility you would be fortunate enough to have a three-dimensional viewing plaything publicizing the opening of the tunnel under the Thames in 1843. You would look through one of three peep-holes in the end of the toy and view a portion of the tunnel with cardboard figures of people standing at the opening.
Literature of the 18th and 19th century did not quite reach the level of "Myra Breckenridge." You would be reading one of several annuals, which were weekly or monthly magazines republished as a single volume around Christmas time. Like many 19th century periodicals, they carried serialized stories.
stereoptician type and your idea of a three dimensional plaything is not a cardboard toy, then you
In the event you're not the
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WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Catalogue are intended
to all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. 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 supplies and furniture. Xerox service. Lawyers. Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. ff. 843-3644.
New refrigerator, apt. size—bench type, only 99.5 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
Handmade Originals - India prints,
tie-dies, dresses, men's shirts, pants
skirts, men's skirts, mini skirts, beads,
earrings, and adoceptoria Creations
West 8th Street. **3-10**
Famous Brand Components now at giveaway prices: Complete Outfits, were $219.90, now $149.90; AM-FM-ghs was $299.90, now $199.90; AMP Shrink was $299.90, now $199.90; Ry in and save up to $100.00 at Ray stoneback's, 929 Mass. 3-3
Old Zenith console stereo phone with AM-FM radio - needs repair, however radio plays beautifully. Come on down to $25.00. Ray Stone屏幕 downtown. 3-3
Beautiful Ring Set-14K white diamond engagement ring, AAA1耳1. diamond center, baguettes each side; 14K Keepsake wedding band with three baguettes. Appraised $2100, Feb. Special $1275. 843-9057. 3
1968 Corvette convertible. w/vinyl hardtop, 327-350, 4-speed, *power* duration 350 miles unless benance 50,000 mile warranty, $475 or best offer. 843-9057 3-3
'69 VW Bug, 12,000 miles, still new,
warranty in effect. Call
3-43
2-wheel trailer; metal frame; wood box; '6'x4'x4': 842-8660. 3-3
One single buffalo—a real bugar. Call anytime, now or then. 842-6303. - 3
***
6-string Gibson in perfect condition.
guitar, cap and case. $100. #824-0002-
824-0003-824-0005-824-0007-824-0009-824-0011-
1966 Dodge Charger, dark green w/ white pin stripe, 426 Hemi, auto. a.i.c., artemis magnets. Goodyear polyglass tires, sold cars, sell trucks, Larry, 842-6952. 3-4
One 850 cfm Holley 4-barrel, $75 One Weid and high-rise manifold (fits 383 or 440), $30, 7,000 miles on each. Call Steva Strahm, 843-1711. 3-3
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Culssat; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket seats;
starts, starts and runs
colently; mechanically perfect. Only
$500. 843-9588. 3-5
Electro-voice 30 watt amplifier with
lamp 842-4897 after 6 p.m.
3-26
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodoram
Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz. Retail price per
24-can case $16.54 Sell price per case
only $5.00 Steve Cohen, UN N-4,457
Maxi-coat, size 13, all wool, ginger
color, beautifully made. From Kansas
City store, worn twice, need money
to repair car. $35.86-335.75
3-6
THE HITE in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill.
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
Classic in its own time, 1961 XK150
Jaguar Coupe, Black with red leather interior. Mint condition, all original equipment. One previous owner. Price $2,955, no trades. Call Topeka, 913-269-6492 at 6:30 p.m.
3-6
Must Sell. Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475.
Also Mike and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-5763 evenings. 3-16
Pentax Spotmatic, new, never used.
fl 4 lenses, soft case, guarantee card.
$309.50 value for only $247.60. Kent Dennis,
842-362, Naismith Hall. 3-9
Women's contract at Naimsburg—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
Fender Newporter Guitar for sale by original owner. Like new condition, seldom played. Call 842-4454 or stop by 2238 Mrph Dr., Apt. 2. 3-9
4 and 8 track car stereo with FM-
radio and excellent condition
库萨, 842-8227
3-9
WANTED
Emergency! Need two tickets to KU-K-State game this Saturday. Call 843-8292. 3-6
Your unwanted steree albums, old and new, are worth money to you. Interested? Call 842-5950 anytime after 3:30 p.m. 3-4
I need a ride!! Topeka to KU, Tuus-
Fri. Must arrive by 8:30 and can leave
at 3:30. Address: 409 Watson, Topeka.
Phone 233-0327.
Roommate wanted—one girl to share nice apt. at Ridge House. $65 plus ½ utilities. Call 842-6331 between 10 and 4 or 843-1161, Ginger. 3-4
Guitar instructor. wanted. Am inter-
viewed for position with *bods*. Call Linda, 843-237-34. 3-6
Tickets for KU-K-State game—642-
6217.
3-6
Roommate wanted, male student to share my large pad, campus at back biking. I had even had a holiday, being all maid service once, a week. Call after six p.m. b428-8377. 3-
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 with junior girl. W. $24/month. Call 82-382-180, 1810 W. 23-4
Apt. F.
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt. with three others.
$51.25 per month, including water.
Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Two girls need roommate to share duplex. Call 842-8434. 3-9
NOTICE
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need
Plaza, 1800 Mass.
Hillcrest, 925 Iowa
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Downtown, 921 Mass.
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
服务:
Complete prescription departments and fountain service
515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Q. If you want some honest-to-goodness Bar-B-Q this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone 1-2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Fyre boots, fringe jackets, moosecaus,
hiking boots, also custom made belts,
barrettes and sandals, purses, vests,
barrettes dog leathers at 812 MODEL
PRIMARILY LEATHER.
Student and family laundries done at Tarr's Laundry, 1903% Mass. St. landmark folded, permanent press on hangers. Bring in early same day service. In early 3a change 3-6
SANDALS—this spring enjoy the comfort and durability of handmade sandals. Your own to choose. LEATHER, 812 Mass. 3-3
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. V 3-4032. 5-14
This ad good for 1 one-hour cassette tapes when presented at time of purification. $49.90—offer expires March 5th. Ray Stoneback's, downtown. 3-3
Lepopidora Creations for men and women. 19 West 9th Street. Select your own India print for custom made clothing. 3-3
Groove-Today in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galerie. Find the latest, the best for guys and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky. tf
We are now open till 5:30 p.m. week-
day. Tair's Laundry, 1903% lbs. Mass. 3-4
hours.
Audio Discount—Your A.R. Dynaco dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
We 3-6
Jey Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
Peppers, trees. Sophomore Class--8
For information concerning the
students concerned,
uilce: 842-4676, 3-4
Psychedelic Lighting Manual! Make your own light-machines, strobes, and lighting displays. $2.00 to Lightrays Company, 713 E. Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19106.
Sand Candles by Betsy Webster, 9th and Indiana. THE OMNIBUS SHOP.
Galvin Bridal
Beautiful Bridal Apparel &
Formal Wear
Formal Wear
Try One Today 814 Iowa
910 Kv.
BURGER CHEF
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Home of the "Big Shef"
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Karate Action Saturday, March 7,
Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
Eliminations-10:30 a.m. 50c.
Finals p. 7月 $1.50. 3-12
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom
apartment 2 blocks from campus.
$115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-
0705. 3-16
PERSONAL
Spring new Sandlers, Sandlers are here. Weaver's Shoe Shop, Second Floor. 3-9
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $811^2/3 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. tt
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 Dodge. 15 W. 9th. 3-4
British surplus wool fire brigade jacket
The Hodge Dodge, 15 W. 9th, 3-4
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
TYPING
Miss Ineeda Fellia; Become one of the "Heavenly Bodies" with Moon Shoes or Arcsenberg's, 819 Mass. They're your soul! Sincerely, G. 3-3 about it.
926 Mass.
Authentic London Bobbies capes.
The Hooded Podge, 15 W. 9th. 3-4
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing materials, and copywriter.
Plea type. Competent. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service
5-15
Experienced typists design manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
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
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
Fred's Auto Pointing
1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience at
AEC Group
*485* (8:00 to 5:00 -842-011-4) 4-3
*486* (8:00 to 5:00 -842-011-4) 4-3
Fast, accurate typing of manuscripts, theses, miscellaneous on Smith Corona electric, Call Mrs. Troxel, 2409 Ridge Court, VI 1-2440. 3-3
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman
Single Muffler Installed
SAVE YOURSELF
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for any American car.
$12.95
- Reweaving
T.I.R.E. co.
720 East 9th VI 3-0950
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EBERT
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SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Group Tax, 8011½ Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
Guitar player and vocalist. Weekends and summer work. Call Steve Clark, Red Dog Inn, 842-0100. 3-6
HELP WANTED
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates—$35 for 121, 182 Mish, 845-969-350. 6 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
Need extra money? We need an accountant; will discuss terms. P.S.—good job for grad student or housemother. 842-5002, for Oscar. 3-6
USED BOOKS-READ and TRADE.
Buy, sell, trade used paperback books:
Educational, Science Fiction, Novels,
Comics, Children's Books, magazines, H & H Furniture Store,
934 Mass. Book 843-2736. Now boasting
25,000 books. 3-3
Need entertainment for your next party? Talented folk group available at reasonable rates. Have done xx work. Can do both. Work. 6278 or 842-7546. 3-3
FOUND
Valuable Swiss watch, Describe, call 842-2827. 3-6
Found: A charming atmosphere that makes the steaks and Russian strogno-fruit taste even better! Castle Tea is the most unique restaurant Lawrence. 3-9
LOST
FOR RENT
Key ring and identification wallet at Robinson Gym. Jack K. Horner. 843-6838. Reward. 3-6
Manila envelope with W-2 forms, cancelled checks. Call FL7-4281 collect. Reward. After 10 p.m. 3-5
For rent starting April 1st to faculty or staff couple or individual. Beautiful building with quiet comfortable. Beef of neighbors, near KU and town. Call 843-8543. 3-6
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 campus busline. Laundry facilities, outdoor pool, off-street parking.
LOW SUMMER RATES
Now showing afternoons at College
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1741 W. 19th, APT. 5B, 843-8220
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Pompidou ends U.S. visit
New York (UPI) - French President Georges Pompidou, his resentment over demonstrations and snubs somewhat abated, spent his last evening in the United States Monday with President Nixon after a warm welcome at the United Nations.
Nixon made a surprise flight to New York Monday afternoon to personally offer his apologies to Pompidou for rough treatment by pro-Israel demonstrators in Chicago last weekend. Some 3,000 orderly pickets marched behind barricades manned by hundreds of police as Nixon arrived at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel to attend a gala banquet in Pompidou' honor.
UNI reporter, Claud Bourgeois of Paris, who has been traveling with Pompidou, reported "the storm is past." He said a phone call from Nixon to Pompidou Sunday night that expressed the "apologies and regrets of the American people" had gone a long way in mollishing the French chief of state. And Nixon's impulse visit helped even more.
Pompidou was asked twice during the day if he would make a return visit to the United States. His answers were, "Why not?" and "Willingly."
Nixon conferred with Pompidou in his Waldorf Towers suite a little more than an hour before they would meet again at a formal reception preceding a gala dinner sponsored by Franco-
16 KANSAN Mar. 3
1970
American organizations. Nixon was scheduled to return to the White House late Monday and President and Mrs. Pompidou will return to Paris Tuesday.
Pompidou, whose sale of 110 jet fighter planes to Libya was protested by Jews, caused resentment among seven top Jewish leaders representing 25 major organizations Monday when he canceled a meeting at the Waldorf that had been scheduled.
He told newsmen later that there was "no significance" in the cancellation which was made because "I had to go directly to the United Nations."
Since arriving in Washington Feb. 23, Pompidou has encountered a boycott by some congressmen of his address to a joint Congressional session, pickets everywhere he appeared in San Francisco, and surging mobs around his car at his hotel in Chicago New York presented a special challenge since it has the largest Jewish population of any city in the world.
France's first lady, Mme Claude Pompidou, cancelled all of her appointments in New York. She was reportedly "terribly frightened" by the 10,000 demonstrators in Chicago—one of the reasons for Pompidou's anger, according to sources close to the French entourage.
Police Commissioner Howard R. Leary, determined that the Chicago incidents would not be repeated, assigned 300 uniformed officers to Pompidou's party in addition to hundreds of plainclothesmen and detectives stationed at all vantage points along its route.
The Jewish delegation, which had sought to discuss France's sale of 110 jet fighter planes to Arab Libya, denounced the cancellation as an "affront" to American Jews and the "gracious traditions" of France. But a similar meeting by Pompidou with the Jewish leaders in Chicago was followed by noisy anti-French demonstrations, leading Pompidou to seriously consider canceling his Monday and Tuesday activities in New York.
Nixon telephoned Pompidou from Washington Sunday night to offer "his apologies and regrets and those of the American people," according to White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.
Pompidou decided to finish out his 8-day state visit and keep a lunch appointment with U. N. Secretary General Thant at noon EST.
The French president avoided an orderly demonstration of 500 persons displaying Israeli flags in the U.N. Plaza by being driven through the U.N. garage to the entrance of the secretariat building. U.N. security guards were stationed 25 feet apart around the walled entrance courtyard, recalling the heavy security accorded Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's U.N. visits a decade ago.
Nixon's decision to attend the 7:30 p.m. EST reception and dinner tendered Pompidou by the city's Franco-American organizations was so sudden that the dinner chairman, former Ambassador to Belgium William A. M. Burden, was not informed in advance of a White House announcement shortly after noon EST.
"We thought Spiro Agnew was going to represent the President," said one of the dinner planners. "I guess Pompidou will be less insulted this way."
BOTH GOV. NELSON A. Rockefereller and Mayor John V. Lindsay had cold-shouldered the event and Lindsay was pointly out of town in Washington. But Michel Dumont, counselor to the French U.N. delegation, said Pompidou's warm welcome by a large turnout of U.N. staff members "compensates a bit" for the official chill Pompidou felt here.
"The president is very gratified," Dumont said, referring to the applause accorded Pompidou. "The atmosphere could not have been better."
The French president had notified Jewish leaders 10 days ago that he would would meet with them, and they had traveled from
all over the country for the 10:30 a.m. EST appointment at the Waldorf. At 10:15 a.m. a radio newsman told them the meeting was off, but they were not officially informed by the French Consulate until 15 minutes later.
Dr. William A. Wexler, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, said, "Without offering any reasons, he decides not to appear. We are appalled at this act of discourtesy which marks an affront not only to the American Jewish community but to the gracious traditions of the people of France."
The Jewish leaders said they had intended to ask Pompidou to lift the French arms embargo against Israel and "to deliver to Israel the 50 Mirage jets bought and paid for."
Jean Beliard, a spokesman for Pompidou, said he alopogized to the Jewish delegation because "circumstances" prevented Pompidou from seeing them. Asked by newsmen what circumstances, Beliard replied, "The circumstances."
Ether anesthesia was used first at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston in 1846.
Try Griff's Fish Sandwich—35c
Give your taste a treat. Try Griff's delicious fish sandwich for only 35¢
A tasty filet of fish, slice of cheese, fresh lettuce and tangy tartar sauce are placed on a toasted bun to give you one of the best fish sandwiches you'll ever eat. And it's at Griff's, famous for Giants, and hamburgers, and friendliness.
Griff's Burgor Bar
1618 W. 23rd
Bell
BELL SYSTEM
Recruiting Team On Campus Thursday, March 5,1970
Representing
American Telephone & Telegraph, Long Lines Department Bachelor's and Master's candidates Electrical Mechanical, Civil, Mathematics, and Physics candidates with broad interests in economic and management problems. Locations: Mid-west states initially.
Bell Laboratories Research and Development B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. candidates. Emphasizing E.E., M.E., Physics, Engineering Mechanics and Mathematical Sciences. Opportunities for graduate study. Locations: New Jersey, Illinois and elsewhere in eastern half of U.S.
Southwestern Bell Technical students, particularly those seeking management and administrative assignments-E.E.; M.E.; E.P.; C.E.; Math-Physics.
Locations: Kansas and the Mid-West.
Western Electric-All Engineering disciplines needed to fill Technical Engineering positions in design, product, systems, military research and management training.
Locations: Southwest—Mid-West—Eastern and Northern States.
Sign Interview Schedule in Placement Office
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Planning board hears request
New biology hall proposed
A proposal for a new life science building to be located across Sunflower Avenue from New Haworth Hall was introduced Tuesday evening at a meeting of the Physical Facilities Subcommittee of the University Planning Board in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
Ronald McGregor, professor of Botany, spoke before the four-member committee, representing KU's department of biological sciences.
The proposed building, said McGregor, should be completed within the next five years, and must have 300,000 square feet of usable space. McGregor described the figure as "very conservative."
"Overcrowded labs are bursting at the seams," said McGregor. "Of the 3,100 students enrolled in the various divisions of biological sciences, 2,500 do some work in Snow."
According to McGregor, botany,
general biology, systematic biology,
biology.
ecology, cell biology, microbiology and bio-chemistry are all included in the division of biological sciences. Except for microbiology and biochemistry which are housed in New Haworth Hall, all disciplines within the division are housed primarily in Snow Hall.
"The real problem," said McGregor, "is that we are at the saturation point right now. There has been a steady growth in the enrollment rate in the biology division, and there is no reason to believe that the increase will not continue steadily."
He explained that 38 of the 61 biology faculty members and 10 of the 15 staff members had offices and research facilities in Snow. Graduate students, he added, do research in the limited laboratory facilities there.
If the present Snow Hall is remodeled, McGregor said, the department would still be short of space.
McGregor predicted the department would need 100 faculty members and 50 full time staff members by 1980.
"These statistics are frightening at the moment, but we must look ahead," he said.
McGregor noted that with the razing of Old Haworth, the anatomy department has had to move its facilities to Snow. Though microbiology and biochemistry vacated space in Snow when they moved to New Haworth, he added, Snow Hall was not constructed for the laboratory facilities needed by the biology department. He said Biology II sections are making use of "crude" facilities vacated by microbiology.
McGregor proposed that forty-year-old Snow Hall be used for general classroom space when a new building is completed.
By locating across from New Haworth, McGregor said, the new life
science building would facilitate great economy and service utilization because of its proximity to other science buildings. He said several of the science departments had shared equipment for years with no problems, but that centralization of all sciences would improve the program.
"Remodeling of present Snow Hall would only cause further fragmentation of the biology division," he said. "We hope a new structure will serve our needs for the next 45 years."
Facilities to be provided in the proposed $25 million building would include offices, classrooms and conference rooms, improved animal housing and a greenhouse.
An important addition would be new environmental control rooms and a new entomology museum to replace the overcrowded one in Snow Hall.
Inside...
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 91
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 4, 1970
Johnson remains in hospital ... 24
Students and drugs ... 10
Dean Taylor speaks in Topeka ... 2
Women's liberation discussion ... 24
Berkeley professor speaks on violence ... 20
Buses mobbed
LAMAR, S.C. (UPI) State police used tear gas and clubs Tuesday to beat back a howling mob of whites, armed with axe handles and baseball bats, when they attacked buses bringing Negro children to a once-white school.
Nearly 200 white men and women smashed the windows of three school buses when they delivered 39 black students to Lamar High, once the white school in this cotton-and-tobacco town.
Troopers fired tear gas into the crowd, driving them away long enough to get the embattled children inside the school. Then the whites resumed their charge, swarmed around two of the buses and overturned them. The troopers — nearly 100 strong — then pulled their pistols and lobbed more tear gas, finally dispersing the crowd.
Several Negro children received minor injuries from flying glass or tear gas.
There were no arrests because the state police "were outnumbered," said Wayne Seal, Gov. Robert E. McNair's press secretary. U.S. Attorney Joseph O. Rogers said he would seek federal court orders for the arrest of the leaders of the mob.
A Justice Department spokesman disclosed that more federal marshals and civil rights division attorneys were en route to Lamar, where the FBI already is at work.
Seal said the patrolmen would have opened fire with their pistols
(Continued to page 24)
Library bond passes
Lawrence voters Tuesday passed a proposed bond issue to build a new $1,575,000 city library. A total of 5,421 votes were cast; 3,056 for and 2,365 against.
The old library, built in 1902, is able to serve a town of 16,000. The new library will not only offer three times more space than the old library, but also many other services to the city.
The new two story facility will have reading rooms to accomo-
date 200 people, a meeting room for a group of 15 to 20 and an auditorium seating 100.
The proposed site for the new library is the south side of Seventh street, between Vermont and Kentucky streets.
Wayne Mayo, Librarian, said it will take approximately 21 to 24 months for bidding and construction before completion of the new facility.
BSU may drop first issue
John Spearman, president of the Black Student Union (BSU), said the BSU is considering dropping the first issue of their controversial newspaper Harambee, which had been re-submitted to the University of Kansas Printing Service for publication earlier this week.
Spearman made the comment in an interview on KUOK Tuesday evening. Spearman said because a number of the papers have been printed in Wichita, it would waste money to print the paper here.
He said that all the other issues of the paper would be submitted to the university press, for publication.
Spearman said the athletic department uses black athletes as a source for its teams and then tells them where and how to live. Spearman said that in effect, the athletic department turns black athletes against their own black brothers.
In the same interview, Spearman called the University athletic department "the racist arm of the University."
Spearman, commenting on the administration is "crisis oriented" to the demands of black students, Spearman said that untill the University is threatened with action they remain largely passive to the requests made by black students.
Spearman also revealed plans for a big brother program sponsored by the BSU. Spearman said that members of the BSU would go into the black community in Lawrence and spend time with children in the community. Spearman said the program is still in its early stages, however, should begin within the week.
Spearman was asked for specific plans for a black moratorium. He said there were no specified dates reserved for the event, but the moratorium would be held as the need arises to inform people of black problems.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Oil fire battle costly
VENICE, La—The battle against the Chevron offshore platform fire is turning into a multimillion dollar exercise in pollution control, according to the Interior Department.
A spokesman said Tuesday the "best brains in the oil industry," plus government pollution control experts, oceanographers and university specialists, were being brought in to study the problem of controlling the oil flow once the fire is put out.
"We hope significant advances in the technology of fighting pollution will result from this," the spokesman said.
Albino whale captured
PEDDER BAY, B.C.—An albino killer whale, believed to be the first ever captured, was under 24-hour watch today by officials from Oak Bay's "Sealand" marina.
The rare, $12\frac{1}{2}$-foot whale was taken off Race Rocks on the west coast of Vancouver Island Sunday by a team of aquarium employees.
Eclipse deadly to eyes
NEW YORK—The sun's deadly eye can put a celestial whammy on yours that will leave your vision crippled for life. Don't look at the eclipse.
That is the warning issued by many eye experts. They are talking about the danger of blindness for those who are overcome with awe or eagerness during Saturday's total or partial eclipse of the sun over North America. So overcome that they gaze directly at it.
Cancellation draws protest
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-The twin cities of Champaign and Urbana were under an overnight curfew early today from angry demonstrations by University of Illinois students protesting the cancellation of a speech by "Chicago Seven" attorney William M. Kunstler.
Dean Taylor testifies at Senate hearings
Emily Taylor, dean of women, testified at the Capitol yesterday to urge legislators to pass a bill ending sex discrimination in employment.
Dean Taylor said 49 per cent of the women in Kansas are unprotected by title seven of the civil rights law. She told the committee that Kansas is one of only 11 states that has not adopted legislation to extend equal rights to women.
In her testimony urging the passage of Bill #1916, Dean Taylor said that 20 per cent of women
who graduate from college work at levels far below their capabilities. She produced a book containing figures on working women in response to a report that the same percentage of all college graduates, regardless of sex, worked in occupations below their capabilities.
"Our state laws are clearly not in conformity to federal laws," said Dean Taylor. "Women are becoming more and more angry over this injustice."
Sen. Tony Casado, R-Wichita,
proposed that the word 'gender'
be substituted for "sex" in the bill, termed the Equal Pay for Equal Work bill.
In response to this, Dean Taylor said that "gender" is much too broad a term to be used and much too confusing. She said she felt the word "sex" was the only term which accurately defined the difference between male and female.
Dean Taylor, a member of the Kansas Commission on the Status of Women, said she thought Casado's substitution would definitely hurt the bill since all other
equal rights measures, federal and state, used the word "sex."
Dean Taylor was one of around 50 women who came to voice their sentiments for the bill at a hearing for the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee. The committee is headed by Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence.
The spokesman for the group said that the bill expressed the
goals of church women everywhere, all faiths included.
A representative of a woman's labor group and a woman who said she represented the women of Topeka also testified in favor of the bill.
The bill has already passed the House and must be reported out of committee soon if it is to become law. The Senate session will be finished March 10.
Senators vote committed for judge
Three queens to reign at Relays; nomination process begins soon
The Kansas Relays will have three queens reigning over the festivities this year. At least one of the three queens will be black, said David Martin, Mission junior and chairman of the Relays royalty committee.
stead of three queens, one queen and two attendants have been chosen. The decision for the change was made in co-ordination with the University Senate's human relations committee.
Martin said that because one-third of the athletes at Kansas are black, a black queen should represent them. In the past, in-
2 KANSAN Mar. 4
1970
Each sorority, including each of the two black sororities at KU, will nominate one candidate.
Martin said letters announcing the nominating and selection process will be mailed this week, and the deadline for proposing candidates would be set sometime next week.
Each scholarship hall will nominate one candidate and each women's residence hall will select three candidates.
Black athletes in football, basketball and track will nominate a candidate and the Black Student Union will nominate three candidates. Three women not living in organized residences at KU will be selected by an Associated Women Students council.
The candidates will be judged on the basis of poise, personal appearance and interest in track.
With that kind of Republican backing, coupled with anticipated support from Southern Democrats, Carswell probably will have enough votes to win confirmation and succeed Abe Fortas on the high tribunal.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott said Tuesday a head count of GOP senators showed that 33 or 34 are committed to vote for the confirmation of Judge G. Harrold Carswell to the Supreme Court.
Judy Collins is COMING !!
Judy Collins is COMING !!
Attention Juniors
THE BIG BLAST!
It’s Party Time
Friday at the Armory
IVORY
TOWER
THE BIG BLAST! It’s Party Time Friday at the Armory
THE SUNSETS
That's right, it's party time—and what a party. (Parties at the National Guard Armory are traditionally the best!) The first Junior Class Party of the semester promises to be one of the biggest gigs of the year. Music will be provided by the IVORY TOWER, straight from their Chicago concert. The tap on the student's favorite beverage will be running FREEly from 8 until midnight, and its free to Junior due payers and only $3.00 per couple for non-payers. The whole thing takes place Friday, March 6, at the National Guard Armory, the place of the BIG BLAST. You will be sorry if you miss it! Compliments Ace Johnson
Campus briefs
Velvel to speak at Mobe meeting
Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, will speak at the Student Mobilization Committee meeting in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union at 7:30 p.m. tonight.
General plans for spring will be discussed, including the anti-draft week March 16-22 and the moratorium April 5.
KU-Y to run restaurant
Meals will be served for the first time on a Sunday at the Captain's Table, 1420 Crescent Road, when the KU-Y takes over the operation of the restaurant for the day.
The restaurant will be open from 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday.
Members of the KU-Y will be serving meals, washing dishes, cooking, cleaning and doing the cashier work, said Janice Cebula, Goodland junior and a coordinator of the program. All proceeds will go to the KU-Y to finance their activities, she said.
Phi Delta Kappa meeting cancelled
A meeting of Phi Delta Kappa, professional fraternity for men in education, originally scheduled for tonight at 7:30 has been cancelled. Persons scheduled to present the program are unavailable.
Russian scientist to speak
A Russian woman scientist will be at the University of Kansas Monday to meet with University microbiologists and speak at a seminar.
Irina Tarasevich of the Gamaleya Institute of Virology in Moscow will meet with David Paretsky, chairman of the microbiology department, and his colleagues. He will lead a seminar on "Endemic Rickettsiosis" at 4 p.m. Monday in 610 Haworth Hall.
Miss Tarasevich chose to visit KU's microbiology department because of its international reputation in the field of rickettsiology.
Angel Flight officers installed
The new officers of Angel Flight, the women's auxiliary to the Arnold Air Society, were formally installed on Feb. 28.
The new officers for 1970-71 are: Sue Gauen, Evanston, Ill. junior, commander; Cyndi Artman, Hays junior, executive officer; Margie Drackert, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, in charge of administration; Harriette Stewart, Leavenworth sophomore in charge of information; Susan Majure, Overland Park junior, comptroller; Carol Garland, Glenview, Ill., sophomore, pledge trainer; Karen Park, Oakley sophomore in charge of operations; Julie Jardes, Overland Park sophomore, rush chairman; and Linda Ireland, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, drill team commander.
Assistant professor gets grant
Steven J. Parker, assistant professor of Slavic languages and literature, has been awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship for the 1970-71 academic year.
Parker, nominated last fall from the KU faculty for the national competition, was one of 80 scholars in the humanities field who were chosen for the fellowship. There were about 500 nominees from colleges and universities.
His award was in the special program for younger humanists. The awards were made to humanists who have recently received their degrees and who have not held any other major fellowship.
Parker will use the $9,500 nine-month grant, which starts Sept. 1, to continue his study of the prose writing of Vladimar Nobokov. He will do research in Paris, Berlin and Switzerland.
Theatre troop to perform
A lecture on Brazil's Black Theatre by a Brazilian director and a performance by a Brazilian theatre troop will be held at KU Monday and Tuesday.
Abdias do Nascimento, director and founder of Black Experimental Theatre of Rio de Janierio, will lecture on Brazil's Black Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Monday, in the Kansas Union Oread Room, as a part of the Luso-Brazilian Studies Colloquium Series.
The Arena Theatre of Sao Paulo will present "Arena Conta Zumbi," a musical drama of protest from Brazil, at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday in Wood-ruff Auditorium.
The play, part of the Brazilian Black Theatre, is the story of the struggle of Zumbi, a rebel slave of the 17th Century, who is remembered as one of the great heroes of Brazil. Although the play is in Portuguese, a background program in English will be provided.
Harvard professor to lecture
Eric Teicholz, professor of architecture in the Harvard Graduate School of Design, will lecture on computers and architecture at 8 p.m. March 12 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Engineering sessions to begin
Field and laboratory testing will be the theme for the 19th annual Mechanics and Foundations Engineering Conference organized by the University of Kansas civil engineering department,
The conference for professionals and construction personnel will be Friday in the Kansas Union Forum Room, Registration will begin at
8 a.m. in the north lobby, with the first session scheduled for 8:45 a.m. The sessions will be followed by a tour of the soil mechanics laboratory in Learned Hall.
Mar. 4 KANSAN 3
1970
Miss Vicki to be 'puffed up'
told newsmen through masses of tangled curls.
The long-haired American warbler, who arrived here Tuesday for a nightclub engagement, said his 17-year-old bride, Miss Vicki, is expecting a baby in September.
SYDNEY (UPI) — Tiny Tim is going to be a father.
Tiny married Miss Vicki on the Johnny Carson Show last December.
"I don't care whether it's a boy or a girl, or anything, as long as it's okay."
"I am absolutely thrilled," Tiny
know if his special love diet of honey and peanut butter had anything to do with Miss Vicki's "happy condition."
Tiny told newsmen he didn't
"I don't know what I did, but it certainly makes me feel good," Tiny said.
He said Miss Vicki remained home on doctor's orders.
SUA Board Applications
Officer Interviews March 17
Board Interviews March 19
Applications Available SUA Office
In the
last twenty years only one newspaper has won more Pulitzer Prizes than The Des Moines Register
Our Congratulations to The New York Times
KANSAN COMMENT
Just how benign?
Have we reached the point where the issue of race would benefit from a period of "benign neglect"?
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, counselor to President Nixon and a longtime bafflement to those interested in race problems, suggested this week that it might be time for us to ignore 'extremists of either race" and pay more attention to what he called a "silent black majority."
If indeed, Nixon's desire is to keep the majority of blacks silent, he might do well to take Moynihan's advice, because there is every evidence that that "silent black majority" will not be kept quiet forever. (It wasn't so very long ago that no one at all—including blacks—was listening to the ideas of militants such as Cleaver, Brown or Malcolm X; and today their ideas are much on the rise among even middle or upper class blacks.)
If, on the other hand, Nixon's desire is to
continue to use the federal government as a weapon against institutional racism, he can afford to "ignore" no one.
Moynihan's assertion that the Negro's problems have been "too much talked about" and "too much taken over to hysterics, paranoids and boodlers on all sides" is possibly less ridiculous than other statements he made. But the very real and oppressive injustices which have prompted too much talk by us boodlers should never be overlooked by the government.
Moynihan's charge that other minorities have been neglected as a consequence of concern (such as it has been) with the American Negro is not well founded. If we can go both to the moon and to Vietnam (our two costliest trips in recent years), there is no reason why we can't go both to the Mojave and to Harlem.
Ignore? That's one of the words that ought not be in any statesman's vocabulary.
—Mike Shearer
hearing voices—
To the editor:
In this modern day of massiveness, everywhere we look we see and hear loud and long decries about pollution of our streams, our lakes, our cities, our lands, our air and everything else except the one pollution that disturbs us most of all and that one is the pollution of the greatest natural resource we have—our minds. We have many, many faults that we recognize and try to do something to remedy. We have many, many more degrading and harmful circumstances that we would like to remedy, but for which we as yet have no remedy due to size, lack of means, lack of knowledge or lack personal fortitude to tackle the problem which might bring down upon us the scourge and vengeance of our fellow man.
We who were born into a society which has surpassed any yet developed on this earth, a society which has guaranteed more freedoms, which has developed more comforts, more pleasures, more wealth, more luxuries, greater opportunities, greater education, endless incentives for the individual and developed individual human dignities out of a peasant and lord society of 200 years ago, we find that this society is now challenged. This wonder of the ages is now polluted and riddled with impurities to the extent that it may be beyond repair or renovation and may have to be replaced.
We have a multitude of individuals and small groups who declare they have the solution. Most of these schemes are ambiguous at best but their promoters arbitrary and doctrinaire in their presentation and inimical to anyone who opposes them. They are extremely fearful of investigation because their schemes are also riddled with imperfections but they seem to feel that persistent repetition accompanied by loud and determined amplification will discourage any opposition. Many of these people use the freedoms granted by this society, to decry the society that grants them the means of criticism. Where their
schemes fail to gain popular support they often, dernier ressort, try to force acceptance.
Many of our educators feel that they are the supreme. They feel that they are above criticism and that practices are beyond reproach. They use the freedoms granted by this society as a spring board for personal glories and monetary advancement. They feel that their word and actions are above the scrutiny of the people who pay the bills.
In our schools of advanced education, the student seems to be the first and only consideration. The old idea of sending students to school to learn has been changed to the conception that the student is now the teacher and administrator. There is no longer a necessity for a requirement but instead the student selects what he wants to learn and how he wants to learn it. The students make the rules that they want to live by. The pariatal rules are amended by the students to meet their desires without a dissenting word from the school administration. We ponder the question of why we pay administrators so handsomely to do a job that the students do for themselves. Why should the students not elect one of their own and eliminate the high cost of school administration that is so completely subservient to the students. We hear much about the freedom to teach but when questioned by students this freedom usually is sacrificed to the freedom of the students. Student freedom seems to mean complete independence from any inhibitions of any kind.
If a student awakes from a trip in a barnyard and is motivated to express himself on the sweet essence of bovine defecation, he should be granted the privilege and the vehicle to do so at tax payers expense, regardless of the consequence. If something is written that displeases any student or group of students, they should be free to dispose of such material without regard to the effects of denial of others or any expense involved. If by some
chance other students or groups of students do not agree, then it is they who should determine the course of action to be taken.
We once fought a long and bloody war against taxation without representation but that idea has disappeared as far as our schools are concerned. The educators feel that they alone should have all the "say" concerning schools and the only concern of the taxpayers should be to pay the bill. We fought a long and bloody war to stop persecution of some elements of our society and today that very element that cost so much is threatening and doing the persecuting of our society. We fought a long and bloody war to make the world safe for the majority to rule as they saw fit, yet today much of the ruling is being done by minimal groups with noisome nihilism. We fought a long and bloody war to preserve the right of peoples to determine their own destinies, yet we are at present bombarded with pressures and subversivealliances to surrender all that we have fought for over the past two hundred years.
Now the big question is, to what extent this pollution of the human mind will extend before the great and silent majority can be aroused to demand its rights? How long can it lend its tacit consent to our educators to waste the greatest resource? Where can it turn for leadership and advice in a society where the oppressed is the oppressor, where the student is the educator, where the majority is the governed and the minority is the governor, where the criminal has more rights than the law abiding, where the courts are shouted down by the defendants, where their judgments are treated as criminal acts or where anything is legal where punishment would cost a candidate a few votes. That is the question.
We will not get an answer that can be interpreted as yes or no, only dissertation on our right to ask the question.
Employees of the Kansas University Printing Service
Griff & the Unicorn
WHEW! ON MY WAY
HOME AT LAST!
NOW I'VE JUST GOT TO
STAY IN THE AIR! GOTTA
KEEP FLYING! CAN'T FALL!
GOT TO KEEP FLYING!!
GOT TO...
!?
THE HECK
WITH IT...
I'LL
WALK
David Sokoloff 1970
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
The controversy I aroused by commenting on the Fort Hays Kansas State College questionnaire (which sought to weed out, among others, persons with long hair, beatniks, radicals, psychotics and those with problems with alcohol, drugs, or homosexuality) has spread to the Fort Hays area, where the column was reprinted.
Fort Hays' President John Gustad wrote a letter to the UDK and informed us that the questionnaire was no longer in use. An article in the Fort Hays News tells us that the questionnaire had been thrown out about a month before the controversy broke out. I am sorry I hadn't known that the questionnaire was no longer in use, but after reading the Fort Hays News story in which college officials explained the questionnaire, I have to wonder if the atmosphere is any different now that the questionnaire isn't being used.
Standlee V. Dalton, Fort Hays State's registrar, told the News he had drafted the questionnaire three or four years ago.
"I look at it this way," he is quoted as saying, "the taxpayers of the state of Kansas subsidize each student about 40 per cent. It cost the taxpayers a lot more than the fees brought in.
"Anytime we bring in in an out-of-state student, I think the student should be an asset to the campus rather than a liability.
"Say someone is a thief. I want some way to stop a community from shipping him out here to us and let us assume his liabilities.
"Assume he or she is a pervert? Do we want him in Hays?
Of course not."
There are two basic questions I have for Mr. Dalton.
First, what has convinced so many Kansans that students from out of state are more dangerous than Kansans? I have never been able to understand this. Last year, after the KU ROTC demonstration, the editor of a weekly newspaper in Topeka blasted the state schools for accepting students from out of state, for allowing them to come here and act as a corrupting influence on Kansas' sweet, fair-haired children (of which I am one). The very next day, the major papers in the state carried stories showing that by far the majority of those participating in that demonstration had been . . . you guessed it . . . born and bred in sunny Kansas (and I'm not saying that this necessarily says anything bad about Kansas).
Secondly, I haven't the faintest idea what Mr. Dalton means by a "pervert." Lay the blame either at the feet of the many of Kansas teachers I've had (starting with my first grade teacher who taught five grades in one room) or at my own feet, but I have never been able to determine just who the perverts are.
If Mr. Dalton was referring to all of those persons who would have been disqualified under the old questionnaire, I suggest not many people would qualify for higher education.
If Mr. Dalton was referring to homosexuals (as a check with a dictionary's definition of perversion might suggest), I think his attitude toward one of society's most creative and productive minorities is a very sick attitude.
I am reminded of a quote from Hannah Green's I never Promised You a Rose Garden: "She remembered Tilda suddenly, breaking out of the hospital in Nuremburg, disappearing into the swastika-city, and coming back laughing that hard, rasping parody of laughter. 'Sholom Aleichem, Doctor, they are crazier than I am,'"
Separating the well from the sick and the decent from the perverse is a task I would never undertake. I doubt that it can be done. If this is the goal of Fort Hays State, my best wishes go to those making such a mammoth effort.
But I am as unsure that our Tildas are crazy as I am that everyone else is not.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except a year at the university. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60644. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior notice or payment may be necessary, necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
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A man jogging across the street. A woman is lying on the ground, sweeping the sidewalk. In the background, a bus and trees are visible.
Photo by Ron Bishon
Here, bush. Come here, bush. . . .
It could be that the student on the sidewalk has had one test too many, or maybe he's just a nature lover who got carried away. Actually, he's Randy Leffingwell, Willmette, Ill. senior and Kansan photographer, getting an ant's eye shot of a blowing branch.
Panetta booted; four quit
Civil rights office in turmoil
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Civil rights attorney wrote President Nixon Tuesday that the ouster of Leon E. Panetta suggested that his administration "has grown insensitive to the cause of enforcing equal rights."
Two more of the attorneys quit in protest of the ouster.
The number of resignations from the civil rights office of the Health, Education and Welfare department grew to four as J. Stanley Pottinger, a young California lawyer, was named to succeed Panetta as chief of the HEW civil rights office.
The latest resignations were from Paul Rillings, a Johnson Administration holdover in charge of the Atlanta regional office, and Peter Gall, information director for the Washington office.
Rillings called the Nixon administration's school desegregation policy "one of vacillation and non-leadership." A letter of protest to Nixon signed by 125 HEW civil rights lawyers said "it is our conviction that developments in the nation have progressed to the stage when issues
School welfare bill approved
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Tuesday approved Senate changes in the once-vetoed school-welfare money bill, assuring congressional approval of a $19.4 billion measure acceptable to President Nixon. The vote was 324 to 55.
The final vote was the House's second of the day in ratifying
Bachelor party nearly upsets honeymoon fun
Konnocki was arrested Saturday but Chapas delayed his hearing so the defendant could be married that day. Konnocki showed up in court Tuesday with his bride and the judge told her: "It's up to you now to keep him out of trouble. Use a rolling pin if you have to."
PITTSBURGH (UP) — Police Magistrate John W. Chapas waited until the honeymoon was over before he fined Richard Konnocki $25 plus $11 costs Tuesday for disorderly conduct after his bachelor's party.
Mar. 4
1970 KANSAN 5
A Reiver is a con artist.
JIM HOWELL
And He's talked us into keeping him for one last week!
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Adults 1.50; Child. 75
Rated M
THE HILLCREST
WESTERN SHOPPING CENTER OF TN & IA
the bill as it was approved earlier by the Senate. In the first, the House voted 228 to 152 to instruct its conferees in a House-Senate conference committee to agree to the Senate version.
Then the conferees met, went through the motions, and brought back the bill to the House for its formal approval. Next it was hurried across the Capitol to the Senate, where quick approval was certain.
The Senate planned to take up the measure the first thing Wednesday.
House approval came after Nixon gave assurance he would sign the measure if it passed the House in the same form that was
approved by the Senate. This version gives Nixon authority to withhold spending of up to 2 per cent of funds allocated to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
The measure contains appropriations amounting to $19.4 billion, but provides that the President can actually spend only about $19 billion. It replaces a bill totaling $19.7 billion which Nixon rejected as inflationary.
Even now, the bill carries about $700 million more than Nixon originally requested. But he sent word to the House through the GOP leader Gerald R. Ford that he was willing to sign it.
Winston Churchill
HE'S BACK!!
THE
GREAT
ONE
HE'S BACK!!
THE
GREAT
ONE
W. C. Fields (also known as
Mahatma Kane Jeeves)
In "DON'T GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK" and
"THE BANK DICK"
THE
Hillcrest 3
Eve. 7:05 & 9:35
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
THE Hillcrest 3
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IFF E
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Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30
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affecting race relations can no longer be subverted in deference to expediency. . . . "
But HEW Secretary Robert H. Finch, announcing Pottinger's selection, said "Stan Pottinger joins me as committed unequivocally to the enforcement of constitutional and statutory law relating to civil rights."
Pottinger, a 30-year-old native of Dayton, Ohio, has been with the HEW regional civil rights office in San Francisco since last year and has been active in Republican politics there for seven years.
Like Panetta, who was forced out of the job last week, Pottinger will serve as a special assistant to Finch in addition to heading HEW's office of civil rights. Finch combined the positions so that the Department's desegregation compliance operations are reported directly to him.
Unsigned copies of the protest letter to Nixon were made available to reporters at HEW. It was understood the letter was signed by professional persons as well as clerks and secretaries, but it was not known if any high-ranking officials signed it.
Mexican peasants prepare festival to celebrate eclipse
MIAHUATLAN, Mexico (UPI) —Peasants in sandals and straw hats swarmed through the "Eclipse 70" festival Tuesday, assured by the local priest the world will not end during Saturday's solar eclipse.
To calm fears that the brief blackout would be an evil sign, the Rev. Reinaldo Rodriguez mounted his pulpit and told a hushed crowd:
"I give thanks to God that you understand that the eclipse is a natural phenomenon and that even the scientists don't know
when the end of the world is coming."
Hundreds of peasants from all sections of Oaxaca State trudged across the town's one paved street to see the festival, mostly handicrafts and regional dances, and to try to sell their own wares to thousands of tourists.
An estimated 500 astronomers from 14 nations have arrived in Miahuatlan, 62 miles south of Oaxaca. The town has been transformed into an international scientific center because of its cloudless skies and strategic location.
STARTS TONIGHT!
HE WAS "THE DAMNED"
TECHNICOLOR® FROM WARNER BROS. X
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No one under 18 admitted ID's requested Adults 1.50; 7:00 & 9:40
"One of the year's IO best pictures!"
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—Rex Reed, Holiday M...
—Joyce Haber, L.A. Times
ROBERT REDFORD · KATHARINE BOSS
ROBERT REPORD KATHARINE ROSS
GP ALL-NEW LIMITED PRODUCTIONS
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Petrology professor visits KU
Malayan rests from racial pressure
By MIKE RADENCICH Kansan Staff Writer
Charles Hutchison, professor of petrology and mineralogy at the University of Malaya, decided to "get away from it all" for a year by visiting the University of Kansas campus.
Hutchison, a red-haired Scotsman from Aberdeen, said he was taking a year's leave from his work in Malaysia to rest from the tensions of racial problems over the last year in Kwahalumpur. capital of Malaysia.
In a Kansan interview, Hutchison outlined the causes of the rioting and killing in the capital city and described the effect of it on the people of Malaysia.
The Malays, he said, consider themselves as being the prime natives of the country. But, over the past few decades, two generations of Chinese have immigrated into the country and, in a short period of time, took over the entire Malaysian economy.
Because of the Chinese take-over of the economy, racial problems have developed because the Chinese hire more of their own countrymen than they do the native Malays. Hutchison said that in the rural areas, the farmers tend to lead a more leisurely and relaxed life by enjoying what they have and not rushing themselves or bothering themselves with luxuries.
In the cities, however, the Malays see that the Chinese are much better off and this is the cause of many of the problems in Malaysia. This was somewhat similar to the racial problems in the United States, he said.
Hutchison said that last year's riots were caused by the elections in Kwahaalumpur. The primary religion of the Malays is Islamic whereas the Chinese practice Buddhism.
During the election campaign the politicians continued to bring up the religious differences between the two cultures, Hutchison said, and continually aroused the people by emphasizing these religious differences that could possibly bring on rioting and fighting.
After the election results were posted, Hutchison said, and after the Malays saw that more of the Chinese won offices than they did, the rioting started. Almost all of it took place in the capital city of Kwahalumpur because racial tension was already at a fever pitch there.
Hutchison said that in contrast to riots in the United States, there was little actual destruction of property, whereas an alarming number of killings occurred.
Because of the rioting and the danger of being shot in the streets, the people of Kwahalumpur were put under martial law with an all-night curfew, Hutchison said.
6 KANSAN Mar. 4
1970
"The people were not even allowed to step outside their houses or visit next-door neighbors because of the great danger of being fired upon," he said.
The most remarkable thing that happened during the riots was the great risk taken by the native Malays to protect people caught in the riot areas, he said. The Malays who were not involved in the rioting and shooting actually brought in Chinese from the streets who would otherwise be shot by the rioters.
"In doing this," he said, "the Malays brought possible danger on themselves from the rioters who would go from house-to-house searching for Chinese."
Hutchison said that in the middle-class suburbs, there was no trouble since most of it was confined to the capital city, and there was complete freedom and cooperation.
The night the rioting started, he said, he and his wife were in town looking for a restaurant where they might enjoy a pleasant evening dinner. After finding most of the restaurants closing up because of the impending riots, they finally found a small place
and settled down to dinner.
"When we later left the place, we were surprised to find the streets entirely deserted, not knowing the cause. We were soon met by police who told us of the rioting and escorted us home," he said.
Some of his friends who also dined in restaurants, he said, had to spend the night there because they lived much farther from the city than he did.
After the rioting, he said, the Malaysian Parliament was suspended by the British and even now a one-hour curfew is imposed every morning as a result of the rioting. Also, the government has been trying to help cool down the racial situation by hiring more of the native Malays into industry.
Hutchison said that no trouble occurred at the University of Malaya during the actual rioting; but afterwards, some of the more militant students attempted to arouse trouble, the prime goal being to cause university officials to nationalize the facility.
He said the militants were protesting the fact that the university is taught mainly in an English atmosphere with a large majority of English and other foreign instructors teaching there. The trouble was quickly suppressed by riot squads of police using tear gas, he said.
Hutchison, who is not a U.S. citizen, said he would return to Malaysia after his year was up.
TED ROBINSON
"It is a community of young people sensitive to burning current social issues. They show forth a high degree of social conscience. These young people want to do 'their own thing.' We of the older generation should develop a style of life which permits young people to be individualistic and within limits, 'do their own thing,'" he said.
WICHITA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking said Tuesday the older generation "should develop a style of life which permits young people to be individualistic and within limits, "do their own thing."
Photo by Mike Radencich
Individualistic youth promoted by Docking
In remarks prepared for delivery at the Kansas Spring Leadership Conference of business education clubs, the governor said today's youth is more informed and probably more idealistic than any previous generation.
The governor said it is important to try to understand young people, that ways must be found to transmit to the youth feelings of mutual respect and concern, and be willing to cope with change.
The state leader said these young people have put the older generation on notice.
"Many of these young people care about this society—these persons who make up the citizens of the world. They are challenging the older generation to care about more than a comfortable house—a secure job—and quiet retirement," Docking said.
"Some of us know that our agencies and institutions must change, bullets change them where necessary and not tear them down," Docking said.
Charles Hutchison
A native Scotsman from Malaysia decided to "get away from it all" and come to KU for a year. Charles Hutchison is a visiting professor teaching petrology and mineralogy.
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the measure today. If it passes, it will go to the senate.
The bill would raise the present cigarette tax from 8 cents per pack to 10 cents, and impose a tax of 25 per cent on the wholesale price of other tobacco products.
TOPEKA (UPI)—The Kansas House Tuesday tentatively approved a 2 cent increase in the cigarette tax and a new tax on other tobacco products, such as cigars and smoking tobacco.
The 125-member chamber is expected to take a final vote on
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Where do we go when the halls are full?
By JOHN RIGGINS Kansan Staff Writer
Visual arts limited by space
"They pour out of the rooms and do their work in the halls because there is not enough space in the studios," said John McKay, associate dean for visual arts within the School of Fine Arts at the University of Kansas. McKay was referring to the space shortage problem of the visual arts department.
A new building designed especially for the visual arts program is the eventual goal, but immediate action is needed. McKay explained the only course of action taken so far was to limit the number of students enrolling in visual arts. This practice is robbing the University of many talented people, he said.
The current enrollment of persons majoring in visual arts is 800, with 1,200 expected by 1980. The department is now allocated 48,000 square feet of space, but within the next 10 years it will need 136,550 square feet, McKay said.
A possible solution would be to
provide emergency space with the pre-fabricated type building now in use east of Summerfield. McKay said this was the only route left, but there were serious drawbacks to this plan, too. One liability is that the size of these buildings is only 24 feet by 60 feet, an allowance of barely enough space for 25 people. The cost of such a structure is about $18,000. McKay estimated it would be five years before a new building could be completed, which would result in an extremely high rate per person for such temporary use.
"There is literally not any space on campus to use," said McKay. The department is so short on space that it is renting the Wesley Auditorium on a year to year basis. The Wesley Foundation can decide not to renew the lease to the auditorium at any time, he said. The visual arts department also has a few rooms in Memorial Stadium, and a branch of visual arts, occupational therapy, is located off campus in Sudler House.
When McKay took his problem to the KU Planning Board Saturday, he emphasized that the visual arts department should have priority for a new structure if the University obtained funds for the construction of another building
"The students are very much aware of their plight, but after waiting for so long they have a tendency to give up," said McKay. McKay said that usually there were between 400-500 new freshmen enrolled in visual arts, but by the time graduation comes about half are gone. He said that possibly the poor facilities turned them away.
McKay said he was not displeased with the way the chancellor is handling his share of the situation.
SWEDISH AUTOMOBILE
Results given by language researchers
STOCKHOLM (UPI)—Sweden exported cars and spare parts worth $373,200,000 in 1968. Imports of cars were valued at $286,000,000, thus creating a favorable "car trade balance."
8 KANSAN Mar. 4
1970
The moon's diameter measures about a fourth that of earth, its volume a fifthieth, and its mass about a hundredth.
Representatives from various groups interested in the language survey results have evaluated present findings and decided upon further plans, said Robert Duncan, Wilmette Ill., sophomore and chairman of the committee.
The latest results of the Foreign Language Survey and the proposals of the Committee on Language Research have been revealed by the chairmen of the committee.
A meeting was scheduled to compile faculty opinion at 2 p.m. March 15 in the North College conference room.
The committee wants to acquaint others with what it is doing to change the foreign language requirement, Duncan said. With help from the chairmen and representatives, he said the committee was going to determine faculty opinion on the foreign language requirement in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. With faculty and student support, a circulating petition and a possible referendum during student elections, Duncan said the committee hopes to gain stronger backing.
The committee will present a plan of change in the foreign language requirement to the Educational Policies Committee of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at a meeting on April 7, Duncan said. Among the possibilities discussed were studies in philosophy, history or cultural trends of a country as an option to learning the grammatical language.
Duncan said that the committee was not questioning the value of the language but the value of the requirement.
Earlier this semester the committee sponsored a foreign language survey during enrollment. The latest facts and figures from the survey are now available to the public. Approximately 75 percent of the College students who returned the questionnaire wish to alter the present requirement in some manner, Duncan said. The committee has placed particular emphasis on the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences because it has the greatest number of hours of foreign language requirement, he said. Copies of the survey results have been made available to all chairmen and representatives of the College Within a College Student Advisory Boards and hall councils.
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General denies investigation request
Meningitis outbreak 'should not spread'
FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. (UPI)—The severe outbreak of spinal meningitis and pneumonia at this huge central Missouri Army base should not spread to nearby communities, the commander of the post hospital said Tuesday.
"We're taking every practical step to stop the spread of the disease," said Col. Ellsworth L. Miller. "It is highly unlikely it will spread."
Thirty-seven cases of meningitis have been reported on this Army post since October; 25 since Jan. 1. Four soldiers have died; three since the first of the year.
Miller said a quarantine of the base was considered "but it is not a practical way of controlling the disease. Surveillance is the only practical method."
Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo., demanded earlier Tuesday an investigation into charges that Army recruits at Ft. Leonard Wood are driven so hard they
are susceptible to the disease.
Maj. Gen. William T. Bradley, commanding general of the base, said he had no formal request for an investigation.
"I've had no communication with Sen. Eagleton," Bradley said. "I don't think an investigation is needed but we have no objection to it." He said trainees at the base are living in a very healthy environment.
Bradley said recruits are in better physical condition after training and he welcomed parents to visit the base.
Col. Thomas U. Greer, commander of the 2nd Basic Combat Training Brigade, in which all three deaths were reported this year, said there was no panic among his 5,144 troops. The morale, he said, was extremely high.
Greer said the greatest problem was getting trainees to go on sick call, because once they report sick, their training is recycled.
"Supervision is so tight I'm beginning to worry about the hours being put in by my cadre," Greer said.
Although the number of meningitis cases reported this year exceeds those during the same period of previous years, it was not totally unexpected, Miller said. The reason, he explained, is because the admissions for upper
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Students denounce address by Kennedy
DUBLIN (UPI)—About 500 left wing demonstrators, denouncing Sen. Edward M. Kennedy as an "imperialist," banged on his car Tuesday night and demanded he get out of Ireland shortly after he told them that street agitation had lost its effectiveness.
It was the first time in Irish history that students came out en masse to raise their voices against a member of the Kennedy clan.
As Kennedy and his wife, Joan, emerged from Trinity College Hall where he addressed the college historical society, the students swarmed around his car, pounded the hood, kicked the tires and yelled "Get out of Ireland, Ted!"
Police, batons raised, scuffled
with the throng. A force of counter demonstrators yelling "We love Ted, leave him alone!" attacked the left wingers and fought briefly with them.
In about five minutes, police cleared a path for Kennedy's car. "That's all right—you are entitled to your own opinions," Kennedy yelled as his dented small black car drove away.
Minutes before, Kennedy had told an audience at the college that "street demonstrations have become mechanical and have lost their effectiveness."
At one point during the speech a scuffle broke out in the back of the hall when a left wing student began shouting Mao Tse Tung slogans.
Some of the students arrested by police were armed with hand grenades and pistols.
One demonstrator was treated for gunshot wounds in the hib.
The number of those arrested and the number wounded were not immediately known. Philippine General Hospital reported treating seven persons for tear gas poisoning and one from a gunshot wound.
It was the third march on the U.S. Embassy in 13 days.
Tracer bullets streaked through the skies over downtown Manila and the explosions of the bottles—called Molotov cocktails—broke store and business windows.
Filipino troops defend US embassy in attack
MANILA (UPI) — Filipino troops standing up in their jeeps and firing automatic weapons tonight turned back a march on the U.S. Embassy by a mob of 2,000 student demonstrators who hurled explosive-filled bottles. Some students fired back.
Two UPI news photographers and a Filipino newsfilm cameraman were injured.
The students were part of a crowd of 12,000 students and striking bus drivers, who gathered in the heart of the city in an anti-government demonstration after snakedancing through slum districts and crowded Chinatown.
It was impossible to determine if the police and government troopers were firing into the air or in earnest.
Before the march on the embassy student leaders ran up the
Mar. 4
1970 KANSAN 9
Filipino flag upside down, with the red border on top.
The group of 2,000 then set off for the embassy where on Feb. 19 demonstrators to dore down steel gates at the embassy office building, shattered more than 100 windows and wrecked furniture.
The police gunfire tonight was the first since Jan. 30 when six persons were killed before the presidential Malacanang Palace.
"This means win," leaders shouted.
EMPORIA (UPI) — Members of the Student Senate of Kansas State College at Emporia voted Monday night to reject a resolution to raise fees $5 a semester for the next 20 years to help pay for a new physical education building.
Bids $600,000 over the estimated $2.5 million cost of the new facility have been received. Officials estimated that rejection of the resolution would delay the project at least a year.
Emporia students reject fee raise
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Students discuss drug usage
"Marijuana is just a harmless giggle. Acid helps you to learn about yourself." - Beatle John Lennon.
By GALEN BLAND
Kansan Staff Writer
It usually starts like all other simple mischief. There is not much difference between a youth smoking pot and a youth of the 50's drinking beer, some students said during recent discussions on drugs.
At first it is usually a deep, dark secret. The "head" hides from the public while he is stoned and is hesitant to talk about it with anyone who does not smoke.
"The first time I smoked grass," one student said, "I picked it myself. It was pretty exciting because very few people I knew had done it then. It didn't get us very stoned, though."
"We were very paranoid when we started smoking. We thought everyone was a narc (narcotics agent) and so we were quiet about what we did," one student said.
Some smoke only once but many continue their use of the weed. "The first time I smoked really good grass was great. There is such a difference between Kansas grass and really good grass. There is no comparison," said another student.
After the newness has worn off users have found their fears also have worn off. Then they become more open with their use of grass and discuss it with others in attempts to "turn them on."
"It was a real kick then. We were stoned and sitting around, laughing at the silly policemen who did not know and the prudish puritans who did not know and even laughing at each other," one user said.
"Sure, you try to turn people on," one student said, "if you can then it costs you less to smoke and besides, you want to share your experience with them."
For those who stick with it a new dimension, a new toy may be added to the game-acid.
10 KANSAN Mar. 4
1970
"I was very nervous before I dropped (LSD) for the first time. I just didn't know what it would be like. A lot of heads won't drop even though they will smoke grass or hash every night of the week. It's all the big scare rumors put out by the government that hold them back," a student said when asked about LSD.
"I've really learned a lot about myself through acid. I don't regret taking it although I don't think I'll do it anymore. I've found what I wanted to find so now it's over," another student said.
"The only way to describe it is WoW," a student said. "The first time I dropped was in Colorado and it was so beautiful that I couldn't say a word but wow."
So they climb higher and higher into the mountains of this never, never land. "Things can get rather distorted if you drop often and smoke more. I've gone days without being straight. It was a gas" one student said.
Several students' said people who criticized dope the most usually were those who knew the least about it. One said it was hilarious to talk with a person
about drugs who did not know he turned on.
In response to whether they have "bad trips" or not most said they had bad moments but they did not last long. "I once thought that all my friends were conspiring to mess me up. I didn't know what they were going to do but I was sure that they were going to get me," said one head.
Almost all heads shy away from heroin or any physically addicting drugs. Speed or methadrine is all right but "smack" is another thing.
"Sometimes I want to shoot smack, but I know I'd better not. Maybe I'll try it sometime. Who knows?" one user said.
Why do they keep getting stoned? Where Does it end? "It's fun. We get stoned and have fun. It's no big deal," one said.
"Sometimes I'd like to quit but I never do. It is hard to do when you can't convince yourself that there is anything wrong with it. Some people have told me that it makes you lose the desire to do anything or be anything, but I don't think that has happened to me," another said.
Pill scare might cause large birth increase
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A birth control crusader told Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., Tuesday that his Senate hearings on birth control pills would result in at least 100,000 unwanted "Nelson babies" this year by making women afraid to use such pills.
Nelson responded by accusing the witness, Phyllis Piotrow, of "scaring the daylights out of people" with questionable statistics.
Mrs. Piotrow, former executive director of the Population Crisis Committee, said a Gallup Poll published in Newsweek magazine indicated that 1.7 million women were quitting birth control pills because of testimony before Nelson's subcommittee. A number of witnesses have testified that oral
Mrs. Piotrow, mother of two, insisted that "in nine months the number of babies being born will be higher."
contraceptives sometimes cause blood clotting and might lead to cancer.
"Whether you want to call these babies 'Nelson babies' or whatever . . . anything that contributes to babies being born that are unwanted and unloved is a tragedy," she said.
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Roofers take break
Three workmen take a break on the ledge of Green Hall. They have been working on reroofing Green Hall for more than a semester.
POZZUOLI, Italy (UPI)—More than 10,000 inhabitants of this ancient Roman seaford sepped Tuesday in fear of an earthquake, but thousands more remained behind in defiance of orders to go.
Italian citizens flee quake
Hundreds of slum dwellers scuffled with police during demonstrations outside City Hall, shouting they would rather die in their ramshackle tenement buildings than leave.
Daley gives no apology
Instead, Daley said, compliments were due to Chicagoans in connection with Pompidou's visit
CHICAGO (UPI) — Mayor Richard J. Daley said Monday he knows of no incident during the weekend visit of French President Georges Pompidou to Chicago that requires an apology.
President Nixon apologized to Pompidou Monday for demonstrations in Chicago Saturday, but Daley said he thought Chicago police did an excellent job of controlling crowds.
Hours after the White House announced Nixon had apologized for the "discourtesy" shown the French chief of state by some 10,000 Chicagoans protesting the French sale of jets to Libya. Daley issued the following statement:
The Moorish kingdom of Toledo was annexed to the kingdom of Castile in the 11th Century.
"Nothing occurred in Chicago during the visit of President Pompidou for which anyone is required to apologize. My own feeling is that compliments are due those who turned out to demonstrate for the orderly manner in which they exercised their rights as American citizens. The Chicago Police Department fulfilled its responsibilities to both the visitors and the citizens in an exemplary manner."
Several persons suffered cuts and bruises in the scuffles and police reported several cases of hysteria as demonstrators chanted: "We want our houses" and "We will not go."
Authorities ordered about 6,000 persons to leave Monday night after scientists said nine slight earthquakes rippled through the city. None caused any damage or casualties.
The city, known as the birthplace of film star Sophia Loren and as the place where the apostle Paul first stepped ashore in imperial Rome, already was panicky because of a rare geological phenomenon known as "slow earthquake" or, in scientific language, Bradyseism.
The city of 68,685 has risen, according to scientists, at least 28 inches since last fall and at least 39 inches since 1968.
Judy Collins is COMING !!
Judy Collins is COMING !!
London Bridge goes up in Lake Havasa City
LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz.
(UPI)—"London Bridge is going up, going up, going up..."
So sang the school children of Lake Havasu City on Sept. 23, 1968, when the lord mayor of London, Sir Gilbert Inglefield, presided at the laying of the foundation stone of London Bridge in the historic old span's unlikely new home—in Arizona sands along the Colorado River.
The song was a little premature then but today the transplanted bridge is in fact beginning to take root and ere long will begin to take shape.
Within a few weeks, stone masons will begin fitting pieces of quarried British granite to the footings of the bridge, which will span a channel at the edge of Lake Havasu on the Colorado. Workmen are now putting the finishing touches on oval-shaped concrete footings which will form the bases for the five arches of the old bridge.
McCulloch Oil Corp., which is developing the planned community of Lake Havasu City, purchased London Bridge on April 18, 1968, from the Corporation of London for $2,460,000.
The bridge, dismantled stone by stone for shipment to the United States, is to be replaced by a new structure over the Thames.
Not all of the stone from the original bridge will find its way to the Arizona desert, but much has and "London Bridge" in Arizona eventually will look virtually the same as the original to the casual observer.
There will be some changes between the old and the new. The bridge will not be as wide as the original because the pedestrian walks at the edge will not be needed here. And only the facing stones, decorative railing, balustrades and corbels will be used.
Whereas the entire bridge in London was built of quarried granite blocks, the new bridge will be of poured reinforced concrete, with the facing blocks fitted on the outside.
Carl Baker, who is directing the bridge construction project for McCulloch, said the target date for completion of the structure is May, 1971.
The McCulloch firm is counting heavily on the bridge as a tourist attraction for the new community. It is estimated the project will cost nearly $7 million, not counting a planned multi-million dollar resort hotel and complex of shops which will surround the base of the bridge at the eastern end.
Pari-mutuel betting touted as source of state revenue
TOPEKA (UPI) — Pari-mutuel betting was touted as a source of new state revenue and scorned as a corrupting influence Tuesday in a house committee hearing.
Proponents and opponents both appeared during the nearly two-hour hearing on the measure which would legalize pari-mutuel betting on horse and dog racing in Kansas. The bill, which has passed the senate, is in the House Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Sen. Jack Robinson, R-Wichita, chief booster of the pari-mutuel bill in the legislature, presented arguments for the measure.
Robinson said pari-mutual betting would probably raise $4 million annually for the state and
Mar. 4 KANSAN 11
1970
Glenn W. Landis, of Westphalia, Kan., with the Kansas Racing Association, noted gambling already exists at Kansas horse and dog tracks, and this bill would put this betting under state regulation.
under provisions of the bill this revenue would fund the homestead property tax relief plan for elderly Kansans. The homestead bill is currently in a conference committee.
No arson suspects found
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI) - District Attorney David Minier said Tuesday he expects to seek at least 20 felony indictments in the rioting at Isla Vista last week but that so far there are no definite suspects in the burning of a Bank of America building.
people-to-people
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A group of KU students
@
Students helping other students
地球
Students who need your help
People-to-People needs new executive board members for next year. The six executive offices available are President/Treasurer, Secretary/Publicity, Liaison Officer, Homestays Chairman, English-In-Action Chairman, and Hospitality Chairman. If you are interested in applying for one of these important offices, pick up an application form at the People-to-People office, B-104 Kansas Union, and return it by March 20.
Interviews will be held Saturday, April 11. You will be notified about the time and place.
For further information about People-to-People call 863-3758 or Dave Hann 843-2332.
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Conference meet Thursday
KU tankers favorites for swim crown
By GALEN BLAND Kansan sports writer
The talented Jayhawk swimming squad will be after its third consecutive Big Eight crown when the league meet opens at Iowa State Thursday.
"We've put in six months of hard work and we are favored in this meet," Kansas coach Dick Reamon said. "I hope we can prove in the meet that we're the best in the conference."
Bob Wright, Kansas City sophomore, leads the KU delegation which returns 405 of their 512 points in last year's meet. Wright won three individual titles in record time and swam a leg on a winning relay team in the 1969 meet. He was named the Big Eight's outstanding performer for last year.
Wright set records last year in the 100-yard breaststroke (1:00.8), 200-yard breaststroke (2:14.3) and the 200-yard individual medley (2:00.6) and swam the third leg on the record-setting 800-yard freestyle relay team (7:08.3).
Kim Bolton, Overland Park junior, and Tom Ellis, Leawood senior, who teamed with Wright
in the 800 return to defend their title. Three-fourths of the league champion 400-yard freestyle relay team return to the meet this year for the Hawks. These three are Bolton, Bob Hines, Overland Park senior, and Bo Darrah.
Hines and Bolton give the Jayhawks strength in the freestyle sprints. Hines holds the league's
KANSAN Sports
50-yard freestyle record (21.4). Both have recorded 21.9 this year, best in the Big Eight. Bolton has the conference's top mark in the 100-yard freestyle (47.8) and the 200-yard freestyle (1:48.2).
Kansas has the momentum of five straight dual victories The Jayhawks finished with a 6-3 dual record. The three losses came in an early Texas trip. They have beaten five Big Eight schools in dual competition and have won
"We weren't as good a dual team this year because we didn't have the big stoppers like Jim Kent and Roy O'Connor," Reamon said. "But we should be a better conference meet team because we have better depth."
"Several have missed qualifying for the nationals by just 10th of a second. This is clearly one of our objectives at Ames." Reamon said.
The Hawks will be the favorites in the meet. They should find their closest competition in Oklahoma who was second last year and second in the Big Eight relays this year, both times to Kansas.
the big Eight Relays at Ames for the third straight year.
Besides defending their championship, the Hawks also hope to qualify some other athletes for the nationals. Only two individuals, Hines and Bolton, have qualified for the NCAA meet. The only relay team to qualify is the 400-yard freestyle squad of Hines, Roland Sabates, Darrah, and Bolton.
NIT adds familiar faces to tourney
NEW YORK (UPI) — There will be several familiar faces in the National Invitation basketball tournament next week.
Utah and Duquesne, two former NIT champions, and fourtime semifinalist Army were among six schools added to the field Monday for the 33rd annual post-season competition March 13-21 at Madison Square Garden.
The first teams named were Louisiana State, which boasts the greatest major college scorer of all time in Pete Maravich, St. John's of New York, Georgia Tech and Marquette, which spurned a NCAA bid.
KU's entries for Big 8 meet:
Manhattan, Georgetown D.C. and Miami of Ohio also accepted bids Monday to raise the number of teams already named to 10 for the 16-team tournament.
Utah, which won the NIT in 1947 by beating Kentucky in the final, wound up its regular season Saturday night tied for second place in the Western Athletic Conference with Wyoming.
14 KANSAN Mar. 4 1970
Duquesne, which won the NIT in 1955 in one of 13 appearances in the tournament, won 11 of its last 12 games this season and finished with a 17-6 record.
The Utes, 17-9, were paced by Mike Newlin and Ken Gardner, whose uncle Vern was the NIT's Most Valuable Player in 1947.
Army, 19-5, will be making its seventh NIT appearance boasting the nation's leading defense with an average yield of 52 points per game.
The Dukes were led by Jarrett Durham, twins Barry and Garry Nelson and playmaker Bill Zopf.
Georgetown was 18-7 this season and Manhattan was 16-7 while Miami, which still has one regular season game to play, has won eight straight and is 14-8.
KU's entries for Big 8 meet:
50 Freestyle—Kim Bolton, Bob Hines, Roland Sabates, Mike Boyle, Mike Tackett.
NEW YORK (UPI)—Emlen Tunnell during his 1948-1961 career as a defensive halfback for the New York Giants and Green Bay Packers returned 258 punts for 2209 yards, an NFL record.
100 Freestyle—Bolton, Hines,
Bo Darrah, Tom Ellis, Sabates,
Steve Rice.
BIG DISTANCE
200 Freestyle—Bolton, Ellis,
Hines, Darrah, Rice, Boyle,
Sabates, Bob Mauer, Bruce Bove.
500 Freestyle—Ellis, Rice, Marc Wagoner, Bove, Mauer, Greg Tharp.
1,650 Freestyle—Wagoner, Rice, Mauer, Tharp, Bove, Ellis.
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200 Backstroke—Skultety,
Trombold, Boyle.
100 Breaststroke—Bob Wright,
Darrah, Staats.
100 Butterfly—Tackett.
200 Butterfly-Tharp, Tackett,
Wagoner, Bove.
200 Individual Medley—Wright,
Darrah, Trombold, Skultet.
400 Individual Medley—Wright, Tharp, Trombold, Darrah, Skultety, Wagoner.
One Meter Diving—Ray Powers, Bishop.
400 Medley Relay-Bolton, Darrah, Hines, Skultety, Staats, Tackett, Trombold, Wright.
Freestyle Relay—Bolton
Darrah, Ellis, Hines, Rice, Sabates.
800 Freestyle Relay—Bolton
Boyle, Darrah, Ellis, Rice, Sabates,
Wagoner, Wright.
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Which One is the Paulist?
It's easy to tell a Paulist. Just talk with him.
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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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Kaline, Aaron may make switch to infield
By United Press International
Stan Musial and Mickey Mantle, who played the outfield during most of their illustrious careers, finished up their playing days at first base and Hank Aaron and Al Kaline, with a total of 33 years of major league experience between them, may follow suit.
Aaron, the perennial All-Star outfielder for the Atlanta Braves, worked out at first base again Sunday in the absence of holdout Orlando Cepeda. The slugging Cepeda is seeking a raise to $90,-000 but the Braves have offered him even less than the $83,000 he earned last season when he helped lead the Braves to the National League's Western Division crown with 22 homers and 88 runs batted in.
Kaline has been splitting his time this spring between right field and first base, but the 17-year veteran of the Detroit Tigers missed Sunday's workout at Lakeland after complaining of not feeling well. Another absentee from the Tigers drills was utility infielder Dalton Jones who was suffering from an upset stomach.
The Orioles will hold their first intrasquad game today minus the services of first baseman Boog Powell, second baseman Dave Johnson and pitcher Dave McNally, all of whom became official holdouts Sunday.
Perez.
Also facing holdout problems are the Cincinnati Reds who are still unable to satisfy second baseman Tommy Helms, pitcher Jim Maloney and third baseman Tony
The Los Angeles Dodgers signed 20-game winner Bill Singer for an estimated $45,000 while Al Campanis, the club's director of player personnel, said he and 17-game winner Don Sutton "are very close to agreement." Other Dodger holdouts include catchers Tom Haller and Jeff Torborg.
Al Oliver drove in both runs with a single and an infield out as the Willie Stargellis beat the Bill Mazeroskis, 2-1, in the Pittsburgh Pirates' intrasquad game; Pat Kelley's two-run triple and a run-scoring double by Amos Otis highlighted a three-run third inning which carried the Schultz' to a 4-2 victory over the Dunlops in a Kansas City Royals' intra-
squad game; and Dave Nelson was the star of the Washington Senators' intrasquad game with a homer, double and single.
The San Diego Padres whipped the Mexico City Tigers, 9-1, as
rookie outfielder Julio Morales hit a homer for the winners and the Ozzie Virgil-coached team downed the Wes Westrum's, 3-2, as the San Francisco Giants held their first intrasquad game.
Official Bulletin
Today
University Lecture; "Amber: Modern Scientific Approaches." Jean Hangenheim, U. of Calif., Santa Cruz. 222 Snow, 4:30 p.m.
Thursday
Foreign students: Next Tuesday,
March 10, is the deadline for signing
up for Spring Break Homestays. See
March International newsletter for
details. Sign up People-to-People
office, Kansas Union.
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Little Symphony: Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Classical Film: "I Lost Post." Wood
ruin at 9 p.m. Kansas Union, 7 p.m.
and University at 9 p.m.
Thursday
Jayhawk Joggers Club. East Door.
Robinson Gymnasium. 4:30 p.m.
Special Film: "Forbidden Games."
Gynec Auditorium, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Senior Recital: Mary Westerhaus,
pianist and woodwind quintet,
Swarthout Recital H., 8 p.m.
Pepitone enjoys quiet life
The Green Bay Packers won five NFL championships under Vince Lombardi.
COCOA, Fla. (UPI)—Joe Pepitone saves everybody the trouble.
He says "yes" to the first question. He frequently says "yes" without even bothering to hear the question because he knows what it'll be.
Did you get a haircut yet?
The question is thrown at him before people even ask him how he likes it with the Houston Astros.
"Sure, I got my hair cut before
Gibson to start in Card opener
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI) —Bob Gibson, George Culver and Chuck Taylor will pitch for the St. Louis Cardinals in Saturday's Grapefruit League opener against the world champion New York Mets, manager Red Schoendienst announced Monday.
With righthander Mike Torrez due to put in a weekend of military service, Schoedienst said lefthander Rich Nye, obtained from the Chicago Cubs, probably would team with Nelson Briles and Jerry Johnson Sunday against the Mets.
Culver came from Cincinnati and Johnson from Philadelphia in off-season deals and are regarded by Schoenendien, along with Taylor, as ranking candidates for the No. 5 starting assignment.
Pitching coach Billy Muffett expressed concern over holdout Steve Carlton's absence.
"With good weather, the staff is far ahead of last spring," he said, "and I hate to see Steve fall behind."
The Cards still have had no word from their top holdout, slugger Richie Allen. But the Cards figure that Allen, a hitter, can get in shape faster for the season than a pitcher.
Maravich to coach South all-star club
HONOLULU (UPI) — Louisiana State's Press Maravich has been named coach of the South team for the second annual Aloha Basketball Classic which will feature some of the country's top college senior stars.
The tournament will be played April 2-4 at the Honolulu International Center.
Still to be named to join Maravich as classic coaches are leaders of teams in the Midwest, West and East.
Thirty-two players will compete on the all-star teams. Stars who have been invited include Maravich's son, Pete, the all-time collegiate scoring leader.
The tournament director is Red Rocha, head basketball coach at the University of Hawaii.
Mar. 4
1970 KANSAN 15
I came here," says Houston's new first baseman. "Can't you see?"
Frankly, it's hard to tell, but Joey says he's going to have his hair cut again before the season starts anyway so why not forget about it and talk about something else? Like how he likes being with Houston.
It's Hard To Tell
"Great." Pepitone says, "Absolutely great. I'm breaking my chops and I love it. I've worked harder here in two days than I did all last spring with the Yankees. That's because of the great set-up they've got here."
Pepitone means Astrotown, a complex made up of pea-green barracks, a mess hall, a recreation hall and assorted baseball diamonds where all the Houston players spend most of their days and nights. A few call the place Alcatraz.
"At first I was scared," Peipotone says. "Let's face it, you know I'm spoiled and I didn't know whether I could take it. The barracks, I mean. No television in the room, no phone, no nothing. They lock the doors by 12 o'clock and you'd better be in your room or it costs you $500. It was like being in service. But you know something? I like it."
Jumps Into Batting Cage
Jumps Into Batting Cage Pepitone jumped into the batting cage so as not to miss his turn against the kid pitcher on the mound, right-hander Ken Forsch, one of the Astros' many good-looking young prospects trying to move up despite being banged up in an auto accident last year.
Pepitone wasn't with the Astros 24 hours when he was quoted as saying he was happy to have left the Yankees.
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—Wichita State's Greg Carney holds the narrowest of scoring leads over North Texas State's Joe Hamilton entering the closing week of the Missouri Valley Conference basketball race.
Carney on top in MVC
Hamilton closed the gap a shade Monday night by scoring 22 points against Louisville while Carney managed 21 at Tulsa. St. Louis' Joe Wiley is the only other Valley cager averaging 20 or more points in conference play with a 20.6 mark.
Statistics released from the MVC office Tuesday and based on conference games only through Saturday showed Carney averaging 24 points to Hamilton's 23.3
Other individual statistical leaders include Cincinnati's Jim Ard in rebounding 14.6, Drake's Tom Busch in field goal shooting .577 and Cincinnati's Charlie Snow in free throw shooting .829. The six team statistical leaders are: offense, North Texas 81.4; defense, Louisville 66.1; rebounds, Tulsa 51.2; field goal shooting, Drake 472; free throw shooting, Memphis State .775.
"I never said that," frowned the sometimes moody, sometimes magnificent Brooklyn 29-year-old individualist. "The only thing that ripped me off is I didn't hear from the boss when they traded me after being with them eight years. I wish 'em the best of luck. Houk always was good to me. So was Burke. But I haven't heard from him since I was traded. He took it worse than I did."
Judy Collins is COMING !!
MEMO FROM THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
To:
THE CAPTAIN'S
TABLE OPEN
SUNDAY
The KU-Y is opening up the Captain's Table on Sunday. All proceeds will go to the KU-Y. The Captain's Table doors will be open from 11: A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Come in this Sunday morning after church for a delicious cafeteria style breakfast. As the Sunday dinner-pains strike out at your stomach, come in for one of the wide variety of charbroiled sandwiches. Cut out the memo and pin it where you will be sure to see it. The best food at student prices!
The
The Captain's Table Across the street from Lindley Hal
Keeps waiting, anticipating and expecting
McLain still confident he'll return to baseball
LAKELAND, Fla. (UPI)—Denny McLain has been suspended from baseball two weeks now.
"I feel," Denny McLain says, "my whole future has been blocked these past two weeks, and when a man has no future he has no reason for living."
Bone-chilling as that sounds, the general attitude of Detroit's indefinitely suspended 25-year-old pitcher is reasonably good.
He believes he'll be back in
baseball and has discovered he has a lot more friends than he ever realized. What bothers him most is that he is unable to defend himself publicly yet against charges reported by Sports Illustrated magazine that he was part of a bookmaking operation and associated with Mafia and Cosa Nostra types.
"I cannot say anything in my defense because I am under the complete jurisdiction of a federal grand jury in Detroit," McLain said, as he sat in the front room of his home.
"I realize people would like to know about those 'certain admin-
sions' I made to Mr. Bowie Kuhn, the baseball commissioner. That'll all come out. But I can't say anything about them now on account of the grand jury. Look, I want to play baseball more than anything else in the world. I miss the ballpark and all the guys. I'm eating my heart out sitting here knowing they're working out right this minute."
Stories already have begun to circulate that Denny McLain is dead broke, doesn't know where his next meal is coming from and is having trouble feeding his attractive dark-haired wife, Sharyn, who is the daughter of Hall of
Famer Lou Boudreau, and his three children, Kris 4, Dennis, 2, and Timothy, 1. The stories are not true.
"I am in a bad way financially and what I'm doing now is digging into what I have left, but we still have enough to eat," he says. "If this thing his suspension goes on for any length of time, I'll have to go to the clubs and entertain."
McLain referred to the offers he has had to play the organ in night clubs around the country. He got up from his chair, walked into another room and came back with a stack of offers he had received from night clubs, theatrical agencies and Las Vegas hotels. There were offers of all kinds, even to do a book.
The telegrams and letters keep pouring in.
Expecting what?
"Time weighs very heavily on my hands," McLain said. "My mind wanders all the time. I keep waiting, anticipating, expecting."
"I dunno," Denny McLain confessed. "I have to be optimistic, I can't be pessimistic. Since this thing happened I've had tears in my eyes a hundred times. I'm one of those guys who can't cry. If I could I would. It would help."
Uclans hold on to top spot
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The figure easily surpassed Kentucky, which took second with nine first-place votes and 303 points, and South Carolina, third with three first-place nominations and 268 points.
St. Bonaventure held on to fourth, New Mexico State remained fifth and Jacksonville clung to sixth. Iowa, newly crowned Big Ten champion, moved past Pennsylvania, the Ivy League winner, into seventh. Drake moved into ninth place and Marquette completed the top 10.
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.
UPI RATINGS
Team Points
1. UCLA (23-1) ... 332
2. Kentucky (23-1) ... 303
3. South Carolina (23-2) ... 268
4. St. Bonaventure (20-1) ... 228
5. New Mexico State (23-2) 193
6. Jacksonville (23-1) ... 123
7. Iowa (17-4) ... 120
B. Pennsylvania (25-1) ... 116
Drake (20-6) ... 41
Marquette (20-3) ... 34
Houston (22-3) ... 29
Florida State (23-3) ... 28
Davidson (22-4) ... 25
Texas-EI Paso (17-6) ... 23
Western Kentucky (21-2) ... 17
North Carolina St. (19-6) ... 12
Cincinnati (20-4) ... 10
Notre Dame (20-6) ... 9
North Carolina (18-7) ... 8
Villanova (19-6) ... 5
Others receiving votes: Columbia, Utah, Kansas State, Utah State, Southern California, Duke, Ohio University, Santa Clara, Long Beach State.
Royals display long ball power
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI) — The Kansas City Royals played their fourth intra-squad game Tuesday in as many days, and Scott Northey and Bob Oliver each hit long distance home runs.
Pat Kelly continued his hot hitting of the spring. He went 3-for-5, which gives him 11 hits in 18 trips to the plate over the four squad games.
Veteran pitchers Wally Bunker and Moe Drabowsky each threw three scoreless innings and each gave up two hits.
16 KANSAN Mar. 4 1970
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Nixon proposes Education Institute
Educational standards to be studied
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon proposed Tuesday creation of a National Institute of Education to find out why the nation's schools have failed the children of the poor before the
government commits vast new sums in aid to education.
He told Congress in a special message that basic research in teaching and learning by the institute—operating the way the
Teacher nominations due
Nominations for the awards for outstanding classroom teachers should reach the Office of the Dean of Faculties before March 16.
Four such awards, each carrying a stipend of $1,000, will be made this year and announced during the Commencement Supper, said Francis H. Heller, the dean of faculties. The award is a gift to the University of H. Bernard Fink, Topeka, a member of
Property tax lid bill killed in Senate
TOPEKA, (UPI) - The Kansas Senate resurrected the property tax lid bill of Gov. Robert Docking which was killed by the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee Tuesday morning.
Following much confusion over parliamentary procedure, a motion by Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Muncie, to suspend senate rules, declared an emergency and placed the beleaguered bill on the senate calendar for debate.
A vote of 28 to 12 gave the motion a margin of one vote over the required two-thirds necessary to suspend the rules and declare an emergency.
Steineger said support for his motion was the result of "bipartisan effort."
In effect, the successful motion overrules the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee's 6-4 vote Tuesday morning to kill the bill, which a senate Republican caucus has committed itself to pass.
Mar. 4
1970 KANSAN 17
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"I am well aware that 'quality education' is already being interpreted as 'code words' for a delay in desegregation," Nixon said. "We must never let that meaning take hold.
the class of 1931. Fink established the award about 10 years ago, Heller said, as a gift to the University.
"Quality is what education is all about," he added. "Desegregation is vital to that quality . . . we must not permit the controversy about the progress toward desegregation to detract from the shared purpose of all—better education for the poor of every race and color."
in the South.
The three other awards are made available by the Standard Oil (Indiana) Foundation.
The Fink Award will be given to someone who has been a full time faculty member for at least three years, less than 50 years of age, and below the rank of full professor, Heller said. The Standard Oil Foundation does not carry such stipulations.
Nominations may be made by any faculty member or student, or by schools, departments, or groups of individuals. It would be helpful to the selection committee if the letters of nomination included as much specific supporting material as possible.
The selection committee, by the terms of the Fink Award, is to remain anonymous. Members include both faculty members and students.
National Institutes of Health does in biomedical research-is required to "begin to climb the up staircase towarl genuine reform."
In addition, Nixon signed an executive order establishing a presidential commission headed by former Defense Secretary Neil McElroy to make a two-year study of school financing, including possible alternatives to the use of the local property tax for revenues.
to expand special programs until the institute comes up with other possible answers to "overcome poor backgrounds," such as use of day care centers, publicly supported projects in educational television and new reading programs.
The President said the Johnson administration's ambitious and costly programs, such as head start, "have not measurably helped poor children catch up" with well-to-do children entering the first grade. He made this problem the proposed institute's first research priority.
Meanwhile, he indicated, his administration would not move
Daniel P. Moynihan, the president's counselor for urban and domestic affairs, told newsmen Nixon's message recognized "we have not succeeded in achieving equal educational opportunities for minority groups in this country, and we do not know how to achieve it."
Nixon cautioned against letting his proposals get bogged down in the present controversy over school desegregation, in which his civil rights critics have accused him of condoning delays
Touching on the sensitive church-state issue, Nixon said he would ask the institute to study what could be done to preserve the nation's private and parochial schools, which he said are closing at the rate of one a day.
Dole asks Agnew's help
WICHTTA (UPI) — U.S. Sen.
Bob Dole, R-Kan., asked Vice
President Spiro Agnew Monday
to help Wichita solve its school
integration problems.
Dole's letter to Agnew was made public Monday night after the Board of Education deferred action on four proposals, pending adjournment of the Kansas Legislature so the amount of financial aid for next year could be determined.
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Rail strike planned for Thursday
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Four shopcraft unions announced plans Tuesday to strike the entire U.S. railway system starting Thursday, and nothing but emergency action by Congress stood in their way.
There was no immediate White House reaction to the announcement by William W. Winpsinger, the unions' chief spokesman in 15 months of contract negotiations with rail management that have ended in complete deadlock.
The strike call was issued one day after U.S. District Judge Howard F. Corcoran ruled that the unions' chief spokesman in 15 vidual railroads as they did Jan. 31 against Union Pacific. That walkout provoked management plans to shut down all railroads with a retaliatory lockout of employees.
The threat of a rail shutdown was averted by court restraining orders against selective strikes or lockouts — twice extended — that finally expired with Corcoran's injunction Monday against what management terms a "whipsaw strike."
That left the unions the alternatives of appealing Corcoran's ruling, issuing no strike call or striking all the 128 major railroads which are members of the National Labor Railway Conference.
They decided on a general strike to begin at 12:01 a.m. (EST) Thursday, even though Winsinger said "from the beginning we have made it clear . . .
Pompidou leaves
PARIS (UPI) — President Georges Pompidou returned to Paris early today from an official visit to the United States where, despite some brushes with pro-Israel demonstrators and a bomb threat against his plane, he said his eight-day trip had "served the cause of peace."
18 KANSAN Mar. 4 1970
that we want to avoid a nationwide strike.
Congress was considered almost certain to vote some form of compulsory arbitration to settle the contract dispute and end a rail walkout, which lawmakers consider intolerable to the nation's economy. President Nixon has no further legal recourse in the dispute.
"Only the Congress can provide the remedy now," Wip-singer told newsmen.
Even before the unions announced their decision, locals of at least two of them—the Boilermakers and Sheet Metal Workers—struck the Penn Central Co. rail yards in Cleveland, Ohio, in defiance of Corcoran's injunction.
Congress has legislated binding settlements of rail labor disputes twice in the past eight years, the last time in 1967 to end a two-day railroad walkout.
The four unions represent 48,000 machinists, electricians, sheet metal workers and boilermakers who already have accepted an 18 per cent wage increase in two years, from $3.60 an hour for top journeymen to $4.28.
But negotiations hit a snag over a work rule proposed by management that would permit members of one union to perform incidental work of another craft in small shops. This proposal was rejected by the Sheet Metal
Workers, smallest of the four unions, and not even AFL-CIO President George Meany's last-minute intervention was able to resolve the issue.
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IRS owes man 73,489 thoughts
Revenue payment made
ROYAL OAK, Mich. (UPI) Walter Ballew collected 73,489 pennies, dumped them into a trash can painted like an American flag, and said he would present the clinking heap to the Internal Revenue Service.
But the IRS doesn't want pennies. In fact, the IRS said they wouldn't take them when the gas station operator and a few hefty
friends carry them up the steps of the IRS office.
"Title 31, section 460 of the U.S. Code provides that minor coins—this would be pennies and nickels—amounting to 25 cents need not be accepted as legal tender in payment of taxes," a spokesman for the IRS said Tuesday.
"We'll cross that bridge when
Two alumni of the voice department at KU have recently appeared in New York musical productions.
Two KU alums appear in New York musicals
Shirley Potter, a soprano from Mendon, Mo., has left the cast of "Coco" for the forthcoming Broadway production "Look to the Lillies," said Charles McHarry in his "On the Town Column" in the New York Daily News.
Mar. 4
1970 KANSAN 19
Miss Potter, who was a frequent soloist with KU musical groups and sang in several operas and musicals, received the bachelor of music degree in 1967. She has been working in New York most of the time since then.
we come to it," said Balew, 23. He'll come to the bridge—or the IRS office—Wednesday.
Robert Benton, a baritone who received a degree in theater and voice last year, has made his New York debut in a concert performance of Beethoven's "Fidelo" by the New York Philharmonic with Leonard Bernstein conducting.
Walter Giza, a collector for the IRS, presented Ballew with a $1.398 quarterly tax bill in November. The bill was for taxes and Social Security payments Ballew had withheld from employes' pay and should have given the government.
"I had terrific financial problems last year," Ballew said. "To make a long story short, I was in very deep trouble."
He said he paid off all his creditors except the IRS. By last Tuesday, he'd partially paid the IRS, and asked for three weeks to pay off the remainder, plus penalties and interest.
Giza "wouldn't even listen," Ballew said. "He told me to have the money Monday or he was going to put me out of business. "I just want to show him what it's like when people don't have any consideration for you."
Employes of Ballew decided to paint the garbage can red, white and blue with stars and stripes
Giza was supposed to collect the money Tuesday but notified the station he couldn't make it, so Ballew decided to take the mountain of pennies to the IRS.
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Lecture features Scriven
Violence won't change values
Michael Scriven, professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, spoke on "Violence" in a Humanities Series lecture Tuesday in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium.
in his speech, Scriven said that violence was not discussed or thought of as it should be. He said that many people think that through violent action our whole value system would be changed. This, he said, is because people are uneducated in this area and have no idea how to react when confronted with a violent situation.
Many people, he said, do not realize that violent revolutions have happened before. Scriven said that people are shocked to
JIM WILLIAMS
Michael Scriven
hear of student unrest and anti-war demonstrations. But, he said, people should realize that our country's heritage is of violence. For an example, he cited the war of 1776.
Scriven said that non-violent approaches have not worked because they did not make changes
fast enough. Non-violence, he said, is too "slow and oppressive."
Seriven said that violence could be stopped and should be stopped. It has done as much as it could do, he said.
Violence at home is due to violence abroad, said Scriven, an example being the war in Vietnam. Scriven said if the war could be stopped violence would not stop because it had gained too much momentum. It has received the dedication and support beyond the reach of reason, he said.
There is a point in violence, a point of no return, where demands are non-negotiable, Scriven said. Because of this it is important to respond when just and reasonable demands are made, he said.
Scriven said student's response to violence was pathetic. This, he said, was due to the fact that violence had no place in our student curriculum. Scriven said like love, violence has been denied existence in our educational system.
Today it is more appropriate to get away from love, he said. This is why we face violence. Our universities are much to blame, he said.
French students battle
PARIS (UPP)—Students chanting "cops off the campus" built barricades on the University of Paris' suburban campus at Nanterre and set them afire Tuesday in the second straight day of battles with police. Police used bulldozers to push down the flaming barriers.
Fulbright criticizes 'secret war' rumors
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., said Tuesday that "high administration officials" had told him that Laos is even more important to the United States than Vietnam.
"If Vietnam was important enough to justify the commitment of half a million troops, how many more could justicably be committed to Laos, which is one of the few worse places than Vietnam to fight a war?" he asked.
Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a staunch critic of U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia, declined to identify the administration officials. The committee recently held secret hearings with Richard Helms, director of the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA). as its chief witness,
Sen, George McGovern, D-S.D. meanwhile called for secret Senate session to hear the administration's version of what he called America's "secret war" in Laos.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, emerging from a House Armed Services Committee hearing, denied McGovern's charge.
"I can categorically state that there has been no buildup of individuals, either civilian or military." Laird said.
But he noted that the Defense Department had no responsibility for "in-country" activities in Laos. It has been widely reported that the CIA is performing an active military mission in Laos.
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield showed no enthusiasm over McGovern's call for a secret session.
Organization of Americas holds long, chaotic history
(UPI) - On July 26, 1964, the then 20 members of the Organization of American States (OAS) signed a resolution in Washington binding them to impose economic sanctions on Communist Cuba and to break all diplomatic relations with her.
Mexico promptly forgot all about it, regarding the action as interference with Cuba's internal affairs.
Four of these nations signed reluctantly. They were Bolivia, Chile, Uruguay and Mexico.
Of the others, Chile has now become the first to break it.
Under an agreement signed Feb.
20, Chile will sell to Cuba $11
20 KANSAN Mar. 4
1970
Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru have suggested they might be willing to take similar steps.
The nationalistic, anti-U.S. regime of Peru has been praised by Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro as "without any doubt revolutionary." A like description can be applied to Bolivia. Both are attempting to establish ties with Communist East Europe.
million in agricultural products in 1970 and 1971. There are indications it may become a trend.
A further indication of feelings south of the border came last month in a speech by Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Eric Williams before the Inter-American Economic and Social Council session in Caracas, Venezuela to the effect that an economic boycott with Cuba was unrealistic.
Scriven said there should be investigations into the theories of violence. He said that its causes and controls should be studied and taught so people would know how to respond when violence occurs.
Scriven said educational programs on violence could solve crises before they arise.
"Perhaps violence is necessary," Scriven said, "but no one has shown it." If violence is necessary, it must be directed strategically toward moderates, he said. They must be shown that they are responsible to tell us the truth, said Scriven.
Scriven ended his speech by saying, "It is better to think violence is the last court of appeal than to think there isn't one."
people-to-people
People-to-People needs students to tutor at the Intensive English Center. This requires only about two hours a week to work with and help new foreign students at KU.
If you are interested in helping, call the People-to-People office, 864-3853, and leave your name.
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Nixon's message aimed at learning
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon Tuesday proposed a five-point program aimed at leading to "genuine reform" of elementary and secondary education in America.
Nixon outlined his program in a lengthy message to Congress.
"When educators, school boards and government officials alike admit that we have a great deal to learn about the way we teach, we will begin to climb up the staircase toward genuine reform," Nixon said.
His basic points were:
- Creation of an early learning program, established jointly by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) and the Office of Economic Opportunity, to set up a network of experimental centers "to discover what works best in early childhood education." The program will be tied into the large day care plan included by the administration as part of the Family Assistance Act.
- Legislation to renew for three years the federal charter for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
- Creation of a National Institute of Education—a new agency within HEW — which gradually would take over existing research programs in the Office of Education.
- Creation by executive order of a new Presidential Committee on School Finance to study and develop plans for aiding the fiscal and organizational needs of schools, with particular attention to non-public schools including Roman Catholic parochial schools.
He endorsed the "right to read" as a national goal for this decade, saying he would ask Congress to increase available funds to aid in alleviating a national reading problem among younger Americans.
Outlining his so-called early learning plan, Nixon said that in development of the mind, "child's play is serious business."
With establishment of an Office of Child Development in HEW, he said he was now directing that
HEW and the OEO "jointly to establish a network of experimental centers to discover what works best in early childhood education."
"An experimental program of this nature is necessary as we expand our child development programs," he said. "The early learning program will also provide us with a strong experimental base on which to build the new day care program, involving $386 million in its first full year of operation, which I have proposed as part of the family assistance plan.
The experimental units of the early learning program, working with the National Institute of Education, will study a number of provocative questions raised in recent years by educators and scientists:
"A study of language and number competence between lower and middle-class children shows a significant difference by the time a child is 4 years old, but the difference is said to become "awesome" by the time the child enters first grade. If this is so, what effect should it have on our approach to compensatory education in the early years?
"A study of poor children in Washington, D.C., conducted by the National Institute of Mental Health, indicates a decline in I.Q.s of infants between the ages of 14 and 21 months—a decline that can be forestalled by skillful tutoring during their second year. If this is true, how should it affect our approach to the education of the very young?
"Many child development experts believe that the best opportunity for improving the education of infants under the age of three lies not in institutional centers but at home, and through working with their mothers. What might we do, therefore, to communicate to young women and mothers—especially to those in or near poverty—the latest information on effective child development techniques with specific suggestions about its application at home?"
Republicans caucus discuss pay increase
TOPEKA, (UPI) - House Republicans caucused Tuesday to discuss appropriation of $13.8 million for state employee pay increases.
The speaker of the house, Rep, Calvin A. Strowig, R-Abilene, said no agreement was reached in the closed-door meeting.
"Some members frankly prefer to see the report before they vote," he said.
The State Finance Council Feb. 23 recommended introduction of the money bill in the legislature to fund the pay increases expected to be recommended in a consultant's report due in late April or early May after the session ends.
The appropriation bill is based on estimates of how much money will probably be needed. The council's intention was to have the money ready when the report is made so the pay increases can go into effect July 1.
Strowng said he called the caucus to get the "feeling" of the members. He said a few suggested maybe a special session should be called after the report is made, but the Speaker said he didn't like that idea.
Strowg said the caucus put the highest priority on passage of the $26 million supplemental school aid program.
Students organize plans for White Student Union
A student who wishes to remain unknown, said the group was not anti-Negro, but wanted to make sure that the blacks, in the process of gaining their identity, did not become overly violent.
A White Student Union is now in the rudimentary stages of organization at KU.
The student also said the group wanted some disciplinary action to be taken against the students involved in the recent confiscara-
tion of $1200 worth of Kansans.
Mar.4 1970 KANSAN 21
The student said the group was interested in finding out why the Black Student Union (BSU) received $10,000 from the Student Senate. The student said the original sum allocated for the BSU was $600 and that it was essential that the reason the group received more be made public.
Monday was the tentative meeting date given for the White Student Union.
The group is reported to have 35 members at the moment and more are expected to be recruited by telephone, said the anonymous student.
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RAISE YOUR READING RATE 50% -100% FREE A SPECIAL MESSAGE TO WESTERN CIV STUDENTS
In order to help you prepare for the Western Civ Comprehensive May 9, we will raise your reading speed 50-100% , free.
Bring Russell's, "Science and Religion." Please be on time.
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Cigarette commercials outlawed
WASHINGTON (UPI)—House and Senate conferees agreed Tuesday on a bill that would outlaw cigarette commercials on radio and television, effective Jan. 1.
The measure also would impose a stronger health warning statement on cigarette packages.
The bill would ban regulation of cigarette advertising by state governments, but would free the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) from the prohibition against federal regulation of cigarette advertising which has been in effect since 1965.
Under the measure, the FTC would be free effective July 1, 1971, to impose a health warning in printed cigarette advertisements.
"We are past the beginning of the end of cigarette smoking—the personal environmental pollution of the 20th century." Magnuson said.
Sens, Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash, and Frank E. Moss, D-Utah, who led the Senate anti-smoking drive, hailed the conference committee action. The bill the conferees agreed on still must be approved by the House and Senate, but conference agreements are rarely rejected.
The FTC says the cigarette industry spends about $240 million a year on TV and radio advertising, more than $200 million of it on television. The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) has estimated that the television industry gets 10 per cent of its revenue from cigarette firms.
Groups bring suit on Chicago Seven
CHICAGO (UPI) — A spokesman for three University of Illinois student associations said today the federal court may be asked to overrule the school's decision to bar a speech by "Chicago Seven" attorney William M. Kunstler.
Violence broke out on the university's Champaign campus Tuesday night following a decision by the University of Illinois Board of Trustees to prohibit the use of school facilities tonight for a speech by Kunstler.
A spokesman for "Concerned Law Students," the organization which invited Kunstler to campus, said the group was considering a suit which would ask the U.S. District Court in Chicago to permit the appearances.
Lawrence O'Brien changes his mind
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Lawrence F. O'Brien, reversing an earlier decision, said Tuesday he was willing to return to his old job as National Democratic Chairman if party leaders draft him at a meeting here Thursday.
O'Brien declined the post last week on grounds he lacked the broad party support he needed, but Tuesday he said in a one-sentence statement: "If the Democratic National Committee ratifies the recommendation of its executive committee to draft me as chairman, I must accept that decision and I will serve my party.
Candidate named
A candidate for Student Senator from Pearson College is Patrick Williams (Alliance) Wichita sophomore rather than Lansing senior as was incorrectly reported in Tuesday's Kansan.
22 KANSAN Mar. 4
1970
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I need a ride!! Topeka to KU, Tues-
Fri. Must arrive by 8:30 and can leave
at 3:30. Address: 409 Watson, Topeka.
Phone 233-0327. 3-6
Roommate wanted—one girl to share nice apt at Ridge House $65 plus ½ utilities. Call 842-6331 between 10 and 4 or 843-1116. Ginger. 3-4
Guitar instructor wanted. Am interested in folk, blues, and picking methods. Call Linda, 843-2374. 3-6
Tickets for KU-K-State game=442-
6217.
3-6
Female roommate wanted, as soon as possible, to share 2-bedroom furnished apartment with junior girl gtlr $250 Call. 842-3820, 1810 W. 2514 Apt. F
Nested. One girl to share luxurious Gathehouse apt, with three others.
$51.25 per month, including water.
Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Two girls need roommate to share duplex. Call 842-8434. 3-9
NOTICE
315 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some, honest-to-god—BarB-Que Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special! VI - P-9510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday IV
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
We are now open till 5:30 p.m. week-
day. Tarr's Laundry, 1903s, Mass. 3,
5-8 o'clock.
AUTO
GLASS
INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS
Table Tops
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynaicoaler dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10%, handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Groove-Today in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galerie. Find the latest, the best for guys and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky. if
henrys
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's th & Mo. VI 3-2139
We - 3-6
a change 3-6
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas. Sophomore Class. 3-6
For information concerning the W.S.U., a group of concerned KU students, call 842-4676. 3-4
Sand Candles by Betty Webster. 9th
and Indiana. THE OMNIBUS SHIP
112-7534
4 see 3-6
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus.
$115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-0705.
3-16
Karate Action Saturday, March 7.
Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
Eliminations-10:30 a.m. 50c.
Friday p. 7 m.: $1.50
3-12
Spring new Sandlers, Sandlers are here. Weaver's Shoe Shop, Second Floor. 3-9
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $ 101^{1/2} $ Mass., Returns $ 4.00 and up tt
Acme Dingo
Cowboy Boots
$18.99
HARVEY'S SHOE STORE
See us also for the
newest styles
Soft Service
Harvey's
DISCOUNT SHOES
803 W. 23rd
Open every day 9 - 9
Sunday 1 - 6
Tie-dyed Wallace Beery shirts. $5.50.
The Hodge Paddle, 15 W. 9th. 4-8
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
THE HOME in the WALL
DELICATESEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685 — We Deliver — 9th G & II.
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Oils and Acrylics
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Stretcher Frames
Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Sitting steaks and fresh salts seafoods email you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest . . . preparing the selections as we like them with all the dinner trappings. Dine height at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
U.S. Choice Steaks Select Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge
843-1431
- Balsa Wood
Bankmark Services
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
Self Service
Harvey's
DISCOUNT SHOES
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
Sirloin
IT
UN 4-3474
SHAW AUTO
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612 N. 2nd St.
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Thesis Typing - 10 years experience
at Thiennes University in Paris, France.
6048 (8:00 to 9:00 -842-0111) 4:3
7050 (8:00 to 9:00 -842-0111)
Typing. Theses, papers. Experienced Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also English tutoring for foreign students or vives. Reasonable. 842-9249 3-5
British surplus wool fire brigade jackets 12-button, double-breasted at $18. The Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 3-4
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing materials. Competent wscripter.
With Pica tape. Competent service.
Wright. Phone 843-9554 5-15
Authentic London Bobbles' capes.
Waterproof, black. Fantastic at $14.
The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 3-4
Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
TYPING
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. W41 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman
HELP WANTED
Need extra money? We need an accountant; will discuss terms. P.S.-good job for grad student or housemother. 842-502-6, ask for Oscar; 3-6
Guitar player and vocalist. Weekends and summer work. Call Steve Clark, Red Dog Inn, 842-0100. 3-6
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today 814 Iowa
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Group Tax, 8011% Mass, $4.00 and up, if
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates - $30. Students, 1218 Mile, 845-968-313-6 tern 6 p.m.
FOUND
Valuable Swiss watch. Describe, call 842-2827. 3-6
LOST
Found: A charming atmosphere that makes the steaks and Russian strogof-
toe taste even better! Castle Roan, most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 3-9
Key ring and identification wallet at Robinson Gym. Jack K. Horner. 843-6838 Reward.
FOR RENT
Manila envelope with W-2 forms, cancelled checks. Call FL7-4281 collect. Reward. After 10 p.m. 3-5
For rent starting April 1st to faculty or staff couple or individual. Beautifully carpeted apt, a/c/ceiling comfortable. Choose quiet, comfortable KU and town. Call 843-8534. 3-6
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
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Contact: Shelley Bray University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
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Panel discusses 'liberation'
A series of discussions on women's liberation, sponsored by the KU-Y and the Associated Women Students, started in McCollum Hall last night.
The panelists for the discussion were Betsy Gwynn, staff member of the National Student YWCA, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Alter of the Women's Liberation Movement and Roxanne Dunbar of the Southern Female Rights Union.
Miss Gwynn said the Women's Liberation Movement was not to be confused with the National Organization of Women (NOW). She said NOW was a reformist organization, while the Women's Liberation Movement was a revolutionary, leftist radical movement.
Miss Gwynn said the movement was fighting for racial, economic and social equality as well as sexual equality for women.
Miss Dunbar accused society of having indoctrinated people with a false picture of women. She blamed this partly on the mass media, which constantly made jokes about liberated women. She said the first division of labor was a sexual division, and that ever since, women had been thought of as weak creatures incapable of defending themselves.
Miss Gwynn said that television pictured women as creatures
seeking a husband and getting excited about floor wax. The general concept of a woman, she said, is that of a "baby-machine," with no abilities to develop mind and body.
Buses mobbed
It was the worst—and virtually the only—violence in the South since Dixie began complying in January with federal court orders calling for total and almost immediate school desegregation.
In other racial developments:
(Continued from page 1)
"if the tear gas had not worked as effectively as it did."
- J. Stanley Pottinger was named to succeed Leon E. Panetta as chief of federal civil rights enforcement and attorneys who worked under Panetta began to protest his ouster.
If a woman showed that she could use her head, she was regarded by men as an exception, said Miss Gwynn. She said the general comment was, "you sure don't think like a girl."
McNair alerted National Guard units at the nearby towns of Florence, Kingstree, Lake City and Marion to stand by. But Seal said, "It is a federal matter. The state is not enforcing the federal court order" to integrate the school. "The state is merely trying to preserve life and property."
"The way will be kept open for children to go to school in Darlington County," he said. But Lamar High was closed after the meele and officials wouldn't say when it would open.
Paul Rilling, in charge of Southern enforcement, and Peter
24 KANSAN Feb. 27
1970
Gall, information director for the Washington civil rights office, quit. Rilling called President Nixon's school desegregation policy "one of vacillation and non-leadership."
- Gov. Lester Maddox of Georgia, denounced federal District Judge W. A. Bootle and his desegregation orders and said if his statement brought him into contempt of Bootle's court "it will be only because the actions of the court were contemptible."
In addition to the black children hurt, several troopers and members of the mob received slight injuries. Many suffered for hours from the effects of tear gas fumes.
Unlike Maddox, South Carolina Gov. McNair has urged compliance with the federal desegregation orders while making it clear he didn't like them. McNair said Tuesday's violence in Lamar "defied all human reason and understanding."
"We have not had any other options than being decorative and weak," she said, and added that liberated women did not exist, because they were not given opportunities to develop by society.
Lamar High had only a few blacks among its students before Feb. 16. Five - hundred Negroes then entered the school on an order by U.S. Circuit Judge Clement F. Haynsworth, the South Carolinian whose nomination to the Supreme Court was rejected by the Senate.
Alter said that men were raised to believe that they were cool, rational and intelligent, and that John Wayne had been up to him as the ideal of masculinity. "Men are made to believe they are unable to do such things as change diapers, as if women had some special bone in their arms making them especially fit to change diapers," he said.
Miss Gwynn said women graduates and PhD's were proportionately lower now than in the '30's, and that more women were now in service jobs than was the case in the '50's. "Women are doing the same jobs as men with a lower rate of payment, and there are very few jobs available to women that are not exploitative," she said.
"Don't give your talents to the system as it is now," said Miss Dunbar, but added that dropping out was not the solution because the system would still go on.
Miss Dunbar said that there would always be psychological and physical differences between people, and that these differences must be compensated. She said the caste systems that still live with us must be eliminated.
The threat of overpopulation as being one of the world's major problems is the result of brainwashing by the government, Miss Dunbar said. She said the government was in favor of birth control among other races than the white, "because the government thinks there are too many brown and black people. The problem does not concern your
SPider and the Crabs
FRI — DOLLAR NIGHT
Pitchers $1.00 — Admission $1.00
SAT — FREE BEER ALL NIGHT
Regular Admission $1.50 — $.75 AFTER THE GAME
red dog inn
little, lily-white baby."
People are led to believe that the main problem of the world is
that of overpopulation, while in fact it is that of starvation, she said.
Johnson condition 'stable'; heart attack fears unfounded
"There has not been a heart attack in the ordinary sense," said Lt. Col. Robert L. North, 40-year-old chief heart specialist at Brooke General Hospital. "Basically, it's a problem of diminished supply of blood to the heart in relation to the man."
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)—Lyndon B. Johnson's cardiologist Tuesday diagnosed the former President's allment as angina pectoris—a pain in the chest caused by a reduced flow of blood to the heart.
Johnson's condition in a 4 p.m. CST medical bulletin was listed as "stable."
"Our main concern in our treatment is to try and prevent a heart attack," North said.
"These current pains do no permanent damage to the heart. We don't have a bleak outlook."
Johnson, 61, suffered extra heartbeats and "transient pain" in his chest and left arm during the day.
Doctors explained that in a heart attack blood is completely cut off to a portion of the heart. In Johnson's case, the flow is reduced by hardening of the arteries.
The 36th U.S. President, 12 pounds overweight at 217, took an oral pain killer similar to aspirin for the chest discomfort, quinidine sulphate to smooth his irregular heartbeat, warsarin to thin his blood and nitroglycerin to dilate his blood vessels.
"I cannot predict in all honesty what the duration of his stay in the hospital will be." North said. "I would say at least several days.
"He's in an excellent mood—good spirits," added North, one of five heart specialists in attendance.
Luci Nugent, 21, the younger Johnson daughter, brought the former President's grandson, Patrick Lyndon, 3, for a hospital visit Tuesday.
The former President's wife, Lady Bird, his companion of 35 years, was with Johnson in his seventh floor suite.
The 4 p.m. medical bulletin said: "President Johnson's condition is stable. His doctors report he has been more comfortable during the day, although he is still experiencing discomfort in the chest."
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857
sleek swimwear
Be a shunshine super-girl on the beach and in the water too!
We've got the swimsuits for all your beachcombing and pool side needs.
See one- and two-piece suits, cage tops, bikinis.
$13 to $20
2nd Floor
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.92
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, March 5, 1970
Senate respects students' rights
A Code for Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct was passed by the Student Senate Wednesday night after certain revisions were adopted.
Major sections considered were
LAUREN K. WILSON
Photo by Ron Bishop
Dean's discuss right's bill Emily Taylor, dean of women, and William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs, discuss possible revisions in the Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct Code.
Confidentiality of Records, Violation of Law and University Discipline. Use of Facilities and Use of University Funds.
The important discussion centered on Confidentiality of Records which emphasizes the privacy of all records relating to students. The Code states that respect must be accorded the confidential relationship between the University and its students.
Concerning the article are the following controlling principles:
1. The student academic record, supporting documents and student files are confidential.
2. Separate files for academic, discipline proceedings, medical and psychiatric, financial aid, student personnel and guidance bureau records are to be maintained.
3. With some exceptions, no entry shall be made in any student record without notice to the student.
4. Each student shall have access to to his records and files.
5. Only upon prior written consent of the student concerned, can information in any student file be released to an individual or organization. Exceptions are recordkeeping personnel and members
of the faculty with administrative assignments for internal educational purposes and routine purposes. Officials from federal, state and local agencies may be given general information if expressly requested.
6. A student may request that his records be destroyed upon graduation. Personnel records shall be maintained for more than five years.
In regard to law and discipline, the Code says if violation of a law occurs on campus and is also a violation of a published University regulation, the University can take action against an offender who has been subjected to civil prosecution. This applies only when the University interest involved is clearly distinct from that of the community outside of the University.
A student who intentionally causes a substantial disruption, the Code states, or obstruction of University activities may be subject to a sanction not greater than suspension. A second offense under this section may subject a student to a maximum sanction of expulsion.
Limitations under the Code says
Mobe hears Velvel
Lawrence Velvel, KU associate professor of law, told approximately 75 people at the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) meeting Wednesday night that inflation, race relations and poverty are important issues but war is the most important issue of all.
Concerning human resources, Velvel said that every minute the President thinks about war he is ignoring other domestic issues. Engineers building ABM systems could be designing engines that
"The reason is greenbacks." Velvet said. He said that until the war is ended other important issues cannot be solved because of lack of finances and human resources.
would not pollute the environment, he said.
Money spent for war makes it impossible to solve other issues," Velvel said.
Velvel called President Nixon's Vietnamization program "a hoax." He said it is like saying to the North Vietnamese, "If you don't agree to end the war, we agree to get out."
Speaking about the situation in Laos, Velvel said if the United States sends troops there "the social upheaval will be terrible."
"If the United States does not end the Vietnam War, war will end the United States," Velvel said.
13-18, and Anti-Draft Week March 16-22. SMC members divided into work groups to discuss tactics for ending the war such as tax resistance, interfering with draft boards and house-to-house canvassing to solicit funds for the Quaker Rehabilitation Center in Quang Ngai, South Vietnam. Fund raising for the Center will be Saturday with headquarters in the American Baptist Center.
At the end of Velvel's speech, SMC members discussed future plans for Moritorium Week April
Tentative plans also call for an SMC investigation into defense contracts at KU and academic qualifications of ROTC instructors.
The meeting concluded with a majority decision for combined anti-war activity in Lawrence and Kansas City on April 15.
that no sanctions or other disciplinary measures may be imposed against a student by the University concerning nonacademic conduct other than what is prescribed in the sections.
Concerning Use of Facilities, the Code states that University facilities shall be assigned to student organizations for regular business meetings, social functions and for programs open to the public. Facilities are also to be made available to groups within the community.
LATE BULLETIN
The following statement was released this morning by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., as his reply to demands made by the BSU last week:
The recent demands of the Black Student Union at the University of Kansas cannot be considered as reasonable, legal, or attainable as short-term goals. Even to consider these demands by September of this year, or by 1971, would require the unconscionable and illegal termination of hundreds of faculty and staff members.
If the BSU were to address itself to long-range goals instead of short-range demands, reasoning men and women would not question goals that are consistent with equal opportunity for all minority groups.
The pursuit of equal opportunity can be accelerated, but affirmative action programs and incremental growth are far from the firing of large numbers of one group of people in order to create instant jobs for another group of people.
The University of Kansas will continue its work toward greater opportunities for minority groups, but our efforts will be within our resources, within reason and within the law.
--says the referendum, "the issue will be put to student referendum in the March 17-18 election.
Miller circulates Wescoe Hall petition
A petition with the intent to put the Wescoe Hall financing to a referendum vote is being circulated by its authors David Miller, Eudora junior seeking student body president, and Dan Beck, Prairie Village, junior, running for student body vice-president.
The Wesco Hall Referendum says that "the Student Senate passed an increase of $7.50 per student per semester in student fees" and would be paid "for the next 20 years" for academic buildings like Wesco Hall. If the required names are acquired,
So far the petition has tallied 1,222 of the necessary 1,247 names, but they have until March 9. Beck thinks they will be successful and hopes for as many as 1,600 signatures.
Miller said that Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Texas, graduate student, was going to challenge the petition because he does not want it. Miller added that Greg Thomas, Shawnee Mission sophomore seeking the position of student body vice-president as a member of the Alliance Party, had signed the petition.
Beck said that members of the other campus parties are disenchanted with their parties platforms, in particular Marilyn Foreman, Sioux Falls, S.D., freshman running for Student Senate with the Alliance. He said she was unhappy with the Alliance's stand of the Vietnam
situation and wanted something more pragmatic so she has formed the Oliver coalition in support of Miller's platform.
Miller said that last spring a referendum decision was passed to have student representation on the basis of living groups to supplement the current school representation and for more student power in the University Senate. He said that no action had been taken by the Student Senate Executive Committee, in particular Peter George, Rick Von Ende and David Awbrey.
"We think that direct orders from the student body should be followed up," he said.
Miller said that he wanted to make
government more responsive to the student problems. He said that students leaving University resident halls was such a problem for which he wanted a solution. The solution is not for a year long contract he said, but to give the students a chance to voice their complaints and move towards an answer.
Beck said that off-campus housing to the north and east was a slum and would not meet with the Lawrence Municipal Minimal Housing Code.
"Over one year ago," he said, "the student government had the responsibility to investigate. Nothing has been done and the slums are still there. We suggest constructive action."
Kansas Regent objects to Senate tax bill
Kansan
Bv JIM ROTHGEB
Max Bickford, executive secretary of the Kansas Board of Regents, said Wednesday that he
M. M. T.
Max Bickford
is hopeful that a Senate bill dealing with the removal of statutory tax exemptions of residence halls
Meningitis strikes again at army base
FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. (UPI)—The 26th case of meningitis to hit this army base since Jan. 1 was reported Wednesday on the eve of a congressional investigation into charges recruits here are worked so hard they are susceptible to disease.
Pvt. William Carver of Alexandria, Ind., was the latest victim. He was described as "very seriously ill."
It was the 38th case of meningitis at the military base since October. Three soldiers died of the disease last month and Tuesday Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo., demanded an investigation.
Rep. Mendel Rivers, D-S C., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, ordered Missouri Reps, William J. Randall and Richard H. Ichord to conduct an on-the-spot investigation. Randall and Ichord were scheduled to arrive Thursday.
Maj. Gen. William T. Bradley, post commander, told newsmen Tuesday he did not think an investigation was necessary, but he would not oppose one.
"... reports from soldiers and their parents indicate that the Army has been lax in dealing with this meningitis crisis," Eagleton said. The senator said he had received reports of exhausting duty, extensive harassment and inadequate medical assistance.
Base officials met with newsmen to deny the charges. Col. Thomas U. Greer, commander of the brigade reporting most of the illnesses, said the accusations were "utterly untrue."
Col. Ellsworth H. Miller, post medical officer and commander of the hospital, said "every practical step" was being taken to stop the outbreak and added that it was "highly unlikely it will spread to nearby communities."
But base officials, including Bradley, will make no further comment Wednesday and Maj. Willis Haas, post information officer, said it was expected authorities would "put the clamps" on any information from the base.
FAYE PLAYS MODEL
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Faye
Dunaway will star as a fashion
model in Universal's "Puzzle of a
Downfall Child."
2 KANSAN Mar. 5
1970
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
Fred's Auto Painting
1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487
and union facilities at the six state-operated colleges and universities in Kansas will be rejected by the Kansas House of Representatives.
Bickford objected to the bill in a hearing before the House Assessment Taxation Committee Monday. A group of four University of Kansas students were also on hand to contest the issue.
The bill would mean that residence hall fees and married student housing fees would increase by as much as $10 to $20 a month
and student tuition would increase by $8 per semester to pay for taxes on the student unions.
Bickford mentioned two ways in which the bill would not be effective.
He said that passage of the bill would result in law suits arising to test the constitutionality of the tax exempt status. Expensive suits might even be carried to the Kansas Supreme Court.
Bickford also said that it would directly affect the student by raising his residence hall housing
fee. The increase would mean that residence halls would have trouble filling their quotas. Students would seek cheaper forms of housing, Bickford said.
Bickford said that he was speaking on behalf of the Board of Regents in contesting the bill.
Bickford said the bill was introduced in the Senate due to a two year study of taxes and tax exemptions. Congressional committees then decided to remove the exemptions from college residence halls and student unions would keep the bill "consistent" with the congressional decision, Bickford said.
HOMESICKNESS CURE
MADRID (UPI)—More than two-thirds of Madrid's 3 million inhabitants were born outside the capital. To keep from getting homesick for the provinces, they have organized 24 "casas regionales" (regional houses) where they meet, play musical instruments, drink country wine and sing the praises of life in the unhurried pueblo.
Musical youth group gets concert benefits
With $125.55 received from a benefit concert given by the "Gaslight Gang" Sunday, the Lawrence Friends of Music Inc. will purchase new instruments for the Lawrence Youth Symphony.
Mrs. Jerry Hutchison, a member of the organization, said the Friends of Music give Lawrence school children a chance to participate in musical training and perform with the symphony.
The symphony, she said, now has over 400 children and is still growing, creating a need for
more instruments.
Mrs. Hutchison said that John W. Pozdro, KU professor of theory and Charles K. Hoag, assistant professor of music theory at KU, have written musical scores specially for the Youth Symphony.
This year Darrell Handel, instructor of music theory at KU, will also begin composing for the group.
Larry Williams, who directs many levels of school orchestras in Lawrence, is voluntarily working with the Youth Symphony.
people-to-people
People-to-People needs students to tutor at the Intensive English Center. This requires only about two hours a week to work with and help new foreign students at KU.
If you are interested in helping, call the People-to-People office, 864-3853, and leave your name.
THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
THE SPIRIT OF CAPTAIN P. J. LOOMS IN THE NITE AT THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Captain P. J., a mischievous, ole, briny sea captain, is said to loom in the darkness of The Captain's Table during the night. Since his death P. J. has been looking for the best place possible to settle up to a table for a long and fulfilling meal. He seems to have found it. The Captain's Table.
It is said that his crew committed mutiny when P. J. forced them into wearing pajamas to bed every night. They retaliated by locking him up and starving him to death. They dumped his pajama clad body into the cold nite sea.
Some of our customers at the Captain's Table say they have seen the bearded P. J. (in his pajamas) outside scratching on the window between 8: P.M. and 2:30 A.M. He seemed to want their dinner (Top Sirloin, K.C. Strip, T-bone, Cubed Beef, Roast Beef, and others).
If you come in between 8: P.M. and 2:30 A.M., you may see P. J. looming in the darkness. But, if you don't, you'll still enjoy the most enjoyable meals in town. The spirit of Captain P. J. thinks so. You'll think so after you have tried it.
- Come in after we beat K-State Saturday and celebrate over a juicy steak. Keep your eyes open for the bearded one, P. J.
23rd St. & Naismith Dr.
Monday - Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
The
Ship Wheel
Captain's Table
Across the street from Lindley Hall
Campus briefs
Basketball pep campaign planned
Freshman class officers have asked all organized living groups on campus to join a campaign to promote spirit for the KU-K-State game this Saturday, said Melissa Wayne, Overland Park freshman and secretary of the freshman class.
Each organized living group has been asked to display a large poster or banner to counter the "purple pride" campaign of K-State, Miss Wayne said.
Spanish guitarist to perform
Spanish guitarist Francisco Espinosa will perform at 8 p.m. Sunday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union following the dedication ceremonies for the new auditorium.
Espinosa, who is on his fourth tour of the United States, will emphasize the flamenco and folkloric facets of Spanish guitar music.
Tickets for the concert are now available at the SUA office in the Kansas Union and will be available at the door.
NROTC drill team to compete
The Navy ROTC drill team from the University of Kansas will compete in the national championship drill meet on March 13-14 at the University of Illinois.
Clinton Laing, Topeka junior, is captain of the drill team.
Clinton Laing, Topeka junior, is captain of the drill team. More than 100 drill units from all over the United States will compete in the two-day meet. The event will be sponsored by the Pershing Rifles.
Mental health grant awarded
Charles K. Warriner, professor of sociology, was awarded a $6,871 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to conduct research aimed at determining "sources of strain in the university."
The study will attempt to determine some of the relationships between levels of university organization, professor orientation, and student response to the educational environment. Warriner said he would start with the assumption that the basic source of problems to
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 3
university students was not in the character of the students but in the nature of the university
in the nature of the university.
Indian seminar scheduled
A Student/Faculty seminar subtitled "The question is not how you can Americanize us, but how we can Americanize you" is scheduled for March 13 in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room, Dennis Dailey, assistant professor of social welfare, said Wednesday. He said the seminar is being sponsored by the School of Social Welfare to deal with issues concerning American Indians.
"The goal is to acquaint people not only with the problems of Indians but also to attend to potential solutions," Dailey said.
The 20th Century life style on the American Indian and institutional racism will be discussed at the seminar. Other problems to be discussed are cultural conflict, the decision facing Indian youths to retain Indian traditions or accept the White culture, and problems relating to reservation and urban life. Dailey said the panels will also deal with the issue of the American Indian as a member of a poverty subculture.
Dailey said the featured speaker will be Mrs. Mary Cornelius, Tribal Chairman of the Little Shell Ojibwa Indian reservation in North Dakota. A youth panel, composed of six Indians from urban areas and reservations, and a panel of adult Indians will also participate in the seminar, he said.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Dina Merrill will star in "The Walking Major," a Japanese production in which the actress portrays the wife of a U.S. Army major who annually walked 900 miles across Japan raising money for orphans.
"The United States government
DINA STARRING
has been very unfaithful in dealing with the Indian," he said. "Over 200 treaties have been made by the government and not one has been kept."
Dailey said the government's laxity in dealing with Indians has fostered their distrust of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He said the government is also responsible for the Seminoles in Florida still considering themselves at war with the U.S. Government.
"This is the year of the Indian," Dailey said, "and I hope they can capitalize on it."
THE HILL in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11l.
Haworth Hall to be leveled
Old Haworth Hall is to come down. Bids on the contract for razing are to be opened at 2 p.m. today in Topeka.
The now vacant Haworth was acquired in 1909, according to the KU financial report. It is to be torn down to make way for Wescoe Hall, the new humanities building planned for construction in Wescoe hole across from Strong Hall.
The demolition job is to be completed within 60 days of the contract assignment. Allen Wiechert, assistant to Vice Chancellor Keith Lawton said. A part of the structure to be saved is the parapet with "Geology and Mining" imprinted on it. One suggestion is that it be used in some fashion in connection with the State Geological Survey building.
Business Abroad:
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THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
O'BRIEN
'Think of it Larry-a chance to get back in the driver's seat!'
The guard changes
When Lawrence O'Brien announced Tuesday that he would, after all, accept the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee, the beleaguered party was struck by a faint beam of light from the end of the long tunnel it entered at the 1968 Chicago convention.
Unlike Oklahoma's Sen. Fred Harris, the departing chairman, O'Brien makes few waves. Yet his experience, gained as Presidential campaign manager for John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson and from his earlier whirl as national chairman during the Humphrey campaign, should benefit the party.
Harris took the post in early 1969 amid cries that his senatorial duties would interfere with party responsibilities. To an extent, his detractors were right. The Oklahoman, a critic of the Vietnam war, decided to prod the party into a dovish stance. No matter how good his intentions, it became apparent that some Democrats either didn't want to go his way or didn't want to go as far. And Franklin D. Roosevelt's grand coalition of labor, intellectuals, the poor and Southerners—always a shaky combination—couldn't stand the new leftward tug.
The party was also without a vibrant leader after Chappaquiddick; Hubert Humphrey remained a symbol of the old politics, while Sen. George McGovern's commission-chairing and Sen. Edmund Muskie's speechmaking failed to arouse the public.
In addition, the Democrats were still faced
with an $8 million debt from the 1968 campaign.
Fund raising dinners and last month's Miami Beach gala netted disappointingly little.
So Harris decided to chuck the whole affair, leaving the tangle to O'Brien.
O'Brien is faced with dismal prospects in the fall congressional races. Twenty-five Democratic Senators are up for reelection but only 10 Republicans. The GOP needs just seven new seats to gain control of the Upper House for the first time since 1955. The Democrats already trail the Republicans in governorships, 18 to 32, and the outlook there is bleak for a Democratic resurgence. Furthermore, the Republicans hold the White House and all the tasty patronage that accompanies it.
Whether a party chaired by O'Brien, who was backed for the job by Humphrey, can enlist youth is uncertain. The disappointment of the 1968 Kennedy and McCarthy campaigns lingers, while splinter groups led by the enigmatic image of Sen. Eugene McCarthy threaten to form a new party.
Yet O'Brien may well be able to gather the remnants of the old party. And given the predominantly liberal list of possible 1972 Presidential contenders—Sen, Harold Hughes, McGovern, Muskie, Harris, Humphrey and lately, former Attorney General Ramsey Clark—and O'Brien's credentials as a former Kennedy man, the Democrats' future thrust looks vaguely promising.
—Monroe Dodd
Griff & the Unicorn
BY SOKOLOFF
AT EVENING, BEFORE I GO TO SLEEP, I TRY TO THINK OF ALL THE THINGS, THAT I ACCOMPLISHED TODAY...
SO WHAT HAPPENS?
I WIND UP RACKING MY BRAINS ALL NIGHT...
$ \textcircled{C} $ David Sokoloff 1970
Pit and the pendant
By CHARLIE CAPE
Kansan Makeup Editor
Between the time a girl enters college and the time she graduates, she is apt to experience a run-in with an institution on today's campus—the lavalier (not to be confused with the lavaliere or laval-liere).
Webster says that this is "a pendant ornament on a fine chain that is worn around the neck as a necklace." It is the college equivalent to a high school boy giving his steady girl his class ring or ID bracelet.
Being lavaliered to someone is the next best thing to being pinned, which is the same thing as being pre-engaged. And before pre-engaged is the next best thing to being engaged.
Now, being engaged is as much of this as many guys want, but somehow, a good part of them seem to make it to the altar and are transformed into what is commonly referred to as husbands.
This is to say that being married is the next best thing to a. . . to a. . . to a, well, who knows what?
One simple thought to those who are considering the lavalier (from either side)—Do not go gentle into that good night. . .
hearing voices—
To the editor:
At one time I held the opinion that political careers did not attract the most talented individuals of a society, but attracted only insecure gentlemen whose history included submission to domineering mothers. My opinions have matured on this matter since I have encountered handbills describing the campaign platform of various parties here at KU, and I find it increasingly difficult to make this accusation. These bills impressed me with a paling stupidity, a dizzy idealism, and such a loose grasp on reality that to argue against their goals would resemble arguing against the existence of either. When I remember the traditional ineffectiveness of these elective offices of student leadership, I stand in awe of the candidates' pretentiousness. If a university contains the greatest minds of the new generation, and if these candidates are the greatest of the greatest of the new generation, then I predict the masses of the future will demand many more stomach pumps to relieve the nausea effected by the buffoonery of these political pathogens.
Charles Novo-Gradac Kansas City sophomore
- * *
To the editor:
In writing the following, did Gordon Allport have Senator Shultz in mind?
A person widely experienced and knowing many courses of conduct has many degrees of freedom. It is in this sense that the broadly educated man is freer than the man narrowly trained. Today we are witnessing the frightening things that political leaders with one-channeled minds can do. What alarms us is their simplistic view of social and political reality. They know only one solution; and this solution is totalitarian and spurious. Their lack of tolerance and fear of dissent reflect their own lack of freedom. One-channeled minds can never comprehend that truth may have many channels.
(From "Becoming" by Gordon W. Allport)
Henry Edwards
Waterville sophomore
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Perry Reservoir nearly complete
By MIKE RADENCICH
Kansan Staff Writer
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has nearly completed a new addition to the Kansas repertoire of boating and fishing havens.
Perry Reservoir, located 15 miles northwest of Lawrence, will provide for 160 miles of shoreline with recreational facilities and eight boat docks plus 12,200 acres of water surface area.
The prime functions of the new
Warnings may go on pill boxes
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said Wednesday it will soon require drug manufacturers to place a government-written warning of possible health hazards in every package of birth control pills.
Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis,
hailed the "courageous" and "historic"
decision as vindication of his Senate small business subcommittee's controversial hearings on the pill.
He said the 8.5 million women who take the pill will be able to learn of the risks from the required pamphlet. He said two-thirds of the nation's doctors fail to mention these hazards when prescribing oral contraceptives.
Dr. Charles C. Edwards, FDA commissioner, told a hearing before Nelson's subcommittee that the leaflet will be required, perhaps within two months.
The 700-word draft statement he proposed says women with serious liver disease, cancer of the breast, other cancers and vaginal bleeding should not take the pill and women with kidney disease, asthma, high blood pressure, epilepsy, fibroids of the uterus, migraine headaches or mental depression should take it under "special supervision."
It says reactions from the pill may include blood clots, mental depression, swelling, skin rash, jaundice, increased blood pressure, increased sugar content in the blood, headaches, nervousness, dizziness, fatigue, backache, changes in appetite and sex drive, pain when urinating, growth of more body hair, loss of hair, nervousness and irritability.
"Scientists know the hormones in the pill have caused cancer in animals, but they have no proof that the pill causes cancer in humans," the leaflet adds.
Edwards said he decided to require the leaflet because "I have come to the conclusion that the information being supplied to the patient . . . is insufficient."
Edwards added that the FDA's position on oral contraceptives is that they "are an effective and safe method for birth control, but as with other potent drugs have both contraindications (side effects) and complications."
He did disclose that 15 deaths from blood-clotting associated with the pill were reported to the FDA between July 1 and Dec. 31, 1969.
O'Brien challenged
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gordon St. Angelo, Indiana Democratic chairman, announced Wednesday he would challenge Lawrence F. O'Brien for the national party chairmanship. He claimed a "silent majority" of support on the national committee.
But early arrivals among committee members gathering for the vote on Thursday strongly indicated O'Brien would handily win back the chairmanship he held during the 1968 campaign.
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 5
reservoir will be to provide for additional flood protection, water conservation and, of course, recreation.
Perry Reservoir will, with its capacity of holding 480,000 acre-feet of water during flood conditions, protect the Delaware River Basin and along the Kansas River.
Along with this flood protection will be included the multipurpose pool which can be used to add to downstream flows for water supply and water quality.
Recreational facilities will include eight boat docks with a large marina where fishing tackle may be purchased, boats may be rented and other supplies may be obtained. The marina will be run by Marine Enterprises Incorporated, and is scheduled for completion on May 15.
George Hathaway, reservoir ranger, said that sportsmen will find excellent fishing during the coming years. He said the Corps of Engineers has stocked the lake with many of the favorite game fishes common in the Midwest.
Gamefish already thriving in the reservoir include Northern Pike, Walleye, Large-mouth Bass, Bluegill, Crappie, and Channel Catfish.
Hathaway said that waterfowl hunting will be allowed along the reservoir except in the public use areas and in the state park areas. Along with this will be provided some 11,000 acres of available land for upland game hunting he said.
The public use areas, Hathaway said, will provide modern toilets, showers for swimmers (swimming will be allowed along the beaches he said), boat ramps and sewage dump stations. He also said there will be no charge for use of the public areas except in the state parks.
The lake itself is located mostly in Jefferson County and extends upstream along the Delaware River 17 miles to Valley Falls. Along with the 480,000 acre-feet of flood control storage there will be provided some 290,000 acre-feet reserved for multipurpose and sedimentation reserve with 150,000 acre-feet allotted for water supply to the State of Kansas.
The dam consists of a rolled-clay water tight core with less water resistant material covering either side. The water side of the dam is covered with rocks to protect it from erosion.
Completion of the dam in 1969 along with present relocation of roads, railroads, cemeteries, municipalities and utilities gave rise to the commencement of water impoundment on Jan. 15, 1969.
The contract for construction of the lower portion of the dam was awarded in June of 1964 to the lowest government approved bidder with the contract for completion of the dam being awarded in June 1966.
Sketches, exhibits featured at Festival
Exhibits will be displayed from Latin America, Guiana, Trinidad, India, Japan, Iran, Germany, the Arabic nations, China, Korea, France and the Nordic nations.
Sketches and exhibits will be featured from all over the world at University of Kansas' 17th annual International Festival. The program is scheduled for March 14 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The ballroom will be open at 6 p.m. for inspection of the exhibits. The program of skits is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m., and the exhibits will again be open for an hour at the conclusion of the show.
Presentations will be given by these countries: India, Sapera dance; Arabic nations, a story of the history of Palestine; Japan, karate and Judo demonstration; Venezuela, a musical skit; Israel, a film entitled "Hello KU;" China, a sketch, "Ode to China's Farmers," and Guiana-Trinidad, "Cultural Triangle."
The reservoir project, to be completed this year and dedicated August 15, cost $48 million dollars.
Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, said more than 200 students are expected to participate in the program. Coan added there will be no charge for admission, and all who are interested are welcome to attend.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Secretary of the Air Force Robert Seamans Jr. Wednesday informed U.S. Rep. Garner Shriver, R-Kan., that McConnell Air Force base in Wichita will not be among Air Force installations scheduled for closing as part of the Defense Department effort to reduce military expenditures.
TOPEKA (UFJ)—The Kansas Senate Wednesday passed and sent to the House the $26 million supplementary school aid bill.
School bill passes, tax lid debate next
The measure was passed unanimously by the upper chamber before debate began on Gov. Robert B. Docking's property tax lid bill.
Numerous amendments were proposed early in the debate, and there were rumors of a possible filibuster by a group of senators who opposed the property tax lid.
McConnell won't close
Shriver said the Wichita base will continue to fulfill its important mission in the Tactical Air Command.
Nurse quits in protest of hair policy
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI)—The University of Missouri Medical Center assistant director of nursing services, Miss Gail Benjamin, resigned today in protest to the firing of three medical center employees because of long hair styles.
Miss Benjamin, who has been with the center five years, announced her resignation in a letter to medical director Dr. Kenneth Keown. It will be effective June 1.
The nurse, who holds degrees from Northwestern, Columbia and Washington Universities, complained that nursing services is the only department where long-haired male employees have been ordered to get haircuts or leave.
She also said nurses are professional and should be able to determine their own standards of appearance and behavior.
Another letter to Dr. Keown signed by 100 male and female employees said that "personal merit in one's job—not personal taste in appearance—should determine who works here."
A hearing was being held in Boone County Circuit Court today on whether to grant a temporary restraining order against the center. The three discharged workers filed for the injunction.
PAYOFF CROP
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI)—Kansas' most valuable crop is wheat. Quality characteristics of wheat such as weight per bushel, percentage of protein, strength of gluten and amount of dockage determine its value.
Wheat quality surveys provide the wheat industry with timely knowledge of desirable characteristics.
THE DAM IS A MASSIVE FORM OF CONSTRUCTION. IT IS LOCATED ON THE BANK OF THE RIVER, AND IS USED TO DRAFT RESISTANCE FROM EMPEROR'S ARROW. THE DAM IS DESIGNED TO REDUCE THE TURBULENCE IN THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER. IT IS ONE OF THE MOST NOTABLE SAFETIES IN THE CITY.
Perry be dammed
Perry Dam and Reservoir, 15 miles northwest of Lawrence, will be completed soon. The reservoir has a capacity of 146,619,450,000 gallons, or 586,478,800,000 quarts, or 1,172,957,600,000 pints,
Air Force ROTC cadets finish course
course
Four members of Air Force ROTC at the University of Kansas have completed the AFROTC flight instruction program. This program gives these students up to 35 hours of in flight training which amounts to a private pilot's license.
The four students are Alan Asher, Barksdale Air Force Base, La., senior; Alan Hansberry, Wichita senior; Harry Hutcheson, Overland Park senior, and Steven McConnell, Atchison senior.
The greatest result of this program has been that the Air Force now receives a higher quality of pilot trainee and the washout rate has been greatly reduced in pilot school, an Air Force spokesman said.
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Biology majors perform cell surgery
By CHERYL BOWMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Every student who graduates from the University of Kansas with a degree in biology is a surgeon . . . of sorts.
Some have become exceedingly skilled in the technique of operating with a glass rod.
While students in the KU School of Medicine probably have an edge over the biology students in technique and knowledge of surgery, they need no more dexterity than the biology microsurgeons who are required to remove portions of a one-celled protozoan that are no larger than the dot of an "i."
"It takes practice and dexterity," said Brower Burchill, assistant professor of biology and instructor of the course in cell structure and function for all biology majors. "If you are the least bit shaky, you won't be successful."
The organism on which the stu-
The people responsible for the destruction of the Feb. 23 issue of the University Daily Kansan should be prosecuted, Thomas E. Sullivan, Kansas City, junior, said Wednesday.
Prosecution asked in UDK destruction
Sullivan presented a statement to David Awbrey, president of the student body, asking that those responsible for the incident be prosecuted, if possible.
"This destruction of student
property did not accomplish anything except to cause harsh feelings from other students," Sullivan said.
If the people involved in the incident were trying to present a grievance, Sullivan said, they should have done something constructive. "Throwing the papers in Potter Lake was completely irresponsible," he said.
Mar.5 1970
6 KANSAN
dents operate is the same protozoan, Stentor coerulous that Burchill has researched for the last six years.
"The incident was not an act against the University, Chancellor, or the printing service," Sullivan said. "It was an act against the entire student body."
It is a single-celled organism with a rather complex organization, large enough to be easily observed. The students study its powers of regeneration by cutting off the feeding cilia at the mouth of the organism and then observing the regenerative process as the cell creates new cilia.
The technique of microsurgery is to heat a fine glass rod over a flame, and then stretch it out to a fine point. This is the "surgical tool." Stentors are put under low magnification on a dissecting microscope for the operation.
ate. It knows its feeding mechanism is gone and that if it is not replaced, the organism will starve.
The organism somehow knows what portions it has to regener-
Official Bulletin
Todav
Jayhawk Joggers Club. East Door.
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Special Film: "Forbidden Games"
Dyhe Auditorium, 7 & 8.9m
Stentor is a unique cell, the only ciliated protozoan that will withstand the harsh treatment of microsurgey. It can be slashed into pieces and, as long as the pieces remain in contact, it will regenerate itself.
Senior Recital: Mary Westhaus,
senior recital, quintet, swankhorst Recital Hall 8, p.m.
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnastics. 7 p.m.
Friday
Popular Film: "In Cold Blood."
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
703 N. 46th St.
Burchill said if scientists knew how the cell functioned normally, they could protect it from its environment.
Folk Dance Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium, 7.30 p.m.
"But until we know what normal is," he said, "we can't decide what abnormal is."
He said the work with the Senator organism could be applied to cancer research.
AWARD WINNER
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — "Run Wild, Run Free" has won the Copper Horse as the best film at the recent International Children's Festival in Gijon, Spain.
DUPLICATE BRIDGE
WHO—Students and Faculty WHEN—March 5,6:45 p.m. WHERE—Kansas Room, Union
sua
Attention Juniors
THE EVG BLAST!
It's Party Time
Friday at the Armory
IVORY
TOWER
Attention Juniors
THE BIG BLAST!
It's Party Time
Friday at the Armory
THE BEST OF THE MIDDLE-AGE ROCKS
That's right, it's party time—and what a party. (Parties at the National Guard Armory are traditionally the best!) The first Junior Class Party of the semester promises to be one of the biggest gigs of the year. Music will be provided by the IVORY TOWER, straight from their Chicago concert. The tap on the student's favorite beverage will be running FREELY from 8 until midnight, and its free to Junior due payers and only $3.00 per couple for non-payers. The whole thing takes place Friday, March 6, at the National Guard Armory, the place of the BIG BLAST. You will be sorry if you miss it! Compliments Ace Johnson
Campus Interviews
These companys will hold placement interviews next week. (All require United States citizenship unless otherwise indicated.)
The School of Engineering 111 Marvin Hall Monday
Missouri Portland Cement Co., BS in chemical engineering
North American Rockwell L.A. and Space Division, BS or MS in aerospace, electrical, mechanical or metalurgy and materials engineering
North American Rockwell, Autonetics Division, MS in mechanical engineering and electrical majors. BS in mechanical engineering. Summer work is available.
North American Rockwell, Power Systems Division, BS in electrical engineering, mechanical and metallurgy and materials engineering, BS, MS, or PhD in aerospace, or chemical engineering. MS or PhD in engineering mechanics.
PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
Sperry Systems Management Division, BS in engineering physics. BS, MS or PhD in electrical engineering, math and physics.
Texas Instruments, BS in engineering or mechanical mechanics, BS or MS in industrial or mechanical engineering, BS, MS in chemical or electrical engineering.
Tuesday
Northern Natural Gas Co., BS in civil engineering, BS or MS in chemical, electrical, industrial, mechanical, or petroleum engineering and math.
Texas Instruments, BS in engineering mechanical engineering, MS or PhD in engineering mechanics. BS, MS, or chemical or electrical engineering
U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, BS in geology, BS or MS in civil, electrical or mechanical engineering Summer work is available.
Federal Highway Administration, BS, MS or PhD in civil engineering.
U. S. Army Material Command, BS or MS in industrial engineering, BS, MS or PhD in aerospace, chemical and electrical engineering or physics.
CPC International. BS in chemical, mechanical engineering on chemistry.
W, D. Kart Co., BS in mechanical engineering. A permanent visa is required. Suitably.
Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, BS in engineering physics. BS or MS in engineering mechanics. BS, MS or PhD in engineering mechanics. BS, MS or PhD in electrical engineering.
Thursday
Wisconsin Department of Transportation, BS or MSc in engineering. Thursday
Goodyear Aerospace, BS in engineering physics. BS or MS in mechanical engineering or in electrical engineering and physics. *ilinois Division of Highways, BS*
Illinois Division of Highways, BS or MS in civil engineering.
Friday
Mason & Hanger, BS in chemical, civil, electrical, industrial and mechanical engineering and math. Summer work is available.
City of Detroit, BS in architectural, chemical, civil, electrical or mechanical engineering, a combination of civil engineering and business administration. chemistry, math and physics. accounting, nursing and recreation.
Ell Lilly & Co. BS in civil engineering, MS in engineering mechanics. BS or MS in chemical, industrial or mechanical engineers. U.S. citizenship or Puerto Ricans with majors in engineering, accounting and finance.
Hughes Aircraft Co. BS in engi-
neering, or PhD in electrical engineering,
or PhD in electrical engineering, or
Schlumberger Well Services, Summit
engineering or petroleum engineering.
Firemen kept busy by KU
Lawrence firemen have answered a record number of fire calls on University property in the past month.
For the second time in less than a week, firemen were called to the campus to investigate a fire in Marvin Hall, which houses the Schools of Engineering and Architecture and Urban Design. Earlier last week a cigarette smoldering in a trash can brought firemen to the Military Science Building.
In past weeks, firemen were called to the Gas Light tavern because of a trash fire and the Alpha Delta Phi sorority reported fires on two separate occasions.
BUILT-IN TIPS
COPENHAGEN (UPI)—Danish waiters have done away with the tipping system in restaurants—but customers will still get stuck.
After threats of a strike, restaurant owners accepted a union demand to tack on a 13 per cent tip to the original price on the menu.
KANSAN 7
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Mar. 5
1970
---
Venable keeps Wildcats laughing
MANHATTAN—As soon as Jerry Venable arrived at Kansas State, he started giving everyone nicknames.
First he called David Hall Buffarilla because Hall reminded him of a buffalo and a gorilla. He tabbed David Lawrence as The Duck because of his walk. Then, he named Jack Thomas Gentle Ben after the big brown bear, and named Eddie Smith
Chicken Little and Mike Barber Pin-Head, and on and on.
Then everyone else, having enough of Venable's fun, turned around and made him The Squirrel.
Venable is partly right. He does kind of look like a squirrel, especially when he flashes his frequent grin which protrudes big, white teeth. And there's also a little squirrel in his actions.
"Maybe, they mean The Squirrel as being fast and quick," he said, though knowing that wasn't the reason. "Or I hoped it was because I looked a little like a squirrel. I hope it doesn't mean that I act squirrelly."
"I'll tell you," testifies coach Cotton Fitzsimons. "He does a lot of squirrelly things out on the floor. And he's always saying crazy things that don't make much sense."
Venable, who bused in from
Ferrum (Va.) Junior College, has been the guy who has kept the K-State players loose before and between games this season.
"You have to have somebody around to keep 'em loose," he says. "Maybe that's my role on the team—keeping 'em loose. That isn't my only role, I hope."
LAS CRUCES, N.M. (UPI)—That big bear which blocked New Mexico State's way to the NCAA basketball championship two years in a row won't be around this year in the first round playoffs.
It isn't. He has his role on the floor, as well, scoring 15.3 points a game. And Venable keeps everyone loose by talking . . . constantly talking.
Cats may face Aggies
But Coach Lou Henson says his
8 KANSAN Mar. 5
1970
Aggies will probably have as tough a time with Rice University this year as they did with the UCLA Bruins in 1968 and 1969.
"We'll be playing in Fort Worth and about 85 to 95 per cent of the crowd at that game will be for Rice," Henson said. "It will be like playing before a home court."
In the last two years, NMSU
lost in the first round play to the Bruins. In 1968, UCLA beat the Aggies 58-49 and the Bruins came back last year to trounce the Aggies 53-38.
If the Aggies get past the first round of the NCAA, however, there's a better than average chance they will have to tangle with UCLA again.
8
For instance, a couple pro football scouts inquired about him earlier this year.
Henson, however, isn't worrying about UCLA right now.
jersey on inside out before the title-clinching game with Colorado here a couple weeks ago, and he eagerly points the finger at others who have done the same.
"I'm like John Carlos, I'll start at a million and work down," he says. "Naw, I might try it. I'll do anything once, especially for a million."
The senior forward also fashions himself as something of a ladies' man.
"I'll tell you what you can say. You can tell 'em that I'm not engaged or married. You can put that anyway you want to. Be sure they know that," he says.
As a final tribute to Venable's squirreliness, if there is such a word, there's the card from a fan that's posted on his door. It reads: "I'm Jerry Venable. I may not be the best, but I'm pretty darn good."
Venable concedes he put his
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Optimism grows for next year
Freshman team reveals secret to success
By DON BAKER
Kansan Sports Writer
Kansas' freshman basketball team has been the subject of much optimistic conversation during the current season, particularly because of its tall, talented front line composed of Mike Bossard, Randy Canfield and Leonard Gray. All three have shown good potential with sporadic moments of greatness to compliment their high scoring and rebounding averages.
However, it is a fourth member of this talented yearling team that has repeatedly delighted KU fans
KANSAS
Practice makes perfect
Mark Williams, 5-11 guard for the Jayhawk frosh, believes in hard practice and works out from five to six hours a day, even in the off-season.
Royal bats show power
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI)—Ed Kirkpatrick and Dennis Paepk drove in two runs apiece to lead the Dunlops to a 6-2 victory over the Schultzes in a Kansas City Royals' intersquad game Wednesday filled with extra base hits.
Doubles by Fred Rico, just back after three days on the sidelines because of tonsilitis, and Kirk-patrick broke a 2-2 tie in the bottom of the fifth inning. Paepke followed with a two-run homer, his second extra base hit.
Kirkpatrick was 3-for-4 and had a sacrifice fly. Luis Alcaraz and Paepeh had two hits apiece for the winners.
Bob Oliver hit his second home run in as many days and Chuck Harrison collected a pinch run as the Royals ran their home rn total to seven in the last three squad games.
Lou Piniella had two of the seven hits allowed by the Schultses, Roger Nelson, Paul Splittorff and Ken Wright.
Wright, a rookie drafted from Boston, allowed three singles in three scorring innings and now has allowed just one run in eight innings. Nelson and Splittorrff each allowed two hits and one run.
Centerfielder Amos Otis remained hospitalized for a third day for further examination, Thursday, to determine if he has a kidney stone, but doctors said they hope he will be back in uniform on Saturday.
with his deadly shooting, deft passing and ball handling and overall play.
Mark Williams, a 5-11 sandy-haired playmaker averaging 20 points a game, takes his basketball seriously. A normal practice day in Allen Field House will find Williams working out for nearly six hours.
Assistant coach Sam Miranda said, "Since I have been here we have never had anyone who works as hard as Mark does. The kid has a great attitude."
Williams' attitude is reflected in his analysis of next year's potential.
"I'm looking forward to next year," he said. "I think everyone is expecting us to win (the Big Eight conference) and I think we will."
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 9
Williams is used to playing with a winner. He graduated from South High School in Denver where during his senior year the school won the Class 3-A (classification for the largest Colorado high schools) state basketball title. Williams averaged 25 points a game on that team and the college recruiters naturally took notice.
Williams said he decided to attend Kansas because of its reputation.
"I thought I'd learn more if I came to KU," he said, "and also I wanted the chance to play on the best team."
However, it should be noted that KU must, ironically, thank Colorado assistant coach Chuck Gardner for Williams signing with the Jayhawks. Had it not been for him it is likely KU would have overlooked Williams.
As Williams explained it the Jayhawks and freshman coach Gale Catlett were in Boulder where KU was preparing for a Saturday afternoon clash with Colorado. On the Friday evening before Gardner invited Catlett to go to Denver with him to scout
the South High School guard.
Catlett accepted the invitation and was so delighted with what he saw that following the game he went to the dressing room to invite Williams to KU for a weekend visit. Williams accepted and soon afterwards signed with the Jayhawks.
The blow must have been particularly hard for Gardner to take because Colorado was among Williams' top three choices before deciding on KU. Colorado State was the third school.
There has been talk that both Williams and Canfield will be red-shirted next year. This possibility was first aired in a Lawrence Daily Journal-World column written by sports writer Chuck Woodling.
"I would be disappointed if this
did happen," Williams said. "I feel I can make the team and contribute as well."
The Wildcat yearlings defeated KU earlier in Manhattan in a game that resulted in both Jayhawk assistants, Miranda and Catlett, openly criticizing the officiating.
Williams agreed the officiating was poor but refused to blame the loss to it.
"We just didn't play well," he said. "I can't really blame the officiating."
Williams said he thought the freshmen have a good chance to defeat K-State.
"I'm looking forward to playing them again," he said. "Personally I think Missouri has a better team and we came back in the second half to beat them so I think we
can take K-State."
The game marks the season's end but it won't be the end of work for Williams. He said that he will continue to work out daily until the end of the spring semester.
One thing is for sure. Basketball will take up much of Williams' time between this Sunday and next October 15 when KU starts practice for the 1970-71 season.
Williams believes that hard daily practice is vital to being a good basketball player as is evidenced by the 400 to 500 free throws he shoots daily just to perfect this one aspect of his game. And its this kind of attitude that helps make Williams a vital cog in future KU basketball.
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Bron, in three years at Ruskin, rushed for 2-150 yards and averaged 8.1 yards a scamper. In his senior year he scored 14 touchdowns.
Former KU athlete dies
Home of the
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Carl Janis, a member of the 1966-67 KU freshman basketball team, was killed Monday in an automobile accident in Virginia.
Janis was a 6-4 guard who teamed in the backcourt with current Jayhawk guard Chester Lawrence.
Rodgers said with the addition of Bron, the Jayhawks had signed 22 hopefuls for next season.
Jamis, a Chicago native, left KU after his freshman year and joined the Marine Corps. He had returned from Viet Nam prior to the accident.
BURGER CHEF
Football list to 22
Kansas coach Pepper Rodgers announced late Wednesday the signing of Rocky Bron, a 178-pound running back from Kansas City Ruskin, to a Big Eight Conference football letter-of-intent
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Richard Schubert, Lawrence junior, hit a career best on the side horse (9.3) last weekend against Nebraska and has been one of KU's most consistent gymnasts this year.
Cats to test gymnasts
By DON BAKER
Kansan Sports Writer
Enjoying its best season in KU history, the Jayhawk gymnastics team will host the Kansas State Wildcats at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Robinson gymnasium.
The Jayhawks have won ten straight duals since losing the opener to national power Iowa State and will put the streak on the line before a parent's night crowd.
Coach Bob Lockwood said Tuesday that his charges are in good shape and well prepared for the match with the exception of Fred McCracken, Wichita senior, who recently injured a hand in practice. Lockwood said McCracken, the only senior on the team, would definitely miss Friday night's action and may miss the conference meet in two weeks.
Lockwood said Kansas State has its best team in history and that the dual should be a great one.
K-State's best score this season is 157.35 compared to KU's best of 158.85.
"Whoever hits their routines the hardest will win the meet," he said. "Both teams are strong and about equal in depth."
One of the more interesting matchups should come in all around competition. The Wildcats' Kenny Snow, a Lawrence product, is currently rated third in the conference while the Jayhawks' John Brouillette, a Wichita junior, is ranked fourth.
Lockwood termed Snow as one of the best in the country, an indication of the strength of Big Eight gymnastics. He said Snow has been scoring close to S3 in
KU tough at home
Kansas' basketball team will be shooting for its first perfect home record in four years when the Jayhawks wind up their season against tournament bound Kansas State at 8:05 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field House..
Coach Ted Owens' Jayhawks have won all 12 home games this winter, but on the road it's been a different story as Kansas managed only four victories in 13 games.
Last time Kansas logged a perfect season at home was in 1966 when that NCAA club finished 10-0 for its Allen Field House dates. The next year the Jayhawks won all their regular season home games, but bowed to Houston in the NCAA regional played on KU's home court.
10 KANSAN Mar. 5 1970
all-around compared to a 52 for Brouillette.
The Jayhawks' performance this season has resulted in praise from Lockwood.
"This is by far the best team ever in KU history," he said. "We are averaging 8.8 per man and that's a whale of an average."
After Friday night the Jayhawks will have two weeks off before the Big Eight conference
and Stan Clyne.
KANSAN Sports
meet in Manhattan on March 21-22.
The KU lineup for K-State includes:
Side horse: Marc Forkins, Marc Joseph, John Brouillette, and Richard Schubert.
Rings: Marc Joseph, Mark Hannah, John Brouillette, and Kirk Gardner.
Floor exercise: Marc Joseph,
Jon Brouillette, Dan Bradfield,
John Brouillette
Long horse: Marc Joseph, John Brouilleton, Dan Bradfield, and Ron Faunce.
Parallel bars: Stan Clyne, John Brouillette, Marc Joseph, and Terry Blanchard.
High bar: Marc Joseph, John Brouillette, Roger Hemphill, and Gerald Carley.
All-around: John Brouillette and Marc Joseph.
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Basketball Stats
GAME BY GAME
| | G | FG | FGA | Pet. | FT | FTA | Pet. | RB | AV | PF | Dsq. | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Robish | 25 | 239 | 498 | 480 | 183 | 242 | 756 | 300 | 12.0 | 72 | 261 | 26.4 |
| Russell | 25 | 137 | 277 | 495 | 185 | 98 | 763 | 123 | 9.5 | 60 | 339 | 13.6 |
| Stallworth | 25 | 138 | 317 | 435 | 51 | 72 | 708 | 157 | 8.1 | 75 | 327 | 13.1 |
| Kivistro | 25 | 53 | 127 | 417 | 58 | 82 | 709 | 36 | 1.4 | 45 | 1 | 164 |
| Nash | 25 | 47 | 116 | 405 | 39 | 86 | 709 | 60 | 1.4 | 45 | 1 | 163 |
| Brown | 25 | 55 | 116 | 509 | 31 | 43 | 453 | 13 | 5.9 | 58 | 21 | 13.7 |
| Lawrence | 24 | 40 | 92 | 435 | 20 | 35 | 571 | 31 | 1.3 | 33 | 0 | 100 |
| Boselev | 19 | 13 | 69 | 333 | 13 | 18 | 722 | 11 | 1.1 | 22 | 0 | 39 |
| Madau | 11 | 6 | 18 | 303 | 14 | 0 | 751 | 11 | 1.0 | 4 | 0 | 16 |
| Mathews | 11 | 3 | 6 | 1,000 | 0 | 0 | 571 | 3 | 1.3 | 3 | 0 | 16 |
| Others | 1 | 3 | 9 | 222 | 0 | 8 | 250 | 2 | 0.7 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| KU Totals | 25 | 733 | 1604 | 457 | 456 | 691 | 660 | 99.0 | 39.6 | 457 | 19 | 1922 |
| Opponents | 25 | 689 | 1648 | 457 | 456 | 691 | 660 | 99.0 | 39.6 | 457 | 19 | 1758 |
**Team Rebounds:** Kansas 140, Opponents 150 (not included in above).
KU's Top Scorer
| | KU's Top Scorer | KU's Top |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| II Marshall | W | 96-80 | Robisch | 36 | Robisch | 19 | 10,000 |
| V Kentucky | L | 85-115 | Robisch | 25 | Robesch | 11 | 11,500 |
| H Wisconsin | W | 76-60 | Robisch | 31 | Robesch | 16 | 10,345 |
| V Loyola (IL) | W | 72-71 | Robisch | 28 | Robesch | 10 | 2,345 |
| N Novice Dame | W | 75-63 | Robisch | 28 | Robesch | 10 | 2,345 |
| H SMU | W | 89-77 | Robisch | 24 | Russell | 16 | 7,000 |
| H Western Ky. | W | 104-81 | Stallworth | 27 | Russell | 13 | 7,000 |
Rebounder
| | Rebounder | Att. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| N Oklahoma | L | 64-84 | Robisch | 29 | Stallworth | 9 | 10,500 |
| N Okla. State | W | 72-56 | Robisch | 29 | Stallworth | 12 | 8,155 |
| N Nebraska | L | 73-78 | Robisch | 19 | Russell | 12 | 10,500 |
| M Missouri | L | 53-56 | Robisch | 22 | Russell | 11 | 5,000 |
| H Iowa State | W | 84-62 | Robisch | 27 | Russell | 26 | 10,500 |
| H Murray State | W | 84-62 | Robisch | 27 | Russell | 12 | 6,500 |
| H Valparaiso | W | 74-58 | Stallworth | 21 | Russell | 13 | 6,500 |
| V Iowa State | L | 89-91* | Robisch | 39 | Russell | 17 | 7,000 |
| H Colorado | W | 75-73 | Robisch | 38 | Russell | 16 | 8,000 |
| H Oklahoma | W | 78-41 | Robisch | 26 | Russell | 12 | 9,500 |
| V Nebraska | L1 | 73-84 | Robisch | 20 | Russell | 7 | 8,125 |
| H Okla. State | W | 69-58 | Robisch | 31 | Brown | 10 | 8,000 |
| V Kansas State | L | 68-71 | Robisch | 20 | Brown | 12 | 12,500 |
| H Nebraska | W | 100-87 | Robisch | 32 | Brown | 21 | 12,500 |
| V Colorado | L | 73-81 | Russell | 20 | Russell | 14 | 5,000 |
| H Missouri | W | 63-45 | Robisch | 23 | Russell | 12 | 12,500 |
| V Ohio State | W | 78-58 | Robisch | 24 | Brown | 17 | 3,800 |
| V Oklahoma | L | 77-82 | Robisch | 26 | Russell | 14 | 4,775 |
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Community KU served by student
THE CHAPTER
John Mauk, Conway Springs senior, is seen working in the KU-Y office with Ruth Cathcart (left), Manhattan junior, and Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior.
Service is the function of the KU-Y and service is the avocation of many University of Kansas students.
A one-man resource of service at KU is John Mauk, Conway Springs senior, who spends long hours each week coordinating the various KU-Y projects. Mauk is a co- vice president of the KUY.
John has spent his college years as a "Big Brother" to many youngsters without fathers at home. He is now in charge of the Community Service Program, which includes the entire "Brother" program. He is also administrator of the programs providing for special activities by volunteers with retarded children, teacher aides to Lawrence schools and the Head Start Program, and tutors to campus students, including blind students. There are about 250 volunteers working in these programs.
Besides all this, John is a proctor, or student manager, at Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall where he orders supplies, makes work assignments and sees that the hall runs smoothly. A chemistry and mathematics major, John is preparing for a medical career, possibly in pediatrics.
John's work with the KU-Y has recently involved him in another project, the Community Service Clearinghouse. This is an agency designed to match student volunteers with community agencies sponsoring social programs.
The Clearinghouse was partially designed to eliminate overlapping of service agencies and to study the needs of the community for such agencies, Mauk said. He worked on the research committee of the Clearninghouse, trying
to pinpoint needs and effectively distribute resources. Clearinghouse volunteers may now find themselves tutoring young elementary students, working on Red Cross drives, or painting baseball diamonds in the spring for the city park department.
on the KU Relays Committee. The Committee is in charge of much of the business work of the relays, Mauk said. They send entry blanks, type various forms for all schools involved, and help announcers and officials. This will be John's fourth year of working on the committee.
With all of his community interests, and the studies which must be maintained to keep him eligible for the scholarship hall, John also finds time to be active
Peruvian government silences newspaper
LIMA, Peru (UPI) — Peru's military government silenced Wednesday its most vocal critic, the Lima daily newspaper Expreso.
About 40 government police seized the newspaper building at dawn Wednesday and prevented anyone from entering.
The newspaper had charged repeatedly in editorials in recent weeks that the government was cooperating with communist elements within the newspaper to promote its downfall. The official government newspaper El Peruano repeatedly had printed statements on its front page from communist-controlled unions in Expreso asking that it be turned over to them as a cooperative.
A brief government statement said the newspaper would be
turned over to its journalist and printers union who would operate it as a cooperative. The government said employees would "assume the obligation of payment" but did not indicate how or when that would be.
The founder of the newspaper, Manuel Ulloa, estimated his investment and that of his stockholders at 25 million soles, about $563,000. A former Peruvian finance minister, Ulloa was sent into exile 17 months ago when the armed forces seized the government. The director of the paper is Ulloa's cousin, Alberto Ulloa.
Seizure of Expreso, which also publishes an afternoon edition. Extra, was the most drastic action yet taken by the government against the press.
Rivers defends US involvement in Laos
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United States is not getting over-involved in Laos and those who say differently "just don't know the facts," Chairman L. Mendel Rivers of the House Armed Services Committee said Wednesday.
Egypt ready to resume diplomatic relations
Rivers spoke to reporters after his committee met in closed session with Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, and contradicted Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield who has said the United States was "up to our necks" in Laos.
Emerging from the same meeting, Rep. Otis Pike, D-N.Y., who frequently disagrees with Rivers, backed him all the way.
Riad made the statements to a closed session of the Egyptian National Assembly. They were reported Thursday by Cairo newspapers.
CAIRO (UPI)—Egypt is ready to resume diplomatic relations with the United States if Washington pressures Israel into immediate withdrawal of occupied territories, Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad said Wednesday.
Meantime, Secretary of State William P. Rogers conferred informally for more than two hours
But Riad insisted that the latest American proposals to settle the Middle East conflict peacefully "cannot form a basis for discussion."
"Based on what we heard this morning, I think you can say quite flatly that the decision has been made that we are not going to get involved in sending military ground combat troops to Laos," Pike told reporters.
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 11
miller
beck
with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but there was no indication of what he said. No committee member—not even Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., a severe critic of U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia—would discuss what was said.
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[Image of a damaged kitchen interior with visible burns and debris scattered around.]
Photo by Marilyn McMullen
Where there's smoke there's fire
A fire in apartment 108-B of Jayhawk Towers at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday caused an estimated $5,000 damage to the kitchenette area, carpeting and ceiling of the apartment. The fire was caused by a skillet of grease which was left on the stove while the renter of the apartment, Glenn Scott, went to class and ran errands.
Shuttle to replace rockets
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—The Kennedy Space Center (KSC) is fighting for its life.
The key to its survival as a major spaceport in the 1980's and beyond is the selection of the site for the main base of operations for the space shuttle orbital transport now on the drawing boards.
The shuttle is planned to serve as an all-purpose, economical space transportation system that will replace most of the costly rockets and spaceships of today.
If the shuttle is not based here, the Space Center and its billion dollars worth of facilities could end up without a program in about 10 years.
One of the requirements for the shuttle is to use existing facilities wherever economically possible. This is the big advantage KSC has, along with its highly skilled pool of manpower.
The shuttle will take off vertically like a rocket and will return to earth like a jetliner, ready for use again in a few days.
The shuttle is expected to be flying around 1978, and its main job will be to ferry men and supplies to and from orbiting space stations. It is expected to be able to carry a dozen men in almost airliner-like conditions or transport 25,000 to 50,000 pounds of supplies.
This is what raises the possibility of locating the shuttle base in another part of the country. A coastal launch site is needed for current "throw-away" rockets that drop spent stages into the sea and which always pose the
12 KANSAN Mar. 5
1970
danger of falling debris if something goes wrong.
But the shuttle will be a new breed of space transport and engineers expect it to be safe to launch over land areas.
Thus the neighboring Atlantic Ocean is no longer an advantage for the Cape as far as the shuttle is concerned. They say it would be nice to have landing strips available several hundred miles in all directions that could be used by the shuttle for emergencies or to fuel its jet engines for
TOKYO (UPI) — In Japan's general election last December one voter out of every 15 gave his vote to the Communist party. Thus there is a new air of optimism in the modern office building in Tokyo that serves as the headquarters of the Japanese Communist Party (JCP).
In Tokyo's municipal election last summer they did even better, capturing 18 seats in the 126-seat city assembly, and winning 14 per cent of the vote.
It is a paradox that the Communist party in Japan has won much of its support by disavowals of violent revolution. Miyamoto's public line is power via the ballot box, although a lot of Japanese businessmen doubt his sincerity.
In public at least, the JCP has refused to endorse the violent protests of reform-minded students against Japan's university system. When Prime Minister Eisaku Sato visited Washington last year, left-wing students fought with police around Tokyo International Airport. But the
Sen. Kennedy returns home from Ireland
The 47-year-old party long has suffered from squabbles over Marxist doctrine, forcible government suppression and indifference from the voters. Now, Secretary General Kenji Miyamoto is confident that JCP's worst years are behind it.
The Communists held only four seats in Japan's 486-seat lower house of parliament before the election. They emerged with 14 seats, their best showing since Japan regained its independence in 1952.
Japan's Communists hopeful after election
BOSTON (UPI) — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy returned here Wednesday from a three-day visit to Ireland, saying he was "extraordinarily well received" and that the disturbances which marred his visit were to be expected by any public figure.
Referring to the demonstrations in Ireland at which students waved copies of Mao Tse Tung's writings, Kennedy said, "All of us in public life can expect that kind of thing from time to time.
Arriving at Logan International Airport, Kennedy said, "A visit to Ireland is always a thing of joy and sadness for any Kennedy. It brings back so many memories of John Kennedy and his visits there."
"They said I was an imperialist that was about as far as it went."
airplane-like flight back to the launch site.
Government approval of the proposal would allow the Penn Central to end its long-distance passenger service west of Buffalo, N.Y., and Harrisburg, Pa.
The proposal involves 34 trains, including the Broadway Limited between Chicago and New York and the Spirit of St. Louis between New York and St. Louis
Paul A. Gorman, company president, said the move is necessary in view of a $56.3 million deficit last year from ordinary operations, primarily because of the heavy passenger service losses.
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — The Penn Central said Wednesday it will ask the government for permission to drop its "East-West" long-distance passenger train service because of staggering financial losses.
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.
Would you feel at home with the Quakers?
Communists told their people to stay out of it.
Meetings are held in Danforth Chapel on Jayhawk Blvd., Sundays 10:15-12:00. For information contact:
Second, they offer the "seeker" the companionship of the local Quaker Meeting.
Miyamoto also keeps the JCP out of the struggle between the Chinese and Russian parties for leadership in the Communist bloc.
Robert E. Hinshow, Clerk
Mt. Oreed Meeting of the
Society of Friends
VI 3-9574
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?
Penn Central plans drop train service
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CARLISLE MUSEUM
A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE?
Probably few know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns conspicuously on Massachusetts Street.
The Castle was built in 1894 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth with an income from patents on wooden containers carved in the shape of a boat for retailing butter and lard.
Each of the fifteen rooms of the Castle is finished in a different type of wood. The dining rooms currently in use are elegantly finished in birch, cherry, oak, walnut, sycamore and pine. The wood carving was all done by hand by Sidney Endacott of England, a brother of Frank Endacott of Lawrence. Sidney Endacott became a noted sculptor and artist and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Halifax home.
There are five beautiful fireplaces in the house, each a unique design with various coteau marble and brick. The original dining room is very ornate with an unusual built-in sideboard and china closet. A recess cluster of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an altar in a chapel.
The tower, which gives the old castle appearance, has a stairway leading to the third floor. Above the tower room is a roof garden which, in bygone days, was shaded with ownings and used during the summer months. The ballroom with spacious window seats on the third floor is available for private parties.
If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and dine in the only restaurant in Lawrence with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really imagine it is to see it for yourself.
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THE HERITAGE AND THE WEEKLY
INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE
SOCIETY
1974
Photos by Randy Leffingwell
If you don't like the weather, just wait a few minutes
KU students who bundled up and headed for class Wednesday morning found the weather more agreeable in the afternoon. As the temperature reached 58 degrees in Lawrence, students doffed their coats and shoes to withstand the heat wave.
Johnson remains in hospital condition listed as "stable"
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)
—Mrs. Patrick Nugent, optimistic over the condition of her father, Lyndon B. Johnson, said Wednesday the former President was working on several projects "but he is listening to his doctors"
"Mother and I are proud of him," Johnson's younger daughter, Luci, said. "His spirits are good. What we hope now is for several weeks of total uneventfulness."
Luci and Pat took many of the flowers which overflowed Johnson's room to burn victims recuperating in the special ward at Brooke General Hospital.
"The President has been so fortunate to receive so many flowers that he wanted to share them with you," Luci told one patient. "He hopes they will bring a little joy to you."
The flowers were given to veterans of Vietnam and earlier wars.
Doctors said Johnson, who entered Brooke Monday with a painful heart ailment, had the symptoms of a common cold but added his "condition continues to stable with a lessening of discomfort throughout the day."
Dr. Glen K. Arney said "Cardiographic monitoring will continue" along with treatment for the cold.
His symptoms included a runny nose, stuffy head and an aching chest. The former President still suffered the pains near his heart that sent him to Brooke General Hospital three days ago.
Johnson's chief heart specialist said he had "every reason to be encouraged" about the condition of the 36th U.S. President.
Johnson suffered a severe heart attack 15 years ago.
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 13
"He is taking his confinement very well. He is in very good spirits," said Tom Johnson, the former President's executive assistant.
Lt. Col. Robert L. North, the Army hospital's chief cardiologist, said Johnson, 61, was given nose drops to go with the regular drugs to relieve his chest pain and thin his blood.
"He could have the beginnings of a common cold," North said.
An electrocardiogram taken in Johnson's seventh-floor suite Wednesday was unchanged from
"The former President's vital signs remain stable," North said. "His blood pressure is 126 over 76. His temperature is 97.4, pulse 68 and respirations 18."
the day before. North said it still showed "irregularities."
The doctor diagnosed Johnson's ailment as angina pectoris, pains in the chest caused by a reduced flow of blood to the heart. The condition is a result of a type of hardening of the arteries, North said.
The cardiologist said the former President would be kept in the hospital "at least several days." Johnson's wife, Lady Bird, stayed on his side.
Governor's tax lid bill approved by Senate
TOPEKA (UPI) - The Kansas Senate Wednesday night gave tentative approval to Gov. Robert B. Docking's property tax lid bill after nearly six hours of turbulent and long-winded debate.
The bill is expected to pass on a final roll call vote Thursday.
If the measure is passed, it will have to be returned to the House because of Senate changes. It was first passed by the House last week.
and he and a handful of other senators then engaged in a mini-filibuster which lasted just over two hours. A roll call vote was then taken on his motion, and it failed.
Tentative approval of the measure came after ill-fated attempts to kill the bill and then refer it back to the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee. The motion to kill the bill failed on a vote of 16-23, and the motion to refer failed on a vote of 15-22.
More than a dozen amendments were proposed. The only ones adopted were proposed by Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Muncie. He was floor manager of the bill, and he said the amendments had the governor's blessing.
In his long speech of a little over one hour, Bennett delivered a bitter denunciation of Docking.
Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Prairie Village, made the motion to kill the Democratic governor's bill,
The Johnson County Senator attacked the bill as blind "to the problems of an inflationary society," and referred to the proposed earnings tax in the measure as "the most regressive tax that has come to the floor of the Senate in my experience."
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WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., said Wednesday thousands of dollars in U.S. aid funds had been diverted from Laos to a black market bank account in New York City.
Black market diverts funds
Coast Guard meets treasure searchers
MIAMI (UPI) - A Coast Guard cutter rendezvoused Wednesday with an American treasure hunting vessel seized by the Cubans and found that all was well with
In 1967 alone, Ribicoff said, at least $45,000 moved from an aid fund in Laos to a black market account code-named "Prysummen" at Manufacturers Hanover Trust in New York.
In New York, a spokesman for Manufacturers Hanover Trust called the testimony old stuff"
Ribicoff made the statement as his Senate subcommittee reopened hearings on irregularities at Army enlisted men's clubs and black market currency manipulations.
"We've cooperated with the committee fully," the spokesman said. "The account is no longer with the bank."
the five-man crew, the boat and its odd assortment of gear.
"The master of the boat Sten Carlson, Chatham, Mass., said he thought that with all the diving gear they had aboard, they probably looked like a bizarre craft to the Cubans," the spokesman added.
The cutter Steadfast rendezvoused with the 65-foot Jocelyn C., 30 miles east of Cay Lobos off the north coast of Cuba at 12:30 a.m. Wednesday and took statements from the crew.
Efforts to contact the Jocelyn C. by radio after its release had failed because the craft's main transmitter was not working and its secondary radio sending equipment was too weak to contact U.S. authorities.
"They reported they had been held and interrogated by the Cubans: they were released at 4 p.m. Monday, given 450 gallons of fuel and told to leave," a Coast Guard spokesman said.
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Arrests made in school bus attack
LAMAR, S.C. (UPI)—State and local authorities launched a roundup Wednesday night of 30 men charged with rioting in Tuesday's white mob attack on Negro school buses, hauling at least one suspect to jail in his pajamas.
Late Wednesday night seven of the 30 suspects for whom warrants were issued had been brought to jail. None was to be allowed bond until after arraignment Thursday.
Wayne Sea, Gov. Robert E. McNair's news secretary, said all the suspects were charged with "common law rioting" as a result of the melee Tuesday in front of newly-integrated Lamar High, when nearly 200 whites with clubs and chains attacked buses bringing Negro students to the school. Police repelled them with tear gas.
All those charged Wednesday were men, although many women were in the mob. Seal said "possible additional charges against the 30 may be placed later and additional persons may be charged as evidence if further analyzed and accumulated." Much of the evidence, it was understood, was in the form of photographs made by police during the violence.
The first man arrested Wednesday night was Jeryl Best, head of a "freedom of choice" school group. All the arrests were made by state police, state law enforcement division officers and sheriff's deputies.
Jerry Watford, 30, was brought to jail in light blue pajamas.
As the arrests mounted, cars began circling the normally quiet courthouse area.
A man who would identify himself only as a "minister of the gospel" came to the jail and insisted on talking to a highway patrolman. He demanded to know "how come the niggers in times past have burned down buildings and even killed people and turn up property and they call it a demonstration? Let a white man do it and they call it rioting."
Patrolman W, R. Griffith replied "if you violate a state law we enforce it. We enforce it regardless of the color." The man then left.
A federal judge, meanwhile issued a show cause order in connection with the violence, and President Nixon let it be known he is watching "that situation closely."
TOPEKA (UPI) - Pest control operators and spokesmen for chemical and fertilizer manufacturers sought today to have their industries represented on a proposed state ecology council under consideration by a Senate committee.
Chemical, pest control industries seek council
member council should include both users and sellers of chemical pesticides.
Darrell Staley, president of the Kansas Fertilizer and Chemical Association, told members of the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee that the proposed 17-
Charles Davis, Jr., representing the Orkin Exterminating Company, and speaking for other pest control firms, urged the committee to expand the proposed council to 22 members, to include three licensed pesticide operators, a herbicide specialist and an agricultural representative from Kansa State University.
KU prof author of government text
A new edition of the book that might be considered the text on Kansas governments will be issued by the University Press of Kansas in March.
It is "The Government of Kansas" by James W. Drury, KU professor of political science. Drury is on leave to serve as director of research for the Kansas Legislative Council.
The book, which is the only book available on all aspects of the government of Kansas, has a Kansas index including history,
state constitution, state, county, and local government, education, courts, agriculture and resources.
County jail hard up for new prisoners
14 KANSAN Mar. 5
1970
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)—Four men in street clothes walked into the Duval County Jail Monday and were shown to a holding cell where they were locked up. A few minutes later a jail official came in looking for the men. He found them in the bullpen and told the desk sergeant the men were new recruits for guards at the jail.
throwing bricks and bottles and beating on the bus with chains and stuff. I was scared to death."
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National Guard troops remained on alert Wednesday for any additional trouble in Lamar, but the day passed without incident. The federal government also reportedly was sending in additional U.S. marshals.
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and overturned school buses Tuesday when the buses arrived at Lamar High with Negro students. State troopers finally beat back the attacks with tear gas.
"The ladies got in front of the bus and the driver stopped," said 16-year-old Annie Burris, one of the Negro students, "We got down in the aisles and they were
The order issued by U.S. District Judge Robert Martin, was directed at seven whites and ordered them to appear in court Monday at Columbia to show cause why they should not be enjoined from interfering with operation of Lamar schools.
About 150 screaming whites, many of them women, battered
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Photo by Bruce Bernstein
Where did they go? . . .
The four members of the KU football team seen here are: back row from left, Phil Basler, Independence, Mo., sophomore; Kenny Page, Dodge City sophomore; front row from left, Steve Roach, Raytown, Mo., sophomore, Joe Shideler, Ashland, Ohio, sophomore. They appear to have been painted from the waist up with decorations heralding the return of a winning football season, but they are actually modeling next year's jerseys.
Silver dollar proposal passed by Congress
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate and House leaders have compromised on a proposal to mint 150 million souvenir silver dollars bearing the likeness of the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower, it was announced Wednesday.
Rep. Peter Dominick, R-Colo,
said the compromise also called
for minting a larger number of
dollar coins from the copper-
nickel alloy now used for dimes and quarters.
Under the agreement, Domi-nick said, the dollars made from silver will not be circulated but will be sold at premium prices to collectors, probably for as much as $10 each. They will actually contain 40 per cent silver.
MOSCOW (UPI) — The Soviet Union Wednesday held a special news conference in which 52 prominent Soviet Jews denounced Israel and the United States, supported the Arabs and vowed they will not be "cannon fodder" for a Middle East war.
Soviets denounced Israel
An official Soviet spokesman also used the session to reiterate the Kremlin's stand on the Arab-Israeli dispute.
He said Moscow supported "the continued existence" of Israel, approved the Arab guerrilla movements to liberate occupied
territory and demanded Israeli withdrawal from the conquered lands.
Venyamin E. Dymshits, a deputy to Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and the highest Jewish officeholder in the Soviet Union, led the group which included generals, writers, scientists and actors and the most popular Soviet comedian, Arkaday I. Raikin.
Together they presented a statement that compared Israeli "aggression" to the wartime misdeeds of the Nazis.
Kansas House will vote to raise cigarette tax
TOPEKA (UPI) — The Kansas House votes today on a bill to raise the cigarette tax two cents and impose a new tax on other tobacco products such as cigars and smoking tobacco.
If the bill is approved in the roll call vote today, it will go to the senate. A senate committee earlier in the session killed a separate tobacco products tax, and it's unknown how this new house measure will fare there.
The house combination measure would raise the cigarette tax from 8 cents a pack to 10 cents a pack, and impose a new tax of 25 per cent on the wholesale price of other tobacco products.
The cigarette tax would raise an estimated $4.5 million in new tax revenue every year, and the other tax would produce another $1.5 million a year.
The bill was amended three times in floor debate Tuesday.
Israelis now use napalm
JERUSALEM (UPI) — Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan disclosed Wednesday that Israeli fighter-bombers are using napalm against Egyptian military targets. In replies to questions from the Israeli parliament, however, Dayan denied that napalm was used against the Egyptian steel plant.
GLENDALE, Calif. (UPI) — Tatzumble Ducalis was buried Wednesday in Forest Lawn Cemetery. She was 120 years old.
Oldest US person Tatzumbie Dupea dies at age of 120
Tatzumbie, the Paiute Indian name for "Beautiful Star," was believed to have been the oldest person in the United States at the time of her death Thursday.
Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs substantiate her claim that she was born on July 26,1849, in Lone Pine, Calif., although at one time, like many a woman, she claimed she was 16 years younger.
In her last years, though, she took great pride in her antiquity and told long stories that stretched from the assassination of Abraham Lincoln to that of John F. Kennedy, from the first rail line linking the East and West coasts to man's walk on the moon.
Her lifetime saw the nation engaged in six wars, from the Civil War to Vietnam. Her mother was killed in an earthquake when she was three and Tatzumbie lived with her grandmother in Death Valley for years. She moved to Los Angeles in 1870 when she was 21.
"Let me be ready when life fades away like the fading sun-set.
She wrote poetry about the Indians and one poem ends:
"My spirit will come to you with clean hands."
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 15
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The most significant one reduced the handling allowance discount on rebate of cigarette taxes from $3\frac{1}{4}$ to $2\frac{1}{2}$ per cent.
Because of the 2 cent increase in the tax, all this reduction actually does is maintain the discount at its present level or $1.80 per case.
Tickets: $1.50 at SUA office
Forty-two members introduced a resolution which would ask Congress to "undertake a more determined effort" to obtain the names of American prisoners of war in North Vietnam.
"Every day bring new reports of the crimes of the Israeli military, reviving memories of the barbarity of the Hitlerites," the statement said.
"This aggression has become a component part of the imperialist, neocolonialist plot directed against the peoples of the progressive regimes of the Middle East, and closely intertwined with it are the interests of lil monopolies and international Zionist organizations."
Some 300 correspondents, both communist and non-communist, attended the news conference, called by the Soviet foreign ministry press department. It was presided over by Leonid I. Zamyatin, the department chief, and Moscow television cameras recorded it.
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It just wasn't the day for a rain dance . . .
No one would deny that Kansas weather is unpredictable, but some people carry precaution to extremes. Steve McMahon, St. Louis senior (left), is prepared for any eventuality. Gordy Grow, Washington D.C. senior, doesn't tote a bumbershoot, but he stays close enough to share the shelter in case of a shower.
Exchange prof likes KU
Jacek Fisiak, visiting professor in the department of linguistics, says that students from his native land of Poland and the students of the United States are quite different.
"Students in Poland are much more formal. They usually wear suits and ties or good dresses to class," he said.
"Our educational programs are slightly different from those in the United States, too," he said. "High school and college up to the master's degree level are combined in one program. There is no such thing as a bachelor's degree in Poland."
Fisiak, who is here as part of an exchange program between the University of Poznan and KU, said that seven Polish students, who are also part of the exchange program, will be arriving at the end of March.
"All of these students have completed at least their master's degrees and two of them already have their Ph.D.," he said.
Traveling outside Poland, according to Fisiak, is much less difficult than most Americans think.
"It's harder for me to go outside of the United States for a short period of time than it is to travel outside of Poland." he said.
"I was invited to lecture in Canada for four days," he said, "but I would have had to wait three weeks to receive a re-entry visa to come back into the United States. In Poland, visitors need only wait for two hours to get back into the country."
"Polish authorities are not restrictive at all, except when we apply to visit western countries," Fisiak said. "To Poland, we must have an invitation from the country to visit. If we don't, the big problem is receiving a travel visa from Britain or France."
"The exchange was arranged through my acquaintance with Victor Contoski, a professor of English at KU," he said. "He was
The first Negro to be nominated for vice president was Frederick Douglass, a candidate of the Equal Rights Party in 1872.
16 KANSAN Mar. 5 1970
on a Fulbright professorship to the University of Poznan, and I met him through a group of academic friends."
"Then, I was appointed a Fulbright professor a year later and went to the University of California at Los Angeles," he said. "This allowed us to keep up our friendship, since I did a considerable amount of lecturing throughout the United States."
As part of the exchange program, he said six students from the United States have been sent to the University of Poznan. Fisiak said that there were five undergraduates and one graduate student in the program.
"More students will be exchanged next year," he said. "I believe 10 Polish students will be arriving at KU in September, and then in January about 15 Americans will go to Poznan."
Fisiak said that a few things in Poland which are taken for granted are lacking in the United States.
"For instance, Poznan has quite an extensive public transportation system. Most people here rely on
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"Also," he said, "health services are absolutely free in Poland. Most of us who travel extensively must take out health insurance before we leave."
Fisiak has taught at several universities since receiving his master's degree in 1959. He also worked for the Associated Press in Warsaw from 1956 until 1959 while he was working on his degree.
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) — A time bomb was discovered Wednesday in a barracks at the Oakland Army Base, a major shipping point for troops going to Vietnam.
MY OWN.
The Army said the bomb was a $2 \frac{1}{2}$-pound plastic explosive wired to a commercial blasting cap and a timing device.
Time bomb found in army barracks
The device was found about 1:30 p.m. on the third floor of the transient barracks. The area was evacuated and the device disarmed by an Army explosive ordnance detachment from San Francisco.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate gave final congressional approval Wednesday to a $19.4 billion health-education-welfare money bill which President Nixon promised to sign after vetoting a more expensive measure.
On an 82-to-0 vote, the bill finally went to the White House eight months and four days after it was supposed to have begun financing operations of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the Labor Department, Office of Economic Opportunity and a dozen smaller agencies.
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The FBI and military police are investigating the incident, the Army said. No further details were disclosed.
Welfare bill gets approval
The big Army base on the waterfront processes thousands of Vietnam-bound troops and is the major munitions and equipment shipping point for the war
The House approved the bill Tuesday and the Senate acted likewise Wednesday after a conference committee approved Senate amendments giving Nixon the right to withhold $347 million in expenditures.
The attempted sabotage was the latest in a series of bombings and attempted bombings in the San Francisco-Oakland area.
the porch of a home occupied by members of the Hell's Angels motorcycle gang. "I guess somebody just doesn't like us," observed one of the Angels.
Earlier in the day a bomb was discovered on a freight train which had left Oakland. The dynamite device also was found before it went off.
In another incident Wednesday a dynamite bomb exploded on
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The Tarantula is being held by a person's hand. The tarantula is black with yellow markings on its legs.
Photo by Dennis McFall
You have very good taste in watch bands . . .
Taking a break from Little Miss Muffett, curds, whey and tuffet is A. Spider, seen here perched on the wrist of its owner. The tarantula is the pet of William L. Overal, Chicago graduate student.
Congress averts rail strike
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congress rushed through emergency legislation Wednesday night ordering four shopcraft unions threatening a nationwide rail strike at midnight to stay on their job for another 37 days.
Setting aside President Nixon's proposed settlement of the long dispute, the Senate and House approved the no-strike freeze after 7 o'clock and sent it to the White House for Nixon's signature.
President Nixon signed the legislation just $3\frac{1}{2}$ hours before the strike was due to begin. The White House declared, however, that Congress "could have settled the matter in accordance with the desires of a majority of the workers involved as well as the carriers" by accepting the proposal Nixon made Tuesday.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Labor Secretary George P. Shultz would try to get the unions and railroads to reach a voluntary settlement during the no-strike period, but Shultz conceded earlier in the day that prospect was dim.
The Senate, after a long day of cooperation between the two houses to agree on a bill, approved the no-strike measure 83-0 and the House passed it an hour later on a 343-15 vote.
It was Congress' third intervention in a railroad labor dispute in seven years, and this time is decided merely to bide for time, openly hoping the four unions and rail management could solve their disagreement over a new contract by themselves.
The administration made clear it held little hope of a voluntary settlement, a view shared by the holdout Sheet Metal Workers Union, whose objection to a proposed work rules change has deadlocked negotiations.
Failing a voluntary settlement, Congress will be faced with another threatened rail shutdown at 12:01 a.m. April 11 unless it comes up with a solution.
Senate leaders denied Congress was stalling on the issue. They complained that one day was not enough time to consider so sensitive an issue.
The last time Congress intervened was in 1967, when it ended a two-day coast-to-coast rail shutdown by referring a contract dispute to what amounted to binding arbitration.
Left in limbo, at least for the time being, was President Nixon's proposal to have Congress impose a contract settlement that rail management and unions had accepted Dec. 4 but which was later turned down by the membership of one of the four unions, the Sheet Metal Workers International Association.
Mar. 5
1970 KANSAN 17
First the House Commerce Committee approved unanimously a 37-day freeze on union plans to strike the railroads. Then the Senate Labor Committee rejected the Nixon proposal, 8 to 6, and concurred in the House proposal.
Both measures would extend existing contract terms until April 11. The House made it a 37-day no-strike order after objections that a 30-day period originally proposed would end during Congress' Easter recess.
Union leaders were busy notifying locals that the strike was off even before the last vote was cast. They said they expected most shopworkers would comply
Senate committee passes credit bill
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate Banking Committee Thursday approved a bill making it illegal to send credit cards to persons who have not ask for them and limiting cardholders to a liability of $50 if their cards are used without their authorization.
The measure, opposed by the administration, is expected to go before the Senate in a few weeks.
with Congress' will, but that there might be a few scattered wildcat walkouts or brief work interruptions by locals failing to get official notification.
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About 10 hours before the strike was scheduled to begin, several hundred diesel shop workers walked off the job at Penn-Central's yards in New Haven, Conn. The railroad sought a temporary injunction at U.S. District Court to halt the walkout.
Ozark school readied for first lady's visit
POINT LOOKOUT, Mo. (UPI)
—All but a last-minute sprucing up of the 1,800 acre campus of the School of the Ozarks was completed Wednesday in anticipation of the scheduled visit Thursday of Mrs. Richard Nixon.
As one official put it, "The walks are swept, the grounds cleared, the floors scrubbed, the linen washed and the Ozark country ham's in the oven."
Students whom the first lady is coming to visit had volunteered their time to help get the campus ready in a spring house cleaning operation that normally would have waited several weeks.
Mrs. Nixon's visit to the 64-year old four-year coeducational college marks the end of a five-college tour that began Monday. She is expected to spend about five hours on campus.
Several hundred Springfield residents, including area officials, school children, girl scouts and a high school band and drum and bugle corps, are scheduled to participate in welcoming ceremonies for Mrs. Nixon at the Springfield Municipal Airport.
The reception list included Mrs.
Betty Hearnes, wife of Gov. Warren E. Hearnes, Mayor and Mrs. Carl Stillwell of Springfield and School of the Ozarks President M. Graham Clark and Mrs. Clark
Accompanied by two School of the Ozarks students, Miss Lola Jones of Belton and Jerry Branan of Chadwick, Mrs. Nixon will be brought by motorcade to Point Lookout.
The public was invited both to the Springfield Airport and to the campus entrance to participate in welcoming ceremonies, in which the president's wife will be greeted at the school by Gary Wortman of Arnold, Mo., president of the student body.
Mrs. Nixon's tour of the campus will begin with a visit to the weaving room at Friendship House, where she will see some 25 students operating the looms. A car will take the first lady down an avenue of about 200 American flags held by students.
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- And all other Full-service Banking Facilities
YOUR COMMUNITY MINDED BANK
University State Bank
955 Iowa
Telephone 843-4700
Agnew condemns attack by whites
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Vice President Spiro T. Agnew Wednesday condemned an attack by whites on school buses carrying Negro children as "reprehensible and entirely senseless mob action."
"Speaking for myself and for the Cabinet committee which I chair, I want to make it clear that
this administration does not condone and will not tolerate violence resulting from the lawful desegregation of schools anywhere," Agnew said.
"Mass lawlessness, for whatever cause, is outrageous and unconscionable," he said.
Agnew promised that those responsible for the Tuesday racial
Douglas County helps K-State fund raising
This group of contributing alumni in Douglas County, which consisted of 98 persons of 180 in the county showed an increase in participation of 77 per cent, which was the highest increase of any other county in Kansas. Also, the 54.4 per cent was the highest per cent of K-State alumni in any given county to contribute. Hedrick estimated the Development Fund raised about $3,500 for the year 1969.
Kansas State University needs more supporters like those in the Douglas County Development Fund Campaign program. In the year 1969 the K-State Endowment Association received money grants from 54.4 per cent of the K-State alumni in Douglas County, said the '69 chairman for the Development Fund, George Hedrick.
Hedrick said some possible reasons for the sudden increase of participation in Douglas County.
DETROIT (UPI) — The Internal Revenue Service which perhaps wouldn't even accept pennies from heaven, Wednesday refused to accept the 73,489 Harold Ballew hauled to the collectors office in a trash can painted like an American flag.
Taxes paid in pennies not accepted
Ballew—his coppery gesture rejected—pulled a wad of bills from his pocket. The IRS accepted these as payment of back taxes and ended its half-hour seizure of Ballew's suburban Royal Oak gas station.
When the IRS people returned, Ballew said, they told him Giza had been sent to his station to take an inventory, shut off the gas pumps, padlock the doors and post signs.
Ballew, 23, planned the rain of pennies as a protest against what he said was the rude abruptness of tax collector Walter Giza. Giza had hold Ballew his service station would be padlocked if he didn't come up with $734.89 in back taxes, interest and penalties.
Ballew fished the bills out of his pocket. By then, interest had escalated the total to $739.80.
"They accepted that," he said. Someone got on the phone. By the time Ballew had completed the 15-minute ride back to his station, he found it in business again and Giza waiting with the appropriate forms.
"They accused themselves on the pretense of an employee situation."
To the IRS, anything more than 25 pennies together isn't legal tender. "Title 31, section 460 of the U.S. code," explained a spokesman.
Ballew was advised of that Tuesday. Nonetheless he took the garbage can and pennies to the IRS office in suburban Highland Park Wednesday. He and three friends transferred the pennies from the flag-can into cloth bank sacks and lugged their clinking burden inside.
Ballew plans to cash in the pennies.
18 KANSAN Mar. 5 1970
violence in Lamar, S.C., would be prosecuted.
from Lamar that there were "feelings of remorse among the townspeople and they are ashamed of their own conduct."
"This was the first year (1969) of an intensive campaign," he said. It was not so important to give a large sum of money, but the idea was that of the alumni's participation, he said.
Agnew, chairman of a new cabinet committee on school desegregation, called reporters to his office and issued his statement a few hours after the White House said that President Nixon deplored the incident.
Agnew said it was unbelievable that violence would be directed at "children who are innocent participants in the court-ordered desegregation of a Southern school district."
The question of whether the sudden rise of K-State football had anything to do with the boost in the per cent of participation, Hedrick said, "I do think the revival in K-State football has done a good deal to stimulate interest." But he added, "I don't think that most of the alumni were interested in just football."
lina to assist U.S. District Attorney Joseph Rogers in investigating the attack and determining who caused it "in order to determine what further action is appropriate."
As for the future of the school—now closed—and whether it will be reopened, Mardian said the Justice Department unquestionably would enforce any federal court order "and have no doubt about that."
Head survey post sought
The committee will include three members of the survey's professional staff, a representative from the United States Department of Geology, a member of the KU geology department, and a representative of the Mineral Industries Council, Heller said.
Francis Heller, dean of faculties at the University of Kansas, will head a six-member committee to find a replacement for Frank C. Foley, who is retiring as head of the State Geological Survey July 1.
"This administration is going to make certain that all children, regardless of color, have equal access to quality education," Agnew said. "I repeat, we will not tolerate violent or unlawful interference with that effort."
Agnew said the Justice Department had sent Senior Trial Attorney Frank Allen to South Caro-
Heller said he hopes to have the first meeting of the committee sometime next week but he didn't know when the committee would reach a decision.
"Nothing can justify the threat or infliction of modily harm on or mob action against children," he said. "The parents who took part in that violence yesterday must know this."
TOPEKA (UPI) — The Kansas House today tentatively approved a $2,000 a year pay increase for all district judges and State Supreme Court justices.
Pay increase possible highway commission state justices, judges
The base salary of the 61 District Court judges would be increased from $17,500 to $19,500 per year.
In response to brief questioning, Agnew said that if the Justice Department locates those responsible for the rioting and finds they have violated federal law, "they will be prosecuted."
All the increases would be effective in 1971.
Robert Mardian, general counsel of the Health, Education and Welfare Department who is working on Agnew's cabinet committee, said a federal attorney on the scene reported Wednesday
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Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University are accorded to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Western Cliv. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analy-
t of Western Civilization," 4th Edition
Campus Med House, 411 W. 14th
St.
FOR SALE
Typewriters—big selection. rental purchase plan available. Office supply furniture. Xerox service. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. 843-3644.
Handmade Originals - India prints,
tie-dies, dresses, men's shirts, pants
and skirts, mini skirts, bead earrings,
at Lepidoptera Creations 1-19
West 8th Street.
1963 Oldsmobile F-85 Cutlass; V-8;
automatic transmission; bucket seats;
brakes; starts and runs efficiently;
mechanically perfect. Only $50
843-958 843. 3-5
Electro-voice 90 watt amplifier with head-set jax. Walnut finish; like new.
842-4897 after 6 p.m.
3-6
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodorant Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz. Retail price per 24-can case $16.54. Sell price per case only $5.00. Steve Cohen, UN 4-4457.
Maxi-coat, size 13, all wool, ginger color, beautifully made. From Kansas City store, worn twice, need money to repair car. $35.84-3357. 3-6
Classic in its own time, 1961 XK150
Jaguar Coupe. Black with red leather
interior. Mint condition, all original
equipment. One previous owner. Price
$2,95. no trades. Call Topeka. 913-269-6942 after 6:30 p.m. 3-6
Must Sell. Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also Mike and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-5783 evenings. 3-16
Women's contract at Naismith—selling for loss, Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
Pentax Spotmatic, new, never used,
f1.4 lens, soft case, guarantee card.
$309.50 value for only $247.60. Kent
Dannen, 842-3627, Naisthim Hall. 3-9
Fender Newporter Guitar for sale by original owner. Like new condition, seldom played. Call 842-4454 or stop by 2328 Mr. Dr., Apt. 2. 3-9
4 and 8 track car stereo with FM-
card condition
692, 842-8227
3-9
1967 Ford. Custom. 6 cyl., auto, R&H,
885. 842-9962. 3-11
For sale: Cheap, two twin mattresses and box springs, call after 5 p.m.
843-9352. 3-9
For sale: Camper truck, 1950 Ford pickup with hemi-8v, auto, radio, heater, extras, call, come by, make offer, 842.7657, 1851 Mississippi 3-11
FREE—Gibson EB-2 hollow body bass guitar with purchase of KUSTOM 200 watt bass amp. 3 - 15 speakers, amps amp covers included. Call 842-6941. 3-11
Basset Hound. AKC registered tricolor male, $1^{½}$ years old, housebroken, needs good home, likes children. Doghouse also for 3-11 Call VI 3-4374.
Skis. Head Standards with bindings,
210 cm, $75; two matching walnut end
lamps or one matching walnut
lamps $7.50 each, one walnut
lamps $15, 843-2188.
3-11
For Sale: 1966 BSA-650 cc--single
Excellent condition
VI 2-4636
3-11
For Sale: SIAMESE KITTENS, six-weeks old, beautiful seal points. Call VI 2-1811 after 6 o'clock, or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 3-11
1960 TR-3, Removable Hardtop, Body and Engine excellent, interior and gear box need work, 842-2191 or 842-8870.
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17-18
Harmon-Kardion 50-watt AM-FM receiver. Nocturne model with walnutHyde-sensitive reception with more than a power base. 842-236 or 616 Kentucky. 3-11
1968 Oldsmobile F-85-Silver, Black interior--immaculate inside and out WW's and Snow's V-8, Air-cond—12,000 Miles. Miles 821-2491 or 8482-3701.
1969 Opel wagon, 102 h.p., 8,000 miles,
much warranty left, radio. Must sell.
Call David Rueschhoff. V 3-5774, 1301
W. Campus Rd.
3-11
1967 VW Super Bug—76 H.P. —Konl'-
Racing Suspension Balanced,
cammed, ported and polished–car
cost over $4500. 842-219 or 842-887.
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately, $1200. See at Ridgiewell Court, 3020 Iowa, Lot G23 or call VI 2-6318, after 6 p.m. 3-25
'68 Bridgestone Super 90—red and silver—1400 miles—very fine condition—completely inspected 842-2191 or 842-8870. 3-11
Accordion—Silvio Soprani, Excellent
Bassoon—Life-time guarantee
4616 3-9
WANTED
Emergency! Need two tickets to KU-
game game this Saturday. Call 6-
8292.
I need a ride!! Topeka to KU, Tues-
Fri. Must arrive by 8:30 and can leave
at 3:30. Address: 409 Watson, Topeka.
Phone 233-0327. 3-6
Guitar instructor wanted. Am inter-
viewed using the Guitar Linda, 843-237-36,
methods. Call Linda, 843-237-36, 3-6
Tickets for KU-K-State game—842-
6217. 3-6
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt, with three others.$51.25 per month, including water.
Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Two girls need roommate to share duplex. Call 842-8434. 3-9
Wanted: Girl to share house for rest
campus; campus $3,495/month.
Phone: 843-3843-311
3-11
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 11, 20% off. All hinderedraft styles. Hodge Posts 30 (open Thursday night) VI 2-0682. 3-11
Wanted: 2 tickets for K-State game, even student tickets. Will pay $5.00 each. Call VI 3-6101 after 3:30 p.m. 3-9
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, If you have a chance to play against Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat 2-915 Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. SL 3-4032. 5-14
Audio Discount—Your A.R. Dynaco dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas. Sophomore Class. 3-6
Sand Candles by Betsy Webster. 9th and Indiana. THE OMNIBUS SHOP.
a change 3-6
We 3-°F
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom
apartment 2 blocks from campus.
$115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-
0705. 3-16
Karate Action Saturday, March 7,
Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
Eliminations-10:30 a.m. 50c.
Finals p. 7月 $1.50. 3-12
Spring new Sandlers, Sandlers are here. Weaver's Shoe Shop, Second Floor. 3-9
GRADUATE TICKET ISP. Surendra Bhana, Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed Gauthier, Bob Hubert, Karen Laun, Leroy McDermott, Fred Oettle, John Harriette Stallworth,乔 Van Zandt, Jonny Gee with a human face (1) voting power on curriculum committees (2) Re-evaluation of degree requirements. (3) Faculty evaluation. 3-11
AT THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE you can
Sari-a-lin steak, strip a K.C. strip,
sandwich a K.C. strip to 2:30 a.m. The best dinner in town.
Across from Lindley Hall. 3-9
BRING YOUR DATE (or parents) to the Captain's Table for informal dining at its best. Only 200 yards north of Allen Field House. Come in after the KU - K-State game. Across from Lindley Hall. 3-5
Notice: March 5 is the last day to enroll in student health insurance. Kalvin, Eddy, & Kappelman, 1026 Massachusetts. 3-6
1 am auditioning female vocalists for local night club work with established group. Interested Call Ric Rasmassman, 843-8153. 3-11
Dress making and alterations, 20
years experience, call VI 3-2767, 8-5.
Exciting challenge for a young man with pep and spirit, experience in summer movie teaching cheeredley workshops Call 1-913-649-3666 3-9
KU males: Is it true what they say about a girl who wears spring styles from Arenesberg's Shoes, 819 Marmadua? Longingly lonely, fella. 1-31
Travel and study in Europe for six weeks this summer—many different college credit available. For catalog information detailed on phone VI 2-3785. 3-11
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $801\frac{1}{2} Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. `tt`
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
Julille—Alles Gutes Fur Deinen
Vollzeit V. Spass! Deiner Jener
merkameradin.
3-5
TYPING
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typetips. Email: mk@microsoft.com. Ms. Piaa type. Competent service. Mrs Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience
at IBM Systems Research, Inc.
6048. 8:00 to 5:00 - 842-0111. 4-3
Experienced typists design manuscripts, theses, etc. Type desire-pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
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
SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Wask 843-281, Mrs. Ruckman.
T.I.R.E. co.
720 East 9th VI 3-0950
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
Make Your
Spring Break Reservations
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama. VI 3-1522. 4-8
Let
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Malls Shopping Center
VI 3-1211
UN 4-3474
HELP WANTED
SERVICES OFFERED
BICYCLE
Need extra money? We need an accountant; will discuss terms. P.S.—good job for grad student or housemother. 842-5002, ask for Oscar. 3-6
Guitar player and vocalist. Weekends and summer work. Call Steve Clark, Red Dog Inn, 842-0100. 3-6
HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE
Your KU L.D. is worth $1,00 off on
the $250 Group Tax. 801.5% Mass; $4.00 and up. If
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates—Maryton, 1218 Miss, 843-8698 3-12 6 p.m.
U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers
Math or Spanish tutoring. Call VI 2-
5603 or VI 3-9734.
3-11
FOUND
1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557
Valuable Swiss watch. Describe, call 842-2827. 3-6
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Found: A charming atmosphere that makes the steaks and Russians strognoff-oftaste taste even better! Castle Tea is among the most unique restaurant Lawrence. 3-9
LOST
Key ring and identification wallet at Robinson Gym. Jack K. Horner. 843-6838. Reward. 3-6
Manila envelope with W-2 forms, can-
tained in the same way as for W-1.
Reward. After 10 p.m. 3-5
FOR RENT
Lost—Man's dark blue billfold in
woolruff Auditorium, Wednesday,
Feb. 25. Please return to Kansas Union
lost and found. 3-11
For rent starting April 1st to faculty or staff couple or individual. Beauti-
quiet, comfortable, carpeted apt., a/c/
near KU, town. Call 843-8534. 3-6
near KU, town. Call 843-8534. 3-6
Small efficiency apartment, furnished,
$55 per month, utilities paid, 2 blocks
from campus. Available March 9. Call
I 2-3750, 4:30 - 10 p.m. 3-9
1 bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Unfurnished, $110 per month and utilities. Available April 2. Call VI 2-3750, 4:30 - 10 p.m.
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IS A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
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University Daily Kansan
111 Flint Hall
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Women's liberation meetings continue
The discussion series on women's liberation sponsored by the KU-Y and the Associated Women Students continued Wednesday night with two meetings.
The first discussion was held in Corbin Hall at 7 p.m. Barbara Alter, working for the Women's Liberation Movement, showed slides picturing woman in today's society. The slides showed women in fancy clothes and glittering jewelry subject to admiration by men, in contrast with people starving and striking.
After the slide show, the discussion group divided in two. The male group leader was Mark Alter, also working for the Women's Liberation Movement.
The female group discussion was led by Barbara Alter and Roxanne Dunbar, working for the Southern Female Rights Union.
One coed said she did not realize how serious the situation was until she tried to get into the Graduate School in social work. She said she was told that her admission was dependent on whether or not the school needed female students, as they were interested in getting male students mainly.
Another coed said she was "shocked" when she came to the University as a freshman and found that "most coeds are here to find a husband." She said an unmarried woman was much worse off than an unmarried man.
"Guys say they think it's
fine that women are getting a college education," she went on, "so they can become educated housewives."
Mrs. Alter and Mrs. Dunbar stressed the importance for women to learn to defend themselves. They suggested that women be trained in karate, "so that in a few years, women will no longer be attacked on the streets."
Mrs. Alter said most men did not take the issue of women's liberation seriously.
"Men want to be able to cry and care for children, but they still won't give up their privileges," she said.
Mrs. Dunbar said the war in Vietnam had awakened people's consciousness.
"The Vietnamese are defeating what is supposed to be the greatest nation in the world," she said.
The second discussion meeting was held in Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana, at 10 p.m. The topic debated was that of the movement's strategy.
Mrs. Dunbar said the most important task now was to unite all the small groups of women throughout the nation who were fighting for the same goals. She said it was essential that women got together to discuss the various aspects of the oppression they were subjected to.
One of the goals of the liberation movement is to establish childcare homes, so that women can go out and work, she explained. She suggested that the homes be operated by
public schools, the programs of which should include childcare.
Mrs. Dunbar said the liberation movement had a lot to learn from the Black Student Union, the actions of which had been "very effective."
Mrs. Dunbar distributed copies of the Southern Female Rights Union program. The demands set forth by the union were the following.
"Women's dependence upon male company for protection at night must be overcome," she said.
- Free, non - compulsory, public childcare. All meals, medical and dental care, clothing and equipment must be available to children in schools, the staff of which are to consist of an equal number of males and females.
- An adequate guaranteed annual income, (minimum $2400) for every individual. Each person must be guaranteed an adequate income, regardless of whether he can find work or not.
- Sexual and racial discrimination must be put to an end.
- Public schools must offer free self-defense instruction for women in all ages.
Sunny and mild today. South winds 10 to 20 miles per hour. Increasing cloudiness and continued mild tonight.
Weather
MADISON JACKSON
Photo by Bill Higgins
Women fight oppression
Barbara Alter (left), and Roxanne Dunbar were leaders of a discussion of womens liberation Wednesday night in Corbin Hall. Mrs. Alter is working for the Women's Liberation Movement, and Mrs. Dunbar is affiliated with the Southern Female Rights Union.
The present hormonal birth control pill must be with-drawn from the market as deadly. The harm done to women who have used the pill must be compensated.
The mass media must establish a new code of ethics, eliminating all discriminatory allusions to females.
The union said these reforms were to be provided by "taxing the rich." It said women were prepared for a "long, hard fight," since no one in power
would give them their human rights.
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French submarine sinks
TOULON, France (UPI)—The French deep sea combat submarine Eurydice with 57 men aboard sank in the storm-tossed Mediterranean Wednesday after a mysterious explosion while it was making an 1,800-foot training dive.
Al Lauter
V13-1571
The French navy declared the ship and its crew lost, the second disappearance of a French submarine in the area in the past 26 months.
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Naval officials said seismographs in France had recorded an unexplained explosion shortly after the Eurydice began its dive about 66 miles southeast of the port city of Marseilles in about 5,000 feet of water. Search vessels reported sighting an oil slick and debris that included what appeared to be bedding from the submarine.
The sit of the Eurydice's loss, south of this naval port, was near the spot where its sister ship, the Minerve, diappeared in January 1968. At time, then President Charles de Gaulle boarded the Eurydice and made his first submarine dive as a gesture of homage to the 52 men lost on the Minerve and of faith in the sea-worthiness of the 1,040-ton Daphnie Class submarines, designed for deep-sea combat against nuclear submarines.
20 KANSAN Mar. 5
1970
HELP WANTED
last radio transmission, reporting that it was beginning its dive, the Mediterranean was lashed by 60-mile winds that disrupted shipping schedules all along France's Mediterranean coast.
Make application NOW. Good jobs as summer Camp Counselors. Write Cheley Colorado Camps, Dept. A. 601 Steele St., Denver, Colo. 80206. Give information concerning Skills and previous camping or counseling experience. Directors of the camp will be on campus soon after first of year for personal completed application forms by January 15. Apply Now! Min. age 19 and Sophomore.
The French navy ordered its Mediterranean fleet from maneuvers off the Algerian coast to join other naval vessels, planes and helicopters in the search for the Eurydice.
Naval officials said the oil slick and debris were sighted at 1 p.m. (6 a.m. CST), six hours after the last radio contact with the Eury-dice and three hours after it was scheduled to surface.
The Eurydice had sailed at daybreak from St. Tropaz on the French Riviera.
Similar weather conditions prevailed Jan. 27, 1968, when the Minerve disappeared in a training dive. No trace of that ship or its crew was ever found.
The loss of the Eurydice was the fourth such disaster involving French submarines since World War II. The United States has lost two submarines in the Atlantic, the nuclear-powered Thresher in 1633 and the Scorpion in 1968. An Israeli submarine, the Dakar, disappeared in 1968 in the Mediterranean.
At the time of the submarine's
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Shultz advocates legislative controls
Sen. Reynolds Shultz, (R-Lawrence) said in a KANU interview Thursday night that if the Board of Regents and the administration did not control campus disruptions the legislature will become more involved and concerned if demonstrations continue.
Shultz said, "I don't think it would help at all if the state started running the University."
But he also said he was disappointed with the Board of Regents in some areas and thought that the University administration had been lax.
Shultz said that a good number of legislators felt the same as he, but have not spoken out on the issue.
Shultz said that if the Board of Regents would not take a firmer stand against campus disruptions, the regents who are reappointed, "might not be confirmed by the Senate."
When asked why he thought it was necessary to incorporate mechanisms for dealing with campus problems in state statutes when the Senate
resolution no. 18 left it up to the administration and students, Shultz indicated that it would not be necessary unless further disruptions occurred.
Senate bills no. 417, 418, and 421, which Shultz introduced, would require the Board of Regents to establish a code of student behavior, to release students records, and to take disciplinary action against student and faculty members convicted of a crime committed in a campus disturbance.
Shultz said the bills are still in committee.
"Under the circumstances, rather than see them take defeat, I just thought we would let them remain in committee and if more things happen in the universities and colleges, then these bills can be acted on clear up until the last day of the session," Shultz said.
When asked whether he had examined the new Senate Code and if he thought the new senate faculty governance system and disciplinary procedures were effective, he said
he had seen the Senate Code just briefly and it "sounded good," but he would have to wait and see how they work.
He said he reconsidered introducing an amendment that would withhold state funds from the University.
"How could I penalize the whole faculty for a few I don't think are an asset to the University," he said.
Speaking about the recent Chicago 10 march, Shultz said that associate professor of law, Lawrence Velvel, should not have made the statements that he did because it excited the crowd.
He said people should not be critical of faculty members unless they are out in public and speak to add fuel to the fire.
"We do have freedom of speech," Shultz said, "but I think you have to exercise a little thought."
"I would have praised the professor if he had have talked to the students to try to stop the march," he said.
Shultz said he was not against the University and he felt a responsibility to the University of Kansas, which he said was one of the great institutions in the state.
He said that the majority of the students were honestly trying to get an education, but he added, "you get this real small group that are going to protest anything and they don't care about disrupting anything at the University.
"These are the people that I am against," he said.
Concerning the Chicago 10 march, Shultz said, "I imagine that there will be more arrests because the sheriff has photographs of the march and anybody that was identified that was doing something wrong, whether it was stealing, or painting the courthouse, or knocking the windows out they will be able to identify them."
Shultz was interviewed by KANU's Gary Shivers as part of a weekly series called View from the Hill.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.93
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, March 6, 1970
BEAT K-STATE
Code amendments pass
Seven amendments to the University Senate Code were passed Thursday afternoon at the University Senate meeting. The meeting was broadcast by closed circuit television to the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Two amendments dealt with the selection of presiding officers. They are:
- The presiding officer of the University Council shall be selected from and by members of the University Council.
- The presiding officer of the Faculty Senate shall be selected from and by Faculty Council.
An amendment taking away the vote of the Dean of Students, the Dean of Men and the
Dean of Women also passed. They may attend, but will not be counted for quorum purposes.
Another revision gives the University Council the right to propose an amendment by a two-thirds vote of the members present and voting.
A seventh amendment permits the Senate Executive Committee to annually appoint
a member of the Faculty Senate to serve as parliamentarian of all meetings of the University and Faculty Senates and Councils.
Article XII, the University Judiciary: Structure and Operation, and rules and regulations that would implement this amendment also passed.
A quorum count was called while the meeting was in the
process of work on Academic Rules and Regulations of the University Senate. Since a quorum was not present, the meeting broke up.
Unfinished business is work on Academic Rules and Regulation and to consider a revised Statement of Principle of the University and the revised Policy on Organizational Membership.
Leftists demand their rights
THE AUTOGRAPH OF THE FIRST CLASS OF MASTERS IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND CROSS LANGUAGES.
Story on page 20
Really...
Chancellor Chalmers, after having gravely received the LHSU demands, said, "It is difficult for me to perceive the problem."
CANADA
Well maybe . . .
Chancellor Chalmers and Ernie Bauer, LHSU representative, shake hands before Bauer and the LHSU left the Chancellor's office. Chalmers asked, "When will you expect an answer?" Bauer replied, "We are not sure for we only operate in good weather."
M
But Chancellor . . .
Ernie Bauer, LHSU spokesman, after presenting the Chancellor with the groups demands said, "You see sir, we are a minority group. We think it is inappropriate to talk of appropriateness. We want action."
Campus briefs
KU-K-State game a sellout
The Athletic ticket office said the game Saturday is a sellout.
An extra 250 student tickets were put on sale for the KU-KSU basketball game Saturday because of increased student interest in the game, said David Miller, Eudora junior and chairman of the Athletic Seating Board.
The extra tickets are available to be sold because less than 6500 student season tickets were sold this year. Usually only 250 student tickets are put on sale to those students without season tickets, Miller said.
Organizational meeting planned
The White Student Union will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. During the meeting the White Student Union will name objectives it hopes to achieve. Anyone interested may attend.
Program based on Gunn's book
ABC-TV's fall schedule of television shows includes a program based on a book by James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor for University relations. The program is "The Immortal," an hour series to be shown from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Thursdays.
The book, "The Immortals," was printed in magazines as a series beginning in 1955 and published in collected form in 1962 and reprinted again in 1968. It has been translated into German, Italian and Japanese.
Zero population meeting set
The second meeting of the Douglas County chapter of Zero Population Growth, Inc. will be held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium.
Zero Population Growth, Inc. is an organization dedicated to the preservation of the environment through population growth control.
The primary business of the meeting will be explanation of the duties and further organization of the several committees.
The meeting is open to all interested persons. The Douglas County chapter now has more than 50 members and the membership goal for this year is 250 persons.
KU host art conference
Two thousand senior and junior high school art students from over the state will be at KU April 10 for the 27th annual High School Art Conference.
The conference will include informal studio demonstrations of art techniques and presentations of the various programs offered at KU in the visual arts. A representative display of student work from the department of design and from the new visual arts freshman foundation program will be on display.
Harvard architect to speak
Eric Teicholz of the Laboratory for Computer Graphics and Spatial Analysis of the Harvard Graduate School of Design will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. His appearance
2 KANSAN
will be part of the School of Architecture and Urban Design's visiting lecture series.
Mar.6 1970
KU
KU Students
Cleaning Headquarters
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities
A complaint was filed Wednesday with the University Disciplinary Board relating to the alleged confiscation and destruction of the University Daily Kansan on Feb. 23, Martin Dickinson, associate professor of law and chairman of the University Disciplinary Board, said Thursday.
1029 New Hampshire
Sullivan said the Black Student Union was being tentatively charged with the destruction of the papers in the formal letter.
"If this act of vandalism is ignored, any faction that wanted to protest could destroy University or student property and expect to get away with it," Sullivan said.
Phone 843-3711
Complaint filed with UDB
Dickinson said the complaint, filed by Thomas E. Sullivan, Kansas City junior, asked that the BSU be fined in the amount of the value of the papers destroyed plus an additional fine of $100.
White Student Union," Sullivan said. "It doesn't matter if the people who did this are black or white. It was vandalism and should not have been done."
Students vie for internship
Sullivan said he was following the rules set by the Student Senate that requires the extent of the punishment asked be stated in a formal letter.
Four KU students have been nominated by the University to be considered for the federal government's new Washington Summer Intern Program.
"I have asked several law students for help in preparing the charges that will be stated in the formal letter," Sullivan said. This letter, he said, will be presented to the Disciplinary Board no later than Monday.
"I want to make it clear that I am in no way connected with any
They are: Theresa Ann Bridges, Norborne, Mo., sophomore; Norman Ray Mueller, Marion junior; Dennis J. Parle, Pontiac, Mich., graduate student; and Mary Joanne Thum, Atchison junior.
The nominees were selected from 16 KU finalists to compete with nominees from other colleges and universities for the 400 positions that will be made available in Washington agencies during the summer. Each participating college was asked to nominate from two to four students depending on its size.
The program is an effort by the federal government to involve talented college students in the operation of federal agencies. The interns will be paid from $425 to $850 a month, depending on their educational level and the job classification.
Each undergraduate nominee was required to have a grade point average of 2.5 or better on a 3.0 system, and graduate students were required to be in the upper half of their class. Leadership, honors, awards and other recognitions received, and career goals and interests were the other criteria for selection.
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KANSAN COMMENT
It only whispers
Among the many words which have been flung about carelessly in the past decade is "conscience."
The defiant young radical declares that he broke a law because his conscience told him to.
The patriotic conscience of the too-brutal policeman tells him that he must crack open the head of that dangerous young radical.
Neither that young radical nor that patriotic policeman knows what his conscience is. Neither is really listening to his conscience.
"Yet while our conscience thus insists that we do right, it does not by itself tell us what IS right," said Harry Emerson Fosdick. "Our ideas of what is right come from varied sources—our inherited tradition, our contemporary culture with its prevailing customs and codes, our own passion and self interest, our excuses and self justifications, the books we read, the movies we see, the people we admire, the philosophy we hold."
Conscience, too often claimed by dissenters belongs to everyone. Adolph Hitler was surely acting out of conscience—doing what he thought was right.
The conscience, then, is an idiot, and like all idiots needs direction. For conscience to be used as a force for good, the convictions which a person holds must be well-founded and human, intelligent and compassionate. The conscience is the vehicle of convictions, and not, as is popularly believed—even by some of the most courageous contemporary Americans, the source of those convictions.
An example of a person obeying his religious conscience without regard to humanity and human intelligence (at least when viewed by contemporary standards) is Columbus, who wrote to King Ferdinand, "In the name of the Holy Trinity, from here we can send as many slaves as can be sold."
Had Columbus understood better the source of the Holy Trinity—a sincere religious compassion in the form of the Bible—his conscience would not have led him to assume slavery was ordained by God.
"That we need more conscientious people is a platitude," wrote Fosdick. "An immense amount of conscientiousness does more harm than good . . . So a young child prayed, 'O God, make all the bad people good, and make all the good people nice!'"
An undisciplined conscience, which works
without regard to reason or compassion but merely on that vague whisper—"Do right," can be more destructive than an ignored conscience.
The greatest literary example of what conscience is may be found in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn when Huck is torn between helping slave Jim escape and obeying his "conscience" by returning him to his owner.
"It would get all around, that Huck Finn helped a nigger to get his freedom; and if I was to ever see anybody from that town again," says Huck. "I'd be ready to get down and lick his boots for shame. That's the way: a person does a low-down thing, and then he don't want to take no consequences of it . . . The more I studied about this, the more my conscience went to grinding me, and the more wicked and low-down or ornery I got to feeling."
Later, Huck talks about "something inside" him saying, "There was the Sunday school, you could a gone to it; and if you'd a done it they'd learnt you, there, that people that acts as I'd been acting about that nigger goes to everlasting fire."
Torn between his conscience (directed in large part by a societal conscience which rejected freeing slaves) and his own compassion for Jim, Huck finally decides to act against his background, against those traditions which he had been led to believe were naturally good. "All right, then. I'll GO to hell," he declares!
The conscience is far too complex, then, to direct any significant action without the guidance of other facilities.
So it is more than probable that the law-breaking demonstrator who hears "something inside" has no more claim to conscientiousness than the club-wielding policeman. Their consciences have been formed by a vast number of things (going to Sunday School or not, as Huck says).
If either the demonstrator or the policeman is more righteous than the other it is probably because of the weakness of the convictions of one or the other, the weakness of the factual foundations of one or the other, the weakness of the moral backgrounds of one or the other.
But too much has been blamed and too much credit has been given to that little "something inside" which, in reality, only whispers:
"Do right. Do right. Do right."
We should never do right until we learn what right is.
Mike Shearer
hearing voices—
To the editor:
Attorney - General Mitchell should have realized that it was unnecessary for him to make a horrible example of the "Chicago 7." They were doing a pretty good job of discrediting themselves until the U.S. Department of Justice intervened. As a result of being brought to trial in a court presided over by an inept and biased judge, this group of emotionally immature, destructive individuals have become martyrs and heroes in the eyes of some young people.
The process of correcting injustices in our society and learning how to live together under
The demands that freedom and power be extended to all people must continue to be made persistently and emphatically. However, violence and unreasonableness in making demands are selfdefeating and destructive of human dignity.
stressful conditions is difficult and frustrating enough without having lighted matches thrown into emotional powder kegs repeatedly.
and institutions that make us angry.
I suggest that the Attorney-General and all the rest of us pray that we can control our fears and restrain our impulses for revenge against the people
Sydney O. Schroeder, M.D.
Psychiatrist
Student Health Service
* * *
(EDITOR'S NOTE). This is a note to A Concerned Jay-hawker who wrote to say that we should protect free speech by banning the Harambee and Vortex, disbar Velvel and nip all of these conspiracies in the bud. I think you're nuts, and since you don't include your name, I doubt your concernedness. Anyone who doesn't have the courage to sign a letter, isn't getting the benefit of this page.—MS)
Griff & the Unicorn
SOKOLOFF
PLAN
PLAN
$ \textcircled{C} $ David Sokoloff 1970
FORTOMATELY, OUR SYSTEM OF JUSTICE HAS BEEN EQUAL TO THE CHALLENGE OF THE "CHICAGO, 7"
THE NEW YORK TIMES
WHERE ELSE COULD A JUDGE DISPLAY
OPEN BIAIS in THE COURT and THEN
deny A BOND to the DEFENDANTS?
WV, WHERE ELSE COULD YOU FIND
SUKH BEAUTIFUL USE OF ILLEGAL
WIRETAPPING ? WHERE ELSE COULD YOU
SENTENCE A PERSON TO FOUR YEARS FOR
CONTEMPT WITHOUT BENEFIT A OR REAL ?
A boy is being teased by a girl.
C
I ASK YOU WHERE ELSE CAN THE
POLITICAL CAMPAIGN BE
AGAINST YOUR POLITICAL OVERSHELD
123.456.7890 123.456.7890
All rights reserved 1978
RUSSIA,
MAYBE?
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
Mail distribution of the Pratt Junior College Crossroads was recently halted by a disturbed college president.
Obscenity? Libel? Treason?
Nope. Dr. Ray Cleveland, juco president, said he stopped the mailing of the most recent issue of the bi-monthly publication because of (trumpets, drum roll, general fanfare) "negative articles."
He told the Pratt Daily Tribune that the issue contained "four or five articles nipping and ripping at the college." (Pauline gasps, Dudley clutches his throat, Black Bart even raises his eyebrows.)
One of the articles, it seems, dared to include a factual article based on an administration questionnaire which gave the number of freshmen who did not plan to return. This isn't good public relations, you see.
"The journalism department here is not the same as at a four-year college, nor is the newspaper the same as the newspaper downtown," the conscientious college president told the newspaper downtown.
"You try to teach young people to be critical . . . to look at things in a critical light . . . and no one says everything is rosy at the junior college," he told the Tribune. "But most of our students are positive thinkers."
Cleveland says he doesn't believe in censorship. "No, I believe in guidance," he told the Tribune.
I don't think the good president has the faintest knowledge of censorship (halting mail distribution ain't guidance by any definition), journalism (newspapers aren't supposed to create a positive, false news world, but rather are supposed to describe the world as it is) or negativism (there are few things more negative than controlling the news to suit a power structure).
No, Dr. Cleveland, everything isn't rosy at the junior college. But the least rosy thing seems to be your attempt to create a rosy world. ("The rose garden world of perfection is a lie and a bore too."—Hannah Green.)
(Curtain falls to chorus of "boos" and back-row chantings:
"Power to the people!")
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and xamination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $15 per month. All goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without any restrictions are necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor... James W Murray
Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson
Campus Editor ... Ted Iliff
News Editor ... Joe Bullard
Editorial Editors ... Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd
Spotlight Editors ... Bruce Carmahan, Steve Shiver
Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkens
Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins
Women's Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers
Arts and Reviews Editors ... Genele Richards, Nich Geary
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KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Mythic guest
By RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
"Easy Rider" is definitely not a disappointment. In fact, it is quite a good film, if the viewer doesn't expect something utterly great.
It is far greater, though, than the average run of "alienation" movies aimed at the youth market which have been glutting marquees recently, simply because it stares its problem in the face without resorting to false sentiment or easy answers. At the close of the sixties, "Easy Rider" seems a culmination of the alienation theme, with a clean, ultra-simple story, presented in mythic terms. The spine of the narrative follows a cross-country motorcycle odyssey by a pair of familiar hippie-types, covering a fine cross-section of all that is beautiful, repugnant, funny and violent in the land of the not-so-free.
The two men, Captain America and Billy, played by Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, start out with a tankful of money from a drug sale south of the border and glide through the landscape from California to the Mardi Gras, encountering, in turn, a peaceful farmer, a struggling hippie colony, scores of leering rednecks, and, best of all, a drunken young lawyer who accompanies them part of the way.
The entire production bears the mark of enthusiastic sincerity. Dennis Hopper's direction is remarkably professional, even though his use of flash cutting to form transitions and his constant reliance on pular songs for background music reminds one of student work. But it is this blend of proficiency and amateurishness that bolsters the film's basic tone of honesty: we know that the picture was made quickly and economically by men who, though they were newcomers behind the camera, had first-hand knowledge of their subject matter.
The acting is uniformly good. Peter Fonda, who has never been anybody's idea of an accomplished performer, fortunately is given very little to say and seems just right as the disillusioned hero of the story. Hopper, too, is fine as an angry, incoherent, somewhat comic little fellow, with a very noticeable violent streak. The standout, though, is Jack Nicholson as the drawing, alcoholic lawyer, who is with the others in spirit but ludicrously out of place in their life-style. Nicholson has won the New York Film Critics award for best supporting actor and has been nominated for the academy award.
In the end, we realize something that the two wanderers don't, because we have, in effect, seen more than they have. At the close of their journey, Fonda says, "We blew it," as if he had failed America rather than the other way around. He thinks he has missed something, but we know he has not; "Easy Rider" shows it all.
Guitarist to perform
Francisco Espinosa, one of Spain's great guitarists, performs at 8 p.m. Sunday in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
10
Francisco Espinosa
He is currently performing throughout the country on his fourth personal appearance tour.
The noted guitarist—famous on both sides of the Atlantic for the vastness of his musical repertoire and the incandescence of his guitar performances—has won widespread acclaim throughout North America on two previous personal appearance tours, and has won standing ovations with his phenomenal renditions of Spain's most dazzling Flamenco, Folkloric, and Classical guitar masterworks.
Epinosa's local appearance will emphasize the Flamenco and Folkloric facets of his repertoire, as the music of the Spanish people and provinces is performed in all its intricacy, with deceptive facility by the thirty-six-year-old artist. Fandangos, Tangos, Bulerias, Jotas, Alegrias, and Zapateados will rain forth in breathtaking profusion during the two-hour concert.
TOM BROWN
W. C. FIELDS
W. C. FIELDS
"DON'T GIVE A SUCKER
AN EVEN BREAK"
and
"THE BANK DICK"
Two Field's Greats
Adult 1.50
Child .75
Hillcrest 7:05
9:35
"TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE". This is a new film with Katharine Ross and Robert Redford, who performed in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid."
M. R.
"EASY RIDER"—See review this page.
A Reiver Is A
Wanderer
So Hurry, He may
Leave Soon!
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30
Rated M
Adults 1.50; Child .75
THE
Hillcrest
"THE DAMNED" — Another "X" movie has come to town but this one should prove better than the rest. The movie centers on the rise of the Nazi regime and the people involved in it.
"THE REIVERS" — Staying around for another week, those who haven't seen this should.
The Weekend Scene
"DON'T GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK" and "THE BANK
THE Hillcrest
HILLS SHIPPING STORE & STATION
DICK"—Again The Great One is back with two of his classic movies.
GET A CHAW?
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPI)
—Plug tobacco originated in Missouri, deriving its name from the method of curing. The tobacco leaves were treated with wild honey and brandy and wedged into holes in green hickory or maple log. The holes were then plugged and the tobacco left to cure.
"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!"
—ANOREW SARRIS, VILLAGE VOICE
"A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY."
—PLAYBOY
"I ELOQUENT, AND IMPORTANT!"
—JOSEPH MORGENSTERN, NEWSWEER
easy Rider
PETER FONDA · DENNIS HOPPER
JACK NICHOLSON
NOW! Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30
Box Office Open 5:00 p.m.
C
Granada
TREATHE...telephone VI3-5740
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
FRANCISCO ESPINOSA—See story this page.
"IN COLD BLOOD" (SUA Popular Film Series, Fri. and Sat.)Many may recognize the actors and the scenery in this film based on the murder of the Clutter family.From the best selling book by Truman Capote, this film is something to see and remember.
Mar. 6
1970 KANSAN 5
TRUMP
"One of the year's
10 best pictures!"
—Roger Greenspun, N. Y. Times
ROBERT REDFORD
KATHARINE ROSS
ROBERT BLAKE
SUSAN CLARK
"TELL THEM WILLIE
BOY IS HERE"
Matinee Daily 2:30
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065
Some people will say"The Damned" goes too far. We don't think so.
J
The New York Times doesn't think so and neither does The Saturday Review, Playboy, New York Magazine, Cue, NBC-TV's Today Show, The Village Voice, Group W Network and Holiday Magazine.
They call it "The year's ultimate spectacle, a rare treat, hypnotic and fascinating, a shattering experience, a masterpiece, a monumental achievement!"
X
WARNER BROS. presents LUCHINO VISCONTIS "THE DAMNED" • An ALFRED LEVY-EVER HAGGIAG production Starring DIRK, BOGARDE • INGRID THULIN
HELMUT GRIEM Introducing HELMUT BERGER • RENAUD VERLEY • UMBERTO ORSINI • ALBRECHT SCHOENHALS • RÉNE KOLDENOFF and FLORINDA
BOLKAN and CHARLOTTE RAMPLING • Original Story by NICOLA BADALUCCO • Music Composed and Conducted by MAURICE ARRE · Produced by ALFRED
LEVY and EVER HAGGIAG • Directed by LUCHINO VISCONTIS • Screenplay by NICOLA BADALUCCO • ENRICO MEDIOLI • LUCHINO VISCONTI • TECHNICOLOR®
Hillcrest
No One Under 18 Admitted.
I.D.'s Requested. Adults 1.50
7:00 & 9:40
CHEVROLET
Plans for a new mobile home park, such as the one shown here at 22nd and Harper Street, were approved by the Lawrence City Commission Tuesday. The new mobile home park will be on Maple Lane.
Mobile home park planned
By CHARLENE MULLER
Kansan Staff Writer
Plans for a mobile home park on Maple Lane were approved by the Lawrence City Commission Tuesday.
Mayor Clark O. Morton Jr, who voted affirmatively, said the park in question would be the last one to receive his approval until changes were made in the city's mobile home park situation.
"I am not opposed to mobile home parks," Morton said. "They are necessary. But the park operators are granted special permits which they are abusing."
Recreation areas of about 200 square feet, he said, are required by a city ordinance concerning mobile home parks to lie adjacent to each trailer. Park operators instead fill the recreation areas with electric poles and gas connections so that other trailers can be crowded into the space, he said.
Morton said the commission was checking into rumors that a person could not rent a space in certain parks unless he bought the trailer from the park owner.
Morton said another violation being checked into was that mobile home owners were removing the wheels from their trailers. This, he said, is strictly forbidden by the mobile home ordinance.
The commission is checking into the amount of revenue mobile home owners pay to the city. Mobile home parks create situations in which new schools might have to be built, Morton said. If this is the case, someone must be paying enough revenue to provide this.
"An equitable system of revenue must be established so that mobile home owners pay personal property taxes to the city comparable to the amount residential home owners pay," he said.
The commission, Morton said, needs to examine and revise the present ordinance so that the most desirable standards for mobile homes, mobile home parks and their locations be established and enforced.
The only commissioner to vote against the mobile home park, James Black, said he thought the
planning of the park was excellent but he did not think it was fair to put a stipulation on the park operator to pave the public road lying adjacent to the west side of the park. The park owner he said, should have been able to petition the city to do this.
"The street should be paved," Black said, "but the stipulation on the park owner now holds him responsible to pave the street. It isn't fair to enforce the responsibility of paving adjacent public roads to park owners in one area and not in another."
Weather
Sunny and mild today: winds light and northerly. Clear and cool tonight. Partly cloudy and warmer Thursday. High today 45 to 50. Low tonight 25 to 30. Probability of precipitation near zero per cent today, tonight and Thursday.
Examinations given not contraceptives
By KAREN KLINKENBERG
Kansan Staff Writer
Watkins Hospital has been asked to give contraceptives to any girl requesting them. Doctors feel they should act like any hometown physician who lets the decision rest with the patient and doctor. The hospital does give such medication to married Students with consultation.
A report by the Student Health Committee of the Student Senate said of the present operating policies of the health center, "At the present time, the medical staff finds the prospect of a contraceptive clinic untenable."
"Staff members have stated that their resignations would follow any attempt to force them to comply," the report said.
The heath center does provide information and educational material on sexual problems when requested. Premarital examinations and advice are provided whenever possible and any decisions reached are between the doctor and patient.
The report also said, "The Board of Regents and the chancellor have not issued any direct orders in regard to the health service concerning contraception."
"It is implied," the report continued, "that all medical services provided by this institution will
be in compliance with the laws of the state of Kansas and the accepted rules of good medical practice. The medical staff must make their decisions within the above limitations in terms of the patients needs and the dictates of their consciences."
The state provides a source of contraceptives for all persons 18 or older at the Douglas County Health Unit.
Watkins Hospital is short of doctors and space.
The report said, "Doctors are nearly unobtainable at the salaries permitted by Civil Service." The last physician position remains unfilled at the present time.
The report concluded by saying, "It must be obvious to all that even a few resignations would be tantamount to a closure of the health service itself."
A resolution presented by Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student Wednesday night asked individual practicing physicians at their individual discretion, to prescribe oral contraceptives and other birth control devices to requesting female students and that such contraceptives be available at the health center." The resolution was dropped by von Ende after consideration of the doctors' threat.
Nuclear weapon pact signed by U.S., Soviets
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United States and the Soviet Union gave life Thursday to the treaty banning the spread of nuclear weapons and voiced hope that their historic arms-control negotiations starting next month would further lessen the threat of nuclear holocaust.
President Nixon and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, who formally proclaimed the nuclear nonproliferation treaty "in force," said they looked forward now to a general agreement between their governments at the strategic arms limitations talks beginning April 16 in Vienna.
The nonproliferation treaty, ratified so far by more than 45 nations, forbids nuclear powers to give fissionable materials for military use to non-nuclear states, which in turn are prohibited from accepting or developing nuclear weapons.
Nixon and Kosygin presided at ceremonies in Washington and
The President, speaking at the State Department, hailed the treaty as "the first milestone on the road which leads to reducing the danger of nuclear war." He said the "next milestone will be the limitation of nuclear weapons"
With the full adherence of the United States, the Soviet Union and Great Britain, which had deposited instruments of ratification last year, the treaty officially went into effect. Six other nations also completed the ratification process Thursday.
6 KANSAN Mar. 6 1970
Moscow during which the two countries officially completed ratification of the pact.
Communist China and France, the two other nuclear powers, still have not signed the treaty and disarmament experts acknowledge that their absence diminishes the force of the pact substantially.
A number of other countries believed capable of making nuclear weapons also have not yet ratified the treaty. These include West Germany, Japan, Israel, India, Argentina, Pakistan and Australia.
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Largest turnout of college tour
Pat gets warm welcome at Springfield
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (UPI) — First Lady Pat Nixon won her most enthusiastic welcome and was received by the largest crowd on her five-day college swing Thursday when she arrived at the Springfield Airport.
Her plane, a 707 jet with an American flag insignia and part of the presidential fleet, was the largest ever to land at the airport.
The crowd, estimated by police at 3,500, broke through wooden barriers to greet the First Lady. Most were children from girl scout and brownie troops and campfire girl organizations who
wanted to shake Mrs. Nixon's hand and get her autograph.
Mrs. Nixon then motored for 90 minutes from the airport through the rolling countryside and lake resort towns to the School of the Ozarks at picturesque Point Lookout near the Arkansas state line.
Church bells chimed, children waved American flags and others carried welcoming placards as the First Lady experienced a bit of Ozark hospitality that compared favorably with her previous stops, some of which had been stormy.
Libraries open doors to all Kansas students
Libraries at the seven Kansas state-supported institutions of higher education have opened their doors to students from any of the institutions, including University of Kansas Medical Center students and faculty.
Students may use the library facilities by supplying evidence of their current enrollment as a student or appointment as a faculty member at any of the seven colleges and universities.
The privilege is the result of an agreement by the Kansas Academic Librarians' Council. It
was reached in order that library materials and services paid for by state funds could be made directly available to all Kansas students and faculty.
The borrowing privileges will apply at each library and the borrower must follow the local rules. Returns may be made in person, by mail or through the home library.
Failure to return books or pay fines could result in the termination of borrowing privilege or action from the borrower's own institution.
Production costs rise on Air Force's C5 plane
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lockheed Aircraft Corp., told the Pentagon Thursday it can not continue to build the C5 beyond the end of the year without more federal money to cover increasing costs of the big jet transport program.
The Air Force reduced its order from 120 to 81 planes and has refused to estimate the cost of the smaller number of purchases,
Mar. 6
1970 KANSAN 7
pending court suits to determine how much of the excess costs should be absorbed by Lockheed
Estimates of "cost overruns" on the program have run as high as $2 billion. When the order stood at 120 planes, the cost was estimated to have risen from an original $2.9 billion to $5.1 billion.
Her visit to the peaceful rural campus was low key.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said he viewed the claim by Lockheed as "extremely serious" but that no action would be taken until the matter had been reviewed by the Defense Department and the appropriate committees of Congress.
The security also was in great contrast to the tours of helmeted police who guided her in Denver and Boulder. There are no hippies here; there were no demonstrations.
"We really just don't have time for that," student Jerry Brannan, 20, told Mrs. Nixon.
"This is an unexpected surprise," Mrs. Nixon said, "to see so many people out at the gate, all the flags. I'm going to enjoy the tour of your great school."
Elbert cautions candidates not to slam,sling mud
"I had to move away; they were breaking down the fences," she told reporters with a smile.
Mrs. Nixon was obviously delighted by the turnout, weather and welcoming. She received a thunderous reception at the Springfield airport, where her only cause for alarm were the children who broke through the barricades just to shake her hand.
Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and student body presidential candidate, cautioned his party's candidates that during the final week of the campaign there might be some mudslinging, but that the Alliance should continue to run their campaign "above board." Ebert spoke at an Alliance organizational meeting Thursday night in the Kansas Union.
"Our intention is to keep the campaign issue oriented and avoid the kind of personality slam and character defamation that appeared today (in Thursday's Kansan). There is not going to be any mudslinging coming from the Alliance," he said.
"Bantering back and forth between candidates about personalities and pseudo-issues only works to turn students off to the importance of the political process," Ebert said.
The meeting was held to help the Alliance candidates to organize their campaign for the final week and to discuss the party's issues.
Mrs. Nixon stepped down from the plane in an electric blue wool coat on a bright, sunny day in the Missouri Ozarks, the best weather she has had to date. She was officially greeted by Mrs. Warren E. Hearnes, Missouri's first lady.
"We're glad you came our way," said Mrs. Hearnes, "Glad you came to see our volunteers."
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"It's great to be here on this wonderful day," said Mrs. Nixon in a brief response. She was handed the key to the city by Mayer Carl Stilwell.
David W. Backs of Southwest Missouri State College, acting as a cheerleader, urged the children to shout "We want Pat, We want Pat."
They responded loudly with shrieks that drowned out some of the welcoming remarks, Mrs. Nixon was handed a red apple which she clutched as she moved along the fence. She laughed when she saw the sign of one little girl which read, "My name is Pat, too."
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It was strictly a Republican- boosted welcome.
Mrs. Nixon signed only one autograph—on an inaugural program which a woman pleadingly handed to her. Among the many welcoming signs was one which read, "God bless you and your work."
Two welcomers who apparently came by on their own to greet Mrs. Nixon were former Congressman O. K. Armstrong, R-Mo., and Attorney General John C. Danforth, the only statewide GOP officeholder in Missouri.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
She was on the last lap of her college tour to spark student volunteerism. Her appearance later Thursday at the School of the Ozarks was the first time she had actually set foot on a campus.
The first lady was slightly perturbed when she came upon blonde 9-year-old Ruby Ferguson, who was crying in her father's arms. She had been slightly bruised in the crush of the crowd.
There were no "anti" signs and security was much lighter here than in Denver and Boulder,
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. Reel, Office of Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
Colo., where Mrs. Nixon toured student volunteer projects Wednesday.
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New Kansas law July 1
Attitudes toward abortion changing
Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kannan Viewpoints on the subject of abortion are changing with the accumulation of knowledge relevant to the topic, according to Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital.
Schweger said yesterday that he had "no misgivings" about recommending a therapeutic abortion (TAB) to a woman who had contracted German measles during the first three months of pregnancy.
His opinion seems to reflect a nationwide change in attitudes toward circumstances which justified granting a woman the right to have a pregnancy artificially terminated.
KANSAN Women
One remembers the thalidomide scandal of 1961-62 when thousands of deformed and mentally defective babies were born to European and American mothers who had been taking thalidomide compounds as sedatives during the early months of pregnancy. In France one heart-stricken mother killed her thalidomide baby with barbiturates as an act of mercy. The child was mentally defective and deformed. The mother was acquitted of her crime.
There was also the case of Mrs. Sherry Finkbine of Arizona who was told by her doctor that she
had been taking a tranquilizing compound containing thalidomide.
Mar. 6
1970
8 KANSAN
Beginning July 1, no woman in Kansas carrying a defective fetus will be subjected to the ordeal Mrs. Finkbine experienced.
Her story was reported in newspapers and magazines throughout the country. Instead of giving birth to a baby who would probably be irreparably deformed, Mrs. Finkbine decided to have her pregnancy terminated by a TAB.
Mrs. Finkbine's search for a doctor who would perform the abortion, which would probably have cost him his reputation and a prison sentence, was viewed with both sympathy and condemnation.
In 1962, TABs could only be performed legally when several physicians had verified that the completion of pregnancy and birth would endanger the life of the mother. Nothing was said about terminating pregnancy when there was substantial reason to believe the fetus was seriously damaged.
So Sherry Finkbine had her abortion legally, in a Swedish hospital. The doctor who performed the abortion said the
fetus was already showing signs of being seriously deformed. Mrs.Finkbine, who had several children at the time of her abortion, bore another child the year after her operation.
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The Kansas abortion law will allow any woman who is a resident of Kansas to have a legal TAB with the verification of three physicians that to continue pregnancy would cause her physical or mental harm, or would allow a TAB in the case of a defective fetus. The law has come under much criticism, and was the subject of passionate debate in the Kansas Legislature. The law is a product of much compromise, and it remains to be seen whether Kansas will become
the "abortion mill" some opponents predict.
Dr. Schwegel said any woman who goes to Watkins Hospital seeking consultation for an abortion is first examined to determine whether there is medical basis for the need of a TAB. He said this procedure would be the same for any disease or disorder.
Schweegler said if the girl wants an abortion she is usually referred to her family physician for further consultation and treatment. Or she is referred to the Kansas University Medical Center.
Although no TABs are performed through Watkins, they can be performed at the medical center with the verification of
three physicians. Schwegler said the physicians at Watkins do not influence other physicians in abortion cases, but simply refer the patient to another qualified physician.
Despite the liberalization of abortion laws in several states (Colorado, Hawaii), there is still a social stigma connected with undergoing a TAB. For this reason, Schwegler, said, no records are kept at Watkins of women who have been referred through the Student Health Service for a TAB.
"It is a highly personal matter," he said. "And we don't feel it is proper for it to appear on a record when we don't know what hands it might fall into."
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Robisch needs 34 for scoring mark
Hawks tangle with NCAA-bound Cats
- The 165th meeting between Kansas State and Kansas will unveil at 8:05 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field House to climax the Jayhawks' season.
It will be the first time in five years that KU, who can finish no higher than second in the con-
Wildcats in Manhattan. That game was a key victory for K-State in its march to the title.
K-State coach Cotton Fitzsimmons, is his second year at the Wildcat helm, owns a 2-1 won-lost record against KU and will depend heavily on his guard combination of Jeff Webb and
and juniors Eddie Smith and Terry Snider among others. The Wildcats have repeatedly depended on their bench throughout the season and has been noted by Fitzsimmons as possibly being the one big factor in K-State's winning the conference championship.
Big Eight scorers with a 21.2 average.
T
Dave Robisch
ference, will not enter post season play.
Going into the game KU has defeated the Wildcats 103 times compared to only 61 losses but somehow past records are of little relevance and only the present will be of importance.
Probable starting lineups:
Kansas Kansas State
Robisch, 6-9 jr. F Venable, 6-6 sr.
Russell, 6-3 jr. Zender, 6-7 so.
Brown, 6-10 jr. C Hall, 6-6 so.
Kivisto, 6-1 so. G Hughes, 6-1 sr.
Lawce, 6-4 sr. Webb, 6-2 sr.
A sell-out crowd will witness the Jayhawks attempt to avenge a 71-68 defeat administered earlier by the Big Eight champion
Buffs edge Iowa State
BOULDER, Colo. (UPI) — Iowa State gave the University of Colorado a start, but the Buffers came back with a vengeance to blast the Cyclones 107-79 Thursday night in Big Eight basketball action.
The game left the defending Big Eight champion Buffs with a 6-7 conference record for the season and pushed the Cyclones back to a 5-8 record.
Iowa State jumped to a quick 10-2 lead in the first two minutes of the game, but it was the Buffaloes from then on. Colorado led for the first time with 9:47 left in the first half when Dudley Mitchell dumped in a field goal to make it 22-21.
KANSAN Sports
For the Jayhawks it will mark the last appearance for Chester Lawrence. The only senior on the KU squad, Lawrence is the only man in the last five years to be elected team captain prior to the season's beginning.
Walt Wesley, former KU great now playing with the professional Chicago Bulls, holds the record, 377 points in 14 games in 1965.
Wheeler Hughes to improve it.
Hughes, a 6-1 senior guard, was tabbed in pre-season by Fitzsimmons as a possible "super" player. Fitzsimmons was quoted as saying that Hughes had all the tools to become one of the nation's great guards. An excellent ball handler and passer Hughes is averaging eight points a game.
Wheeler Tiggers to improve in Webb, a 6-4 senior from West Allis, Wis., has been described by Fitzsimmons as a top pressure man. In 25 games this season he is averaging 11 points a game and is hitting 78 per cent of his free throws to lead the Wildcats in that department.
PETE BURGESS
Chet Lawrence
The Wildcats also have a talented front line composed of senior Jerry Venable and sophomores David Hall and Bob Zender to complement their guards. Venable is the leading K-State sewer with a 15 point average while Zender and Hall are averaging 13 and 11 points respectively.
In addition K-State has been noted for its strong bench consisting of senior David Lawrence
The 6-4 Vienna, Ill., product comes into the game fresh from an 18-point performance, his career best, against Oklahoma Monday night.
Dave Robisch, KU's 6-9 junior
Russell named top athlete
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Bill Russell, the man who led the Boston Celtics to 11 National Basketball Association championships in 13 years, has been named the Athlete of the Decade by Sporting News, it was announced Thursday.
The national weekly, Sporting News, said Russell was deemed the finest of the five because of his "consistence and brilliance during this period ... more than anyone else, the past ten years in sports belonged to one man - center Bill Russell of basketball's Boston Celtics.
Russell beat out Willie Mays in baseball, Johnny Unitas in football, Bobby Hull in hockey and Arnold Palmer in golf to win the honor.
and Big Eight scoring leader, needs 34 points against the Wildcats to break the Big Eight one-season scoring record.
Russell joined the Celtics in December of 1956. The Celtics had led the league in scoring five straight years. However, the team had not won a division title during that time.
Robisch will take a 26.5 scoring average into the game, well ahead of Oklahoma's Garfield Heard, who is in second place among
In the next 13 years, with Russel at center, Boston won nine division championships and 11 NBA titles.
Russell "didn't just play a great 48 minutes of pro basketball." Sporting News said. "He influenced the entire defensive side of the game. Except in very rare instances, and then for only extremely short periods of time, does defense ever catch up with offense in sports."
10 KANSAN Mar. 6
1970
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Your job would involve you with communication problems. People problems. Problems in business logistics. You'd be looking
Canton, Ohio, is the site of the National Football Hall of Fame.
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Come and look us over. Demand specifics. Weigh us as hard as we'll be weighing you. We might turn out to be your kind of people. Write to Wm. D. Hamm, Manager, Sales Selection and Employment at the address below. He'll give you a better idea of what it's all about.
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Hurl two scoreless innings
Seaver displays sharpness in first mound stint
Two innings don't make a successful season but they did establish Wednesday two points the world champion New York Mets wanted to know about 25-game winner Tom Seaver.
1. Seaver seems to have lost none of his competitive sharpness on the winter banquet circuit.
2. He is very close to being in shape for the new season's opener.
The National League's Cy Young Award winner in 1969, Seaver pitched two hitless innings Wednesday when the Yogi Berras beat the Joe Pignantanos, 3-2, in
an intra-squad game. Seaver gave up one walk, erased in a double play, and left the mound bubbling with enthusiasm.
"I felt good and was getting the ball where I wanted to," he said. "I'm in good physical and mental shape because I attended only five banquets during the winter. Everything looks good for another good year."
On other fronts: Hank Aaron hit two run-producing singles as the Atlanta Braves' regulars beat the reservers, 3-0. . . Tom Haller's signing for an estimated
$50,000 left Jeff Torborg only
unsigned Dodger.
Don Lock hit two homers and George Thomas and Russ Gibson one each in the Boston Red Sox intra-squad game. . . . Ed Kirkpatrick and Dennie Paeke drove in two runs each to lead the Dunlops to a 6-2 victory over the Schultzes in the Kansas City Royals' intrasquad game.
The New York Yankees arrived at full roster strength when they signed infielders Jerry Kenney and Ron Hansen . . first baseman Boog Powell and 20-game winner Dave McNally remained the Baltimore Orioles' holdouts.
Manager Leo Durocher of the Chicago Cubs said that he will not alter the top four spots in his batting order regardless of newcomers. Nos. 1-4 will be Don Kessinger, Glen Beckert, Billy Williams and Ron Santo holdout Tommy Helms went home after failing to reach a
salary agreement with Sheldon Bender, the Cincinnati Reds' director of player personnel.
Mike Shannon singled in the game's only run in the fourth inning of the St. Louis Cardinals' intra-squad game. . Dennis Saunders, a 21-year-old rookie right-hander, starred on the mound in the Detroit Tigers' workout. Manager Mayo Smith, it may be recalled, is on the lookout for a replacement for 24-game winner Denny McLain.
Flood doubtfull of playing status
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Curt Flood, former outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals, said Thursday he does not really expect to play professional baseball again.
Flood said, "I don't think that one of the 24 men owners in baseball will touch me with a 10-foot pole. In my own mind, I don't really expect to play again."
Flood said even if he could get back into baseball he probably would have trouble getting into shape because his suit against baseball's reserve clause is expected to take two years.
"I'll be 34 by then and it would be very difficult to come back from that," he said.
Flood said Wednesday's decision by U.S. District Judge Irving Ben Cooper, which denied Flood's request that he be allowed to negotiate with any team he chooses this season, was not a surprise except in timing.
Flood promised to continue his battle against the reserve clause and said, "I think it's going to have to go right to the Supreme Court."
Flood said there was "no possibility" that he would come to terms with the Philadelphia Phillies even if they offered him over $100,000. "I just will not sign
Mar. 6
1970 KANSAN 11
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that contract again with the reserve clause in it."
Flood said the Phillies had offered him a contract "very close to $100,000—one side or the other." He added, "I really can't afford to layout one season . . . but when you figure that other people have given their lives for this same issue—their individual rights—what's $90,000?"
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THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
THE SPIRIT OF CAPTAIN P. J. LOOMS IN THE NITE AT THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE
Captain P. J., a mischievous, ole, briny sea captain, is said to loom in the darkness of The Captain's Table during the night. Since his death P. J. has been looking for the best place possible to settle up to a table for a long and fulfilling meal. He seems to have found it. The Captain's Table.
It is said that his crew committed mutiny when P. J. forced them into wearing pajamas to bed every night. They retaliated by locking him up and starving him to death. They dumped his pajama clad body into the cold nite sea.
Some of our customers at the Captain's Table say they have seen the bearded P. J. (in his pajamas) outside scratching on the window between 8: P.M. and 2:30 A.M. He seemed to want their dinner (Top Sirloin, K.C. Strip, T-bone, Cubed Beef, Roast Beef, and others).
If you come in between 8: P.M. and 2:30 A.M., you may see P. J. looming in the darkness. But, if you don't, you'll still enjoy the most enjoyable meals in town. The spirit of Captain P. J. thinks so. You'll think so after you have tried it.
- Come in after we beat K-State Saturday and celebrate over a juicy steak. Keep your eyes open for the bearded one, P. J.
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Roger Brown becomes popular with fans; attitude a big factor in his comeback
Roger Brown, KU's 6-10 junior post man, has become a favorite among Jayhawk basketball fans. The entrance of Brown into a game inevitably brings a roaring crowd reaction and his recent re-entry to the KU starting lineup has revitalized team enthusiasm.
A. W. BOWEN
Roger Brown
The history of Brown's varsity career at KU is interesting. Last year as a sophomore he found himself a starter teaming with
6-9 Dave Robisch in the Jayhawk double-post offense. However this year coach Ted Owens disregarded his traditional deliberate offensive style for a fast-breaking one and as a result Brown found himself sitting on the bench.
The bench was anything but helpful however and Brown's early season play became noticeably inconsistent and hesitant. But unlike many players Brown possesses a great attitude and refused to give up.
The results paid off and became noticeable when the Hawks hosted Nebraska Feb. 16. Brown entered the game with 12 minutes remaining in the opening half and the Cornhuskers holding a narrow lead over KU. By halftime he had scored eight points recorded an unbelievable 18 rebounds and the Jayhawks held a nine point advantage. KU went on to win, 100-87.
"I thought I should have been starting," he said, "but it was the coach's decision. It was kind of tough at first and I got down on myself a little bit but I just decided I had to get myself up and work harder."
No one is happier about Brown's comeback than Owens who attributed the big center's development to his attitude.
"Roger just needed to believe in himself and have the opportunity to play more," Owens said.
"He has done this and you can see the results."
Assistant coach Sam Miranda expressed similar sentiments.
He said, "Roger has a great attitude and this has allowed him to come back like he has."
Brown's confidence does not stop with himself as he believes next season will be the "year of the Javhawks."
"If we don't go all the way next year there has to be a problem somewhere," he said. "We only lose Chester (Lawrence) and we've got a real good freshman team."
it's got to help us," he said. "Everyone will be a year older and it should make a big difference."
Brown expressed disappointment at this year's results but felt the experience gained will be an asset to next season.
"With most everyone returning
He offered no excuses for not winning the Big Eight conference title this year.
"We just didn't play hard enough on the road," he said.
Baltimore heavy favorite to repeat
The Jayhawks will close out their season Saturday night with interstate rival and Big Eight champion Kansas State.
Oh, they know it did—from Manager Earl Weaver on down to the batboy, they've got the emotional and financial scars to remember it. But they are not letting it disturb their confidence that they can win the American League championship again, maybe as easily as they did in 1969.
12 KANSAN Mar. 6
1970
(Editor's note: The following is the first of a series of stories sizing up the 1970 major league baseball teams.)
"It will take a lot of injuries or a lot of bad luck for this club to
MIAMI, Fla. (UPI)—The Baltimore Orioles think and act as if their crushing defeat by the New York Mets in last year's World Series never happened.
The Royals received good news Thursday on Amos Otis, who is expected to be the regular centerfielder. Doctors said the kidney ailment which has kept the former New York Met out of practice the past four days appears to be over and Otis should be out of the hospital Friday and back in uniform Saturday.
One rookie will be in the starting lincup. Metro said he will open with Scott Northey, son of former major leaguer Ron Northey, in centerfield.
Royal open exhibition season today
lose," Weaver says as he surveys his talent-rich squad in a workout at Miami Stadium.
Manager Charlie Metro said Wally Bunker, who won 12 games last season, will pitch the first three innings. Nine game winner Bill Butler will work the middle three and 11-game winner Dick Drago will finish up.
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI)—The Kansas City Royals will use their three winningest starting pitchers of last season in their exhibition opener against the New York Yankees Friday.
And Weaver, realizing he's violating the first rule of the "managers' union" by being optimistic, is also the first to admit that the Orioles' being such heavy favorites to repeat puts him squarely on a spot.
SUA Board
The same terrific pitching is back. Mike Cuellar (23-11), Dave McNally (20-7) and Jim Palmer (16-4) are the top three.
Tornedoed by Mets
For catching, Weaver says he will generally platoon left-right again with Ellie Hendricks and Andy Etchebarren "unless one of them is hot." Clay Dalrymple is No. 3.
Backing them up are Curt Motton .303 and Merv Rettenmund .247. Weaver will carry six outfielders and the No. 6 job is the only one where a rookie might find a place on the squad. It's up for grabs among Dave May .242 and rookies Terry Crowley and Tom Shopay (drafted from the Yankees).
The Orioles were on the verge of being hailed as one of the great teams in modern baseball when they were suddenly torpedoed by the Mets. They had won the American League East Division by a whopping 19 games, and then crushed the West champions, the Minnesota Twins, in three straight games in the AL playoffs.
Applications
Outfield Is Set
The outfield remains set with Don Buford.291 in left, Paul Blair.284 and 26 homers in center, and Frank Robinson.308 with 32 homers and 100 RBI's in right.
During the winter, the Orioles' front office stood pat on the roster, making only one trading attempt, for a pitcher, and that fell through.
In the infield, it's Boog Powell 304 with 37 homers and 121 RBI's at first base, Dave Johnson 280 at second, Mark Belanger 287 at short, and the incomparable Brooks Robinson 234 at third.
And, as these "guys" tune up for the campaign, it's easy to see why they are 2 to -1 favorites in their divisions again. Name it and the Orioles have it — hitting, pitching, defense, depth.
Officer Interviews March 17 Board Interviews March 19
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Graduates may have trouble finding jobs
By GALEN BLAND Kansan staff writer
Graduates this spring could find their job opportunities slimmer than in years past.
According to an article in U.S. News and World Report, companies have cancelled many of their interviews with June graduates. The placement bureaus at the University of Kansas bear out this nationwide trend.
Mrs. Mildred Young, director of the School of Business placement bureau, said Thursday that a number of firms had cancelled their interviews.
"There seems to have been fewer job offers this year," she said. She said there had been a large demand for accounting
graduates but there had been a low demand for Ph.D.'s.
The Men's Salary Survey by the College Placement Council said there had been a drop of 16 per cent in job offers to those with bachelor's degrees, a 26 per cent drop to those with masters degrees and a 14 per cent drop to Ph.D.'s.
Mrs. Young said part of the slow down could be attributed to government cutbacks in spending.
The Department of Engineering reports that 66 companies have cancelled in the last two months. "This," a spokesman said, "is way above the usual number of cancellations. Many of the companies felt it was a waste of time to interview when they only needed a few recruits."
Candidate for House presents platform
Michael G. Glover, candidate from the 39th legislative district and a KU student, spoke before the Faculty Forum Thursday at the Westminster Center.
Glover, Lawrence senior, said he based his platform on lack of communication between man and government. He said if elected he would remain in touch with the people by weekly forums to discuss problems and solutions.
Glover stated his platform dealt with air and water pollution, employment, housing, tax, welfare and the black issue.
Regarding air and water pollution, he said Lawrence didn't have the problem now, but the possibility was increasing. He said it was best to move today to correct the problem before it worsened. The box factory, the sewage plant and the fertilizer plant, he said, were currently polluting the river.
On the subject of employment and housing, he said he thought people should have a salary they were proud to work for; one that allowed future growth. He said he thought better housing in Lawrence was needed. Lower income and middle income families were not able to build or improve, he said. The best remedy was to channel capitol funds into local programs, he said.
Glover's next point was tax. He believed in a progressive income tax, distribution of wealth. He said he is against putting a lid on taxes.
Glover's position on welfare stated the problem with local welfare was not that society could not support the poor but that it could not support the rich.
Concerning the black issue, he
Official Bulletin
Today
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnastics 7 pm
popular Film; "In Cold Blood,"
wrote historian Kansas Union,
7 and 8:30 p.m.
Folk Dance Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium, 7:30 p.m.
People-to-People: now accepting applications for board positions for next year. See People-to-People office, Kansas Union.
Saturday
Freshman Basketball: Kansas State
freshman. = Allen Field House. 5:45
pm.
Popular Film: "In Cold Blood"
Washington Auditorium, Kansas Union,
8:05 p.m.
Basketball: Kansas State. Allen Field House, 8:05 p.m.
cruiting.
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson Gynasium, 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Carillon Rectal: Albert Gerken, 3 p.m.
p
Concert Band: University Theatre,
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SUA Program: Francisco Espinosa.
Spanish guitarist. Woodruff Auditor.
Guitarist.
HOUSTON (UPI) — George Blanda's 55 yard playkick against San Diego for the Houston Oilers in 1961, remains an AFL all-time record.
Mar. 6
1970 KANSAN 13
said the blacks were aware of their own culture, and what they could contribute to the future of all mankind was good. He said he wanted to keep communication open between all groups in the community.
New enterprises should be controlled by the people of the 39th district, he said.
Cutbacks in federal spending, especially in the defense department, can be cited as the cause for this job slowdown, he said.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences also reports some cancellations for job interviews. Mrs. Gladys Padget, director of the placement office, said the job situation was tight and that some government agencies had cancelled.
for jobs immediately, she said. A high percentage of students in the College go on to graduate studies.
Herold G. Regier, director of the educational placement bureau, said there were less recruiters this year than last. There were 141 districts here last year, he said, and although the final tally has not come in, the number this year will be less.
She said that the market could be "swamped" in some fields, Only 18 per cent of all graduates from the College will be looking
Regier said that a lack of recruiting funds, fewer vacancies and a greater supply of teachers coming from home districts were reasons for the cutback in re-
He said most Kansas and Missouri schools had not committed themselves because of their problems with legislation, such as the tax lid bill, that could affect teacher's salaries.
On the brighter side, Dana Leibengood of the School of Journalism reported that the number of interviews and job offers were not down in that school. He said the news industry was not effected in quite the same way by the economic situation as were other industries.
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Kansas House passes cigarette tax bill
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
Kansan Staff Writer
KU students that smoke would have to pay two cents more per pack in taxes under a bill that passed the Kansas House of Representatives Wednesday. Senate action on the bill is expected early next week, but its fate is uncertain.
In addition to raising the cigarette tax from 8 cents per pack to 10 cents, the bill would impose a 25 per cent excise tax on cigars and other non-cigarette tobacco products that are now free of state tax.
The cigarette tax would raise an estimated $4.5 million in tax revenue every year, and the other tax on tobacco would produce another $1.5 million a year.
The House passed the bill
despite warnings from industry lobbyists and some legislators that increased tax on cigarettes and tobacco products would cause Kansans in border counties to cross state lines and buy their cigarettes and cigars, thus decreasing the volume of sale in Kansas and lowering the state's total tax take on such items.
The bill is considered to be a "tax reform" measure because it would put an excise tax on cigars, pipe tobacco and chewing tobacco for the first time. It is the second "reform" measure passed by the House this session. The other was a tax on Kansas-based insurance companies.
An amendment to the bill reduced the handling allowance discount on rebate of cigarette taxes
from 3.75 to 2.5 per cent. This means that the allowance given dealers against the cigarette tax for affixing stamps to the packs would be lowered. This is expected to boost revenues about $250,000 a year. The 3.75 per cent allowance was granted originally when dealers had to purchase sheets of stamps and put one stamp on each pack, said Rep. Fred Linde, R-Wichita. He said a machine is now used to affix
the stamp and the allowance of 3.75 per cent is outdated.
Senate action on the bill is uncertain. Sen. Frank Hodge, R-Hutchinson and chairman of the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee, expects his committee to act on the bill early next week, probably Monday.
Earlier this year a separate but similar bill was killed in committee. However, since then a caucus of Senate Republicans has
generally endorsed a cigarette tax increase.
Last years legislature enacted a 35 per cent excise tax on tobacco products, but the levy was nullified by a Shawnee County District Court decision which held the measure unconstitutional because of a technical flaw in its title.
Cathay is the old name of China, used by Marco Polo.
KU debate squad hosts yearly tourney
The KU debate squad is sponsoring the 13th annual Heart of America Debate Tournament which started Thursday in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The tournament will last through Saturday, the final rounds will take place at 3 p.m. Saturday.
Don Parsons, assistant professor of speech, is chairman of the tournament. KU has been victorious only once in the 13 years the tournament has been held. Parsons remains optimistic about KU's chances of winning this year. He said the competition is tough, but KU has a fairly good chance of winning the title.
The tournament, which hosts 48 teams, has attracted entrees from schools all over the country. Represented from the East are Dartmouth, Brown, Georgetown and Boston College. From the West are U.C.L.A., Southern California and Stanford. Represented from the North and South are Alabama, Texas and Minnesota. Last year's winner was the University of Houston. Previously Southwest Missouri State had dominated the tournament by winning three times.
The tournament consists of eight rounds, each school debating twice in each round. To determine the best team, an elimination process is used. After the first day, 32 teams eliminated. This leaves 16 teams to battle their way through the quarter finals, semi-finals and finals.
This year's topic for the tournament is "Federal Revenue Sharing with the States." Each team, which consists of two members, will be given a chance to speak for ten minutes affirmative and ten minutes negative. Their final comments will be limited to five minutes per person. Each speaker is judged on delivery, rebuttal, evidence, organization and refutation.
Judging for the tournament is done by coaches of the colleges. The winning team will receive
14 KANSAN Mar. 6
1970
The tournament is open to the public and there is no admission charge.
a large trophy that will be kept for one year. Individual members of the teams will receive smaller plaques for their efforts.
This year KU is represented by two teams. The first team is Bob McCullough, Mission senior and David Jeans, Independence, Mo. senior, David Beck, Prairie Village junior, and Bob Prentice, Turon sophomore, make up the other team.
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The Senate goes on TV
KU law professor and chairman of SenEx, Charles Oldfather is shown here addressing both the University Senate Meeting in Lawrence and by closed circuit television the Medical Center. The video tape setup enabled the meeting to have a quorum since each the Medical Center and Lawrence could see each other.
Tax reform institutes scheduled this spring
Two institutes on the Tax Reform Act of 1969 will be presented this spring by the University of Kansas Law School, the Tax Section of the Kansas Bar Association, and KU extension.
The first institute will be held this Saturday at the Kansas Union. The second will be in Wichita March 21 at the Radisson Hotel. Indentential programs will be presented in one-day comprehensive coverage of the many changes made in federal income tax law by the 1969 Act.
The institute, designed for lawyers, accountants, and others affected by the tax reform act, will explain the effect of the act on everyday business planning decisions. Moderators will be Tom W. Hampton of Salina, chairman
of the Tax Section, Kansas Bar Association, and Lawrence E. Blades, dean of the KU School of Law.
Yesterday's University Senate meeting was transmitted for the first time by video television to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City.
FBI breaks bookie ring
Charles Oldfather, KU professor of law and chairman of the
Senate meeting shown on TV
Senate Executive Council, said it was done so the half-dozen student senators and the entire faculty could watch and comment. He said it was done so a quorum of the meeting could be attended.
NEW YORK (UPI) — Eleven men, including four New York State Police troopers and an alleged Mafia figure, were arrested Thursday by the FBI, breaking up a multi-million dollar interstate syndicate handling bets on baseball, football, horse races and other sports events.
Alex Lazzarino, director of in-
Mar. 6
1970 KANSAN 15
Australia is the least densely populated of the continents.
Army tour postponed
Thirty-eight Ft. Leonard Wood soldiers have been stricken by the disease since October. Three died of it in February.
Reps. Richard Ichord and William J. Randall, Democrats, and Republican Durward G. Hall had been scheduled to tour the base Thursday but their presence for House voting in Washington delayed the trip 24 hours.
FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. (UPI)—Three Missouri congressmen Thursday postponed until today their tour of this meningitis-plagued Army base to investigate charges of laxity and mistreatment of recruits at the post.
Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., ordered the on-the-spot inspection earlier this week after Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo., demanded it.
Eagleton said he received reports from parents and soldiers of exhausting duty, extensive harassment and inadequate medical assistance at the base; reports that "indicate the Army has been lax in dealing with this meningitis crisis."
The population of India as of April 1, 1969, was 532,714,246.
dependent studies, helped to coordinate the transmission to Kansas City. He said there was very little expense involved because the micro-wave line at KU was in operation 24 hrs. a day and the camera men were regular employees and students. He said the only expense incurred was moving a camera from Kansas City to Murphy Hall where the meeting was held.
"It was live and immediate on a two-way system at the Med. Center and Lawrence," Lazzarino said."The only difference was that KU watched the Med. Center on a large screen and the Med. Center watches KU on a monitor."
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Management and rail union to try again
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rail union and management negotiators agreed Thursday to meet again to try to settle voluntarily their 15-month-long contract dispute which Congress refused to do for them.
After a day which saw angry shopcraft workers picketing in scattered areas across the country in protest against Congress' decision Wednesday night to order a 37-day delay of a threatened nationwide rail strike, the Labor Department announced that both sides would meet at 9:30 a.m. EST Friday.
Assistant Labor Secretary William J. Usery, Jr. will meet with the negotiators, even though there was little hope that the deadlock over a proposed work rules change in the new 1969-70 contract would be broken.
Pickets at scattered terminals caused temporary delays in freight and some passenger service Thursday but the overwhelming majority of rail employees reported for work at the urging of union leaders or as a result of court injunctions.
Campus Interviews
The KU School of Business has announced its interview schedule for the week of March 9-13. All interested students are requested to sign up in 202 Summerfield Hall.
March 9: Bank of America, BS business administration, accounting, finance, political science, economics; The Hartford Insurance Group, any degree for sales and sales management; George A. Hormel & Co., BS, MS, MBA in Business, BA in Liberal Arts, production management, sales, accounting, summer work for seniors; International Milling Co. Inc., BS, BA or MBA, accounting, business administration, economics and statistics, production and sales management, data processing; Northern Natural Gas Co, BS-MS business administration—interest in data processing, summer interns for juniors, U.S. citizenship required; The Proctor and Gamble Co, seniors in Business and MBA candidates, any major.
March 10: Bank of America, BS-business administration, accounting, finance, political science, economics; Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co., all degrees, sales and sales management; Macy's, all degrees with an interest in retail sales and management; Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., all degrees, sales, sales management, accounting; The Paper Mate Company, MBA and BS with an accounting major, assistant production manager, accounting management programs, summer work for seniors and graduate students; The Upjohn Co., BS, MS, MBA in Business, BA in Liberal Arts, credits in chemistry and/or biological sciences necessary for sales work with physicians, hospitals, etc.; Wilson and Co. Inc., BA and MBA-Business, BA-Liberal Arts, sales, accounting management trainees.
16 KANSAN Mar. 6 1970
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Government asks court to void election
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The government Thursday asked a federal court to void as unfair the Dec. 9 United Mine Workers election in which incumbent W. A. "Tony" Boyle defeated Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, his dissident rival who later was murdered.
The Justice Department filed a suit in U.S. District Court here in behalf of the Labor Department, which asked that a new election be ordered on the basis of what Labor Secretary George P. Shultz called "the most widespread and painstaking investigation in the history of the Land-rum-Griffin Act."
The suit, resulting from the work of 200 investigators during more than two months, charged that UMW members were denied the right to vote as they chose "without being subject to penalty, discipline or improper interference or reprisal." Some were denied the right to vote at all, the government said.
Shultz also charged that the union "failed to provide adequate safeguards to insure a fair election," and denied candidates the right to have observers at polling booths and at the counting of ballots.
The government also sought an injunction to force the union to keep adequate records. Sen. Harrison A. Williams, D-N.J., announced at the same time that his Senate labor subcommittee would hear testimony March 17 into a charge that Boyle engineered a 30 per cent increase in monthly pension benefits payments by miners to further his bitterly contested re-election campaign.
The request for a new UMW election originally was requested by Yablonski, who along with his wife and daughter were found fatally shot in their Clarksville, Pa., home on Jan. 5.
A federal grand jury in Cleveland has indicted five persons, including the president of a small UMW local in La Follette, Tenn., and four others—including his
Mar. 6
1970 KANSAN 17
daughter—who reside in Cleveland on charges of conspiracy in connection with the Yablonski murders. Actual murder chargés have been filed by Pennsylvania state authorities.
Even as the government filed suit Thursday, the Cleveland grand jury indicted a retired Kentucky coal miner, Dillard Couch, on perjury charges in connection with what it called a UMW "research and information committee" in the union's District 19, which encompasses Tennessee and eastern Kentucky.
A union representative said the
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committee was set up in 1968 to organize non-union mines, but Yablonski charged before his death that the union had illegally funnelled $3.7 million into the district to keep Boyle in power.
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Another affidavit, by Henry A. Queen, another department investigator, said seven persons described as organizers for UMW District 2 were added to the payroll last June.
"Checks were issued to these organizers for 'organizing expenses' without any supporting vouchers or receipts to substantiate the purpose for which such expenditures were actually made." Queen said.
Neither Boyle nor the UMW had any immediate comment on the government suit. Yablonski's lawyer was not available for comment.
The government charged in its suit that millions of dollars of union funds had been spent without an official accounting of where they went. It requested an injunction to prohibit UMW officials from spending any more union funds without keeping adequate records and notifying the Labor Department of how the money is spent.
This period was shortly after Yablonski announced he would oppose Boyle's re-election bid. Boyle defeated Yablonski by a two-to-one margin.
Shultz told newsmen that Boyle
and other international officers of the 195,000-member union who were elected in December would be entitled to remain in office until any new election was ordered by the court. He said he expected quick court action on the request for an injunction on financial records.
Documents accompanying the suit included an affidavit by Thomas F. Kane, a special Labor Department investigator who said he found records showing that more than $5.4 million in loans were made by the UMW headquarters to union districts in 1967, 1968 and 1969.
"My examination of the records of the UMW International did not disclose any documental evidence concerning the disposition of these loaned funds," Kane said.
Shultz said any new election orders by the courts would be supervised by the Labor Department, but that Boyle would be eligible to run again.
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Printing service explains walkout
By MARILYN McMULLEN
Kaasan, Staff, Writer
Three men, acting as spokesmen for the employees of the University of Kansas Printing Service, gave reasons Thursday for their walkout on Feb. 17. On that day the printers walked off their jobs and refused to print Harambee, the newspaper of the Black Student Union (BSU)
Coeds to aid funding for scholarships
Each individual woman student and women's living groups have been asked to participate in projects to build the AWS memorial scholarship fund. Continuous monetary support for the fund also comes from alumni and friends of the University of Kansas and the University Administration.
Kathy Nemeth, Oberlin sophomore and chairman of the Scholarship Money's Our Purpose (SMOP) Committee suggested the possibility of selling stationary to make money for the Scholarship Fund at a recent Associated Women Students (AWS) Forum meeting.
The AWS Memorial Scholarship Fund was started in December, 1948, when two organized living gorups donated money to a scholarship fund instead of exchanging Christmas gifts. The fund was established in memory of two KU women, Geraldine Cuddy and Fredrika Ekblad, died in an automobile accident. The scholarships are now given in honor of those two women and other KU women students whose University careers have tragically ended.
Originally the scholarship was a cash grant of $50. Recently, each award has covered a full year's tuition.
Each year at Honors Night the new recipients of the AWS Memorial Scholarship are announced. These students are selected by the SMOP committee on the basis of demonstrated scholarship, contribution to campus and financial need. Applications are now available at the Dean of Women's office at 220 Strong.
Rock Chalk continues for staff
Rock Chalk is still happening for many of the staff members,
Many staff meetings also will continue to be held and the entire program will be analyzed for the purpose of improvement, said Kathy Colton, Omaha junior and producer of the 1970 Rock Chalk Revue.
She said interviews for the producer of the 1971 Rock Chalk Revue would be held in 2-3 weeks, and a new theme would be decided late in the spring of this year.
The 1970 Rock Chalk Revue showed many signs of a job well done, said Tom Moore, director of the KU-Y, which sponsors the event.
Moore said two aspects of this year's production impressed him. He said the show went at a much better pace than in past years and the activities were more entertaining because of the length.
Moore said he was also impressed with the attitude of the people involved in Rock Chalk, especially the backstage crews. "Never before has the stage crew shown such talent, on stage and off stage." Moore said.
18 KANSAN Mar. 6 1970
John Verberg, Harold Fox and Carl Shankland, who work in the composing room of the printing service, expressed the views of the employees on incidents occurring before and since the walkout. They also discussed a letter which Shankland wrote to the editor of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on behalf of the employees.
Verberg, who signed the letter, said he did so because Shankland lives in Topeka and Lawrence residents wishing to comment on the letter would have a harder time contacting him. He added that he had received over 70
phone calls and letters concerning the walkout and the letter.
The printers, said Shankland, did not think material such as the allegedly obscene poem in Harambe should reach the print service. He said the printers thought faculty advisors should stop "filth" before it reached the printers.
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
his definition of obscenity were derived from Webster's.
He added that the printers thought students were merely testing faculty members by attempting to print obscene words which should have been deleted from copy.
the printers to print the editorial.
The printers are still concerned with legal action which could be brought if they were required to print the poem. According to their attorney, the Kansas statute dealing with the prosecution of printers includes printing anything which is obscene, immoral, lewd or lascivious. As yet, obscurity is the only category which has been ruled on.
The printing service, according to Verberg, has returned copy to the University before the Harambee incident. A recent editorial which appeared in the UDK was sent back to the Kansas Board of Directors. The board instructed
Shankland said the walkout was not a racial issue. The employees of the printing service did not think anyone should be allowed to print "that kind of thing" (the Harambee) whether he was black or white.
The employees enlisted the services of a Lawrence attorney five days ago in case legal action is taken. The attorney, who wished to remain unnamed, has been advising the employees of possible legal action which could be taken despite the decision of Attorney General Kent Frizzell that the poem in Harambe was not obscene.
PITTSBURGH, Pa. (UPI)—Byron White, a Pittsburgh Steeler halfback, led the National League in ground-gaining in his first season, 1938. White, the former U. of Colorado All-American, today is an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.
Shankland said the printing service employees did not know how the attorney general's decision could have been reached if
SOCIAL ACTION
IN THE 70's
ISP
UN 4-3474
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You pay more for some things than others—yet they may cost less in the long run. Like Florsheim Shoes. Slightly higher than some other brands, yet they'll wear competition into the ground. Florsheim builds shoes not only to make you look and feel on top, but to keep on delivering long past average shoe life. That's how you come out well ahead in the pocket book when you stick to the consistent high quality that Florsheim offers in every pair.
VI 3-3470 Arensberg's Shoes 819 Mass.
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8:00 to 12:00
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You pay more for some things than others—yet they may cost less in the long run. Like Florsheim Shoes. Slightly higher than some other brands, yet they'll wear competition into the ground. Florsheim builds shoes not only to make you look and feel on top, but to keep on delivering long past average shoe life. That's how you come out well ahead in the pocket book when you stick to the consistent high quality that Florsheim offers in every pair.
VI 3-3470 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass.
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Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
workmanian man are offered to
all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
---
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Ed.
Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Handmade Originals-India prints, tie-dyes, dresses, men's shirts, pants, hats, swimsuits, mini skirts, beads, earrings, at Lepidoptera Creation, West 8th Street.
Electric-voice 30 watt amplifier with
Electro-voice finish, finish like now
842-489-497 at 6 p.m.
842-489-497
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodorant
Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz Retail price per
24-can case $16.54. Sell price per case
only $5.00 Steve Cohen, UN 4-4457.
Maxi-coat, size 13, all wool, ginger
color, beautifully made. From Kansas
City store, worn twice, need money
to repair car. $25. 864-3357. 3-6
Classic in its own time, 1961 XK150
Jaguar Coupe, Black with red leather
interior. Mint condition, all original
equipment. One previous owner, Price
$2,995, no trades. Call Topeka, 913-
269-6942 at 6:30 p.m.
3-6
Must Sell. Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also mice and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-5763 evenings. 3-16
Women's contract at Naimshi—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
Pentax Spotmatic, new, never used
f1.4 lens, soft case, guarantee card.
$309.50 value for only $247.60. Kent
Dannen, 842-3623. Naismith Hall. 3-9
Fender Newporter Guitar for sale by original owner. Like new condition, seldom played. Call 842-4454 or stop by 3238 Mr. Dr. Apt. 2. 3-9
4 and 8 track car stereo with FM-multipllex. Excellent condition. Call Scott, 842-8227. 3-9
1967 Ford. Custom, 6 cyl., auto, R&H,
895. $842-9962. 3-11
For sale: Cheap, two twin mattresses and box springs, call after 5 p.m.
843-9352. 3-9
For sale: Camper truck, 1950 Ford pickup with hemi-v8, auto, radio, heater, extras, call, come by, make offer, 842-7657, 1801 Mississippi 3-11
FREE—Gibson EB-2 hollow body bass guitar with purchase of KUSTOM 200 watt bass amp 3 - 15 speakers, bass amp cover amps included. 3-11 Call 842-6941.
Basset Hound. ACK registered tricolor male. 1½ years old, housebroken, needs good home, likes children. Doghouse good home. Call VI 3-4374. 3-11
For Sale: 1966 BSA—650 cc.—single carburetor. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-4636. 3-11
Skis. Head Standards with bindings,
210 cm. $75; two matching walnut end
lamps, two matching walnut
lamps $7.50 each, one walnut
table, $15.84-2138, 3-11
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street the most convenient to campus
US
University State Bank
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
Harmon-Kardon 50-watt AM-FM receiver. Nocturne model with walnut case. Highly-sensitive reception with noise limit, power 842, 842 or 618 Kentucky. 3-11
1969 Opel wagon, 102 h.p., 8,000 miles,
much warranty left, radio. Must sell.
Call David Rueschhoff. Dl 3-5770. 1301
W Campus Rd. VI 3-11
For Sale. SIAMESE KITTENS, six-
weeks old, beautiful seal calls. Point
V 1-2811 after 6 o clock, or see at
2416 Jiah Drive. 3-11
1960 TR-3, Removable Hartrap, Body and Engine excellent, interior and gear box need work, 842-2191 or 442-8870. 3-11
1967 VW Super Bug—76 H.P. —Koni's
Racing Suspension Balanced,
cammed, ported and polished-car
cost over $4500. 842-219 or 842-887.
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
1968 Oldsmobile F-85-Silver, Black interior–immaculate inside and out. WW's and Snow's V-8. Air-cond- 9.000 Miles. h-8212-4291 or h-8482-3710
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately $1200. See at Ridgeview Court, 3020 Iowa, Lot G23 or call I-2 6318 6 after p. 6月. 3-25
'68 Bridgestone Super 90—red and silver—1400 miles—very fine condition—completely inspected. 842-2191 or 842-8870. 3-11
Raney Drug Stores
Accordion — Silvio Soprani, Exellent
Life-time guarantee. 3-9
4016
For Sale: fall-real hair, long, light brown, like new. Call Kate Kaku. 842-8379.
For Sale: '69 Honda 175—electric starter—wow! Best offer over $300.
Call Barb evenings: 842-0719. 3-6
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
1968 VW fastback. Must sell, new-
wholesale price. AM-FM reverb.
Quartz iodine driving lamps. Call
V 3-1891 after 6. 3-12
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Sell- Concord 510D tapedec, 1 yr. old, also BA tube amp. Mike, room 435 Templin, VI 2-1200. 3-12
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
For Sale: 1964 Honda Trail 90, good condition. $170 or best offer. Call VI 2-1378 after 6:00 on weekdays, anytime on weekends. 3-12
WANTED
1968 VW bug. $1295. VI 2-8614. 3-12
Emergency! Need two tickets to KUK-
K-State game this Saturday. Call 843-
8292. 3-6
I need a ride!!! Topeka to KU, Tues-Fri. Must arrive by 8:30 and can leave at 3:30. Address: 409 Watson, Topeka. Phone 233-0327. 3-6
Guitar instructor wanted. Am interested in folk, blues, and picking methods. Call Linda, 843-2374. 3-6
Tickets for KU-K-State game—542-
6217.
3-6
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt. with three others. $11.25, per month, including water. Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Two girls need roommate to share duplex. Call 842-8434. 3-9
Wanted: Girl to share house for rest
and travel; campus camp;
3-11 month. Phone 843-3843.
Phone 843-3843.
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 11, 20% off. All handcrafted styles. Hodge Podge Sandals, 30 open Thursday night VI 2-0682
Wanted: 2 tickets for K-State game, even student tickets. Will pay $5.00 each. Call VI 3-6101 after 3:30 p.m. 3-9
NOTICE
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que. If you want some honest-to-good Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. It offers our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. II-V-2510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday if Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat for more information, call Max Lahay. GROOVE-TODAY in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galerie. Find the latest, the best for eggs and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynacoe dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
we 3-6
4 see 3-6
a change 3-6
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas. Sophomore Class. 3-6
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom
apartment 2 blocks from campus.
$115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-
0705.
Sand Candles by Betty Webster. 9th and Indiana THE OMNIBUS SHOP.
Spring new Sandlers, Sandlers are here, Weaver's Shoe Shop, Second Floor. 3-9
Karate Action Saturday, March 7.
Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
Eliminations-10:30 a.m. 50c.
Finals t. 5 p.m. $1.50
3-12
AT THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE you can
Sit a-la-loin stair, strip a K.C. strip,
to 2:30 a.m. from town to 2:30 a.m. The best dinner in town is From Lindley Hall. 3-9
Notice: March 5 is the last day to enroll in student health insurance. Kalvin, Eddy, & Kappelman, 1026 Massachusetts. 3-6
I am auditioning female vocalists (or local night club work with established group. Interested Call Ric Rasmussen, 843-8153. 3-11
AUTO
GLASS
INSTALLATION
Table
Tops
AUTO GLASS
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Sudden Service
BURCKEK CHEF
GRADUATE TICKET ISP Suriendra Bhana, Gene Roberts, Dave Dblahn, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Bob Hubert, Bob Hubert, Neale Laub, Leroy McBee, John Walters, John Patterson, Harriette Stallwyn, Van Zandt, John Whalen. Education with a human face (1) voting power on curriculum committees (2) Reexvaluation of degree requirements. Faculty evaluation 3-11
Try One Today 814 Iowa
Dress making and alterations, 20
years experience, call VI 3-2785, 8-75.
PERSONAL
KU males: Is it true what they say about a girl who wears spring styles from Arensen's Shoes, 819 Massa-nae? Longingly lonely, Inedea fella.
Exciting challenge for a young man pop and spirit, experience in cheerleading and summer months teaching cheerleading workshops Call 1-913-649-3666
Casual slacks--make your selections
new, our new spring shipment
buggers flares flares flares
trim cuts in solids - stripes
Ross Disney Men's Wear 811 Mass
pella.
Travel and study in Europe for six months as summer—many different programs—can be avail. For catalog and detailed information phone VI 2-3785
Students of Objectivism—discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand and others. 7.30 Monday. Call 842-6210 after 5:30 3-9 anniversary; weekly silent vigil for peace and island (and Laos) South Park, Sunday, March 8 12 noon - 12:30. Join us.
Casual slashes—make your selections now from our new spring shipment (Haggars or Lewis). Choose flares or
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc.
TYPING
Unde Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients.
Troup Tax, 8011 $\frac{5}{9}$ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up
Happy Birthday to Sandy, the Best Bird in the Zoo.
3-6
Die die!! Wallace Beery shirts. $3.50.
The Hodge Dog, 15 W. 9th. 3-12
henrys
Home of the "Big Shef"
TYPING. Experienced typist. IBM
system. Phone 843-396-866
Phone 843-396-866
experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typemakes, typewriter with typewriter service. Pica tape. Competent service. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Thesis Typing—10 years experience—Marlene Higley. After 5:00 at 843-1522 and 4-3 Typing—Term paper. These Discussions. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken. 1712 Alabama. VI 3-1522. 4-8
Hurry to Henry's
6th & Mo. VI 13-2139
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
VI 3-0501
926 Mass.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math or Spanish tutoring Call VI 2-
5603 or VI 3-9734 3-11
Guitar player and vocalist. Weekends and summer work. Call Steve Clark, Red Dog Inn, 842-0100. 3-6
Experienced typists design manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style -pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
FOUND
FOR RENT
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates. Attendance 1218 Mishir, 843-9659 after 6 p.m.
Your KU I.D is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 8011*. Mass $4.00 and up.If
- Balsa Wood
- Bankmark Services
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-3281, Mrs Ruckman
HELP WANTED
- Oils and Acrylics
Need extra money? We need an accountant; will discuss terms. P.S.—good job for grad student or housemother. 842-5002, ask for Oscar. 3-6
- Passports
- Stretcher Frames
- Portraits
Found: A charming atmosphere that makes the steaks and Russian strogonoff taste even better! Castle Tea is one of our most unique restaurant in Lawrence.
- Balsa Wood
Small efficiency apartment, furnished,
$55 per month, utilities paid, 2 blocks
from campus. Available March 9. Call
1-27300, 4:30 - 10 p.m.
Valuable Swiss watch. Describe, call
842-2827. 3afi
803 W. 23rd
Open every day 9 - 9
Sunday 1 - 6
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
- Applications
LOST
"Please call for appointment"
Key ring and identification wallet at Robinson Gym. Jack K. Horner. 843-6838 Reward 3-6 in a dark blue billfold in Woodruff Auditorium, Westport Feb. 25. Please return to Kansas Union lost and found. 3-11
Bob Blank, Owner
摄影师
See us also for the newest styles
- Decoupage Materials
For rent starting April 1st to faculty or staff couple or individual. Beautiful, quiet, comfortable. Best of neighbors, near KU and town. Call 843-8534. 3-6 1 bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Unfurnished. $110 per month. NIU. April 2 - September VI 2-7500. 4:30 - 10 p.m. 3-9 Small efficiency apartment, furnished.
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Soft Service
Harvey's
DISCOUNT SHOES
HIXON STUDIO
Cowboy Boots $18.99
HARVEY'S SHOE STORE
Acme Dingo
THE CONCORD SHOP
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
for
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miDAS
mufflers and shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Always Pleasurable Dining
The Sirloin
Stunts always and fresh talent scandals await you when you die at the Silos. We are proud of your dream, preparing the satire as you like them with all our team. We will be at the Silos to commemorate philanthropy.
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Open Day Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one mile half miles north of the Kow River Bridge
842-1431
TIMES OF THE WORLD
}
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LHSU presents demands
A radical "leftist" representing the Left Handed Student Union (LHSU), spoke Thursday in front of Strong Hall to approximately 75 persons and afterwards marched into Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr's office and presented a list of demands denouncing discrimination against left-handed students.
The LHSU representative, Ernie Bauer, Clay Center senior, said, "For 4.000 years left-handed people have been discriminated against. The left-handed people of America have been ignored and subjected to thoughtless defamation of character and physical and mental slavery," he said.
"Who knows how many tenhanders have been killed in Vietnam because the M-14 was designed for right-handers," Bauer said.
He said the word left had implications "that cut into the very soul of a conscientious left-handler's heart. Why, the Latin for left is sinister," he said. "Telephones, watches, men's shirts, water fountains, and the way waitresses set tables are all designed to degrade and humiliate the left-hander," he said.
He said educational opportunities for lefties had been stiffed because books were bound on the left and from first grade to Ph.D.
the left-hander is placed in right-handed desks.
"It takes a contortionist left-hander to be comfortable in those monsters," he said.
Bauer said, "Even Jesus Christ himself was a left-hander."
"the kunckles of a left-handler right hand are always bloody from right-handed pencil sharpeners," he said.
A list of demands to be met by Dec. 1, 1970 was presented to the Chancellor including: the installation of left-handed desks in each classroom to be placed at the front of the room; the establishment of a Left Studies Program as large as other programs
in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, with a full staff of professors to be hired and fired by the left-handed students; the supplying of the Kansas Union bookstore with left-handed books and writing supplies; and the folding of the Daily Kansan front page to where left-handers want it.
Bauer demanded a left-handed Homecoming Queen, six left-handed cheerleaders and pompon girls, the hiring of left-handed Associate Deans of Men, Women, Students and Student Affairs; that $15,000 be allocated for a left-handers lecture series and film; and that 15 per cent of next year's freshman class be left-handed.
be laughing when they blow that wall out for a left-handers classroom."
With a smile, Bauer said to the Chancellor, "You see sir, we are a minority group. We think it very inappropriate to talk of appropriateness. We want action!"
Chalmers said, "It is difficult for me to perceive the problem."
Bauer retorted, "You see, there is another derogatory remark."
Chalmers asked when the group would be back and Bauer answered he was not sure since his group only operated in good weather, but finally said they would return in 48 hours.
Bauer said again that this was only a beginning and that he had support not only from other left-handed members but also from "radical sympathetic righties."
Susan Atkins talks with Manson has second thoughts about testifying
LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Susan Atkins, who turned police informer in the Tate murder case, talked with accused hippie cult leader Charles Manson in jail Thursday and afterwards indicated she had second thoughts about testifying against him at the trial.
Bauer then marched out of the Chancellor's office with his small band of followers, one of whom was carrying a sign reading backwards, "Why the right hand of God?"
The 21-year-old Miss Atkins spent an hour and 15 minutes conferring with Manson across a table in the attorney's room of the Central County jail with her lawyer, Richard Caballero, present.
Her testimony before a grand jury in November led to the indictment of Manson, herself, three other girls and another male member of the cult on charges of seven murders and conspiracy to murder.
As she was led out of the jail en route to the women's jail, the young woman was asked whether she would take the witness stand and repeat the grisly account she has told of stabbingss and shootings last August at Sharon Tate's home and the residence of a wealthy grocer and his wife.
"That's none of your business," she snapped.
Caballero said that Manson had a sharply different philosophy about how the defense should be conducted from the course he would take and that if Miss Atkins could not follow his advice he would have to withdraw as her attorney.
"She is going to think about those differences," Caballero said. "As of now, I am still her attorney."
20 KANSAN Mar. 6
1970
The lawyer was asked whether the 35-year-old Manson, whom Miss Atkins previously described as having a hypnotic command over the cult, had tried to persuade her to let him call the shots for the defense.
"No, he told her to do what she thought was right," Caballero said.
The long-haired Miss Atkins had been Manson's particular girlfriend and he had nicknamed her Sadie Glutz. They had not seen one another since more than two dozen of the "Manson family" were rounded up in Death Valley in October.
Miss Atkins was clad in a faded prison den dress. The pair laughed and grinned at each other when they first came face
Nearly $2 million has been approved by the Highway Department for construction on a three mile strip of a four lane highway to replace a section of K-10, Joe McCourt, resident engineer for the State Highway Commission, said Thursday.
Part of K-10 to improve
"This is only the beginning," Bauer said. "If these demands are not fulfilled, we left-handed students promise to give ourselves hernias laughing at the other inane demands of other campus groups."
Asked what they talked about,
Miss Atkins said;
McCourt said the Highway Department planned to start construction on this section inside the city limits and continue it for three miles east of Lawrence.
Buford M. Watson, Lawrence City Manager, was pleased about the construction and he hoped that K-10 would someday be rerouted around Lawrence. He said this would "lessen the traffic accidents on 23rd Street."
to face but they could not touch. There is a partition about 18 inches high in the middle of the table.
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In reaction to the Chancellor's laughter, Bauer said, "You won't
HOLE
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9th & III.
Jawhawk Food Mkt.
843-7685
He told me I loved.
She said she was glad to see him and hoped they would meet again soon. After testifying before the grand jury, she said she was "afraid Charley will conjure a vision" to harm her but Thursday their friendship seemed restored.
Cabalerro said he could not comment on whether one of his biggest differences with Manson was over whether Miss Atkins should testify. He had said previously he had urged her to tell the full story to the grand jury.
The lawyer was asked whether, without "Miss Atkins' testimony, the state could convict the "Manson family." "I don't know," he said.
MARCH 6,7
UN
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READ THIS JUNIORS!
Class Party Tonite at the Armory
That's right, it's party time-and what a party. (Parties at the National Guard Armory are traditionally the best!) The first Junior Class Party of the semester promises to be the biggest gig of the year. Music by the IVORY TOWER, straight from their Chicago concert, will harmonize with the sound of the student's favorite beverage. And it is FREE to Junior due payers and only $3.00 per couple for non-payers. Don't miss this party. IT'S TONITE! Be there ready for action at 8 P.M.
Compliments of Ace Johnson
Hawks defeat K-State
Story on pages 8 and 9
3
Photo by Ron Bishop
A dejected Wildcat
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Willie the Wildat" swallows his purple pride as the Jayhawks edged conference champion K-State, 82-79, Saturday night in Allen Field House.
80th Year, No.94
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, March 9,1970
Brown trial opens
BEL AIR, Md. (UPI) — With William M. Kunstler as his attorney, black militant H. Rap Brown goes on trial on state riot charges Monday before a judge determined that "there won't be any Chicago here."
Brown, 26, was accused of inciting a riot in Cambridge, Md., in July 24, 1967 when he delivered a speech urging blacks to "burn America down" if "whites don't come around." Two square blocks of Cambridge were burned following the speech.
The Cambridge riot was one of the incidents that lead to passage by Congress of the 1968 law
prohibiting the crossing of state lines to incite riot. The law was invoked for the first time against the "Chicago Seven" who also were defended by Kunstler.
"This will be a serious, hardworking trial," Harford County Circuit Court Judge Harry E. Dyer said in interview. He said he considered both Kunstler and prosecutor William B. Yaes II "able and competent."
"All I'm interested in is making sure Mr. Brown gets a fair trial— according to the present system of administering justice," Dyer said.
Controversy arose even before the start of the trial, however.
when venue was moved 85 miles from Cambridge on Maryland's eastern shore to this rural community 24 miles from Baltimore.
The prosecution asked for the change of venue because of racial tensions in Cambridge, scene of racial disturbances in 1963 and 1964. Kunstler said the trial was moved because Dorchester county (Cambridge) is 33 per cent black while Harford county is only 8.6 per cent black.
The trial replaced the refusal of the management of Bel Air's only movie theater to admit "long haired" youths as the biggest issue in this town of about 7,500.
What's Inside
Hawks defeat
Hawks defeat
K-State ... page 8 and 9
Nader to speak
at KU ... page 12
KU views eclipse ... page 13 Committee discusses
Committee discussions
ROTC ... page 3
This week at KU ... page 5
--of the candidates running an "anti campaign" against everything that had been done.
ISP meeting outlines goals
An Independent Student Party (ISP) meeting Sunday night at the Wesley Foundation clarified what ISP stands for; incorporated student power.
R. L. "Puf" Bailey, Atchison senior, said ISP's idea of incorporated student power would be designed to use human and academic resources on issues of human rights and population.
The subdivisions, he said were (1) ISP would work politically to get things done; (2) communication and education to distribute information about human rights and population; (3) Student Power Inc., "a labor pool" in which students would commit two hours a month to service in the community; (4) human rights committees on tutorial programs for blacks and Indians and voting rights for 18-year-olds; (5) population.
"We hope to keep working beyond the election," Bailey said. "We want to get other people involved, get them together under Incorporated Student Power."
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y. law student and ISP presidential candidate, said earlier in the meeting he was bothered by one
"This week I am going to be the recipient of incredible slanders," he said. "To combat this mudslinging, I have to go out and do some campaigning."
Kansan reporter excluded from student political meeting
A University Daily Kansan reporter was excluded from a meeting Sunday night conducted by David Miller, independent candidate for student body president, and Dan Beck, candidate for student body vice-president.
Miller, Eudora junior, said he
did not want the meeting spread all over the Kansan because it was a secret meeting about their campaign. He said if results of the meeting were exposed they could be a detriment to the final week of the campaign.
Senators object to Laos report
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Chairman J. William Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said Sunday he objected to President Nixon's report on Laos because it lacked "any indication of a change in policy."
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield also criticized the Friday report for not going far enough. He said he would stand by earlier statements that in Laos "we are in over our heads."
Mansfield also said the involvement in Laos is following the same pattern of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
Both senators, however,
"My principal objection is the lack of any indication of a change in policy," Fulbright, D-Ark., said. "While he gave some additional facts . . . what I hoped would occur as a result of this is a new approach, a re-evaluation of the Vietnamization policy as such."
thought the President's statement was beneficial as far as it went.
He said he was concerned primarily with "the basic policy of Vietnamization, the prolongation of the war in Vietnam and Laos indefinitely."
Mansfield, D-Mont., said of the
Nixon report: "I think it is a frank report as far as it goes but it does not go back far enough because I think the start of our involvement in Laos occurred during the time of the Eisenhower administration."
Mansfield was interviewed on the television show, Face the Nation—CBS. Fulbright was interviewed on Meet the Press—NBC.
Both senators said they would like to see the United States withdraw completely from Southeast Asia. Mansfield said he would like to see a withdrawal "lock, stock and barrel, including bases."
By United Press International
UDK News Roundup
Nixon drafts new aid plan
WASHINGTON—President Nixon plans to propose a new foreign aid plan based on a report which recommends scrapping traditional foreign assistance programs and establishing a multibillion dollar lending fund for developing nations.
U.S. violates treaty
Several western sources said the disclosures may prove diplomatically embarrassing because they constitute an admission the United States is violating the 1962 Geneva Accords designed to bring peace to Laos.
VIENTIANE, Laos—President Nixon's disclosure of American military involvement in Laos raises a number of diplomatic risks for the United States, western diplomatic sources said Sunday.
Indian 'attack' thwarted
SEATTLE—The Army arrested 72 persons, including actress Jane Fonda, when a band of nearly 100 Indians tried to take over Fort Lawton Sunday for a native cultural center.
The group also included Grace Thorpe, daughter of the famous Indian athlete, Jim Thorpe.
Oil threatens marine life
KODIAK, Alaska—Federal pollution officials went up in light planes Sunday to get a look at 1,000 miles of oil soaked beaches on the eastern edge of the Kodiak Island chain.
Ray Norris, member of the Federal Water Pollution Control Authority, said an estimated 10,000 sea birds have been killed by the oil spill and are piling up on the sand and rocks where they are being eaten by scavenger animals and birds.
Attempted killing probed
NICOSIA, Cyprus—The Cyprus government said today 11 persons were arrested during the night as suspects in the attempted assassination Sunday of Archbishop Makarios, the president of this island nation.
---
Campus briefs
Intersection survey planned
The State Highway Commission has initiated action to start a survey of the intersection at 19th and Iowa streets. The state crew is now putting the familiar rubber hose and steel box at the intersection to get an estimate of the rate of traffic that passes over this part of the road.
George Williams, director of public works, said the state will require about 90 days to decide whether or not a light at this location would benefit motorists. Williams said the state will notify Lawrence officials when a decision is made.
State specifications for an intersection the nature of 19th and Iowa are that to warrant a stop light, a 600 car average over an eight hour period must pass over Iowa, and a 150 car average in the same eight hour period must pass over 19th St.
ISP campaign song released
The Independent Student Party released a campaign recording Friday titled "Politically Oriented Radical Left Saga." Peter George, Tucahoe, N.Y. law student, and ISP presidential candidate, described the song as "a parody of everything."
The song was written by Rick Averill, Topeka sophomore. Copies are available in the Kansas Union at the ISP office, George said.
Physics film to be shown
The Department of Physics at the University of Kansas will present a film on sub-atomic particles today and Tuesday.
The film, entitled "Time Dilation of the Muon Lifetime," will deal with the property of the tiny sub-atomic particle, the Muon.
The film will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in 124 Malott both nights.
Cribbin to speak at seminar
The thirteenth annual Supervisory Seminar will be held Wednesday at the University of Kansas. All sessions will be in the Kansas Union. The theme for this year's seminar will be "Is Bossism Dead?"
Present at the conference will be personnel directors, personnel managers, supervisors and superintendents from businesses and industries in the Midwest.
James S. Cribbin, professor of management in the graduate division at St. John's University, New York, is the featured guest lecturer. He will speak in three areas. They are "Sense and Nonsense about Supervisory Leadership," "The Strong Right Arm of the Leader" and "The Reliable Left Arm of the Leader."
The seminar is sponsored by University Extension and Lawrence
2 KANSAN
Mar. 9
1970
Adult Education. Karl Kappelman, University Extension, is coordinator of the seminar.
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Troupe stages protest play
The Arena Theatre of Sao Paulo, Brazil, will perform at the University of Kansas at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
The play to be performed is "Arena Conta Zumbi," a drama of the black man's protest, featuring Afro-Brazilian and bossanova music. Tickets are available at the SUA ticket office in the Kansas Union for $1.50.
Sponsored by the Center for Latin American Studies, the University Theatre and SUA, the play is based on the struggle of Zumbi, a rebel slave of 17th century Brazil, who is remembered as one of the heroes of that country. But the action in "Arena Conta Zumbi" is modern with actors wearing T-shirts and chinos. The set consists only of a few platforms and a red rug.
The entire production is in Portuguese with text by Augusto Boal and Gianfrancesco Guarnieri and with music by Edu Lobo.
"Only one idea guided the creation of the text and of the show," states the program of the play, "one that is found in the writings of the Bishop of Pernambuco: 'The habit of freedom makes a man dangerous.' This is the idea: we want to be free."
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PICO DE VENUS
Will academic credit be denied?
Committee struggles with ROTC issue
By BOB WOMACK
Kansan Staff Writer
A committee of faculty members and students is currently grappling with the issue of ROTC and the role it should play in the curriculum at the University of Kansas.
The preliminary report they expect to issue in April is important because the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences faculty plans to vote the same month on whether to deny credit, starting in 1971, to military science courses not taught in regular academic departments of the University.
The committee was created by a motion passed at the University Senate meeting of Oct. 30, 1969. The Senate voted to direct its executive committee to appoint a temporary Senate committee to deal with the question of ROTC. The motion charged the committee with issuing a progress report by the fall of 1971 at which time a reassessment of the ROTC situation would take place. The committee was selected in November of last year.
Members of the committee will
Mar. 9
1970 KANSAN 3
issue their preliminary report in April to indicate the progress they have made in dealing with the question of how ROTC is to fit into the University's structure.
The members of the committee reflect a wide range of different opinions, but grounds of agreement have been found and the group is making progress in its effort to have its report ready by next month. Much material is being read by the members, who have broken into sub-groups to study different aspects of the ROTC question. Herman Lujan chairman of the Department of Political Science and chairman of the committee, said the committee had not dealt with the question of whether or not credit should be granted for military science courses.
"Before you can decide on credit, you have to have some idea of a program. We're still talking about program and program content rather than credit," he said.
Lujan was among those who asked the faculty of the College to delay its vote on credit for ROTC. The vote was originally scheduled for December. "I did this on the grounds that our committee needed a chance to begin its work in terms of the
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future of the ROTC programs, without mandates from anybody, to see what we could come up with," Lujan said.
He agreed to make a progress report prior to the April vote which will be by mail ballot. He described the report as "informational input" the faculty can use in making its decision.
to make ROTC itself, rather than the legislature's actions, the central issue.
A central issue in the postponement of the vote was the concern that an immediate decision might be interpreted as deliberately antagonizing to the legislature, which was beginning to show increased interest in the ROTC programs at KU. There was a desire at the same time to avoid the idea that the legislature was dictating curriculum to the University. The committee is trying
vate prejudices and positions himself, but, "I have to rectify these in terms of the fact that I happen to teach at a state university."
Lujan pointed out that the College faculty represents only one school and one level of University structure.
This is the year that state universities are grappling with ROTC, he said. The University of Washington has removed credit from ROTC programs and the University of Michigan has severely modified the military science program there.
It is possible for the different schools of the University to give different answers on the matter of credit. The chancellor must deal with the question, as does the Regents as the policy-making body, and final authority rest with the legislature.
Lujan said he hadn't clearly defined in his own mind what role the ROTC programs had in the college curriculum, and the committee was wrestling with this problem..
Lujan said he had certain pri-
"Private schools have an easier way out. They can simply choose not to have it around. But a state university may not have that kind of independence," Lujan said.
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KANSAN COMMENT
Students & the slums
By HALINA PAWL
Off-Campus Housing
Committee Co-Chairman
I would like to respond to Mr. Dan Beek's appraisal of the off-campus housing situation. That off-campus housing to the north and east of campus is a slum. I would immediately agree as my article in the fall Jayhawker illustrates.
After two years of investigation into the housing problem, its complexity is emerging. City Hall says it realizes the conditions but that if all of that housing were investigated and much condemned, a great number of students would be left homeless due to the Lawrence housing shortage. The Building Inspector does act on specific individual complaints, however. The university is reluctant to take action because of the inevitable "en loco parentis" issue with the students who live off-campus, partially to escape university living regulations.
In essence, the students living off-campus are the only ones who can directly influence their conditions. As it stands, tenants who inform their landlords of defects in their dwellings have reportedly been rewarded with rent raises. This has understandably made students reluctant to complain and the conditions worsen.
The problem is complex and discouraging but not hopeless. If the students become better
informed on the laws and their rights, they will be better equipped to deal with the situation. Such information is available through the Student Senate Office as well as legal information regarding individual complaints. Law students working through LSCRRC and with the Student Senate Housing Committee are writing a proposal to the State Senate to up-date the present code so tenants will have an option besides simply moving out of a situation they don't like.
Housing conditions are a community affair and no real change can be made without the landlords' contribution. The Housing Committee has been in contact with the Landlord's Association which is interested in correcting bad business practices and standards. They support a written lease which would clarify responsibilities and are trying to find answers to the problem of relocation.
Any "constructive action" suggested is always welcomed. Housing information including a summary of the Lawrence Municipal Minimal Housing Code, Discrimination Ordinance, rental checklist, eviction and noticing procedures, and complaint forms are available in the Student Senate Office, UN 4-3710.
Halina Pawl
SCHOOL INTEGRATION LAWS
NATIONAL COMMITMENT
'See, I told you I'd take care of it.'
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The letter which appeared in last Wednesday's UDK signed by The University of Kansas Printing Service should have borne the names of its authors. I have received a telephone call from a Printing Service employee who said that he and others at the Printing Service had not seen the letter and it did not, in fact, represent the opinion of all employees. Apologies to those employees who did not support the letter and also to those readers who were wrongly led to believe that the letter represented the entire Printing Service staff.-MS)
hearing voices—
Biafra, blacks, visual arts
To the editor:
Please permit me to pass some comment on Judith Kahane's article which appeared in the UDK of 2nd March, 1970. It appears to me that Kahane and other sympathizers with the authorities of defunct Biafra are still undergoing the tedium of closing their minds to truth and relevance. The issue about Nigeria is not whether U.S. did commit or is committing genocide in or outside U.S. Nixon did accuse Nigeria of genocide but he will probably never concede that U.S. did or is committing genocide anywhere. Now that the attempt to Biafranize Africa suffers an agonizing blow in Nigeria, one wonders whether the Americans who supported Biafra should not direct their principles toward U.S. After all, they can as easily justify the fragmentation of their own country into as many independent republics as there are ethnic affiliations. I am conceding the argument of some people that the analogy of the Nigerian Civil war and the American Civil war is irrelevant or far-fetched.
Britain supplied ammunitions to Nigeria because in the interest of British investment, there was no alternative. Biafra already conceded the petroleum royalty to France despite the fact that Britain carried out the bulk of prospecting and refining. It is clear that France was in Biafra for the same reason Britain was in Nigeria and not because France was that "humanitarian." Russia was also in Nigeria but Russia had no immediate interest in Nigeria as such.
In the Biafran rebellion, Kahane had quite a conglomeration of allies: France, Rhodesia, South Africa, Portugal—they were all there. Many of the Americans that supported Biafra are now yelling at Pompidou for selling jets to Libya as if they are just starting to learn that there is no morals as such in economic imperialism. Krance killed thousands of Algerians because they asked for independence, France is repressing separatist movements within her borders, France is also repressing secessionist movements in Chad; the same France armed Biafra for what
the French government called self - determination. Rhodesia, South Africa, and Portugal (all of them members of the committee to keep Biafra alive) are currently depriving millions of black people the right to even vote.
Was it Ojukwu that committed fratricide or was it Nigeria that committed genocide? Ojukwu boasted that he was going to die fighting for Biafra. He disallowed food and medicine to get to the people because he was pre-occupied with the assertion of a moribund sovereignty. When the time for rhetorics elapsed and the end of the rebellion was in site, Ojukwu ran into hiding with a plane-load of property and a Mercedes car. What a way to die fighting! Then came reports of atrocities by the Nigerian Forces —reports related by people on the Biafran side and written by people who already made up their minds what to report. Parts of the reports may be true, but that simply proves nothing more than that baser propensities are ubiquitous to all human societies, especially in a war.
I sincerely appeal to Kahane and others who think like her not to re-open the wounds of the Nigerian tragedy; that is the way to give the people of former Biafra a chance to test the promise of the Nigerians to welcome the Ibos back into the society. The Federal victory may have damaged the egos of some people. Failure is as natural as winning; it is unsportsmanlike to cry over spilled milk.
Omotoye Olorode
Ogbomosho, Nigeria
graduate student
★ ★ ★
There was a time when the Negro had every right to demand more than he had. At that time, I felt that he deserved it. Then something happened. The situation was no longer shifting but began landsliding. The blacks were beginning to overreact. Over the past ten years this tendency has gained momentum. Today, it has reached a point where a small
To the editor:
minority at this university, which is typical of the national situation, is dictating policy to a weak-spined administration. The administration here has backed down every step of the way, including allowing the vulgarity being printed in the Harambee. The truly outrageous part of this is that, according to a recent issue of the UDK, all the students up here have helped finance this paper with their fees, and yet black students receive it for nothing while non-blacks have to pay an additional fifteen cents. Why do we blind ourselves to discrimination in reverse? The white population have trapped themselves into feeling so guilty about the blacks former slavery, for which at least this student feels no responsibility, that they are not only allowing blacks to discriminate them, but they are discriminating against themselves. This attitude seems most obvious in the Chancellor's office.
If a few people on this campus, especially those whose rights are being trampled on, would try to honestly answer the following questions without using the racist attitudes the BSU continually spews forth, maybe they would realize that they have overshot civil rights.
A. Why does the BSU and other radical black organizations continually expound on moral obligations when, by printing of obscenity (and I do not care whether it is technically obscene or not) they show that they have no moral conscience?
B. Would you like to have your small child who is just learning to read find a loose Harambeen and sharpen his reading skills on it? The Vortex can be included in this category.
C. Can you seriously and responsibly justify why non-black girls must compete in a field of hundreds for a pom pon position while black girls need only compete among ten or twenty? I might add that the original competition drew only four, not ten or twenty.
D. If I or a group of my peers had confiscated half the UDK's on any day, amounting to approximately twelve hundred dollars worth, would we still be allowed to attend this university?
E. Is there any justifiable reason
E. Is there any justifiable reason why non-blacks must adhere strictly to the rules and blacks need not?
F. Is there any way this university can possibly guarantee that ten per cent of the fall freshman class will be black?
G. Is it not a radically racist attitude when positions on any staff are filled according to their color and not their merits?
H. Why is being part of a responsible, sensible, hard-work-ing majority (the establishment) considered so shameful?
Alan L. Moser Shawnee Mission senior
* *
To the editor:
I read today, with some amusement and disbelief, the article concerning the lack of space in visual arts. I was especially interested in the statement attributing the eventual loss of half of any one freshman visual arts class to lack of space.
Really! I assert that visual arts doesn't DESERVE to have more space until something is done to upgrade the faculty and the curricula.
Having previously been a student in visual arts myself, I know from a limited experience that students leave visual arts for many reasons. But the reason I
have heard most often is that students are disgruntled either with the faculty or the curricula. Granting that my experience is limited, I don't know of a single student that left because of lack of space.
There are faculty members in that department that must have been there at least 20 years, which in itself is not bad, but they are teaching their courses the same way they did 20 years ago. The material covered in these courses has become totally irrelevant and completely divergent from what is being done in the field today. One faculty member delivers lectures from a notebook in which the pages are so yellowed, torn, and rotten, that he must turn the pages with great care in order to avoid having the whole thing crumble in his hand.
There are some faculty members who must be teaching because they couldn't make it in their field. If this is not the case, it is the impression they leave. They are not enthused about teaching and are unwilling to give the student any help or advice concerning his work or his career.
Visual arts has been resting on its laurels too long. Even if given more space, I maintain that the department will die of decay from within.
More space indeed! KU would do better to use the money elsewhere.
Jack R. Pittman
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'Jean Brodie' appears unconventional
By MARILYN McMULLEN
Kansan Sports Writer
"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" is a play about a teacher whose methods are, to say the least unconventional. The play opens March 13 in University Theatre and runs March 14 and 18-20.
According to director Jack Brooking, professor of speech and drama, the play is a character study of Jean Brodie and depicts her effect on the lives of people around her. Jean Brodie, played by Judy Levitt, San Clemente, Calif., graduate student, considers herself to be in her prime, sexually and mentally. She views herself as an actress, and becomes
the leader of a personality cult
the leader of a personality cult.
The action takes place in Scotland and spans a period of seven years, from 1931 to 1938. Jean, who teaches in a private girls' school, attempts to mold "my girls" into the "creme de la creme" of society.
Her rejection of reality and search for happiness through illusion from the theme of the play. Her influence on her girls' lives is examined. It asks whether Jean Brodie was good for the girls, or whether her illusions were dangerous.
The play was adapted by Jay Allen from a novel by Muriel Spark. It appeared on Broadway during the 1967-68 season.
On campus this week
Monday
RALPH NADER—This famous author of "Unsafe at Any Speed" should present an interesting lecture that many won't want to miss.
MIHAILO MARKOVIC — The topic of the speech will be "Philosophy in Yugoslavia" by this professor of philosophy at the University of Belgrade.
UNIVERSITY STRING QUARTET—From the Faculty Recital Series will be performances by Howard Boyajian, violin; Karel Blaas, viola; Paul Todd, violin; and Rayomad Stuhl, cello, assisted by Charles Hoag, double bass; and Stephen Smith, piano.
"TUTAKHAMEN: THE IMMORTAL PARHOA" "WHY MAN CREATES SYMMTRY" (Films of Fact and Fiction)—For those who are seeking something different and exciting, maybe this is what you're looking for.
Tuesday
"The INNOCENTS" (Special Film Series)-This film was made in 1951 by Jack Clayton and is presented in the Evil Children Series. The short for the night is Shirley Temple in "Managed Money."
Wednesday
"RED DUST" (Classical Film Series)—An American film made in 1932, it was done by Victor Fleming.
Thursday
"EXTERMATING ANGEL"—From Mexico with English subtitles, this film also calls itself "Guess Who Can't Go Home From Dinner" following in the footsteps of "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner."
"VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED"
(Special Film Series)—Ending the
Evil Children Series, is this film
by Wolf Rilla made in Britain in
1960. Again Shirley Temple
entertains with "Pardon My Pups."
BOOKS
By United Press International
LA RAZA, THE MEXICAN AMERICANS, by Stan Steiner. Harper & Row, $8.95. The heroes of La Raza are the 9 million Mexican Americans in the southwest United States, the villians are the "Anglos" and their indifference to the poverty and alienation of the Spanish-speaking neighbors.
La Roza lists the grievances of the Mexican Americans in their own words, often despairing and hopeless. But now two leaders have appeared. They are Reis Lopez Tijerina, who headed the sometimes violent New Mexican movement for land reform and ended up in jail; and Cesar Chavez, who organized the grape workers union in California and became something of a Gandhi in the process.
Reis Tijerina is already being supplanted in New Mexico by his disciples who are forming their own cooperatives, educational programs and land-reform campaigns. Steiner says, but it was he who started the ball rolling. Gov. David Cargo of New Mexico is quoted as saying: "He
Mar. 9
1970 KANSAN 5
has driven a wedge into the political set-up of this state and maybe the Southwest."
Chavez is a different sort. In the spring of 1968 he observed "a Lenten fast for peace and nonviolence" lasting 25 days. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy visited him on the last day of the fast. And Martin Luther King called him a "living example of the Gandhian tradition with its great force for social progress and its healing spiritual powers."
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Sets, designed by James Hawes,
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Brooking has also directed "The Country Wife," "Gypsy," "Oliver." "Macbeth," and "School for Scandal."
The revolving stage is used to
in which action takes place. Brooking said skeletal sets were used because sets were not an essential factor in developing the character study, which is the essence of the production.
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Bolton & Hines push Hawks to Big Eight swimming crown
By GALEN BLAND
Kansan Sports Writer
The powerful KU swimming squad used depth and the winning combination of Bolton and Hines to splash almost 200 points ahead of runnerup Oklahoma in the Big Eight swimming championships last weekend in Ames.
Kansas amassed 563 points in the three day meet to win their third straight conference title. This is only the third title for the Hawks since 1929.
KU took the lead from the start of the meet when Tom Ellis won the first event, the 500-yard freestyle. Teammate Bruce Bove was third.
5
FINAL BOX SCORE
Kan. St. fg-iga ft-fit afa reb turn pf t4 19
Zender 3-9 8-9 19 20 4 14
Venable 7-16 4-6 13 14 4 18
Hall 6-10 3-6 10 14 1 15
Webb 8-13 3-3 3 0 2 19
Hughes 2-10 0-2 3 0 2 19
Lawrence 1-12 0-2 2 2 4 19
Skiner 1-2 0-2 3 2 1 4
Smith 0-1 0-1 1 2 1 4
Litton 0-0 2-2 2 0 1 2
Totals 28-64 23-33 44 12 14 29
Kansas fg-fga ft-fa ab reb turn pf tp 9
Russell 3-9 3-5 12 14 2 1 9
Robisch 11-28 6-12 14 2 1 3 28
Brown 3-7 2-2 14 2 1 5 8
Kivisto 3-7 3-4 3 2 2 0 9
Lawrence 4-12 8-10 3 2 2 0 16
Walworth 1-6 0-3 3 0 1 5 0
Nailow 1-1 0-2 3 0 1 4 0
Boslevi 5-5 0-2 5 1 4 10
Mathews 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0
Totals 30-75 22-36 49 13 24 82
KANSAS STATE 44 35 79
KANSAS 48 34 82
After Bob Wright, the defending champion and event record holder in the 200-yard individual medley, came home fifth in this event Kim Bolton of the 'Hawks took over. He grabbed first in the 50-yard freestyle and was followed home by teammate Bob Hines.
KANSAN Sports
6 KANSAN Mar. 9 1970
On Friday Bolton added the 200-yard freestyle to his collection and Tom Ellis was right behind for another Jayhawk 1-2 finish. This was the only first for KU on the second day of competition.
The icing on the cake came when Bolton splashed to his third title by winning the 100-yard freestyle to complete his domination of the freestyle events. Hines of KU again was second to Bolton.
Besides Ellis seconds were won by freshman Mike Tackett in the 200-yard butterfly and Steve Trombold in the 100-yard backstroke. Bob Wright failed to defend his title in the 100-yard breaststroke. He came in third, one second off first and two and a half behind his record time last year.
The 'Hawks' 400-yard freestyle relay team of Hines, Sabates, Ellis and Bolton won their event to push the KU squad further ahead.
On Saturday, Scott Skultety of KU lowered the 200-yard back-stroke mark to 2:00.0 in the preliminaries but was upset in the finals. Skultety placed third behind winner Steve Trombold of KU and Dave Howell of Oklahoma.
Next week members of the Kansas squad will compete in the National championships.
miller
·
beck
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Canfield tallies 39 points
Frosh rebound edge KSU
Led by Randy Canfield's career high 39 points the Kansas freshmen made a great second half comeback to defeat the Kansas State freshmen 84-78 in Saturday night's preliminary game.
Gymnasts set records in defeat
The Kansas State gymnastics team defeated Kansas Friday night 159.90 to 159.15 to break the Jayhawks' streak of 10 straight wins in dual competition.
It was a frustrating night for coach Bob Lockwood's squad as they broke four team and individual records en route to only their second defeat of the year.
The big difference was the Wildcats' Ken Snow who captured four first place finishes while placing in six of the seven events.
Following the match Lockwood attributed the loss to early missed routines.
"We were just a few routines away from it," he said. "We had one miss in the floor exercise at the first and that really hurt us. Also we had four misses on the side horse—we just didn't hit that well all the way through."
The Jayhawks simply met the Wildcats on the wrong night as K-State, who like KU is fielding its best team in history, bettered its best team score by more than two points.
A near capacity crowd watched the Jayhawks as they established four new records.
Aitchison junior Kirk Gardner scored a brilliant 9.50 on the still rings to pace a team score of 27.30 for the first record. John Brouillette, Wichita junior, and Mark Hannah, Overland Park junior, scored 9.10 and 8.70 respectively to add to the score.
Ron Faunce, Topeka sophomore,
Dan Bradfield, Overland Park
junior, and Brouillette all scored
at least 9.0 en route to a team
record score of 27.40 on the long
horse. Faunce and Bradfield each
scored 9.20 to pace the scoring.
The team score of 159.15, paced by nine 9.0 or better performances, was the third team record established while Brouillette's 52.30 score in all-around competition was the fourth mark established.
COSTLY 1968 FIRES
NEW YORK—Eight fires with insured losses over $3 million each occurred in the United States in 1968, reports the Insurance Information Institute. The most costly was a $12 million fire involving chemicals in Taft, La.
After maintaining the lead through most of the first 11 minutes the Jayhawks became foul plagued and the Wildcats took advantage finally taking the lead, 23-21, with 8:37 remaining in the half.
With Mike Bossard, 6-6 Washington, D.C. forward, sitting on the bench with three fouls the Jayhawks lost their rebounding domination and K-State built and maintained an eight point lead throughout much of the time remaining. A Canfield tip shot at the buzzer cut the Wildcat lead to six, 45-39, as the two teams retired for halftime.
As the teams returned to the floor for the second half the crowd had grown considerably in anticipation of the varsity game and it seemed to make a difference in KU's play.
With greater fan support the freshmen began to eat away at the K-State lead until a Leonard Gray jump shot with 13:47 left to play tied the score, 51-51.
The two teams traded baskets for the next three minutes before K-State, behind 6-5 forward Ernie Kusnyer, scored five straight points to take a 64-59 lead with 8:35 showing on the clock.
Mar. 9
1970 KANSAN 7
The Jayhawks slowly rallied behind the growing support of KU fans making their way into Allen Field House and finally tied the score, 74-74, on a Canfield
turn around jump shot with 3:58
left.
The Wildcats' doom was soon to follow after Kusnyer, K-State's leading scorer, picked up his fifth personal foul. The Oklahoma City product did not like the call and informed the official of his feelings resulting in a technical foul in addition.
Mark Williams, hitting 77 per cent of his free throws coming into the game, missed both attempts and the Wildcats took the lead two minutes later, 76-74.
At this point Bossard personally took charge of another KU rally scoring six straight points to put the Jayhawks in front, 80-76, to play. 0:26 to play.
Gray followed with two free throws at the 0:15 mark to build the KU lead to six, 82-76, before Marcus Kemper hit a short jumper for K-State to make it 82-78 with eight seconds remaining to play.
Bossard regained the six point lead with a layin just before the final buzzer and the Jayhawks left the floor with an 84-78 win.
Canfield, the 6-11 Wichita product, got good scoring support from Bossard and Gray, who each tallied 18 points. Williams was held far below his 19 point average with just nine points.
Kusnyer led K-State scoring with 27 points.
KU ended its season with a record of 10 wins and 2 losses.
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For the clear look . . . get Fostex Cake.
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ARE COUNTRY SET GIRLS SPOILED? ABSOLUTELY!
country Set paints you tender sweet and spring with a palette of pastels. High-cut tunics, prints, knit blouses to tie, or not.
at
KIRSTEN'S 9th and Iowa in THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
Use Kansan Classified
Jayhawk comebao
Big 8 champs fall 82-79 Bosilevac leads surge
By BRUCE CARNAHAN
Ransan Sports Editor
and DON RAKER
Kansan Sports Writer
The KU Jayhawks closed out their 1970 basketball campaign in championship fashion Saturday night as they roared back from a five point deficit in the final four minutes to nip Big Eight champion K-State, 82-79, before a capacity crowd of 17,000 in Allen Field House.
The visiting Wildcats, playing the same aggressive and hardnosed brand of basketball that brought them a conference crown, pulled to a commanding 77-72 advantage with 3:35 remaining in the contest.
It looked as if K-State was well on its way towards its 20th regular-season victory, but the "Cats" success was short lived as a rib-sticking KU defense turned the tide by forcing the Wildcats into four costly turnovers and catapulted the 'Hawks past the invaders in the crucial closing minutes.
Dave Robisch, the league's top point producer, began the rally as he drove the lane for a layup to cut the lead to three. David Hall, the Wildcats' 6-6 sophomore forward, was called for fouling on the play and Robisch went to the charity stripe with an opportunity to put the 'Hawks within two points of K-State.
Robisch's free throw bounced high off the rim but the Jayhawks regained possession and Chet Lawrence, senior captain making his final appearance as a KU cager, was promptly fouled by K-State's Wheeler Hughes. Lawrence calmly converted both ends of the one-and-one opportunity to pull the Hawks within one, 77-76, with 2:15 remaining.
Fred Bosilevac, a seldom-used 6-5 forward, provided the game-winning heroics for KU as he fired in a 15-foot jumper from the baseline to thrust the 'Hawks on top for good, 80-79, with only 59
Bob Kivisto downed a 20-footer to push the surging Jayhawks to a 78-77 margin, but Jeff Webb countered for K-State with a twisting 15-footer to put the Cats on top 79-78 with 1:25 showing and set the stage for the hectic closing minute.
seconds of the game remaining to be completed.
The conference champion Wildcats began to lose their poise with the determined Jayhawks comeback and when a missed K-State shot fell into Jayhawk hands the "Purple Pride" began to sense the bitter taste of defeat.
Kivisto and Lawrence each converted free throws in the final minute to complete the KU scoring display and conclude the winning 82-79 ledger.
The game had all the marks of a KU rout as the 'Hawks raced to a 21-12 lead in the first six minutes. But Roger Brown, KU's 6-10 pivot, picked up three fouls early and the Wildcats took advantage of the skyscraper's absence to knot the score, 25-25, with 7:47 showing and limit KU to a 48-44 half time margin.
The 'Cats rebounded in the second stanza to overtake KU, 60-58, at the 12:58 mark on Hall's layup and continued to dominate play the next eight minutes in building up the 77-72 cushion.
PARKS ARE THE BEST OF ALL
It appeared that the Jayhawks would have to wait until next year—but KU's pressing defense, coupled with clutch board play and scoring, choked the 'Cats down the stretch and enabled the 'Hawks to register a perfect 13-0 home court record for the year.
At the sound of the final gun pandemonium broke loose as hundreds of screaming KU supporters joyfully raced to the floor to congratulate their heroes and give coach Ted Owens a free ride off the floor atop their shoulders.
P
Sunflower state rivalary draws capacity crowd of 17,000 in
(2)
Coach Ted Owens—ulcers, fatigue and victory
POLITICS
PETER MUSKIN
K-State's Fitzsimmons—the agony of defeat
KANSAS
40
35
Dave Robisch connects for two of 28
In a post-game interview Coach Owens, disheveled from the furo following the game, had high praise for Lawrence, Bosileva and the entire KU squad.
"Chester has been an inspiration to our team," he said. "I'm just sorry we couldn't win the championship when he was captain. You couldn't have a better captain than Chester."
Owens expressed great satisfaction with the play of Sophilevac The 6-5 Mission sophomore cam off the bench to hit a perfect five for five from the field and wa one of three Jayhawks scoring in double figures.
"I have a lot of faith in Fred, Owens said. "It's tough to come in under those circumstances but h
The faces of KU basket B
back trips K-State
FRED YOUNG
Kansan photos by Ron Bishop Monroe Dodd Joe Bullard
d of 17,000 in Allen Field House
game interview Coach
neveed from the furor
the game, had high
Lawrence, Bosilevac
tire KU squad.
has been an inspirational team," he said. "I'm we couldn't win the ship when he was cap-couldn't have a better in Chester."
expressed great satish on the play of Bloesivac. session sophomore came ch to hit a perfect five on the field and was tree Jayhawks scoring figures.
a lot of faith in Fred,"
"It's tough to come in
in the circumstances but he
is determined and did a good job."
Robisch, a Springfield, Ill. junior, hit 28 points to lead KU and game scoring. The All-America candidate finished the season with 689 points, third best in KU history and fourth best in Big Eight history.
Robisch also finished the season with 314 rebounds to become the fourth in Jayhawk history to record more than 300 rebounds in one season.
Lawrence assisted the KU cause with 16 points.
The Wildcats were lead by Webb and Venable with 19 and 18 points respectively.
For the second time in two weeks crowd behavior was less than admirable as flying objects
thrown to the floor repeatedly interrupted the game.
The peak came when K-State called time out with 12:59 left in the first half only to have its huddle hit with an egg.
Upon Owens being notified in the KU huddle of the incident, the disgusted Jayhawk mentor went to the scorer's table and told the crowd over the public address system to stop throwing things so the teams could determine which was best.
KU did just that.
The Hawks finished the season with a 17-9 overall record and an 8-6 conference mark, good enough for a second place. K-State ended 19-7 and 10-4.
1980'S FESTIVAL CENTER
es of KU basketball fans reflect the joy of the Jayhawks' thrilling finale
44
53
Pierre Russell tangles with a Wildcat
0:26
Bob Kivisto downs crucial charity with 26 seconds left
M
evelyn wood reading dynamics
Lord of the Flies William Golding C.P. Snow
THE AGE OF ANALYSIS
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Spring bridal fashions modeled at AWS show
Bridal gowns appeared more feminine than ever with high necks and long puffed sleeves at the Spring Bridal Show Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The affair was sponsored by the Associated Women Students Fashion Board.
P. H.
Debbie Fox, Overland Park sophomore, models a romantic gown featuring an empire waistline and Venice lace applique at the AWS spring bridal fashion show Saturday.
Organza was a popular fabric for the gowns, which were heavily appliqued with beads and Venice lace. Many of the gowns empire waists, which gave fullness to the long flowing skirts. Veils were predominately train length, with either "dutch boy" or Juliet head pieces.
Dotted swiss, silk screen prints, voile and chiffon were favored fabrics for the bright new bridesmaid's dresses. Large picture hats often topped the sheer dresses.
The trousseau outfits included travel clothes, after-five dresses and beach wear. Pants suits were shown with straight line flare pants and tunic tops or jackets. Ribbed knit was the frequent choice for casual suits for the honeymoon. Maxi-coats and short jackets were seen in crushed patten leather in stately black or flaring red.
Pam Russell, Iola senior and commentator for the event, gave short descriptions of each outfit. Rick Shaffer, Hutchinson senior, assisted as accompanist on the piano.
- Models for the event were AWS Fashion Board members: Carol Boney, Storm Lake, Ia., junior; Suzanne Cherot, Independence senior; Nancy Dodge, Omaha sophomore; Debbie Fox, Overland Park sophomore; Pam Reusser, Cincinnati, Ohio; sophomore; Pam Miller, Overland Park junior; Eva Martin, Topeka senior; Linda Smith, Overland Park sophomore; Sugar Yaun, Fort Worth, Tex., junior; Norma Decker, Tecumseh sophomore; and Casey Eike, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore.
Miss Eike was also the chairman of the event.
The fashion show featured bridal gowns from Galerie Bridal, trousseau outfits from La Petite Galerie and sportswear from the Jay Shoppe.
Hilltopper Applications and Nominations
- Due March 13. Turn in at the information Desk in the Student Union.
- Selection will be based mainly on one criteria-whether the student has made an impact on KU: whether he left this school changed. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind.
- NOMINATIONS should be signed by 3 students.The nomination should include a list of activities and/or accomplishments of the nominee, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- SELF-NOMINATIONS OR APPLICATIONS should include letters of recommendations by 2 students or 1 student and 1 faculty member, a list of activities and/or accomplishments, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- All candidates must be classified as SENIORS.
- Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students.
---
Karate Club sponsors annual tournament
The second annual Jayhawk Karate Tourney sponsored by the KU Karate Club was held Saturday at the Community Building, 11th and Vermont Streets.
Mike Sheahon, Wichita graduate student and former KU varsity track runner, won first place in green belt kata (form and style) competition.
Mar. 9
1970 KANSAN 11
George Arnold, Wichita freshman, won second place in white belt kata.
In team competition, the Bushidokan Karate Academy from Kansas City, Mo. won first place. The KU Karate Club took third place in team competition.
Max Muller, Prairie Village law student, instructor of the club and director of the tourney, said about 500 spectators watched the tournament, in which about 200 competitors participated.
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PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
FORD
Photo by Mike Radencich
Mobile homes like this one at 3040 Iowa are becoming increasingly popular among married students at KU. Trailer living offers the advantages of privacy and convenience, often at less expense than an apartment.
Woodruff Auditorium opened with reception
The Laurence E. Woodruff Auditorium was formally opened to the public with a reception in honor of Professor and Mrs. Woodruff Sunday in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union.
The auditorium, which is across the hall from the Big 8 Room on the second floor of the Union, was completed in December of 1969 and seats about 600, said Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union. The auditorium has been in use since January. Burge said
that 34 events were scheduled in the auditorium in the next 20 days.
Woodruff is a professor of biology and entomology. He was registrar from 1942 until 1946, dean of men from 1947 until 1953 and dean of students from 1953 until 1967.
As dean of students, Woodruff was on the Union Executive and Operating Committee when plans were made for the auditorium in 1964, Burge said.
12 KANSAN Mar. 9 1970
In 1964, the estimated number of illegitimate births in Kansas was 1,864.
1905
After a long week of classes, the best way to start the weekend is at Burger Chef. Stop in today and try a Super Shef.
- 100% Pure Beef -
9th & Iowa St.
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF
Approval by the Lawrence City Commission of a new mobile home park on Maple Lane demonstrates a growing popularity for trailer living. The new park will be the sixth in the Lawrence area.
Marvin Keith, Overland Park senior, and his wife, Nancy, Bern senior, who live in the Ridgeview Court Mobile Home Village at 30th and Iowa, said it was less expensive in the long run to live in a trailer.
By CHARLENE MULLER
Kansas Stiff Writer
"We pay $50 a month rent besides making payments on the trailer," Keith said. When the trailer and our furniture is paid off, we'll have something to show for our money. If we decide to sell the trailer, we'll take only a small loss and will have furniture to take with us."
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
Mrs. Keith said the difference between monthly mobile home payments and apartment rent could be spent on other important things.
Mobile homes popular
Steven Lukert, Sabeth senior, and his wife, Carolyn, said the privacy of mobile home living is a major advantage.
"You're close enough to the next trailer not to be isolated, but far enough to have quiet and individual privacy." Lukert said.
"My husband and I love gardening and working outside," she said. "We are planting a vegetable and flower garden, which we couldn't do in an apartment."
Rodney Angle, Medicine Lodge graduate student, and his wife, Karen, live in the Mobile Home Estates at 22nd and Harper. Mrs. Angle, who is expecting their first baby in May, said, they got much more space for the money than they could have gotten in an apartment. Their trailer, she said, has three good-sized bedrooms.
Large fenced-in yards are provided to each mobile home owner, Mrs. Angle said.
The Lukerts installed their own air conditioning units but the Keiths bought a trailer with central air conditioning already installed.
move it. However, if a man is transferred to another city by a company, his moving expenses are usually paid for by them."
Mrs. Angle said another reason they chose to live in the Mobile Home Estates was because they were allowed to keep pets outside. This is not allowed in all courts. Other advantages, she said, were a storage shelter and a swimming pool.
The Lukers said they moved to the Ridgeview Court from another court where they were dissatisfied with the park operator. Promises
The way mobile homes are constructed," Lukert said, "you feel all "boxed-up" in hot weather unless you have air conditioning.
were made that were not kept, such as the building of a park for children and storm shelters, Lukert said.
Both the Keiths and the Lukerts praised their present park operator. They said he provided them with a free clubhouse, swimming pool, basketball court, central television hookup, trash collection twice weekly, paved roads, storage shelters, storm shelters, car ports and fenced-in yards.
Lukert and Keith said residents were provided with a list of rules requiring them to mow their lawns and keep their yards free of trash. Dogs are not allowed outside because they bark at passers-by.
A major disadvantage to trailer living, Lukert said, is that air conditioning is a necessity in the summer.
Another problem with mobile homes, Lukert said, is the cost of moving them outside the city.
"If you are moving a long instance," Lukert said, "it might be more profitable to sell the trailer since it costs about $1 a mile to
Mrs. Angle said the home owners in their park would like the operators to put in storm shelters and paved streets.
"Last year during the tornado season," Mrs. Angle said, "we were always having to run to a friend's house to seek shelter."
O
BACK TO FRONT
Fashion has returned to the great front. Here, widely lapelled, buttoned with zest — for you to wear with super-command. The idea works two ways, of course — for the back of this striped suit is as arresting as its front, with muscular shoulders, high center vent. Get back to our fitting room soon and front up!
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The last until the year 2017
Photo by Ron Bishop
The solar eclipse Saturday was witnessed throughout most of the United States and Mexico. This is the first and last solar eclipse in this century.
Country views eclipse
At about noon, Saturday, most of the United States and parts of Mexico witnessed the last solar eclipse to occur on this continent this century.
From the west coast of Mexico to the eastern seaboard of the United States, the "cone of totality," or shadow of the moon, swept across the country at 1,500 miles an hour turning day into night and confusing all types of animals.
The NBC television network carried live TV pictures of the eclipse from cameras attached to telescopes, thus giving people all over the country a chance to see this rare and unusual phenomenon first hand.
As millions watched, the dark sphere of the moon slowly engulfed the sun producing a number of unusual occurrences.
As the moon covered the last portion of the solar disc, a bright, almost blinding flash of light was seen as sunlight streamed through the valleys and craters on the moon. The effect produced an appearance not unlike that of a diamond ring glinting in the sun. This phenomenon is known to astronomers as (not surprisingly) the "diamond ring effect."
After this passed, and as the moon continued its pass across the sun's face, the otherwise invisible chromosphere, the part of the sun's atmosphere just above the surface, was seen.
Finally, the most notable phenomenon of any solar eclipse became visible, the sun's corona. This is the sun's atmosphere that extends many millions of miles out in space and is made up of gases heated up to a million degrees.
Because the most ideal conditions for viewing the eclipse were present in Mexico, astronomers and scientists from all over the world set up telescopes and recording equipment near the small village of Miahuatlan in central Mexico.
Before the coming of the scientists, this small hamlet had none of the modern conveniences that Americans are so acustomed to. As the time of the eclipse drew near, the people of Miauhtalan found themselves besieged by Americans, Russians, Dutch and many other countries represented by their top scientists.
The United States alone sent some 20 different teams from many universities to the small town that had obtained the use of electricity only last fall.
Yet, the Miahuatlans prepared for the onslaught of scientists. The townpeople cleaned the streets, slapped new paint on old buildings, and even set up new boots for their market places. During the week prior to the eclipse, a week-long fiesta was declared by the people to welcome their visitors.
As usual for an undeveloped society, rumors of the "moon eating up the sun" circulated through the village. But, most of the people knew that the solar eclipse was not a harbinger of death and destruction and became eager to see the unusual occurrence as the time approached.
Interviews
March 11: Armstrong, BS-business administration, BA-Liberal Arts, marketing, sales, U.S. citizenship required, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., business administration and related areas; St. Paul Insurance Co., BS, MBA-Business, BA-Liberal Arts, claims, investment analyst, bonds, sales, titles; Touche, Ross & Co., accounting, BS, MS, MBA, BA, MA, accountants and management consultants.
March 12: Del Monte Sales Co., BS, MS, MBA-Business, BALiberal Arts, sales trainee; Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Business, accounting; Kansas City Power and Light Co., BS, Business major in accounting; Moberly, West, Jennings & Schaul (Wichita), BS, MBA, accounting; 7-11 Stores, any degree for on the job management training program; Xerox Corp., sales representatives.
The March draft call for Kansas will be 130 men, according to Lt. Col, Junior F. Elder, State Selective Service director,
"Draft lottery numbers which are vulnerable will be 90 and under for the month of March," he said.
"Approximately 73 per cent of the group had numbers in the first half of the lottery numbers, and seven people had numbers above 340.
Quotas have not been filled for the last two months. Elder said.
"We were 16 short in January and 27 short last month." He said that they would probably be able to meet their draft call for March, according to the reports he received in February.
"We took a sample 200 men from the 400 who entered the National Guard in January and found that 25 per cent of this group was in the top 50 numbers of the draft letter." Elder said.
"Those seven to have simply voluntarily enlisted, but not because they thought they would
be drafted," he said. He said that 600 men enlisted in the National Guard in February.
"A lot of the men who enlist aren't classified I-A, but would become eligible in June, he said. "I guess they thought they'd just get in ahead of the crowd so that they wouldn't be drafted. It is easier to get into the National Guard now."
Magic number is 90 in March draft call
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Galerie Bridal
910 KENTUCKY
VI 3-0826
presents
Third Annual
Spring Bridal Fashion Show
2 p.m.
Sunday, March 8
Union Ballroom
produced and modeled
by AWS Fashion Board Members
Trouseau
Apparel by
LA PETITE GALERIE
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
Mar. 9
1970 KANSAN 13
The official nickname for Maryland is the "Old Line State" or the "Free State."
Galerie Bridal
910 KENTUCKY
VI 3-0826
presents
Third Annual
Spring Bridal Fashion Show
2 p.m.
Sunday, March 8
Union Ballroom
produced and modeled by AWS Fashion Board Members
Trousseau Apparel by LA PETITE GALERIE
CAMPUS APPROVED! CAMPUS PRICED!
University Club
by Bostonian
Come see our new selection of "beefed up" university styled, traditional moccasins with genuine handsewn front seams. Campus approved and campus priced. Designed to bring you many semesters of long, comfortable wear. Several styles and colors to choose from.
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McKINN shoes
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VI 3-2091
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RALPH NADER
MARCH 9 8:00 P.M. FREE — HOCH AUDITORIUM Sponsored by SUA, Kansas University, Kansas Law School, Student Bar Association
CAMPUS APPROVED! CAMPUS PRICED!
University Club
by Bostonian
Come see our new selection of "beefed up" university styled, traditional moccasins with genuine handsewn front seams. Campus approved and campus priced. Designed to bring you many semesters of long, comfortable wear. Several styles and colors to choose from.
$19.
McCoys shoes
813 Mass. St.
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Session to decide tax lid bill
Only one week remains in the 1970 Kansas legislative session, but one of the most controversial bills, the property tax lid, is still to be decided.
In a rare Saturday session, the House voted the bill to a Senate and House Conference Committee. The committee is going to try to work out differences in versions previously passed by the Senate and the House.
By a voice vote Saturday, the House defeated a motion to refuse to go along with extensive Senate amendments to the bill. The bill would have been dead if the motion had been adopted.
Gov. Robert Docking is a strong supporter of the property tax lid. The bill is opposed by municipal and school officials throughout the state.
The bill is designed to place a limit of 5 per cent on increases in expenditures and would freeze property taxes at the present level.
The fate of the controversial bill is unknown. While many legislators are afraid to vote against it, increasing numbers believe the bill is unworkable and unconstitutional because of Senate revisions made last week.
The House had passed the bill earlier in this year's session, and the Senate passed its heavily amended version of the bill Thursday in a 22-17 vote.
The conference committee to rework the bill will be composed of six members. House members appointed by Speaker Calvin Strowig, R-Abilene, are House Majority Leader Don Bell, Wichita, House Minority Leader Pete Loux, D-Wichita, and Strowig.
Senate members of the committee have yet to be appointed. They will be named when the Senate convenes this afternoon.
Both House and Senate leaders say they have no plans to try to extend this year's legislative session. There is a constitutional requirement that the session_end by Saturday.
Strowig and Sen. Glee Smith Jr., R-Larned, say the legislature may stay in recess until it is determined whether any vetoes by Gov. Docking will necessitate bringing the full legislature back.
Graphic display shown at museum
A collection of about 90 graphic works by Winslow Homer will be on display today through March 25 at the University of Kansas Museum of Art.
The KU museum is one of only 16 museums in the country displaying the exhibition, while it is on a national tour.
Winslow Homer began his career as a graphic artist and essentially he remained one all his life. Until he was over 26 his work was almost entirely in black and white—lithography, illustration and drawing. One of his most ambitious works was a large lithograph of the entire Massachusetts Senate, 42 individual portraits, which he did at the age of 20.
Other works include etchings, lithographs and wood engravings in the context of Homer's overall development as an artist.
The works in the display depict some of Homer's most well known topics. Included are his interpretations of life at sea, including the popular "Lifeline." His works depict Yankee farm life, the country and forests
Also included is the series of "campaign sketches" drawn during the Civil War depicting light moments of army life.
Homer's graphic work reflects his use of line and tone, his feeling for patterns and rhythmic lines.
14 KANSAN Mar. 9
1970
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FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Handmade Originals--India prints,
tie-dies, dresses, men's shirts, pants
on maxi skirts, mini skirts, beads,
airline t-shirts for creation Apps.
West 5th Street. **3-10**
Must Sell. Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also mice and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-5763 evenings. 3-16
Women's contract at Naimshi—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
Pentax Spotmatic, new, never used,
1f.4 lens, soft case, guarantee card.
$309.50 value for only $247.60. Kent
Dannen, 842-362. Naismith Hall, 3-9
Fender Newporter Guitar for sale by original owner. Like new condition, seldom played. Call 842-4454 or stop by 2328 Mr. Dr. Apt. 2. 3-9
For sale: Cheap, two twin mattresses
box springs, call after 5 p.m.
843-933-6000
4 and 8 track car stereo with FM-
card. Excellent condition.
Scott, 842-8227. 3-9
1967 Ford. Custom. 6 cyl., auto. R&H, H$85. 842-9962. 3-11
For sale: Camper truck, 1950 Ford pickup with hemi-8v, auto, radio, heater, extras, call, come by, make offer, 842-7657, 1851 Mississippi 3-11
Basset Hound, AKC registered tricolor male, 1½ years old, housebroken, needs good home like children. Doghouse also for 3-11 Call VI 3-4374.
Skis, Head Standards with bindings,
210 cm. $75; two matching walnut end
brackets; one matching walnut end
lamps $7.50 each, one walnut coffee
table. $15, 843-2188. 3-11
FREE—Gibson EB-2 hollow body bass guitar with purchase of KUSTOM 200 bass amp bamp 3 - 15 speakers, guitarp amp cover amps covers Call 842-6941 3-11
For Sale: 1966 BSA—650 cc—single
Excellent condition
VI 2-4683
3-11
1960 TR-3, Removable Hardtop, Body and Engine excellent, interior and gear box need work, 842-2191 or 842-8870. 3-11
For Sale: SIAMESE KITTENS, six-weeks old, beautiful seal calls. Point V 1-2811 after 6 o'clock, or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 3-11
1968 Oldsmobile F-85 -Silver, Black interior--immaculate inside and out-WW's and Snow's -V-8, Air-cond-12,000 Miles. 842-1291 or 842-8780. 3-11
Harmon-Kardon 50-watt AM-FM receiver Nocturne model with walnut microphone reception power more than adequate power 842-3225 or 616 Kentucky
1969 Opel wagon, 102 h.p., 8,000 miles,
much warranty left, radio. Must sell.
Call David Rueschoff. VI 3-5770, 1301
W Campus Rd.
1967 VW Super Bug—76 H.P. -Konl'ts-
*Racing Suspension Balanced,
cammed, ported and polished-car
cost over $4500. 842-1291 or 842-131
unless otherwise listed.
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately. $1200. See at Ridgway Court, 3020 Iowa, LGT G23 or call VI 2-6318 after 6 p.m.
3-25
Accordion—Silvio Soprani, Excellent Condition, Life-time guarantee, 842- 4616. 3-9
For Sale: Walk—real hair, long, light brown, like new. Call Kate, 832-812-13
1968 VW bug. $1295. VI 2-8614. 3-12
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
Fred's Auto Painting
1328 W. 9th. Ph. 842-9487
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
henrys
'68 Bridgestone Super 90—red and silver—1400 miles—very fine condition —completely inspected. 842-2191 or 842-8870. 3-11
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
Hurry to Henry's
6th & Mo. VI 3-2139
1968 WV fastback. Must sell, new—wholesale price. AMF-M revers. Quartz iodine driving lamps. Call I 3-8191 after 6. **3-12**
Sell- Concord 510D tapedeck. 1 mile, 145 Templain VI 2-1200 3-12 435 Templain VI 2-1200 3-12
For Sale: 1964 Honda Trail 90, good condition. $170 or best offer. Call VI 2-1378 after 6:00 on weekdays, anytime on weekends. 3-12
Custom designed, multi-purpose weight lifting, training apparatus. Custom designed, training apparatus. Nomical purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design approval) for Barbelle Co. Inc.) 5475.7 bjsl bsx assigned weight Call J. B. at 843-2103 3-13
For Sale: Wooded sloping building site in Martin's Park area. Two acres will together or separately Call艾利姆教育, 843-1011. After 3-13 843-6453
Tremendous sacrifice, 1968 Shelby
500; new tires, factory air power
aircraft, 250,000 miles
tallic blue, plush black Interior
accept offers. 843-9223. 3-11
Polaroid model 800 camera, used five times, wink light, flash, light reducer, exposure meter, leather carrying case, print copier, complete instructions. Original value over $230. Sell for $100 or best offer. Call 842-2958 evening.
Canon FT-QL with a 1.2, 58 mm lens.
Also a 200 mm telephoto and mise.
accessories. Steven Briggs, 842-8402
3-13
WANTED
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatchose apt. with three others.
$51.25 per month, including water.
Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Two girls need roommate to share duplex. Call 842-8434. 3-9
Wanted: Girl to share house for rest
month. Phone 843-3843. 5-11
月 phone 843-3843. 5-11
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 11, 20% off. All handcrafted styles. Hodge Podge 30 (open Thursday midnight) VI 2-0682.
Needed: Adults with history of stuttering problems to participate in research at KU. Speech and Hearing Contact: Dr. Contact Lingwall at U-31 4345
Wanted 3 tickets for K-State game,
6 tickets for CSU game.
Call ESI 3-6101 after 3:30 p.m. 3-9
Wanted: Female roommate for summer
Share 3 bedrooms, air-conditioned apt.
Room size 80m². Available on June 1st. Call Cheryl, UN 4-
3106 or 842-3569. 3-13
NOTICE
515 Michigan St, St. B-B-Que. If you want some honest-how-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 t
GROOVE-TODAY in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galerie. Find the latest, the best for guys and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky.
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-14
I am auditioning female vocalists for local night club work with estaillado group. Interested Call Ric Rasmassen. 843-8153. 3-11
Spring new Sandlers, Sandlers are here, Weaver's Shoe Shop, Second Floor. 3-9
Sand Candles by Betsy Webster, 9th
and Indiana THE OMNIBUS SHIP-
11-23
ITP
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynazoe dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10°; handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
UN 4-3474
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. $115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-160705.
Karate Action Saturday, March 7
Community Building, 11th and Vermont. Eliminations-10:30 a.m. 50c.
Friday 5 p.m. $1.50. 3-12
AT THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE you can Sir-a-loin streak, strip a K.C. strip, Sira-a-loin streak, strip on 8 am to 2:30 a.m. The best dinner in Across from Lindley Hall. 3-9
GRADUATE TICKET ISP. Suresendra Bhana, Gene Roberts, Dave Dlahnau, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed Gauthier, Bob Hubert, Karen Laub, Leroy McDermott, Fred Oettle, John Patterson, Harriette Stallworm, Joe Rohde, Bob Hubert, Karen Laub with a human face (1) voting power on curriculum committees (2) Re-evaluation of degree requirements. (3) Faculty evaluation. 3-11
Dress making and alterations, 20 years experience, call VI 3-2767, 8-2643.
Exciting challenge for a young man with pep and spirit, experience in teaching summer music teaching cheerleading workshops Call 1-913-649-3666 3-9
KU males: Is it true what they say about a girl who wears spring styles in cincinnatus's Shoes, 819 Massachusetts? Longingly lonely, fella. 1-31
Travel and study in Europe for six weeks this summer—many different program colleges credit availale. For catalog detailed information phone VI 2-3785. 3-11
Students of Objectivism discuss the
study of Objectivism in a Monday.
Call 842-6210 after 5:30 3-9
Casual slacks--make your selections now from our new spring shipment and find them at all-course cuts in solids - stripes - plains. Ross Disney Men's Wear. 811 Mass.
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in these and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $801½ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. **tt**
Tie die !t! Wallace Beery shirts, $3.50
The Hodge Dodge, 15 W. 9th. #3. 12
TYPING
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typers, curriculum writers. Pica type. Competent service. Mrs Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
Thesis Typing—10 years experience-
4084. 6 (10:00 to 5:00 -842-0111)
4-3
6048. 8 (10:00 to 5:00 -842-0111)
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8
Acme Dingo Cowboy Boots $18.99
HARVEY'S SHOE STORE
See us also for the newest styles
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
帅气的小男孩
803 W. 23rd
Open every day 1 - 9
Sunday 1 - 6
Self Service
Harvey's
DISCOUNT SHOES
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss.
TYPING. Experienced typist. IBM Selectric, pica type. Work guaranteed. Phone 843-3186. 3-12
Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. M43-8321, Mrs Ruckman
Typing, Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree.
Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249. 3-13
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
HELP WANTED
Help wanted for farm work. call VI 2-8153. 3-13
Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on
the top of the floor. Group Tax 8015 .$12, Mass.$4.00 up. if
the bottom.
SERVICES OFFERED
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates. Attendance 1218 Mish, 843-9690 after 6 p.m.
Math or Spanish tutoring. Call VI 2-5603 or VI 3-9734
3-11
Your headquarters
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
for
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mufflers and
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
shocks
FOUND
Found: A charming atmosphere that makes the steaks and Russian strogonoff flavor taste even better! Castle Tea is must most restaurant Lawrence. 3-9
LOST
Lost—Man's dark blue billfold in
Woolrdruff Auditorium, Wednesday,
Feb 25. Please return to Kansas Union
lost and found. 3-11
Multi-colored female cat with long,
thick fur. Cat VI 3-8153. 3-13
FOR RENT
1 bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Unfurnished, $110 per month and utilities. Available April 2. Call VI 2-3750, 4:30 - 10 p.m.
Three-room furnished apartment,
utilities paid, $70 per month. Prefer
married couple or graduate girl. For
appl. 843-1909, 1151 Ohio. 3-13
Small efficiency apartment, furnished,
$55 per month, utilities paid, 2 blocks
from campus. Available March 9. Call
2-3750, 4:30 - 10 p.m.
3-9
Always Pleasurable Dining
Carpeted, air-conditioned one bed-
room apartment for rent. Call Us:
3-13
Sirloin
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U
Malls Shopping Center
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
VI 3-1211
CLASSIFIEDS mmmm-
Snoopy
Do you have a car to sell or a birthday to acknowledge?
Contact:
Shelley Bray University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall
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- Copy must be in 2 days in advance.
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Nader to speak tonight
Ralph Nader, crusader and researcher, will speak at 8:00 p.m. tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
Nader is the self-proclaimed guardian of the American consumer's rights. He has caused U.S. industry to reappraise its responsibilities and established
POLICYMAN
Nader
new concern for the consumer between womenili c i ans and businessmen.
the atmosphere.
Nader is known to be critical of the au-t o m obile i in dusty the pollution of
He has been responsible for the passage of five federal laws. They
are the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966, the Wholesome Meat Act of 1967, the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act, the Radiation Control for Health and Safety Act and the Wholesale Poultry Products Act.
Nader recently brought before Congress the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act. This act provided preventative measures against working conditions that can cause black lung in mine workers.
This year General Motor's Corvair was taken off the production line. Nader was responsible for this. Through his condemnation of the car, in his best-seller "Unsafe at Any Speed," Nader was able to reduce the sales of the Corvair 93 per cent before its withdrawal.
Nader also revealed the dangers of the food additive monosodium glutamate. His research showed that baby-food containing this
chemical may cause brain damage in some animals. He also has pressed the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to continue investigations on DDT and cyclamates and has made known the possible dangerous misuses of X-rays.
Presently, he is checking the business affairs of Covington & Burling, a Washington law firm headed by former Secretary of State Dean Acheson. Nader is investigating how much influence the company has within the Government.
Nader has been criticized for his actions by members of big business and the New Left. Businessmen have said he exaggerated situations and the New Left accused him of improving the economic system rather than tearing it down.
He frequently contributes articles to Atlantic Monthly, The Economist, The Nation and The New Republic.
Senate to discuss bills
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate is expected this week to pass a voting rights bill opposed by the South, perhaps in time to take up an issue Southerners vigorously support: The Supreme Court nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell.
The Senate civil rights bloc was confident it had the strength to make the voting rights bill, when
16 KANSAN Mar. 9
1970
it emerges from the Senate, tougher on the South than the House-passed bill which carries the administration's support.
In the Senate, liberals are lined up behind amendments offered by Republican Leader Hugh Scott and San, Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., to retain three key provisions of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, under which 800,000 Southern Negroes were enfranchised.
THE HOLF in the WALL
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The administration—backed bill waters down those provisions in a manner which the liberals say
66
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2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Oils and Acrylics
- Stretcher Frames
- Stretcher Frames
- Balsa Wood
Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
could allow the Southern states to deny the vote to Negroes.
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
HIXON STUDIO
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street, the most convenient to campus
US
University State Bank
Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
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Rings - Crusted - Letters
Southerners looked to Republicans for a possible compromise which would free all states but Georgia and South Carolina from the key provisions but retain the attorney general's power to file suits against states adopting voting laws which he felt were discriminatory.
Al Lauter VI 1-1571
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
BURGER
CHEE
An amendment offered by Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield would grant the vote to 18-year-olds. Some senators argue this can only be done through adoption of a constitutional amendment and not simple legislation.
Home of the
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814 Iowa
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
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
1980
Photo by Ron Bishop
Pandemonium in Allen Field House
An unidentified KU basketball fan celebrates the Jayhawks' thrilling triumph over K-State Saturday night by cutting down the net at the southern basket in Allen Field House. Hundreds of fans raced onto the court to congratulate the KU basketball players and coach Ted Owens at the conclusion of the game.
FRATERNITY ALUMNI RELATIONS FIRM
SEEKS MAN WHO NEEDS AT LEAST
$25,000 ADDITIONAL INCOME
National organization working exclusively with the fraternity world seeks man to operate local office here. Must enjoy working with people and be willing to accept comprehensive training. This is a franchise program and can be handled on a part-time basis evenings from your home until full potential is reached. A minimum of $5,000 cash is required with financing available. If you want a secure income, call or write me for complete details.
Harry O. Richards, President, Fraternity Alumni Service DIVISION OF THE CARSON COMPANY
611 South Boulevard · Evanston, Ill. 60202 · Tel. 312/869-8330
1970
Bob Dover, Agent
MARK MORGAN
Dick Fortier, Agent
10.32.81
Dee Ketchum, General Agent
CollegeMaster
Fidelity Union Life Insurance Co.
6th & Iowa
FULTICO CollegeMaster
B. R. WILSON
Jeff McCall, Agent
Rodger Bohnenstiehl, Agent
1973
Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co.
Irishman's Choice
Dave Staffer, Agent
VI 2-4650
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.95
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 10, 1970
Nader attacks big business
Ralph Nader, the self-appointed guardian of consumer rights, said Monday night that the American consumer was being abused by the automotive industry and corporate big business.
Approximately 3,000 persons at Hoch Auditorium heard Nader say consumer protection was more sophisticated, subtle and long-range today than in the past, but that consumer abuse had not received enough study, especially on the college level in engineering.
The problem with consumer abuse, protection and research was that the consumer does not realize he has been short-changed in comparison to what he received, Nader said.
Nader used the automobile industry as an example of almost total neglect in safety. Here, he said, is where the most consumer abuse occurs.
Nader said the highway transportation system is the greatest form of technology that man has ever known. Violence on the highway, he continued, was our
greatest level of trauma. Nader said that Americans should ask themselves why this, our greatest problem, has been neglected. These problems arise from manufacturers and industries, he said.
Nader said the greatest obstacle to improvements on our traffic safety policy is the "nut behind the wheel theory." This theory is based on the belief that accidents are caused by driver negligence and not as a result of faulty vehicles.
Nader said the concern should focus on health and safety for individuals in automobiles, beginning with the vehicle itself. Our technology must adapt to the driver, not vice versa, he said.
Nader said the level of waste each year due to unsafe automobiles was approximately $14 billion, including all insurance claims, repairs, traffic tickets and medical bills. He said our national expenditures should be greater by percentage to remedy our great loss.
He added that standards should be developed to prevent accidents
and loss before they occur. We must ask ourselves, he said, what to do to limit causes of accidents and which measure would gain the most effective safety, with the least cost over the longest period of time. He said this meant improvements of the car instead of the driver.
Two things happen in an accident, said Nader. First, the car goes out of control. Second, there is a collision inside the car with the individual thrown against dangerous instruments, sharp edges and hard objects. He said we try to stop the first accident by screening drivers, but do not show concern over the second accident. There is no second line of defense for the occupant of the car, he said.
"There is something wrong with the organization of our economy since it spends 100 billion dollars on war expenditures, and does not spend 1 billion, in total, on air and water pollution, pesticides research and food, drug and cosmetic research," Nader said.
(Continued to page 12)
Brown asks venue change
BEL AIR, Md. (UPI)—Defense attorneys challenged the legality of H. Rap Brown's 1967 indictment on riot charges and sought a change of venue Monday in pretrial proceedings which provoked the first black demonstration ever seen in this predominantly rural town.
William Kunstler, defense attorney, told Circuit Court Judge Harry E. Dyer it was "utterly impossible" for Brown to receive a fair trial here.
"Harford County is not the place to wash the dirty linen of Dorchester County," Kunstler said. The trial was moved to the 179-year-old colonial brick court
house here at the request of prosecutors who expressed fear the trial would provoke demonstrations and possibly violence in Cambridge, Md.
About 100 persons marched outside the court house, chanting "Power, power, power, to the people." They were orderly but could be heard inside the courtroom.
Kunstler told Dyer it was the first time in Maryland history and possibly even in the nation's legal history, that a trial was moved over defense objections.
Carl Broege, defense attorney, also told Dyer that local newspaper stories had made it impossible for Brown to get a fair trial here because they implied Kunstler's appearances were the cause of trouble in California and Illinois.
Brown, who teaches ghetto children in New York, was not present in the courtroom Monday. He was expected Tuesday for the start of jury selection.
The 26-year-old black militant is charged with arson, inciting to arson and inciting to riot in connection with a speech he delivered in Cambridge July 24, 1967 which was followed by racial disturbances in that eastern shore community. At the time he was head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Draft protests planned
WASHINGTON—Anti-war leaders announced Monday that demonstrations, many involving nonviolent civil disobedience, would be held March 19 at draft boards and induction centers in more than 100 cities.
The protests will highlight a so-called "Anti-Draft Week" March 16-22.
U.S. consulate to close
WASHINGTON—The United States, in a move applauded by Black African leaders as well as the British government, is closing its consulate in Rhodesia.
Secretary of State William P. Rogers announced Monday the consulate would be shut March 17. He explained the action was being taken because premier Ian Smith's breakaway regime had promulgated a constitution, named a president and thus broken its last link with Britain.
My Lai fault undetermined
WASHINGTON—A congressional subcommittee investigating the alleged My Lai massacre has reported it cannot publicly determine whether U.S. troops intentionally shot innocent South Vietnamese civilians.
To reach such a conclusion, according to the subcommittee chairman, would interfere with the legal action the Army has undertaken against the 37 active and former servicemen.
As a result, the House Armed Services Special Subcommittee has switched its task and has decided to focus its attention on the Army's handling of the case.
Boyle denies election flaws
WASHINGTON (UPI) — United Mine Workers President W. A.
"Tony" Boyle, stoutly denied Monday any wrongdoing in his reelection in December or any complicity in the murder of his opponent a month later.
Striking back at his critics in a two-hour long news conference, Boyle accused the Department of Labor of conspiring with his enemies against him, and said he had been mistreated by news media and denied a chance by a Senate subcommittee to answer charges against him and the union.
Boyle shouted at times during his first meeting with the press since he talked briefly with a handful of reporters on election night Dec. 9.
"For more than a month I have desired a proper judicial forum to
respond to the outrageous charges in the press and before the subcommittee involving complicity in murder, the increase in pensions by our trust fund, blacklisting and lies asserted by those who should know better," Boyle said in a statement he read to reporters.
"Having been denied such a forum," Boyle said raising his right hand and facing photographers, "I hereby solemnly swear to Almighty God to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth."
He said that neither union funds, personnel nor the union newspaper was used to promote his candidacy against insurgent candidate Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski in the UMW election Dec. 9.
He said he had nothing to do with
the murder of Yablonski, his wife and daughter, whose bodies were found Jan. 5 in Clarksville, Pa. He denied any connection with Silous Huddleston, a UMW official who has been indicted on conspiracy charges.
He also said the news media had "vilified" him to the extent "that television networks have permitted individuals to accuse me of being involved in murder."
A Senate subcommittee investigating the UMW, had heard opposition witnesses, but had denied Boyle a chance to appear before the subcommittee. When told the subcommittee Monday invited him to appear March 18 and 19, Boyle said he had not received any such invitation.
The Department of Labor was in
"collusion" with Yablonski's attorney, Joseph L. Rauh Jr., against Boyle and the UMW.
Loan funds to UMW workers were mentioned in a suit filed Thursday by the Department of Labor seeking to set aside Boyle's election over Yablonski and to order a new one.
Boyle said he didn't know how much his election campaign cost, who were the contributors to that campaign except "coal miners."
Boyle said he was the victim of "the cheapest fraud" by the Department of Labor when he was promised that Labor Secretary George P. Shultz would be advised of his "factual and legal arguments" against the government election suit before it was filed. He said the suit was filed even as the promise was being made.
Campus briefs
KU debate squads place in tourney
Two University of Kansas debate squads coached by Donn W. Parson, professor of speech and drama, placed fifth in a tournament held in the Kansas Union last weekend.
The squad of Bob Prentice, Turon sophomore, and Dan Beek, Prairie Village junior, and the squad of Bob McCulloh, Prairie Village senior, and Dave Jeans, Independence, Mo. senior, took fifth place from a field of 48 teams.
The University of Houston won the tournament after defeating the University of Denver in the final round.
The KU squad will compete this weekend in the Kansas Debate League Championships at Manhattan.
Blind gain use of recorder
Blind and visually handicapped students may now use a tape recorder available in Watson Library.
The tape recorder was purchased by the Endowment Association and is available for the use by these students at the circulation desk of the library. It may be used in room 353 of the library by students who need to have books read to them and recorded for further study.
Political science speech tonight
The political science department will sponsor a colloquium at 7:30 tonight in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
Wayne Francis, associate professor of political science at the University of Washington, will speak on "Statistical Models in Political Science."
John J. Conard, publisher of the Kiowa County Signal in Greensburg, has been appointed director of university relations and development at the University of Kansas. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced Monday the appointment would become effective July 1.
his M.A. in political science here in 1947. He has a doctorate in international law from the University of Paris.
Conard was a Naval aviator in World War II and an instructor of political science at KU from 1946 to 1949 before going to France for his doctoral studies. Last fall Conard conducted a graduate seminar in political science here.
Faculty Forum to meet Thursday
Ronald Calgaard, KU associate professor of economics, will speak before the Faculty Forum at noon Thursday.
for ten years and served as Speaker of the House in the 1967 and 1968 sessions. He is married to the, former Virginia Powell of Olathe, a 1948 graduate of KU.
"There is a clear need at KU for an office to coordinate numerous development efforts, provide general assistance to the office of the Chancellor and develop better state and federal relations. I am delighted that a person of Dr. Conard's abalities and experience could be attracted to this position." Chalmers said.
"Leaving our home community is a painful process," Conard said, "yet I am delighted with the opportunity of serving the University once again. I hope that I can make a significant improvement in the educational opportunities for the young people of Kansas."
The Faculty Forum meets in the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. A hot lunch will be served for a fee of $1.00. For reservations call 843-4933.
Publisher appointed to post
Danish professor to lecture
A professor from the University of Copenhagen will lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in 112 Blake on "The First Greeks in Phoenicia and their Settlement at Sukas."
P. J. Ris, professor of classical archaeology in Copenhagen, Denmark, will include in his lecture the character, background and importance of the Greek settlement; earlier archaeological and mythological evidence of Greeks on the Phoenician coast in the Homeric Age and about the Danish excavations at Sukas.
KU residence hall board attends Texas convention
2 KANSAN Mar. 10 1970
The Association of University Residence Hall executive board plus two advisers from the Dean of Men's and the Dean of Women's offices leave tonight for Lubbock, Tex., where they will attend the National Association of College and University Residence Hall's national convention at Texas Technical University.
John J. Conard
---
PETER C. BROWN
10
A native of Coolidge, Conard graduated from KU in 1943 with a journalism major, and received
The students and advisers will be traveling by bus along with similar groups from Kansas State University, Kansas State Teachers' College, Fort Hays State College, Ottawa University and Wichita State University.
The group will present a slide show to the assembly depicting the functions and projects which AURH performs on the KU campus. The slide program will be a mixture of narration and slides of the AURH activities and facilities to show how AURH ties the residence halls to campus activities.
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Two bowl appearances have been made by the Air Force Academy football team, the first in the 1959 Cotton Bowl and second in the 1964 Gator Bowl.
The convention begins Wednesday morning and lasts until Saturday. The students will be living in residence halls in Lubbock.
Fellowships to encourage foreign study
Conard was a member of the Kansas House of Representatives
The University of Kansas will be permitted to select 15 graduate students preparing for careers in teaching and public service to receive fellowships for the study of foreign languages and area studies during the 1970-71 academic year. The fellowships are financed by the National Defense Education Act.
The University has received a grant of $53,250 for the fellowships, to be awarded in East Asian studies, Latin American area studies, and Slavic and Soviet area studies. They will be awarded to students working for an M.A. degree in one of the area studies programs and for the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in any of the 14 academic departments which cooperate in offering area studies at KU.
The Modern Foreign Language Fellowship Program was initiated in 1959 as a response to the nation's critical need for specialists in foreign countries and languages. Bv next spring the program will have provided nearly 17,000 fellowships.
Yell leaders nab first
University of Kansas yell leaders tied for first and KU pompom girls were rated second in a survey conucted by the International Cheerleading Foundation, Randy Neil, executive director of the foundation, said Saturday.
Of the 250 university squads judged, the KU yell leaders tied for first place in the nation with the University of California at Los Angeles Song Girls. Each squad received 32 votes by the universities asked to rank major university cheerleading squads.
"A large number of ballots commented on the spirit of KU in 1969," Neil's office said in making the announcement.
Two other big eight schools also placed in the top ten. The University of Colorado pompon squad ranked fifth and Kansas State University cheerleaders ranked ninth.
Bob Hartman, Santa Ana senior and head of the yell leaders, said he thought the judging began when KU went to the Orange Bowl last year. Special recognition should go to Vince Billotta,
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Students aid needy children
By ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer
Student volunteers at the University of Kansas are transforming their concern for community affairs into positive action. They spend at least one afternoon a week working with Head Start and related programs in Lawrence.
Children's Hour, a program begun about six years ago by concerned mothers, is sponsored by the KU-Y. It has recently been incorporated into the Head Start program. The two share quarters, teachers and volunteers in working with three to five year old children from lower income families.
Courthouse protesters sentenced
Two men arrested after the Feb. 17 demonstration at the Douglas County Courthouse were sentenced to the Douglas County jail Friday in county court.
David McDowell Neff, 19, 1225 Oread, pleaded guilty to three misdemeanor counts. He was sentenced to serve 90 days in jail on each of two charges. He was charged with defacing the statue in front of the School of Law and with defacing the courthouse by painting a clenched fist on it. Neff was also fined $25 on a petty larceny charge for taking a construction warning flag from the corner of 11th and Vermont Streets.
Neff agreed to make restitution on a broken window in the basement of the courthouse and to pay for the cleaning of both the statue and the courthouse wall.
A federal detainer for a Selective Service Act violation has been filed against Neff, and after completion of his jail term he will be released to federal authorities.
The second defendant, John Robert Sachse, 22, Lawrence, was tried on three misdemeanor charges. He was sentenced to 15 days in jail on charges of interfering with the duties of an officer and fined $25 for stealing a sign from a door in the courthouse.
Sachse was also sentenced to six months on a charge of marijuana possession, reduced from felonious possession, after officers arresting him on the interference charge found a cigarette stub containing marijuana in his pocket.
Neither Neff or Sachse is a student at KU.
Mar. 10 KANSAN 3
1970
College girls, regardless of their major fields, who like to work with children help out during the morning sessions of Head Start. The program is federally supported by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) for children from families with yearly incomes below $3,300. They supervise free play, talk with the children to expand their vocabularies, encourage their artistic ventures and help serve the free noon meal each child receives.
Volunteers show up again in the afternoon to help with the KU-Y sponsored Children's Hour. This older program is for children of families who, while they do not qualify for Head Start, are still in need of low-cost nursery facilities. There are 30 children in this group, as in the morning Head Start, with facilities located in Joliffe Hall on the KU campus, said Mrs. Stephen Edwards, program director of the KU-Y.
Because of the location, all children must be picked up and returned home by volunteer drivers, many of whom are KU faculty wives. Approximately 45 drivers are needed each week.
The Children's Hour program follows the same pattern as Head Start, except that a snack is served rather than a hot meal. Children make weekly contributions ranging from ten cents to three dollars.
The Children's Hour program
Engineers select queen candidates
Ten University of Kansas coeds were chosen as semifinalists for the Engineering Exposition Queen in the Kansas Union Sunday. One professor from each department in the School of Engineering will decide the five finalists next Sunday.
The Engineering exposition Queen semifinalists are: Nancy Tippit, Paola sophomore; Sheila Pyle, Overland Park sophomore; Carolyn Gibbs, Galesburg, Ill., sophomore; Pam Kulp, Overland Park junior; Benita Bacon, South Haven freshman; Karen Sanders, Memphis, Tenn., freshman; Vivian Poje, Kansas City junior; Margerie Drackert, Kansas City Mo., sophomore; Pam McCan, Albuquerque, N.M., sophomore; Kaye Salminen, Kansas City, sophomore.
The Engineering Exposition Queen will reign over this year's engineering exposition held April 17 and 18. This is the 50th exposition at KU with the theme of Profiles Of The Future.
has support from the United Fund and private donations. The success of this local program was reported in the Christian Science Monitor in 1967. Much of the success is attributed to the number of volunteers who take time to devote individual attention to the youngsters.
Since the program is supported by the United Fund, it is not allowed to solicit support in the city. To cover all operating costs, the program is about to launch a fund drive in the campus area, since students are not regular contributors to the United Fund.
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KU students are also active in another program in the Kennedy School are for children in kindergarten through the fourth grade. The Maple Lane Center is located in the United Methodist Church. It serves as a recreational facility after school hours for children whose parents are working, said Melanie Oldfather, director of the program. The program is licensed and financed by the State. Miss Oldfather said the program began just two weeks ago with attendance increasing rapidly.
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KANSAN COMMENT
A cheap analogy
Perhaps the publicity and the humor of the left-handed students' demands has helped relieve campus tension a little.
Certainly, the well-intentioned demonstration should be met with a smile, even by those who were being parodied.
But we must take a strong look at some of the implications beneath the left-handed students' burlesque performance of KU's blacks' association with the administration.
If there are any persons left in America who actually believe that the plight of the American black is in any way parallel to the plight of other "minority" groups, they had better take a step backward and look again.
For left handers, red headers or blue-eyed persons are not really minorities in any "suffering" sense of the word. Joseph C. Hough, Jr., in Black Power and White Protestants, says, "The terms 'minority' and 'majority' refer to a power relation between the groups within a particular society, and a minority is weaker and hence suffers some kinds of disabilities at the hands of the stronger group . . . Second, a minority is to be distinguished from other depressed groups within a society, because the disabilities under which they suffer are related to special characteristics which the minority shares and of which the majority (and often the minority itself) disapproves in some degree."
Assimilation or even acceptance is much easier for a left hander simply because he can't be spotted as a left hander from his appearance.
The black man is recognized as black and, as much as many Americans hate to admit it, it is his blackness itself which many of us too-whites have come to detest.
To jest about the black man's plight, or to compare it with the plight of a group which has only been shortchanged superficially (i.e. books
being bound on the left, etc.) seems a gross misunderstanding of the hardships the black man has suffered.
Furthermore, the left handed students' promising to give themselves "hernias laughing at the other inane demands of other campus groups," as their witty leader put it, does little to show that they have any concern whatsoever about America's hostility toward nonconformity even when that nonconformity is inherited as skin color.
Yes, the black students' demands were more than could have been accomplished by September, but the pressure which the blacks have been maintaining on campus can only serve to stimulate the administration and the various schools to accomplish what COULD be accomplished.
And since the black man has always been given far less than 100 pennies for his dollar bill, why shouldn't he ask for 105 pennies when he knows he will get less?
"The day of partial payment in this country is drawing to a close," says Dick Gregory. "For a hundred years America has been changing the Negro's dollar for 32 cents. Now she wants to begin to make up for that injustice by offering 64 cents. We are out in the streets saying to our country, 'A full dollar's change for a dollar spent. We are going to stop this country from cheating or the American cash register will ring no more."
If there is any such thing as compassion and concern, KU's left handers must know how very little they have in common with blacks.
If there is any such thing as humor, KU's blacks will understand that KU's left handers were really not making as racial a statement as it might have appeared.
—Mike Shearer
POLITICAL OPPOSITION
"AND ON MY LEFT THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT IS DEMONSTRATING THE SELF DETERMINATION WE'RE FIGHTING FOR!"
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hearing voices—
Israel and obscenity
To the editor:
I would like to make a few comments about Professor Fawwaz T. Ulaby's letter to the editor (UDK Feb. 26).
(1) . It would be less than accurate to say that the military confrontation in the Middle-East is between Palestinian commandos and the Israeli Army. From the front page of any newspaper, and even from the UDK's "News Roundup" one can learn that the Egyptian, Jordanian, Syrian, and Iraqi armies play the major role in this military confrontation. I really wonder if the goal of the Iraqi dictators, the Jordanian king Hussein, the military regime in Syria and President Nasser is a democratic state in Palestine. Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Iraq have a very long way to go until they come anywhere near democracy in their own countries. The fact that they make the Palestinian problem their main problem might indicate that they don't want to deal with their own real problems. Somehow Professor Ulaby ignores the major part of the neighboring Arab countries in the Palestinian problem.
(2) . The openly declared intention of Egypt, Syria, and Iraq is the destruction of Israel and its population. The Egyptian ambassador to the UN told a T.V. reporter last week that phrases like "throwing the Jews into the sea" are plain fabrication. If so
it was fabricated by the Egyptian and Syrian broadcasting systems. During May of 1967 I heard exactly this phrase and many more of that type on the Hebrew programs of Cairo's and Damascus' radio stations.
(3) . The basic principles for lasting peace in the Middle-East, as Professor Ulaby described, certainly are a move in the right direction. Statements like "Acceptance of the right of Jews to Palestinian citizenship," "guarantee the rights of Jews as individuals" were never made publicly by Arab leaders (except Borgiba of Tunisia) before the war of 1967. The Palestinian resistance as it is known today, has been formed during the last five or six years. Never before had an Arab leader spoken about the "right of Jews to Palestinian citizenship" and this is surely a step in the right direction. One step more, namely, accepting the rights of Jews to a national presence in Israel, next to a Palestinian national presence, might solve the Palestinian problem. The Middle-East is big enough to hold a Palestinian democratic state and an Israeli democratic state. The Jews have national, historical, religious, and political rights as a group in Israel. This fact was accepted by the UN in November of 1947 by more than a two-third majority. So let each one care for democracy in his own country.
(4) . Since Professor Ulaby's letter referred to Professor Kahane's letter to the UDK, allow me to say that one does not have to be a professor of philosophy in order to interpret "abolition of the Zionist in Palestine," "rejection of any right of the Jews to a national presence," and "Jews have no real historical, religious, or political right as a group in Palestine" as an open proclamation to destroy Israel. That is exactly what it means. Israel is a state of its people and Israelis will never allow the destruction of their state.
Its'hak Dinstein Haifa, Israel Graduate student
\*\*\*
To the editor:
Mr. Shearer, I read with interest your article from the Daily Kansan which appeared in tonite's Star on the controversy at KU over obscenity.
First, let me say that I am largely in accord with most of the principles set forth. However, I strongly dissent from what seems to me to be your complete failure to apply the principles you yourself enunciated.
Take, for example, your statement "Every man should have a right to decide for himself what is obscene and every group should have that same right."
OK, let's see how your principle would apply: the printers are men, and they constitute a group; therefore, they should be allowed to decide for themselves what is to obscure for them to print, and that's that, period.
The radical youth of today prattle an infinite deal about "individual freedom," but upon close examination it is often apparent that they think it applies only to themselves!
Jerry Flynn Warrensburg, Mo.
★ ★ ★
To the editor:
In an article on obscurity in the University Daily Kansan, as reprinted in the Kansas City Star, Saturday, February 28, you (Mike Shearer) quote J. A. Hadfield, with approval, as saying: "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."
As far as real good and evil is concerned this doesn't have much meaning. One might just as well say: "There is no such thing as good in itself. Good is not a thing, but a right function; it is the use of an impulse at the right time, in the right place, toward a right end."
Of course, in many cases, the motive or intent determines the character of an act. But if an individual has malice in his heart, which causes him to commit an evil act, the malice which led to the evil act is an evil thing in itself.
Although I do not have all that was involved in your discussion, I feel there is a lack of a clear-cut distinction between that which is an expediency and that which involves a moral principle. Expediencies are not wrong in themselves, but may become wrong by their incidental effects. What is inexpedient at one time may not be at another, or what is inexpedient in one place, or with regard to certain people may not be in another place or with other people. This is never so with moral principles. It is never right to have malice or to exercise it at any time, in any place, or toward any person. God has written the moral law upon all our hearts (Rom. 1:14,15) and it is the same with all races. The basic moral law is as fixed as the law of gravitation. The greatest sin possible and the one from which all other sins stem is rebellion against God's sovereignty (see Rom. 1:18-32). This is real and a sin in itself.
Sincerely,
Wade K. Ramsey
Shawnee Mission
Photo by Greg Sorber
A blasted rocket
Martin Grogan, Oberlin graduate student, shows how the hybrid rocket he built for a special project in aerospace engineering ignites with plexiglass as a fuel. The rocket is much easier to control than with the current liquid fuel.
KU students react to volunteer army
By JEFF GOUDIE
Kansan Staff Writer
A recommendation by former Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates to President Nixon that an all volunteer army be established has brought varied reaction from KU students.
The recommendation urges that the change begin next summer with only a standby draft law after 1971.
When asked about such a change, Russ Welch, Merriam junior, said: "It would be a black army fighting for a white America, and that would be bad."
Carlen Jupe, Ukiah, Calif. sophomore and ROTC member, responded by saying, "They'd have to raise the pay quite a lot. It brings to mind the question they could strike or if they would. As far as professionalism is concerned, it would have one bad consequence in that only a certain personality type would be attracted."
"But then some people would say that would be good in that that element would be out of the mainstream of society. But then you wouldn't be lousing up the emotions and viewpoints of the average guy being drafted."
A viewpoint from a practical standpoint was given by Jack McRoberts, Topeka junior. "It sounds great," he said, "but it's not very practical. The army would definitely have inadequate strength. But on the other hand, I don't like the present draft system either."
Viewing the financial aspect, Mike Sheppard, Smith Center junior, said, "There wouldn't be as many people, but the army could stand a cutback in personnel, generals have said this. Even if they had to pay the men more, they could operate it more cheaply."
An affirmative viewpoint was given by David Nye, Leawood senior. "I think it would be good to have one," he said. "The present draft is against the democratic ideal of our country. You will find it hard to find a military man above the rank of lieutenant who is not professional. The present draft takes away my freedom of choice. I think if there has to be a military conscription, it should be for everyone, at the age of 18, male or female."
Mar. 10
1970 KANSAN 5
The present draft law, unless extended by Congress, will expire June 30, 1971.
The all voluntary military is a complex issue with may implications. KU students will get a chance to vote pro or con on the issue in a referendum in the March 17 and 18 election.
A common plastic used for windows can also be used as a rocket fuel. Martin Grogan, Oberlin graduate student in aerospace engineering, has developed a hybrid rocket which burns plexiglass as fuel.
Grogan said the idea of a hybrid rocket, a rocket which uses liquid and solid material for fuel, is not new—the first recorded data about a hybrid rocket appeared in the early 1960's.
Rocket fueled by plastic
He said the hybrid rocket was behind in development in comparison with the all liquid or all solid fuel rockets.
Grogan's stationary rocket uses a plexiglass rod and oxygen as fuel. Since the plexiglass is translucent, the fuel glows with a brilliant flame, Grogan said on a real rocket the plexiglass would be enclosed in a metal cylinder, but it is more impressive to look at a clear rod when his rocket is firing.
There are hybrid rockets in use today, he said, Flygmotor of Sweden makes a sounding rocket which projects weather instru-
Blacks, theater struggle
Black theater in Brazil was once classed lower than prostitution as a form of entertainment, Abdias do Nascimento told an audience of 50 people Monday night. The black Brazilian spoke at a lecture given in connection with the "Arena Conta Zumbi," a play to be presented tonight by the Arena Theatre of Sao Paulo
Nascimento is the founder of the Black Theatre of Brazil. He spoke in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room on the subject of The Development of Black Theatre in Brazil.
Speaking in Portuguese, the short, bearded artist told of the slavery problem which had plagued blacks in Brazil since Portugal began colonizing South America. He said few persons knew the extent of racial discrimination in Brazil, where blacks account for 40 per cent of a population of 90 million.
"Blacks have been fighting slavery since they were first taken to Brazil." he said. "Colonies of runaway slaves existed from north to south during the 16th century."
He said Brazil has experienced violence over the racial issue in a society in which the ruling class refuses to recognize the presence of racial discrimination.
"Arena Conta Zumbi" is the story of Zumbi, a runaway slave. Nascimento said most original black plays written in Brazil depict the black man's struggle for freedom.
Nascimento spoke of his theater's struggle to establish itself in 1941. He said the Brazilian press campaigned against the theater, saying it was an afront to white society.
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"Black Experimental Theatre is in its infancy," the emotional director declared. "We are waiting for better times so the theater can mature."
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One of the important features of the hybrid rocket is its safety, Grogan said. He said there was less danger of accidental ignition, because the fuel and oxidizer were isolated. In a solid fuel rocket, the fuel and oxygen are together in the grain.
He also said that in a hybrid rocket the thrust, unlike a solid fuel rocket, could be varied. In a liquid fuel rocket the thrust can be varied but it has to be controlled by two fuel systems instead of one.
Grogan built the rocket system as a special project last semester. He is updating the instrumentation to record the rocket's efficiency.
In the near future, he said, the rocket would be used for a propulsion class. The class presently uses only a pulse jet and a piston engine for instruction purposes.
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'THE WILDBUNCH'
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SHORT SHOTS
By STEVE SHRIVER
By STEVE SHRIVER Assistant Sports Editor
If Saturday night's Kansas- Kansas State basketball game is any indication of things to come, the Big Eight should be well represented in the NCAA regionals. The game may well have been the two Kansas schools' best performances of the season. son.
Cotton Fitzsimmons, I am sure, would be one to disagree. He and his Wildcats wanted this
KANSAN Sports
game badly, and the disappointment was plainly evident on their faces at the final gun.
This game must be regarded as KU's best team effort of the year. They were facing the conference champion, not to mention the cross-state rivalry, and they rose to the occasion.
"I was afraid we would be tight for the game." Owens said. "They (K-State) had a successful season, they clinched the championship early, and they could afford to be a little more loose for the game. We had to win to salvage something out of our season."
Coach Ted Owens felt K-State had the psychological edge.
At any rate, the game was highly entertaining to even the most unbaused observer. All Kansans can be proud of the basketball performances and reputations of Kansas and Kansas State. The two teams combined for a total of 36 victories and 16 losses this year and they are the top two basketball teams in the tough conference. K-State deserves the support of all Kansans, regardless of school affiliations, when they meet New Mexico State in the first round of the NCAA regional to be played here in Allen Field House, March 12.
Except for the egg-throwing incidents, the behavior the fans was disciplined and colorful. The signs and chants of both schools could only help add to this traditional rivalry, one which the state can be proud of. In the college tradition both schools exhibit tremendous school spirit.
It is terribly disappointing that the game was marred by a chosen few who felt they could help decide the outcome of the game from the bleachers. The players were doing an excellent job, all by themselves, and their sportsmanlike conduct merits praise, especially in the face of such adversity. The pressure was soley concentrated on the players and their emotions were strung out. but they all did a fine job of channeling their energies into playing good basketball.
6 KANSAN Mar. 10
1970
Nearly everyone was angry and upset at the egg-throwers. Most everyone could see that the incidents were extremely detrimental to the name of the school and to the KU fans. Several Kansas fans tried to help the ushers by pointing out the culprits, but to no avail. The ushers were just as interested in watching the game as the rest of the fans. It would be a shame if KU had to resort to the tactic of hiring policemen to watch the fans exclusively during games.
KU loss until Saturday in the playoffs against fifth-ranked Jacksonville. Notre Dame beat Ohio University Saturday as All-American Austin Carr canned 61 points. Both wins helped boost KU's national image.
The Jayhawks own prestigious victories over NCAA-bound Norte Dame and Western Kentucky, the former on the Irish home court. Western Kentucky did not lose a game after the
Fitzsimmons spoke earlier in the week of the "championship of Kansas" as the most important thing at stake. K-State won the first game at Manhattan, 71-68. In two games the total difference between the schools was only six points.
KU basketball had to have taken several steps forward after this victory, and with a bright outlook for the future, it can definitely be said. "We will be back."
Netters to rebuild
Tennis team looks up
By GALEN BLAND Kansan Sports Writer
The KU tennis team faces a rebuilding year. They return only three lettermen and only one competitor in the Big Eight meet.
miller
·
beck
Their season opens Thursday with a match against Washburn in Topeka. The squad will travel to Maryville, Mo., to face the Northwest-Missouri team, this weekend.
Last year the team won 13, lost 8 and tied 2. Their victories included one over both Washburn and Northwest Missouri. They went on to place fourth in the Big Eight tournament in Ames.
Coach Jim Burns is in his third year at the helm after being the assistant in 1966 and 1967. Burns played for Kansas in 1963-65 and won four Big Eight championships, two singles and two doubles.
Kansas has won 27, lost 15 and tied two in dual competition under Burns. They have finished in the upper half of the Big Eight both years, taking third in 1968 to go with last year's fourth place finish.
This year, however, the 'Hawks could be in for a smaller harvest. "It will be tough for us to be as good as last year," Burns said. "If our new kids come through, we'll be all right. But we are inexperienced. The new kids are good athletes, but we don't know if they are good tennis players."
Jim Ballinger, Leawood junior,
heads this years squad. Last year
he compiled a 9-5 dual record
in the No. 4, 5 and 6 singles pos-
itions. He combined with various
squad members throughout the
season to earn a 9-3 doubles mark.
In the Big Eight meet he lost
only in the finals of the No. 3
singles to Gerry Perry of Oklahoma.
Dan Oram, Prairie Village senior, is the only two year letterman on the squad. Last year he had an 11-8 dual mark while playing in the No.2, 3 and 4 positions. In his two years of competition he has recorded a dual mark of 25-15. He was runnerup in the No.3 singles at the Big Eight meet in 1968.
Chris Wells, Denver senior, had a 5-6 mark in singles competition
last year. The doubles teams he was on have posted an 8-2 record.
The other members of the squad are Tom Carlson, Leawood freshman, Ken Dickson, Topeka senior, Cal Simmons, Falls Church, Va., sophomore and Tim Williams, Kwun Tong, Hong Kong, junior. The Big Eight meet will be held at KU this year. Coach Burns said he saw no way that defending champion Oklahoma could be dehroned. The Sooners have won four straight titles after Kansas won back-to-back championships in 1964 and 1965.
1970 Tennis Schedule
March 12 — Washburn at Topeka
March 12 — Washburn at Topeka
14 — Northwest Missouri at Maryville, Mo.
21 — West Texas State at Canyon, Texas.
23 — Texas Tech at Canyon, Texas.
24 — Hardin-Simmons at Abilene, Texas.
25 — Texas Christian at Fort Worth.
26-28 — Oral Roberts Invitational at Tulsa.
April 8 — Emporia State at Emporia.
10 — Missouri at Lawrence.
11 — Arkansas at Lawrence.
14 — Northwest Missouri at Lawrence.
17 — Wichita State at Lawrence.
18 — Nebraska at Lincoln.
21 — Emporia State at Lawrence.
22 — Washburn at Lawrence.
23 — Kansas State at Manhattan.
25 — Oklahoma at Lawrence.
30 — Wichita State at Wichita.
May 2 — Oklahoma City at Lawrence.
7 — Denver and Wyoming at Denver.
CARLS
45
'Cat' gets ant's view...
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Bowlers rank 2nd to OSU
The KU women's bowling team was 9-3 but the men could only win 5 out of 12 in the Traveling League competition at the Kansas Union Saturday.
Both KU teams are second in the league to Oklahoma State teams. Other members of the league are Wichita State and Kansas State who follow Kansas in that order.
Linda Moderow rolled a 236 against OSU. This is the highest mark attained by a woman in loop play. The women's team set a team high game with 950 total against KSU.
Don Holman led the men with a 182 average and Diane Burger posted a 172 to lead the women.
The Postal league face to face match will be in 2 weeks in Ames. This will be followed by the Big Eight meet two weeks later.
Many seats still unsold for regional
An ample supply of tickets remain to be sold for the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball tournament at Allen Field House next Thursday night and Saturday afternoon.
Fans desiring to purchase tickets may send their orders along with checks or money orders to: Ticket Office, Allen Field House, Lawrence, Kan., and the tickets will be held in their name at the "Will Call" window.
The ticket office at Allen Fried House also will be open daily for "over the counter" sales.
Tickets are priced at $5 each and all seats in the 17,000 capacity Allen Field House are reserved.
Monte Johnson, KU assistant athletic director, is predicting a crowd of "between 12,000 to 14,000, if Kansas State and Drake move the large blocks of tickets they have taken."
On Thursday night's opening session Drake, the Missouri Valley champion, meets Houston at 7:05 p.m. and Kansas State's Big Eight kings go against New Mexico State at approximately 9 p.m. The third place game Saturday tips off at 1 p.m. and the championship game at 3:10 p.m.
Wild turkeys not only can fly well, they have been clocked at 15 m.p.h. on the ground.
Mar. 10
1970 KANSAN 7
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Now her second term
Feminine legislator can hold her own
By LINDA WRIGHT Kansan Staff Writer
TOPEKA—Working in the man's world of state politics is not as difficult for a woman as some people may think, says Mrs. Walter Porter, R-Reading, and the only woman state senator in the Kansas Legislature.
Her position sometimes causes confusion, however. A Topeka
She had been a school teacher, a member of the local school board and active with 4-H clubs and Methodist youth groups.
1964 at the urging of friends and family.
She rolled up a 12,000 vote victory margin over her opponent in her first election, winning the job of representing Coffey, Lyon,
PAPER CLIP
Photo by Don Davis
'I'll check that right after...'
Mrs. Walter Porter, the only woman state senator in the Kansas Legislature, tackles one of many problems to be found every day in the masculine world of state politics with a fellow legislator. Although she's used to working with men, she still wants to hold her identity as a woman.
Although a legislator has work from the word go, being a
firm once greeted her by mail and offered to "make alteration on your suits or keep your pants pressed."
KANSAN Women
woman and homemaker at the same time have not made her responsibilities heavier, she says
Mrs. Porter, tall, slender and attractive, decided to run for the Fourth district senatorial seat in
Osage and Wabausee counties in the Kansas Senate.
Mrs. Porter repeated her victory in 1968 by winning her bid for a second term.
Mar. 10
1970 KANSAN 9
Her colleagues recognized her interest in livestock and education by making her chairman of the Senate livestock committee and vice-chairman of the education committee.
She has also served on numerous other committees in the Legislature.
Her Senate work is less disrupting to her home life than one
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might think, Mrs, Porter says. When the legislature is in session, she commutes 30 miles to Topeka each day.
A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which should enable you to increase your reading speed and yet retain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately.
According to this publisher, many people, regardless of their present reading skill, can use this simple technique to improve their reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, books, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds with this method.
Arriving at the office about 8 a.m., she studies reports of the previous day's business, looks over the 17 papers she subscribes to, reads her mail, visits with constitutents and attends committee meetings.
Legislative session begins at 1:30 p.m. and often she only has time to pick up a sandwich to take along to a meeting.
Saturdays are devoted to visiting the towns in her district and talking with constituents. She said it is very important to keep in close contact with people at home.
To acquaint the readers of this newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing rapid reading skill, the company has printed full details of its interesting self-training method in a new booklet, "How to Read Faster and Retain More," mailed free. No obligation. Send your name, address, and zip code to: Reading, 835 Diversey, Dept. 167-013, Chicago, 60614. A postcard will do.
"The loudest voices heard in the legislature are those from home," Mrs. Porter says.
Mrs. Porter holds strong opinions of a woman's role in civic and political affairs.
"More women are being drawn into the Legislature with each session. And why not?" she says.
"Every piece of legislation enacted affects a woman's life, her family, husband and her home," she says.
works as more leisure time becomes available to them through modern conveniences, she says.
"Our state needs not only men,
not only women, but both men and women who are sufficiently interested in our form of government that they are willing to make it function as it should," she explains.
Mrs. Porter does not believe that women should claim special privileges in the working world on the basis of sex.
However, Mrs. Porter says she never wants to see the day when women are considered equal to men. She doesn't think women are ready or willing to be responsible for lifting heavy objects or serving in the military service.
"Whether we are men or women, we should each earn the place we hold," she says.
More women should be involved in politics and public
COOPERATION BEST
SPACE CENTER. Hou s t o n—U.S. space director Thomas Paine reacting to the Soviet launch of Luna 15:
"We hope the juxtaposition of two lunar missions in such close time frame points out the desirability of close cooperation in space between the Soviet Union and United States."
Two perfectly matched rings to symbolize your marriage.
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Wash, wet, soak, hunt,
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Contact lenses were designed to be a convenience. And they are up to a point. They're convenient enough to wear, once you get used to them, but, until recently, you had to use two or more different lens solutions to properly prepare and maintain contacts. You needed two or three different bottles, lens cases, and you went through more than enough daily rituals to make even the most steadfast individuals consider dropping out.
But now caring for your contacts can be as convenient as wearing them. Now there's Lensine, from the makers of Murine. Lensine is the one lens solution designed for complete contact lens care . . . preparing, cleansing, and soaking.
a drop or two of Lens sine before you insert your lens prepares it for
your eye. Lensine makes your contacts, which are made of modern plastics, compatible with your eye. How? Lensine is an "isotonic" solution. That means it's made to blend with the eye's natural fluids. So a simple dron or two
coats the lens, forming a sort of comfort zone around it.
Cleaning your contacts with Lensine fights bacteria and foreign deposits that build up during the course of the day. And for overnight soaking, Lensine provides a handy contact canister on
the bottom of every bottle. Soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearing periods assures you of proper lens hygiene.
Improper storage between wearings permits the growth of bacteria on your lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and, in some cases, it can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine. Lensine is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.
Let your contacts be the convenience they were designed to be. The name of the game is Lensine. Lensine, made by the Murine Company, Inc.
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evelyn wood reading dynamics
Lord of the Flies William Golding 37
THE AGE OF ANALYSIS
ANNOUNCES A SPECIAL
WESTERN CIVILIZATION READING DYNAMICS COURSE
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
1. AT LEAST TRIPLE YOUR READING EFFICIENCY
2. PASS THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION COMPREHENSIVE, MAY 9
Classes begin
Wednesday, March 11
Reserve your class space now. CJLVL 3-6424
Call VI 3-6424
BARKER SOCIAL CONTRACT
Oregon YEARS LETTERS THE EIGHTH OF TITLE SAYING
THE UTILITARIANS BENTHAM MELL
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HERITAGE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION
Snowy Ridge
1314 oread
lawrence, kansas 66044
telephone 843-6424
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the invoices of the employer are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of, Western Civilization." 4th Ed.
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St.
Handmade Originals–India prints,
tie-dyes, dresses, men's shirts, pants
maxi skirts, maxi shirts, beads,
earrings, dapper Creations australia.
West 9th Street. 3-10
Must Sell, Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also mice and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-5763 evenings. 3-16
Women's contract at Naismith—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
1967 Ford. Custom. 6 cyl., auto, R&H,
895. 842-9962. 3-11
For sale: Camper truck, 1950 Ford
pickup with hemi-v8, auto, radio,
heater, extras, call, come by, make,
offer, 842-7657, 1801 Mississippi 3-11
Basset Hound. AKC registered tricolor male. 1½ years old, housebroken, friendly. Needs good home for children. Doghouse on four sides. Call VI 3-4374. 3-11
FREE—Gibson EB-2 hollow body bass guitar with purchase of Kustom BD 200 bass amp. 3 - 15 speakers, guitars, bass amp. 4 amp covers included. Call 842-6941. 3-11
Skis, Head Standards with bindings,
210 cm, $75; two matching walnut end
brackets; one pair of two matching walnut
lamps $7.50 each, one walnut handle;
$15, 843-218-89.
3-11
For Sale: 1966 BSA—650 cc.—single carburetor. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-4636. 3-11
1960 TR-3, Removable Hartop, Body and Engine excellent, interior and gear box need work, 842-2191 or 842-
8870. 3-11
For Sale: SIAMESE KITTENS, six-weeks old, beautiful seal calls. Point V 1-2811 after 6 o'clock, or see at 2416 Jiaru Drive. 3-11
Harmon-Kardon 50-watt AM-FM receiver. Nocturne model with walnut case Henkel-sensitive reception. Capable of equal power. 842-3225 or 616 Kentucky. 3-11
1968 Oldsmobile F-85 -Silver, Black interior-immaculate inside and out WW's and Snow's V-8, Air-cond- 12,000 Miles. Miles 821-2491 or 882-870. 31
1967 VW Super Bug—76 H.P.-Konl’s
-Racing Suspension Balanced,
cammed, ported and polished-car
cost over $4500. 842-129 or 842-887.
1969 Opel wagon, 102 h.p., 8,000 miles,
much warranty left, radio. Must sell.
Call David Rueschhoff. VI 3-5770, 1301
W Campus Rd.
Custom designed, multi-purpose weight lifting training apparatus.
Designated by York Barbell Co. (Inc).
nomical purchase for individual apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved by York Barbell Co. Inc.).
assorted weighted call 1 J. B. at 843-210-3.
3-13
For Sale: Fall—real hair, long, light brown, like new. Call Kale. 842-823-5961
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately. $1200. See at Ridgway Court, 3020 Iowa, LGT G23 or call VI 2-6138 after 6 p.m.
3-25
Gabrielle Bridal
Beautiful
Bridal Apparel
&
Formal Wear
910 Ky.
Galvia Byschel
THE HILE in the WALL
DELICATESEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III
1968 VW bug. $1295. VI 2-8614. 3-12
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
Fred's Auto Painting
328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487
'68 Bridgestone Super 90—red and silver—1400 miles—very fine condition—completely inspected. 842-2191 or 842-8870. 3-11
1968 VW fastback. Must sell, new-
wholesale price. AM-FM reverb.
Quartz iodine driving lamps. Call
V 3-8191 after 6. 3-12
For Sale: 1964 Honda Trail 90, good condition. $170 or best offer. Call VI 2-1378 after 6:00 on weekdays, anytime on weekends. 3-12
Sell—Concord 510D tapedeck, 1 yr.
—Concord BA VI amp. Mike, kee-
435 Tupelo amp.
For Sale: Wooded sloping building site in Martin's Park area. Two acres. Meet together or separately. The Gill Agency, 843-1011. After hours. 843-6453. 3-13
Tremendous sacrifice, 1968 Shelby
500; new tires, factory air, power
batteries, 2,000 miles, 400 feet,
tallic blue, plush black interior
accept offers. 843-9223. 3-11
Polaroid model 800 camera, used five times, wink light, flash, light reducer, exposure meter, leather carrying case, print copier, complete instructions. Original value over $230. Sell for $100 or best offer. Call 842-2958 evenings.
Canon FT-QL with a 1.2, 58 mm lens.
Also a 200 mm telephoto and misc.
accessories. Steven Briggs, 842-842,
3-12
Zenith 2-speaker portable stereo. 3-
speed 16-33-45 RPM. Excellent condition.
Call 843-5755. 3-16
Really great fish mobiles from Thailand in several colors and sizes. You won't find them anywhere else, so drop into the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays. 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Sable wig, brown medium length hut
jacket for you for your Comi Callen - 842-694-9
3-12
Television—Admiral Console—beautiful black and white. New tube, $45 cash. Fidelite Electronic Desk Calculator, $35. Call 843-8191 at 6:00. 3-16
Corn husk dolls from the Southern Appalachian Mountains craftsmen. These are the dolls that were played on the earl of Maine our country. Museum of Natural History Gift Shop, open weekdays 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Repossessed Magnavox Stereo Component. 1 year old, 20 watt amp. Was in 400 at Ray Stacks back's. 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings. 3-16
Famous brand component system.
Save $20.00. Now only $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings. 3-16
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bt. B-Que. If you want some lunch, be in the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. Varsity Volleyball II 2-515. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf
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
GROOVE-TODAY in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galerie. Find the latest, the best for guys and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky.
Audio Discount—Your A.R. Dynaecar dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
I am auditioning female vocalists for local night club work with established group. Interested Call Ric Rasmassen, 843-8153. 3-11
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. $115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-160705.
Sand Candles by Betys Webster. 9th and Indiana THE OMNIBUS SHOP,
Karate Action Saturday, March 7.
Community Building, 11th and Vermont. Eliminations-10:30 a.m. 50c.
Finals t. 5月 $1.50. 3-12
GRADUATE TICKET ISP. Surenandra Bhana, Gene Roberts, Dave Dlahma, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed Gauthier, Bob Hubert, Karen Laub, Leroy McDernott, Fred Oettle, Joe Harriette Stallworth, Joe Van Zandt, Bob Hubert, Karen Laub with a human face (1) voting power on curriculum committees (2) Re-evaluation of degree requirements. (3) Faculty edu. 3-11
Dress making and alterations. 20
years experience. call VI 3-2767, 8-5.
KU males: Is it true what they say about a girl who wears spring styles from Arenberg's Shoes, 819 Massa Avenue? Longingly Ioney, lonely fella. 1-31
Travel and study in Europe for six weeks this summer—many different programs at the cache credit available. phone VI 2-3785. detailed information phone VI 2-3785. 3-11
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in these and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf
Casual slacks--make your selections now from our new spring shipment (Haggars or Levis). Choose flares or skirts. Wear a T-shirt, Ross Disney Men's Wear. 811 Mass.,
We 3-16
4.000 5
a change 3-16
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas, Sophomore Class. 3-16
The Castle Tea Room is ideal for luncheons, dinner parties, or even reception. Call Libuse Kriz. 843-151-3 Most unique restaurant Lawrence.
IT
Frostbite sandal sale through March 11. 20% off. All handcrafted styles. Hodge Podge. 10:00-5:30 (open Thursday night), 842-682-08. 3=11
We're back from New York with nourished thinking and stimulating objects. Tosalaea's Hotel, Harper 1161 898-9121. Schedule sent to request. 3-16
"Proffits" from sales in the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop make possible a school services program and instruction. Help us expand this program shopping weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays from 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
TYPING
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience at
6842 (8.08 to 5:00 - 842-011). 4-3
6842 (8.08 to 5:00 - 842-011). 4-3
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
HAROLD'S PHILIPP 66 SERVICE
U-HAUL Trucks
and Trailers
1401 WEST 6th STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
UN 4-3474
66
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
---
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Typing. Theses, papers, applications.
Listing with necessary English corrections.
English teacher. M.S. degree.
Student with foreign or student's students. Reasonable. 842-924-3-16
Accurate typing of papers, manuscripts, theses by experienced typist on carbon ribbon selective. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson, 842-2124. 3-16
Typing, Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249. 3-13
WANTED
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typers, typwriter, compwriter, Plea type. Competent service. Wright. Phone 843-9543 5-15
Typing, Experienced typist. IBM Se-
curity. Work w guardians.
Phone 843-3186 3-16
DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt, with three others. $51.25 per month, including water. Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
Wanted: Girl to share house for rest
phone. Memo 843-3843.
month. Phone 843-3843.
3-11
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Work 843-8281, Mrs. Krauckman
Experienced typists design manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style -picca or elite Electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6526. 3-31
K
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8
Boy playing musical instrument
TYPING, Experienced typist. IBM
TYPING, Experienced Work guard.
teed. Phone 843-3196
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 11. 20% off. All dress styles. Hodge Podge. 10:00 - 5:30 open Thursday night. VI 2-06828
COIN OP. PICK UP
LAUNDRY STATION
19th and II. 2346 Iowa
9th and Miss. VI 3-9868
Needed: Adults with history of sluttering problems to participate in research at KU. Speech and Hearing Contact Dr. Contact Lwall at 4345. 3-11
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
Wanted: Female roommate for summer. Share 1 bdrm., air-condition apt.
Phone: (855) 693-2784. Available June 1st. Call Caryl, UN 43106 or 842-5369. 3-13
Wanted—used motorcycle crash helmet. Call Murl at 842-9073 after 6:00 p.m. 3-16
Female roommate for summer. Share
1 bmdm, air-cond. apt w/ pool. $73
plus 2 % utilities. Available am-
ount. Just Call Cheery! UN #4106 or
3-16 3-16
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416
Tony's 66
Be Prepared! tune-ups
Table Tops
Tony's 66 Service
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
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.
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
for
Your headquarters
Math or Spanish tutoring. Call VI 2-5603 or VI 3-9734. 3-11
SERVICES OFFERED
miDAS®
LOST
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troop Tax, 801½% Mass. $4.00 and up. if
mufflers and
Lost-1 (one) Notebook. Reward.
Name, Richard Scharine; Subject,
Advance Film Production, Speech 275.
424-8070, 8070-1140 Pennsylvania St.
3-16
Lost: a diamond and sapphire gold.
Ring. In the women's restroom at
Robinson. If found, call Carol, Room
Robin. If gone, leave it.
Reward. 3-16
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates. Graduation, 1218 Mitas, 843-9698 after 6 p.m.
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. 4-1
Multi-colored female cat with long, thick fur. Cat VI 3-8153. 3-13
Lost—Man's dark blue billfold in
Woodruff Auditorium, Wednesday,
Feb. 25. Please return to Kansas Union
lost and found. 3-11
shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
FOR RENT
Three-room, furnished apartment,
utilities paid, $70 per month. Prefer
married couple or graduate girl. For
appt. 843-1909, 1151 Ohio. 3-13
Carved, air-conditioned one bed-
room room for rent. Call V7.
8153. 3-13
For rent to quiet male student, studio apt., close to campus. Nicely furry chair. Available immediately. 843-8534. 3-16 Nicely furnished rooms with allware.
—shower and tub, central air-cond,
and heating. Linens and utilities included.
Quiet, congenial home for serious student and teachers. Near waterfalls taking tensions for summer and fall. Jayhawk Inn, 928 Rhode Island. 3-16
PERSONAL
Uuncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011% Mass., Returns $4.00 and up
tt
Tie die it! Wallace Beery shirts, $3.50.
The Hodge Paddle, 15 W. 9th. #12
Notice to the Big Boy: Happy Birthday from one who digs you.
Help wanted for farm work. Call VI 2-8153. 3-13
HELP WANTED
Summer employment Enquire Sunset
Suite 843-9172 for appointment 3-16
Call 843-9172 for appointment
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
or the best in:
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
- Reweaving
926 Mass.
VI 3-0501
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
[Image of a large black tarp covering an outdoor area]
Spring approaches and the giant black blob returns
A terror-stricken student stood horrified in front of Strong Hall Monday as the giant black blob makes its yearly spring appearance by creeping slowly down Jayhawk Boulevard. Reliable sources said that warmer weather signals its return each year.
Referendum questions need okay from SenEx for Mar. 17-18 ballot
Five referendum questions are to be placed on the ballot in the elections March 17 and 18 if approved by SenEx, said Kathy Newcomer, Omaha, Neb. junior and election committee co-chairman.
Possible referendum questions are:
- Do you favor an immediate end to the military draft, and replacement with a voluntary army?
- Do you favor a $3.50 a semester fee increase to support the construction of a satellite student union?
- Do you favor a $10 a semester fee increase to support the construction of a new University Health Center?
Wilpers (Alliance), Garrett Park, Md., sophomore; Susie White (Alliance), Hutchinson junior.
Engineering (6): Les Lampe (Alliance), Goodland junior; Craig Martin (Alliance), Wichita junior.
Oliver College: Sherlene E. Burns, Anthony freshman; Marilyn Foreman, Sioux Falls, S.D.
freshman; Fran Ferman (Alliance), St. Louis freshman; Gaye Powers (Alliance), Overland Park sophomore.
Centennial College: Pam Pyles (Alliance), Wichita freshman.
Corbin College: Ben Brunner (Alliance), Wamego freshman; Barbie Downer (Alliance), Topeka freshman; omit Don Hunt, Iola junior.
Pharmacy: Don Hill (Alliance), Smith Center senior.
- Do you favor the use of student fees to help finance Wescoe Hall
Party changes and additions to the candidates list of March 2 are:
Education (10): Val Fladeland (Alliance), Deerfield, Ill., junior; Peggy Morgan (Alliance), Kansas City, Mo., junior; Pam Varney (Alliance), Leawood junior; Norma Paterson (Alliance); John
Nader speaks
(Continued from page 1)
The real militants and radicals said Nader, were the large corporate businesses and industries. They infect our healthful environment, he said. Because of them, he said, we do not have a capitalistic society, we have corporate socialism.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Terrie Webb (Alliance), Clearwater junior.
Nader said the corporate industries were our major source of violence. He said that violence comes through the use of their products and their exposure to the environment, in silent forms such as air, water, vehicles, food and drugs.
These, he said, should be our concerns before violence in the streets. And, he continued, concern must be directed at the large corporations because they have the most money and influence over our situation.
Men's All Leather
SANDALS
Sizes 7 to 12
Made in Italy
12 KANSAN Mar. 10 1970
$5.99
- Do you feel there should be general requirements (other than the requirements for majors) for graduation from the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences?
Harvey's
FASHION SHOES
802 W. 23rd
Open every day 9 - 9
Sunday 1 - 6
Nader said we must take on a new citizenship. He said the basic issue was to discontinue our present system before it destroys us. We can begin, he said, by posing the hypotheses that we cannot obey or tolerate unjust laws and until corporations lose their unjust claim to legitimacy.
ATTENTION
Social Chairman
The Log Cabin at OAK LODGE
available for private parties each night except Sunday for parties, socials & dancing
- Location -
- Location -
13 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 59 For Information Call 913-594-3349
Students to vote on fee increase
Students will have an opportunity to voice their support or opposition to the use of student fees to finance Wescoe Hall on the campus election ballot March 17-18.
Dave Miller, Eudora junior,
said Monday he had obtained
1,449 signatures on a petition
concerning the issue and that
the amount of signatures was
enough to have the question
put on the ballots.
Miller said he thought if the increase of $7.50 in student fees for the building was voted down by the students, the Board of Regents might not allow the increase.
The Student Senate Election Committee co-chairmen, David R. Miller, Hays senior and Kathy Newcomer, Omaha junior have promised the issue would be on the ballot, Miller added.
The Bierstube
Ladies Night
Tuesday, 7-9 p.m.
75c pitchers to all ladies and their dates
Sandwiches Peanuts Open 1 - 12 p.m.
Phone 842-9441
14th and Tenn.
Hilltopper
Applications and Nominations
- Due March 20 Turn in at the information Desk in the Student Union.
- Selection will be based mainly on one criteria-whether the student has made an impact on KU: whether he left this school changed. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind.
- NOMINATIONS should be signed by 3 students. The nomination should include a list of activities and/or accomplishments of the nominee, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- SELF-NOMINATIONS OR APPLICATIONS should include letters of recommendations by 2 students or 1 student and 1 faculty member, a list of activities and/or accomplishments, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- All candidates must be classified as SENIORS.
- Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students.
House cuts Wescoe Hall
The Kansas House of Representatives Tuesday passed a motion deleting Wescoe Hall from a bill which would allow for the levying of bonds to cover building costs for campus construction.
Wescoe Hall was one of three buildings cut from the bill. The others were to be constructed at Wichita State and Fort Hays State College. All three were to be partially financed by increasing student fees.
The motion, which passed 51-49 was made by Rep. Rees Hughes, R-Pittsburg. He said it was a policy
matter and that he was opposed to establishing a policy of using student fees to finance general use buildings at state colleges and universities. He also made the motion to eliminate from the bill a power plant and science building at Wichita State University and a health, physical education and recreation facility at Fort Hays State College.
The Senate approved the bill in its original form, and the bill will now go before a compromise committee between the House and Senate for further discussion.
This is the final week of this year's legislative session. If the bill is not
passed by Friday, a special student referendum election on Wescoe Hall would be a possibility in mid-April, said David Awbrey. Hutchinson senior and student body president.
The students will not get to vote on the Wescoe Hall referendum in the regular elections March 17 and 18, Awbrey said, because of the pending bill in the legislature.
Awbrey said the ballots go to the printer today, and because of the possibility that the bill would eliminate student financing, the referendum will not be on the ballot.
David G. Miller, Eudora junior had turned in petitions with more
than 1400 valid signatures to force the referendum.
Those legislators who were in favor of the student financing said that the action could cost the state $3 million in federal funds.
Unless a building is built in the next 3-4 years, said Frank Zilm. St. Louis, Mo., senior, the University would be out of classrooms. The University is now using 89 per cent of its classroom space with enrollment expected to increase by 7,000 in the next 10 years and more space will be needed to keep up with the people, Zilm said.
Weather
Travelers warning today and tonight . . . Snow spreading eastward this foreoon and continuing this afternoon and tonight . . . creating conditions hazardous to travel. Snow accumulating one to three inches by daybreak Thursday. Continued cold with 10 to 20 miles per hour north to northeast winds today and tonight. Thursday.
--one enemy suspect and murder of a second during interrogation after the My Lai sweep. The two victims are the same Medina is charged with killing.
UDK News Roundup By United Press International End to fighting demanded
PARIS—France officially demanded today the end of all outside intervention in Laos and announced its readiness to help reestablish peace in the Asian kingdom.
The French cabinet issued the call for the cessation of foreign interference after today's cabinet meeting chaired by President Georges Pompidou. It demanded that peace be restored in Laos on the basis of the 1962 Geneva agreements guaranteeing Laotian neutrality.
NFO burns potato crop
AMERICAN FALLS, Idaho—National Farmers Organization members Tuesday began burning an estimated five million pounds of potatoes in an effort to jack up prices.
The "potato bake" brought the total amount of potatoes burned in Idaho in the past week to seven million pounds.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 96 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, March 11, 1970
Army charges five with murder
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Army in a surprise move Tuesday brought four charges of murder against Capt. Ernest L. Medina, the company commander during the alleged My Lai massacre. Medina has denied seeing, ordering or hearing reports of a massacre.
Charges also were filed at Ft. McPherson, Ga., against four other military men, including an Intelligence officer, bringing to 10 the number charged in connection with the March 16, 1968, sweep in which scores of South Vietnamese villagers are alleged to have been killed.
Medina, answering reporters' questions before television cameras at the Pentagon Dec. 4, said:
"I did not see a slaughter and none was ordered by me or reported to me. But it is possible that it could have taken place. I did see some civilian bodies. They were among the 20 to 28 civilians I reported had been killed."
One of Medina's platoon leaders, Lt. William L. Calley Jr., will be court-martialed starting May 18 on charges of premeditated murder of 102 civilians at My Lai. A squad leader there, S. Sgt. David Mitchell of Ft. Bliss, Tex., faces a court-martial on charges of assault with intent to murder 31 civilians.
A special subcommittee formed by the House Armed Services Committee, meanwhile, reported that because of legal action under way, it could not ascertain publicly whether a massacre actually took place at My Lai.
The panel, headed by Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La., said it would focus its attention instead on the Army's handling of the affair to determine whether there had been a "coverup" and whether an innocent soldier had been wrongly prosecuted.
Medina, 33, of Pico Rivera, Calif., commander of Company C of the American Division's 11th Infantry Brigade during the My Lai sweep, was specifically charged with the murder of two unidentified persons "on or about" March 16, 1968, the murder of two enemy suspects—and the maiming of one of them—during interrogation late that day after the sweep, and assault with a deadly weapon against a third prisoner during interrogation the following day.
Medina and the other four charged Tuesday are at Ft. McPherson outside Atlanta, Ga., and are not under confinement.
The others are:
Capt. Eugene M. Kotouc, 35, of Ft. Omaha, Neb., charged with assault, maiming and murder of
S. Sgt. Kenneth L. Hodges, 24, of Dublin, Ga., charged with rape and assault to commit murder.
Private Max D. Hutson, 24, of Attica, Ind., charged with rape, murder and assault with intent to commit murder.
Sgt. Esquel Torres, 21, of Brownsville, Tex., charged with murder and assault with intent to commit murder at My Lai, where two months later he was wounded and received a Purple Heart. There is a separate count of murder "about February or March, 1968" against Torres.
The remaining three servicemen facing possible courts martial are Sgt. Charles E. Hutto, 22, of Tallulah, La., charged with premeditated murder; rape and assault with intent to commit murder; Pvt. Gerald A. Smith, 22, of Chicago, accused of premeditated murder and indecent assault on a Vietnamese woman, and Capt. Thomas K. Willingham, 25, of Allenhurst, N.J., accused of unpremeditated murder of an unspecified number of civilians two miles away from My Lai on the same day.
Charges include printers
By STEVE FRITZ Kansan Staff Writer
Charges that were filed with the University Disciplinary Board will be broadened to include the Black Student Union (BSU) and those individuals who destroyed the Feb. 23 University Daily Kansan and printers employed by the University Printing Service. Thomas E. Sullivan, Kansas City, Kan. junior, said Tuesday.
"I feel that censorship of the Harambee," Sullivan said, "was as much an infringement of free speech and academic freedom as the destruction of the Kansan."
"In both cases there was censorship of a sort; in both cases certain members of the University community set themselves up as judges of what publications the rest of the community should have access to." Sullivan said.
"Both actions, "he continued, "were detrimental to the University as a whole, and both wrongs should be redressed."
There is a connection between both the action of the BSU and the printers which makes it desirable to try them together as part of a single case, Sullivan said.
"I have been advised by my legal counsel," Sullivan said, "that my formal complaint against both the BSU and the printers should be filed with the new University Judiciary, in order to assure jurisdiction over both groups. Therefore, I am dropping my complaint filed with the University Disciplinary Board."
Michael G. Norris, third year law student from Wichita, and Barkley Clark, associate professor of law, are advising Sullivan in the case.
The charges that will be presented to the University Judiciary, Norris
said, will be signed by Sullivan and five other students. The other students are Glenn Holroyd, Kansas City, Kan. junior; Thomas Moats, Kansas City, Kan. junior; James Roller, Bettendorf, Ind. senior; Steven Converse, Kinsely, Ky. senior; and Mark Warren, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore.
We will present the charges to the University Judiciary, Norris said, on March 15 or shortly after.
Norris said, "the Student Senate rules on matters such as this are rather vague; however, we have to be specific in our charges in order to give the parties concerned adequate notice to what they are being charged with.
"We will abide by the policy to give no information that we consider might be misleading until after the formal charges have been filed," Norris said.
William T. Smith, director of the KU Printing Service, said, "The walk out over the printing of the Harambee was not a union activity. There are members of printers unions employed at the print service, but there is not a University print service union.
"The refusal to print the BSU paper," Smith said, "was an act of some of the employees who wanted to find out if they could be held liable for printing the paper."
Harold Fox, spokesman for the printers, said the walkout was a group of individuals who wanted to be sure they could not be held liable, not a union activity.
"I don't see how the two actions can be tied together," Fox said. "I cannot make any other statements," he said, "until I receive an official copy of the charges."
(1)
Professors tour BuMines Research Center
Ralph D. Fleming, left, describes some of the instrumentation for measuring automobile exhaust emissions in research on air pollution at the Bureau of Mines, Bartlesville, Okla., Petroleum Research Center to Louis Burmeister, associate professor of mechanical engineering and Robert Glick, associate professor of mechanical engineering. Burmeister and Glick visited the Petroleum Research Center to learn about the Bureau's air pollution research program and to discuss possibilities of cooperative research for KU engineering graduate students. Fleming received the BSME degree at KU in 1960.
KU International Festival to present exhibit, program
The KU International Festival staged by students from 18 different countries will be held Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The festival is sponsored by the International Club.
Exhibit tables from 11 nations or groups of nations will be set up in the Big Eight and Jayhawk Rooms. Exhibitors include Latin America, the Arab nations, Guyana and Trinidad, India, China, Japan, Iran, Germany, Korea, France and the Nordic nations.
Doors to the exhibition area will open at 6 p.m. The exhibits will be closed during the entertainment program from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. and re-opened after the program.
Masoud Moayer, Rosht, Iran,
senior, will be master of ceremonies for the variety program of dances, demonstrations and skits.
Subcommittee created on environment studies
Robert T. Aangeenbrug, KU associate professor of geography and chairman of the University Committee on Environmental Studies announced Tuesday the creation of a subcommittee on the undergraduate environmental studies program.
Students from Israel, Venezuela, the Arab nations and Nationalist China will present skits with a nationalist flavor.
The new subcommittee intends to introduce a coordinated proposal of coursework that could receive approval as leading to an undergraduate degree in environmental studies.
Traveling trophies will be awarded for the prize exhibit and program after the final number.
2 KANSAN Mar. 11 1970
For
Kansas led the nation in wheat production in 1968.
Complete Automobile
Insurance
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass. St.
VI 1-3012
SUA INTERVIEWS
COMMITTEE POSITIONS For Kansas Relays' Concert
Biophysics needs space
Sign up at SUA Office by Monday, March 16
B & G seeks relocation
By LINDA WRIGHT Kansan Staff Writer
The departments of buildings and grounds (B & G) and radiation biophysics presented their need for new space and facilities to a subcommittee of the University Planning Board Tuesday night in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
Harry Buchholz, director of the physical plant, and Edward Shaw, professor of radiation biophysics, made the presentations.
Buchholz requested that buildings and grounds be relocated in the development of west campus.
This relocation was necessary, he said, in view of the antiquated and crowded facilities now used by B and G.
Buchholz said the shortage in storage space was reaching a danger point. Over crowding of space is creating a fire hazard and maintenance problem, he said. The shops are becoming so crowded that it is dangerous for the workmen.
In some instances, B and G is using equipment that is 40 to 50 years old, Buchholz said. He added that for some machines, parts are no longer available and B and G workmen had to make the needed parts themselves.
At present, Buchholz said, B and G is having to rent 12,000
square feet of storage space but they will lose approximately two-thirds of that rental space in the near future.
Office space is also over crowded and even walking space is at a premium. Buchholz said.
Buchholz added that the restroom facilities were inadequate and next year construction on the new humanities building will necessitate elimination of the greenhouse.
Buchholz pointed out that the move to west campus would have several advantages. It would release valuable space on the Hill for student facilities. He pointed out that B and G does not require a central location.
He also suggested a central University storage and receiving center. Today, Buchholz said, materials are received all over campus and often there is no one to check for such things as damaged freight or incorrect shipment of orders.
On behalf of the radiation biophysics department, Shaw presented a three fold need for a third floor to be added to the nuclear reactor building.
Shaw said added space is needed for research and teaching activities, health physics and radiation services.
The added space would enable
health physics to conduct routine procedure, analyze materials and store radioactive waste and prepare it for shipping to burial facilities.
Would you like to lose weight and keep it off for good?
WEIGHT WATCHERS.
Can Tell You How
EVERY THURSDAY
7:30 P.M.
Community Bldg.
11th and Vermont
"WEIGHT WATCHERS" is a Reg. T.M. of Weight Watchers International, Inc., Great Neck, N.Y.
(#02)
© 1986 W.W.I., Inc.
People-to-people
世界地图
A group of KU students
O
Students helping other students
@
Students who need your help
People-to-People needs new executive board and committee members for next year. The six executive offices are President/Treasurer, Secretary/Publicity, Liaison Officer, Homestays Chairman, English-In-Action Chairman, and Hospitality Chairman. Members are needed on the Publicity Committee, Homestays Committee, Hospitality Committee, and English-In-Action Program. If you are interested in applying for one of these offices or committees, pick up an application form at the People-to-People office, B-104 Kansas Union, and return it by March 20.
Interviews will be held Saturday, April 11. You will be notified about the time and place.
For further information about People-to-People call 864-3758 or Dave Hann, 843-2332.
Campus briefs
Sorority invitational parties begin
Girls participating in this spring's formal sorority rush will meet in Woodruff Auditorium at 6 p.m. Thursday to receive invitations to their first invitational parties, Kathy Hoefer, Overland Park junior and Panhellenic president, said Tuesday.
Miss Hoefer said that invitational parties begin Friday night and last through Sunday afternoon. She said the rushees would receive their pledging invitations Sunday night.
Lecture on Israel's Arabs planned
Michel Butor, French novelist and current visiting professor at the University of New Mexico at Albuquerque, will speak on "The Usage of Words" at 8 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is part of the Graduate Colloquium series sponsored by Pi Delta Phi.
French novelist to speak
Mahoud Abassi, Arab editor and author, will speak on co-existence and integration of Arabs in Israel at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is being sponsored by Hillel.
Blood center needs volunteers
The Red Cross Blood Center in the Community Building in Lawrence is looking for volunteers to help with the county blood drives, said Mrs. Jo Byers, executive director of the center.
KU students are needed as volunteers in the downtown center to work as typists and receptionists and to assist nurses in the donor room, she said. This work would consist of one Monday a month for four to five hours.
KU participated in a blood drive in February for the Red Cross under the direction of the Pershing Rifle Club. The next campus drive will be held during the coming fall semester.
American Indian topic of seminar
The School of Social Welfare is sponsoring a student/faculty seminar on the problems of the American Indian at 1:30 p.m. Friday, in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The seminar is subtitled "The Question Is Not How You Can Americanize Us, But How We Can Americanize You."
Mar. 11 KANSAN 3
1970
The featured speaker at the seminar will be Mrs. Mary Cornelius, tribal chairman of the Little Shell Ojibwa Indian reservation in North Dakota, Dailey said.
Diamond
ALL ABOUT DIAMONDS
Our Helpful "Blue Book"
Buying a diamond for the first time? Or even thinking about it in the next few months? Now is the time to stop in and get your first comprehensive information about these beautifully mysterious gems. We will be happy to show you a selection of qualities from our fine stock and explain the subtle points that establish the per carat price of every diamond. Also, pick up your free copy of the American Gem Society's helpful 36 page booklet on "Diamonds" which gives accurate information on grading and pricing. No obligation, of course. Stop in soon!
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VI 3-4266
FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL
together
Featuring
Bad Dog Am
Largest Pitcher in town
Pitcher Budweiser
Buy one regular price get next one for 1c RED DOG INN FRIDAY ONLY
Fri. 1c Sat. Featuring
DAD DAD
Largest Pitcher in town
Pitcher Budweiser
Buy one regular price get next one for 1c
RED DOG INN
FRIDAY ONLY
together
BLOODY DANCE
hearing voices—
Lefties,blacks,a satire
To the editor:
This is an apology to all right-handed people who were no doubt shocked and outraged by the last Thursday's protests of an ungrateful group of left-handers. Most of us left-handers did not protest, for we, as right-thinking citizens, believe that much progress is being made toward equal treatment for all left-handers. Are not left-handed hitters and pitchers among the best in professional baseball? And surely the recent appointment of left-handers to high government jobs proves to all that equality exists everywhere. Right? In addition, most right-handers have stopped saying that we left-handers will never reach the level of dexterity (which is to say, the level of rightness) that they have achieved (by birth). My people receive much encouragement from the fine work the right-handed government has done to help our pidgeon-toed brothers to learn to walk in the right way (of course, those that didn't . . . ); we know that with hard work, patience, and the kind help of right handers who are trying to teach us how to use our left hands just as though they were right, my people shall overcome our disadvantages and will eventually be able to live and work with you in the right way.
This will require some adjustments and unnatural positioning on the part of us left-handers, but it is either this or be left out.
Brent Reppert
Osawatomie
graduate student
- * *
To the editor:
Dear Fellow Left-Handers and Friends, God bless your sweet humor—we've needed it on the activist campus scene lately. Mankind expects this kind of brilliance from left-handers—surely a superior race?—a brilliance that will not be found lacking in the future.
I was particularly pleased that we found a creative conflict approach to let our black fellow students know how much we respect their cause and how much we intend to use our sinisterial powers to support equality of higher education for all. As a fellow minority group, we have suffered much also and we intend to further expose thru our humor-conflict strategy the stupidity of a right society which allows so much "silent violence" to oppress our brothers in the minority.
Onward with the left my convivial brothers! Let our leftist creativity ease the way to social
justice at our University and in our society.
Ronald T. Boland, L.H.
Assistant Professor
School of Social Welfare
★★
To the editor:
I was recently disgusted when the Black Student Union took it upon themselves to dump my copy of the UDK into the lake along with many others. It appears they have a group of children running their organization judging by their mentally defective attitudes and actions.
I was further nauseated by the Black Veterans on Campus request for $2,255 for office equipment, supplies, and a newspaper. Since I am the chairman for a group of veterans at KU it seems my request would be in order; one new Cadillac Fleetwood with taxes and service furnished, office space and a secretary furnished by the University of Kansas.
It would seem these people would benefit much more in many respects by using intelligent decisions rather than these methods of silly "demands."
Steve McComas Concordia junior
\*\*\*
To the editor;
Editorial writer Shearer exhibits a great eloquence and obvious talent for masquerading bullshit for truth. His article of last Friday, "It only whispers," did entertain me with the pleasant references to Fosdick and Huck Finn, but he drew conclusions that seem very odd—as well as wrong. I will admit that innumerable fanatics have used "Conscience" to sanctify their crimes just as they have used other noble ideas such as freedom, justice, equality, and peace to sanctify their wars, but what is there in the heart of man to direct him forward if not his conscience, "The conscience, then, is an idiot," writes Shearer. Of course! Yet even philosophers resort to this idiot to direct their own actions when the final analysis by logic has failed. If Shearer actually believed that "We should never do right until we learn what right is," then he would sweat a lot trying to justify many of his editorials, including this one.
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Below this article a letter appeared from an author who appeared to be of the same general inclination. Dr. Schroeder, like a typical head shrinker, suggested that we "control our fears and restrain our impulses for revenge against the people and institutions that make us angry." He was referring to the trouble over the Chicago conspiracy convictions. That we restrain impulses for revenge is sound advice, for no cause recks of such futility as revenge, but that we must lash out at the corruption and injustice we see all around us cannot be denied. Revenge? Nay—call it self-defense.
Charles Novo-Gradac
KC sophomore
✳ ✳ ✳
\* \* \*
To the editor:
I'm glad to see you disagree with our "Concerned Jay-hawker"; and yet am dismayed that you missed the letter's intent. This stems from not recognizing the style employed. It was a sardonic letter mocking an all too prevalent point of view—or a seemingly prevalent one as gauged by your having taken it so seriously. However, this mocking element, which was effectively destroyed through your paraphrase, had exaggerated this viewpoint so as to make it ludicrous and specious. In short, it's intent was to expose and discredit an inane viewpoint.
It seemed only appropriate that sarcasm should be used to make this viewpoint laughable. For if you argue against illogical and shallow cententions with a serious and logical attack you not only fail to discredit it but also assign merit.
Editorials and letters to the editors have been, all too often, too serious. And in being so conscientiously grave are dead to other more effective ploys.
If you reread the "Concerned Jayhawker" letter I believe that you will find the above interpretation of its intent true. Similarly, the below remarks will hopefully illuminate you on the intent of the pseudonym. Its purpose was multifarious:
1) To represent a general, stereotype viewpoint (i.e. a "Concerned Jayhawker")—not the author's opinions.
2) To make ludicrous the "Concerned Jayhawk's" castigation of Mr. Beckwith. While condemning Mr. Beckwith for not having his name printed as editor of the Harambe, even though commonly known, he nevertheless doesn't disclose his own identity.
3) To indicate that the letter was, in fact, a sardonic letter much in the way Mark Twain wrote under pseudonyms (i.e. Ty Slocum, Quintus Curtis Snodgrass, etc.) for such purposes.
4) Thus, ironically the "Concerned Jayhawk" is concerned
my wyhwer is concerned.
Hence, my only fault="nutty-
ness" as you would have it—
would be in my not having ex-
aggerated enough that which is
already ludicrous.
Michael Sanner
Michael Sanner Manhattan sophomore
★★
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Okay, here's your first letter. Sorry, but it sounds a little less than Mark Twain to me. We still don't run letters with paedonymes—MS)
★★
To the editor:
As one of those students who knows that the university is an institution for higher learning I become dismayed by those who would steal UDKs (and even print their own papers as if a thing would actually be sanctioned by the university seems incredulous to me). All this activity only disrupts the orderly process of education. If this freedom: to be educated is to be preserved, then certainly another freedom must be preserved: the freedom of speech. And if this right is to be preserved it seems apparent that those papers that advocate violence, "free love," and other such wrong notions must be abolished. If we don't stop these papers (i.e. Harambee and that hippie paper Cotex) then it becomes obvious that free speech as we know it now will not be around.
In this regard I agree with our Kansan (as well as American) Senator Shultz that Prof. Velvel should be not only disbarred but also debarred. As for Beckwith—who does he think he is being "common knowledge" (UDK, March 3)—this rings of communism to me. Besides, in a free country one would proudly put one's name to what one publishes; but our Mr. Beckwith won't claim the Harambee as his paper—need you more proof that he's hiding something? Finally, it seems conclusive that he is communist inspired by what he said in the UDK, March 3: "more than happy." But getting back to their freedoms, it seems apparent that these violence advocates must be given a little of their own medicine. Otherwise, if we don't nip this thing (dare I say conspiracy?) in the bud they may actually become violent.
Not to end on such an unpleasant note, I think it only appropriate that we think of our proud "Jayhawker" heritage, and particularly by supporting our basketball boys against the K-State Wildcats.
Sincerely your.
A Concerned Jayhawker (i.e. Michael Sanner)
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KWSAN REVIEWS
RECORDS: The Fabulous Flippers cut album
By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer
For years the Flippers have enjoyed an immense popularity throughout the Midwestern area, and especially around Lawrence. It was common mystery among their fans as to why this great group never released an album. Well, wait no longer. The Flippers have finally made their recording debut in an album entitled, "Something Tangible."
The group spent several months in the process of recording this album because they wanted it to be just right for their fans. I had heard a demonstration of the record a couple of months ago and was extremely disappointed because of the bad recording job. But this album suffers none of those earlier mistakes and will please anyone who has ever liked the group's performances. The record contains many of the arrangements that have made the Flippers one of the top bands in the Midwest.
As is the case with most groups and their recordings, there are moments on the second side of the album where the Flippers do not come across as well as they do live. But the first side captures all the excitement and color of their live performances.
The album opens with the group's popular arrangement of material from the Broadway musical "West Side Story."
One thing that has always struck me about the Flippers is their vocal capabilities. No where on the album are these more evident than in the selections "Peace of Mind," and "Woman's Blues." The talents of lead vocalist, Dennis Loewen, make these two cuts stand out from the others. The latter is probably the best recorded number on the album.
"Matchmaker" and the unique arrangement of "It Was A Very Good Year," are two good selections that display the vast vocal and musical talents of the group.
On "More Today than Yesterday," Larry Lingle, who handles the organ for the group, crawls out from behind his instrument to turn in a fine vocal performance. "You Always Hurt Me" and two more selections from the
Mar. 11
1970 KANSAN 5
group's show set, "For Once In My Life" and "Who Can I Turn To" close out the album.
One complaint about the album is that the recording does not include enough selections. I would also like to have seen the group turn loose their lead guitarist on a number. But this is only the beginning for the Flippers. The music scene is ripe for this style
of music and this should be their year. The brass section of the group, and especially Rick Gardner, compares with any jazzrock group in the country. Yes, even Blood, Sweat and Tears.
It shouldn't be long before the Flippers land a recording contract with a large company and are catapulted into the national spotlight.
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Photo by William Sellers
Spring arrives-with campus construction
Buildings and Grounds personnel continued work this week on the new sidewalk in front of Bailey Hall.
WASHINGTON (UPI)—An investigator for the House Internal Security Committee said Tuesday that as a member of the same race as the Black Panthers he found nothing more repressive in his lifetime than the Panther Party.
KC Panther party repudiated by black
Shaw, a police officer for 12 years in Columbus, Ohio, before joining the committee staff, was asked by Chairman Richard H. Ichord, D-Mo., how he reacted to threats from Black Panthers to kill police.
"Ive talked with Negro officers all over the country," Shaw replied. "They have more concern for exploiting of the Negro race by the Black Panthers than for themselves."
Richard Shaw, assigned by the committee to investigate Panther activities in Kansas City, Mo., also told a committee hearing the relatively small size of the party there—six or eight members—is not ignored by police.
"You're just as dead if one in six shoots you as if one in a thousand shoots you," said Shaw. Earlier testimony by Kansas City police officers reported an armed confrontation between Panther members and police that was resolved without shots being fired.
"As a member of the same race I have seen nothing in my lifetime that represents repression more than the Panthers. Fear of them prevails more than support of them," Shaw said.
Shaw also compiled arrest records of 40 persons whom he said were either members or associates of the Panthers at one time during 1969. He said there were 394 arrests in Kansas City among the 40 during the year, with 277 convictions resulting.
The single greatest offense was for disorderly conduct—82—while other dominant offenses among the 22 various charges were 50 arrests for robbery, 42 for larceny, 39 for burglary, 38 for aggrated assault, 21 for resisting arrest and 17 for concealed weapons.
Tarsus, a town near Adana, Turkey, is chiefly famous as the birthplace of the Apostle Paul.
Architecture school under evaluation
The School of Architecture and Urban Design is undergoing an accreditation visit by representatives from the National Architectural (Accrediting Board (NAAB) which will conclude today, a school representative said.
The representative said the accreditation visits normally occur every five years to evaluate curricula and facilities of collegiate schools of architecture. The KU School of Architecture was visited in 1967 but was given a two-year accreditation period to allow the accrediting agency to "keep abreast of changes in the school."
6 KANSAN Mar. 11 1970
ATTENTION
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If you're tired of being one of 10,000,better think twice about who you take a job with. Take a look at a different kind of company where you'll be more than a number. We'll give you a job situation,and you'll make your own position. We're interviewing soon on campus.See your school or placement office today.
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Tentative recommendation given
New tax formula proposed
TOPEKA (UPI)—A House bill providing a new distribution formula for state motor fuel tax revenue received a tentative recommendation Tuesday from the Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee, but may still be in trouble on two counts.
Opponents will appear today at a hearing which committee chairman E. W. Strahan, R-Salina, has said may affect the committee's final decision.
And a spate of amendments which the committee did not adopt may turn up as a separate
new bill introduced by the Senate Waves and Means Committee
The Transportation and Utilities Committee has thus far left the measure exactly as it was passed by the House last month. Urban counties would get a bigger slice of the annual $84 million
Russian program continues
An intensive Russian language program in the Soviet Union will be conducted this summer for the fifth year.
The University of Kansas and the University of Colorado will sponsor the program in cooperation with the Council on International Educational Exchange.
Eight credit hours from either University will be given for the
Mar. 11
1970 KANSAN 7
program, which includes six weeks at Leningrad State University and two weeks of travel in the Soviet Union. At the end of the program in the Soviet Union, the group will travel together to Vienna, Germany, separate for a week of independent travel and then meet in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Those participating in the program will depart from New York by air on June 22 and return Sept. 4.
will be given weekly, with emphasis on conversation, grammar, difficult problems in the Russian language, classes in translation and phonetic work with a specialist. Classes will be limited to eight to 10 students. Both Russians and Americans from KU and CU will be on the faculty.
state motor fuel tax revenue, and each of the state's 105 counties would get at least $20,000 a year.
During the stay in Leningrad,
24 hours of language instruction
Admission is open to both undergraduate and graduate students who have completed 20 semester hours of course work in Russian or the equivalent.
Almost half the annual revenue (43 per cent) returned to local government would go to cities on the basis of population, and the remainder to the counties on a formula based on dollar amount of motor vehicle registrations and average daily miles driven in each county.
The bill would raise an additional $2.3 million by cutting in half the so-called three per cent shrinkage allowance granted to motor fuel distributors for loss of fuel through evaporation or other reasons. This sum would go into a special county equalization fund to guarantee that no county receives less than its current share.
The spurned amendments were proposed by Sen. Dave Owen, R-Overland Park, who said he will take them to the Ways and Means Committee for possible introduction in the form of a new bill.
$200,000 more in the county equalization fund, and rectify what he feels to be a technical flaw in the House bill which provides for counties to receive only three payments annually instead of the stipulated four.
Owen's changes would put
Strahan vigorously opposed Owen's motion to introduce the amendments in a separate bill through the Ways and Means Committee, which is the only Senate committee which still can introduce bills this late in the session.
Owen objected to coupling his amendments on to the House bill on grounds the revised measure would encounter difficulty in a joint conference committee.
"If this bill goes into a conference committee, it's dead," Owen said.
"If this bill can't stand the light of day in a joint conference committee, then that means there are still serious problems in it," said Strahan, who told committee members that Owen's proposed amendments represent an improvement in the bill.
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Captain America offers philosophy
'Rider's' Fonda plays it cool and easy
(Editor's Note: Peter Fonda, producer and star of "Easy Rider," was in Kansas City this past week to share the honor of "Producer of the Year," with the film's executive producer Bert Schneider. The award was featured as part of the United Motion Picture Association's film exhibitors convention, Show-A-Rama.)
It was a usual day at the airport, filled with the everyday people.
By GREG LIGHT Special to the Kansan
At one gate there was an air of anticipation as photographers and high school girls stood waiting. Old ladies getting off the plane looked curiously as they sensed something was happening, but didn't know just what. People were whispering and one lady asked, "Who's all the to do about, anyway?"
To think she didn't know. It was Peter Fonda, star of "Easy Rider."
So there he was, "Captain America," in the midst of everyday people. He stood a little taller than most of the crowd around him, walking easily in
8 KANSAN Mar. 11
1970
flared Levis and cowboy boots. As his shades flashed in the sunlight, you could only wonder what he was thinking, if he really knew you were there.
And then came the interview. Fonda relaxed in TWA's VIP lounge as if he were on a jet flight. Flashing his magnetic grin, Fonda came down to earth as the TV man began his questions.
Fonda related the message on Easy Rider as simply "We blew it." Chuckling, he caught himself and noted, "that's just too easy to say."
"We have a responsibility beyond what we think it is. The American Dream has been tarnished incredibly, liberty is just a statue in New York harbor and
KANSAN features
we have to re-evaluate our entire journey from the beginning of our life to the end." he said.
position, or whether it is something to be discarded," Fonda said.
He said he feels older people especially need to do this, since the young are still involved in questioning by virtue of their age.
"People need to consider whether retirement is a tenable
Speaking deliberately and sincerely, he suggested, "It's time we took this planet seriously and made it some place to live and not some place where my two children will have to beg for water or gasp for air."
Regarding judgement of the young, Fonda said their hairstyling and dress are superficial, though they reflect certain attitudes relative to what's happening today.
"It's unfair to lay it all off on clothes and hair." be said.
Responding to a remark that "Easy Rider" is just an ad for Honda motorcycles, Fonda said, "Easy goes beyond that."
As for those who regard it as a reflection of freedom he said, "its got nothing to do with freedom, if it did, why me, Peter Fonda. I've got lots of money, and lots of motorcycles and dope, why I'd be out riding right now."
"As for Captain America, he represents everyone who feels freedom can be bought," he said.
Fonda said he feels most older people judge "Easy" on its urtace value and do not come to grips with the moral problem.
When asked about marijuana,
Fonda said, "It's just a weed
that some people smoke and some people don't. Since the young feel falsified on this account, they use pot as a tool against the older generation."
"Actually," he concluded, "it's insignificant to me."
So that was Peter Fonda, cool, smooth, relaxed, deliberate in his choice of words and animated with his expression. Sincecere, concerned—he was doing his own thing in his own time—we should be proud.
Students travel to cities for in-depth study reports
Journalism students enrolled in Backgrounds of the News II will spend their spring vacations traveling throughout the country gathering research material for specialized reports on critical contemporary issues.
Each student will write an indepth article or series of articles on a subject of their own choice related to problems of urbanization.
They will travel individually to the city or area of their choosing. Some have chosen to stay in Kansas to do their research, while others plan to travel to San Francisco, Phoenix and New York.
Students will submit their research plans and estimated expenses this week to their instructor, Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism. Most students will do their necessary traveling during spring vacation, but their reports will not be completed until May.
Some of the topics students plan to research include studies of urban Indians in Phoenix, Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.'s concentrated aid program at McKinley High School in St. Louis, urban renewal in small Kansas towns, draft dodgers in Canada, and a study of New York Central Park.
One student is planning to tour the Arkansas River Basin to see what progress has been made to open it to shipping. Another student plans to study the conditions of Kansas penal institutions.
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Servicemen in Laos receive combat pay
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Defense Department disclosed Tuesday that U.S. servicemen in Laos have been receiving combat pay since Jan. 1, 1966 and announced that an Army captain killed there last year received the Silver Star for Valor.
The disclosure came a day after
President Nixon, criticized for allegedly withholding some aspects of U.S. military involvement in Southeast Asia, instructed the Pentagon to identify all U.S. casualties and aircraft losses in interior Laos.
The Pentagon said combat pay,
$65 a month in excess of a serv-
KU professor, student to present urban paper
Forrest J. Berghorn, professor of American Studies, and Robert E.Huitt, a doctoral candidate in the department will present a paper at the 15th annual meeting of the Midcontinent American Studies Association.
The paper, "The Urban Observatory and American Studies," is an account of American Studies participation in a nation-wide urban observatory project. The University of Kansas is one of five American universities selected for urban observatory research.
The chairman of the session in which the paper will be presented is John Hancock, professor of urban planning at the University of Washington, Seattle. Wash. Hancock, a former member of the Department of American Studies at KU, has maintained close ties to the department through a student exchange program arranged between the two departments.
Edward F. Grier, professor or English and Stuart L. Levine, head of the American Studies department, will also participate in the conference, entitled "American Urbanism and Its Processes."
The conference will be March 20 and 21 at the Hotel Blackstone in Omaha, Neb. Sessions include "The City in Literature," "The Changing University: Black Studies and Open Admissions."
Mar. 11
1970 KANSAN 9
"Social Perspectives on the City"
and "The Arts and the City."
Grier is chairman of the editorial board of the Midcontinent American Studies Journal, published at KU and sponsored jointly by the association and KU. Levine, editor of the journal, will preside at the meeting of the editorial board and will present the editor's report at the business meeting.
Attendance at the meeting is not limited to members of the Association. Persons in related fields who would like to attend may obtain detailed programs and registration forms at the American Studies departmental offices, 165 Oread, UN 4-4263.
Profs get grants for brain study
The National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Strokes has given Ralph N. Adams, professor of chemistry, a grant of $26,654, and Richard L. Schowen, associate professor of chemistry, a grant of $14,945.
Adams said his research would focus on the "mechanism of electron transfer reactions, especially in organic systems of biological interest."
Schowen is studying small molecular catalysts which act similarly to a particular enzyme which affects the brain.
iceman's normal pay, was given to all American servicemen in Laos, but that they were not granted income tax exemptions given to Americans serving in Vietnam.
A spokesman also said U.S. airmen stationed in Thailand and flying missions over Laos received combat pay because Laos was routinely considered hostile territory because of its location.
Combat pay is officially termed "hostile fire pay" by the military and it is ordinarily given to those who are expected to be exposed to enemy fire.
in South Korea.
Virtually all Americans in Vietnam receive it as well as those near the demilitarized zone
The Pentagon said Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr. of Temple, Tex., whose death in Laos was revealed during the weekend, was decorated for his part in defending a compound attacked by 20 North Vietnamese soldiers Feb. 10, 1969.
The White House said Sunday that Bush, a military adviser to the Laotian army, was one of 27 Americans listed as killed or missing in Laos. The rest were civilians.
Before he died, the citation said, Bush killed two enemy soldiers as he and an unidentified American sergeant sought to establish a defensive position
within the compound. The sergeant was seriously wounded.
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Sen. Harrison A. Williams, D.N.J., said Nixon's recent statement on U.S. involvement in Laos had done "very little" to inform Americans of exactly what is happening there.
State Department spokesman Carl Bartch said the United States would be satisfied with any agreement reached by the Laotian government and the Communist Pathet Lao if it bruught real peace and neutrality to Laos. But he said any agreement would have to include removal of the 67,000 North Vietnamese troops which Nixon says are in Laos.
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---
On March 4,1970 the Student Senate enacted a bill concerning student rights, responsibilities and conduct. A full printing of that bill is presented below. This publication is deemed notice to all students. Therefore, it is strongly encouraged that all students read and become familiar with its provisions.-David Awbrey,Student Body President.
Legal Notice:
Title
ART. 1. These rules shall be known as the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct.
Bill of Rights
ART. 2. The following enumeration of rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others in their capacity as members of the student body or as citizens of the community at large:
A. Free inquiry, expression and assembly are guaranteed to all students.
B. Students are free to pursue their educational goals; appropriate opportunities for learning in the classroom and on the campus shall be provided by the university.
C. The right of students to be secure in their persons, living quarters, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures is guaranteed.
D. Students will be exempt from disciplinary action which affects their status as a student for academic failure or vocation or litigation. Rules and procedures clearly promulgated in advance of the supposed violation.
E. No disciplinary sanctions may be imposed upon any student without notice to the accused of witnesses against him and the assistance of a person of his own choosing.
F. A student accused of violating University regulations is entitled, upon request, to a hearing before a judicial body.
Definitions
ART 3. When used in the Code—
(1) The term "university" means the University of Kansas 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 ectections; and (4) the word "determination" means the determination of his status in a particular situation shall be determined by the surrounding facts.
(4) 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.
(5) The term *sham* is used in the imperative sense.
(6) The term *may* is used in the permissive sense.
(7) All other terms have their natural meaning unless the context dictates otherwise.
Access to Higher Education
ART. 4. Under no circumstances shall an applicant be denied admission because of race, religion, sex, 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. Requirements of participation in classroom discussion and submission of written exercises are not required.
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, advisers, and counselors, is confidential and is not to be disclosed to others unless by consent of the student. Questions relating to intellectual or skills content may 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 disruption of the operation, or otherwise means which do not disrupt the operation of the institution is permitted. (See Article 23, C (1))
ART. 9. Students, groups, and compus 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, political, educational, economic or social. Affiliation or disaffiliation with an organization is not limited to the degree of membership privileges. As a general rule, membership in all university related organizations shall be open to any student. However, the right of organizations to establish standards for membership is acknowledged, provided that all students are afforded equal opportunity to meet those standards. Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as imposing a requirement which would violate the law.
A student may not be denied the rights of access to and participation in any university sponsored or supported by race, religion, ethnic background, political affiliation, or sex unless is sex a bona fide qualification.
ART. 11. In order for an organization to receive student activity funds the organization shall file with the Student Executive Committee of the Student Senate a list of all 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.
(1) Rules of social conduct shall not be adopted which conflict with a contract entered into as a condition of residency in a university residence hall. However, the signing of such contract shall not operate as a waiver of constitutional rights, or rights enumerated in Art. 2 or Art. 20, of this code.
(2) A student must not be enrolled by a body which shall have at least equal student representation from the living group involved.
(2) An organization or living group may discipline any member for violation of social rules provided that the process employed does not conflict with any rights guaranteed by this code, and, provided further, that any disciplinary action taken shall not affect a member's 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 conditions may be imposed for such uses, but the university should not space assigned, time of use, and to insure 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 members of the university community.
Use of University Funds
ART. 14. The Student Senate has sole authority to allocate university funds designated student activity fees. Approval of requests for such funds shall be conditioned upon submission of budgets to, and approval by, the Student Senate. Where such funds are allocated financial accountability shall be required.
Publications
ART. 15. A student, group, or organization may distribute written material on campus without prior approval.
Freedom of Protest
ART. 17. The right of peaceful protest within the university community must be preserved. The university retains the right to assure the safety of individuals, the protection of property, and the
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.
oral statement of views on a university-controlled radio or television s
(b) Central of University Buildings. Peaceful picking and other orderly demonstrations are necessary in university buildings, including corridors outside auditoriums and other places set aside for public meetings.
(a) Picketing and External Access to University Buildings. Orderly picketing and other forms of peaceful protest may be allowed in response to a conference with members of the university community where members of the university community have a right to be.
Violation of Law and University Discipline
(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 the protest does not interfere with any other student's opportunity to have such an interview.
RT.18. If the violation of law occurs on campus and is also a violation of a published university regulation, the university may be prosecuted under the law, who has been subjected to legal prosecution only if the university interest involvement is clearly disclosed in front of the community outside the university. Ordinarily, the university should not impose sanctions if public prosecution of a student is anticipated or after law enforcement officials have disposed of the evidence.
Privacy
ART. 19. Students have the same rights of privacy as any other citizen and surrender none of these rights by becoming members of the academic community. These rights of privacy extend to residence by requiring the institution or residence hall contract to abide by it, implying give the institution or residence hall authority to consent to a search of a student's room by police or other government officials.
ART. 20. The institution is neither abber 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, not in violation of law, is of no disciplinary concern to the institution.
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, occupants may be notified of such action not less than twenty-four hours in advance. There may be entry without access in emergencies where imminent danger to life, safety, health, or property is reasonably feared.
Confidentiality of Records
ART. 22. Respect must be accorded the essentially confidential relationship between the university and each student. Students must be in a position to maximum extent possible the privacy of all records relating to each student. Conforming principles are required.
(1) The official student academic record, supporting documents, and other student files are maintained by the university and the member members of the university staff or properly authorized part-time employee employed for that purpose.
(2) Separate files shall be maintained, as follows:
(2) Separate files shall be maintained, by follows:
(a) Academic records, supporting documents, and general educational records.
(b) Records of discipline proceedings.
(c) Medical and psychiatric records.
(c) Medical and psychiatric ret
(d) Financial aid records.
(a) Financial Aid Records.
(e) Student Personnel Records.
(e) Student Personnel Records.
(f) Guidance Bureau Records.
(3) No entry shall be made in any student record without actual notice to the student with the following exceptions;
ing exceptions:
(a) Publication of grades and announcement of honors shall be deemed actual notice.
(b) Documents or writings which must by necessity be entered in a student record through counselor or other situations developed through student initiation or participation shall be deemed actual notices.
(4) Each student shall have access to his records and files subject only to reasonable regulation as to time, place, and supervision.
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 the student would be responsible if charged with violation of university regulations.
(5) Information relating in any way to any of the following categories is not relevant to the educational process. Access to these resources be made in relation to any such matter except upon the express request of the student in question.
(a) Race.
(b) Religion.
(b) Religion.
(c) Political or social views.
(d) Membership in any organization other than honorary and professional organizations directly related to the educational process.
(6) Except with the prior written consent of the student concerned, or as stated below, no information in any student file shall be released to any individual or organization.
(a) Record-keeping personnel may have access to student records and files only as stated in paragraph (1) above.
(b) Members of 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 purposes. Access to financial, medical, and disciplinary records is limited to the officials responsible for filing these having access under this paragraph may disclose information beyond that listed in (c) or (d) below.
(c) The following information may be given any inquirer, and is the only information to be released by the inquiry. It shall not be used for enrollment; and (iii) degree awarded, honors, major field, and date. In addition to the above, a student's address, telephone number, and date of birth may be confirmed if the inquiry is made in person at or by mail. Different or further information may not be given in the event that the inquirer's request is denied.
(d) Properly identified officials from federal, state, and local agencies may be given the following information if expressly requested: (i) school or division of enrollment; (ii) periods of enrollment; (iii) degree awarded, honors, major field, and date; (iv) nature of academic record in general, i.e., excellent, good, fair (not specific grades); (v) address; (vi) verification of signature, passport, or ID; (vii) evidence that may be given the same information if the potential employer presents proper credentials and offers proof that the student has given permission that such information may be given to that person.
(7) Records may be preserved after graduation. However, a student may request that his person be destroyed on graduation. In no case shall personnel records be maintained for more than five years.
(8) Students sitting as members of University boards or committees which deal with records of a company may accept any form of responsibility as that board or committee may adopt, or as attach to any member of that board committee.
ART. 23. Proscribed Conduct
1. A student who, on University premises or at University sponsored or supervised functions, places an anecdote on the farm, or commits a battery upon any person, may be subject to a sanction of not more than suspension
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.
1. A student who, on University premises, steals or takes or carries away the money or other property at a time not more than one-half the value of the property involved.
2. A student who, on University premises, steals or takes or carries away the money or other personal property of another of the value of greater than fifty dollars may 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.
SECTION B. OFFENSES AGAINST PROPERTY
3. A student who embuzzes 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 embellies 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 may 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.
5. A student who willfully and maliciously breaks, destroys, or damages University property, or the property of persons or organizations situated in a University premises may be subject to not more than one fine.
6. For a second offense under this section a student may be subject to a maximum sanction of expulsion.
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 permitted, or constitutionally protected activities on University premises, including university recruitment and public service functions, may be subject to a sanction not greater than suspension.
SECTION C. OFFENSES AGAINST THE ORDERLY PROCESS OF THE UNIVERSITY
2. A student who knowingly furnishes false information to the University or forsakes or alters or misuses evidence of identification with intent to defraud may be subject to a saction of not greater than suspension.
3. For a second offense under this section a student may 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. WARNING: Notice in writing that continuation or repetition of conduct found wrongful, within a period of time stated in the warning, may be cause for more severe disciplinary action.
2. RESTITUTION: Reimbursement for damage to or misappropriation of property. This may take the form of appropriate service or other compensation.
3. FINE: A money payment to a designated University Fund.
4. SUSPENSION: Exclusion from classes and other privileges or activities as set forth in the notice for a definite period not to exceed two years.
5. EXPULSION: Termination of student status for an indefinite period. The conditions of readmission, if any, shall be stated in the order
SECTION E. DISCIPLINARY PROBATION
In all cases in which the student receives a sanction, other than expulsion, the adjudicating body shall give consideration to disciplinary probation. Disciplinary probation shall act as a suspension of all or a portion of the sanction imposed and shall have as its purpose the rehabilitation of the student. In order to effectuate rehabilitation, the adjudicating body may require the student to participate in certain activities, including guidance counseling, and the probation officer will review such activity with the program which it just must use in order to correct any addition, the adjudicating body shall assign any qualified person within the University community, other than an undergraduate student, to act as probation officer. The probation officer shall report periodically to the adjudicating body concerning the student. If the probation officer should report that the student is not meeting probation requirements, a hearing shall be held; and, if in the judgment of the adjudicating body the probation requirements, it may vacate the probation and reinstate the sanction initially imposed.
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 and discovery of his alleged participation in a violation of University rules pertaining to academic conduct.
Authority
24. 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.
BENNINGTON
The 'thrust' of the prof
Sculptor Robert Tobias shows pride in his work. The sculpture is representative of Tobias' concept of expressing tension and thrust in geometric forms.
Sculpture involves thrust and tension
Sculpture involving designs of thrust and tension by Robert Tobias, instructor in the department of design at the University of Kansas, will be displayed at the Omnibus Shop, 9th and Indiana, from 2-5 p.m. beginning Monday, March 16.
Tobias has exhibited pieces in the California State Fair and Exposition, Southwestern Craftsmen's Exhibition and the Walnut Creek (California) Exhibition. His awards include first prize in the Mill Valley (California) Fall Arts Festival, 1965; The Student Center Purchase Award at the First Annual Metal Sculpture Exhibit, Wisconsin State University, 1967; first prize in the Phoenix Jewish Community Fine Arts Exhibit, 1968; and second place in Sculpture, Arizona State Fail, 1968.
Tobias' sculpture utilizes and expresses the elements of thrust and tension in space by the use of geometric components. The degree of thrust is a factor in determining the degree of tension. Tobias describes his sculpture as "minimal hard edge constructions." The geometric forms with which he deals are handled in a nonrepresentational realm.
Tobias received his bachelor's degree in ceramics at Arizona
Addict's father wants drug case investigated
The district attorney, F. T. "Dut" Graham, called the teacher, Richard Hockaday, a "hothead" and said he was playing politics
BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (UPI)
A Los Fresnos school teacher who said his son is a drug addict claimed Tuesday the Brownsville district attorney refused to investigate the case.
Hockaday said he met with Graham three times and left the third meeting "disgusted" when, he said, Graham would not take any action to arrest persons supplying drugs to his 18-year-old son, Theodore.
Graham, who said he was being harassed about the problem to the point where he could not get any work done, said Hockaday's statements were a pack of falsehoods.
Hockaday, making what Graham later termed a "character assassination" appearance before the county commissioner's court, said local law officers were doing what they could but could not get Graham's help in attacking the drug problem.
"I have not refused to do a thing. I told him to get the family physician . . . to find a psychiatrist to look at his boy. That's what his boy needs," Graham said.
"As for the other, I can't go out there and arrest somebody this man wants arrested. The boy's father is a hothead.
The district attorney said he was not running for re-election but that his son was running for county judge.
"I don't know what this man wants and neither does he. It's a bunch of politics. I haven't got to the bottom of it, but I'm working on it and I will," Graham said.
Mar. 11 KANSAN 11
1970
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Bob B
"Whether this stuff is directly connected with that, I don't know. It will take some time to get to the bottom of it," he said.
Hockaday, during his talk to the commissioners court, said his son has slipped from being a good student to being a poor student in school. Hockaday described an apparent LSD trip his son was on.
"I know that by bringing this matter to public attention, I am jeopardizing my family's reputation, my future and perhaps even my life," Hockaday said.
Scholarships totaling $2050 are being offered to KU women students by Reed and Barton silversmiths in their 1970 "Silver Opinion Competition."
Competition entry forms illustrate 12 silver designs and eight designs of both china and crystal. The entrants are asked to list the three best combinations of sterling, china and crystal from the illustrated patterns.
Women offered scholarships by silversmith firm
"He was carrying on a ritual with a very bright light shining into his eyes. He was watching himself in a mirror and a radio was blaring hippie music. My son would laugh, cry, sing, scream and occasionally he would almost collapse," he said.
State University in 1964 and his master's degree in sculpture at Arizona State in 1969.
"But I love my son. He does not think so but I do, and I want to do everything possible to stop the illegal use of drugs by young people."
Scholarships and awards will be made to those entries matching or coming closer to the unanimous selections of the table-setting editors from three of the nation's leading magazines.
The first place entry will receive a $500 cash scholarship; second place a $300 scholarship; third place a $250 scholarship; fourth, fifth and sixth places, $200 scholarships; and seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth places, $100 scholarships.
In addition, there will be 100 other awards of sterling silver, china and crystal with a retail value of $75.
Judie Ericson is the student representative for the Reed and Barton contest at KU.
Elementary Teachers Needed
Sunny Southern California
Brawley School District
$7100 - $11,400
On Campus Interviews
Tuesday, March 17, 1970
See your placement office for appointment.
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
SUA BOARD Applications
OFFICER INTERVIEWS MARCH 17 BOARD INTERVIEWS MARCH 19
Board Members
Officers
Director-Festival of Arts
President
Treasurer
Vice-President
Secretary
Films
Forums
Fine Arts
Public Relations
Recreation
Travel
Special Events
Other (Name your position)
CLASS OF '71 ELECT!
CHILDS-v.p.
NICHOLS-pres.
I
RICH-sec.
BOCELL-treas.
Russell second team choice Robisch, Meely top All-Big Eight squad
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—KU's Dave Robisch, the league's leading scorer, and Colorado's Cliff Meely were unanimous selections Tuesday to the 1969-70 All-Big Eight basketball team announced by United Press International.
Also named to the first five were Garfield Heard of Oklahoma, Iowa State's Bill Cain and Bob Zender of Kansas State.
Robisch was also a near-unanimous choice as the league's Player of the Year. Zender was voted Sophomore of the Year and Cotton Fitzsimmons, who guided K-State to the league championship, was honored as Big Eight Coach of the Year.
Three repeat
Robisch, Meely and Cain were all repeaters from last year's first team, Gordon Tope of Colorado, a first-team choice a year ago, headed the second team, which also included K-State's Jerry Venable, Missouri's Don Tomlinson, Nebraska's Tom Scantlebury and Pierre Russell of Kansas.
Robisch, the Jayhawks' 6-9,
235-pound junior pivot from
Springfield, III., came within
three points of the conference
KANSAN Sports
games' scoring mark and finished with a 26.6 average. He also ranked third in the conference in rebounding, picking off 12.3 caroms per game.
Meely honored in '69
Meely, a 6-8 junior forward and the loop's Sophomore of the Year last season, finished third in scoring (21.1) and second in rebounding (14.0). Heard, a 6-6-210-pound senior, ranked second in scoring (21.5) and fourth in rebounding (11.7).
NEW YORK (UPI) — Pete Maravich, greatest scorer in major college basketball history, and Bob Lanier, rated the best big man in the collegiate ranks this season, were the top vote-getters in the 1969-70 United Press International All-America squad balloting announced today.
Maravich, the Louisiana State University standout who led the Tigers to their best season in 16 years while becoming the most prolific scorer in major college history with a three-year career total of 3,590 points and a 46.6 average this season, was named on 549 of the record 556 ballots received from UPI subscribers.
Maravich dominates UPI All-America selections
With scoring two points for a first place vote and one for a second place, Maravich tallied 1,083 points.
Cal Murphy picked Lanier, the 6 feet, 11 inch giant for St. Bonaventure, received 1,003 points. The Buffalo, N.Y., senior led the Bonnies into the NCAA playoff with a 30 point average.
Other spots on the first team went to Dan Issel of tournament-bound Kentucky, Rick Mount, the nation's No. 3 scorer from
12 KANSAN Marr. 11 1970
Purdue and little Calvin Murphy of Niagara.
Issel, a 6-8 senior from Batavia, Ill., received 921 points; Mount, a 6-4 senior from Lebanon, Ind., and the Big 10 conference's top scorer, had 733 points in the balloting.
Murphy, smallest man on the All-America squad at 5-10, got 658 points. The senior from Norwalk, Conn., averaged 30 points a game in leading the Purple Eagles into the NCAA plavoffs.
Cain, like Heard at 6-6 and a senior, was the loop's No.1 bounder. His 211 caroms in 14 conference games tied the Big Eight record set by Kansas' Bill Bridges in 1959.
The Cyclone star also ranked fourth in scoring with an 18.3 mark.
The second team consisted of Notre Dame's Austin Carr, the No. 2 scorer this season; Charlie Scott of North Carolina; 7-2 Artis Gilmore of Jacksonville; John Roche of South Carolina and Rudy Tomjanovich of Michigan.
Zender, a 6-8 rookie from Wyckoff, N.J., was the Wildcats' most consistent performer in their run for the title. He posted an 11.5 scoring average and pulled down 7.1 rebounds per game.
point behind Scantlebury's average. Venable, Tope, Scantlebury and Tomlinson, who averaged 13 points for the Tigers, were all seniors.
Russell, who ranked sixth in rebounding (9.6) and scored at a 13.7 clip, was the only junior named to the second team.
Venable finished last.
Venable, who came on late for the Wildcats, finished with a 15.9 scoring average, fifth in the conference.
Tope ranked seventh with a 15.4 mark, a tenth of a
Venable finished fast
Tomlinson, teammate Dave Pike and Iowa State's Aaron Jenkins were all second-team choices a year ago. Pike and Jenkins are honorable mention this year.
- * *
Garfield Heard, Oklahoma, 6-6,
Sr.; Bill Cain, Iowa State, 6-6,
Sr.; Bob Zender, Kansas State,
6-8, Soph.
First Team:
Dave Robisch, Kansas, 6-9, Jr.;
Cliff Meely, Colorado, 6-8, Jr.;
The 1969-70 United Press International All-Big Eight Conference basketball team.
First Team:
Responsibility Communication Progress WELSH
---
Alliance
Student Senate—Liberal Arts
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Action begins Thursday
KU hosts Mid-West regional
The NCAA Mid-West regional basketball tournament begins Thursday night in Allen Field House with Houston facing Drake and Kansas State meeting New Mexico State in first round action.
Fifth-ranked New Mexico State must be rated the favorite but each of the four teams could win it all and advance to the finals in College Park. Md.
New Mexico State is led by 6-2 senior guard Jimmy Collins who has averaged 24.7 points this year. He is noted for his unstoppable two-hand jump shots and his sticky defensive play. He is rated by many to be an excellent pro prospect because of his excellent one-on-one play.
New Mexico State beat Rice University, Southwest Conference champion, 101-77 in a first round game in Fort Worth to earn the right to compete in the regional. Coach Don Knodel of Rice said after the game that NMS could go all the way. He said Kentucky could be the only team that could handle them.
Besides Collins NMS has Sam Lacey, 6-8 center who averaged 18 points and 15.4 rebounds, Jeff Smith, 6-8 forward averaging 13.6 a game, John Burgess, a 6-5 defensive standout, and little Charley Criss, 5-8 guard averaging 12.4.
New Mexico could be surprised by Kansas State's Wildcats as was the rest of the Big Eight Conference. Although K-State lost games to such unnoted teams as Wichita State and Athletes in
Action, they won the important conference games to sack the title with two games to spare.
The Wildcats, who own a 19-7 mark, were knocked out of the top 20 after they lost to KU last Saturday night. Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said after the game that the loss hurt because it took all of their momentum away from the team.
K-State presents a balanced attack led by 6-5 Jerry Venable who is averaging 15.5 for the year. Sophomores Bob Zender, 6-7, and David Hall, 6-6, have made enormous contributions to the squad with their 12.6 and 11.4 averages, respectively.
At the guard positions K-State has 6-4 Jerry Webb, 11.1 average, and 6-1 Wheeler Hughs, 8.2 average. The Wildcats boast a strong bench headed by 6-6 David Lawrence and 6-3 Terry Snider.
The late game Thursday night will be a reunion of former teammates. Ollie Taylor of Houston and Jeff Haliburton of Drake were standouts on the San Jacinto, Texas, Junior College team that won the national title in 1968.
Ollie Taylor is a 6-2 forward with unbelievable jumping abilities. The muscular Taylor leads the Cougars in both scoring and rebounding, 24.7 points and 11.7 rebounds per game.
Although the calibre of their schedule might be questioned,
Houston has one of the highest scoring teams in the nation. Dwight Davis, 6-7 center, averaged 17.6 during the season. Forward Jeff Hickman netted 12.4 a game and the guards, Poo Welch, 6-3, and Tom Gribben, 6-2, put 13.2 and 10.0 points through the hoop this year.
The Drake Bulldogs came into action with a 21-6 season record and the Missouri Valley crown. They are ranked 14th nationally. Last year they surprised the experts by winning the regional and battling talented UCLA down to the wire in the semi-finals. They lost four starters from that team but built back up with strong junior college recruiting.
The only returner, Al Williams, 6-5 forward, averaged 16 points and 12.7 rebounds a game this season. Haliburton also averaged 16 points a game with his quick, shifty moves. Another returner who does not always start is Gary Zeller, who has averaged 12.3.
Bobby Jones, the quarterback of the Bulldogs, is a transfer from Paducah Juco where he won the Most Valuable Player award by helping Paducah win the nationals last year. He is averaging 13.7 a game. Other transfers who played a large part in Drake's winning year are Tom Bush, 6-7 center averaging 9.9 points and 10.6 rebounds, and 6-4 Carl Slay-
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Jayhawks seek second straight indoor title
Kansas will be fighting to become the first school to win back-to-back NCAA indoor track championships this weekend in Detroit's Cobo Hall Friday and Saturday.
The Jayhawks lost all but three of their individual scorers from last year's championship squad. They return only the 13 points that shot putters Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop piled up in their one-two-three sweep of that event.
Kansas lost mile winner Jim Ryun and long jumpers Ron Jessie and Stan Whitley who finished first and second. Other scorers who left because of graduation were George Byers, third in high hurdles, Bob Steinhoff, tie for third in the pole vault, and Ken Gaines, fourth in the triple jump.
Coach Bob Timmons is hoping his new faces who carried the 'Hawks through the indoor season in admirable fashion can make up for the loss of 28 $ \frac{1}{2} $ of their last year's points.
Kansas will send 18 men to the meet. In the 440 Julio Meade, who has a best time of 48.3, will team with Marvin Foster who ran a 48.7 this season.
Brian McEilroy, freshman stand-
out who took the Big Eight indoors
two weeks ago, and Jim Neihoe will take the 880 for
the Jayhawks. MsEilroy has been
clocked in 1:50.0 and Neihoe
in 1:51.9.
Doug Smith, second in the Big Eight indoor with a time of 4:09.2, will run the mile. Jay
Mar. 11
1970 KANSAN 13
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Mason had his best time in the two-mile in the Astrodome Relays with a clocking of 8:44.6. Mike Bates rounds out the individual runners for the 'Hawks in the 60-yard High Hurdles.
KU's mile relay team which has won every meet this year except the Big Eight will be manned by Foster, Mike Larimore, Randy Julian and Meade. The two-mile relay team will have Dennis Stewart, Paul Mattingly, Smith and either Solomon, Neihouer, Roger Kathol or McElroy.
Jan Johnson reached his season peak in the Big Eight pole vault with a leap of 16-6 $ _{1/2} $ and will be shooting for the 17 foot mark in the Nationals.
Phil Reaves also notched his career high in the long jump finals. He will be Kansas's hope to pick up the slack caused by the departure of Ron Jessie and Stan Whitley.
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INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
18 Countries Represented
UNION BALLROOM
Exhibits at 6:00 p.m.
Program at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 14
Admission free—everyone invited.
THE BOWLING WEEK
Photo by Larry Fencyk
Perfect form
Curtis Catenhauser displays the form that enabled him to roll a perfect 300 game last night at the Jay Bowl in the Kansas Union.
Bowler rolls 300 game in scratch league action
Curtis Catenhauser, a Prairie Village freshman, bowled a perfect 300 game last night at the Jay Bowl in the Kansas Union while bowling for the "Undesirables" in the All Star Scratch League.
Going into the game with an average of around 160, Catenhauser bowled the masterpiece in
14 KANSAN Mar. 11 1970
the second game of a three game set for his team.
Catenhauser, whose previous high score was a 242 bowled last year in Kansas City, said he started to feel the pressure about the seventh frame.
"My knees started shaking then," he said, "and also the crowd started gathering around and that didn't help."
Warren Boozer, recreation manager at the Union, said the game was the first perfect game ever rolled at the Jay Bowl.
Kentucky vaults past Bruins into top spot in final poll
By United Press International Kentucky is king again in college basketball.
Coach Adolph Rupp's Wildcats were named United Press International's national basketball champion Monday for a record fourth time.
Kentucky wound up with 304 points, 14 more than UCLA, the season-long leader which saw its chances for repeating as national champions fade when it was upset by Southern California last week.
Kentucky was named No.1 on 19 of the 33 ballots cast by the 35-member UPI board of coaches. Two coaches did not participate in the balloting.
UCLA received 11 first place votes, Jacksonville had two and Notre Dame one.
St. Bonaventure moved up to third in the final ratings as South Carolina dropped to sixth after its loss to North Carolina State in the finals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. New Mexico State finished fourth and Jacksonville fifth.
Iowa, the Big Ten champion,
came in seventh followed by
Notre Dame, Drake and Marquette to complete the top 10.
Two Sports
Notre Dame and UCLA were the only major colleges to have both their football and basketball teams finish in the top ten in the nation in the final ratings.
Houston ranked 11th, followed by North Carolina State and Pennsylvania.
Florida State took 14th with Villanova and Long Beach State tied for 15th. Three teams—Niagara, Utah State and Western Kentucky—tied for 17th while Cincinnati and Texas-El Paso finished in a dead heat for 20th
Kentucky won the first two UPI titles in 1951 and 1952 and repeated in 1966. It finished this
season with a 25-1 record while UCLA w up 24-2.
Proud Coach
"I'm glad to hear it," said Rupp when notified of the honor. "I felt our record justified the selection as No. 1. UCLA has a
fine team and a great coach in Johnny Wooden. They'll always have a great team as long as he's coaching them. To be selected No. 1 above them is a great honor and distinction.
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[Image of a tractor]
Photo by Ron Bishop
Farmer in the dell?
The University of Kansas is not trying to take over the major curriculum of Kansas State. The man pictured here, a worker for the buildings and grounds crew, is punching holes in the lawn east of Robinson Gymnasium. Aerating the grass in this manner results in a healthy field.
KU police investigate disturbance at library
Campus police were called to Watson Library Tuesday night to investigate reports of a man with a knife following a coed in the stacks.
Library employees who did not wish to be identified, said the girl went to get her boyfriend after she saw the man in the stacks. When the boyfriend returned to the area, employees said, he saw the man with a steak knife and immediately reported the incident to a staff member, who called the police.
When the police arrived, employees said, the man had already left the library but returned 10 minutes later and was approached by police in the general reading room where he was sitting at a table. The knife, which he kept in his pocket, was taken by police, they said.
Employees said police took him outside for questioning. He was then taken to Watkins Hospital for further questioning by Donald Alderson, dean of men.
The man was described by library employees as about 6 feet 4 inches tall, weighing about 200 pounds, having black hair and a beard. One employee said he had a "blank" look and acted "non-chalant" about the incident.
Alderson said the incident was a misunderstanding. No threats were made, he said.
The girl and her boyfriend, who would not talk to reporters, left the library under police escort after questioning. They did not swear out a complaint against the man, who is a former KU student.
Book contest looking for special collections
The man was released after questioning. No charges were made.
When you hear about a book collecting contest, you probably picture a bunch of dark, heavy, gold embossed books with brown pages crackling with age being judged on how many pages are left in the oldest editions. But such is not the case with the 1970 Elizabeth Snyder Book Collecting Contest.
This contest is for the KU student who has a collection of paperback books or hardbacks on a certain topic that is of special interest to him. Barbara Backus, assistant special collections librarian at the Spencer Library said that topics of collections in the past years have ranged from the supernatural to the Civil War.
The contest is sponsored by Mrs. Snyder and the Oread Book Shop. The first place winner is awarded $100 in books to be ordered through the Oread Book Shop and the five second place winners receive $10 each in books.
This year there are to be two areas of judging, a graduate and an undergraduate student division.
Each contestant is asked to first submit a bibliography of
Mar. 11
1970 KANSAN 15
his collection, together with a brief statement of his purpose in making the collection. At least ten entries on the bibliography should be annotated with a description of the book and its special interest. The entries are to be limited to a selection from 25 to 50 books from the student's collection. These books must be owned and have been collected by him.
After a preliminary judging made on the basis of the bibliography paper, finalists will be asked to bring their collections to the library for final judging.
A 2 to 1 decision was handed down by the Student Court Tuesday against chief justice John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student, who was appealing three parking tickets he had received for parking in zone X behind the Union.
KU chief justice loses case
Army ROTC sponsors Southeast Asia forum
Hampton's counsel, Mark Anderson, Wichita first year law student, argued that Hampton was entitled to park along a yellow curb in the lot because he had paid a dime to enter and was unable to find a parking place after checking every aisle.
Anderson said Hampton was aware of a no parking sign in front of the yellow curb and recognized the violation. He argued, however, that Hampton "had paid his money and had a contractual right to park." He added that Hampton's car was not obstructing traffic along the curb
The Army ROTC cadets held a symposium on Southeast Asia Monday.
Col. Herve de'lencquesaine of the French army, Ltc. Richard Bird of the Royal Australian Regiment, Ltc. Ngo-Nhu Bich of the Army of Republic of Vietnam and Ltc. Myles Mierswa of the U.S. Army were the panelists.
Anderson further stated that his client had relied on a Student Court decision last year in which Hampton was prosecuting ator-
A welcome was given by Colonel Philip Reidel, professor of military science. The group of cadets and guests had lunch at the Alpha Delta Pi house with Patti Parchen as hostess. Miss Parchen is the commanding officer of E-CO Berets, a coed affiliation to Pershing Rifles.
The seminar was held in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
The officers were talking not as official representatives of their countries but as individuals giving candid remarks to questions based on their experience in Vietnam.
The potential of the Laotian situation, reasons the United States became involved in Vietnam, mistakes the United States made in that involvement and the problems in understanding the Vietnamese people were among the topics of discussion.
Psychology prof receives grant
Welch will work with Gerald Goldstein of the Veterans Administration Hospital in Topeka.
Robert B. Welch, assistant professor of psychology received recently a $7,555 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to study perceptual motor stability in brain damaged people.
Tests will be run to compare people with damage to different parts of the brain. The tests will determine whether subjects can distinguish between self-movement and movement of a dot and whether the subject can adapt to distorted vision.
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Prosecuter John Vratil, Larned second year law student, cited section B of Parking Regulations which said that parking even with a permit was a privilege and that such privilege provides no assurance of parking space.
HEKU
Joe Smith, third year law student, gave the 2 to 1 decision of the court.
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
ney in an identical case and had lost the case.
Anderson replied that when you pay money you have a contractual right. He said it was a public parking lot and the sign in front of the gate did not say full.
BOWLING
"Majority feels parking in restricted parking lot is a privilege and not a right. There was also a parking sign in front of the curb where defendant parked. We weighed the precedence but did not think it strong enough. There was no emergency and it was shown in previous cases that there was a problem in parking and the defendant could have come earlier."
Dick Wetzler, Marysville second year law student, dissented, "I feel there was a contract in this situation between the University and the student, that the student
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should have absolute right and did have a valid contract. If the lot was full, the defendant had the right to park his car in another place not obstructing traffic."
After the decision, Anderson arose and expressed his displeasure with court's decision. He said he would appeal the case to the court en banch.
Hampton's fines totaled $48.
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AURH changes open house, closing rules
As a result of the brainstorming session held at Lewis Hall Feb. 26 by the Association of University Residence Halls, many changes are in store for the students who will live in University residence halls starting next fall. The most changes came within the women's residence hall regulations.
Siama Nu was biggest.
In 1922 the KU Sigma Nu chapter was the largest fraternal estate in the world. In that year the house and furniture were purchased for $52,000. Included in the purchase was $28 1/2 acres of land, most of which has since been sold.
"Many more suggestions were given, but could not be dealt with immediately." Mrs. Frank Shavlik, assistant dean of women said Tuesday. "But, we will be meeting again to discuss how more of the suggestions may be worked out," she said.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall will be the only freshman women's residence hall which will have mandatory closing hours. Also at GSP, open houses will be held only occasionally. At Corbin Hall, there will be no closing and weekend open houses only.
Both Joseph R. Pearson Hall and Templin Hall will house only men and they will have the option of having open house whenever a majority of floor residents can agree upon it.
Hashinger Hall, which will house upperclass as well as freshman women, will have no closing hours and open houses at set times. Lewis Hall, with upper-class women only, has the same option for open houses as Hashinger.
Mrs. Shavlik said they were now working on setting up open house hours for each floor in the women's residence halls which may have open houses any time. She said that women students would then be able to choose even the floor which they wanted to live according to when they wanted open house privileges.
Ellsworth Hall, Oliver Hall and McCollum Hall will all be coed, Mrs. Shavlik said. However, Oliver will house only freshman
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Tuesday passed a bill that would outlaw cigarette commercials on radio and television, effective Jan. 2, and strengthening the health warning on cigarette packages.
"Thanks to this bill, Marlboro country will fade into television history, as of next January," said Frank E. Moss, D-Utah, sponsor of the measure.
Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., hailed the action as "landmark legislation in the health field." He said "great economic forces were aligned against" it, a reference to lobbying by broadcasters and the tobacco industry.
Radio, TV cigarette ad ban approved by Senate vote
The House still must act on the bill, but passage is considered virtually certain since the final version of the bill was worked out last week in a House-Senate conference committee.
The Senate vote was 75 to 9.
Six months after President Nixon signs the bill, it would require this warning on all cigarette packages: "Warning: The Surgeon General has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health."
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reported June 30 that the cigarette industry's 1968 advertising expenditures included $217.2 million on television, $21.3
million on radio, and $44.6 million in newspapers and magazines.
Moss said if the industry switches its broadcast advertising money to other media, he will "urge and support" imposition of the FTC's proposal that a mandatory health warning be required in all printed cigarette advertisements.
The bill would ban regulation of cigarette advertising by state governments, but would free the FTC, effective July 1, 1971, from the prohibition against federal regulation of cigarette advertising which has been in effect since 1965.
Paintings, bequest donated
The University of Kansas is heir to 130 framed oil paintings plus several stacks of sketches by the late Ward Lockwood.
The paintings will not belong to the University for several more months because they are still tied up in Lockwood's estate. The paintings came to the University provided in the will of his widow, who died last October. Mr. Lockwood died in 1963.
The paintings are currently in the Spencer Library until they can be processed. They came from the Lockwood home in Rancho de Taos, N.M.
A $300,000 bequest was made to the Endowment Association in addition to the paintings. The bequest is for the Claude Bone-
Official Bulletin
Today
Classical Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Classical Film: "Red Dust." Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Thursday
Thursday
Poetry: Jack Anderson reads his works. Forum Room, Kansas Union, 4 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door,
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Johninson Gymnasium Natoratiorum 7
Film: "Village of the Damned."
1982.
Amorortum 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Latin American Film: "The Ex-
terninating Angel." (Mexico) Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, 7-30 p.m.
Architecture Lecture; Eric Telchoh,
Forum Room, Kansas Union, 8 p.m.
brake Lockwood and Ward Lockwood Art Scholarship Fund. The income from the endowment will provide awards to seniors or graduate students of exceptional merit and promise in creative painting or sculpture.
Lockwood, a native of Atchison, studied at KU for two years. He was a practicing artist for many years and was a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Texas at Austin, Tex. During the 1957-58 academic year he was a Rose Morgan visiting professor and artist in residence at KU.
16 KANSAN Mar. 11 1970
The University awarded Mr. Lockwood a distinguished service citation in 1942.
The estate will be closed in October and a sale of the paintings will begin. The sale is expected to take 20 months. Mrs. Lockwood specified a list of 18 nationally known museums that
A professional art expert is being hired by the Endowment Association to catalog, photograph and write descriptions of the paintings.
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90"
- Oils and Acrylics
The faculty committee which will handle most of the arrangements concerning the paintings for the Endowment Association consists of Bret Waller, director of the Museum of Art; Marilyn Stokstad, chairman of the Art History Department, and Raymond Eastwood, professor of painting and drawing.
The KU Art Museum will select a representative Lockwood collection after the sale to museums to be added to the permanent KU museum collection. The remainder of the sketches and paintings will be offered for sale over a 25 year or longer period to ensure that the works are sold at their true value.
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are to be offered a "major Lock-wood work." The museums are to be contacted in the order listed in the will and each will have 30 days to accept or to reject the offer before the next museum is allowed to make a selection.
Proceeds from the sales will be added to the scholarship fund.
It will cost students $900 to live in the residence halls next year and students will sign a full year contract, which Mrs. Shavlik said will insure "optimal services for students remaining in the halls for the entire year."
Mrs. Shavlik said many more of the suggestions which students offered are still being considered and will be finalized within the next few weeks so that further plans can be made for next fall's residence hall program.
V
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Professorship funds donated by alumni
Accounting firm honors faculty member
Robert R. Sterling, professor of business administration at the University of Kansas, became the country's second Arthur Young and Co. Professor Monday.
The professorship is the first one to be awarded to a permanent KU professor. It has been twice awarded to visiting professors at KU. The University of Chicago holds the other Young professorship.
Sterling joined the KU business administration faculty in 1967. He earned his bachelor's degree in economics and his M.B.A. with an economic emphasis from the University of Denver. He earned his Ph.D. at the University of Florida, Gainsville, Fla.
The Arthur Young and Co. Professorship funds are donated
by KU alumni through Arthur Young and Co. The choice of recipient is left to Clifford D. Clark, dean of the School of Business, in consultation with Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr.
"The University of Kansas is delighted to honor one of its own younger faculty members, and
one who has distinguished himself internationally in his field." Chalmers said.
Before coming to KU, Sterling was a Science Faculty Fellow at the Sloan Physics Laboratory of Yale University. While there, he worked on measurement theory with physicist Henry Margenau under an award made by the
National Science Foundation.
Sterling said his work was not in physics as such, but rather in applying the measurement theories of accounting to physics. However, he has long been interested in the philosophy of science and has done post-doctoral work in this area.
Reagan declares candidacy intent
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)—Gov. Ronald Reagan announced his candidacy for a second term Tuesday, promising if re-elected to strive for a government "which adds soul to science, God to gold and quality to the purpose of life."
The former movie actor-turned-political-star, who contested Richard Nixon for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination, formally declared his long-anticipated candidacy during a 15-minute announcement taped for television.
Then, facing a room full of reporters, TV cameras and aides in a hotel across from the state capitol, the handsome 59-year-old governor of the nation's most populous state held his first news conference of the 1970 campaign.
In his prepared announcement, Reagan told California's 7.6 million voters "it will take common sense, hard work, and a constant commitment to law and order and justice" to attain his dream of a new "spirit of the 1970s."
"It will come when government gets off your back and out of our way so that every man is free to fly as high and as wide as his drive and his talents and his vision can take him," he said.
The conservative defeated former Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown by nearly a million votes during his first bid for elective office in 1966.
Reagan's opponent in the November general election is expected to be veteran Assembly Democratic leader Jess Unruh of Los Angeles County.
Detention facilities plan rejected by commission
A proposal for the remodeling of a frame house on county-owned property east of the Douglas County Courthouse for use as a temporary juvenile detention facility was rejected Monday by the Douglas County Commission.
Travis Glass, chairman of the commission board, said it would have cost several thousand dollars to remodel the house, and the short period of time the facility would have been used would not have justified the cost.
The house in question is one of several located on the proposed judicial-law enforcement building and parking facilities site bounded by New Hampshire, Rhode Island, 11th and 12th Streets.
Mar. 11 1970 KANSAN 17
Glass said the county presently did not have a facility for detaining juvenile offenders.
"Offenders are sent to city, county or out-of-county jails on a temporary basis," Glass said. Douglas County pays a fee to have many of them kept in Johnson County.
Glass said he suggested to Charles Rankin, judge of the juvenile court, that he investigate the need for such a facility in Douglas County. If such a facility is deemed necessary and then approved by the commission, Glass said, a proposal for its construction must be presented to the voters in a general election.
Engineering exposition scheduled
"Profiles of Tomorrow," the theme of the Engineering Exposition scheduled for April 17 and 18, will be reflected in about 30 displays and exhibits which are being prepared by students, technical societies and area industry, the KU School of Engineering reported Tuesday.
The Engineering Exposition was established in 1920 after a year of feuding between engineering and law students. Since the turn of the century an engineering day had been held each spring on Mount Oread, featuring field events, parades and displays. These celebrations were used by the law students as an opportunity to bait their rivals in the School of Engineering.
In 1919 a group of law students destroyed several engineering floats which were to be paraded down Jayhawk Boulevard the next morning. In return, the engineering students marched on Green Hall and covered it with rotten eggs. A riot broke out, and the Chancellor ordered that no more engineering days be held, as they were too dangerous.
To make up for this loss, the engineers got the idea of an engineering exposition, which included many of the activities of the old engineering day, but which was also educational. The Chancellor okayed the affair, and the Expo was established as an annual event.
Chairmen for this year's Expo are: Robert Bibb, Mission senior and Expo chairman; Dave Dwyer, Mission senior, and Bob Russell, Prairie Village senior and publicity chairman; Terry Exsturm, Denver senior and finance chairman; Jay Stoker, Mission junior and judging chairman; John Heather, Prairie Village sophomore in charge of queen selection; Al Shumaker, Wetmore junior and banquet chairman; Stan Stegelman, Winfield senior in charge of the opening ceremony; and Larry Svoboda, Mission senior in charge of displays.
Hijacking foiled in East Germany
BERLIN (UPI)—Two men attempted to hijack an East German airliner at gunpoint Tuesday and killed themselves when they failed, the East German news service, ADN, reported.
ADN said the pair tried to force the crew of a government Interflug airliner to change course on an early flight from East Berlin to Leipzig.
Presumably the men wanted the aircraft to fly to West Berlin so they could ask for asylum as refugees.
ADN identified them only as "bandits."
ADN said the hijacking attempt failed because the crew adhered to security regulations, presumably special anti-hijacking safeguards. The men were said to have committed suicide as the crew was landing the aircraft.
It was not clear from the official East German news agency's brief report whether or not the hijackers had used their guns to threaten the crew or had opened fire.
"The bandits, whose reprehensible actions seriously endangered air safety and brought the passengers into extreme danger of their lives, committed suicide during the landing maneuver to escape their legal punishment in view of their failure," ADN reported.
Tony's 66 Service
PHOTO 66
Tony's Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
KU Entertains Haskell Students
Feel free to attend a program including karate demonstrations, Chinese folk legend reading, and folk dancing this Friday evening from 6:00 to 7:00 at Haskell Auditorium.
Support the KU International Club in its effort to bring KU and Haskell closer together. Admission free.
Buzzi and Associates, Inc. Insurance Agency
Ayushi Mishra
Tony Croman
Rob Lowe
"For the Professional Approach to Your Insurance Needs"
- Arden Gray
Bob Joyce
- Mike Reeves
P. C. SCHMIDT
Ray Terrell
- Janice Peterson
Lloyd Buzzi
A. A. K.
Bill Hill
- Ralph Light
- Steve Gibson
D.J. MAYER
- Gene HadI
Let us help you with:
Auto Insurance Renters Insurance Life Insurance Computer Programs Health Insurance
Group Insurance Disability Insurance Mortgage Insurance Tax Sheltered Programs
Ric Marshall
Gary Garrett
Gary Garrett
MADRID, Spain - A man died on Sunday of a heart attack.
Buzzi and Associates
2323 Ridge Court
V12-7771
Lee Smith
Lee Sells
Dennis Browell
Doug Powell
Sweet APPLE, OHIO
THE COURT HOUSE
Photo by Ron Bishop
Lawrence High School faculty present . . .
The Lawrence High School faculty is presenting the play "Bye Bye Birdie" to help raise money for the school's library. Faculty members shown here are from left Don Binns and Ralph Hazel.
LHS faculty give play
The second performance of "Bye Bye Birdie," Charles Strouse and Lee Adam's musical comedy, will be presented tonight at Lawrence High School by its faculty.
Bruce Levitt, LHS teacher of English and director of the production, said the plan for a faculty play to raise money for the school was begun last year. This
Susan Atkins will repudiate her confession
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Susan Atkins, the member of the "Manson Family" who turned informer in the Sharon Tate murder case, will probably repudiate her confession, a lawyer seeking to represent her said Tuesday.
Miss Atkins, 21, asked the court Tuesday for permission to fire the lawyer who originally advised her to tell her story to the grand jury and hire Dave Shinn, who has advised Charles Manson, the leader of the hippie commune.
Shinn said he was "pretty sure" Miss Atkins would deny her earlier testimony which led to the indictments of her and five other persons for the Tate-La-Biance murders. "She should deny everything," he said.
Superior Court Judge William B. Keene set a hearing on the motion for this afternoon.
The 21-year-old Miss Atkins visited Manson in county jail last week and listened to his views on how the defense should be conducted. She indicated then she was having second thoughts about repeating her accusations before a jury.
18 KANSAN Mar. 11
1970
Her attorney, Richard Caballero, said he and Manson had sharp differences over the tactics Miss Atkins should use in her defense and if she could not follow his recommendations he would have to withdraw as her lawyer.
year, he said, the faculty hoped to raise nearly $1,000 either to buy books and sculpture for the library or to finance the construction of an outdoor classroom.
The production, which was adapted from Michael Stewart's novel, concerns Conrad Birdie, a popular rock and roll star, who is drafted into the Army. His manager, Albert Peterson, panics at the thought of losing Conrad until his secretary and girlfriend Rosie Alverez comes up with a scheme which involves the writings of a song, "One Last Kiss," which Conrad will sing on the Ed Sullivan Show and then kiss one of his fans goodbye. Complications develop between Kimm MacAfee, the girl chosen to receive Conrad's last kiss, and her steady boyfriend Hugo Peabody.
Stipends offered for social workers
The United Fund and Community Planning Council of Wichita and Sedgwick County is offering this financial assistance to students who have an AB degree or expect to earn an AB degree in 1970, a School of Social Work spokesman said.
Graduate scholarships and stipends for the field of social work for students qualified to enter the KU Graduate School of Social Welfare are available now.
A scholarship entitles a student assistance during the time he is in training. However, any student granted a scholarship must also accept social work employment in Wichita or Sedgwick County for a period of 12 months with a pay of $2,500.
Students accepted for a stipend will receive assistance during the nine months of a block field work assignment in a Wichita social agency. A stipend agreement does not commit a student to accept employment after receiving a MSW degree.
Identification to get easier
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen.
John L. McClelland, D-Arr., said
Tuesday the Nixon Administration outdid him in proposing more latitude for policemen seeking fingerprints and other identification checks before they filed any charges.
Students wishing to make application may write to Carol Weaverling, Community Planning Council, 520 Insurance Building, Wichita, Kansas 67202.
"Frankly, I'm a little surprised," McClellan told Assistant Attorney General Will Wilson, who was testifying before the Senate criminal laws subcommittee.
Wilson urged acceptance of the administration's version of the measure. "The pretrial burden on law enforcement officers during the past four or five years has so rapidly increased" as a result of Supreme Court rulings, he said, that new laws are needed to help police.
McClellan, chairman of the Senate permanent investigations subcommittee and a proponent of tougher criminal laws, agreed and said he made a bill he has proposed more restrictive only to keep the courts from killing it.
"Courts in the past few years have . . . found every technicality they can and invoked it in behalf of the defendant . . . they've gone out of their way," McClellan said.
"It's reassuring to know that the Justice Department today, in my opinion, is really trying to do something about law enforcement," McCllenl said. "I haven't always felt that way."
Both the McClellan bill and
Prof translates history
the administration's version would let police fingerprint a suspect, with a judge's permission, even if officers lacked enough evidence to charge him with a crime. The same rule would apply for blood samples, hair samples and other means of identification.
The first English translation of a Russian historian's work on the rise of modern Russia will be published by the University Press of Kansas in April.
It is "The Time of Troubles: A Historical Study of the Internal Crises and Social Struggles in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Muscovy" by S. F. Platonov.
But under McClellan's bill, a judge or magistrate would have to witness such fingerprinting and police would first have to determine that the suspect's prints were not already in police files somewhere. Neither provision is in the administration version.
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857
$5
2nd Floor
Skooter Skirts...
Go from morn 'til night in these great skooter skirts—shorts designed to look like a skirt in front. Assorted styles in prints and solids. 100% cotton. Sizes 8 to 18.
Hilltopper Applications and Nominations
- Due March 20 Turn in at the information Desk in the Student Union.
- Selection will be based mainly on one criteria-whether the student has made an impact on KU: whether he left this school changed. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind.
- NOMINATIONS should be signed by 3 students. The nomination should include a list of activities and/or accomplishments of the nominee, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- SELF-NOMINATIONS OR APPLICATIONS should include letters of recommendations by 2 students or 1 student and 1 faculty member, a list of activities and/or accomplishments, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- All candidates must be classified as SENIORS.
- Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Journal are served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Salet
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analy-
tical of Western Civilization" 4th Edition,
Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th
St.
Must Sell. Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also mike and boom stand-$15. Call VI 2-3783 evenings. 3-16
Women's contract at Naiismal—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
1967 Ford. Custom, 6 cyl., auto, R&H,
$885. $842-962. 3-11
For sale: Camper truck, 1950 Ford pickup with hemi-8v, auto, radio, heater, extras, call, come by, make, offer, 842-7657, 1851 Mississippi 3-11
Basset Hound. AKC registered tricolor male. 1½ years old, housebroken, needs good home, likes children. Doghouse also for 3-11 Call VI 3-4374.
FREE—Gibson EB-2 hollow body bass guitar with purchase of KUSTOM 200 bass and bass + 3 - 15 speakers, guitars and amp covers Call 842-6941
Call 842-6941
Skis, Head Standards with bindings,
me, $15; two matching waltn end
lamps; two matching waltn end
lamps; $7.50 one walnut
table; $15. 843-2188, 3-11
1960 TR-3, Removable Hardtop, Body and Engine excellent, interior and gear box need work, 842-2191 or 842-
8870.
For Sale: 1966 BSA-650 cc--single
Excellent condition
VI 2-4633 3-11
For Sale: SIAMESE KITTEN, six-weeks old, beautiful seal points. Call VI 2-1811 after 6 o'clock, or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 3-11
Harmon-Kardion 50-watt AM-FM receiver. Nocturne model with walnut case and high-sensitive reception. 842-5225 power. 842-5225 or 616 Kentucky. 3-11
1968 Oldsmobile F-85-Silver Black interior--immaculate inside and out--WW's and Snow's-V-8, Air-cond- 12,000 Miles. Miles 821-2491 or 8428-371. Upto
1969 Opel wagon, 102 h.p., 8,000 miles,
much warranty left, radio. Must sell.
Call David Rueschhoff. VI 3-5770, 1301
W. Campus Rd.
1967 WV Super Bug—76 H.P. -Koni'l Racing Suspension Balanced,
cammed, ported and polished-car cost over $4500. 842-1291 or 842-8870.
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately. $1200. See at Ridgeview Court, 3020 Iowa, Lot G23 or call I-2 6318 after 6 p.m. 3-25
For Sale: Fall—real hair, long, light brown, like new. Call Kate, 812-342-9700.
Custom designed, multi-purpose training apparatus. May be used in 8x12' cabinets. Nominal purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design Barbell Co., Inc.). Also 577.5 lbs of assembled weight. Call J. B. at 843-2103. 3-13
1968 VW bug. $1295. VI 2-8614. 3-12
1968 VW fastback. Must sell, new,
wholesale price. AM-FM reverb.
Quartz iodine driving lamps. Call
VI 3-8191 after 6. 3-12
'68 Bridgestone Super 90—red anil
silver—1400 miles—very fine condition
-completely inspected. 842-2191 or
842-8870. 3-11
Sell- Concord 510D tapeedec. 1 yr.
Mike, Concord 510D Mike, 345 Templin VI 2-1200
For Sale: 1964 Honda Trail 90, good condition. $170 or best offer. Call VI 2-1387 after 6:00 on weekdays, anytime on weekends. 3-12
For Sale: Wooded sloping building site in Martin's Park area. Two acres. will sell together or separately. Call Agency, 843-101. After 3 hrs. 843-6453.
Canon FT-QL with a 12.58 mm lens.
Also a 200 mm telephone and
mass accessories. Steven Briggs, 842-8402,
3-13
7 DAY SPECIAL
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
Fred's Auto Painting
1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487
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
Tremendous sacrifice. 1968 Shelby
500: new tires, factory air, power
carry, flat tire, 500 miles; tainte
tilie black, plush black interior.
Will accept offers. 843-9223. Will
Polaroid model 800 camera, used five times, wink light, flash, light reducer, exposure meter, leather carrying case, print copier, complete instructions. Original value over $230. Sell for $100 or best offer. Call 842-2958 evenings.
Zonith 2-ap-saker portable stereo 5-
147-835 Excellent concert Call 844-5735 3-14
speed 16-33-45 RPM, Excellent condition.
Call 843-5755. 3-16
Rally great fish mobiles from Thailand in several colors and sizes. You won't find them anywhere else. So shout the Natural History Gift Shop weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays; 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Sable wig, brown medium length human hair. Will style for you Free! Call Connie 842-6949. 3-12
Television—Admiral Console—beautiful black and white. New tube, $45 Shuttle Bible Week days 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays; 12:30 to 4:30. 3-14
Corn husk dolls from the Southern Appalachian Mountains craftsmens. These are the dolls that were played with by the early settlers of our country. Museum of Natural History Book weekdays 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays; 12:30 to 4:30. 3-14
Raposessed Magnavox Stereo Component 1 year old, 20 watt amp. Was $179.90. Now $85.00 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings. 3-16
Famous brand component system. Now only $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. Open Mon. Thurs. evenings. 3-16
For Sale: '69 Honda 175—elective starter—wow! Best offer over $300. Call Barb evenings. 842-0719. 3-16
Elect. typewriter, paint sprayer, hi intensity lamps, refrig. and cupboard, drafting table, lamp and tackle boxes, radio and phono, Norelle dictation recorder and transcriber. 842-1970. 3-17
Nashua, '63, 10x55, 2 bdm, din r,
completely furn, carpeted, new auto,
washer, metal util, bldg., fenced
yard; June occupancy only. 842-4165.
1964 Chevrolet Impala Super Sport,
327, 300 hp, 4 speed, buckets, maroon.
Call 842-4774 after 6:00. 3-17
Corvette for sale, 1965, 365 H.P., both
tops, excellent condition. Call 843-
317 from 4-7 p.m. ask for Steve. 3-17
Vepa. Corvette for sale. Vepa.
chianical condition, good body, nearly
new paint job. Very good dependable
transportation. Sell for only $100.00.
Call UN 4-3217 or 842-7305. 3-17
Ampx Stereo Tape recordor-auto-
microphones, tapes, and demagnitizer,
2 years old, must sell before spring
vacation, call Bob Brown, 843-5721.
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-goodness Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. The kitchen has your specialty. Open 11 am. 11 pm. VI 2-5610. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, IV 3-4032. GROVE ET OTEC - honorary store from La Petite Galerie, Find the latest, the best for gifts and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky.
Audio Discount~Your A.R. Dynacom at the audio at the lowest price. Buy at least shipping 10% handling charge, 842-2047 evenings. 3-81
I am auditioning female vocalists for local night club work with established group. Interested Call Ric Rasmassen. 843-8153. 3-11
Sand Candles by Betsy Webster. 9th and Indiana THE OMNIBUS SHOP
Karate Action Saturday, March 7
Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
Eliminations -10:30 a.m. 50c.
Finals t. p.m. $1.50. 3-12
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. $115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-160705.
Student specials
TEXACO
★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
New, experienced management
W. 9th
842-9413
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
ment
TEXACO
GRADUATE TICKET ISP. Surendra Bhana, Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob Hob, Farla Clark, Jack Casey, Glen Brown, Robert Karen Laub, Leigh McDermott, Freela Laub, Patterson, Harriette Stallworth, Joe Van Zandt, John Whaleh. Education with a human face (1) voting power curriculum committees (2) Evaluation requirements (3) Faculty evaluation (3-4) Dress making, and art.
9th & Miss.
KU males: Is it true what they say about a girl who wears spring styles from Arensberg's Shoes, 819 Massaura? Longingly lonely, Ineeda fella.
Casual slacks -make your selections now from our new spring shipment at the store. Titans are in solids - stripes plains. Ross Disney Men's Wear. 811 Mass.
Travel and study in Europe for six weeks this summer—many different programs—college credit available. detailed information phone VI 2-3785.
Dress making and alterations. 20
years experience, call VI 3-2767, 8-254
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in these and dissertations. Typewriter, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf
For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc.
4 see 3-16
a change 3-16
3-16
Hurry to Henry's
change 3-16
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas. Sophomore Class. 3-16
The Castle Tea Room is ideal for
lunches, dinner parties, or even
adding receptions. Call Libuse Kriz.
843-305-1971 Most unique restaurant
Lawrence. 3-16
Frostbite sandal sale through March
11. 20% off. All handcrafted styles.
Hodge Podge. 10:50-3:00 (open Thursday
night). 842-6082. 3-11
We're back from New York with
baking and stimulating objects.
Rosalia S. Johnson & Harper
Kan. (316) 896-9121. Schedule ses-
request. 3-16
"Profits" from sales in the Museum of
Natural History Gift Shop make
possible a school services program
at a school with environmental education.
Help us expand this program.
shopping weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30.
Sundays from 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Graduate ticket ISP—Surendra Bhana,
Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob
Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed
Yorker Leroy Mermott, Fred O'Connell,
Joe Patterson, Harriette Stallworth,
Joe VanZandt, John Whale. 3-13
Position—improvement of university
environment. (1) Students on planning
boards. (2) Autonomy main
position. (3) Graduate organization
in all departments. 3-13
TYPING
henrys
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dispers-
tations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.)
Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-
1522. 4-8
TYPING, Experienced typist. IBM
TYPING, Experienced typist. Work guard.
teed. Phone 843-3166.
Patient at Mercer
Marlene Higley. After 5:00 at 843-
6048. (8:00 to 5:00-842-0111).
Experienced typist will type themes,
examples, typesetting, type linking.
Have electric typewriter, typewheel.
Pica type. Competent service. Mrs.
Phone. Wright 843-9554. 5-15
6th & Mo. VI 13-2139
THE DRAU GHT HOUSE
Thesis Typing—10 years experience
Marlene Higley. After, 500, st, 862
八
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
EBERT
THOMAS
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
L. G. Balfour Co.
Exclusive Representative
of
- Badges
- Recognitions
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt, with three others. $1.25 per month, including water. Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Favors
- Lavaliers
Favors
Must
- Mugs
Wanted: Girl to share house for rest
campus, $34,000.
Month. Phone 843-3843. 3-11
mth. Phone 843-3843.
- Lavaliers
- Paddles
WANTED
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 11. 12% off. All handmade styles. Hodge Podge. 90-30 (open Thursday night) J-2 0-6882. M-31
- Gifts
Needed: Adults with history of stuttering problems to participate in research at KU. Speech and Hearing Center. Contact Dr. Lingwall at UN 4-4345
- Sportswear
- Stationery
Wanted: Female roommate for summer. Share 1 bdmr, air-cond. apt.
Room: mo. plus ½ utilities.
Available June time: Call Cheryl U., 3106 or 842-5369.
U., 13
Female roommate for summer. Share 1 bdmle, air-cond. apt w/ pool. $73 / plus 5 ushilities. Available June 1st. all Cherry! UN 4-3106 or 3-16
Al Lauter
- Stationery
* Plagues
Rings - Crested - Letters
Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—plea or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Cail 844-3281, Mrs. Ruckman
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306
Typing, Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249 3-13
Accurate typing of papers, manuscripts, theses by experienced typist on carbon ribbon selective. Close to English tutoring. 842-9249 3-16 Typing, Theses, paper typescript.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249
Typing, Experienced typist. IBM Selectic, pica type. Work guaranteed. Phone 842-3186 3-16
VI 3-1571
Wanted—used motorcycle crash helmet. Call Murat at 842-9073 three-1-36
- Plaques
LNB Bldg. #306
Across from the Red Dog
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 801½ Mass, $4.00 and up. tf Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One block from campus. Lowest rates—$3 buchen, 1218 Miss, 843-9659 after 6 p.m. Math on Spanish Tutoring Coll.
LOST
Available now! Need one girl roommate to finish the year. Move in now for $45. April and May—$65. Close to campus. Call 842-9156. 3-17
Galactic Bridal
Math or Spanish tutoring. Call VI 2-5603 or VI 3-9734. 3-11 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. 4-1
SERVICES OFFERED
Lost—Man's dark blue billfold in
Woodruff Auditorium, Wednesday,
Feb. 25. Please return to Kansas Union
lost and found. 3-11
Beautiful
Bridal Apparel
910 Kv.
&
Formal Wear
Single Muffler Installed
SAVE YOURSELF
A FINE
for any American car.
$12.95
T. I.R.E. co.
720 East 9th VI 3-0950
Home of the "Big Shef"
Try One Today
BURGER CHEF
814 Iowa
Multi-colored female cat with long, thick fur. Cat VI 3-8153. 3-13
Lost - I one) Notebook. Reward.
Lost - I one) Searache. Subject.
Advance Film Production. Phone 843-5072 or 842-8070 Address.
1140 Pennsylvania St. 3-16
Lost: a diamond and sapphire gold
hat; the women's restroom at
Robinson; call Carol, 708,
Corbin. If gone, leave message.
3-16
1 pair woman's prescription sunglasses. Contact Mary, 842-6600, room
Small black and gray striped male
cat with white feet. Call 842-1841, 3-13
FOR RENT
For rent to quiet male student, student
apt, close to campus. Nicely furnished,
parking, utilities paid. Available immediately.
843-8534-316
-- 3-16
-- furnished rooms with all meals
-- showers and bathrooms and heating. Linens and utilities included. Quiet, congenial home for everything. Now, also lacking tutions for summer and fall. Jayhawk Inn, 928 Rhode Island.
-- 3-16
Carpeted, air-conditioned one bed-
room apartment for rent Call 319-
3-19
PERSONAL
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801% Mass, Returns $4.00 and up ff
The die! it! Wallace Beery shirts, $3.50.
The Hodge Paddle, 15 W. 9th. . . . 3-12
Notice to the Big Boy: Happy Birthday
from one who digs you.
HELP WANTED
Help wanted for farm work. Call VI 2-8153. 3-13 Summer employment, Enquire Sunset Drive-In Theatre. Male or Female. Call 843-9172 for appointment. 3-16 Summer employment — TV and small appliance equipment. TV and Kwik-Goins, Shawnee TV, 11006 Johnson Dr., Shawnee, Kan. 62623. State qualifications and experience. 3-13 Male or female commission sales representative wanted to sell medical appearance and transportation needed. Kwik-Goins medical supplies not essential. Leads furnished. Phone 842-5568. 3-17 Part-time help wanted — waitress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person, Earl's Pizza 1292-7258. 4-2 Wanted: student to baby-toilet children during summer while mother works. Prefer someone having own transportation or who lives near Fair grounds. 842-1037. 3-13
FOUND
Found March 9, contacts in case on steps between Flint and Malott. To claim call 842-8334 after 5 p.m. and pay for ad.
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Brown trial adjourned
BEL AIR, Md. (UPI)—The explosion death of a black militant and his companion resulted Tuesday in the adjournment of the riot trial of H. Rap Brown who was thought for a time to be the unidentified victim.
At a late afternoon news conference, Assistant State Medical Examiner Werner Spitz ended speculation by saying his examination of the shattered body of a moustached Negro in his late 20s or early 30s had convinced him it was not the 26-year-old Brown.
"From what remained of the ears, nose and hairline it is possible to exclude a certain person —H. Rap Brown."
There was an earlier report by a state police spokesman that one of three identifications found on the body after the Monday night blast was that of Brown but this was later denied.
Walter Lively, a Maryland civil rights worker, identified the other victim as Ralph E. Featherstone, former program director of Brown's Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee.
Lively said he also viewed the other body and it was not Brown. Brown's attorney William E. Knistler said he too was sure it
Fashions aid world rapport
HONOLULU (UPI) — Some choose to march to protest for peace, but Mrs. Lola Stone does it through fashion.
Mrs. Stone is the founder of Fashions for Peace and Fashions Pacifica, non-profit organizations dedicated to promoting international understanding through the presentation of ethnic costumes from all over the world.
The attractive blonde mother of two started Fashions for Peace in New York City in 1965 with "just a handful of outfits and a lot of determination."
When she stepped down as director last year, Fashions for Peace had three collections of costumes, each with about 30 outfits from Hong Kong, Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Iran, Cambodia and South American countries.
"I hope that these exhibits of dress from different countries generate international enthusiasm and understanding," said Mrs. Stone.
More than 90 per cent of all service stations in the United States are owned and operated by independent local businessmen.
20 KANSAN Mar. 6
1970
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was not Brown.
Spitz sent a part of a hand found at the scene to the FBI headquarters in Washington for positive identification. Every bone in the man's body was shattered, his face blown away and his extremities scattered over a wide distance from tremendous impact of an explosive device that Spitz said was located in front of the driver on the floor board.
The doctor was unsure of how the device was detonated and did not rule out the fact that it might have been detonated from outside the car. The car was heading south from Bel Air toward Baltimore and was about a quarter of a mile in the country when the blast occurred.
State police late Tuesday released five names found on identification cards in the car wreckage. Police said a check of local police stations across the country showed persons with these names had been arrested on a variety of charges, including bombing.
The names were: William Henry Rogers, Selma, Ala., listed on a Selective Service card; Rev. C. B. Robinson, Atlanta, Ga., on
a Social Security card; on Will Rogers, Enfield, N.C., on a library card; Kacheby Robinson, on a Navy service card; and William Herman Payne, on a birth certificate from Covington, Ky.
Police said they also found a bank card listing the Afro American Society of Atlanta and the name William H. Payne.
Defense attorney Carl Broege said late Tuesday he was "99 per cent sure" the two deaths were murder. "Fatherstone was not the type of guy to travel around with explosives," Broege said.
Kunstler said Brown was reported by his wife to have left his New York home Monday for Maryland. The attorney said he had not heard from his client since, but there were reports in Bel Air that he had been seen in the vicinity since Judge Harry E. Dyer opened the trial Monday morning.
Both Kunstler and Prosecutor William Yates said they thought the explosion deaths—Kunstler called them "a bombing"—would affect the trial. Kunstler said he would revise the questions to be asked prospective jurors, and Yates said he thought the atmosphere of the town might affect witnesses.
Senate extends'65 voting act to include six Northern states
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate voted Tuesday to extend the 1965 Voting Rights Act to parts of six Northern states, including most of New York City.
At the same time, the Senate again refused to exempt any of the seven Southern states now covered by the act, rejecting an amendment which would have freed all but South Carolina and Georgia.
The Senate adopted an amendment to the proposed five-year extension of the act which would cover non-Southern counties which in the 1968 elections had less than 50 per cent of the voting age population registered or voting.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., a veteran advocate of civil rights, argued that the amendment was a "placebo . . . to make us feel better" by applying the bill nationwide.
temps to disenfranchise voters because of race, creed or color.
The amendment, offered by Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., did not affect continued coverage of the seven Southern states, but would extend coverage to three voting districts in Alaska, --, 11, 12, 16; Apache County, Ariz.; Imperial County, Calif.; Elmore County, Idaho; Wheeler County, Ore.; and the Bronx, Kings, and New York counties in New York.
Sen. Mark O. Hatfield, R-Ore., said he had called registration officials in Wheeler County and told Cooper his figures were wrong. Hatfield said he was informed that of the 1,800 voting age population, 95 per cent were registered and 72 per cent voted.
He said it was extremely unlikely that there have been at-
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield hoped for final passage Wednesday or Thursday and predicted that badly-outnumbered Southerners would not mount a desperation filibuster.
In a week of scrimmaging, Southern forces suffered six successive setbacks in their efforts to dilute the act.
"I don't want to bring witnesses up here with the townspeople upset," Yates said.
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Miller questions authority
Referendum taken off ballot
Dave Awbrey, student body president and Rick von Ende, vice-chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee (SenEx), said Wednesday night that accusations acusing Awbrey and SenEx of acting without authority in postponing six referendum questions until April 7, were false.
The accusations were made by Dave Miller; student body presidential candidate, and Dan Beck, student body vice-presidential candidate.
Miller and Beck's statement came
after the decision by SenEx Wednesday to drop the referendum questions from the March 17 and 18 student body elections.
SenEx said the referendums would be voted on in a special election April 7.
Miller and Beck said, "David Awbrey, student body president, on his own initiative ruled that students would not vote on the Wescoe Hall referendum in the March 17 and 18 elections. He did not have the power to make that decision."
Von Ende said, "David Awbrey is falsely accused of having ruled that students would not vote on Wescoe Hall."
Awbrey made the motion in the SenEx meeting to put all referendum questions on an April 7 ballot in a special referendum election. Members attending the meeting were, Phil Weiss, Philadelphia, Pa. graduate student, Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y. law student, Bill Ebert, Topeka junior, von Erde and Awbrey. The vote was four in favor, none opposed.
Miller and Beck said, "SenEx chairman George, president Awbrey, and members Ebert, von Ende, and Weiss did not have the authority to postpone the considerations of the referendum."
Von Ende said, "The Student senate executive committee has the authority provided for in the Senate Code."
The Senate code states, "The University SenEx shall ensure that all functions of the University Senate and University Council are carried
(Continued to page 20)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 97 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, March 12, 1970
Voting age discussed
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate refused Wednesday to kill a proposed amendment to the 1965 Voting Rights Act which would lower the voting age to 18 in national, state, and local elections, effective Jan. 1, 1971.
The test vote indicated solid Senate support for reducing the voting age, but there was still no indication how soon the Senate would be able to vote on the proposal itself.
Although not a single voice was raised against the idea of granting 18-year olds the vote, the Senate had been bogged down all day in its attempts to reach a decision.
After an afternoon of voting on amendments, Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., marched into the Senate and, unexpectedly, made a motion to table the amendment which was offered to the proposed five-year extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Long's proposal was beaten. 62-21.
An anticipated showdown was
blocked by Sen. James B. Allen, D-La., who offered a series of changes. Asked how many more amendments he would propose, Allen said "I will offer them one at a time."
There was no indication how many amendments Allen would offer, but at the end of his second, he told the Senate, "I hope I'll have time on subsequent amendments to conclude my remarks." Then he told reporters there would be no vote Wednesday.
Nearly everybody backed Allen's amendment to add the words "except as required by the Constitution" to the voting age proposal. The vote was 84 to 7 and advocates of the 18-year-old vote contended it would have no effect on the measure.
Allen's second amendment, which would have eliminated penalties of five years in prison or a $5,000 fine for anybody denying the vote to 18-year-olds, was soundly beaten, 66 to 22.
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, who sponsored the 18-year-old vote amendment, sat by grimly as Allen produced his hand-written amendments.
Despite overwhelming support for lowering the voting age to 18, the Mansfield proposal ran into strong opposition from senators who argued it had to be accomplished through a Constitutional amendment. They were backed by the Nixon Administration.
Arguing for his amendment, Mansfield said, "This is the only chance we've had . . . to give 18-year-olds, 19-year-olds, and 20-year-olds . . a small wee voice" in setting policy.
Rejecting argument that the Senate wait for a Constitutional amendment, Mansfield said he was not sure that would ever happen.
"Maybe we're afraid of these youngsters. Maybe they're too smart for us," Mansfield said. "Maybe they'll take some of our jobs."
Weather
Variable cloudiness and continued cold with 10 to 20 mph north winds today. Tonight, clear to partly cloudy and cold.
1111111111
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Explosions rip New York
NEW YORK—Powerful bombs ripped through the office of major corporations in three mid-Manhattan skyscrapers early today, shattering walls, windows and plumbing. No one was injured.
A special delivery letter received in United Press International's New York Bureau said a group called "Revolutionary Force 9" was responsible for the bombing attacks against the large corporations.
Moon soil kills bacteria
SPACE CENTER, Houston-A Space Agency doctor said Wednesday moon soil collected from beneath the surface at Apollo 11's Tranquility Base apparently kills three types of hardy terrestrial bacteria for unknown reasons.
Experiments performed by microbiologist, Dr. Gerald R. Taylor, showed that only the material collected from below the surface of Apollo 11's landing site appears to have a lethal effect on bacteria growing in a culture medium.
Mudslinging highlights debate
A verbal mud-slinging contest evolved out of a "Meet the Candidates" debate Wednesday night in Templin Hall, presented by KUOK, the university radio's "Night Beat" program hosted by Joe Vaughn, Kansas City, Kan. senior.
The debate was designed for interested voters to hear all the student body presidential candidates.
The two-hour debate included Peter George, ISP presidential candidate; Sharon Baucom, ISP vice-presidential candidate; Bill Ebert, Alliance presidential candidate and Dave Beck, Independent vice-presidential candidate.
The verbal battle began in response to a question on the black studies program. Ebert began by explaining the work his vice-presidential candidate, Greg Thomas, Shawnee Mission, sophomore had done by contacting black students across campus finding out their needs. Thomas is a black student. Ebert continued in saying, "There currently is a black studies program and Alliance thinks the committee on black studies program should be listened to and acted on."
At that point, Sharon Baucom, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore said, "Well, I think Greg missed the boat. Black studies began last year and I was on that committee. I agree I'd like to have more black professors and more black courses but if Greg thinks he's starting something new, he's wrong.
"If Greg's so interested he should start by coming to the black meetings and programs. I think just because Greg is black by pigmentation alone doesn't mean he's interested. It's also a state of mind." Miss Baucom said.
"The crying need." Beck said, is not for a black studies program but a black major. We need qualified black teachers
Beck accused both parties of "missing the boat."
and right now we don't have the professional people we need. First of all we need to integrate the people in educa-
sue. When the question was put to Beck he sidestepped the issue saying, "If elected, I promise to place Mr. George
tion and then we can begin a black major's program."
Rebuttal then bounced back and forth on the ecological is-
(Continued to page 20)
Blast rocks courthouse
CAMBRIDGE, Md. (UPI) Authorities sought an unidentified white woman Wednesday as the chief suspect in an early morning bombing that caused $100,000 damage to a courthouse where black militant H. Rap Brown originally was to have been tried, the governor's office announced.
A spokesman for Gov. Marvin Mandel said three witnesses had given information about an alleged getaway car and its license plates which pointed to a woman suspect.
State Police Lt. Col. Thomas Smith confirmed this and said the "white female had been
seen in the courthouse at a late hour in the afternoon yesterday just before closing."
Rumors and confusion swept Dorchester County after the blast rocked the circuit court building only 24 hours after two Negro men, one of them an associate of Brown, were killed by an explosion in a car near Bel Air, Md., 85 miles away.
Mandel ordered the historic state house in Annapolis surrounded by state police, then flew to Cambridge to confer with State's Attorney William Yates, local officials, Congressman Rogers C. B. Morton and Sen. Charles Mathias, R-Md.,
Morton's Congressional District contains Cambridge.
Yates, who is the prosecutor for the Brown trial, said he thought the latest bombing was linked to the trial, but he did not elaborate. The explosive device apparently was planted in a lady's lounge on the second floor of the stone building.
Meanwhile authorities positively identified the badly mangled second body in Monday's car explosion as William H. Payne of Atlanta, Ga., an organizer for the Student National Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and a veteran civil rights worker in Alabama and
(Continued to page 20)
Campus briefs
AURH work applications due
Applications are now available for women's personnel positions in residence halls for the 1970-71 school year.
Women who are interested should pick up an application in the Dean of Women's Office, 220 Strong Hall. All applications must be returned by March 20.
Applicants have the opportunity to specify the residence hall in which they would prefer working.
Archeology lecture planned
P. J. Riis, professor of classical archeology at the University of Copenhagen, will lecture tonight at 8 p.m. in room 112 of Blake Hall. Riis will speak on "The First Greeks in Phoenicia and Their Settlement at Sukas."
All interested persons may attend.
Summer jobs available in Europe
American students who would like to have their summer in Europe pay for itself through a summer job in Europe may apply to Summer Placement Officer, Asis. 20 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg.
Still available are 200 to 300 resort hotel jobs in Switzerland and some 850 factory, construction and hospital jobs in Germany. Room and board are included at no charge and standard Swiss and German wages are paid. Also available are 165 sales jobs in Belgium, Germany, Italy and Spain with room and board arranged at minimal cost in rooming houses, small hotels or with private families.
No previous experience is required for any of the jobs and there are no foreign language requirements for most positions.
Pi Delta Phi lecture planned
The French honorary society, Pi Delta Phi, will sponsor its second graduate colloquium at 8 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Speaker for the event will be Michel Butor, French novelist and literary critic. The title of his speech, which will be given in French, is "L'Emploi des Mots."
Film to be shown today
A film in which someone "socks it to the Beautiful People," is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium. The film, "The Exterminating Angel," was directed by famed film maker Luis Bunuel.
The plot revolves around a sumptuous dinner party to which high society is invited. Mysteriously, they find they cannot leave. Then the "fun" begins.
The film is sponsored by the Center of Latin American Studies.
Senate committee studies ROTC team teaching plan
By JIM CZUPOR Kansan Staff Writer
"There is no report," he said,
"and it has not developed because we haven't come to any agreement."
Under the team teaching plan faculty members from the regular University academic schools
Reports have indicated that a team teaching plan is being studied as a possible solution to the problem of uniting University military science courses with the existing academic departments.
Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science and chairman of the University Senate committee studying the problem, declined comment earlier this week that the team teaching plan is the essence of the proposal to be presented early in April.
Lujan's committee on ROTC programs met Monday to further consider the proposals. Lujan once again declined to comment on the meeting.
The University Printing Service printed a more subdued second edition of the Black Students Union newspaper, Harambee Wednesday under orders from the Chancellor's office.
Harambee's 2nd printing more subdued
The second issue does not contain the words that the printers objected to in the first edition. Two articles attack the actions of the Chancellor, the Left Handed Student Union and the White Student Union.
In compliance with the SenEx ruling that any publication funded by the University contain the name of the editor, the BSU newspaper masthead lists Monty Beckwith, Wichita freshman, as the managing editor.
"It creates a problem," he said, "in coming to any sort of an agreement."
He said, "We have had numerous guest lecturers before from the political science department. If this plan is adopted, we hope it will enhance our guest lecture program."
Army Colonel Philip Riedel Jr. cautioned that the team teaching plan was not that novel.
Lujan said he regretted those reports.
Lujan said the committee would have a statement after finishing the initial plan at the March 30 meeting.
Nixon orders drug research
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Citing an alarming increase in drug addiction among school children, President Nixon Wednesday ordered expanded research into the effects of marijuana and a $3.5 million training program for teachers on the dangers of drugs.
Whether or not the team teaching plan becomes a reality or not, the heads of the ROTC program agree they would like to see such a plan.
Air Force Colonel Rayburn Lancaster said, "I think it would be an extremely good idea for a short term solution. We will, however, consider other things to be done for the long term solution. I think though that it is a good solution for the short range to get academic instructors more involved in our program."
The President's order also establishes a national clearinghouse for drug abuse information under the National Institute of Mental Health which will gather and disseminate information on harmful drugs.
Caduceus Capers to be presented at Med Center
and departments and faculty members from the military science departments jointly would teach the military science courses.
"Up From the Tank She Arose," this year's musical comedy, is written, produced and directed by the 200 students at the Medical Center. The plot involves a 19th Century nurse visiting a bustling 20th century medical center.
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The 18th annual production of Caduceus Capers, presented by the nursing students at the University of Kansas Medical Center, will be at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Battenfeld Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Proceeds will be used to send delegates to state, national and international nursing conventions and to buy furnishings for the nurses dormitory.
Admission price is $1. Free baby-sitting will be provided.
2 KANSAN Mar. 12 1970
hard question to answer right now."
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"This is just one of the many courses of action we're studying," he said. "If it does come about we would have to ask certain professors if they have the time and interest to teach our courses. If so, then possibly it could go into effect next fall, but that's a
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THE FIELD COAST
The nest of the yellow-bellied sapsucker
The sun will continue to shine, but not on the KU greenhouse. The greenhouse will have to be torn down when construction on Wescoe Hall starts. It is occupying space that will be utilized for the cooling system of the new Wescoe Hall and other buildings.
France offers diplomatic aid to restore Laos' neutrality
PARIS (UPI)—France demanded Wednesday an end to all foreign intervention in the Laotian civil war and pledged diplomatic aid to restore the country's neutrality.
The appeal and pledge were made public by government spokesman Leo Hamon after a cabinet meeting presided over by President Georges Pompidou heard a report on the Laotian strife by Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann.
Although Hamon named no country, the French call appeared directed at both the United States, which has been backing the embattled central government of Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma, and North Vietnam, active supporters of the Pathet Lao Communist movement led by Prince Souphanouvong, the premier's half-brother.
France, former colonial power in Laos, is watching closely the political and military moves in the Asian kingdom, Hamon said. He said France demanded a settlement reactivating the 1962 Geneva agreement which ended an earlier protracted fighting there and established in Vientiane a short-lived national unity cabinet including leftist, neutralist and rightist factions.
"So far as France is concerned, any international solution must result in a return to the Geneva accords, their current application, a complete termination of foreign interference and the respect for Laotian neutrality," Hamon said.
Hamon said that France was
Playwrite to talk on Arabs in Israel
Mahmoud Abassi, an author and playwright, will speak on the "Co-existence and Integration of Arabs in Israel" at 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Abassi, who is a graduate of the College de Frere, has a B.A. in language and Arabic literature, linguistics and Hebrew literature. He is presently studying for his M.A. in language and Arabic language.
Mar. 12
1970 KÀNSAN 3
anxious to see Laotians restore their country's internal unity. This appeared as an indirect endorsement of Souphanouvong's offer to resume talks with Souvanna Phouma, observers said.
Hamon told newsmen, "While the French government rejects any false solution, it intends to help, when the time comes, towards a true solution. France welcomes any move that goes in this direction."
Flower power wilts
KU greenhouses to close
By JIM RYUN Kansan staff writer
Flowers, plants and foliage torgraduation, faculty offices and banquets will no longer be provided by the University of Kansas greenhouses if the present plan for their demolition is completed.
The greenhouses are tucked behind Flint Hall and located on a sloping hill surrounded by buildings. But some students have been able to find the hidden structure and frequently tour them.
Mrs. Sader said that boys most often come and would identify plants and flowers with the phrase: "my mother had one of those." She said boys also come
"Students often come to sit and relax between classes," said Mrs. Ralph Sader whose husband is florist for the University greenhouses.
Rep. John Hayes, R-Hutchinson, proposed the amendment to an otherwise minor bill cleaning language in state highway safety statutes. It was adopted on a vote of 55-31
TOPEKA (UPI) - An amendment was adopted by the Kansas House Wednesday to require only motorcycle riders under 21 to wear helmets.
The bill as a whole gained preliminary approval. If it is passed, it must be returned to the Senate for concurrence in the Hayes amendment before it goes to the governor.
House adopts amendment on helmets
for advice about what kind of flowers would look best in their apartments.
The present law requires all motorcycle riders to wear helmets as a safety measure.
"Students read in books about plant growth, but they want to see it." Ralph Sader said, "so they stop in every two or three weeks and observe."
But the greenhouse will have to be torn down when Wescoe Hall construction begins. The present greenhouse location and 30 feet deep will be utilized for large cooling units to serve several buildings including Wescoe Hall.
The new humanities building, Wescoe Hall, will not be the entire reason for demolition of the greenhouse. Keith Lawton, vicechancellor for operations, said they were being torn down because of their age and inefficiency. He said that new greenhouses would not be re-built.
"It is no longer economical to propagate flowers," Lawton said, "and we will begin to purchase them."
Lawton said the long range plans were to capsulate as many cooling units as possible to serve numerous buildings. He said that once completed they could serve Wescoe, Malott and Flint Halls and a new physical science building.
Curator of birds to dedicate hall
Robert M. Mengel, associate professor of systematics and ecology and curator of birds in the Museum of Natural History at KU will be the main speaker for the dedication of the new Life Sciences Building at the University of Louisville, April 17.
Mengel, a native of Louisville, is the author of "The Birds of Kentucky," published in 1965, which has had favorable reviews both at home and abroad.
But maybe life at the greenhouse was doomed long before Wescoe Hall was being considered.
Harold Blitch, grounds supervisor, said there had been several accidents involving the greenhouse. He said that once a Coca Cola truck driver had failed to tighten his hand brake securely while servicing the Coke machines, and the truck plowed into the greenhouse. A similar incident occurred with a janitor.
Even the students have contributed to the accidents. He said that a few students had failed to set their hand brake firmly or through some other mishap had permitted the car to roll down the hill and stop in the green-
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KANSAN COMMENT
Eclectic Union
By GARY PETERSON
Kansan Correspondent
Like all college Union buildings, the Kansas Union should be a place for student recreation and relaxation—the hub of student life. It should be the brick-and-mortar exponent of institutional spirit. But the Kansas Union is neither, in large part because of its undefined and uncoordinated esthetic values.
Since its birth in 1927, five separate sections have been added to the original structure. All of them reveal the designers' apparent preoccupation with conservative economics combined with a tendency toward heroic simplicity.
Profligate student funds have been employed in a half-hearted attempt to make it an artistic edifice. Yet the latest addition, completed last fall, exemplifies the Union's utter failure as an architectural monument.
The financial plight of Kansas' colleges and universities is evidence that adequate funds cannot be obtained for buildings that are pleasing to the eye as well as functional. Witness the original 25-story conception of Wescoe Hall in contrast to the final four-story plans for the structure.
But it does seem that, while pumping $4.6 million into the Union during a 43-year period, someone could have come up with a better
THE MUNICIPAL CENTRAL HOSPITAL
architectural solution to the expansion problem than that which we see today. Much of the responsibility for the appearance of the Union lies with Robert Mann and Co. of Hutchinson, designers of three of the five additions and Charles Marshall, Kansas state architect.
It is difficult to label the Union's architectural style, although individual sections do have certain characteristics which makes labeling them possible, but not feasible.
The original building (the one with the dissimilar cupolas) might be called Late Renaissance, although it was conceived in 1926. A one-story addition to the north side in 1947 might be called Kansas Gothic.
In 1927, construction began on a wing which raised the north side to five stories. A new south wing was thrown in for the $1.5 million bargain. After a great deal of trouble by the planners, the Board of Regents presented KU with the completed wings: a Gothic section to the north and a combination of Modern and Late Renaissance to the south. Increasing enrollment brought pleas for more space at the Union, so in 1959-60 a six-story extension on the west was constructed. High Renaissance architecture was the theme in the architects'
office those years. By the time of the fifth addition, it might have been thought the appearance of the structure was so far gone that, try as the architects might, they could not produce another style of architecture. But they did—$1 million in Romanesque and French Renaissance architecture positioned at the northwest corner.
It seems that the architects' inharmonious efforts followed the concept of "form follows function" at the expense of form. This is clear to many of those who have seen the progression of the Union since its early days. One of these is Tom Yoe, director of the KU News Bureau, who says: "Its massiveness is good, but I won't argue its beauty. Though its appearance is intriguing, the working space came before the outside looks."
With such limited time for the average student to seek a cultural education anyway, it seems a shame to deprive him of at least relaxing in surroundings where he can absorb that culture unconsciously.
The Union's popularity has decreased with respect to the proportional size of the student body since its services first went into operation. Perhaps one reason is an underlying resentment of its appearance. No longer does it attract many dances and similar social functions, or students trying to escape the heat of a midsummer afternoon (it was once the only air-conditioned building on campus).
If there is a justification for the gross absence of proper architectural form in the Union, in the guise of functional qualities, then let this functional totality be examined. Take for example, the two cupolas on the main building roof. According to Frank Burge, Union director, they were for "architectural ornamentation, but seem to serve no other purpose now than to attract pigeons. If you can figure out a way to get rid of the things, I'll buy you a malted-milk."
The best answer to getting rid of the pigeons is to get rid of the cupolas. Another prime example of wasted space is the niche on the southwest corner of the Union. It would seem to be suitable for a statue—or better yet, a baptismal font. But it has never contained anything. It is difficult to determine whether the staircase on the northwest corner of the latest addition was intended to be a functional entry or exit, or a fire escape. If it is an entry, it provides poor access from the ground level of the main building (near the Hawk's Nest). If it is a fire escape for Woodruff Auditorium, the user takes his life in his hands, because the bottom door opens blindly onto the driveway.
The Union appears the way it does now—as the entire KU campus appears the way it does now—because there has never been a master plan adopted for the building design at KU. That the campus has been here a long time and no one could forsee when or where new buildings would be needed is an inadequate excuse. The University of Colorado has been in existence since 1875, nine years after KU was founded, yet architecturally it is a model university because it has always had a master plan and followed it.
The architecture of the buildings should typify KU's unique topography. Accordingly, the Union should have had a distinctive architecture worthy of its setting on The Hill.
Certainly nothing can be done about the Union's present architectural state. The purpose of questioning the reasons behind its appearance is so that, in the future, someone else may question plans for buildings. At this time, three new buildings are planned for KU. What will these look like once they are built and additions made?
Griff & the Unicorn
BY SOKOLOFF
SOMETHING BUGBING YOU, PAL?
I'M SORT OF WORRIED
WE WORRY AS THOUGH WE HAD A THOUSAND YEARS TO LIVE,LET US RATHER ALWAYS STRIVE AFTER THE GENTLE HUMOR OF THE HEART,WHICH KNOWS HOW TO SMILE AT THE WORLD,AT OUR FELLOW MEN, AND AT ITSELF, AND WHICH CAN STAND A LITTLE ABOVE THINGS!
...GETS HIM EVERY TIME...
David Sokoloff 1970
hearing voices—
To the editor:
I am writing this letter in response to that of Mr. Alan L. Moser in the March 9th issue of the UDK. I write for no black student other than myself. In responding, I'd like to go down Mr. Moser's letter pointing out some things I think he—and others like him—should do more thinking about.
He opens by saying that there was a time when the black man "deserved" the right to demand more than he had. By this Mr. Moser implies that the black man no longer deserves this right. I submit that had the black man waited until whites like Mr. Moser thought he deserved his rights, he would still be picking cotton today. If you do not believe me, take a look at the American Indian. He has been waifing. What will he have to do before he deserves the right to demand more than he has now? Turn white?
Mr. Moser then says that blacks have overreacted. Obviously he doesn't know any black history. If he did he would be asking himself in amazement why blacks hadn't risen and burnt this country down by now. God save the country the day blacks decide to dish out EQUALLY the stuff they have been fed all these years.
Moving on to Mr. Moser's questions, he asks how can a group like the BSU expound on moral obligations when, by the printing of "obscenity," they show that they have no moral conscience. Firstly, Mr. Moser, I measure a persons morality by how he acts toward myself and others, and not by how he expresses himself. Secondly, obscenity is relative. Lastly, I am willing to bet that some of the majority's most "moral" leaders use "obscenities." Ask the guy who read Richard Daley's lips at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.
Mr. Moser then asks, would I like to have my child find a loose Harambee with which to sharpen his reading skill. Well, Mr. Moser, I think I'd rather have my child read a Harambee or a Vortex as opposed to the distorted garbage your type of people have called factual history for hundreds of years. I'd rather have my child take on a few "obscenities" than be swamped by tons of distorted records of his people.
The next question is, "Can you seriously and responsibly justify why non-black girls must compete in a field of hundreds for a pompon position while black girls need only compete among ten or twenty?" Strange. After all these years the white majority is concerned with FAIRNESS. It's most refreshing. Blacks will have to try it one day—once the scales of justice have been balanced to give us an equal footing.
Mr. Moser then asks if he and his peers had confiscated UDK's, would they not have been thrown out of school. I don't know. Mr. Moser will have to ask the Chancellor about that. All I can say is that had black men attacked a bus filled with white children, chances are they would not be on bail today.
Next question: "is there any justifiable reason why non-blacks must adhere strictly to the rules and blacks need not." Outside of being black in this racist country, show me a rule broken by a black man, not broken by a white man.
Concerning the recruitment of black students to this campus. KU now has nearly 800 foreign students enrolled. There are only about 400 black students. Think about it. This situation exists at a university right smack dab in the middle of the United States. I see no reason why this university should not go out and help us reach-at the minimum—the enrollment level of the foreign students.
Lastly, Mr. Moser asks, "Is it not a radically racist attitude when positions on any staff are filled according to their color and not their merits?" I couldn't agree with you more Mr. Moser. Now go back to your white racist employers and construction union officials, and tell them how you and I feel about their practices.
As long as inequities exist—and they do Mr. Moser—civil rights can never be overshot. They can only be undermined
Jerold Kenrick James Jamaica, N.Y., senior
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Igor Stravinsky—Beethoven of our time
Editor's note: The University of Kansas Symphony Orchestra will perform Stravinsky's "Firebird Suite" as part of its concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in University Theatre.
By JIM BARNES
Kansan Correspondent
Paris, May 29, 1913: Concert-goers filter in to the Paris Opera House, awaiting the world premiere of a work by a brash new Russian composer who has garnered the city's musical attention with his first two ballets performed by the Ballet Russe.
In the pit, an oversized orchestra tunes its "A." Behind the normal ballet string section sits a huge wind and percussion section. The lights dim and applause greets the conductor entering the pit.
And now, the curtain. Drab, pagan-like scenery fills the stage; the orchestra begins, but the music is thin for an opening—just a solo bassoon whose thin, eery sounds conjure an almost perverted feeling in the audience's minds.
Soon other double reeds enter.
Are they all playing in the same kev? Is this music correct?
Catcalls echo from the balcony and student section; soon there is a bonafide "Boo!" followed by many more.
Camille Saint-Saens rises to leave in disgust and people jump to their feet to scream insults at the stage. Claude Debussey stands to plead with the audience to be still so the performance can be heard. Maurice Ravel suddenly leaps from his seat and cries "Genius!" above the cacophony in the hall.
The police rush in, while, at a corner of the stage, a slender young Russian with thick spectacles and a stubby moustache appears.
"Go to hell!" he screams directly at the audience. Retreating backstage, he leaps out a side window and escapes down the alley to avoid his "fans."
So went the world premiere of one of the monumental compositions of the 20th century, "The Rite of Spring," by the same controversial composer who hurled expletives at his audience that spring night in Paris—Igor Stravinsky.
"The Rite of Spring," along with Debussy's "Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun," was instrumental in breaking off the style of the 19th century composers and in forcing the search
which led to what we now call modern music.
Igor Fyodorovitch Stravinsky was born June 17, 1882, in Oranienbaum, Russia. His father was the principal bass singer in the St. Petersburg Opera. Many musical celebrities of the 1880's and 1890's were house guests of the Stravinskys and Igor absorbed the musical atmosphere with verve.
He began piano at 9 years of age and soon was studying full scores of new operas and symphonies—more regularly, in fact, than his studies at school, of which he later remarked, "I was singularly inept."
At 17, he began, through a bit of hook-and-crook by his father, his study under Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov, one of the most noted composers of the time. As a student of Rimsky-Korsakov, Stravinsky composed his first two nearly mature works, the "Symphony in E Flat" and "Scherzo Fantastique." A third piece dedicated to Rimsky-Korsakov, "Fireworks," became Stravinsky's springboard to success. "Scherzo Fantastique" and "Fireworks" were played at a concert in St. Petersburg shortly after Rimsky-Korsakov's death and were considered mild successes.
But there was an impressario in the audience at that performance who liked what he had heard and thought that he had a place in his ballet troupe for the young Stravinsky. Serge Diageev, the impresario, soon commissioned a full ballet from Stravinsky called the "Firebird." When Stravinsky played the first draft of it to Diagiliev on the piano and a friend, Diagiliev said to his friend, "Remember this young man. He is about to become world famous!"
Diagliev was right. "The Firebird" was a sensation when it was premiered June 15, 1910, by the Russian Ballet Russe, and the suites derived from it by the composer have long since become favorites of concert audiences around the world. Although his music vaguely like that of Rimsky-Korsakov and the Russian Peter Tchaikovskiy, Stravinsky has begun an original style that would sweep the world with its stark, brutal, ultra-rhythmic style sound.
Stravinsky overnight became a world figure and composed success after success, not only ballets, but such diverse endeavors as chamber music and opera. The t tumultuous premiere of "The Rite of Spring" was not, in the end, a failure for Stravinsky; rather, it made him at the very least infamous. People didn't necessarily like what they heard, but they listened; and this is a much more enviable position for a serious composer.
Igor Stravinsky
The three early ballets, "The Firebird," "Petrouchka," and "The Rite of Spring," are still Stravinka's most famous works. And of these three, the best known and most performed is the suite from "The Firebird." It was the fifth most frequently-played composition by major U.S. symphony orchestras in 1969. No matter how many times one hears this work, it never loses its flash, color and subtle beauty.
'Riding Hood' appears as classical opera parody
Stravinsky proceeded from this early period of "primitivism" to the style of "Neo-Classicism," the bland, simple-yet-complex style that marked his "L'Histoire du Soldat," the "Octet for Winds," the "Symphony of Psalms," the "Symphony in C" and his best-known opera, "The Rake's Progress" (performed at KU in 1968).
Styron honored
NEW YORK (UPI) - The Howells Medal, the nation's highest award for fiction, was given Wednesday to 44-year-old William Styron for his controversial novel "The Confessions of Nat Turner." The award is given only once every five years by the American Academy of Arts and Letters for the most distinguished work of fiction produced in that period. Styron's best-seller, based on a pre-civil war uprising of southern Negroes, was published in 1967.
"Little Red Riding Hood," a satirical operetta for children, will be presented March 14 and 15 at the Westminster Center. Written by Seymour Barab, the operetta is a satire on stories and plays which talk down to children. It is a parody on classical opera style.
Mar. 12
1970 KANSAN 5
He is notorious among publishers for driving a hard bargain. They feel he would write anything "if paid enough." In fact, he once wrote a ballet for dancing elephants for the Barn- and Baily circus.
Mrs. Bill Meikle, who has had experience with childrens' theatre and community theatres in Texas, is directing the production. She helped produce the operetta when it was performed by the Musicians Club of Midland. Tex. "It was such a success" she said, "that the troupe presented it on a tour of Texas grade schools."
Mrs. Meikle said college students would probably enjoy the play because of its satirical quality.
The cast for the production is made up of music education and theater voice majors at KU.
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Stravinsky has an odd sense of humor and has said, "My music is best understood by children and animals." This complex man has succeeded by contradicting the norm. He always could see the need for change in his field and did more than talk about it; he changed it.
It seems to this writer that one factor places Stravinsky at the fore of all his contemporaries: He has the power to set the mood of a composition from the very first sound and, regardless of whether it is an early ballet or one of his recent works, the listener feels confident that he is in the grip of a master.
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The golden fleece?
Somewhere in the wilderness surrounding Lawrence stands this tree, and from it hangs the golden fleece. It is written that he who finds the tree and slays the fiery dragon guarding it shall be exalted among his peers. He may even get an "A" in mythology.
FT. RILEY (UPI)—Sensitivity training has reached the United States Army, Ft. Riley officers revealed today, adding that "for many it came as a shock."
Officers learn to be sensitive
An unnamed company commander was quoted as saying afterward, in apparent seriousness and unaware of what he implied, that the sessions taught him that "the enlisted man is actually more human than I had given him credit."
Described as perhaps the first of their kind in the Army, the sessions were conducted by chaplains of the 24th Infantry Division as a pilot project. It was planned after a service-wide letter from Maj. Gen. Kenneth G. Wickham, adjutant general, reporting that men who went AWOL or deserted indicated that a "recurring reason" was the apparent lack of interest by commanding officers in the individual soldier's problems.
In one sensitivity session company commanders were given simple, detailed, but not deceptive verbal directions for the construction of a geometric pattern and were not permitted to ask questions. None were able to construct the simple pattern correctly and each became increasingly frustrated. When the test was tried a second time, with questions permitted, frustration ended and the same men
Health conference slated
The First National Student Conference on Community Health will be held at the University of Kansas Medical Center, March 14-15. Mrs.Patricia C. Nelson, administrative director has announced.
The conference is sponsored by the National Student AMA, but will be an interdisciplinary conference with cooperation by the National Student Nurses Association, the Student American Dental Association and the Student Pharmaceutical Association through the National Coalition of Student Professional Organizations.
Plans are being made for about 500 health science students to attend the program, which will concentrate on such areas as rural health programs, urban health, health education environmental health and population dynamics. The bulk of the program will consist of small group workshops in these areas of special interest.
The goal of the conference program is to increase the knowledge in the area of community health to those students who are actively involved or interested in community health activities. Its
6 KANSAN Mar. 12
1970
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objectives are to provide an overview of the status of health care, to discuss the current programs which are designed to improve health care delivery and to study past and current direct student efforts so that new and
The Medical Center in Kansas City was chosen to host the conference because it is a model student health community project, said Mrs. Nelson.
improved approaches might be developed.
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were able to complete the pattern successfully.
In another phase of the program, a company commander played the role of a private first class with a serious personal problem and was forced to face a commanding officer who was more absorbed in his own problems than those of the men he was counseling. Try as he might, the pseudo Pfc. was unable to bring his problem before the officer, who kept intervening with remarks on such subjects as the enlisted man's haircut, his accent and performance during the last week's training.
One session opened with a chaplain telling the participating commanders that "A life was not intended to be used the way the Army has been using it. You care more for the vehicles in your motor pool than the men under your command. You have the attitude that a man can be replaced but a truck can't."
No assessment of the success of the program was offered but more workshops would be scheduled, to encompass all remaining units in the division.
Bank president asks widow to return gift
CHICAGO (UPI)—Richard Mix was shot in the head during a holdup of the Gateway National Bank. When he died the bank gave the widow of the slain guard $913.02—a month's salary.
Then the bank's new president, George P. Poulas, called Mrs. Mix in and demanded the money back, saying it was all a "mistake." The 39-year-old mother of three returned the gift.
Wednesday bank officials agreed to return the money.
"It's not our fault if a guy gets his head shot off. I can't help that," Poulas told newsmen who quoted him about the matter.
The money was given to Mrs. Mix by the bank's former acting president, Kenneth Peterson.
When Poulas called her in last month, Mrs. Mix said, he told her that Peterson had no authority to give her the money, that if she wanted to collect on her husband's insurance she would have to return it, and that hospitalization for the dead guard had cost more than $900.
Poulas then presented her with a check drawn on her account for the $913.02 and told her to sign it, Mrs. Mix said. That was the net salary her husband would have earned that month as a guard and maintenance man.
"Nobody gets paid anything for services not rendered," Poulas said.
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Creator of 'Perry Mason'
Erle Stanley Gardner dies at age 80
TEMECULA, Calif. (UPI) — Mystery writer Erle Stanley Gardner, who drew on 25 years of courtroom experience to create Perry Mason, the fictional lawyer who never lost a case, died Wednesday at his home at the age of 80.
The author of more than 100
detective and Western stories was released from Riverside Community Hospital last month where he was undergoing treatment for an undisclosed illness.
Peggy Downs, Gardner's sister-in-law, said he died at 11:05 a.m. at his ranch home in Riverside County. His wife said earlier he
Two planes hijacked in separate incidents
By United Press International
Hijackers commanded two big jetliners Wednesday—one in the United States and the other in South America—and ordered Colombian hijacking was delayed because of mechanical difficulties.
The hijackings were the fourth and fifth of the year in the Western Hemisphere.
The first hijacking happened when a single gunman forced his way into the cockpit of United Air Lines' flight 361, en route from Cleveland to West Palm Beach, with intermediate stops in Atlanta, Ga. and Tampa, Fla. There were 99 passengers on the big Boeing 727 jet and a crew of seven.
The jet touched down in Atlanta at 10:04 to refuel, then 32 minutes later took off toward Cuba. During the tense refueling, a single fuel truck drove to a remote section of runway at the busy airport and gassed the plane.
None of the passengers were allowed to leave the plane in Atlanta. FBI agents and detectives swarmed through the terminal, but a United spokesman., Jim Ramsey, said they had "strict orders" to stay away from the plane."
The plane returned to Miami at 6:37 p.m.
An Avianca airliner with 78 persons on board was hijacked
The crew exchanged only routine conversation with the control tower while the plane was on the ground. When the craft took off for Havana, all outbound traffic at the airport stopped.
was recovering from a number of minor ailments, but denied reports he was ill with cancer.
Battenfeld places first in college bowl contest
Battenfeld scholarship hall took first place in the 1970 intramural College Bowl competition held at KU Sunday. Kappa Sigma fraternity placed second and Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity finished third.
The members of the Battenfeld team were Myrl Duncan, Paola senior; John Brown, Hoisington senior; John McRoberts, Derby junior; and Jim Beckman, Concordia junior.
Twenty-seven groups were entered in the competition. Each group had four members plus one alternate.
Mar. 12
1970 KANSAN 7
Gardner, who dictated his thrillers to seven secretaries, ground out the Perry Mason mysteries so fast he never spent more than 30 minutes roughing out his plot.
while flying from Bogota, Colombia to Barranquilla. The plane landed at Cartagena, apparently only to refuel and remained on the ground only five minutes.
The plane touched down later at Barranquilla, took on still more gas, and took off again for Cuba. But minutes out of Barranquilla, Capt. Sinofoso Gutierrez, the pilot, radioed that the plane had mechanical problems."
Again the plane set down in Barranquilla, where it was confirmed there were four hijackers, apparently armed with explosives. They threatened to blow up the craft unless officials at the airport "collaborated" to repair a faulty hydraulic landing gear.
The needed part was being flown in from Cartagena.
Murphy said transportation for the demonstration would be arranged through SUA. He added the demonstration in Kansas City did not rule out the possibility of anti-war activity in Lawrence during the same week in April.
Anti-draft week war rally planned by student mobe
Fred Murphy, Fayette, Mo. sophomore, said although other area colleges are in favor of the demonstration final plans would not be made until the regional SMC meeting Sunday in Kansas City.
Plans also were outlined for an Anti-draft Week March 16-22. Murphy said actions during the week would be directed toward the Lawrence Draft Board and local Army recruiters.
At a Student Mobilization Committee meeting last night in the Kansas Union, SMC members voted in favor of staging a mass anti-war demonstration April 15 in Kansas City including antiwar groups from Kansas and Missouri.
Plans for Mar. 19 include a vigil in front of the local draft board and harassment of draft board employees and Army recruiters. Murphy said harassment would include interfering with telephone calls and personal visits.
"The purpose of the Anti-draft Week activities is to gain support for the mass demonstration in Kansas City," Murphy said.
As well as the Mason series, Gardner also wrote detective stories under the pen names of A. A. Fair, Charles J. Kenny and Carleton Kendra.
miller
beck
His books sold more than 100 million copies, and the Perry Mason television shows starring Raymond Burr made his name almost synonymous with courtroom theatrics.
Born July 17, 1889 in Malden, Mass., the son of a mining engineer, Gardner decided to become a lawyer after a district attorney warned him he was breaking the law by taking part in a series of unlicensed amateur boxing exhibitions.
Gardner studied law in the offices of several of the best trial lawyers he could find and was admitted to the state bar of California when he was 21.
He practiced law in Oxnard and Ventura, Calif., for 10 years before he began writing short stories at night.
gan writing full-time, pouring out 20,000 words a day and six books a year. At one time he said his books were selling "at a rate of around two thousand an hour."
He wrote the first Perry Mason book in 1932 and eventually be-
Moynihan note says Vietnam war is lost
WASHINGTON (UPI) —White House adviser Daniel P. Moynihan told President Nixon that the Vietnam War was lost, he should end the draft, and that lower class Negroes should be upgraded to a stable working class.
The text of his memorandum to Nixon, dated Jan. 3 1969, was disclosed by the Newark News and New York Times-the second such "leak" to a newspaper of a Moynihan memo in the two weeks. In the first, which the Times reported, he suggested that Nixon treat Negroes with "benign neglect," continuing to promote their progress but with less rhetoric.
In the second memo—actually
written a year before the first one that became public Moynihan said American society suffered from disunity mostly because of the Vietnam War and the "Negro revolution." But, he said, the nation had remained stable principally because of the "great prosperity of the 1960s."
For that reason, Moynihan advised, "The single most important task is to maintain the rate of economic expansion. If a serious economic recession were to come along to compound the controversies of race, Vietnam and cultural alienation, the nation could indeed approach instability."
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Work continues on Malott addition
Perched atop the partially-completed addition to Malott Hall, two men continue construction work on the building. The addition is scheduled for completion this spring.
LAS VEGAS (UPI)—A mass exodus of gamblers and tourists from this desert resort town began Wednesday as the famed "Strip" was hit by its first major strike.
Las Vegas hit by walk-out
The Culinary and Bartenders Union began walking out of the hotels, starting with Howard Hughes' Desert Inn, shortly after 2 a.m. and token picket lines were set up at the resorts.
By midmorning the airports were jammed, traffic on the arteries leading out of town was heavy and vacationers were carrying their own baggage out of the swank hotels. Gambling trickled nearly to a halt.
Shows at all the affected hotels were cancelled and most resorts were refusing to take reservations. An estimated $1.5 million is paid out by the hotels each week for entertainment.
The 14,000-member union voted Tuesday night to reject management's last offer of a 25 per cent wage and fringe benefit package.
Some 6,000 other "Strip" employees were expected to refuse to cross picket lines, including the showgirls, musicians and security guards who watch the money.
Lee Shaw, attorney for the Nevada Resort Association, said all 16 member hotels locked out striking union members, because "we consider a picket line at one of the association's members the same as a picket line at all the hotels."
Only three of the major hotels—the Riviera, the Circus Circus and the Bonanza—were unaffected by the strike, because they do not belong to the resort association and previously agreed to union terms. They reported brisk
business.
Al Bramlet, president of the executive board of the union, blamed the stalemate in negotiations on the "big four" who he said wanted to break unions. He referred to the multiple ownerships of Howard Hughes, Kirk Kerkorian, Parvin Dohrmann Corp., and Del Webb.
Bramlet predicted the strike would "be a long one."
The unions asked for a 35 per cent wage increase over a three-year period.
English professor to write Gilbert and Sullivan articles
John Bush Jones, assistant professor of English at KU, has been commissioned by the Encyclopedia Americana to write three articles dealing with Gilbert and Sullivan for the 1971 revised edition.
Jones organized the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company. He and his wife are now
preparing for the International Conference on Gilbert and Sullivan to be held at KU May 8 and 9, during which the Mount Oread Company will present "The Grand Duke."
Singapore became an independent nation Aug. 9, 1965.
Senate bill to clarify KU-WSU affiliation
The Kansas Senate sent to Gov. Robert Docking Monday Senate Bill 398 which makes it clear that Wichita State University is not a branch of the University of Kansas.
Sen. T. R. Van Sickle, R-Fort Scott, said Wednesday that the affiliation between KU and WSU was created when the debate took place over admission of Wichita State, then a municipal university, to the state system. At that time, it was decided that WSU would be an associate of KU.
Under the present law, the chancellor of KU and the Board of Regents share authority for selection of the WSU president. The universities are also associates in doctoral work.
Senate Bill 398 strikes sections
Nixon 'to ignore' blacks
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., charged Wednesday that the Nixon Administration has made a "cold calculated political decision" to ignore the needs of blacks as part of a strategy to win re-election in 1972.
The Senate's only Negro said that he and other Republicans are "deeply concerned about the lack of commitment to equal opportunities for all people."
Mar. 12
1970 KANSAN 9
of the statutes which state that WSU is an associate of KU and that the president of WSU shall be appointed with the approval of the chancellor of KU.
Iraq agrees to end war with Kurds
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)—Iraq announced agreement with rebellious Kurdish tribesmen Wednesday and an end to their nine-year war.
President Ahmed Hassan Al-Bakr, in a nationwide radio and television broadcast, declared the Kurds would be given "autonomy within the framework of the Iraqi Republic."
It was the first time the word "autonomy" has been used in any agreement with the Kurds. Self-rule for their northern ethnic region has been their basic demand since the 1.5 million Iraqi Kurds rebelled in March 191.
Bakr, in a 15-point declaration, listed other concessions which informed political sources described as "extremely generous" to the Kurds.
Earlier Wednesday the official Iraqi news agency (INA) announced that fighting between Kurds and government troops had stopped.
SUA INTERVIEWS
COMMITTEE POSITIONS For Kansas Relays' Concert
Sign up at SUA Office by Monday, March 16
Visit the Colonel
Colonel Sanders uses eleven herbs and spices to make his Kentucky Fried Chicken.
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Regent appointment made
Henry Bubb, Topeka financier, had his reappointment to the Board of Regents confirmed by the Kansas Senate Monday. The Senate also confirmed three other appointees of Gov. Robert Docking for positions on the Regents
Besides Bubb, those formally
confirmed to the Regents were Elmer Jackson, Kansas City, Kan., William Danenbarger, Concordia, and Paul R. Wunsch, Kingman.
The Senate Education Committee went into a closed session to vote on the four appointees last week. After the session, Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Mountridge and
committee chairman, said the vote was unanimous to recommend Senate approval on all of the Docking appointees except Jackson. Jackson, first Negro appointee to the board, drew one dissenting vote.
The Senate approved the appointment with a 37-0 vote of the 40 man body.
Indian excavation finds projectiles
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UPI)—A sociology professor and 25 students and naturalists have uncovered the site of a nomadic Indian culture near the Connecticut River Valley which may date back to 1300 B.C.
Prof. Robert E. Lowie, assistant professor of sociology at the American International College who lead the expedition, said: "Vague rumors about the site have been floating around for years." He and his associates turned those rumors into facts when they started to survey and excavate the site.
"Actually there are two sites," said Lowrie. "On the first site we found very little and eventually abandoned it. A quarter-mile away from the first one we began intensive work." Most of the artifacts were found at the second site.
Pottery and tool fragments were found along with traces of fire pits and remnants of hut-type dwellings.
The work was done by volunteers who dug about three days a week. Some of the objects were found as close as two inches below the ground other as deep as 15 inches.
"The indians who lived here probably were a cultural type whose existence dates from 1300 to 1000 B.C. exact dates have not been determined."
The inhabitants did not use bows and arrows but pointed projectiles made of stone, Lowrie said.
The site is 200 feet deep and has a 150-foot frontage. Lowrie expects to continue the work over the next two years.
Police quell racial disturbance
"It is not known whether they were planters. If they were, they probably did their planting down the river since the soil from the excavated area is of poor planting quality," Lowrie said.
Officers confiscated a quantity of cherry bombs, three steel pipes of varying length and pellets for air pistols.
The disturbance was quelled quickly after seven officers entered the building while others stood watch outside and a helicopter overhead maintained surveillance.
School authorities using the public address system instructed all students either to return to their classes or leave the building and go home. Most left, police said.
Mar. 12
1970 KANSAN 11
KANSAS CITY (UPI)—Police arrested "approximately 10" juveniles in a disturbance Wednesday at racially troubled East High School. No injuries were reported.
Betting bill lobbying under investigation
TOPEKA (UPI) — Gov. Robert B. Docking and legislative leaders Wednesday night announced an investigation into "serious accusations and innuendoes" raised about lobbying activities involving the pari-mutuel betting bill.
The governor's advisory committee on governmental ethics will make the investigation. Former U.S. Sen. Frank Carlson is chairman of the panel which includes several former Kansas governors.
The statement was issued after the governor met with several legislators to discuss news accounts and rumors surrounding the bill.
It said "serious accusations" have been raised concerning the bill. "The people's trust and confidence in their government and their elected officials should be maintained. The people have a right to know all facts involved in this controversy."
"The necessary legislation is being prepared which will give the committee legal powers necessary to gather testimony and records," it said.
The statement also said the committee will be given authority to hire an investigator.
Rumors allege $30,000 was delivered to a lobbyist for the bill and invitations extended to some state legislators by a senator supporting the bill to make a trip to South Africa.
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Campus Interviews
The KU School of Business has announced its final interview schedule for the semester. All interested students should sign up in room 202 in Summerfield Hall.
Monday: Commerce Bancshares, BS, MS, MBA in business management, trainees in areas of commercial lending, business development; Continental Can Co, BS-Business, BA-Liberal Arts, accounting trainees, sales and marketing trainees; Kennedy and Coe., staff positions in accounting firm (summer work for seniors and graduate students); Montgomery Ward, BS-Business, accounting, BA-Liberal Arts, data processing; Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp, BS-Business, Liberal Arts, sales; Thunderbird Graduate School of International Management, program designed to train graduates of American colleges and universities for service abroad.
Tuesday: Haskins & Sells, MBA or BS with accounting major (summer program); The Maytag Co., BS-Business, BA-Liberal Arts, marketing and sales, accounting, home economics; Pan American Petroleum Corp., BS or MS in computer science or math, other disciplines with a minimum of 15 hours of math; Vick Chemical Co., MBA, BS, or BA-Liberal Arts for marketing career (summer employment for juniors and first year MBA candidates).
Wednesday: Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S., BS, MS, MBA, business, math, marketing, accounting, economics, and finance (summer trainee program); Pet Inc., MBA, finance, finance analyst, accounting, BS, accounting; County of Los Angeles (Dept. of personnel), BS, MS, MBA in accounting, auditor, social worker; Roche Laboratories, BS, MS, MBA-Business, BA-Liberal Arts, sales (summer work for juniors).
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The Captain's Table Rejected This One!
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George is a tough, dirty, obstreperous, old pig. He's real groovy . . .
but just too fat and tuff. As you can see, George smokes too. You've
heard of smoked ham. (Bad pun!)
Ace Johnson, the owner of the Captain's Table, flatly refuses to serve his customers anything but the best dinners. That means he buys only the best steaks and ham. Of course that rules out George.
George is a real ham at parties and loves to groove to the latest blues of Janis Joplin. He's a right-type-of-guy but a wrong-type-of-ham.
Dinner at the Captain's Table is between 8: P.M. and 2:30 A.M. If you order Baked Ham, rest assured, its not George you are eating. You might like to try one of the Captain's Table steaks. They weren't George's either.
The
The Captain's Table Across the street from Lindley Hall
--money, never trailed as Clem Haskins paced the club with 23 points, one more than teammate Chet Walker. John Block led San Diego with 33. Elvin Hayes, the defending scoring champion, was held to 15 points.
SHORT SHOTS
--money, never trailed as Clem Haskins paced the club with 23 points, one more than teammate Chet Walker. John Block led San Diego with 33. Elvin Hayes, the defending scoring champion, was held to 15 points.
By GALEN BLAND
Kansan Sports Writer
The basketballs bounced all day Wednesday in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium as the National Intercollegiate Basketball Tournament completed its second round. Pro stars Dick Barnett, Willis Reed and Lucius Jackson have come from this tournament so it is usually well scouted by the professional teams.
Stephen F. Austin University of Nacogdoches, Tex., has been rated the number one team all year in the NAIA polls. They are the number one seeded team and most experts expect them to go all the way.
Wednesday night Austin risked their 32 consecutive victories against Augusta College of Georgia. Augusta was not rated high in the pre-tournament polls even though they had lost only two games this year.
Austin started 7-foot, 250-pound George Johnson at center. The awesome cager was first team All-American last year but managed only 11.2 points a game in the current season. At the forwards they have the Polnick twins, Ervin and Marvin. Both are 6-6 and average about 13 points a game.
One of the twins usually starts the game on the bench because third team All-American Surry Oliver is a stalwart on both offense and defense. Wednesday night, however, Oliver rode the bench.
Their guards are quick James Silas, 6-2, and 6-7 Harvey Huffstetler. 6-7 may seem tall for a guard but Huffstetler, at times, is a marvel. He averaged 15.7 during the season with most of his points coming on jumpers from the 25 to 30-foot range. Silas, on the other hand, works best on the inside. His average is high for the team at 17.6 but the best thing is that he is only a sophomore. Both guards were third team NAIA picks.
Austin was definitely not overexcited for this game. Big Johnson was thoroughly beaten on the boards by 6-6 Chip Johnson and 6-4 Joe McBride. Austin plodded their touted fast-break down the court and it was only the deadly outside shooting of Huffstetler that kept smaller Augusta from blowing them out of Municipal Auditorium.
With 12 minutes left in the first half, Austin went for broke and brought in Oliver. This shocked Augusta into blowing two layups and throwing the ball away three straight times. They should not have worried about Oliver. He is a 6-7 forward who is known for being tough on the boards, but he decided it was his night to play outside.
Oliver and Silas decided to go to work in the second half. It was nip-and-tuck for a while but Austin got off to a five point lead. At this point they were showing part of the fast-break that had made them number one in the country.
It had to be an off night for Austin but the question is how far off. There were a few bright spots but the overall game play of Stephen Austin was considerably below the major college freshman basketball norm.
They did not shoot badly from the field (45 per cent). Their guard play, however, was sloppy and their big center could not get off the ground often enough. Their forwards were rough under the basket except for Oliver who was dancing around the 20-foot mark all night.
Austin did not show the talent of four NAIA All-American picks. They did, however, have one big plus, and that was their poise.
12 KANSAN Mar. 12
1970
Knicks clinch tie; Celtics eliminated
By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Knicks were on the verge of a milestone today, while the Boston Celtics were fitted for a headstone marking their first elimination from the National Basketball Association playoffs in 20 years.
New York, by way of congratulating coach Red Holzman on his promotion to general manager, clinched at least a tie for its first Eastern Division title since 1954. The Knicks' 117-99 victory over Seattle Tuesday night, coupled with Milwaukee's 140-127 loss to Atlanta reduced their magic number for winning the championship to one.
The Knicks can annex the title Friday night in Portland, Ore., against Seattle.
Boston, NBA champion in 11 of the last 13 seasons, was eliminated from a playoff berth as
Detroit edged the Celtics, 115-112.
Detroit eged the Celtics, 115-112.
In other games, Chicago beat San Diego, 111-106, and Los Angeles, thanks to Jerry West's clutch basket with two seconds remaining, edged San Francisco, 106-104.
Lew Alcindor outscored Atlanta's best when he tallied 40 points against the Hawks, but Bill Bridges made the difference under the boards as he collected 24 rebounds to 13 for big Lew. The Hawks held a 62-45 rebound advantage over Milwaukee that spelled the difference. Lou Hudson led the Atlanta attack with 36 points and Joe Caldwell netted 30.
Chicago tightened its hold on the fourth and final playoff berth in the Western Division by moving two full games ahead of Seattle. The Bulls, sensing playoff
West's field goal in the closing seconds from 25 feet out enabled
the Lakers to beat the Warriors and kept Los Angeles only one game behind front running Atlanta in the Western Division. West, on his way to the scoring championship, finished with 42 points, 33 of them in the second half. Joe Ellis paced the Warriors with 24 points.
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March 12
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Seattle club to move to Milwaukee; owners decide to reverse decision
By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) — The Milwaukee Brewers are about to become the American League's newest entry.
League President Joe Cronin already is in possession of the nine votes necessary to switch the distressed Seattle franchise to Milwaukee and official announcement of the transfer will come in a few days, it has been learned.
Only a few relatively minor wrinkles remain to be ironed out
KANSAN Sports
and that largely was the reason a scheduled meeting of American League officials was canceled here Tuesday.
Cronin said there will be another meeting very shortly, probably in Cleveland. That could be the occasion for the formal announcement of what already has been decided privately.
A Milwaukee group, known as Milwaukee Brewers, Inc., and headed by Bud Selig and Judge Robert Cannon, already has agreed to pay $9.5 million for the one year-old Seattle franchise and put up an additional $1.5 million for working capital.
Coinciding with that agreement, workmen in County Stadium, Milwaukee, are getting the ball park ready for the American League season which opens April 6. Snow was cleared off the seats and the field last Monday, and to show how news sometimes travels quicker in the lower echelons, one of the workmen, when asked by a visitor why he and the others were bothering to remove all the snow, replied:
"Didn't you hear? The Seattle club is moving in here in a few weeks."
Actually, the decision to welcome Milwaukee back into the major league orbit after a four year absence was reached last week following a financial report on the Seattle Pilots by Roy Hamey.
The American League had loaned the Pilots $650,000 in February in order to get them
New pro football league organized
CHICAGO (UPI) — Organization of a new professional football league, the Transamerican Football League, Inc., was announced Tuesday by Arthur Arkush, publisher of a weekly sports newspaper.
Arkush, interested in the Chicago franchise, said the league with headquarters in Chicago, would include eight teams for the 1970 season. In addition to the Chicago franchises with fees paid have been assigned to San Antonio, Hershey, Pa. and Southern California.
The league will be capitalized for $1 million and will assist each franchise holder in management, public relations and will share TV and radio revenue and receive an annual franchise fee based on a percentage of receipts.
One of the prime obstacles involved in the transfer of the Seattle franchise to Milwaukee is the already made-out 1970 American League schedule. But Bowie Kuhn, the baseball commissioner, has been conferring with Cronin and other American League officials, and has been assured the necessary changes can be made in time.
Qualifications for a franchise were set at $50,000 franchise fee, a net worth of over $1 million and a city with minimum TV and fan exposure of $2 million.
The Milwaukee Braves of the National League were switched to Atlanta after the 1965 season.
Mar. 12
1970 KANSAN 13
Arkush said several other applications were being considered for competition in 1970 with expansion of another four cities by 1975.
Cronin, at a news conference in St. Petersburg attended by baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, declined to give a definite answer on the change, although it was further learned that only a few minor details await settling before the official announcement.
through spring training. The loan was made with the intention of helping the club to at least start the season in Seattle.
That idea was abandoned however, after Hamey, the on-leave New York Yankees executive who was designated to oversee the loan, came back to the American League with his report.
Membership in the league was expected to consist chiefly of defectors from the Continental Football League, which was reorganized last week.
Budweiser Pitchers ONLY
"We love Milwaukee, but we're still in Seattle," Cronin said.
FRIDAY NITE
Other cities expected to enter with stadium requirements were Fort Worth and Memphis.
The move is expected to touch off lawsuits by both the city of Seattle and state of Washington against the American League, alleging breach of contract and violation of anti-trust laws.
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MARCH 13,14,18,19,20
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Cardinals land Carlton Allen still holding out
By MARTIN LADER UPI Sports Writer
The St. Louis Cardinals fired a double-barrelled shotgun into the air last week, and at least one bird came tumbling to the ground today.
The Cardinals notified holdouts Richie Allen and Steve Carlton that the team was invoking the renewal clause in their contracts and ordered both to report to camp by 10 a.m. this morning.
Carlton reported to St. Petersburg, Fla., 24 hours early, although he continued to express dissatisfaction with the contract offered him, but Allen still was flying free as the deadline neared.
The 25-year-old lefander reportedly was seeking $50,000,
$20,000 more than the Cardinals offered.
Catcher Jeff Torborg, his job threatened on the Los Angeles Dodgers, reported to their Vero Beach, Fla., camp Tuesday and ended his holdout.
The Cardinals registered their first victory of the Grapefruit League season Tuesday, beating Los Angeles, 5-1, as four Dodger runners were thrown out on the basepaths in the first two innings.
The Washington Senators, winless in their first nine spring outings last year, raised their 1970
Favorite's role to New Mexico State for regional here
Fourth-ranked New Mexico State carries the favorite's role into the NCAA Midwest Regional semifinals Thursday night against Big Eight champion Kansas State.
Drake, winner of the Missouri Valley, takes on independent power Houston in the opener.
Thursday night's winners meet Saturday for the Midwest title and the winner here will be pitied against the West titlist—probably defending champion UCLA—in the NCAA semifinals March 19 at the University of Maryland.
K-State is the only unranked club in the four-tteam field, which compiled an overall 89-18 record this season.
New Mexico State brings a 24-2 mark to mammoth Allen Fieldhouse after biltzing Southwest Conference champion Rice 101-77 last Saturday night.
14 KANSAN Mar. 12 1970
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record to 4-0 by beating the New York Yankees, 6-4.
Rico Carty hit a two-run homer and Hank Aaron had a solo blast as the Atlanta Braves nipped the Minnesota Twins, 4-3, in a night game at West Palm Beach.
Dave Johnson, playing in his first game after ending an eight-game holdout, hit a two-run homer and doubled to help the Baltimore Orioles to a 9-1 triumph over the Montreal Expos
A two-run eighth-inning double by Duffy Dyer gave the world champion New York Mets a 5-4 win over the Detroit Tigers and rookie Ron Allen singled in the winning run for Cleveland as the Indians tripped the Oakland A's, 3-2.
Rookie first baseman John Mayberry hit a grand-slam home run as the Houston Astros beat the Boston Red Sox, 6-3; Roberto Clemente's three-run homer capped a six-run second inning and helped the Pittsburgh Pirates to an 8-4 victory over the Cincinnati Reds; homers by Billy Williams and Randy Bobb helped the Chicago Cubs to a 4-3 victory over the San Diego Padres; Sandy Alomar had three singles as the California Angels beat a team of San Francisco reserves, 10-0; and Danny Walton's grand-slam homer sparked the Seattle Golds to an 8-2 decision over the Blues in a Pilots' intra-squad game.
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GREYHOUN
Photo by Ron Bishop
Now boarding, the Marvin Hall Express.
The above scene on the third floor Marvin Hall is part of the School of Architecture's student exhibit erected for the school's accreditation visit which concluded Wednesday. The accreditation team was from the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB) and evaluated the school's curriculum and facilities.
Tempers flair in Lamar troopers encircle school
LAMAR, S.C. (UPI) - State troopers, backed by national guardsmen, threw a protective ring Wednesday around a school where whites have violently protested classroom desegregation.
The Lamar School was reopened Tuesday for the first time since a mob overturned two school buses carrying Negro children last week. Troopers turned back two small groups of whites Tuesday and one man was arrested for carrying a nightstick.
Elsewhere, police used tear gas for the second straight day Tuesday to disperse Negro youths in Louisiana. The incident occurred at Bayou Goula, where blacks are protesting the reassignment of two Negro principals in a desegregation program. Bayou Goula is about four miles
Whether demonstration against court-ordered desegregation of the Lamar schools will continue nonviolent remained the big question.
from Plaquemine, where police fired tear gas at rock and bottle throwing blacks Monday.
J. P. Strom, director of the State Law Enforcement Division (SLED), called the Tuesday incidents a "form of protest" and said they were relatively minor.
Mar. 12
1970 KANSAN 15
"Things do get back to normal." Strom said. "I don't think it will be too long before we'll have peace and tranquility in Darlington County."
Some residents doubted it would be so easy.
"Tempers are higher now than they've ever been before," said a girl behind the checkout counter at the cotton and tobacco town's only supermarket.
MR
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Kansas Senate committee suggests gas tax passage
如
如
of taxes, even though the shrinkage allowance were reduced, Kramer said.
He said that leakage, spillage and shrinkage of gasoline are uncontrollable factors that must be allowed for in taxing fuel distributors.
TOPEKA (UPI) - Despite pleas by gasoline distributors and the president of the Kansas County Commissioners Association a Kansas Senate committee today recommended for passage a measure providing a new distribution formula for state motor fuel tax revenue.
The measure, already passed by the House, would raise an additional $2 for counties by cutting in half the present 3 per cent shrinkage allowance granted to motor fuel distributors for loss of fuel through evaporation spillage and leakage.
Urban counties would get a bigger slice of the revenue and counties would get at least $20,000 a year, under the bill's provisions.
Almost half 43 per cent the annual revenue returned to local governments would go to cities on the 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 in each county.
Amos Kramer, representing the Kansas Petroleum Industry, told the committee the bill's proposed reduction of the 3 per cent shrinkage allowance "could deal the death blow to man independent businessmen throughout the state of Kansas."
Jerry Maloney, representing Universal Service Stations in Wichita, told the committee that if Kansas reduces its shrinkage allowance to $1\frac{1}{2}$ per cent, it will be the lowest such allowance of the states surrounding Kansas. Urban Klenke, president of the Kansas County Commissioners Association, said that the allocation of federal funds to many counties would be affected by the bill's distribution formula.
Motor fuel distributors would still have to pay the same book-keeping costs for keeping track
Article stresses rearing methods
The article "Indian and White Americans" co-authored by Rosalie Wax, associate professor of anthropology, and Robert K. Thomas was chosen for inclusion in the spring issue of Forum Magazine published by the J. C. Penney Company.
The spring issue of the publication, designed especially for educators, was devoted to sensitivity in interpersonal relationships.
The article discussed the different rearing techniques used by white and Indian families, Mrs. Wax said. The white man tends to respond to a new situation with a great deal of activity and experimentation, she said.
The Indian, she said, does not respond to a new situation until he is sure what behavior is proper and safe in that situation.
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THE COLLEGE JEWELER
"Special Colleges Terms"
809 Mass VI 3-5432
Applications and Nominations
Hilltopper
- Due March 20 Turn in at the information Desk in the Student Union.
- Selection will be based mainly on one criteria-whether the student has made an impact on KU: whether he left this school changed. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind.
- NOMINATIONS should be signed by 3 students.The nomination should include a list of activities and/or accomplishments of the nominee, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- SELF-NOMINATIONS OR APPLICATIONS should include letters of recommendations by 2 students or 1 student and 1 faculty member, a list of activities and/ or accomplishments, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- All candidates must be classified as SENIORS.
- Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students.
Rosemary and Roberts
Rodeomen to perform at SUA coffehouse
Frummox, a duo composed of Steve Frumholz and Dan McGrimmin, will sing about the West at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union Prairie Room. Both singers have ridden the rodeo circuit and McGrimmin is still active in the Denver Cattleman's Association.
Abortion law passes
HONOLULU (UPI) — Hawaii Wednesday became the first state in the United States to legalize unrestricted abortion.
A new law permits doctors to perform abortions in hospitals as part of their regular medical practices. It went into effect at midnight without the signature of Gov. John A. Burns, a member of the Roman Catholic Church which opposes abortion.
The law makes abortion a decision between a woman and her doctor. The operation will be permitted:
- By a licensed physician.
- In a hospital licensed by the state of Hawaii or federal government.
- On women who have lived in Hawaii at least 90 days. They must sign an affidavit saying they meet the residency requirement.
Israel discussing U.S. war aid delay
By United Press International
The Israeli cabinet called a special session today to discuss the delay in President Nixon's reply to Tel Aviv's request for additional jet warplanes and arms.
Diplomatic sources said the cabinet, concerned by the latest apparent change of mood in Washington, may decide to recall its ambassador to the United States, Yitzhak Rabin, for consultations.
President Nixon said on Jan. 30 he would have a decision on the Israeli request in 30 days. Israel is said to have asked for a total of 110 new F4 Phantoms and A4 Skyhawks.
No reason has been given for the delay but informants in Washington have said the President is holding off the decision for fear of provoking the Soviets into sending more arms to the Arab world.
Diplomatic sources in London said the Soviets, too, were holding off on sending more arms to Egypt pending the outcome of the latest Big Four efforts to find a basis for settlement in the Middle East.
One Arab leader, King Hussein of Jordan, told a Swedish interviewer Monday that he was prepared to go to the Soviet Union for more weaponry if the need arises.
"The United States has knocked down what it really could do to create a just and lasting peace in our area," Hussein said. "Instead of working with the other big powers for a political solution, the United States has been delivering new arms to Israel."
Slavery was abolished July 4, 1817 in New York state.
Increase reported in number of births in'69
The oldest yacht club is the Royal Yacht Club, established in Ireland in 1720.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The number of births increased in the United States last year, breaking a downward trend that began in the early 1960s, the government reported Wednesday.
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare said the 2 per cent rise in the number of births was mostly due to the increase in the number of women in the childbearing ages.
The department said the birth rate rose to 17.7 births per 1,000 population in 1969, the first annual increase since 1957. But the fertility rate — births among women 15 to 44 years old—remained virtually unchanged. It was 88.5 per 1,000 women in 1968, compared to 85.7 in 1969.
Women in this age group, HEW said, are increasing rapidly as a result of the high birth rate during the late 1940s and in the decade of the 1950s.
HEW also reported the number of marriages last year continued a 10-year rise, totalling 2,146,000—the second highest annual total on record and 4 per cent higher than in 1968.
16 KANSAN Mar. 12 1970
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In the Gaza Strip, guerrilla terrorists threw two hand grenades today at a crowd of Arabs waiting for a bus to take them to work in Israel. Five persons were wounded, the latest victims in a wave of Gaza Strip terrorism.
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Photo by Ron Bishon
The versatile linotype machine . . .
Fred Staples, KU printing service employee, uses his linotype printing machine advantageously. Staples heats his casserole for lunch on the hot box.
Oil slick heads for coast
VENICE, La. (UPI)—High seas and winds up to 50 miles an hour broke apart a protective line of barges Wednesday and sent what could become history's largest oil slick heading toward the Louisiana coast.
The line of barges had effectively contained 75 per cent of the chocolate-colored oil slick which appeared when a month-long oil platform fire was put out Tuesday.
But an Interior Department spokesman said the winds and 10-foot seas "in effect have wiped out the large booms and all the oil which was being contained is now flowing freely."
Even when the barges had contained most of the oil, a slick 12 miles long and a mile wide spread across the Gulf of Mexico. No one would estimate how big the uncontained slick would become
New lawyer okayed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The girl who testified Charles Manson sent her and a hippie band to kill Sharon Tate got a new lawyer Wednesday after a hearing in which Manson chewed his long hair, muttered irrationally and threw his glasses across the counsel table.
The cult leader, who appeared cheerful and even flippant at earlier court proceedings, was pale, morose, and seemed unable to comprehend questions put to him by the judge.
until officials could visit the scene after daybreak Thursday.
According to estimates by the Chevroon Oil Co., the Louisiana pollution could do as much damage in a week as was done in a month by last year's Santa Barbara, Calif., oil slick.
Superior Court Judge William B. Keene eventually granted the request of Susan Atkins, 21, that
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Korean-American attorney Daye Shinn, 52, replace Richard Caballero as her lawyer.
Shinn said Tuesday Miss Atkins would repudiate her grand jury testimony which led to the indictments of six persons for the murders. However, the young woman refused Wednesday to comment specifically on that statement by her new attorney.
The island homes of migrating waterfowl and rich offshore seafood beds which lie off the Louisiana coast were endangered by the spreading oil slick.
Alliance
Student Senate----Liberal Arts
Responsibility Communication Progress WELSH
Interior Secretary Walter J. Hickel will fly to Louisiana Thursday to inspect and investigate the slick growing by the minute with gooey gushes from eight renegade wells on Chevron Oil Company's "Charlie" platform.
Table Tops
In its messy path is Breton Island, part of a national wildlife refuge that is the home of as many as 12,000 teal and pintail ducks and uncounted gulls and shore birds.
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
The U.S. Weather Bureau hoisted small craft warnings off the Louisiana coast. Winds lashed the sea and prevented skim and vacuum boats from sucking up the brownish-yellow crude oil.
AUTO GLASS
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THE CONCORD SHOP
- Decoupage Materials
- Artist's Canvases
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- Oils and Acrylics
- Stretcher Frames
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Bankmark Services
President Nixon's message to congress on educational reform last week stresses the urgent need for far more research into why poor children do not do better in school.
McConnell Lumber
844 E. 13th VI 3-3877
United Press International
Positive approach taken in educational reform
The president asked Congress to establish a national institute of education to pursue research and development, much as the national institutes of health seek scientific knowledge related to medicine. This is a positive approach since educational research long has been starved for funds.
The national expenditure for education at all levels is $65 billion, second only to defense. But the Pentagon has spent lavishly
Campus Crusade head for Florida
Campus Crusade for Christ has launched a fund-raising drive to enable 40 University of Kansas Christians to spend semester break at Daytona Beach, Florida, Evie Thurley, Campus Crusade staff member, said Monday.
The students will spend March 22-26 on the beaches sharing their faith in Jesus Christ with the thousands of students who flock to Florida beaches each Easter.
Miss Thurlby said Campus Crusade members are raising the money from local businessmen and residents to charter a bus to take the students to Daytona.
"We need $1500 in order to pay for the bus," she said, "and all other expenses will be paid for by the students themselves."
The KU Campus Crusaders will join about 1,200 other Christian students from all over the United States who will also be in Daytona to share their faith and experiences with other students.
The trip to Daytona is called "Operation Sunshine," Miss Thurlby said. Campus Crusade will sponsor special speakers in the mornings. During the afternoons, the students will be out on the beach to talk with other students.
"The New Folk singers will be there to tell about Christ through music and coffee houses will be open for the students at night." she said.
for research while education has been miserly.
The President's position is based largely on the conclusions of the Coleman Report, a 1966 study by Dr. James S. Coleman of John Hopkins University which attributed school achievement more to social environment than to educational input. The report disputed the notion that there was a relationship between expensive programs and achievement.
Nixon, trying to keep federal spending in check, said that the commitment of vast new sums of money to education should wait until more is learned about what will work in improving the learning of poor children, the critical problem of urban schools.
The President praised the efforts of U.S. Commissioner of Education James E. Allen Jr. for focusing the nation's attention on reading deficiencies. But virtually no money has been committed to what Allen wants to make a priority program, as was reaching the moon in less than 10 years.
Reading is fundamental to all education. There is much more known about how to teach Johnny to read than has ever been implemented in most urban schools. In fact, big city schools are so strapped for money that quality education is something to dream about.
The reality is simply finding enough money to keep the doors open and meet staff payrolls. Lavish new spending may not be warranted now. But neither is a cop out on urban schools.
Alaskan tremors shake up Kodiaks
KODIAK, Alaska (UPI) — An earthquake, described as "fairly big," Wednesday shook Kodiak Island adjacent to the Aleutian chain.
A spokesman for the U.S. geodetic survey station at Palma, Alaska, said there were no reports of damage, but the quake had a potential to cause some.
The National Earthquake Information Center said epicenter of the quake, which was strongly felt on the island, was 60 miles southwest of the town of Kodiak. The island is sparsely populated, having only 2,600 residents. The quake was recorded at 5:38 p.m. EST, the spokesman said.
BLAZZ
Watch "George of the Jungle" at 9:00 a.m. every Saturday at the SHOEBOX
Japanese consul kidnaped
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI)—Nobu Oukchi, Japanese consul general to Sao Paulo, was kidnapped Wednesday from his limousine by terrorists armed with machine guns. The operation was similar to the abduction of U.S. Ambassador C. Burke Elbrick in Brazil six months ago.
It was the second kidnapping of a foreign diplomat in South America in less than a week and the fourth such abduction since last year. Victims have been two U.S. diplomats and the foreign minister of Guatemala. Another U.S. diplomat was slain in Guatemala.
The Japanese consulate identified the victim as a 52-year-old career diplomat, who had previously served in Bombay, India, and Mexico City.
Okuchi left his downtown office at 6 p.m. (5 p.m. EST) and a half hour later his driver, Hideki Doi, telephoned that the diplomat had been abducted and taken to an undisclosed location. It was not known if Okuchi was harmed.
Vice-Consul Inhosuke Hirooka said Okuchi's car was forced to a stop by three other cars as the consul was being driven home. He said men armed with machine guns threatened the driver and made the consul get out of his limousine. The consul was then put into one of the kidnaper's cars and driven away.
Okuchi arrived in Brazil about the time Elbrick was kidnapped in Rio de Janeiro by leftist terrorists. The U.S. diplomat was later freed in exchange for the release of 15 political prisoners. Elbrick's kidnaping while driving back to the embassy from his home was
very similar to the Okuchi kidnapping.
Army officials told all local news media not to mention the latest kidnapping and turned over investigation of the incident to "Operation Bandeirantes," a joint army-police tactical unit which
has been investigating terrorism in the Sao Paulo area.
A consulate spokesman said Okuchi and his family have been in Brazil about six months.
Last Friday, leftist terrorists in Guatemala City kidnapped U.S. Second Secretary Michael Holly
Jayhawk Postal Station opens
changing and package weighing with rates posted for public convenience.
The new Jayhawk Postal Station, located near 23rd and Naismith, will open Monday.
The cost of the new post office is $240,000 with 11 city carriers and two rural route carriers based at the new station.
The station will provide for a complete self-service postal unit located in the lobby for customer use on a 24 hour basis, seven days a week. This unit will have vending machines for envelopes, stamps and postcards, dollar bill
The Jayhawk Station superintendent will be Andrew Smith with Charles Hagen to be the assistant superintendent.
and held him for 40 hours until the Guatemalan government agreed to release three jailed guerrillas for his safe return.
A week before that, Guatemalan Foreign Minister Alberto Fuentes Mohr was abducted and held until the government released a group of leftist students.
Elbrick was kidnapped in Rio de Janeiro last year and was held prisoner for 72 hours until the Brazilian government released from jail and allowed to leave the country a group of leftist political prisoners. Brazil has announced the capture of several suspects in the Elbrick abduction.
In August, 1968, U.S. Ambassador John Gordon Mein was slain by terrorists while resisting a kidnap attempt in Guatemala City.
Nevada resorts strike
LAS VEGAS (UPI) — Howard Hughes' Desert Inn Hotel was the first target today of a massive cook and bartender strike. Picket closed down virtually all the resort's operations except the casino.
Picket lines appeared shortly before 2 a.m. PST and then moved toward Caesars Palace and the International Hotel. Union leaders said the pickets would spread to 13 other resorts on the Las Vegas "Strip" by mid day.
Casino operations were not affected by the strike as non-union dealers remained on duty and the green felt tables were as busy as ever.
The powerful Culinary and
Cigarette ban expected
WASHINGTON (UPI)—House sources today predicted final congressional passage this week of a bill outlawing cigarette commercials on radio and television.
The ban would become effective Jan. 2, a date picked partially to let broadcasters bid for a final feast of cigarette advertising money during the New Year's Day football bowl games.
The bill also would strengthen the health warning on cigarette packages and free the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) from a five-year restriction against requiring a health message in printed cigarette ads.
"Great economic forces were aligned against passage of strong legislation," Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., said Tuesday, shortly before the Senate passed the bill 75 to 9.
18 KANSAN Mar. 12 1970
Bartenders Union, 14,000 members strong, gave the strike approval late Tuesday and voted to reject management's last offer of a 25 per cent wage and fringe benefit increase.
Lee Shaw, attorney for the Nevada Resort Association, said all 16 hotels would lock out the striking union members.
The unofficial vote favoring a walkout by the unions was 11,601 to 317. Union leaders said some 6,000 other "strip" employees would honor picket lines, including showgirls and musicians.
Security guards recently unionized at many hotels, also pledged not to cross picket lines. This left casino owners with the problem of guarding the money.
One hotel executive said the resorts probably would lock their doors during the strike for security and safety reasons. Union attorneys said that would constitute an illegal lockout which would be appealed to the National Labor Relations Board.
Three strip hotels not affected by the strike were the Riviera, Bonanza and Circus Circus.
Those gambling spas affected were the Hacienda, Tropicana, Flamingo, Caesars Palace, Sands, Castaways, Desert Inn, Frontier, Silver Slipper, Sahara, Thunderbird, Landmark, International, Aladdin, Dunes and Stardust.
The unions opened negotiations with a demand for a 35 per cent wage increase over a three-year period. Under the old contract, which expired at midnight, waiters and waitresses earned $11.60 a shift, minimum cook shift scale was $33.95 and bartenders were paid from $28 to $31 a shift.
TELEPHONE LANDMARK HELSINKI (UPI)—The 1 millionth telephone was installed in Finland this year. According to the Union of Telephone Companies, the number of telephones in the country has doubled every 11 years since World War II.
TELEPHONE LANDMARK
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FOR SALE
Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive edition of Western Civilization," 4th Edition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th ft.
Must Sell. Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475.
Ice boom and boom stand." $15. Call VI 2-5769. Women's contract at Naismith—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately.$1200. See at Ridgway Court. 3020 Iowa. Lot G23 or call VI 2-5788 a 6 p.m. f.
Brown. Fall—real hair, long. 3-25
For Sale. like new. Kate, 842-8579. 3-19
sign ed, multi-purpose weight lifting apparatus. May be used in 8'x8" monochromatic purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved. York Barbell Co., Inc.). May be used in 5' bats assorted weight. Call J. B. at 843-2103. Weigh 1968 WV bug. $1295. VI 2-8614. 3-12 '68 Bridgestone Super 90 -red and silver=1400 miles -very fine condition metly inspected. 842-2191 or 842-8870. 1968 WV fastback. Must sell, new wholesale price. AM-FM reverb. Quartz iodine driving lamps. Call I 3-8191 after 6. Concord 510D mopedecel. 1 yr. old. Mice, Mike, red 435 Templin. VI 2-1200. For Sale: 1964 Honda Trail 90, good condition. $170 or best offer. Call II 12-378 after 6:00 on weekdays, visiting on weekends. 3-12 For sale of copper building site in Martin's Park area. Two acres will sell together or separately. Call the Gill Agency, 843-1011. After hours, 843-6453. 3-13
Canon FT-QL with a 1.2, 58 mm lens.
Also a 200 mm telephoto and misc
accessories. Steven Briggs, 842-8402.
Polaroid model 800 camera, used five times, wink light, flash, light reducer, exposure meter, leather carrying case, print copier, complete instructions. Original value over $230. Sell for $100 or best offer. Call 842-2958 evenings.
Zenith 2-speaker portable stereo. 3-16 15-34 3-15 RPM. Excellent condition. Call 843-5755. 3-16
Really great fish mobiles from Thailand. You won't find them lors and sizes. You don't drop into the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays. 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Sable wig, brown medium length hut sundries for you Furniture Call Connie - 842-6949. 3-12
Television—Admiral Console—beautiful black and white. New tube, $45 cash. Friden Electric Desk Calculator, $53 Call 843-8191 after 6:00. 3-16
Corn husk dolls from the Southern Africa. These are the dolls that were played with by the early settlers of our country. Museum of Natural History Gift Shop weekdays 8:30 to 4:30, Sunday. 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Repossessed Magnavox Stereo Component. 1 year old, 20 watt amp. Was $179.90. Now $85.00 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. Open Mon. and thurs. evenings. 3-16
Repossessed component system. Save $20.00. Now only $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. Open Mon. and thurs. evenings. 3-16
Elect. typewriter, paint sprayer, hi intensity lamps, refrig. and cupboard, dratting table, lamp and tackle boxes, radio and phone, Norelco dictation recorder and transcriber. 842-1970.
1964 Chevrolet Impala Super Sport,
327, 300 hp, 4 speed, buckets, maroon.
Call 842-4774 after 6:00. 3-17
Corvette for sale, 1965, 365 H.P. both
for sale, 1972, 340 H.P.
7922, from 4-7 p.m. ask for Steve, 3-17
Nashua, '63, 10x55, 2 bdm, din r., completely furrow, carpeted, new auto,
washer, metal util, bldg., fenced yard; June occupancy only 842-415-86.
Vespa scooter 125cc, excellent mechanical condition, good body, nearly new, good depend on transportation. Good value $100.00.
Call N 4-3217 or 842-7305. 3-17
Ampex Stereo Tape recorder--automatic reverse, automatic threading, microphones tape, and demagitizer. Vacation, call Bob Brown, 843-5721, vacation, call Bob Brown, 843-5721.
Attractive breakfast set with 4 comfortable chairs, $50.00 Coffee table, traditional, $5.00, 843-7657. 3-12 Eiphone 12-string guitar (acoustic) for sale; excelent condition; fast action; $110.00. Call Bill at 843-4059.
NOTICE
54 Chevy, new battery, good radio
Best offer. Call 53-5560 before S. 3-16
Dodge, TBA BRC 843-2290
haust, Pirelli tires, Lucas lamps,
luggage rack, excellent condition, call
Rick, 843-2327.
3-16
Walnut stereo speaker cabinets. These
are built-in models with condition
system. Perfect condition.
Must sell Call 843-6707.
3-18
GTX—1970, 440c.l., 4b., auto, airc-
ond, AM-FM w/rear speaker, power
driver, disc brake, disce brake
Must sell Steve, 842-4275.
3-18
1969 Mustang, 302 V8 tuck, white with
black interior, will sacrifice for quick
sale. $1995 Call 842-2191 or 842-8870.
Audio Discount—Your A.R. Dynacoaler offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus $10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31 Sand Candles by Betsy Webster. 9th and Indiana. THE OMNIBUS SHOP.
Casual slacks--make your selections now from our new spring shipment (Haggars are in solids. Choose flares or skirts.) in solids. Ross Disney Men's Wear. 811 Mass.
Karate Action Saturday, March 7,
Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
Eliminations - 10:30 a.m. 50c.
Finals p. 7月 $1.50. 3-12
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass.
Raney Drug Stores
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-goodness B-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special offer. VI 2-9510 VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptad VI 3-4032. 5-14 VI 3-4032. Donor clothes from La Petite Galerie, Find the latest, the best for guys and gals. We exist for the ego. 910 Kentucky.
W
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in theses and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tt
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
We 3-16
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Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Jepi Smith, president; Scott Kreamer, v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane Peterson, treas. Sophomore Class. 3-16 The Castle Tea Room is ideal for lunches, dinner parties, or even wedding receptions. Call Libuse Kriz. 843-1151. Most unique restaurant in lawrence. 3-16
Robert "Tuck" Duncan - active, dynamic
College Student Senior 3-16
College Student Seniors 3-16
The DRAUGHT HOUSE
New York Cleaners
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For the best in:
or the best in:
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We're back from New York with nourished thinking and stimulating objects. Rosalesa's Hotel, Harper, 316189-89211. Schedule sent to request. 3-16
Like pancakes, french toast, ham and eggs and economically tasted? to eat them across the street from Lindley Hall. Breakfast 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. 3-16
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
IT
"Profits" from sales in the Museum
from schools. Shop make possible a school service concerned with environmental education. Help us expand this program by shopping weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30.
Sundays from 12:30 to 4:30.
3-16 Graduate Ticket ISP - Surenendra Bhattacharya
Graduate Ticket Faria Clark, Brown, Farla Clark, Jack Casey, Ed Gautheir, Bob Hubert, Karen Laub,
Leroy Mermoch Fred Oettel, John Waterson, Harriette Stallworth, Joe Winters.
Position—improvement of university environment. (1) Students on planning boards. (2) Autonomy maintained. (3) Graduate organizations in all departments. 3-13
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18. 20% off. All shoes with stitched styles. Hodge Pottery 10:00-5:30 (open Thursday night) 842-6082. 3-18
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama. VI 3-1522. 48
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience - at 842
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Pica tipe. Competent service. Mrs.
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We'd like to serve you in the capacity of Senior Class officers. Randy Andrews. Ed Wood, Pat Riley, Kathy Bruning. 3-18
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Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7747 or 842-6562. 3-31
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Rauckman.
TYPING, Experienced. typist. IBM
phone. 843-3186. Ware guard.
telephone. 843-3186.
WANTED
Wanted—used motorcycle crash helmet Call Murt at 842-9073 or 3-16 3-16
Ride wanted—Topека to KU, MWF.
2-30 Call CE2-0571 3-18
2-31 Call CE2-0571
Typing. Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249. 3-13
Accurate typing of papers, manuscripts, theses by experienced typist on carbon ribbon selective. Close to tupus. Phyllis Nelson. 842-9249. 3-16
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249.
Typing. Experienced typier. IBM Selectric, pica type. Work guaranteed. Phone 843-3186. 3-16
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Available now! Need one girl roommate to finish the year. Move in now for $45. April and May—$65. Close to campus. Call 842-9156. 3-17
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Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 80121. Mass, $4.00 and up. tf Income tax returns prepared by student in the block from campus. Lowest rates—$3 up. Gretchen, 1218 Mish. 843-9659 after 6 p.m. 3-13 IF YOU need repairs, we need your assistance less than the competition. PERFORMANCE ENTERPRISES, 317 N. 2nd St., 842-1191. Repairs on all popular imports and sports cars. 4-1 beginning in French will teach beginning and intermediate students. Call 843-0905. 3-16
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Multi-colored female cat with long, thick fur. Cat V1 3-8153. 3-13
Lost-1 (one) Notebook. Reward. Marina. Advance Film Production. Speech 275. Phone 843-5072 or 842-8070. Address. 1140 Pennsylvania St. 3-16
Lost: a diamond and sapphire gold ring. In the women's restroom at atrium. If found, call Carol, Room 708. Corbin. If gone, leave reward. 3-16
1 pair woman's prescription sun-
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Small black and gray striped male cat with white feet. Call 842-1841. 3-13 Green leather women's billfold, probably somewhere near Summerfield Sunday before. Please call me need desperate help. Recommend say "Diane" (Wrigley) Wrigley, 842-7450. 3-16 Lost -13th and Louisiana area, small female calico cat, come to name "Nellie." Reward. Call 842-1150. 3-18 Lost -my reward at KU rugby game last Sat, March 7; behind Oliver, call 842-5927. Fred Joseph. Reward. 3-16
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Summer employment—TV and small appliance repair work. Write to Mr. Goins. Shawnee TV, 12006 Johnson Dr. Shawnee, Kan. 65200. State qualification required. Financial assistance. Male or female commission sales representative wanted to sell medical supplies. Neat appearance and transportation necessary. Knowledge of medical supplies is essential. Locate hospital. Male or female commission help wanted—waitress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person, Earl's Cart Parchor, 729 Mass. 4-2
Wanted: student wife to babysit three weeks; furries in house while work. Work someone having own transportation or who lives near Fairgrounds. 842-1037. 3-13
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Candidates blast referendum action
(Continued from page 1)
out expeditiously and in conformity with the provisions in this CODE . . . it shall act on behalf of the University Senate and Council in all matters requiring expeditious action, and shall make appropriate reports of any such action."
Von Ende said, "In the last
Student senate meeting the Student Senate impowered SenEx to determine what referendum questions would be on the ballot, how the question would be worded, how the information pertaining to the questions would be dismininated and when the questions would be submitted to the voter."
Miller and Beek said, "The purpose of a referendum procedure is to by-pass an irresponsible Student Senate action."
Von Ende said this statement was "misleading retoric" and the purpose of the referendum is to permit students to give their opinions and to consider actions
of the Student Senate, but it doesn't mean the Student Senate is irresponsible.
Mudslinging
in charge of the ecological problem since he claims he's such an authority on the subject. And I'll place Mr. Ebert in charge of the Haskell Studies program since he's such an authority on that. And then we can get something done with student government through the Independent Party."
Ebert's appeal did not last long however as the question of abolishing the Western Civilization comprehensive came up. Several times during the evening, candidates accused each other of "missing the boat" on certain issues. The western civ
(Continued from page 1)
Ebert then asked the candidates to refrain from defamming the other candidates on the premise of character. He drew applause when he asked the candidates to devote their comments to the issues.
issue came up again, however, only this time with laughter and applause as George said, "It seems as though for the first time this evening Mr. Beck has missed the boat."
Awbrey earlier had said there should be a Wescoe Hall referendum because the students, through due process, had requested it in a verified petition, but that the referendum could wait until April so sufficient information could be distributed to the student body informing them of the total question.
Beck's argument stated that each party went into office after promising abolishment of the Western Civilization program but failed to meet that promise. George said, "It's up to each individual school how they want to handle the problem. It's not up to the whole student body. The University Senate can't do it either."
On the question of women's rights, George said, "The basic problem here is to get the women informed of their rights. We probably have 25 to 35 women in our party but overall I don't think that women are as interested as men."
Ebert said, "We feel the pinch of discriminatory policies toward women. We advocate women's liberation and are against the prejudices held against them. I think this should be researched by qualified authorities."
Beck then said, "First of all, we don't have any women on our platform but let me say this, some of my best friends are women. Since I'm not a woman I don't expect to get pregnant in the next year and I don't expect any of the women I date to get pregnant in the next year. Therefore I don't see how we can guarantee a medical health center and guarantee an end to women prejudice because that is a very real problem and we can not promise to solve it."
The final questions consisted of the satellite union, a new hospital and increasing tuition fees.
Prior to the vote to include all referendum questions on the April 7 ballot, von Ende had listed several reasons not to put the vote on Wescoe Hall on the regular election ballot: the time element which is insufficient to inform the student body of all the ramifications of the question; the fact the Kansas legislature has not yet acted on the bill pending before it; and the printers need the ballots by today to be ready for the regular election.
Tuesday the Kansas House passed a motion deleting Wescoe Hall from a bill which would allow for the levying of bonds to cover building costs for campus construction. Previously the bill had been approved by the Senate in its original form. The bill is now in a joint-House-Senate conference committee to iron out differences of the separate versions passed by each legislative body.
This year's legislative session ends Friday, and it is not known yet if the bill will be passed. If the legislature does decide that student fees can be used to help
finance Wescoe Hall, the students will be able to vote on the issue in the special election.
In February the KU Student Senate had voted to allow student fees to be used to help finance Wescoe Hall. However, Miller turned in petitions with over 1400 valid signatures to force the referendum. The petition makes it necessary to submit the question to the voters within 30 days, but the April election would meet this requirement.
If the legislature will not allow students to help finance the humanities building, there may be no reason for a vote, said David R. Miller, Hays senior who is chairman of the elections committee.
The other five questions which will not be on the ballots March 17-18 are:
Do you feel Western Civilization should be required for graduation from any school of the University?
- Do you favor an immediate end to the military draft, and replacement with a volunteer army?
- Do you feel there should be general requirements (other than the requirements for majors) for graduation from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences?
Courthouse-
- Do you favor a $3.50 a semester fee increase to support construction of a satellite student union?
Mississippi. Earlier the other body was identified as Ralph Featherstone, former national program director for SNCC's predecessor, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, which Brown headed.
(Continued from page 1)
Do you favor a $10 a semester fee increase to support the construction of a new University Health Center?
Authorities said Payne and Featherstone were killed when an explosive they were transporting — probably nitroglycerine — blew up.
Local authorities have theorized they intended to blow up the Bel Air courthouse but were killed when the bomb was prematurely triggered—possibly by shortwave radio waves from state police cars or by the victims trying to set its fuse.
The two deaths precipitated a five-day postponement Tuesday of Brown's trial which had not yet gotten to the jury selection state. He is charged with arson
Brown's attorney William Kunstler, said he thought the two men were murdered.
20 KANSAN Mar. 12
1970
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and inciting to riot in Cambridge where two blocks were burned after Brown spoke to blacks there in 1967.
The trial started Monday and Brown slipped out of sight the same day in New York, saying he was going to Maryland. Some authorities believe he may have left the country.
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Adding to the uneasiness felt by Cambridge residents, Kunstler warned that there is a possibility of more bombings and said the changes against his client "ought to be dismissed" under the circumstances. He said the case was "being perpetuated out of utter stupidity."
There were no injuries in the courthouse blast, which happened at 12:01 a.m. EST. The explosion tore out a huge chunk at the top corner of the 100-year-old building and hurled debris 100 feet into the street.
---
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OFFICER INTERVIEWS MARCH 17 BOARD INTERVIEWS MARCH 19
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INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
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Exhibits at 6:00 p.m.
Program at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 14
Admission free — everyone invited.
Senate lowers voting age
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate voted Thursday to lower the voting age to 18 in national, state and local elections, making up to 11 million youths eligible to vote by the 1972 presidential elections.
The legislation, approved 64-17, still faces two critical tests —approval by the House and a certain test of its constitutionality by the Supreme Court.
the voting age proposal, sponsored by Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield,
was adopted as an amendment to the proposed five-year extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
The controversial 1965 act, which has enfranchised 800,000 Southern blacks in less than five years, still has to be approved by the Senate. There was no indication how soon Southerners would let the Senate reach a final vote.
The Mansfield amendment would allow youths between 18 and 21 to vote in all elections
and primaries after Jan.1, 1971.A provision to allow a quick test of the proposal's constitutionality is included in the amendment.
The minimum voting age is now 21 except in four states. Kentucky and Georgia sets the minimum at 18; Alaska at 19; and Hawaii at 20.
With the outcome certain, the Senate approved Mansfield's amendment after Sen. James B. Allen, D-Ala., gave
up his one-man battle to change the amendment.
No voice was raised in the Senate against lowering the voting age to 18. The only opposition came from Senators who insisted that it was unconstitutional to provide it through a simple statute rather than a constitutional amendment.
They pleaded with the Senate to wait and adopt a constitutional amendment, which would require approval by two thirds of the Senate and House
and ratification by three-fourths of the states.
In the end, however, only nine Democrats, all from Southern states, and eight conservative Republicans voted against the Mansfield proposal.
The most fondible obstacle for 18-year-olds appeared to be Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., 81-year-old House patriarch and chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who opposes lowering the voting age, especially without a constitutional amendment.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of KansasLawrence,Kansas Friday,March 13,1970
University senate fails to draw quorum for third week in a row
For the third consecutive week, the University Senate failed to draw a quorum of members. A demand for a quorum count was called 45 minutes after the meeting began. The count revealed only 202 voting members were present, including representatives from the KU Medical Center via closed-circuit television.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., began the meeting with a statement on the University budget in relation to recent legislative action.
"It's nice to know," he said, "that it doesn't require a quorum for me to speak."
Chalmers assured faculty members that salaries initially reduced in Congress were now back up to a six per cent increase. Initially
the budget director's office had recommended a slash to four per cent in salary increases.
It was hoped the Chancellor's comments would serve as a stimulant to interest members to attend.
During the short proceedings, an amendment providing that the Western Civilization comprehensive examination not be required for graduation in any school was overruled.
alty, and a statement against gradepoints being assigned for the letters, P,I or W.
Dennis Embry, Great Bend junior, also proposed a list of amendments and changes for the Senate Code. The list included: a change in the grading system; the chance for students to disenroll from any course at any time in the semester without pen-
When it was discovered that a quorum was not present, proposals were made to vote by mail ballot, abolish the Senate and move to a council-form of governing body, and a motion to recess.
Oldfather cautioned, however that a recess was impossible because of next week's University Council meeting.
Oldfather then asked that the meeting adjourn, and it passed unanimously.
The Senate will not meet now until late April.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Bill averts undeclared war
BOSTON—The Massachusetts House has given preliminary approval to a bill which would prevent the state's citizens from fighting in undeclared wars such as Vietnam.
Under the legislation, the state attorney general would be required to represent Massachusetts citizens in court if they refuse to serve in combat zones during undeclared wars. Supporters of the measure say the Supreme Court would be forced to decide if the President can commit troops without a formal declaration of war.
Oil slick threatens refuge
NEW ORLEANS — Interior Secretary Walter J. Hickel stood on lonely Breton Island, a national waterfowl refuge threatened by a monster oil spill, and said "if Santa Barbara was an accident, this is a disaster."
Hickel had just seen from a Coast Guard helicopter a 23-mile-long, six-mile-wide slick on the Gulf of Mexico's green waters that was mainly spawned by renegade well No.6 on Chevron Oil Co.'s "Charlie" platform.
Kansan sponsors candidate debate
By TERRY WILLIAMSON
Kansan Staff Writer
The important question Thursday night at a debate of student body presidential candidates was why the Student Senate Executive Committee deleted the Wescoe Hall referendum from the ballot for the March 17, 18 student body elections.
The debate, sponsored by the University Daily Kansan in McCollum Hall, involved Bill Ebert, Alliance presidential candidate, Peter George, ISP presidential candidate and Dave Miller. Independent presidential candidate. The interviewers for the Kansas were Joe Bullard, news editor; Ted liff, campus editor; and Monroe Dodd, assistant editorial editor.
In response to the question of why Miller's referendum on Wescoe Hall was postponed till April 7 by the Student Executive Committee, Ebert said the committee had to decide whether the student body could be informed about the fee increase in a few days and whether it was a problem that demanded immediate action. Peter George also said he thought students hadn't had enough opportunity to learn the fact concerning Wescoe Hall.
Miller said he found it hard to accept the fact that Student Senate Executive Committee could disregard his petitions of over 1400 signatures to force the referendum.
A question to all candidates was what could each candidate do concerning the problem of attendance and involvement at Student Senate and University Senate meetings.
George said there was no real answer to this because he couldn't guarantee that an ISP, Alliance or Independent candidate would attend every meeting. He said students had to judge on individual merit what you thought these people would do.
"A cut down on the number and length of meetings, more committee work and organization," Miller said, "would help solve the problem."
"You have to motivate students to activate their interests," said Ebert. More things need to be done in the committees; committee work needs to be emphasized, he said.
"The basic problem in this election," George said, "is that it has taken a year for things to get put out in any form at all. Most people most of the time don't pay attention to what's going on. We hope in the future to get more people involved in committees."
A question to Ebert by a Kansan interviewer was what actions could he take to change procedures at Haskell Institute.
He said the University could make contributions to the betterment of
the Institute such as exchange programs of University professors. He also said the community of Lawrence held policies which were discriminatory and prejudicial against Indians and the Student Senate could organize student boycotts for those businesses.
In response to a question concerning what specific instances there were of discrimination against women at the University, George said the Graduate School would rather accept qualified males rather than females. Also he said, many of the recruiting businesses discriminated in their pay scales.
"What ISP, the Student Senate or I can do." George said, "is emphasize that students should become educated about the problem. We want to educate people on the campus, and hope we can get something done."
Iliff confronted Ebert on whether he thought it was responsible student leadership when Greg Thomas, Alliance vice-presidential candidate, confiscated issues of the Kansans.
"I wanted to avoid politizing of this particular issue." Ebert said. "Thomas did it as an act of conscience. I can't question that. In my opinion he is a responsible person."
A question put to Miller dealt with his complaint about inadequate Kansan coverage concerning his candidacy. Miller replied a specific example was when the other two candidates announced their candidacy, they received separate stories. He said the first coverage his party got was a three part story.
On the question of Black Studies programs, Ebert said there should be a creation of an undergraduate department with a Black Studies major. He said advantage should be taken of the advice of black students in this program.
"There are a large group of students that don't feel educated," Ebert said. "They need to know; most students aren't aware."
A final question by the Kansan members was how would each candidate involve freshman in the student government.
Miller also said he thought black student majors should be established.
Ebert's solutions were either two seats should be reserved from each college-within-a-college in the spring to be filled in the fall or that the full Student Senate should be elected in the spring and added to in the fall.
George added a third alternative of movement of elections of colleges-within-a-college into the fall.
"Any alternative to get them into student government." George said. "is necessary."
The debate then opened for audience questions to the candidates.
Dean Taylor backs liberation
The current feminist movement has organized professional women, women students and middle class housewives in an effort to demand an end to discrimination because of sex.
Emily Taylor, dean of women and a member of the Kansas Commission on the Status of Women, has actively supported legislation that would end sex discrimination in employment practices. She maintains that the problem is not with dominating male egos or passive female attitudes, but rather, with the culture.
Miss Taylor said Wednesday in a Kansan interview that it hadn't been long since many Victorian attitudes were changed and that the carryover of this trend of thought was the root of the problem.
"Women were protected, coddled and almost treated like children. Higher education gave women an opportunity to have a little freedom before marriage. Today as colleges accept less paternal responsibility, modern women have an even greater sense of freedom," she said.
Miss Taylor added that the marital role had changed too, along with attitudes concerning the child-rearing process.
"For 16 years women compete in school and are given the encouragement to achieve," she
Research center solves problems explains census
One of the oldest and perhaps least known institutions on campus is the Governmental Research Center.
Robert A. Aangeenbrug, associate professor of geography and acting director of the center, described the center as an agency funded by the state of Kansas to support research in public administration, political science and related areas for the faculty, students and citizens of Kansas.
The center has ties with the political science department and the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA).
"The historic function (of the center) has been to hold schools for public administrators," he said. "This function has now been transferred to the IPA."
Another role of the center is to give advice backed by their research facilities to cities on problems such as the fiscal system and how to get federal grants.
Aangeenbrug also serves as the census technical coordinator. It is his job, he said, to explain what the census means to cities in the state of Kansas.
said, "After a woman is trained she should have the right to exercise her option in seeking employment opportunities. If a competent young woman has been educated, she should compete equally in the labor market.
"This is not the case. The culture grants equal education, but does not offer women equal opportunity to fulfill equal expectations."
2 KANSAN Mar. 13 1970
Miss Taylor objects to the familiar argument that women are unsound and undependable employment investments.
"Except from the ages of 25 to 35, which are primarily the childbearing years, the employment patterns of men and women are coming closer, despite the fact that employment practices favor men," she said.
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Miss Taylor said many companies would not hire women with young children, and few places offered child care centers.
She said, "It is the right of each of us, not as women, but as people, to decide whether we need or want to work. Industry does not have the right to do so."
"A lot of women have accepted the role of second class citizens, but more and more women are becoming angry at this exploitation. They are no longer content to be a convenience of business."
Miss Taylor cited current House Bill 1916 as a step in the right direction toward the elimination of discriminatory practices against women.
A college women can contribute to the feminist movement by reporting any on-campus sex discrimination to the Associated Women Students' Commission on the Status of Women, Miss Taylor said the group would investigate the circumstances and if necessary take action against the discriminating party.
At the hearings on Bill 1916, a senator asked Miss Taylor about work legislation that favored women.
Topeka, she stated that 37 per cent of the Kansas labor force were women and 20 per cent of college trained women were working in positions that were of a non-professional nature.
"I favor protective legislation for all workers, not just women," she said.
Testifying in support of the bill before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee in
"It's important that we know what is going on," she said. "There are differences between the Women's Liberation Front and the National Organization for Women (NOW), but they both seek to right a particular inequity."
Miss Taylor described NOW, headed by Betty Freidan, author of "The Feminine Mystique," as a large national organization which advocates basic freedoms now denied to women.
She said the group was roughly divided between "aaction groups," which challenge certain basic American institutions, such as capitalism and the family structure, and "encounter groups," which help women discover in each other their common plight and their potential.
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Campus briefs
Tennis team meeting slated
Suzi Cammon, graduate assistant and coach of the women's intercollegiate tennis team at KU, announced that there will be a team organizational meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday at Robinson gymnasium. All those interested in playing on the women's tennis team must attend this meeting.
Workouts will be from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at Robinson beginning Monday with tryouts beginning March 31 and lasting until April 2.
Brainwashing subject of talk
Jack Mohr, a lecturer sponsored by the John Birch Society, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Mohr's lecture will be on sex education and sensitivity training as forms of communist brainwashing of today's youth. The title of his speech is "Our Families—Under Attack."
Mohr's visit, sponsored by the Movement to Restore Decency, is part of a tour affiliated with the John Birch Society.
African art lectures planned
Roy Sieber, Chairman of the Department of Fine Arts at Indiana University, will make a three-day visit to KU next week, during which he will make two lectures on African arts and artists.
Sieber will speak on "Traditional African Artists" at 2:30 p.m. Monday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is part of a forum program sponsored by SUA.
Tuesday the topic of Sieber's lecture will be "African Art: History and Context." The lecture will be at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
'Festival of life' scheduled
A "festival of life" will be held at Potter Lake Saturday beginning at 1:00 p.m.
The festival will feature craftsmen, bands and jewelers. The festival is being sponsored by the River City Arts Cooperative, a non-profit group.
Kilo Klippers elect officers
The Kilo Klippers, the newly organized auxiliary unit affiliated with Navy ROTC at KU, have elected officers for the organization's first term.
The elected officers are: Cheryl McElhose, Kansas City, Mo. senior president; Sunny Mons, Lake Forest, Ill. junior, vice-president; Sandy Clem, Overland Park sophomore, secretary; Pamela Wright, Lakin sophomore, treasurer; Frankie Platz, Osawatomi sophomore, social chairman; Pam McCan, Albuquerque, N.M. sophomore, activities chairman; and Jo Ann Jones, Prairie Village senior, public relations director.
The Kilo Klippers was formed as a service organization designed to promote interest in NROTC on campus and in the community.
Mar. 13
1970 KANSAN 3
A bill to set up a study of personnel procedures at state colleges and universities was killed Wednesday in the Kansas Senate. The bill, which had been sponsored by Rep. Morris Kay, R-Lawrence, had passed the House earlier this week.
The study would have included hiring, firing and tenure procedures. A legislative council would have been set up to study personnel procedures and establish broad guidelines for school administrations to follow.
Investigation bill on hiring & firing killed by Senate
Straws in the wind
Rep. Kay had stressed that the bill was not designed to hamper administration. He said that the legislature appropriated the peoples money, and that he thought a study should be set up to look into the personnel problems of state colleges and universities.
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The bill was killed in a floor vote in the Senate, according to Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge.
The
at Campbell's Alley Shop 843 Mass.
The Sphinx in Egypt was built about 2,900 B.C.
FRI.
SAT. TOGETHER
1c
SALE
Budweiser Pitchers only
1c
Buy one, get another for ONE CENT.
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Saturday, March 14 at 10:00 p.m.
Free Refreshments
Chance to win free games
Couples only Reservation required
3 games each with a total cost of $2.25. Phone now
at UN 4-3545
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
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
Hilltopper
Applications and Nominations
- Due March 20 Turn in at the information Desk in the Student Union.
- Selection will be based mainly on one criteria-whether the student has made an impact on KU: whether he left this school changed. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind.
- NOMINATIONS should be signed by 3 students. The nomination should include a list of activities and/or accomplishments of the nominee, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- SELF-NOMINATIONS OR APPLICATIONS should include letters of recommendations by 2 students or 1 student and 1 faculty member, a list of activities and/ or accomplishments, his address, his phone number, school, major, and GPA.
- All candidates must be classified as SENIORS.
- Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students.
KANSAN COMMENT
Laos: a temptation
After eight years of relative calm, the military situation in Laos has suddenly become an annoying pebble in the United States' retreating world combat boot. Just when America seemed to be successfully disengaging from its traumatic power play in Vietnam, Communist and neutralist forces clashed on Laos' strategic Plain of Jars last month.
The battle ended with the Communists' capture of the plain. But the action's implications ranged beyond a mere loss of face for the American-backed government troops. It also heightened the controversy over the extent of U.S. involvement in Laos, a controversy previously confined mainly to the floor of the Senate.
The Senators (Fulbright, Symington and others) who questioned the Nixon administration's sincerity in downplaying the number and use of our men and equipment in Laos were afraid the conflict might be transformed into another Vietnam. Their fears may be confirmed by a tragic Vietnam-like buildup in Laos, unless the administration and the American public make a careful assessment of the actual threat.
The Communist Pathet Lao, supported by an estimated 15,000 North Vietnamese troops, were the aggressors in the Plain of Jars, which was officially declared neutralist territory after the 1962 Geneva accord. But whether they intend to remain there or to continue driving toward the major Laotian cities of Luang Prabang and Vientiane, and possibly into Thailand, is uncertain.
The physical signs, which include more heavy battle equipment than on previous Communist excursions south, point to further strikes. The political situation and Hanoi's own logistical limits indicate that the new communist movement is less dangerous and that the domino theory may not be revived after all.
First, Hanoi may be attempting a diversionary tactic to prove that "Vietnamization"—any American support to the Asians short of supplying ground troops—is futile. The Laotian soldiers are infamously nonchalant about battle. They are reluctant to fight and, when forced to, generally do so by Marquis de Queensbury
rules. U.S. bombers and infantry advisers, which President Nixon believes will eventually be sufficient to keep the South Vietnamese government in power, couldn't help the neutralist troops stop the Plain of Jars push. Thus, Hanoi has shaken the groundwork of the concept of handing major responsibility to the Asians.
Second, Hanoi could be aiming at new U.S. compromises at the Paris peace talks. The North Vietnamese have said repeatedly that any major peace breakthroughs must come at the negotiating table, not through long-term American withdrawal. Until now, the United States has felt relatively safe from new enemy attacks in South Vietnam; American negotiators in Paris have made no concessions recently, in the belief that they had Hanoi under control. But the United States might have to reconsider its position with the knowledge that providing adequate deterrent forces in Laos would not be politically feasible at home.
Third, Hanoi must realize that it cannot extend its troops indefinitely southward. By the time the Communist forces reached the border of Thailand, they would probably be on inferior terms with the highly capable Thai army. And American public opinion might shift in favor of heavy U.S. ground and air support, should Thailand be endangered.
Hasty reaction on the part of the administration or the public to the latest Laos offensive could drive America into a situation similar to the one which it is now trying to leave.
The Nixon Doctrine advocates a "low posture" for the United States in the world. It posits a reluctance on our part to engage in small power disputes. But, like the obese matron who has sworn off candy, then cannot control her appetite when she is faced with an array of sweets, the administration may be inclined to reverse itself and enter the Laos dispute on the pretext of safeguarding American security. This is especially possible if the President hides the degree of our involvement from the public.
The United States must proceed carefully in Laos, hopefully away from intervention. There is a precedent for going the other way and its lessons are too painful. -Monroe Dodd
THE A.A.I. CIRCUS JOURNAL 1970
"IT'S NOT TRUE THAT WE'VE ESCALATED THE FIGHTING AND BOMBING IN CAOS, IT AT THE SAME LEVEL WE HAD IT FOR THE LAST YEAR OR SO."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Editorial Editors ... Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd
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hearing voices—
To the editor:
This letter is in reply to Mr. Jonathan Jordan's letter (Kansan, Feb. 24).
It seems that Mr. Jordan is either ignorant of the facts about establishing the Zionist state of Israel or he knows the facts and tries to conceal them by reiterating the classical false Zionist claims.
I will pick Mr. Jordan's claims, or the Zionist claims, and show that they are completely false. My references and documents will not be Arab. They will be foreign and particularly Jewish.
Zionist claim: Israel wants secure borders.
First:
My claim: Israel is an expansionist state. (Reference: the monthly publication of the National Working and Studying Youth (part of the Israeli Histadrut) edited by S.K.Emanual, special edition, June 20, 1967. In this publication, the Histadrut gives the map of future Israel. The map involves the Sinai Peninsula, Jordan, Palestine, Lebanon and most of Syria.)
Israel is always recruiting more Jewish immigrants. I just can't see how present Israel (of 1967) could accommodate all the Jews of the world (about 12 million) unless there is a plan to achieve the map of the Histadrut. Israel will design further "secure borders" (to conceal its aggression) to satisfy the Histadrut map.
Second:
Zionist claim: All Israeli arms are purchased with hard currency.
My claim: The hard currency of Israel is probably not enough to buy Phantom jets (among other heavy arms). In this respect I would like to mention that Israel received official U.S. help (1964-1968) in the sum of $1.127 billion. (Reference: U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants, P. 15)
The huge amount of money collected by the United Jewish Appeal which is essentially American, and tax-free, is sent to Israel. I guess that Mr. Jordan now realizes how Israeli arms are purchased by American money and not by Israeli hard currency. If Israel spends its revenues from citrus fruits and other exports to purchase arms, the Israelis will have to eat arms or starve to death.
Third:
Zionist claim: The Jews accepted the partition plan of the United Nations and Arab armies invaded Palestine. The Refugees were a result of an order of the Arab High Command that Arab citizens evacuate Jewish areas.
My claim: If the Jews truly accepted the U.N.'s partition plan, why did they capture more land in 1947 than had been allotted to them? This is not to forget lands captured after Israel's establishment (1948). They are Al-Uja and Um-Rashrash (now Eilat), both in Egypt. (Reference: United Nations maps and any
Atlas showing 1948 Israel.) The United Nations never recognized the new additions of 1948. People didn't forget the Israelis' annexation of Arab Jerusalem in spite of all the world governments of the United Nations except the United States, which abstained.
Let me remind Mr. Jordan that Israel declared its independence while the United Nations was convening to find a solution to the problem. Let me also point out that Israel was denied membership in the United Nations at first, then afterwards it was provisionally accepted. (Israel owes its admission to the United States and other Western powers' pressure.) The United Nations at that time was composed of 55 members, the majority of which were Western states that always supported Israel. A face that might surprise some: The United Nations has accepted Israel against its charter. Also, the United Nations has no right to partition Palestine.
If the Arabs did not flee because of the massacres of the Zionist terrorists such as the Irgun gang and Stern gangs, how does Mr. Jordan explain the Massacre of Kier-Yassin? Here I quote Menachim Begin, leader of the Irgun gang which was responsible for the "supreme victory" at Dier-Yassin. In his book, "The Revolt," he writes, "Panic overwhelmed the Arabs of Eretz Israel (Greater Israel); in the rest of
In Dier-Yassin, 250 people were massacred in cold blood (Reference: Jon Kimche, a Jewish scholar, in his book, "The Seven Fallen Pillars," 1953, p. 228).
the country, Arabs began to flee shouting Dier Yassin." Menachim Begin was member of the Israeli parliament and was recently awarded a cabinet post.
The claim that the Arabs were ordered to evacuate the land has no support and bears no truth. The Zionists say that the order of the Higher Arab Command (if such a name exists) was broadcast over the Arab radios which were monitored by the British Broadcasting System.
The fact is brought up by the Irish journalist, E. Childers, in an article published by The Spectator, May 12, 1963. In that article, Mr. Childers finds out the Zionist claim is a legend. I challenge the Zionists to support their claim (that the Arabs left after a command from the Arab armies).
Fourth:
Zionist claim: Arabs in Israel enjoy all the rights of an Israeli citizen.
My claim: This is false. On many occasions, it has been said by many Zionist leaders that they want a "pure Jewish state just as France is French and America is American." In such an "Israel," do gentiles have a place? i. e., Do Arab Christians and Arab Moslems have
a place? Logically, the answer is no.
In an Israeli I.D., the following items must be filled out: citizenship, nationality and religion. I wonder in which country do citizenship and nationality differ? I am a Christian. My Jordanian passport asserts that my citizenship and nationality are Jordanian. There is no item regarding my religion. Why should an item appear on the Israeli I.D. (or any other country's) unless some religions have certain privileges?
Mr. Jordan ends his letter by admitting that he has no solution to the problem.
I end my letter by presenting the solution adopted by the Palestinian Command struggle (Al Fatah and other commando groups): Let Israel compromise. Instead of occupying more lands and hence create more refugees, let the refugees go back to their private property.
Let all inhabitants of Palestine (now Israel), including the two million Palestinian refugees, establish a democratic, non-religious, non-racist, secular state in which all faiths coexist and have equal rights. Let Israel evacuate the lands that it occupies that are non-Palestinian.
After that there will be no problem and no wars that endanger the world peace.
Muwaffak J. Haddadin Amman, Jordan graduate student
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Western poetry
By RICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
The western genre has become so abused and distorted in recent years that its ability to give us an evening of exciting entertainment, let alone art, has greatly diminished. But now along comes "The Wild Bunch," as grim and glorious a western as anyone could want. It also happens to be a work of art.
The director and co-writer, Sam Peckinpah, is obviously a man who loves and respects the traditions of the American West. He made his name eight years ago with a modest, poetic movie called "Ride the High Country," which introduced the theme brought to full intensity in "The Wild Bunch": the death of the frontier and the fate of men trapped between two eras.
Peckinpah sets his story in Texas and Mexico in 1913, where automobiles and paved sidewalks strike subtly jarring notes against the primitive grime of the land and the people. The Wild Bunch is a gang of bandits, led by William Holden, who perform their last job—stealing guns from a U.S. government train for a corrupt Mexican general—while being pursued by a band of bounty hunters, led by Robert Ryan, a former member of the gang.
Though they are thieves, they are honorable thieves; they are brutal and coarse, but they believe in the old virtues of companionship and sticking together and keeping one's word—virtues that bring about their deaths. They are knights-errant living by a code that is obsolete; desperate men, caught between bounty hunters on one side, treacherous Mexicans on another, and the law on still another.
The most noticeable, if not the most important element of this film is its violence. Some have complained that there is too much of it, that it is too bloody, and even that it can do harm to those watching it. But less violence would make "The Wild Bunch" a different picture; the blood is not there for its own sake, but linked inseparably to the theme. And it is not real, in the sense the term is used in the movies; the twoorges of killing we are given (one at the beginning and one at the end) are surreal—their brutality is caricatured, carried beyond realism to abstraction. Peckinpah is surely a man opposed to violence, but to argue the point is irrelevant. He is interested in the poetry of violence, as Kurosawa was in "The Seven Samauri," and to assign it any sort of social significance is ridiculous.
"The Wild Bunch" is a tragic, though not totally despairing vision (In the end, the launger of the survivors as they ride into the new era mingles with the flashback laughter of the dead bandits), which brings Peckinpah into the front ranks of American directors and injects new excitement and depth into a stagnant genre.
"Tell Them Willie Boy is Here"
—An exciting western chase story, excellently directed and edited, though occasionally bogged down by a simple-minded socially-conscious script.
The Weekend Scene
"The Wild Bunch"—See review this page.
"The Magic Christian"—A silly comedy starring Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr, based upon Terry Southern's clever novel.
"The Dunwish Horror"—A modern terror tale about the occult, taken from H. P. Lovercraft's classic story.
"Easy Rider"—A simple, eloquent story of despair and violence in America.
"The Great Escape" (SUA Popular Film, Fri. and Sat.) A suspenseful tale of escape from a Nazi POW camp, starring Steve McQueen and James Garner. Directed by John Sturges; 1964.
"Strangers on a Train" (International Series, Fri.)—One of Alfred Hitchcock's best films tells of a bizarre relationship between a tennis star and a demented young man. Made in 1951, starring Robert Walker and Farley Granger.
"La Ronde" (KU Film Society, Sun.)—A French film, made in 1950 by the master stylist, Max Ophuls.
SPRING 70 CONCERT — The University Symphony Orchestra presents their Spring happening under the direction of George Lawner, professor of orchestra. The program includes: "Symphony No. 7 in C Major" by Schubert, "Fantasy on Japanese Wood Prints" by Hovhaness and Suite from "The Firebird" by Stravinsky.
Switzerland's six million people —roughly the population of greater Chicago-support 400 newspapers, including more than 100 dailies.
Mar. 13
1970 KANSAN 5
"A LYRIC, TRAGIC SONG OF THE ROAD! AN HISTORIC MOVIE!"
—RICHARD SCHICKEL, LIFE
PANDO COMPANY in association with
RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS presents
easy rider Restricted
starring
PETER FONDA · DENNIS HOPPER
JACK NICHOLSON · COLOR · Released by COLUMBIA PICTURES
Granada
TREATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5784
NOW!
Adults 1.50
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Box Office Opens 5:00
1970 KANSAN 3
"A LYRIC, TRAGIC SONG OF THE ROAD! AN HISTORIC MOVIE!"
—RICHARD SCHICKEL, LIFE
PANDO COMPANY in association with
RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS presents
easy rider
Restricted
Starring
PETER FONDA · DENNIS HOPPER
JACK NICHOLSON · COLOR • Released by COLUMBIA PICTURES
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784
NOW!
Adults 1.50
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Box Office Opens 5:00
THE GREAT ESCAPE
MARCH 13,14
7:00 and 9:30 pm
woodruff aud
$.50
Changed from "Soldier in the Rain"
THE GREAT ESCAPE
MARCH 13,14
7:00 and 9:30 pm
woodruff aud
$.50
Changed from "Soldier in the Rain"
WONDER WOMAN
Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of man?
The Magic Christian do.
Peter Sellers & Ringo Starr in "The Magic Christian"
TECHNICOLOR®
Matinee Daily 2:30
NOW SHOWING
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
MARY TUVEN HOAG—Performing on the violin, she will give her graduate recital.
FRUMOXO—Singing at the Middle Earth Coffee House, these two gentlemen will give their first concert at KU.
"THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" (theatre production)— One of the major productions of the year, this play centers around a teacher at a girls' school whose methods are rather unconventional.
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!"
—Rex Reed, Holiday Magazine
ROBERT REDFORD • KATHARINE ROSS
ROBERT BLAKE • SUSAN CLARK
"TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE"
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR • PANAVISION® GP
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:15
Adult 1.50; Child .75
THE Hillcrest 2
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA
The wild bunch is loose again!
A FAMILY BAND
A PHIL FELDMAN PRODUCTION
He invoked the UNSPEAKABLE
She invited IT!
H. P. LOVECRAFT'S CLASSIC TALE OF TERROR AND THE SUPERNATURAL!
The DUNWICH HORROR
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL
SANDRA DEE • DEAN STOCKWELL • ED BEGLEY • LLOYD BOCHNER
DONNA BACCALA
JOANNA MOORE JORDAN
SAM JAFFE
JAMES H NICHOLSON • SAMUEL Z ARKOFF • ROGER CORMAN
DANIEL HALLER
CURTIS LEE HANSON HENRY ROSENBAUM • RONALD SILKOSKY • H. P. LOVECRAFT
1970 American International Pictures, Inc.
NOW!
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:30
Adult 1.50; Child .75
THE Hillcrest
THE Hillcrest
Jayhawks open golf schedule
The Kansas golf team will open the 1970 season today in a two-day meet in Stillwater. Last year's squad finished a distant seventh in this meet but coach Wilbur Norton is optimistic in his outlook for this year.
"All of these guys are a year older and with a year's experience, could make quite a bit of improvement," Norton said this week. "I feel we can move into the first division in the conference, maybe as high as third if everyone plays the way they can."
The Jayhawks return six lettermen from the team that finished seventh in the Big Eight last year. The returners include the 'Hawks' second and third best scorers Craig DeLongy and Stan Zimmerman, based on average per round.
DeLongy, a freshman last year, led the squad with a 78.6 average for 18 holes. DeLongy, despite his low average, could manage only one victory in five individual matches last season.
Zimmerman, Topeka sophomore, was close behind DeLongy with a 78.8 average. Zimmerman faired much better in individual competition than did DeLongy. He won seven and lost five last season. Zimmerman is still on the team despite the loss of the top of his left thumb last summer in a water skiing accident.
Another returning letterman from last years conference won
Tennis team tops Icabods
The Jayhawk tennis squad blitzed the Washburn Ichabods 9-0 Thursday afternoon in Topeka.
Jim Ballinger, Tom Carlson,
Ken Dickson, Dan Oram, Cal
Simmons and Tim Williams all
polished off an Ichabod in individual competition. The 'Hawks also won all three doubles matches.
6 KANSAN Mar. 13
1970
four, lost 10 and tied two in dual competition is George Burgland, Derby sophomore. Burgland won two matches and lost two in dual competition and had an 80.1 average last year.
Jack Rogers, Keokuk, Iowa, senior, also averaged 80.1 last year. He will be out to improve on his 1-8-2 record from a year ago.
Roger Wells, Denver sophomore, and David Ross, Arkansas City senior, complete the returning KU letterman. Wells averaged 83.8 and Ross 84.6 last year. In qualifying for the meet in Stillwater, Ross led the team with 72 at Lawrence Country Club.
Also making the trip to Oklahoma will be Warren Wood, Independence, and Jim Dennerline. Paola freshman.
University Elections
"They have been playing well," Norton said of the Jay-hawks. "The good weather has really helped. They have been able to get in a lot of practice rounds."
Student Body President and Vice-President Student Senate Class Officers
Tuesday and Wednesday, March 17 and 18th 8:00-6:00 p.m.
Strong, Murphy and the Union Tuesday, March 17th at 7:00-10:00 p.m. GSP, Oliver and Ellsworth
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
CLASS OF '71 ELECT!
STEVE CHILDS v.p.
JIM NICHOLS-pres.
THE FILM 'WHERE THEY WERE' AT THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MUSEUM IN BROOKLYN, NY. IT WAS RELEASED ON SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1972.
SUZY BOCELL-treas.
PAT RICH-sec.
PD.-NCRB
M. J. BURTON
"Can You Dig It?"
"Friday (that's tonight) and Sat (that's tomorrow night) we can groove to the Sounds of Tide. Very heavy!" One Dollar Admission — One Dollar Pitcher
8:00 p.m.
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THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
804 W.24th
Aggies and Drake claim regional wins
By United Press International
By United Press International Fourth-ranked New Mexico State blew a 17-point lead, then rallied on guard Jimmy Collins' shooting and went on to beat Big Eight champion Kansas State 70-66 Thursday night in the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball tournament.
Drake defeated Houston 92-87 in the first game and will face New Mexico State Saturday for the right to advance to the four-team national finals at the University of Maryland.
New Mexico State opened as if it would breeze past the Wildcats of the Big Eight, scoring the first seven points of the game and limited K-State to
eight points in the first 13 minutes.
But K-State, with Jerry Venable leading the charge, closed the gap to 35-27 by halftime and continued to chop away at the Aggie lead in the second half.
A 12-foot jumper by Jeff Webb finally put K-State in front, 54-53, with 6:32 remaining. But, with six minutes to go, Collins hit a jumper and New Mexico State was again
Drake, champion of the Missouri Valley Conference, took a convincing 18-point lead into the final nine minutes before
Tony's 66 Service
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tune-ups
starting service
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Al Williams, lone starter returning from last year's Drake team which finished third nationally, set the early pace for the Bulldogs, who led by 10 or more points throughout the first half.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI)
—Reluctant Richie Allen, controversial slugger reported here from his Philadelphia home Thursday, signed with the St. Louis Cardinals and said "I hope to be able to play with peace of mind."
Allen signs with Cards
Smiling, neatly dressed in a light brown double breasted Edwardian suit with orange shirt and accessories, the 28-year-old Allen said he was "very excited to be a Cardinal" and was "satisfied" with the reported $80,000 contract offered by the club that traded regulars Curt Flood and Tim McCarver to Philadelphia to obtain him.
"What I wanted to do was clear up some fringe benefits I got from Philadelphia last year," he said. "No, a take-it-or-leave-it ultimatum by August Busch didn't force me to sign. My lawyer and I had already talked it out Tuesday night and reached a decision before I heard Wednesday what Mr. Busch had said."
Allen, grinning, said "besides,
it was about time for me to leave for camp. Spring training is too long and I haven't been on time since 1964. I figured on getting here around March 15,
anyway. My mom, bless her,
has been urging me to go for
two weeks.
Allen, who hit 32 homers and drove in 89 runs for the Phillies, even though playing only 118 games last year when he experienced a month-long suspension, said his goal was to play "all games" if possible.
Mar. 13
1970 KANSAN 7
KANSAN Sports
ahead, 57-55; this time to stay.
Venable was the game's high scorer with 26 points; Collins finished with 23 for the Aggies.
Drake's Bulldogs withstood a furious second half Houston rally triggered by sharp-shooting guard Poo Welch to squeeze out a 92-87 victory Thursday night in the first game of the NCAA midwest Regional basketball tournament.
Robisch decides to pass up baseball
Dave Robisch, All-Big Eight in baseball and basketball, will not compete in baseball this spring.
"After a long basketball season that left him mentally and physically fatigued, Dave felt he could not perform for us to the best of his ability and decided to pass up baseball this spring," Jayhawk coach Floyd Temple said Thursday.
The 6-9 lefty led the Jayhawk pitchers with a 4-2 season record and an earned run average of 2.57.
Vermont ranks second in asbestos and fourth in talc mining in the United States.
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
TEHRAN
GALLERY
Imported jewelry
from Iran...
authentic rugs,
brass and ceramics.
TEHRAN GALLERY, 705 Mass.
- Portraits
- Passports
- Applications
'Please call for appointment'
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
Houston, with Welch hitting from all angles, staged one of its patented rallies that barely fell short.
B
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
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Welch scored 10 points during one three-minute span and twice helped cut the Bulldog margin to four points.
Lt. Col. Jack Mohr
Honored Member of the John Birch Society
speaking on
SENSITIVITY TRAINING AS A COMMUNIST PLOT.
Monday, March 16, 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Union
Sponsored by the SUA Minority Opinions
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!
Budweiser on Tap
Alfie's
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH
RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT
T.M. Allis's Fish&Chips
6th and Maine VI 2-5500
$ \textcircled{c} $1969, Alfie's Fish & Chips, Inc
Poverty plan suggested
Income distribution can eliminate poverty in the United States. Ronald Calgaard, KU associate professor of economics told the Faculty Forum Thursday.
The U.S. government lists a family of four living in an urban
area with an income of below $3,900 as poor. Calgaard said. Any family is poor if their income is below the median of one half the average income for a family of four, he added.
Graduation garb must be ordered next week
Graduation candidates must order and make payment for their cap and gown at the information counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union. Registration hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The cost for cap and gown including tassel is $4.50 for both bachelor's and master's candidates. It is $5.50 for a doctorate candidate. If the tassel is returned a 50 cent refund will be made. Caps and gowns may be ordered by mail with checks or money orders made payable to
the Kansas Union and mailed to: Caps and Gowns, Kansas Union, University of Kansas. Included must be name, current mailing address, school of graduation, student I. D. number, sex, height and hat size.
After March 31 a 50 cent penalty fee will be assessed and after May 1, $1
Caps and gowns may be picked up at Hoch Auditorium on May 30 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; May 31, from noon to 6 p.m.; and June 1, from noon until Commencement time.
Meningitis epidemic not likely
There have been no cases of meningitis reported at Ft. Riley and Ft. Leavenworth army bases in wake of the epidemic at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., last week.
Irwin Army Hospital at Ft. Riley and Munson Army Hospital at Ft. Leavenworth have both stated that no cases of the highly contagious disease have been reported in their hospitals
Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Watkins Hospital, described the disease as an inflammation of the lining membrane that covers the brain. Though there are many types of the disease, the type at the fort is the typical meningococcus bacillus that is contagious, he said.
The symptoms, he said, usually start with headaches and neck stiffness which develops into the definite symptoms of shock, bleeding into the skin and unconsciousness.
Watkins Hospital has had no cases of meningitis, Dr. Schwegler said. Lawrence Memorial Hospital and the Douglas County Health Center also report no cases.
The trouble at the army bases, Dr. Schwegler said, is the close quarters and the strenuous work plus the arrival everyday of new men. Though a college is a rather confined situation, he said, there was not much chance of an epidemic here.
At Ft. Leonard Wood there have been three deaths and 29 cases of meningitis this year. Because of the epidemic and reports the men had been overworked and not cared for at the health unit, several members of the U.S. House Armed Services Committee visited the fort last week to investigate the conditions. Rep. Richard Ichord, D-Mo., chairman of the group, said, "Everything possible was being done to bring the epidemic under control."
Meeting scheduled
The KU Physical Therapy Club will meet March 17 at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlor A. There will be a panel discussion on the role of the physical therapist. Panel members will be chief physical therapists from three local hospitals.
Mar. 13
1970
8 KANSAN
THE HILL in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver 9th & III.
SAVE YOURSELF AFINE
Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95
T.I.R.E. co.
720 East 9th VI 3-0950
"MOORE"BURGER
"The Biggest Hamburger In Town"
VI 3-9588 1414 W.6th
Poverty is on the decrease, Calgaard said, but slowly. In 1960, he quoted, 22 per cent or 40 million persons in the U.S. were considered in poverty. In 1969, only 13 per cent or 25 million persons were so considered.
Raney Drug Stores
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest,925 Iowa Downtown,921 Mass.
The group living below the median point has not changed since 1945, Calgaard said. Twenty per cent of families of four were below the median then and in 1969, 20.1 per cent live below the median.
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
Generally the persons in this poverty group were from groups with lower levels of education, with female heads of families, and persons in minority groups. Recent figures show that only 3.4 per cent of the labor force is unemployed.
SENIORS
An innovative blend of teaching, research, and application is being offered in one of the most exciting business laboratories in the world, Dallas, Texas. The SMU School of Business focuses on individualized instruction, developing entrepreneurial ability and leadership, and discovering and distributing relevant knowledge about business. For an inside look at this NOW MBA program, see the SMU recruiter on campus
Friday, March 20
C
School of Business Administration
Southern Methodist University
Dallas, Texas 75222
Use Kansan Classified
University of Kansas Theatre
presents
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Jay Allen
Adopted from the novel by Muriel Spark
MARCH 13,14,18,19,20
For Tickets Call UN 4-3982
Current registration card admits to $1.40 seat
University Theatre --- Murphy Hall
RING DAYS
Next Tuesday and Wednesday, March 17 and 18
The Official RING
OF THE UNIVERSITY
1865
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. COLLEGE
A factory representative will be at the bookstore to help you personalize your KU class ring. Seniors-order now to assure delivery by graduation. Juniors-get your ring now and enjoy it for a year.
KANSAS
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Coeds learn self-defense
By CHARLENE MULLER
Mad rapists and fresh dates — beware!
Before you attack a woman in the Lawrence area again you had better make sure she is not enrolled in the KU Women's Self-Defense Class.
The class, a branch of the KU Karate Club, meets each Thursday night and is instructed by Max Muller, Prairie Village law student.
KANSAN Women
Muller teaches women a mixture of karate, judo and alkido
"Each martial art stresses different techniques," Muller said, "and a woman needs a mixture of techniques to physically defend herself in different situations unless she is proficient in one martial art."
Karate, Muller said, stresses punching, kicking and body shifting. Judo centers on throwing, choking and tripping. He said jujitsu is a combination of judo and karate. In judo you flip a man over your shoulder palm down, bending his elbow. In jujitsu, you flip him palm up, break his elbow and strike him when he is down, he said. There is more breaking of bones and joints than throwing, as in judo.
Muller said he teaches the women how to convert simple things, such as a purse and a
Mar. 13
1970 KANSAN 9
tube of lipstick, into weapons. If a woman has a tube of lipstick between her index and middle fingers, she can clutch her fist around it and by punching with it can put her force into a small area and penetrate deeply into her opponent's body.
Mental attitude is stressed, Muller said. A woman can usually defend herself without lifting a finger. The class teaches women poise in situations of stress. Because of this, he said, size is not important. Any girl can be overpowered by an attacker, he said.
Muller gives an example of a 4-foot-10 inch student he taught two years ago who rode home from a local tavern one night with a boy she had just met. The boy was taller than 6-feet and weighed more than 200 pounds. He grabbed her waist and would not let her out of the car when they arrived at her living group.
Instead of panicking, the girl said, "Hey, let me show you what I learned in karate." He laughed, let go of her to see what she would do, then she jumped out
FRIDAY NITE
Budweiser
Pitchers ONLY
1c
with purchase of
1 reg. priced pitcher
1c
Featuring Fri. & Sat.
Together-8 p.m.
RED DOG INN
Coming...
of the car and ran into the hall.
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
Dallas Taylor & Gryg Kervors
Dejávu
The Long Awaited Second Album by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
reg. 5.98 now $388
ATLANTIC
Available NOW on 8 Track Tape at $477
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center
A graduate student said she took the course after having been raped last summer.
"Too many people," she said, "think it will never happen to me. The class 'tells it like it is' by putting you in real life situations. It makes you more perceptive to what can happen."
She said she would eventually be teaching in the inner city and thought it was important she knew how to defend herself.
The confidence you gain in the class, said Marti Crow, Pratt sophomore, extends situations in which you are threatened mentally, as well as physically. This ranges from a teacher asking a question you cannot answer in class to defending your opinion without breaking down in a heated argument.
The Carriage Lamp Private Club
invites you to dine and dance to the sound of the
Paul Dahlstrom Trio Friday & Saturday
Carriage Lamp
VANELI
VANEOi
For the girls who just love shoes Van Elis are what
they choose. Pictured only two styles from a large selection in black patent, navy calf or patent, white patent and red and white calf.
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
Group will pick judges
A selection committee formed by the University Human Relations Committee is soliciting recommendations for pompon and yell leader contest judges.
Leader Squad and Pep Band — and in other such groups which might develop in the future."
TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO
★ Student specials
★ New, experienced manage-
ment
★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
9th & Miss. 842-9413
Miss Leek said judges would meet prior to tryouts to establish judging procedures. Judges would be free to discuss qualifications of finalists before voting.
letic events. The University Human Relations Committee considers it urgent that black students be included in the groups that currently provide these services — the Pompon Squad, Yell
Before tryouts, a series of clinics designed to teach prospective pompon girls and yell leaders the techniques and procedures used by the squads will be conducted by squad members. Clinics for pompon squad candidates will be March 31 and April 2 and 14. All clinics will be held at 7 p.m. in Allen Field House.
Through a Human Relations Committee proposal special clinics and individual tutoring will be offered to black candidates so they can compete on an equal basis with white candidates who have had previous experience with pompon or yell leader squad procedures. Miss Leek said black candidates were encouraged to demonstrate and emphasize original routines which could be added to the squad's repertoires.
Nine judges will be selected to preside at pompon squad tryouts April 16 and yell leader tryouts April 21.
DRAUGHT HOUSE
The Human Relations Committee issued a statement concerning black representation on the squads which said:
Recommendations for judges should be turned in at the dean of women's office to Mrs. Cheryl Dorris by March 16. Recommendations can be made by any campus organization.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
"Recommendations can be for faculty members, students or members of the administration," explained Carol Leek, Fort Scott senior and member of the Human Relations Committee.
The seven-member selection committee comprises representatives from the dean of women's office, the athletic department, the Human Relations Committee, advisers to the pompon and yell leader squads and a member of each squad.
The selection committee has drawn up a reserve list of possible judges for use in the event that an adequate number of judges was not recommended. She added that none of the people named on the list had been notified of their selection.
"Since a significant number of black students are members of athletic teams at KU, they should be adequately represented on groups which provide entertainment and promote spirit at ath-
The report was assembled by Lawrence Blades, dean of the KU School of Law, and concerns a speech that Velvet gave to a crowd in front of the law school as part of the demonstration.
Report on Velvel protest is sent to Board of Regents
A report on the participation of Lawrence R. Velvel, associate professor of law, in a protest of the "Chicago seven" contempt citations has been sent to the Kansas Board of Regents.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. forwarded the report to the regents with undisclosed recommendations, a high-level administrator said.
The faculty handbook takes the following stand on academic freedom:
"The university teacher is a citizen, a member of a learned profession and an officer of an educational institution. When he speaks or writes as a citizen, he should be free from institutional censorship or discipline, but his special position in the community imposes special obligations.
"A faculty member is free to express publicly, in speaking or writing, his own considered view or opinion on any and all matters which he feels should from time to time receive such expression, provided such statements shall satisfy the requirements of professional dignity and good taste and are not represented as other than the private view of the person expressing them."
10 KANSAN Mar. 13
1970
THE
GREAT
ESCAPE
MARCH 13.14.15
780 am and 930 pm
woodruff aud
--for ways to make information more intelligible to more people. To make it impossible for carelessness to destroy efficiency,.
MR YUK
TGIF Free Admission
me
xx
groove to the
HEAVY SOUNDS
of the
“CRADLE”
All Girl Soul & Rock Band
Free Admission
TGIF
船
Free Admission
TGIF
雪
人形
---
Could you get enthusiastic about selling the most salable product in the world?
The product is ideas.
The 2600 men who sell ideas for us are excited about what they're doing. We know that because they're successful at it. And many of them are recent college graduates.
In fact, our preference is for young college graduates who get a kick out of being loners. Bull sessions aside, college students spend at least four years being loners in the world of ideas. As a member of the Moore sales team, youd still be pretty much on your own, with responsibility that grows as you grow
Your job would involve you with communication problems. People problems. Problems in business logistics. You'd be looking
Δ Δ
Come and look us over. Demand specifics. Weigh us as hard as we'll be weighing you. We might turn out to be your kind of people. Write to Wm. D. Hamm, Manager, Sales Selection and Employment at the address below. He'll give you a better idea of what it's all about.
Challenging? You bet it is.
Moore Business Forms Inc.
Denton, Texas 76201
P. O.Box 1369
An equal opportunity employer
MOORE BUSINESS FORMS, INC.
Over 675 offices and plants. 281 salesmen in North America
Nina, the happy ending shoe
For a happy ending, always follow your nose and keep your eyes peeled for your own thing, with your own people. For your feet — your own fashions, brought to you by Nina. We keep you a step ahead in silhouette and color . . . so you'll be prepared for a happy ending at any moment.
spring...
Capture the mood of Spring
CADENCE
Available in these ultimate mood-capturing colors:
Navy Blue and Cuero Brown
819 Mass. Trensberg's = Shoes VI 3-3470
Where Styles Happen
Capture the mood of
CADENCE
Available in these ultimate mood-capturing colors:
Navy Blue and Cuero Brown
3
Arensberg's = Shoes
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Catalogue are referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
vised, comprehensive, "New Analysis
of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Tition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th
St.
Must Sell, Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also muke and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-5763 evenings. 3-16
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately. $1200. See at Ridgway Court. 3020 Iowa. LOT G23 or call VI 2-6138 after 6 p.m. 3-25
Polaroid model 800 camera, used five times, wink light, flash, light reducer, exposure meter, leather carrying case, print copier, complete instructions. Original value over $230. Sell for $100 or best offer. Call 842-285-9933 3-13
Custom designed, multi-purpose weight lifting - training apparatus. May be in 8'x8" space. Ideal, economical purchase for individual apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved by York Barbell Co., Inc.). Also 577.5 lbs of assorted weights. Call J. B. at 843-2103. 3-13
Women's contract at Naimsim—selling for loss, Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
Really great fish mobiles from Thailand in several colors and sizes. You won't find them anywhere else, so drop into the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
For Sale: Wooded sloping building site in Martin's Park area. Two acres. Together or separately. Gill Abbies, 843-1051, After hours, 843-6453.
Canon FT-QL with a 1.2, 58 mm lens.
Also a 200 mm telephone and misc,
accessories. Steven Briggs. 842-8402
3-13
Zenith 2-speaker portable stereo. 3-speed 16-33-45 RPM. Excellent condition. Call 843-5755. 3-16
Television—Admiral Console—beautiful black and white. New tube, $45 cash. Friendic Electric Desk Calculator, $35. Call 843-8191 at 6:00. 3-16
Corn husk dolls from the Southern Appalachian Mountains craftsmen, these are the dolls that were played with by our country. Museum of Natural History Gift Shop, open weekdays 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays. 12:30 to 4:30. 3-18
Famous brand component system.
Save $20.00. Now only $99.90 at Ray
Stoneback's 929 Mass. Open Mon. and
Thurs. evenings. 3-16
Repossessed Magnavox Stereo Component. 1 year old, 20 watt amp. Was used with Ray Tracing on Ray back's. 929 Mass. Open Mon., and Thurs. evenings.
1964 Chevrolet Impala Super Sport,
327, 300 hp., 4 speed, buckets, maroon.
Call 842-4774 after 6:00. 3-17
Elect. typewriter, paint sprayer, hi intensity lamps, refrig. and cupboard, drafting table, lamp and tackle boxes, mud and snow tires, port. AM-FM radio and phone, Nicolet recorder and transceiver. 842-1970. 3-17
Corvette for sale, 1965, 365 H.P., both
wheels, with automatic transmission.
7922, from 4-7 p.o. manufacr. for Steve 3-14
Ngahua, '63, 10x55, 2 barm, din. r,
completely furrow, carpeted, new auto,
washer, metal util, bldg. b fence,
yard; june occupancy only 842-26-
3-17
Vespa scooter 125cc, excellent mechanical condition, good body, nearly new paint job. Very good for dependable use only for 30-197 Call UN 4-3217 or 842-7305. 3-17
Ampex Stereo Tape recorder-automatic reverse, automatic threading, microphones, tapes, and demagnitizer, 2 years old, must sell before spring vacation, call Bob Brown. 843-5721. 3-17
Epiphone 12-string guitar (acoustic)
for sale; excellent condition; fast action.
$110.00. Call Bill at 842-4059.
3-18
1965 Triumph TR4, BRG, Stebro ex-
haust, Pirelli tires, Lucas lamps, luggage rack, excellent condition, call Rick, 843-2327. 3-16
SOCIAL ACTION
IN THE 70's
UN 4-3474
'54 Chevy New battery, good radio.
Best offer. Call 842-8594, after 5. 3-16
Walnut stereo speaker cabinets. These are beautiful floor models with 12" speaker systems. Perfect condition. Must sell! Call 843-6707. 3-18
GTX-1970, 440c.l, 4b, air.cou,
air-OMFM w/ rear speaker, power
steering, vinyl roof, and disc brakes.
Must sell. Steve, 842-4275. 3-18
1969 Mustang, 302 V8 stick, blue with black interior, will sacrifice for quick sale. $1995. Call 842-2191 or 842-8870
2-18
Bicycle—Schwinn Paramount Deluxe with sew up tires, tools, etc. Excellent condition. Make reasonable offer. Phone 843-3241 eve. 3-19
1969 Roadrunner Coupe--Save $1,100 on this beautiful year-old muscle car with pop-options like: 383 magnum, 335 h.p. t: Torquefile; power disc tire; steering air; factory air and tape; Konix; F14 Model II and four more years of factory warranty. Ivy green with matching vinyl top, 13,000 miles, never raced or lost List $4,100; asking $2,995. Got metal frame for a smaller boss. 843-774 or 2337 Murphy (grey buildings east of Holiday Inn) after 2 p.m. 3-19
65 Chev. SS. New wide tires, brakes,
shocks. Black with red interior.
4-speed, 327, A.C. Call Stretch or Jim,
842-1200, rm. 234. 3-17
NOTICE
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-14
515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Que. If you want some honest-to-gooodness B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
GROOVE-TODAY in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galeine, Find the latest, the best for boys and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky.
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynaco
daler offers the best of audio at
the lowest price. Buy at factory cost,
shipping plus 10% handling charge,
Ravox and other lines available. Call
842-2047 evenings. 3-31
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus.
$115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3- 16
0705. 3- 16
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in these and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tt
We ___ 3-16
4 see 3-16
a change 3-16
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Clindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas. Sophomore 3-16
The Castle Tea Room is ideal for luncheons, dinner parties, or even receptions. Call Lubrise K843-1131. Most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 3-16
Robert "Tuck" Duncan: active, dynamic, responsible independent for North College Student Senator! 3-16
"Profits" from sales in the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop make possible a school services program and monumental education. Help us expand our educational shopping weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays from 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
We're back from New York with nourished thinking and stimulating objects. Rosaela's Hotel, Harper, 316) 896-9121. Schedule sent to request. 3-16
Graduate Robert ISP—Sureendra Bhana, Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed Hofmann, Michael Kerr, Leroy Mermott, Derry Oettel, Patterson, Harriette Stallworth, Joe VanZandt, John Whalen. 3-13
Position—improvement of university environment. (1) Students on plant maintenance. (2) Automonomy maintained. (3) Graduate organization in all departments. 3-13
Home of the
"Big Shef"
BURGER
CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
BURGER CHEF
We'd like to serve you in the capacity of Senior Class officers. Randy Andrews, Ed Wood, Pat Riley, Kathy Bruning. 3-18
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18, 20% off. All crafted styles. Hodge Podge. 10:00-10:30 (open Thursday night) 842-6822 3-18
Like pancakes, french toast, ham amy egg cheese and economically priced? come to the street across the street from Lindley Hall. Breakfast 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. 3-16
Students of Objectivism—discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand and others. 7:30 Monday, Oread Room, Kansas Union. 2-16
Pilots - Optopac Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly湿 rate; Chesna 150
120; Honeywell 85; $50-30; Cherno 180; $12.50; 2-seat chair
Phone 182-124 after 6
4-6
Change the College now! Vote John Friedman—Alliance Senator from Liberal Arts and Sciences. 3-17
We've got Beatles—the UDK ad in Tuesday's edition sold out our complete lineup. We've had a few albies but also and still at low prices at Tempo in the Malls. 3-19
Thesis Typing—10 years experience—
Marlene Higley. After 5:40 at 843-
6048. (8:00 to 5:00—842-0111.) 4-3
TYPING
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ers, form writers, copywriter,
Pica type. Competent service.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Disse-
tations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.)
Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-
1522. 4-8
Typing, Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249. 3-13
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman.
Accurate typing of papers, manuscripts, theses by experienced typist on carbon ribbon selective. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson, 842-212-3. 1-16
Typing. Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree.
Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249. 3-16
Typing, Experienced typist IBM Sea-
phone 843-3186 Work guarantee
5-16
WANTED
Ride wanted—Topeka to KU, MWF,
must arrive by 9:30 and can leave at
2:30. Call CE2-0571. 3-18
Wanted—used motorcycle crash hel-
net. Curl Murl at 842-9073 after 6:00
p.m. 3-16
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt. with three others.
$51.25 per month, including water.
Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. vi. PI 2-6357.
Wanted: Female roommate for summer. Share 1 bdmr, air-cond, apt.
Available June 1st Call Cheryl, UN 4-3106 or 842-5369. 3-13
MR Sirloin
Sirloin
The Sirtoin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Suiting steaks and fresh select seafoods await you when you arrive at the Sirtoin. We serve only the finest .. preparing the selection as you like them with dinner fareings. One night at the Sirtoin for uncomparable dining pleasure.
U.S. Choice • Select Steaks • Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge
843-1431
U.S. Choice Steaks Select Seafoods
Female roommate for summer. Share
bdrm, air-cond, apt w/ pool. $73 /
utilities & utilities. Available Jabl-
lest. Call Cheryl, UN 4-3106 or
54-126
Available now! Need one girl roommate to finish the year. Move in now for $45, April and May—$65. Close to campus. Call 842-9156. 3-17
Need one roommate to share expenses with 3 other girls. For months of April and May. $65.50 per month Gatehouse apartments. Call 844-519-5128
Male guinea pig to mate with our female. Any color or type. Will negotiate terms. 843-8615. 3-19
SERVICES OFFERED
Income tax returns prepared by student with six years' experience. One student from campus. Lowest rates up. Greentown, 12M Rir, 845-969-3-13 after 6 p.m.
Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 80112 Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
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. 4-1
Graduate student in French will tutor
Graduate and intermediate student.
Call 843-9905 3-16
LOST
Lost- 1 (one) Notebook. Reward-
name. Richard. Scharine. Subject.
Subject. Richard. Production. 42-8070. Spea-
phone 843-5072 or 42-8070. Address.
1149 Pennsylvania St. 3-16
Multi-colored female cat with long, thick fur. Cat V1 3-8153. 3-13
Lost: a diamond and sapphire gold ring. In the women's restroom at Corbin. If found, call Carol, Rea 708, Corbin. If gone, leave reward. Reward. 3-16
1 pair woman's prescription sum-
matures. Contact Mary, 842-6600, r-
13-1033
Small black and gray striped hat
cat with white feet. Call 842-1841, 3-13
Green leather women's billfold, probably somewhere near Summerfield horseback riding. It desperately Reward. Lion (ID's say "Diane") Wrigley, 842-7540 - 316
Lost—13th and Louisiana area, small f-male calico cat, come to name "Nellie." Reward. Call 842-1150 3-18
Lost—my biblfold at KU rugby game last Sat. March 7, back Oliver If found, call 842-5927. Fred Joseph. R-eward. 3-16
High school ring, Thomas Alva Edison High School, Tulsa, Oklahoma gold band, green stone, eagles, side, reward offered, Mike Mellinger, 842-5003, 842-5002 between 5-7 p.m. 2-17
FOR RENT
Carpeted, air-conditioned one bedroom apartment for rent. Call VI 2-8153. 3-13
For cent to quiet male student, studio apt., close to campus. Nicely furnished, parking, utilities paid. Available immediately. 843-8534. 3-16
Nicely furnished rooms with all meals—a shower and tub, central air-cond. cabinets, ceiling fan included. Quiet, congenial home for serious students and teachers. Near campus, also taking reservations for summer fall. Jay Ann, Inn, 928 Rhode Island. 3-16
EBERT
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VOTE
EBERT
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March 17*18
PERSONAL
Unee Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up tt
Wanted: bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18, 20% off. All crafted styles. Hedge. Podręc. 10-00-30 (open Thursday) 3-18
842-6082
Certain KU femmes Fatales tell me that a visit to Arensberg's Shoes, 819 Massachusetts, is the first step toward insuring a male-populated spring. Insure a girl who wears retreats go for "Hunting Army?" Still hang in" there. Ineeda Fella, P.S. Mention me to a friend (a "male" friend)! 3-13
Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. ff
HELP WANTED
Help wanted for farm work. Call VI 2-8153. 3-13
Summer employment. Enquire Sunset Drive-In Theatre. Male or Female. Call 843-9172 for appointment. 3-16
Summer employment—TV and small appliance repair work. Write to Mr. Shawnee Kan, 62603. 2006 Johnson Do. Shawnee Kan, 62603. Sessions of experience and interest. 3-13
Male or female commission sales representative wanted to sell medical supplies. Neat appearance and transportation necessary. Knowledge of medical supplies not essential. Leads furnished. Phone 842-556-3. 3-17
Part-time help wanted—watttress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person. Earl's Pizza Parlor, 129 Mass. 4-2
Wanted: student wife to babybat three children during summer while mother works; refer someone having own little room; who lives near five grounds. 842-1037. 3-13
Sailing Instructor: Qualified graduate student or one who holds a degree in education. Coast Guard License required. Salary open. Send resume and photo to Personnel Office, Tan-Tar-A Resort. Osage Beach, Missouri 65065.
FOUND
Found March 9, contacts in case on steps between Flint and Malott. To claim call 842-8334 after 5 p.m. and pay for ad.
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Juniors emphasize involvement
Andrew Bukaty, Kansas City, sophomore, and Michael Helbert, Salina sophomore, oppose each other for the office of Junior class president.
Daniel Evans, Salina sophomore, is running for vice-president on the Helbert ticket. Bukaty has a full ticket with John Robinson, Prairie Village, running for vice-president, Marsha Brin, St. Louis, running for secretary and Ann Ladewig, Shawnee Mission, running for treasurer.
Bukaty's platform emphasizes "involvement through interaction." Class polls, Bukaty said, are planned to give the class a voice in improving social and cultural activities.
Bukaty said he plans activities such as a class concert, class picnic or barbeque, co-sponsorship of speakers that normally would be too expensive for one group to sponsor, and presporting event rallies. He would also like to promote the expansion of Big Brother and Sister Pregrams now sponsored by the KU-Y, and the establishment of a junior class Congress.
Helbert said he is planning two major projects. One is raising funds for supporting environmental and ecology projects. He said he seeks to make the University more aware of ecological problems, and have KU inform the public of them. He said he would also like to see work done on local pollution problems.
His second project is the creation of a book buying and refunding program. John Wulf,
Morton Grove, Ill., freshman, and sophomore class presidential candidate is cooperating in this project.
Helbert also favors elimination of the Western Civilization comprehensive examination and the foreign language requirement. Helbert said that he would strive to get student representation on the Education Requirement Board to meet this problem.
Bukaty is majoring in business administration. He has served on the KU Relays publicity committee, Rock Chalk stage manager, and as Phi Gamma Delta pledge class vice-president.
Helbert is a political science and geography major. He is serving as SUA complimentary ticket chairman for the Judy Collins concert.
Sophomores plan projects
Candidates for sophomore class president are John Wulf, Morton Grove, Ill. and Jeff Stinson, Wichita.
Forrest Chapman, Topeka, Wulf's candidate for vice-president. The Stinson ticket consists of Scott Kreamer, Olathe, for vice-president; Cindy Winn, Overland Park, for secretary; and Stephanie Petersen, Grand Island, Neb., for treasurer.
Wulf, a political science major, said his platform is indefinite regarding class parties. Wulf does plan to work for the extension of the credit/no credit option and a general reduction of requirements.
He also plans to conduct mail surveys to keep in contact with his constituents. Wulf said his major project would be the establishment of a student book exchange. Also he would like to use part of the class dues for a
12 KANSAN Mar. 13
1970
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Stinson said more and better class parties can be held if the class dues are handled properly. He also plans to push for the inclusion of class officers in the Student Senate.
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$1,000 donation to Watkins Hospital or other University project from surplus class dues. To encourage an increase in the number of students who pay class dues, he also advocates a reduction in dues from $3 to $2. Stinson said this action would probably result in additional revenue as well.
Hector is busy
ALICE, Tex. (UPI) — In one day, Hector Estrada was sentenced to prison, granted a divorce, and married—all by the same judge.
Estrada drew a prison term of four years after a previous burglary probation was revoked. Judge C. W. Laughlin then granted a divorce petition that Estrada had filed several months earlier, and married him to his second wife. After the ceremony, Estrada was taken to the county jail to await transfer to the state penitentiary at Huntsville.
Wulf is president of Oliver Hall and has worked on the AURH food committee and the President's Council. He has also participated in Students Concerned about Education Taxation.
Stinson was Delta Tau Delta pledge class president last year.
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KU captures second NCAA crown
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
80th Year, No.99
Monday, March 16, 1970
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
End to deferments voted
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.-Young draft advisers from 27 western states, meeting in the residential compound here, voted Sunday to recommend a phaseout of all student and occupational deferments.
Their recommendations will be consolidated with a similar meeting of eastern representatives in Washington and submitted to President Nixon for inclusion in his report to the Senate Armed Services Committee's upcoming hearings on the Selective Service System.
Mutinous crew seizes ship
HONG KONG—A hijacked American cargo ship carrying bombs for U.S. planes in Thailand rested at anchor off the coast of Cambodia today under the control of two mutinous crewmen.
The Pentagon said "according to these initial reports, it appears that the American cargo ship was diverted in international waters by persons aboard, possibly mutinous members of the civilian crew."
The Pentagon report said the Columbia Eagle, chartered by the Military-Sea Transport Service MSTS was carrying 750-pound and 500-pound bombs and other munitions bound for Sattahip, Thailand.
U.S. announces bombings
SAIGON—The United States began announcing air strikes into Laos today and reported the losses of three more U.S. planes to ground fire there.
Fort investigation sought
The official disclosure that American planes are bombing Laos, along with the announcement of U.S. plane losses there, meant a further step in taking the wraps off what has, since 1964, been a secret air campaign.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Rep. William J. Randall, D-Mo., will seek further investigations into basic training procedures at Ft. Leonard Wood, where more than 50 soldiers have been stricken with spinal meningitis since October.
"We have been very fortunate with the weather," said a spokesman for Chevron Oil, owners of the offshore drilling platform. "The oil is now going straight into the middle of our perimeter and is being picked up by our skimmers. All the skimmers are working well."
Randall was part of a three-man congressional team headed by Rep. Richard H. Ichord, D-Mo., that toured the base March 6.
Barges skim oil from Gulf
NEW ORLEANS—Barges equipped with skimming facilities cut into a 52-square-mile oil slick Sunday while three oil wells sprayed thousands of barrels of brown, stick crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico.
Salary 'skim'
Graduate teaching assistants have not received salary increases appropriated by the state legislature. . .
seen
The University, especially the College of Liberal Arts and Science's administration have,"skimmed monies off the top and placed them into a pool that has been used to augment some professorial salaries," stated an Alliance position paper which was released today.
"This is totally unfair to graduate students who are required to make ends meet in a period of rapidly escalating inflation without a salary raise," Bill Ebert, Alliance presidential candidate and Topeka, junior said.
"Our research," the paper said, "indicates that, for the last few years, the same annual percentage increase has been appropriated by the state legislature for the salaries of assistant instructors and members of the professoriate alike.
"If faculty members were appropriated a six per
cent increase, assistant instructors were also granted a six per cent increase."
"The Alliance must make it clear." Ebert said, "that it is wholeheartedly in favor of increased professorial salaries. This policy, by creating a special augmentation process for professorial salary increases, rapes the University's efforts to secure from the state legislature a broad-based raise in the salary base for faculty members."
The paper outlined three points of action that Alliance would take in correcting the situation. The paper said, "First, we shall demand an increase in the salary base for assistant instructors to $3,000 a year.
"Second, we shall demand that assistant instructors be awarded the same per annum percentage salary increase as is awarded to other faculty members.
"Third, we shall continue to take the lead in exposing the reasons for inequities and in finding solutions to the problem." (Continued to page 8)
Yuk Down charged with discrimination
A meeting today will clarify the position of the Yuk Down management in regard to the recently implemented policy of refusing admittance to men with long hair said the owner Jesse Roberts.
A group of nearly 65 students boycotted the Yuk Friday night after Roberts refused to admit several long-haired men. "We have a right to refuse service to anybody," Roberts said.
A student asked Roberts what he thought was wrong with long hair. "That's irrelevant," replied Roberts.
Roberts said he had had trouble with "long hairs" in the past, but refused to disclose the nature of the trouble. He said he began the policy when he couldn't "tell the difference between men and women."
Michael Carter, Overland Park sophomore, organized the boycott. He distributed notices on campus Friday after he had been refused service Thursday. He said he had been admitted three weeks earlier when his hair was combed differently. Carter added he plans to file suit against Roberts for alleged discrimination.
Richard Turnbull, Oklahoma City junior, and one of three men refused admittance earlier Friday afternoon, asked Roberts why he would not let him in. "I don't like you personally," Turnbull quoted Roberts as saying.
Turnbull also said he had been admitted to the Yuk Down three weeks earlier. He said he is planning to seek legal council with the Legal Aid Society today.
Roberts was asked later if his policy pertained to the rock bands he hired. "No." he said, "I doubt if we'd hire any band like that. We hire strictly professional musicians, but it's a private decision."
THE YUK DOWN
DISCRIMINATE'S
AGAINST HAIR
The YUK DOWN
DISCRIMINATE'S
AGAINST HAIR!
Photo by Ron Bishop
Boycott in the parking lot
Nearly 65 students participated in a boycott of the Yuk Down Friday because of alleged discrimination against men with long hair. The management of the Yuk said they won't admit a man who "looks like a woman."
Program called subversive
Two women from Idaho have charged the Program Head Start Leadership Training program at the University of Kansas with being anti-American and subversive.
The women, Mrs. Paul D. Barnes and Mrs. Elmo Ellison, both of Malta, Idaho, were at KU last January and February to attend a 7-week leadership training program designed to train Head Start teachers and social service aids. The program is sponsored by the School of Social Welfare.
The two have charged they were forced to attend a lecture by Saul Alinsky Feb. 3 and were bussed to Kansas City Jan. 21 to protest the airing of the anti-welfare record "Welfare Cadillac."
Mrs. Barnes has claimed Alinsky called for "the overthrow of the existing order." Ed Scaggs, associate professor of social welfare, denied the charge saying that Alinsky called for change but stressed that it must be done within the present system.
men attended were voluntary.
Scaggs said the events the wo-
The two women have been promised a Congressional investigation by Rep. Orval Hansen (R-Idaho) who was contacted Friday by the Kansan.
"I will utilize whatever resources I can to learn the facts," Hansen said.
Hansen said plans call for inquiries at the Congressional level and a report to HEW Secretary Robert Finch.
Court review to decide fate of petition
An emergency session of the Student Court will decide the fate of the Wescoe Hall referendum at a 6:30 meeting tonight.
The referendum was originally scheduled to be on the ballot on March 17 and 18. A Student Senate Executive Committee decision banned it from the ballot. David Miller, candidate for Student Body president, and Dan Beck, vice-presidential candidate, first made a fruitless appeal to the Election Committee before bringing it before the Student Court, Beck said.
"If the charges are true, Hansen said, "the next step will be to secure changes in the program."
The Student Court has the power to issue a court order forcing the committee to comply with the petition, Beck said.
Population study determines data on city of Wichita
Population projections to determine the age, sex, and voting age of the center-city area of Wichita just beyond the year 2000 are being worked out by two researchers at the University of Kansas Center for Regional Studies.
Robert T. Aangeenbrug, director of the center, and Carl E. Youngmann, research associate, are conducting the study funded by a $1,369 grant from the Wichita-Sedgwick County Metropolitan Area Planning Department.
Official Bulletin
Today
Six weeks grades due
Films: "Mysteries of the Deep"
"Prowler of the Everglades," 3
RIPs, 4-30 pm
**Physics Colloquium:** Murray Peshak-
malot University. 238
Malott. 3:45 p.m.
Systematics-Ecology S e m i n a r : "Ecology and Species of Arthropods." Dr. Robert Colwell, University of Chicago, Dyche Auditorium. 4 p.m.
Toxology Seminar: "Extracardiac
Glycosides." 318 Malott,
4:30 n.p.
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium, 6:45 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.
KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnasium. 7 p.m.
SUA Minority Forum: "Sensitivity Training and Sex Education-Brainwashing." Lt. Col. Jack Mohr. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas University 7:30
Chamber Music Series: Prokofiev
Quartet. Swarthout Recital Hall,
843
Tuesday
Lecture: "Improvisation in Middle Eastern Music." Prof. Bruno Netti, University of Illinois. Swarthout Recital Hall, 2:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door,
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
Gymnastics 6:45 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.
Special Film: "The Cooanuts"
Table Tennis Club: 173 Robinson
Gymnasium, 6:45 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.
RU Sylhet Club - Lahore Gymnasium Natatorium, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Christian Science Organization:
Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Rodde Club: Room 2A.
Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium, 7 p.m.
KU Synchro Club: Robinson Gym-
Humanities Lecture: African Art:
History and Context." (Illustrated)
Sieber, Indiana University,
Woods Auditorium, Kansas Union,
8 p.m.
Concert Course: William Masselos,
pianist. Hoch Auditorium, 8:20 p.m.
Special Film: "Monkey Business." Dyche Auditorium, 9 p.m.
2 KANSAN Mar. 16 1970
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Campus briefs
Student elections to be held
University elections will be held Tuesday and Wednesday.
University elections will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. Elections will be for student body president and vice president, student senate positions and class officers, said Kathy Newcomer, Omaha junior and elections chairman.
Polling times will be from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m.at Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union. Additional polling times will be from 7 p.m.to 10 p.m.Tuesday at Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Oliver and Ellsworth Halls.
The University of Kansas Interim Judiciary will be completed Tuesday when the appointed members meet and elect a chairman and vice chairman.
New judiciary structure to be completed Tuesday
As of now, 11 of the 12 non-student members of the hearing division and all four of the law school faculty members of the hearing division have been appointed.
The 1970 Medical College Admission Test for students applying for admission to medical colleges in the fall of 1971, will be offered on May 2 and October 17.
Medical exam dates announced
Applications may be obtained through the Guidance Bureau, 116 Bailey Hall. Deadlines for the applications are April 15 and Sept. 30.
The final non-student member is expected to be appointed late Monday, following receipt of a recommendation from the KU Medical Center.
The test is designed to measure general information and scientific knowledge. It is offered under the auspices of the Association of American Medical Colleges.
The new Judiciary replaces the old University Disciplinary Board (UDB) and Board of Disciplinary Appeals, and the interim mem-
Ski-Hi club schedules meeting
Ski-Hi Sky Divers, a local sky diving club, is holding an informational meeting on sky diving at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Jim Garrison and Matt Farmer, two sky divers, will show two films and give a short talk about parachuting and sky diving.
The club meets one mile northeast of the Sunflower Ordinance Plant near Desoto.
Physicist to speak Thursday
Mind-body problems viewed through modern computer technology and theory is Jaki's principal research project.
Stanley L. Jaki, research professor of the history and philosophy of physics at Seton Hall University, South Orange, New Jersey, will speak on "Science and the Mirage of Infinity" on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in 124 Malott Hall.
Jaki's appearance at the University of Kansas was arranged in cooperation with the University Christian Movement. There is no admission charge and there will be a question and answer period following the talk.
Art exhibit entries due
Paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, watercolors and photographs by artists of this region may be entered in the Mid-America III exhibition at Nelson Art Gallery, said Phillip Brimble, director of publicity at the gallery.
Artists age 13 and over who live in Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Iowa, Tennessee, Kentucky or the southern two-thirds of Illinois may compete for $3,000 by submitting their entries at Nelson Art Gallery at 45th and Rockhill Road in Kansas City Tuesday.
Entries must be hand-delivered or shipped prepaid to the Nelson Gallery. Judging will be held March 23 to 24.
German professor to lecture
Friedrich Beissner, the current Max Kade Distinguished Visiting Professor from the University of Tubingen, Germany, will lecture at 10:30 a.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Beissner is an authority in Greek and German classical literature. His lecture will be entitled "Holderlin Ldr Die Grienchen," and will
Mar. 16 KANSAN 3
1970
be held to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the birth of the German poet, Hoderlin.
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Stanley Shumway, associate professor of music theory; Wyman Storer, professor of astronomy; Mary Townsend, instructor of psychology; Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics; Nita Wyatt, professor of education.
bers will serve until their replacements are elected in May.
Charges wait for selection of Judiciary
The Judiciary is to establish an office for itself. Charles Oldfather, professor of law and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, suggested that Strong Hall would be a likely site for the Judiciary office.
The non-student appointees are:
The charges that will be filed with the new University Judiciary against the Black Student Union (BSU) and printers employed by the University Printing Service are in the final stages of preparation, Michael G. Norris, third year law student from Wichita, said Sunday.
Sullivan said, "In both cases there was censorship of a sort; in both cases certain members of the University community set themselves up as judges of what publications the rest of the community should have access to."
Michael Cherniss, assistant pro-
Norris, legal council for Thomas E. Sullivan, Kansas City junior, said the charges will be presented to the University Judiciary as soon as the board is chosen. The charges are being pressed by Sullivan and five other University of Kansas students for the destruction of the Feb. 23 University Daily Kansan and the refusal of the Printing Service to print the Harambee.
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KANSAN COMMENT
Vote for George
Forgiving Lewis Carroll and Alexander Pope for interfering in KU's campus elections is not too hard to do-particularly since they were dragged into the campaign by the two most spirited and promising of the candidates.
ISP's Peter George, ever present and always persistent campus politico, and his spunky running mate Sharon Baucom have emerged from the often-heated, sometimes-silly and usually-interesting campaign as the two candidates who most deserve your votes this week.
Technically, there are three duets being sung for your votes.
But the tune coming from the Independent candidates, Dave Miller and Dan Beck, has been so harsh on the ears that they don't even deserve serious consideration. Their unfounded charges (against President Dave Awbrey this week and the Off-Campus Housing Committee last week) and their directions (suggesting students shouldn't be concerned—through their Senate—with such irrelevancies as ecology or Haskell) should simply leave a thinking voter cold.
The song being sung by Alliance is far more formidable, particularly the Haskell refrain which suggests opening KU classes to Haskell Indian students. (The suggestion has been made several times in the past and deserves to be studied more thoroughly than through the annual campaign leaflets.)
But the song sung by Peter and Sharon has been most impressive, possibly because of the freedom with which they expressed themselves on such a variety of issues.
Women's rights, ecology, student representation on the committees of various schools, extension of the pass/no credit system, requirements, freshman representation in Senate, graduate assistants' representation on the University Council and SenEx, increasing the power of the
student body president, housing and citizenship at 18—Peter and Sharon have been there. They've told us where they are,and they have told us aggressively.
They have bitten off much, much more than they can ever digest. (For instance: "All general requirements for graduation from all schools and the College will end. This includes the language, Western Civilization, speech, English and math requirements. Students will be given a recommended list of courses and will make their own education." I hope no one expects Peter and Sharon to put that into effect in one year!) But the rhetoric of campaigns, despite all the cries of, "Hypocrisy! Unfilled promises!," is both purposeful and beneficial. Ideas have been expressed and heard, and isn't that at least partially what we are here for—ideas? Secondly, the ability to see KU as an institution which will be here for years—yes, even after we've all gone—is an ability which allows persons such as Peter and Sharon to see the value in pursuing now the goals which will take years to achieve.
But whoever is elected must be expected to accomplish those things which they can accomplish and to take steps in the direction of those far-off goals.
In both accomplishing and in "taking steps," Peter George and Sharon Baucom stand out as the candidates who can best be leaders. They have both performed energetically in Student Senate this year and they have both earned your votes.
Even if you disagree and think one of the other political pairs can best lead the student body, cast a vote Tuesday or Wednesday.
The election and the Student Senate itself are going to be just as relevant as you make them. Or irrelevant.
"Students can do it. AND MUST."
—Mike Shearer
ALCATRAZ
GARDER G
'Chief say he might go as high as $24.00 for island.'
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. 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 Adviser . . . James W. Murray
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editor Ted Illiff
News Editor Donna Shrader
Editorial Editors Mike Shearer, Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd
Sports Editor Bruce Carnash, Steve Shriver
Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilmens
Wire Editor Ken Cummins
Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers
Artists and Musicians Genelle Richards, Rich Geary
Assistant Campus Editors Wendi Phillips, Will Walk
Assistant News Editors Cass Ssexson, 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
National Advertising Manager Oscar Bassinson
Classified Manager Shalik Dray
Promotion Manager Jim Hughgos
Service Manager John Lagios
hearing voices—
To the editor:
Filth, write-in, ISP
I would like to respond to Jerry Flynn's letter, to the editor (UDK March 10) concerning obscenity and censorship. Mr. Flynn quoted Mike Shearer's statement (relating to the printers' refusal to print the controversial issue of the BSU's Harambeet) from a recent article which goes as follows, "Every man should have a right to decide for himself what is obscene and every group should have that same right."
Mr. Flynn felt that a contradiction existed in Mr. Shearer's statement. Mr. Flynn's reasoning went like this: "OK, let's see how your principle would apply: the printers are men, and they constitute a group; therefore, they should be allowed to decide for themselves what is to (sic) obscene for them to print, and that's that, period."
It is clear to me that Mr. Flynn's statement is not a valid extension of Mr. Shearer's statement. Mr. Flynn assumes that because a group has the right to decide for itself what is obscene, that it also should have the right to censor what it feels to be obscene if it is in a position to do so. This amounts to a complete misrepresentation and twisting of Mr. Shearer's statement which says only that existence of obscurity is up to every individual or group to either find or not to find in any one example, not that any individual or group should censor what it feels to be obscene (thereby violating the rights of all other individuals and groups to decide for themselves what is obscene).
Personally, I agree with Mr. Shearer's statement. Only when
censorship is non-existent, can the individual's, or group's, freedom of both expression and inquiry be guaranteed. Tom Lehrer, in his very clever album "That Was The Year That Was," captures the basic problem with censorship, ". . . filth, I'm glad to say, is in the mind of the beholder. When correctly viewed, everything is lewd. I could tell you things about Peter Pan, and the Wizard of Oz is a dirty old man."
Mark C. Syverson
Lake Mills, Iowa
Junior
* *
I hereby serve public notice that I as a responsible student and committee of one am formulating a Radical Splinter Faction which seeks to have nothing to do with any of the "politics" on
To the editor:
this campus.
My faction is as yet unnamed (I'm planning a contest to have somebody pick a name and win a grand prize-"Puerto Rico"). Its motto is "Ad Diploma Per Studia," its flower is the nasturtium, and its bird is the Mockingbird. As I unfortunately missed the deadline, I have no candidates chosen for this year's elections. However I urge students of like mind to place write-in votes for Tom and Dick Smothers for the Presidency and VicePresidency of the Student Body.
1) I'm against pollution, too. No more Daily Kansans in Potter Lake, no more gum wrappers and miscellaneous junk on the campus. No more writing on the desks. General respect for the property which doesn't after all, belong to us.
The platform of my RSK:
2) Let all minorities on this campus develop some respect for
the fact that they are also part of the majority—of students who also don't like the social values imbedded in the minds of people after 200 years of the existence of this country. Let the minorities open their eyes to the fact that the university is the place in which to grow and learn, not segregate into cliques and rot.
3) The students on this campus, indeed on every campus in this country, shall, under the guidance of this RSF, come to realize the great worth of institutions such as this school and of our political system, that there be no further need for anyone to Deprecate For The Sake of Deprecating all that which is Established.
Isn't this a neat Platform I certainly hope that any and all students who have come to the same realizations as I will also swallow their fear of ostracization and ridicule by the "relevant" portion of our little cosmopolis
and join me in the RSF, to the greater glory of education and growth into maturity.
(After all, there are people who still think Alice in Wonderland is a fairy tale.)
Kathy Warren
Topeka sophomore
\* \* \*
To the editor:
I note with great interest ISP's Student Power, Inc., program. This program is designed to build a bridge between university and community, by providing student aid to community projects such as the Ballard Center and East Lawrence Community Center. In other words, Student Power, Inc., is to be a "clearing-house" providing student help.
S.C. & ED CREATED BY © 1970 ED OAKLEY S.C. WILSON
SC-DO YOU WANT TO COOK TOWRIGHT?
SC-DO YOU WANT TO COOK TONIGHT?
NOT REALLY I'M TIRED OF MY OWN COOKING!
EDDIE-LET'S COMBINE OUR COOKING HERITAGE.
HOW'S THAT?
LET'S MAKE AOSHER-SOUL FOOD!
NOT REALLY
I'M TIRED OF
MY OWN COOKING
EDDIE-LET'S COMBINE OUR COOKING HERITAGE.
HOW'S THAT?
LET'S MAKE
KOSHER-
SOUL FOOD!
Cookery &
Welfare
If the ISP had examined the problem more carefully they might have found that such an organization already exists and has been in operation for three years, and is aptly called "Community Service Clearing House." This organization provides student service to Ballard Center, East Lawrence Community Center, city schools, Girl Scouts, Big Brother-Big Sister, Maple Lane Center, Lawrence Parks and Recreation, Bess Stone Center, Small World, and city churches. It appears foolish to have two programs such as this when one great united effort would accomplish so much more. ISP's heart is certainly in the right place, but its energies should be devoted to supporting the existing organization, Community Service Clearing House, rather than to sumplanting it.
Pam Crow
Pam Crow Topeka senior
KWSAN REVIEWS
PLAYS: 'Brodie' in her prime
By GENELLE RICHARDS Arts & Reviews Editor
"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" by Jay Allen bursts on the stage to the sound of a bell and the lights of 1931, to entertain its audience to the fullest degree.
Jack Brooking, director, takes several great talents not unknown to KU audiences and casts them very suitably. Then the performers take their characters and develop each of them into a distinct person.
Judy Levitt as Jean Brodie gives an outstanding and complete performance. Her portrayal of the unconventional school teacher is convincing, highlighting the days of Miss Brodie's prime.
Although Mrs. Levitt gives an excellent performance, the show is practically stolen from her by four of "her girls."
Christine Brandt as the intelligent Sandy, Rebecca Balding as the pretty Jenny, Kathryn Reed as the happy, funny Monica and Valda Aviks as the alone-in-the-world Mary MacGregor all give fantastic, realistic performances.
Each girl is believable in age and manner showing characteristics of youth and maturity. One watches as the girls grow from 10 to 13 and then finally 16. During this time they change from giddy little girls writing letters about Miss Brodie and "her lovers" to young ladies facing the problems of maturity.
In showing this transition they each give excellent performances with their characters all completely individual and well developed.
John Green as Teddy Lloyd, an "Old flame" and Cheryl Burnet as Miss MacKay, the headmistress give very mature performances and are therefore most believable. Green, who has appeared in many plays at KU, gives one of his best performances outdoing them all, except possibly for "Summertree."
Excellent sets designed by James Hawes greatly add to the overall effect of the play. "Jean Brodie" is one of the finest examples of the use of stage area that has been seen in University Theatre. This is shown in the use of the revolving stage and the orchestra pit holding classroom seats.
Much credit is due to Brooking for a most enjoyable and superbly done production. With every play he directs one expects something extra special and gets it. "The Country Wife," in addition to this play, show that he has a fantastic imagination and much talent.
The play is full of good qualities which make it one that many are sure to enjoy. Therefore, everyone should see "Jean Brodie" in her prime.
CONCERTS:
More than satisfactory
By MONROE DODD Assistant Editorial Editor
The KU Symphony Orchestra is considered one of the best university orchestras in the Midwest and, except for some trouble with the violins, it did nothing to belie the notion at its concert Sunday afternoon.
Franz Schubert's "Symphony No. 7 in C Major" filled the first half of the program. It seemed a bit overlong, but that is not, of course, the orchestra's fault. The "Seventh" is one of Schubert's most difficult symphonies, especially for the violins. Throughout, the violins were rather poorly synchronized with the rest of the orchestra and the horns also had some difficulty with their attacks. However both sections improved as the concert progressed.
The woodwinds and especially the oboes performed the Schubert excellently. Their playing was the highlight of the afternoon
"Fantasy on Japanese Woodprints" by Alan Hovhaness featured George Boberg, assistant professor of percussion, in a virtuoso xylophone performance. Boberg's command of the instrument was well demonstrated in the dissonant piece. "Fantasy" employs some interesting improvisational sections in which the orchestra is given the pitches, but not the tempo. The sections may be played as fast or as slow as the individual performer desires, creating a mysterious quality which brings Oriental sounds to the western-style orchestra without making them seem to be purely for innovation's sake.
Igor Stravinsky's "Suite from 'The Firebird' " ended the program and was, the most exciting work of the afternoon. "The Firebird" was compressed by Stravinsky into a suite from parts of his original score to Michael Fokine's ballet.
Again, the woodwinds' performance was excellent, as were the trumpet solos. The horn solo at the beginning of the finale was precise and well-played.
The dynamics, in a constant state of flux in many parts of "The Firebird," were handled magnificently by the orchestra. Only at points in the "Infernal Dance" did the ensemble falter, when the brass played apart somewhat.
But the works selected by conductor George Lawner would have challenged many good professional symphonies. And the KU symphony's better-than-satisfactory performance of them Sunday was a definite indication of its ability.
The audience received the orchestra well, yet the crowd could have been larger. Students and faculty should give better support to an organization such as the KU Symphony, which well deserves it.
Mar. 16
1970 KANSAN 5
LIGHT SHOW, MOVIES AND BANDS—This program includes; Pig Newton and the Wizard, and Hiram Glutz and the Four Kaws-novskies.
Monday
On campus this week
PROKOFIEV QUARTET — (Chamber Music Series)—This quartet from Russia includes two violins, one viola and a cello. The program consists of: "Op. No. 1" by Haydn, "No. 8 in C Minor" by Shostakovitch and "No. 2 in A Minor" by Brahms.
"MYSTERIES OF THE DEEP"
and "PROWLERS OF THE
EVERGLADES" (Films of Fact)
BOOKS
THE STRUGGLE FOR THE MIDDLE EAST, by Walter Laqueur. Macmillan, $7.95. The Arab-Israeli conflict in the Middle East, already more than 40 years old, should give pause to those who feel the world's problems are fundamentally simple ones.
Making the Middle East situation even worse is the fact that the Arab countries have two assets eagerly coverted by both the United States and the Soviet Union: warm water ports on the Mediterranean, and oil,
Russia has been seeking a foothold in the Mediterranean since the days of the czars. The military failure of the Arab nations in 1947 and 1956, combined with the support of most Western nations for Israel, gave the Russians their first major opportunity.
The dangers of this gamble became clear in 1967, when the United States balanced on the edge of war with the Soviet Union after the Israeli attack on the U.S.S. Liberty, an electronic "spy" ship hovering off the Sinai Peninsula in order to listen to Israeli and Arab military conversations.
Walter Laqueur's book explains by Russian presence in the Middle East should be a cause for concern, without implying it is a cause for exaggerated alarm. An appendix of relevant documents makes the book especially useful.
HOW TO STUDY, by Harry Maddox (Premier, 75 cents)—A guide for the student, offering shortcuts—in the writer's view—to better grades. This probably should be read long before the student gets to the university.
and Fiction)—Two documentaries about animal life.
WILLIAM MASSELOS (KU Concert Course)—Performing on the piano, his program consists of: "First Piano Sonata" by Charles Ives, "Davidsbundlertanz" by Schumann and "Sonata in B Minor" by Liszt.
Tuesday
ROY SIEBER (Humanities Lecture Series)—Sieber is an art history scholar and chairman of the department of art at Indiana University. He will speak on "African Art: History and Context."
MARX BROTHERS DOUBLE BILL (Special Films)—"The Cocoanuts"—Insanity at a Florida hotel. Their first picture; 1929. "Monkey Business" — The four brothers are stowaways on a ship (1931).
Wednesday
"THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" (Theatre production)— See review this page.
GERRE HANCOCK—Hancock appears in the spring semester guest organist series and will perform the works of: Couperin, Sweelinck, Bach, Reger and Kennan.
TWO AMERICAN DIRECTORS (Classical Series)—"Dawn Patrol"
—War action directed by Howard Hawks (1930). "Edge of the City"
—Realistic drama of racial conflict, directed by Martin Ritt and starring John Cassevettes and Sidney Poilier (1957). Each film shown once.
Thursday
DOUBLE BILL (KU Film Society)—"Son of the Shiek"—Rudolph Valentino in his most famous role (1926). "The White Shiek"—One of Fellini's first
films. A gentle comedy starring Alberto Sordi (1952).
SEX AND THE OLD UNDERGROUND (Special Films)—An attractive program of six pioneering underground epics, including Kenneth Anger's "Scorpio Rising" and Robert Nelson's "Oh, Dem Watermelons."
NANCY TOWNSEND—Singing soprano, Miss Townsend will give her senior recital.
"THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" (threatre production)
—See review this page.
Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of man?
Peter Sellers &
Ringo Starr in
"The Magic Christian"
TECHNICOLOR*
Released by COMMONWEALTH UNITED
Matinee 2:30 Daily
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V1-1665
PANDO COMPANY in association with RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS presents
"A LYRIC, TRAGIC SONG OF THE ROAD! AN HISTORIC MOVIE!"
easy RideR
restricted
PETER FONDA • DENNIS HOPPER
JACK NICHOLSON • COLOR • Released by COLUMBIA PICTURES
Granada
THEATRE----telophone VI 3-5790
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone 91-3-5780
NOW!
Adults 1.50
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Box Office Opens 5:00
University of Kansas Theatre
presents
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Jay Allen
Adopted from the novel by Muriel Spark
MARCH 13,14,18,19,20 For Tickets Call UN 4-3982 Current registration card admits to $1.40 seat
University Theatre --- Murphy Hall
Brazilian political prisoners freed
Japanese consul returned unharmed
PAULO, Brazil (UPI) — Kidnapers of the Japanese consul general, Nobou Okuchi, released him unharmed Sunday night 10 hours after the arrival in Mexico of five Brazilian political prisoners whose freedom the abductors had demanded as ransom.
Okuchi arrived in a taxi at his home here at 5:40 p.m. EST, appeared relaxed and rested and told police his kidnapers had freed him in the city's Paraiso District where he hailed a taxi for a 50-cent ride to his home.
The consul, who had been held captive for 97 hours, was abducted last Wednesday by political terrorists who blocked his car as he was going home and forced him to accompany them.
Police were maintaining a vigil around Okuchi's residence when he arrived in the taxi. The taxi driver, Joaquim Coelho, said he did not even know of the kidnapping until police began interrogating him after Okuchi left his car to rejoin his family.
Instead of releasing the diplomat as soon as the arrival of the prisoners in Mexico had been confirmed by radio and television stations, the kidnapers had demanded assurance from police that they would not try to apprehend them when they released Okuchi.
Police gave no immediate details on where he was found or of his condition.
Campus Interviews
The following companies will hold placement interviews next week. (All require United States citizenship unless indicated otherwise.)
The School of Engineering
111 Marvin Hall
Tuesday
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., BS in civil, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering, engineering physics, chemistry, math and physics engineering and business administration. BS or MS in chemical engineering.
State Highway Commission of Kansas
Engineering
Summer work is available.
City of Los Angeles, BS or MS in
Education. Summer work is available.
Wilcox Electric, BS or MS in electrical engineering. Summer work is available.
Worthington Corp., BS in architectural, chemical, civil, electrical, industrial engineering, physical engineering, engineering physics. A permanent visa is required.
Wednesday
U. S. Patent Office, BS or MS in aerospace, chemical, electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering, chemistry and physics majors.
Vacu-Blast Corp., BS or MS in mechanical engineering. MS in engineering mechanics. A permanent visa is required.
Veterans' Administration, BS in a combination of civil engineering and business administration, or mechanics, BS or MS in civil electrical or mechanical engineering.
6 KANSAN Mar. 16 1970
Okuchi was freed shortly after police had announced they already were complying with a late demand by the kidnapers to reduce patrols and call off all searches for the diplomat.
A communique Sunday afternoon from the kidnapers, the sixth since Okuchi was abducted Wednesday, said police patrols must be reduced in this city of 5.4 million before he can be released. It also said any attempt to apprehend the kidnapers before Okuchi is freed "might have tragic consequences and ruin all these days of negotiations."
HELP!
Change The College
VOTE
JOHN
FRIEDMAN
The military government previously had pledged not to search for the kidnapers and not to take repraisals against other prisoners still in jail in accord with two other demands made by the kidnapers at the time they set freedom for five political prisoners as the ramson for Okuchi.
As with previous communiques, an anonymous telephone call to a Sao Paulo newspaper advised newsmen where to find the latest note. It was picked up six hours after a Brazilian plane carrying five political prisoners released Saturday arrived in
---
ALLIANCE Senator from Liberal Arts MARCH 17 - 18
Mexico City where they are to be granted asylum.
- Portraits
- Passports
Arrival of the five political prisoners in Mexico was confirmed, as the kidnappers had demanded, by dispatches and photos of them there transmitted by international news agencies. They were broadcast immediately by the city's seven television stations.
Kidnapers used the same technique last year in Rio de Janeiro in the kidnaping of U.S. Ambassador C. Burke Elbrick but made no subsequent demands after the 15 persons exchanged for the American diplomat had arrived in Mexico. Elbrick was released on a
- Applications
"Please call for appointment"
摄像师
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
LEARN TO FLY WITH THE AIR FORCE ROTC AT KU
Apply Now for Next Fall
Stop by Room 108 Military Science Building or Call UN 4-4218
Be Deferred from the Draft
Application Deadline: 30 Mar. 70
Fly 361/2 hours during your Senior Year and Qualify for Pilot's License.
Receive $50 monthly for Two Years
2262
Take six weeks paid Summer Training this Summer
imprisoned five months, and the widow of a terrorist leader slain last month in a gunfight with police. The other three were men, one of them a convicted bank robber.
Rio street corner and caught a taxi to his home.
The five prisoners released in exchange for the Japanese diplomat include a Roman Catholic nun, who had been
Beginner's Guide to Crochet a Shawl
CHARLIES GIRLS makes it - at the
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
VI 3-5755
HAVE YOU HEARD THE RUMOR ABOUT
FIRE and ICE?
THE DRAUHT HOUSE
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY NIGHT
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
Federal funding affected by problems
Departments plagued by overcrowding
By JOHN GOODRICK Kansan Staff Writer
The East Asian studies program, physical education department, Health Science Advancement Award committee (HSAA) and radio, television and film presented their space needs to the University Planning Board Saturday morning.
"We are competing with pigeons on the roof of our building," said one representative of the East Asian program to the planning board to explain the program's space needs.
Grant Goodman, chairman and professor of East Asian studies, said their present housing at 1332 Louisiana was condemned and would be demolished as soon as the neighboring land to the building could be bought by the Endowment Association to build a new scholarship hall.
Goodman asked the board to consider moving the East Asian studies program into the proposed humanities building, Wescoe Hall. He said it would be beneficial to house Slavic and East European, Latin American and East Asian programs in close proximity to each other to combine the "several thrusts of these programs."
The necessary physical requirements for the next 10 years include a quadrupling of present classroom space, Goodman said. He predicted a tripling of the graduate enrollment, a doubling of the upper division undergraduate enrollment and a probable tripling of the Eastern Civilization enrollment within the decade.
Richard Spear, associate professor of Oriental languages and literature, said if his department moved into the humanities building now they would need 2,000 square feet and in ten years they would need 6,000 square feet for an estimated 27 staff members.
Robert Burton, director of Eastern Civilization, said his department had an enrollment of 230 this spring semester. The Eastern Civilization department is housed under the Oriental languages and literature department and Burton said his department was crowding them for sape. Goodman said that Eastern Civ had "no assigned classrooms" and there was a "shuffle for space" every semester.
Felix Mose, chairman of the East Asian Center and professor of East Asian studies, said there were "minimal requirements" that the University needed to meet before the East Asian program got federal funds, and that after the initial support by the government the University was supposed to take over.
The HSAA committee said they could hire faculty between June 1, 1970 and June 1, 1971 and get federally funded for these for the next three years but they needed space to hire anyone.
Edward Smissman, professor of pharmacy, suggested a new building be built since there was no sapce in Malott or Haworth Hall.
He also said one building should house the HSAA for "maximum interaction" and to prevent "duplication of facilities." This building should be adjacent to the pharmaceutical laboratories, he said, and a library reading room is a necessity.
Fifty-three doctoral and post
doctoral students are presently using the HSAA's space. Fifty students are in 150 square foot space and three in another 250 square feet of space.
W. J. Argersinger Jr., professor of chemistry and associate Dean of Faculties, said, "We can't afford to wait much longer."
Smissman said he wanted to know when a letter of recommendation would be given to the Chancellor or he said the HSAA would talk to the Chancellor directly.
"We can't wait six months," he said.
Max Lucas, co-chairman of the planning board, told Smissman it would be best for him to write a letter to Francis Heller, chairman of the planning board, for the board to discuss in their next meeting the HSAA's pressing needs.
Professor Bruce Linton, radio, TV and film director, said, "KUOK is a dangerous place for students to be."
He said there was one entrance and exit in the basement of Hoch Auditorium, where the station is located, and it was a fire tran.
There are 9,500 square feet in five locations now for radio, TV and film, he said, and by 1980 24,000 square feet will be needed.
Mar. 16
1970 KANSAN 7
Linton said the growth of the department was stopped only by space needs and added that the enrollment was stopped at 208 students which is the capacity of Dyche Auditorium. He predicted that if his department got the equipment by 1980 it would have 250 undergraduate students and 60 to 75 graduate students.
He said there was "not one square foot of storage space," and one seven-by-nine room with two small desks housed eight graduate assistants.
A "Communications Complex" was suggested by Linton for several schools and departments including graphic arts, radio, TV and film, the School of Journalism and the speech department. He said these closely related fields should be more allied.
Henry Shenk, professor of physical education, said the expansion of Robinson gymnastium to the second phase had to undertaken "as soon as possible." The second phase is an additional wing on the south side of the gym.
Two University of Kansas mathematics majors who were part of last year's fifth ranking three-man KU team have again earned honorable mention in the annual William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition.
The Putnam competition is conducted by the Mathematical Association of America and involves a day-long examination.
Math majors win honors
Douglas A. Hensley, Wichita senior and Walter R. Stromquist, Charleston, Ill. senior, tied for 34th place among 1,051 undergraduate students from the United States and Canada.
Last year Hensley and Stromquist were members of the team which came in fifth in the competition, the highest rank ever won by a KU team. The third member of that team was William D. Homer who graduated last spring.
The third member of the KU team was Michael Wells, Winfield sophomore, who placed 25th in the competition.
He said the critical space needs of his department were for intramurals and "drop-in" space for those students wanting to stop in to play a game of basketball, handball or volleyball.
The state bird of New Mexico is the Chaparral, commonly known as the road runner.
Shenk said there were more tennis courts in 1951 for 5,000 students than there were now for 17,000. He said the University had lost six or eight courts in the last two or three years and there were only 11 courts in good shape.
He said the University had acquired some land by 23rd and Iowa which was being made into several touch football fields and added that some tennis courts could be developed there.
Joie Stapleton, professor of education and physical education, said, "There is no space or staff for existing programs." She said there was a space need for "drop-in" sports and a room similar to the men's weight room as a type of "slim-down" room for women.
She said there were no handball or squash courts for women and there were about 40 intramural women's teams this year. She said practices for interschool swimming were minimal and held only at night.
Robert Lockwood, gymnastics coach and men's intramural chairman, said that approximately 25 per cent of all men students signed up for basketball intramurals. He said because of this they had to limit organizations to one A team, one B team and three C teams.
He said that between 1,200 and 1,500 people signed up for volleyball and so they had to switch volleyball to a fall sport so as not to compete with softball.
Shenk said, "I don't know of a school in the conference that has worse indoor facilities." He said that such classes as fencing, dance, and lifesaving were limited by facilities and staff.
EARL CLARK and JERRY HOOD
FISH SPECIAL
VOTE FOR
Henry's is here to help the pocketbook of the student again. This time with a fish sandwich special—every fish sandwich sold from Friday, March 20th to Sunday, March 22nd will cost only 19c
Henry's is her with a fish sandwich. 20th to Sunday, March 22nd will cost only 19c. Why buy fish sandwiches?
for student representatives
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
Well, for one reason, a person can only stand so many hamburgers. Also,
it's Lenten season and a very appropriate time for fish. And since this special will be occurring over Spring Break, you'll be looking for some source of food besides your dorm or living group. So come to Henry's this weekend, and save yourself some money.
Henrys
6th and Mo. VI 3-2139
Judy Collins in CONCERT
March 18
tickets available at:
SUA Office Information
Booth Middle Earth
Kief's the Sound Bell's
& Richardson's
The image depicts a group of people gathered on a grassy area near a lake, likely in a park setting. The individuals are seated and standing around a stone wall, facing the water. Some appear to be observing something or someone, while others seem engaged in conversation or leisure activities. The trees in the background are bare, suggesting it might be winter or early spring. The overall atmosphere is calm and serene.
Photo by Judy Gerling
Festival of Life
Sunny weather encouraged students to find seats along the banks of Potter Lake Saturday afternoon for the Festival of Life organized by the River City Arts Cooperative. Jewelers, craftsmen and bands were invited to display their wares and their talents for the curious.
Brown's attorney ties bombing, factory
CAMBRIDGE, Md. (UPI) — William Yates, Dorchester County state's attorney and prosecutor of black militant H. Rap Brown, predicted Thursday that the bombing of the Dorchester County Circuit Court building and discovery of a New Left bomb factory in New York will prove to be related.
The state police captain in charge of the investigation in Cambridge said late Thursday, however, that police have no concrete leads.
Capt. Thomas Veditz said he met with all law enforcement agencies active in the investigation and that none had turned up any substantial evidence in regard to the type of explosive used or the person who set the bomb.
"So far, we're up against a blank wall," he said.
Veditz said that to consider a white woman seen near the courthouse Tuesday as a suspect
would be "farfetched." But he said police are still attempting to locate her for questioning.
It was learned that FBI and state authorities had extended their investigation of the Wednesday courthouse bombing and the Monday bomb deaths of two of Brown's associates in Bel Air, Md., to the New York case. They were especially interested in checking links between the disappearance of two young women when the New York "factory" accidentally blew up and eye witness testimony that a young woman was seen in the courthouse just prior to the blast.
"I think all these cases are related," said Yates. "I think they are an attack on the judiciary, an attack on courthouses as a symbol."
Yates said his belief was reinforced by a statement made by Brown's attorney, William Kunstler, that more bombings were possible and the "stupid" case against Brown ought to be dismissed.
Gov.Maddox may leave Democrats
ATLANTA (UPI)—Gov. Lester Maddox has scheduled a news conference Monday to announce his future political plans—including the possibility he will bolt the Democratic Party.
But Maddox readily admits conferring with GOP leaders in recent weeks about switching from the Democratic Party.
Maddox cannot, by Georgia law, succeed himself as governor. He once talked of running his wife, Virginia, for governor and himself for lieutenant governor, but that talk has subsided in recent months.
Sources close to the governor seem to believe he will announce his candidacy for the office of lieutenant governor, and probably as a Democrat again.
8 KANSAN Mar.16 1970
Vote for the possible JOHN REGIER Liberal Arts
The statements of various law enforcement officials and Maryland Gov. Martin Mandel concerning the explosions have been highly contradictory. There was confusion over the description of the white woman sought in the courthouse bombing as being "from New York" because a car she supposedly entered near the courthouse had New York tags.
Investigation showed Thursday that the car was owned by a New York shirt manufacturer and being driven by a company vice president visiting one of their plants.
Brown is charged with arson and inciting to riot in connection with the burning of two blocks of racially restive Cambridge in 1967 after he made a speech advising Negroes to "burn America down."
Although the blasting caps were composed of black powder and black powder traces were found in the car's wreckage, a state police officer said he thought it was "coincidental."
Alliance
Air, possibly on the night when Brown aides Ralph E. Featherstone and William Herman "Che" Payne were killed. Police said the men were transporting explosives.
Meanwhile it was disclosed Thursday that 7,000 dynamite blasting caps contained in a single package had been taken from a grenade manufacturer near Bel
The women sought in the accidental explosion that leveled a Greenwich Village townhouse in New York and killed at least two persons is Cathlyn Wilkerson, 25, daughter of the house's owner. She was once associated with radical groups in Washington and suburban Maryland, and the two Negroes who were killed in Bel Air were from Washington.
Pollution no problem London rid of smog
LONDON (UPI)—Not long ago, London was a place where the sky was always dingy, where the only birds were pigeons, where people lived in dread of a thick yellow smog which sneaked up on the city and strangled thousands.
Today, Londoners live in one of the cleanest atmospheres in the world. Hawks, wild ducks, and bullfinches have returned to nest in the parks. The sun, when
it shines, shines brightly. Even the wash on the line dries whiter.
The reason—Britain's Clean Air Act which 14 years ago deprived the Englishman of his traditional glowing coal fire for the privilege of breathing fresh air.
Salary 'skim'-
The 1956 Clean Air Act was the first legislation of its kind in the world. As a result, London now has one of the lowest air pollution rates of any industrial city on the map.
(Continued from page 1)
"I think that you'll find me Alliance's allegation absolutely false," said Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"If a faculty member had a salary of $10,500 then six per cent of that would be $630. He would then either get an increase of $600 or $650 depending on how that instructor was evaluated."
"I believe that you will find," he said, "that the basic six per cent increases or about $153, is given in all the graduate assistant salaries."
"But," he said, "there is no
"Increases are given at even number figures like $10 or $50. We don't give any three or five dollar increases because it keeps the mathematics of our budget simpler.
Romney will not help campaign of Mrs. Romney
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Housing Secretary George Romney said Sunday he would not campaign in behalf of his wife's efforts to win the GOP nomination as a candidate for the U.S. Senate from Michigan.
His wife Lenore said she thought her husband would be "too busy" to campaign for her before the April primary but she said that her children will be pitching in.
Romney said he was "accused of trying to dictate" to the state's Republican leaders in political jockeying a few weeks ago and did not want to be criticized again.
"She's the candidate," said the secretary for housing and urban affairs and former Michigan governor. "I'm going to stay out."
Mrs. Romney said she is confident she will win the nomination.
amount of money skimmed off and put into any slush fund."
Shankel was speaking for George Waggoner, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences who is out of the country. At press time, Francis Heller, dean of faculties was unavailable for comment.
Professor honored with award
Robert R. Sterling, professor of business administration, was named last week to the Arthur Young and Co. Professorship in Accounting.
"Such professorships are provided by gifts to the University in order to recognize and attract distinguished scholars," said Clifford D. Clark, dean of the School of Business.
Last spring, Sterling organized and co-chaired the first Arthur Young Accounting Colloquium, which attracted scholars from the field of philosophy, mathematics, economics, information theory, sociology, finance and accounting. The proceedings of that colloquium will be the subject of a book to be published by Southwestern Press.
Sterling serves on advisory boards of three national research projects, a task force assigned to write the Fundamental Concepts of Accounting, the national committee on Theory Construction and Verification, and as a departmental editor for the Accounting Review.
Sterling's research has been published in accounting journals of England, Japan, Australia and the United States. His paper "The Going Concern: An Examination" received the highest award for research given in his field.
Odds and Ends- Sweatshirt Sale
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
All right, here it is, fans. Now you know the bookstore has had sales before—print sales, record sales, book sales, novelty sales—but this time we outdid ourselves. We're having a huge sweatshirt sale to get rid of our extra stock. There are sweatshirts, T-shirts, turtle-necks, mock turtle-necks, and V-necks. Long-sleeved, short-sleeved, every color, and all sixes. The sale starts Monday the 17th and will go till Friday the 20th or until we run out of odds and ends.
Spring Break is just about here. Now you know nothing lights up the face of your little brother or sister like when you take them home something from KU. And you'd really enjoy watching your dad work in the yard in a sweater or sweatshirt you brought home to him. Think about it, fans. The time is right, the price is right.
HALF-PRICE!
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
kansas union BOOKSTORE
1976
CIRCA 1930s
A delicate balance
Photos by Joe Bullard
Two on a teeter-totter may be fun, but one on a teeter-totter is more of a challenge. This little girl gives the mystery of the delicate balance her complete concentration while enjoying a warm Mary day.
Manhattan to continue research in Arctic
TULSA, Okla. (UPI)—The SS Manhattan leaves next month to retrace its historic path to the Arctic region aimed at gathering more information on possibilities of year-round tanker operations through the North-west Passage.
Hurricane Oil and Refining Co. officials said the Mahattan will
Soviets deny plan to send arms to Egypt
MOSCOW (UPI)—The diplomatic concensus in Moscow is that there is no immediate likelihood the Soviet Union will supply Egypt with its MIG 23, the latest and deadliest interceptor in the Soviet arsenal.
According to the Vice Premier the question is not even being considered.
It is also noteworthy that although the present campaign against Israel and its alleged American backers has reached unprecedented proportions there has been no mention of Soviet "volunteers" for Egypt to man planes and guns.
In London this week, diplomatic sources said Russia also had decided to delay shipment of massive new arms-exclusive of the MIG 23-to Egypt pending developments in Big Four efforts to find a solution to the crisis. In this connection it was considered noteworthy that President Nixon delayed his decision on whether to send F4 Phamtom Jets to Israel.
Mar. 16
1970 KANSAN 9
Some time ago, Nasser told American newsmen Egypt did not have skilled pilots, like those of Israel, to man such sophisticated aircraft as the complex MIG 23. For this reason alone, if for no other, Russia is believed unlikely to send the expensive jets to Egypt since they could easily be wrecked by untrained pilots or fall into Israeli hands.
THE CONCORD SHOP
- Stretcher frames, ready-made and parts
- Artist's Canvasses $ 5 4^{\prime \prime}-7 2^{\prime \prime}-9 0^{\prime \prime} $
- Deliveries to Strong Hall,
Tues. morning and
Thurs. afternoon
return to Baffin Bay and Parry Channel to determine the economic feasibility of transporting crude oil from Alaska's newly discovered North Slope oil fields to the U.S. East Coast.
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Announcement of that trip coincidentally followed announcement by 17 oil companies to begin geophysical surveys of selected areas off the coast of Alaska.
Taking part in the surveys will be American Petrofina Exploration Co., Atlantic Richfield, Getty Oil, Gulf, Humble, King Resources, Mobil, Murphy Oil, Phillips, Skelly, Standard Oil of California, Sun Oil, Superior Oil, Texaco, Union Carbide Petroleum Cor., Union Oil of California and Union Texas Petroleum.
U.S. may join Forces with Soviets in space
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The head of the American space program said Sunday that U.S. and Soviet astronauts might be flying joint space missions once the Apollo moon program is completed. Dr. Thomas O. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), said such cooperation would be similar to multi-national scientific efforts in Anaretica. "I wouldn't be at all surprised to see Soviet scientists in an American space stations and an American scientist in a Soviet space station," he added.
Skelly's district office in Denver will direct the 1970 survey.
Operations are expected to get underway May 15 and continue through late August. One of the questions that must be answered to fully take advantage of the huge oil discoveries in Alaska is how to transport it.
"We could construct a pipeline," said Humble marine department manager R. C. Curtis. "But costs for both methods muts be considered."
Additional radar has been installed on the Manhattan but she is generally outfitted the same as for her maiden voyage into the forbidding northwest passage.
"We expect no record making precedents," said a Humble spokesman of the second voyage. "Our planned activities will be restricted to the daily measuring of ice and testing the ship's performance."
The spokesman said the ship had no plans to transit the passage again during this cruise.
The Canadian Ministry of Transport has said it wants to join the Manhattan during the series of Arctic ice tests.
Humble said the first voyage indicated it was "operationally" feasible for commercial ships to transit the Northwest Passage as well as learning "there is no human limitation to Northwest Passage operations."
The company still does not
know, however if such an operation is "economically" feasible. ible.
The voyage will cost about $1.7 million which will be shared by Humble, Atlantic Richfield and B.P. Oil Corp.
Asked if a trans-Canadian pipeline was still under consideration as a means of moving the
crude oil back to the Continental United States, spokesmen said they were "keeping an open mind."
"We have to consider every economically practical means of moving crude oil from the north slope and until we are satisfied that one method has clear advantages over the other; we have to keep an open mind."
Andes snow avalanche blocks auto race path
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) Snow avalanches triggered by an earthquake crashed down from peaks in the Andes mountains Sunday, blocking a road on which an international auto race was in progress and isolating several villages.
Argentine frontier police reported the leading car in the race missing and 14 other cars trapped or blocked by snow on the road, 15,600 feet above sea level in the Andes range between Argentina and Chile.
Radio reports from the Argentine frontier police post at Vieja and from the Chilean post at La Serena said there were no reports of injuries.
A heavy snow storm in the mountains hampered the drivers even before the avalanches, police reported. An earthquake
registering 5.3 on the Richter scale was reported early Sunday by the astronomical observatory in San Juan. That city was slightly shaken by the quake, and Argentine police said it apparently triggered the avalanches in the mountains above.
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MARCH 17th & 18th
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MARCH 17th & 18th
Video portion of meetings to continue
Lighting, picture quality poses problem
By JIM CZUPOR
Kansan Staff Writer
A local two-way television series between the University Theatre and the Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City has disappeared from the airways after only two weeks of programming. Sources have attributed the end of a series to a lack of audience.
The program, entitled "University Senate Meeting," ceased as a result of the Senate's failure to draw a quorum at their last three meetings. Latest reports indicate the program may be reinstated in late April for the next Senate meeting.
The idea for the program began after the February 26 Senate meeting lacked a quorum. The program resulted in an effort to connect University Senate members with the members of the Medical Center via the University's microwave system. It was hoped more members would attend, but the move failed and the program was discontinued.
Alex Lazzario, director of independent studies for the University Extension and of the bureau of visual instruction and instructional TV, described the microwave system as a two-way hook-up between the University and the medical center used mainly as an instructional aid. Cables from Bailey Hall, Malott Hall and Murphy Hall extend to a transmitter station at KU which then relays a signal to Kansas City. Students there are able to view classes and participate by asking questions as though they were actually in the Lawrence classroom.
KU beer sales high
More than 8,000 gallons of beer are sold to University of Kansas students each week. This does not include beer sold in dancing places or pizza parlors.
10 KANSAN Mar. 16
1970
Raymond Nichols, secretary of the University Senate, said, "We televised the Senate meetings to the Med Center to enable them to attend the meeting without having to travel back and forth. I was satisfied with the participation of the Med Center members; at least they voted."
Transmission of the March 5 meeting presented several problems which Lazzarino attempted to solve at the last meeting. However the Senate's last meeting lasted only an hour and some of Lazzarino's plans were never used.
The first transmission presented problems of picture quality, lighting and the need to develop a method for relaying proposals to the Med Center.
Proposals were relayed by typing all motions from the floor and showing them to the KU audience by an overhead projector. A copy of the proposal was then made which the camera focused on for the Med Center members.
"In Kansas City, they were viewing the meeting on 21 inch monitors, so the picture was much more compressed and clearer than here. At KU, we were viewing the members in Kansas City with a video projector," said Lazzarino.
"The video projector has the effect of taking an electronic image and projecting it to a 10 or 12 foot screen. So the projector disseminated the signal resulting in some loss of picture definition. The more you enlarge any photograph, the more definition you lose.
"If the Senate meeting becomes a regular-event, several monitors could be placed throughout the theater." Lazzarino said, "the smaller monitors would offer as clear a picture as you home TV."
At the first broadcast meeting, the video projector and screen were set up on the theater's stage and a camera was focused on the presiding officer. Whenever anyone in Kansas City had a question, the presiding officer turned his back on the camera and the audience to watch the screen. The people in Kansas City con-
sequentially got a rear view of the officer's head.
For the second broadcast, Lazzarino provided the presiding officer with a small nine-inch monitor to watch, preventing him from turning his back.
Another problem that plagued Lazzarino was lighting.
"All we had were ordinary houselights," he said, "and since they were overhead they cast a shadow on the speaker's face, so we used spotlight."
"In order to improve the picture on the screen, we had to dim the houselights as you would a movie theater. Then it became much more difficult for the speaker to see the audience because of the darkness and the spotlight glaring in his face."
For the last meeting, Lazzarino remedied the glaring spotlight by using two floodlights on opposite sides of the speaker's stand. The houselights were then brightened. There remained the problem of the speaker not being able to see, however.
Lazzarino admitted that if he were to react positively to the criticisms made of the transmissions he should provide additional monitors.
"We could provide monitors every 25 or 30 feet in the auditorium but that would be a problem simply because the equipment isn't available and would have to be purchased. We don't have the money this year
KU ranks 6th
The University of Kansas ranks sixth in the nation among the institutions that graduate 20 or more Woodrow Wilson designates in the past two years, according to the annual report of the Woodrow Wilson national Fellowship Foundation.
The University's 35 Woodrow Wilson Designates ranks behind Cornell, Michigan, Toronto, Princeton and Harvard. Only 25 institutions in the United States and Canada had 20 or more designates.
to acquire additional monitors," he said.
Lazzarino also said if the addition were possible then problems with the video projector and the lights could be eliminated. He also suggested the possibility of using an extra camera to survey the audience.
The cost of the special transmission, Lazzarino said, was only nominal.
The lighting problem did not exist in Kansas City. The camera there was focused on the entire audience while they viewed proceedings with monitors.
"The costs were not above what we normally have. The cameraman and technicians are regular employees of the University and any additional expense involved was only due to moving the necessary equipment from Kansas City. The equipment belonged to the med center," he said.
FACTS OF LIFE
MARCH 16 - 20
Rated "Great" For Swingers
MR
YUK
SO YOU SAY YOU CARE.
SO DOES EVERYONE ELSE WHO DOESN'T VOTE.
FESTIVAL DE CAMPEONATO EN TAMAULO
Skit wins first at festival
Photo by Ron Bishop
First prize at the International Festival was awarded to this skit presented by the Venezuelan students. The festival was held in the Kansas Union Ballroom Saturday.
One of America's foremost living poets, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, will appear at the University of Kansas 1970 Festival of the Arts in Hoch Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 31.
Poet Ferlinghetti first on art festival agenda
This change is being made to save time in the cataloging operation and to get the books listed in the card catalogue more quickly, said Terrence Williams, assistant director of libraries.
The first bookstore in the country to handle paper back books only was founded by Ferlinghetti and an associate, Peter D. Martin. Under its imprint, Ferlinghetti began publishing the Pocket Books Series, which includes works by William Carlos Williams, Allen Ginsberg, Kenneth Patchen, Kenneth Rexroth, Antonin Artaud and many exciting new writers whom he discovered.
Ferlinghetti received his bachelor's degree from the University of North Carolina and his master's from Columbia University. He received a Doctorat de l'Universite from the Sorbonne in Paris.
In essence, there will be "two libraries" and a user will need to know which system the call number of his book is in.
The Dewey Decimal classification system is being discontinued on books coming into the University of Kansas Libraries. All new books are being classified according to their Library of Congress call numbers.
This means that Watson Library and the branch libraries will have two systems of classification. The Library of Congress numbers for the new books and
The Library of Congress in Washington classifies each book that is published and then distributes a listing each year of the titles along with their Library of Congress number.
The Library of Congress system classifies books on an A to Z scale and then from 1 to 9,999, the Dewey system arranges books according to subject and then by numbers from 000 to 900.
KU libraries revamp system
Dewey Decimal cards for the present books will be in the drawers of the card catalogue.
Ferlinghetti's second book of poems, A Coney Island of the Mind, is now going into its 16th printing with a quarter million copies in print so far. A novel, Her, was published in 1960, and is now in its seventh printing. His book, Routines, is a venture into the unconventional revolutionary theatre. He has written six other books.
Because KU used the Dewey system, each book had to be re-classified.
Ferlinghetti has given many poetry readings both in this country and abroad, including the Spoile Festival, the Berlin Literary Colloquin, and the historic poetry evening at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
The change was begun last week for the purpose of reducing the library's backlog of uncatalogued books. All books in the library will be classified by their Library of Congress numbers in the future but this retrospective classification has not begun at present.
Most major university libraries have made this change, Williams said. It was begun here after long consideration by the library staff and approval of the Senate Libraries committee.
Spanish institute offers travel, training
Language training in a native situation is provided by the Summer Language Institute in Barcelona, Spain.
The Institute will provide the language training using local instructors under the supervision of regular University of Kansas staff. It will be sponsored by the department of Spanish and Portuguese in conjunction with the Office of International Programs.
The course offerings will be aimed at students in the intermediate range of Spanish language preparation: Intermediate Spanish I and II, Intermediate Spanish Composition and Conversation, and Spanish Culture. Students may earn six hours of academic credit.
Mar. 16
1970 KANSAN 11
The program will include two weeks of organized travel under the direction of an art historian to points of historical interest in Spain, including Madrid, Todeno and Salamanca. After a period of formal study in Barcelona approximately two weeks will be free for independent travel.
Limited scholarship funds are available. Requests for scholarships must accompany application blanks.
Applications and more information on this and other Summer Language Institutes sponsored by KU may be obtained at the Office of International Programs, 224 Strong.
Geostatics study scheduled in June
On June 7-9, the Kansas Geological Survey and the University Extension at the University of Kansas will sponsor a colloquium on geostatics.
Geologists and statisticians such as J. W. Tukey, statistician from Princeton University and A. B. Vistelius, geomathematician from the laboratory of Mathematical Geology at Leningrad, USSR, will attend.
Weather
Mostly cloudy with a chance of occasional snow today becoming partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Northerly winds 10 to 15 mph today. High about 40. Low tonight near 30. Probability of precipitation 20 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight and Tuesday.
TIME TO HAVE YOUR EASTER CLOTHES CLEANED
102
Before you leave for spring break try our expert service on your finest garments.
WEAVING REPAIRING ALTERATIONS
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SENSITIVITY TRAINING AS A COMMUNIST PLOT.
Monday, March 16, 7:30 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium,
Union
Sponsored by the SUA Minority Opinions
4-SEEING A CHANGE...
In favor of bigger and better parties next year.
In issuing a survey this spring to find your choice of bands, speakers, and projects.
In donating money to your choice of project, (Watkins Hospital, Scholarships, etc.).
In making Class Officers voting members of the Student Senate.
1. 2
If you too foresee a change
VOTE
STINSON, KREAMER, WINN, AND PETERSEN
for
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS
General admission tickets on sale
SUA sponsors fourth Festival of Arts
A week-long program of nightly performances and daytime appearances of performers and critics in the various arts will be presented from March 31 to April 4 at the University of Kansas.
The program is the fourth annual Festival of the Arts sponsored by Student Union Activities. In past years the Festival has brought such performers as Oscar Peterson, Rey de la Torre, Dave Brubeck, Gerry Mulligan and Lou Rawls, such authors as Mark Van Doren, and Edward Albee, and such critics as Henry
Geldzahler and Pauline Kael to the KU campus.
This year's Festival features Lawrence Ferlinghetti on Tuesday, March 31; the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble on Wednesday, April 1; Barbara Rose on Thursday, April 2; The Lucas Hoving Dance Company on Friday, April 3; and Buffy Sainte-Marie on Saturday, April 4.
SEATTLE (UPI)—In an early morning sneak attack, about 80 Indians stealthily scaled the west bluff of Fort Lawton and tried unsuccessfully to set up tepees inside the Army post Sunday.
Performances will be held each night at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. General admission tickets will go on sale Monday, March 16.
Indian 'attack' on fort ends with 77 arrests
Military police spotted their encampment about an hour after the invasion and arrested 77 persons.
The raid came exactly a week after the original seige of the post by about 100 Indians and actress Jane Fonda, who said
KU museum gets painting from artists
The University of Kansas Museum of Art is the recipient of one of 32 donated works of contemporary American artists given to museums across the country.
The work, "Softer Than Sheeler," by artist Nancy Wisseman is now on loan and hanging in the KU School of Business office.
The painting is a depiction of a desk, bed and a baby crib crowded to the side of a small room. The picture is done in cool shades of blues and greens applied in a flowing manner. The title of the work refers to the artist Charles Sheeler, whose works are hard-edged and stark.
The oil painting has been donated by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. All the pictures were purchased at a cost of $39,000 through the Childe Hassam Fund. The museum has not yet been informed of the value of the painting it has received.
12 KANSAN Mar. 16 1970
INITIATIVE
LINDA
SHEEHY
Liberal Arts Student Senate Alliance
1234567890
Action
Your University State Bank at 955 Iowa Street the most convenient to campus
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they wanted the 1,100 acre fort as the site of an Indian cultural center.
Fifty-two men, 24 women and a 15-year-old boy arrived at the beachside bluff about 4 a.m. They waited until dawn to creep the 15 paces up the hillside and into the fort with moccasin-like silence.
Give of the Green
St. Pat's Day, March 17
The SUA office will be unable to honor any requests for tickets which arrive later than four days before the night of the performance, said Darlre Reed, Leawood senior and director of the 1970 Festival of the Arts program. Students may continue to redeem their Festival of the Arts coupons until four days before the performance.
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- party supplies
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Tickets for the evening performances will also be sold at the door, or they may be ordered by mail through the SUA office, Reed said.
The University Daily Kansan will present a feature on the individual performers each day this week in the order that they will appear in the Festival of the Arts.
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A factory representative will be at the bookstore to help you personalize your KU class ring. Seniors-order now to assure delivery by graduation. Juniors-get your ring now and enjoy it for a year.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Transplant drugs have side effects
HOUSTON (UPI) — A nurse handed a heart transplant patient a toothbrush. He didn't know what to do with it.
She brought his dinner. He didn't eat. He didn't recognize his wife. In fact, when he looked in the mirror, he didn't even recognize himself.
A few hours earlier the patient was alert and responsive. He was on the way to recovery, but his body started rejecting his heart.
Doctors increased the dosage of antirejection drugs tenfold and a sudden transition took place. His face became expressionless, like a mask, and he ceased to function normally.
to function normally.
The nurse had to put the toothbrush in his hand and move his hand to his mouth. She had to feed him.
Mar. 16 1970 KANSAN 13
The dose of cortisone-like drugs caused the unusual behavior, according to Drs. Irvin A. Kraft and H. Barry Molish of the Baylor College of Medicine. Others reacted strangely in different ways, they said.
They have studied 14 of the 20 transplant patients of Dr. Denton A. Cooley since September 1968 and found the patients suffered from delusions of grandeur, mental deficiency, elation and depression.
Kraft said he also found the patients worried about receiving the heart of a "hard hearted" person or the heart of a woman, but these were not connected with the unusual reactions from the drugs.
The change in attitudes caused by the drugs was temporary and disappeared after the dosage was cut to a low level or was eliminated.
"One patient was grandiose," Kraft said. "He saw himself as going to build a big institution in his home state and call it Cooley Hospital, but these ideas diminished as the medicine was diminished."
Kraft, a psychiatrist, said the I.Q. of one patient was 72 during periods of heavy dosage, but rose to more than 100 other times.
"This man's I.Q. never was measured before the transplant so we don't know what was normal," Kraft said.
"There are very swift mood changes," he said. "A patient will be talking and break into tears where there's no sad situation.
Some have become euphoric."
One was so disoriented that he was found wandering near a shopping center about five miles from the hospital at 2 a.m. one day. The patient, who was allowed to leave the hospital for short periods at this stage of convalescence, said he was mailing a letter.
The antirejection drugs used by Cooley's team have been cortisone and prednisolone, which is five times more powerful than cortisone, according to Dr. Robert Leachman, chief cardiologist on Cooley's transplant team.
These drugs have been causing changes in behavioral patterns in patients since they have been used, but they seldom have been given in large doses as in the transplants.
During the first critical hours
after the transplant, adults received the equivalent of more than 3,000 milograms of cortisone, Leachman said. When used for treatment of arthritis or colitis, the most intense dose normally is 150 milograms a day, Leachman said.
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VOTE!!
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THE FOLLOWING ARE A FEW OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE PLEDGED THEIR SUPPORT TO THE CANDIDACY OF MIKE HELBERT AND DAN EVANS.
Steve English
Bert Gagnon
Sally Brown
Linda Pemberton
Scott Taylor
Russ Ritchel
Mike Roberts
Gary Harben
Ron Michaelsen
Doug De Tray
Dennis Long
Tom Low
Jim Ashton
Chris Hoffman
Art Valentine
Keith Rupert
Tina Borak
Llyle Stout
Diane Lonergan
Benna Henderson
Leslie Peet
George Davidson
Don Weiser
Kathee Hanny
Susan Borgstadt
Peggy Larkin
Melissa Godfrey
Jan Mactier
Dianna Sperber
Ellen Ruff
Claudia Brown
Mary Roenig
Cheryl Rousey
Sandy Myers
Steve Glover
Gretchen Whittake
Scott Manion
Tom Shea
Mike Mulvanon
Cheryl Umphrey
Jorgen Brockman
Sue Dalrymple
Larry White
John Payne
John Campbell
Scott Hendrick
Stan Reese
Bob Rahmeier
Cheri Hill
Mary Gans
Sam Bledsoe
Mike Adams
Jerry Piper
Kenny Cohen
Larry Walter
Scott Schoffner
Steve Morris
Mark Hupe
Gene Mohr
Blaise Plummen
Greg Wilson
Dave Brubaker
Bob Brookens
Dan Wheeler
Brent Eilts
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Justin T. Hunt
Greg Hotchkiss
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Stephen C. Evans
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Phil Gibson
Paul Dewey
Lynn Diller
F. Stank
Tod. E. Queen
John Dobbins
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Greg Harp
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Keith Wealy
Becky Johns
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William Axcell
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Lectures to discuss World War II
"Japan and the Pacific War" will be the topic of a lecture by Kimitada Miwa, and "Australia and World War II" the topic of a lecture by Douglas Pike, two visiting lecturers who will speak to the History of World War II class at 1p.m. on Tuesday in Hoch Auditorium. All interested people are invited to come.
Miwa, who has his Ph.D. from Princeton and is a professor of Modern Japanese History at Sophia University in Tokyo, has been visiting professor of Japanese history at the Centro de Estudios Orientales of the Colegio de Mexico this year.
Pike is a specialist in Australian history and is now Professor of History at Australian National University and has this year been in England as Commonwealth Fellow at St. John's College, Cambridge.
Other lectures by the two visiting lecturers sponsored by the Department of History are as follows:
Miwa—"Yosuke Matsuoka: A Reappraisal," in a class studying modern Japan, Tuesday at 2:30 p.m., in room 4, Fraser Hall.
Pike-"Australia and the British Empire," in History 145, Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. in 102 Strong Hall.
Pike-"European Problems from the Commonwealth Point of View," in History 131, Wednesday at 11 a.m. in room 3, Green Hall.
The members of the KU varsity tennis team last year were all graduates of the same high school, Shawnee Mission East.
14 KANSAN Mar. 16 1970
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Another job for the knights of the B & G
Workers from the University Buildings and Grounds department are busy using sand-blasting equipment to erase paint markings from the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. The markings appeared Friday morning and were removed early Friday afternoon.
Poll workers needed in student elections
Poll workers are needed for the Student Senate elections to be held this week.
The polls will be set up Tuesday and Wednesday in the Kansas Union, Strong Hall and Murphy Hall. They will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Polls also will be open in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, Oliver Hall and Ellsworth Hall from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. Tuesday night only.
"We desperately need poll workers," said Kathy Newcomer,
Omaha junior and co-chairman of the elections committee. "Anyone interested in helping at the polls should sign lists distributed in the dorms, frats, sororities and scholarship halls." She said people could also sign up by calling either 843-5600 or 843-6455.
Miss Newcomer and David R. Miller, Hays senior and co-chairman of the elections committee, plan to collect the lists tonight and make a master list.
Bircher to lecture tonight
Lt. Col. Jack Mohr, retired U.S.
Army colonel and a member of
the John Birch Society, will
speak about sex education in the
schools, sensitivity training and
Vietnam, at 7:30 pm. today in
Woodruff Auditorium in the
Kansas Union.
Mohr was a prisoner of the North Korean Communists even before the outbreak of that war.
During the Korean war, the term "brainwashing" was added to our language. "Brainwashing."
as Major Mayer has said, is "a calculated attempt to distort men's convictions and their principles . . . and to supply them with a mass of specific information."
Colonel Mohr describes the sex education programs currently being promoted in the public schools as "merely one form of sensitivity training, which itself is an adaptation of the brainwashing—or mind control—techniques."
PETER MCCARTHY
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Naming names of the spots only we local folk are "in" on.
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We'll tell you about a crazy little $30 ticket that'll buy you 1,100 miles of rail and boat travel.
And fill you in on all kinds of tours planned especially for the college crowd.
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39
Edge Villanova for NCAA crown
Jayhawks repeat as indoor kings
By GALEN BLAND
Kansan Sports Writer
Kansas slipped by Villanova by one and a half points to give the Jayhawks their second consecutive NCAA indoor track and field championship Saturday night in Detroit's Cobo Hall.
KANSAN Sports
Villanova lost two points they had counted on when their mile star, Marty Liquori, was upset by unheralded Howell Michael of William and Mary. The two points difference between first place and Liquori's second place finish would have given the title to Villanova.
The Jayhawks captured two firsts in the competition. Karl
Salb tossed the shot 67-21/2 in winning the Hawks' only individual championship. He was followed by teammates Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop giving KU 13 points for their sweep of the weight event.
KU's two-mile relay team grabbed the other first as they established a new world record for an 11-lap track with a time of 7.25.7. Denis Stewart, Jim Nei-house, Roger Kathol and Brian McElroy each ran an 880-yard leg in the Hawks record run.
The Jayhawks battled Kansas State in the two mile with anchorman McEriroy staving off the strong finishing kick of Ken Swenson to win by 15 yards. McEriyon was clocked in 1:49.7, Stuart in 1:53.6, Neilouse in 1:50.0 and Kathol in 1:52.4. The previous record had been set in 1964 by Villanova with a 7:26.4.
Kansas scored 27 $ \frac{1}{2} $ points in winning its third team crown in the meet's 6 year history. Villanova scored 26 and easily garnered second over Harvard's 15 points. Among Big Eight conference schools, Missouri tied for 11th and K-State was tied for 21st.
Liquori finished about 10 feet behind Michael in the Villanova star's costly defeat. Liquori lagged back in the pack until the final laps when he unleashed his famed kick. He pulled abreast with Michael on the final turn but the William and Mary miler pulled away down the stretch. Michael was timed in 4:03.1 which was one half second faster than Liquori.
good race," he said. "It wasn't that I thought Michael didn't have enough left. I guess I was just too tired."
Liquori could not explain his shocking defeat. "I don't know what it was. I just didn't run a
Michael was pleased with his race and his race plan. "This race couldn't have gone any better. It went exactly according to plan," he said. "I wasn't surprised about Liquori's strong finish, that's his pattern—to hold back and then come on."
Herb Washington of Michigan State joined nine others who have run the 60-yard dash in 5.9 seconds indoors. Tom Hill of Arkansas State set an NCAA indoor mark with a 6.9 timing in the 60-yard high hurdles.
Washington, a sophomore, said after his victorious run, "I knew
I had it won 10 yards away. I was leading with 10 yards to go a year ago but John Carlos and Wayne Long went ahead of me so I ended up third."
In the pole vault, Jayhawk Jan Johnson and Jim Williamson of Maryland both soared 16 feet 6 inches, but Williamson was awarded first on fewer misses. Bill Hatcher picked up a crucial point and a half in this event for the Hawks by tying Alartou of Brigham Young for fourth.
The other Jayhawk points were scored by Doug Smith who finished fifth in the mile and Bill Penny who was fourth in the 35 pound-weight throw.
Collins tops regional all-tourney selections
Jimmy Collins, New Mexico State's sensational 6-2 senior guard, was a unanimous choice for the NCAA Midwest regional all-tournament team to pace all vote-getters for the mythical team.
named on 32 of the 46 ballots cost.
Teammate Sam Lacey, the muscular 6-10 Aggie center, missed being a unanimous choice by only two votes to place second among vote-getters
Collins, who led his team to the tournament title, also was named the tournament's most outstanding player while being
Rounding out the five-man team were Kansas State's David Hall and Jerry Venable and Drake's Al Williams. Hall, the Wildcats' sophomore forward, was the only non-senior to make the team. He scored 35 points and grabbed 40 rebounds in two games.
Mar. 16
1970 KANSAN 15
TOMMY AND LISA MARSHALS
INVOLVEMENT
THROUGH
INTERACTION
ANDREW BUKATY President
MARSHA BRIN Secretary
ANN LADEWIG Treasurer
JOHN ROBINSON Vice-President
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
10c draws
LUMS®
809 W. 23rd
Collins pushes NMS into finals
Aggies defeat Drake
New Mexico State easily defeated the Drake Bulldogs Saturday, 87-78, in the championship game of the NCAA Midwest Regional held in Allen Field House. The victory puts the Aggies in the NCAA finals to be held this weekend in College Park, Md., where they will meet the UCLA Bruins in a semi-final game.
Coach Maury John's Bulldogs stayed with NMS for the first ten minutes before the powerful Aggies, fifth ranked nationally, began to gradually pull away.
Leading 23-22, NMS reserve guard Milton Horne hit two free throws with 9:45 left in the first half only to be followed by 6-10 Sam Lacey's 15 foot jump shot and a Roy Neal layin to propel the lead to seven, 29-22, with 8:47 showing on the clock.
Drake could never recover from the Aggie surge as New Mexico State held at least a seven point lead the remainder of the game.
By halftime the outcome was clearly predictable as New Mexico State led, 47-35, while completely dominating game tempo during the last ten minutes of the half. Jimmy Collins, the Aggies brilliant 6-2 guard who was
later named most valuable player in the tournament, and Lacey each had 10 points while Lacey had additionally controlled the backboards with 10 rebounds.
The second half was one of frustration for the Bulldogs as all comeback attempts were thoroughly squelched by the Aggies.
With 10:01 remaining to play Drake got as close as 11, 61-50, on a Lee Allen jump shot. Collins and Lacey quickly picked up the slack for the Aggies though and with 6:33 showing on the clock NMS led, 74-56.
The Bulldogs refused to give
BOX SCORE
Drake fg-fa> ft-fta reb pf tp
Williams 4-15 1-3 14 15 14
Halliburton 8-18 8-8 9 3 24
Bush 6-8 1-6 7 9 3 13
Zeller 4-15 1-1 1 5 9
Sakos 5-8 -0 1 1 5 9
Sakus 0-2 2-4 1 3 2
Wanamaker 1-4 1-2 3 3 3
Salyers 3-5 0-0 0 3 1
Allen 1-3 0-0 0 1 0
Teeter 0-1 0-0 1 0 0
Totals 32-19 14-24 37 32 78
N. Mex. St.
Burgess fg-fga ft-fta reb pf tp
Smith 0-0 0-0 7 2 0
Lacey 2-4 1-3 3 5 2
Criss 5-10 4-7 0 4 14
Collins 9-18 8-10 3 1 36
Henne 2-3 3-4 4 7
Reyes 3-6 7-9 0 4 13
Totals 28-53 31-45 46 22 87
BAKE 28-53 31-45 46 35 43-78
DRAKE 35 43-78
NEW MEXICO STATE 47 43-87
Cats blast Houston in consolation tilt
The Kansas State Wildcats climaxed their 1969-70 basketball campaign Saturday by defeating the Houston Cougars, 107-98, to take third place in the NCAA Midwest Regional tournament held in Allen Field House.
The victory left K-State with a season record of 20 wins and 8 losses—the first 20 victory season for the Wildcats since 1964. The Houston loss gave the Cougars a 25-5 record and a fourth place finish in the regional.
The two teams managed to take the monotony out of a usual consolation game with a rapid run and gun pace that led to a whipping 184 shots taken, 124 rebounds, 52 turnovers and 50 personal fouls.
Houston stayed close to the Wildcats for the first seven minutes before a sudden spurt of eight straight K-State points broke a 15-15 tie and proved fatal to the Cougars.
Jeff Webb started the fireworks for the 'Cats with a 20 foot jump shot to make it 17-15 with 12:41 remaining in the half. Bob Zender and Jerry Venable followed with quick baskets before another 20 footer by Webb at the 11:19 mark put K-State in front, 23-15.
From that point on the two teams played near even as Houston could get no closer than four points while K-State could never build the lead to more than 12.
At halftime K-State led 52-46 largely on the strength of Zender, Venable and David Hall. All three had grabbed eight rebounds by the 20-minute mark and Venable led all scorers with 17 points. Zender and Hall were close behind for the Wildcats with 13 points each.
16 KANSAN Mar. 16
1970
Responsibility
Communication
Progress
Russ
WELSH
Student Senate—Liberal Arts
Alliance
Alliance
K-State hopes of winning appeared to be in jeopardy while leading 82-72 and eight minutes to play. Zender left the game earlier in the half with an eye injury and both Venable and guard Wheeler Hughes had fouled out turning the game into a match between Houston's overall balance and the Wildcats' bench.
Alliance
Led by the sensational play of all-tournament selection Hall, the Wildcats prevailed by using semidelay tactics resulting in numerous layins.
up however and outscored the Aggies 22-13 in the time remaining. But the damage earlier inflicted was too extensive and the Aggies left the floor a winner, 87-78.
Hall led both K-State scoring and rebounded with 25 and 19 respectively. Venable gave strong scoring support with 24 while Zender hit for 15.
Ollie Taylor, Houston's 6-2 jumping-jack, led all scorers with 26 points. The Cougars possessed strong scoring balance with five men in double figure.
BOX SCORE
Houston 98 fg ft pt pf reb tp
Taylor 10-18 6-11 6-11 32 16
Davis 7-14 2-3 4 9 16
Bell 0-0 0-0 1 9 0
Bellen 6-18 5-9 10 10
Welch 5-18 4-5 4 5 14
Hickman 1-12 2-2 3 6 16
Willis 0-3 1-3 0 1 4
Hall 2-5 0-0 1 4 1
Evans 2-5 0-0 3 0 0
Youngdale 2-2 0-0 0 4 0
Totals 39-90 20-33 24 47 98
In a post game interview, conversation with New Mexico State coach Lou Henson centered on the Aggies forthcoming meeting with the UCLA Bruins.
Kan. St. 107 fg ft pt pf reb tp
Zender 7-13 1-3 3 10 12
Venable 11-26 2-4 3 10 24
12-19 11-3 5 10 24
Webb 7-13 0-0 2 16
Hughes 4-8 1-2 5 5 9
Lawrence 2-4 2-6 3 5 6
Snider 2-4 3-5 3 7 6
Smith 2-6 2-3 7 7 6
Thomas 0-0 1-1 1 1 1
Barber 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Litton 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 47-24 10-36 26 65 107
A UCLA-NMS matchup will be nothing new to NCAA tournament play as the Bruins have defeated the Aggies in the Far West Regional the last two years.
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Totals 47-94 13-26 26 65 107
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Survival in the Seventies Depends Upon Your Being Informed
THE ENVIRONMENTAL HANDBOOK
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APRIL 22, 1979
EDITED BY GARRETT DE BELL
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APRIL 22, 1978
EDITED BY GARRETT DE RELL
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Attention Women Students
APPLICATIONS are available now for women's personnel positions in the residence halls for the school year 1970-'71.
COMPLETED applications should be returned to the Dean of Women's Office by March 20,1970.
ANY junior or senior woman is eligible to apply.
OPPORTUNITY will be given to specify the particular hall in which the applicant prefers to work.
CONTACT a member of the Dean of Women's Staff if you have any questions.
---
45
34
Top flight performers
K-State's Jerry Venable attempts to arch a shot over the outstretched arm on New Mexico State's burley center Sam Lacey in Thursday's opening game of the Mid-West Regional. Positioning himself for the rebound is Wildcat David Hall (no. 33). All three were named to the all-tourney team along with the Aggies' Jimmy Collins and Drake's Al Williams.
Bruinstrounce Utah State for Far West regional title
SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) — UCLA broke open a tight game with nine straight points to end the first half Saturday and then cruised to 101-79 victory over Utah State to take the NCAA Far West regional basketball championship.
Santa Clara closed with a 7-2 spurt after blowing a 10-point lead to edge Long Beach State 89-86 for consolation honors.
The Bruins, who recorded their 22nd straight NCAA tournament victory, will play New Mexico State Thursday night in the NCAA semifinals at College Park, Md. Jacksonville and St. Bonaventure will meet in the other semifinal with the winners and losers playing on Saturday.
Utah State stayed with the
Mar. 16 KANSAN 17
1970
Bruins in the early going and grabbed a 44-42 lead with three minutes left in the first half when Ed Epss hit a jumper. But UCLA, behind Curtis Rowe, forged to a 51-42 lead at the half.
Rowe, who finished with 26 points, scored six of UCLA's final nine points before intermission. He also pulled down 16 rebounds.
UCLA, gunning for an unprecedented fourth straight NCAA title, broke the game open in the second half by hitting 52.6 per cent of its shots from the floor.
Utah State cut the lead to seven points two minutes into the second half on 6-8 forward Marv Roberts fallaway jumper. Roberts topped all scorers with 33 points as Utah State closed its season with a 22-7 record. Roberts also snagged 15 rebounds.
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COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) — All-America Bob Lanier suffered torn ligaments in his right knee while leading St. Bonaventure past Villanova 97-78 for the NCAA Eastern regional title Saturday, and doctors said he will require immediate surgery, knocking him out of next week's NCAA championship playoff.
Bonnies and Jacksonville claim championship wins
Lanier, a 6-11, 265-pound senior and expected to be one of the top picks in the pro draft, crashed to the floor when a Villanova player ran into him under the goal with 9:37 remaining. A cast was applied to his knee, and he was flown back to Buffalo, N. Y.
"It's a tough break for Bob and a tough break for us," Bonnies Coach Larry Weise said. "We'll have to pick up as best we can."
with 10:04 remaining in the first half. Jacksoville built its lead to 11 points, 52-41, shortly before halftime but Kentucky cut it to 52-45 at intermission.
Lanier scored 26 points to become St. Bonaventure's top all-time scorer as he helped his team avenge its only regular season loss. He returned for one play
Jacksonville's 7-foot-2 center Artis Gilmore, who scored 24 points and had 20 rebounds, also sat out several minutes in the second half when he picked up his fourth personal foul with 11:29 to go.
Phone VI 3-2091
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Underdog Jacksonville withstood a furious second half rally to beat top-ranked Kentucky 106-100 in the finals of the NCAA Mid-East regional basketball tournament Saturday afternoon behind Rex Morgan's 28 points.
★★
In the consolation game, North Carolina State rode Vann Williford's 36 points to beat Niagara 108-88.
Jacksonville advances to the NCAA finals late next week at College Park, Md., where it meets St. Bonaventure, winner of the Eastern Regional.
In the consolation game, Iowa defeated Notre Dame 121-106.
after his fall, then retired to a standing ovation.
Kentucky, which played the final 10 minutes without its All-America center Don Issel who fouled out, never caught up after the Dolphins took a 22-21 lead
Responsibility Communication Progress Russ WELSH Student Senate—Liberal Arts
Alliance
University Elections
Student Body President and Vice-President Student Senate Class Officers
Tuesday and Wednesday, March 17 and 18th 8:00-6:00 p.m.
at
Strong, Murphy and the Union Tuesday, March 17th at 7:00-10:00 p.m. GSP, Oliver and Ellsworth
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KU offers institute in Rome
The 1970 Summer Institute for Mediterranean Area Studies will be held in Rome June 18 to August 19.
The institute is open to upperclassmen and graduate students. Highly qualified freshmen and sophomores may also be accepted, but the enrollment is limited to 80 students.
The institute is sponsored by the American Universities Field Staff (AUFS) and five of its member universities: Alabama, Kansas, Louisiana State, Michigan State and Wisconsin.
Focusing on the Mediterranean area, the institute will offer students opportunities to compare the history, governments, and modernization of the nations bordering the Mediterranean. It will also examine the regional organizations that are most pertinent to Mediterranean problems, according to the Office of International Programs at the University of Kansas.
Augmenting the course work in English will be visits by more
than 20 distinguished Mediterranean scholars, diplomats and active political practitioners from European, Middle, Eastern and North African nations of the region.
A series of special non-credit lectures will cover the development of Rome and Italy, supplemented for those interested by field trips to Florence and Naples. For beginners, a course in conversational Italian will also be offered.
Insurance plans for KU students to be considered
The Health Committee of the Student Senate is now awaiting replies from insurance companies who wish to bid on a student health insurance plan.
Before this year students were offered Blue Cross-Blue Shield plans at enrollment time. Price escalations over the years have made this plan no longer feasible, said Dave Blahna, St. Louis Park, Minn., graduate student and chairman of the Health Committee.
When the decision was made to drop Blue Cross-Blue Shield last year, a committee which included William Balfour, dean of student affairs, Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor of finance, and Raymond Schweegler, director of the health service, decided that the Travelers Insurance Company offered the best alternative plan, but under this plan, married students had to pay higher rates than single students.
The major concern of the committee is finding a plan that offers better rates for married students. They want rates for single and married students to be determined on a more equal basis.
The Health Committee drew up a list of specifications for the program last month. When bids from the companies are received, the committee will make recommendations to the Student Senate, which will make the final selection.
18 KANSAN Mar. 16
1970
Las Vegas active again after strike settlement
LAS VEGAS (UPI) — Dice rolled, roulette wheels spun and slot machines gobbled coins again Sunday after 16 hotel operators along the famed "strip" agreed to give employes a 31.5 per cent raise.
The strike by the 14,000-member Culinary and Bartenders Unions which caused the first gambling shutdown in city history, was called off at one minute past midnight. Entertainer Jerry Lewis was the first player to step up to the crap table, crying "Whooope!"
Some bookies had been giving eight to five odds the walkout would last a full week, but the huge neon lights along the strip flashed on again after 94 hours.
Their shutdown had cost the power company $1,600 a day in lost revenue.
The shutdown also caused an estimated $2 million loss in wages to strikers and those who refused to cross picket lines. The casino operators were deprived of an equal anticipated take from gambling and the state of Nevada lost about a half million dollars in tax revenue.
There was a mass exodus from Las Vegas after the 16 affected hotels closed down all operations Thursday night, leaving 10,887 rooms vacant. Full resumption of service was expected by Tuesday.
Nevada Gov. Paul Laxalt flew here to take part in round-the-clock negotiations between the unions and the Nevada Resort Association. Downtown casinos and three "strip" resorts—Riviera, Bonanza and Circus Circus—had separate contracts.
The new agreement provided a straight 27-28 per cent wage in
crease plus fringe benefits including pension, health and welfare benefits, additional holidays and vacation time resulting in the 31.5 per cent raise. The unions demanded 45 per cent and the hotels offered 25 per cent.
Before the new contract was signed, a cocktail waitress was making $11.40 for a eight-hour shift with up to $40 more in tips. A bartender made $28-31 a shift with $20 in tips and a chef averaged about $34 a shift.
KU students get awards at dinner
Four junior and senior men and women were honored at the physical education department's annual dinner March 8.
The Jack Wolfe Memorial Award for the outstanding senior man was awarded to David B. Standage, Oklahoma City. The award is a memorial to a former KU basketball player and coach at Goodland High School.
The Earl Falkenstien Memorial Award for the outstanding junior man went to Danny Jay Bradfield of Overland Park. This prize memorializes a former business manager of the KU athletic department.
The Physical Education Alumnae Awards, made from annual gifts of women graduates went to outstanding senior woman Jennifer Clader, Winnetka, Ill., and outstanding junior woman Patty Johnson, Overland Park.
ELECT
ANDREWS
Pres.
WOOD
V. P.
RILEY
Treas.
BRUNING
Sec.
SENIOR
CLASS
OFFICERS
A
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Information & Applications
Call: Mario Karr-V12-6917 or
See: Dean Clark Coan-St. 226
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
advertisement are offered to
all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Anak-
vow of Western Civilization" 4th
issue. Campus Mad House, 41 W. 14th
St.
Must Sell, Large, professional drum set. Includes drums, cymbals, hardware, accessories, and cases. Beautiful black pearl finish. Like new-$475. Also mike and boom stand—$15. Call VI 2-3763 evenings. 3-16
Women's contract at Naisimun—selling for loss. Call VI 2-3439. 3-16
Zenith 2-speaker portable portable 3-
series Excellent. Excellent Call 844-5755.
3-16
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately. $1200. See at Ridgway Court, 3020 Iowa, Lot G23 or call VI 2-6318 after 6 p.m. 3-25
Really great fish mobiles from Thailand in several colors and sizes. You won't find them anywhere else, so drop into the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop weekdays from 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Television—Admiral Console—beautiful black and white. New tube, $45 cash. Friden Electric Desk Calculator. $3, Call 843-8191 after 6:00. 3-16
Corn husk dolls from the Southern Appalachian Mountains craftsmen. These are the dolls that were played with by children in their country. Museum of Natural History Gift Shop, open weekdays 8:30 to 4:30, Sundays, 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
Repossessed Magnavox Stere Component. 1 year old, 20 watt amp. Was 1968, 1000 at Ray Stockback's. 929 Mass. Opened. 3-16 Thurs., openings.
Famous brand component system.
Save $20.00. Now only $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. Open Mon. and Thurs. evenings.
3-16
Elect, typewriter, lamp, sprayer, in intensity lamps, refrig. and cupboard, drafting table, lamp and tackle boxes, VW mud and snow tires, port. AM-FM radio and phono, Norelco dictation recorder and transcriber. 842-1970.
Corvette for sale, 1965, 365 H.P., bom tops, excellent condition. Call 843-7922, from 4-7 p.m., ask for Steve. 3-17
1964 Chevrolet Impala Super Sport,
327, 300 hp., 4 speed, buckets, maroon.
Call 842-4774 after 6:00. 3-17
Nashua, '63, 10x55, 2 bdmr., din. _, completely furnay, carpeted, new auto.
washer, metal util. bldg._, fenced yard; June occupancy only. 482-4165.
Ampex Stereo Tape recorder--auto-
threading, microphones, tapes and
2 years old, must sell before spring
vacation, call Bob Brown. 843-572-
9100
Vespa scooter 125cc, excellent mechanical condition, good body, nearly new, can depend on transportation for only $100.00.
Call UN 4-3217 or B42-7305. 3-17
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SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
ITP
UN 4-3474
Ephone 12-string guitar (acoustic,
for sale; excellent condition; fast
action. $110.00. Call Bill at 842-0509.
3-18
1965 Triumph TR4, BRG, Stebro exhaust, Pirell tires, Lucas lamps, luggage rack, excellent condition, call Rick, 843-3237. 3-16
'54 Chevy, New battery, good radio.
Best. Call offer 64-5894, 5-13. 5-16
Walnut stereo speaker cabinets. These are beautiful floor models with 12" speaker systems. Perfect condition. Must sell! Call 843-6707. 3-18
GTX-1-1970, 440c.l., 4b., auto, air-room,
AM-FM Fw/r rear speaker, power
steering, vinyl roof, and disc brakes.
Must sell. Steve, 842-4275. 3-18
1969 Mustang, 302 V8 stick, blue with black interior, will sacrifice for quick sale. $1959. Call 842-2191 or 842-8870.
P-18
Bicycle-Schwinn Paramount Deluxe with sew up tires, tools, etc. Excellent condition. Make reasonable offer. Phone 843-3241 eve. 3-19
1969 Roadrunner Coupe--Save $1,100 on this beautiful year-old muscle car with pop-options like: 383 magnum, 335 n.p. ; Torquefile; power disc wheelchair; Wheelchair and tape; Konis; F-70x14 Polglass; and four more years of factory warranty. Ivy green with matching vinyl top, 13,000 miles, never raced or driven, 2995. Got married and need a smoker. 843-7747 or 2337 Murphy Dr. #4 (grey buildings east of Holiday Inn) after 2 p.m. 3-19
"65 Chev. SS. New wide tires, brakes,
shocks. Black with red interior.
4-speed, 327, A.C. Call Stretch or Jim,
842-1200, rm. 234.
3-17
Tire Sale—Tax time is here again,
must raise some loot. F07x14, $22.03
**Bridgestone Tires**
$23.09
must raise some loot. F70x14, +F.ET. $2.44; G70x14, $23.55
F.ET. $2.59; H70x14, $24.86 + F.ET.
$2.77; F70x15, $22.43 + $2.50; G70x15,
$24.12 + F.ET. $2.69; H70x17, $25.49
+ F.ET. $2.85. Above tires are premium quality. Glass belted, dual
premium first time the 2 cheater slicks. Plenty of recaps. All tires are fully guaranteed. Discount Tire Co. 906 N.2nd. North Lawrence. 842-6099. 3-20
Motorcycle-Bass Amp. Triumph 650 bored to 700 cc. Sunn bass cabinet 115 cc. Larsen bass cabinet. Fender Bassman Bass. Best offer. Ted. 842-7000, room 813. 3-20
'68 Volkswagen Bug. Must sell. Call
842-8605. 3-18
NOTICE
515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-government 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
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. VI 3-4032. 5-14
GROOVE-TODAY in tomorrow's clothes from La Petite Galerie. Find the latest, the best for guys and gals. We exist for your ego. 910 Kentucky.
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynaco dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
Urgent! Need to sub-lease 2-bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus.
$115. Day, call UN 4-4231; night VI 3-0705.
3-16
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in theses and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf
Jennie T. - Phone Order
843-7685 - We Deliver - 9th & III
Same Time — Phone Order
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
THE in the WALL
Jeff Stinson, president; Scott Kreamer,
v.p.; Cindy Winn, sec.; Stephane
Peterson, treas. Sophomore Class. 3-16
a change 3-16
We 3-16
The Castle Tea Room is ideal for luncheons, dinner parties, or even receptions. Call Llibuse at 843-115-3. Most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 3-16
We're back from New York with nourished thinking and stimulating objects. Rosaliea's Hotel, Harper, 11616 890-9212. Schedule send request. 3-16
Robert "Tuck" Duncan: active, dynamic, responsible independent for North College Student Senator 3-16
4 see 3-16
"Profits" from sales in the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop make possible a school services program for more elementary education. Help us expand our shopping shopweekdays from 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays from 12:30 to 4:30. 3-16
We'd like to serve you in the capacity of Senior Class officers. Randy Andrews, Ed Wood, Pat Riley, Kathy Bruning. 3-18
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18. 20% off. All sandal styles. Hodge dresses. 10:00-5:30 (open Thursday night). 842-6082. 3-18
Plitos—Ooptocap Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Cessna 150
240. Hourly dry rates: Balsam 150; Chuckie
180 12$1.50; 2-seat saloon
Phone 842-1124 after 6.
4-46
Like pancakes, french toast, ham and eggs . . . and economically priced? e.g. a sandwich across the street from Lindley Hall. Breakfast 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. 3-16
Students of Objectivism–discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand and others. 7:30 Monday, Oread Room, Kansas Union. 3-16
Change the College now! Vote John Friedman—Alliance Senator from Liberal Arts and Sciences. 3-17
We've got Beatles—the UDK ad in Tuesday's edition sold out our compass. We have to sell them all again and still at low sale prices at Tempo in the Malls. 3-19
Anyone interested in a turned-on 2- day camping trip over spring break. contact J. D., 842-3664. 3-18
TYPING
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience-
6048. 8:00 to 5:00 -842-0111. 4-3
6048. 8:00 to 5:00 -842-0111. 4-3
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing materials. Typed author pre-writer
Pica type. Competent service. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
Exclusive Representative
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8
Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7747 or 842-6562. 3-31
7 DAY SPECIAL
Cars Painted
$34.95
Fred's Auto Painting
of
- Sportswear
L. G. Balfour Co.
Rings - Crested - Letters
Recognitions Paddles
- Guards
- Favors
- Gifts
- Plaques
- Mugs
- Badges
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
Be Prepared! tune-ups
LAWRENCE, KATHARINE O'BRIEN
- Lavaliers
- Stationer
645 Mass.
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
startina service
LNB Bldg. #306
Tony's 66 Service
VI 3-1571
- Guards
- Mugs
Fred's Auto Painting
1328 W. 9th, Ph. 842-9487
Across from the Red Dog
Al Lauter
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
RIDGE
66
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman.
Accurate typing of papers, manuscripts, theses by experienced typist on carbon ribbon electric. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson, 842-2124. 3-16
Typing. Theses, papers, applications.
Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assist with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. Reasonable. 842-9249. 3-16
WANTED
Typing, Experienced typist. IBM Selectric, pica type. Work guaranteed.
Phone 843-3186. 3-16
Wanted—used motorcycle crash hel-
net. Call Murl at 842-9073 after 6:00
p.m.
Ride wanted—Topeka to KU, MWF,
must arrive by 9:30 and can leave at
2:30. Call CE2-0571. 3-18
Needed. One girl to share luxurious Gatehouse apt. with three others. $51.25 per month, including water. Call Nancy after 5:00 p.m. VI 2-6357.
Available now! Need one girl roommate to finish the year. Move in now for $45. April and May—$65. Close to campus. Call 842-9156. 3-17
Need one roommate to share expenses with 3 other girls. For months of April and May. $65.50 per month. Gatehouse apartments Call 843-5192.
Female roommate for summer. Shower 1 bdrm, air-cond. apt w/pool. $73
1st. Call Cheryl, UN 4-1064 or 842-
5369. 3-16
Male guinea pig to mate with our
guinea pig type. WT
golate forms. 843-8615.
3-19
SERVICES OFFERED
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troop Tax, 8011$1 Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
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. 4-1
Graduate student in French will tutor beginning and intermediate students. Call 843-0905. 3-16
LOST
Lost- 1 (one) Notebook. Reward.
Name- Richard Scharine; Subject-
clients- Michael Speech; Phone
843-5072 or 842-8070. Address-
1149 Pennsylvania St. 3
- 16
Lost: a diamond and sapphire gold ring. In the women's restroom at room 708, Corbin. If found, call Carol, Rozen, 708, Corbin. If gone, leave reward. Reward. 3-16
Green leather women's billfold, probably somewhere near Summerfield football field. "It despatches Reward, Lion ID's say 'Diane'." Wrigley, 842-7540, 3-16
Lost- 13th and Louisiana area, small
Nellel. "Reward" B48 125-10, 3-48
"Reward" B48 125-10, 3-48
"MOORE"BURGER
"The Biggest Hamburger In Town"
VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th
Men's All Leather
SANDALS
Sizes 7 to 12
Made in Italy
SANDAL
$5.99
Lost-my bilfold at KU rugby game last Sat. March 7, behind Oliver. If found, call 842-5927. Fred Joseph. Reward. 3-16
Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES
802 W. 23rd
Open every day 9 - 9
Sunday 1 - 6
Black wallet: lost at the Granada
Fred Wilson, March 11. If found telephone
Fred Wilson, $42-7000. Reward. 3-20
High school ring. Thomas Alva Edison School. School, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Gold band band. School, Tulsa, Oklahoma. side, reward offered. Mike Mellinger. 842-5003. 842-5002 between 5-7 p.m.
Loved puppy lost. About three months old with brownish to white hair. Yellow collar. Please, please call Michelle -842-2874. Reward 3-18
FOR RENT
1 bedroom, unfurnished apartment 2 blocks from campus. $110 per month plus utilities. Available April 1. Call 842-3750. 4:30 to p.m. 3-18
For rent to quiet male student, studio apt, close to campus. Nicely furnished, parking, utilities paid. Available immediately. 843-8534. 3-16
Nicely furnished rooms with all meals—shower and tub, central air-cond, and heating. Linens and utilities included. Quiet, congenial home for serious students and teachers. Near everything. Now, also taking reservations for summer and fall. Jayhawk Inn, 928 Rhode Island. 3-16
PERSONAL
Wanted: bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18. 20% off. All adored styles. Hodge. Podge. 10:00-5:30 (open Thursday night) 842-0682. 3-18
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved, our clients. Troup Tax, 801! $ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. tt
sandal off. All Podge. night). 3-18
Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. iff
HELP WANTED
Summer employment. Enquire Sunset Drive-In Theatre. Male or Female. Call 843-9172 for appointment. 3-16
Male or female commission sales representative wanted to sell medical supplies. Neat appearance and transportation necessary. Knowledge of medical supplies not essential. Leads furnished. Phone 842-5568. 3-17
Part-time help wanted—waitress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person. Earl's Pizza Parlor. 729 Mass. 4-2
Sailing Instructor: Qualified graduate student or one who holds a degree in Sailing. Must be required. May 1 through Labor Day. Salary open. Send resume and photo to Personnel Office, Tan-Tar-A Resort, Osage Beach, Missouri 65065.
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
Your headquarters
for
miDAS
mufflers and shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Photo by Ron Bishon
And the fire blazed on . . .
The area's dry conditions turned a farmers field burning incident into a major blaze Sunday which consumed nearly 60 acres by midnight. The blaze occurred seven miles north of Lawrence in Jefferson County, a sheriff's officer reported. The fire could not be fought, the officer said, because the township has no fire department.
Student party started
A new student power movement called Incorporated Student Power was formally created Friday at a Kansas Union news conference.
The party will be incorporated under the laws of the State of Kansas and governed by a board of directors. The board will coordinate the work of four subordinate groups and their functions.
- Student Power Inc.-a labor pool of concerned students involved in social action.
- Human Resources Commission—a board to coordinate action committees involved with such projects as ecology improvement,
zero population growth, women's rights, the peace movement, etc., and to implement campaign goals.
20 KANSAN Mar. 16 1970
- Independent Student Party the political arm, to give force in student government to the proposals of Incorporated Student Power. The party is to be reorganized under the direction of a representative steering committee, which will coordinate legislation in the Student Senate.
- Communication and Education Commission—the publicity organization; it will include a press bureau and newsletter division.
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y. law student and Independent Party candidate for student body president, talked about the goals of the party.
"Students in America have developed into a distinct social class. Unfortunately, student power
movements in the past have been based on the assumption that this student class is quantitatively different from all other social classes. Because of this, their demands and energies have been directed towards power solely for the advantage of students," he said.
"Incorporated Student Power views the student class as but one, albeit important class, within society. Incorporated Student Power will make demands and will direct it's energies toward the improvement of society. Not student society, not black society, not white society and not even American society, but the society of man," he said.
Incorporated Student Power plans a conference in April which will include representatives of major Kansas colleges and members of other Big Eight schools.
Senior candidates state platforms
The class of 1971 can choose between Randy Andrews, Wichita junior, and James E. Nichols, Hiawatha junior, for its senior class president.
Andrews, an advertising major, said his platform has four major planks. He said he will seek to have class officers included in the Student Senate. With senior class officers in the Senate, work can be done toward creating intern programs in fields that do not presently have them. Also Andrews hopes to initiate discussion of the value of the Western Civilization comprehensive examination.
Andrews said he plans a full schedule of class parties. He is also interested in a class project to improve Watkins Hospital,
Andrews said he is working on a project that would give due-paying seniors 10 to 25 per cent discounts on purchases from selected local merchants.
Nichols, a political science and philosophy major, said his platform is very class-oriented. He said he hopes to learn class ideas through a monthly newsletter
which will include a returnable questionnaire.
Nichols said three parties are planned, and he hopes to extend Senior Day to Senior Week. He said plans have been made for a fund raising concert. The proceeds would be donated for the improvement of Watkins Hospital.
He said he also favors lowering class dues to $10. Even with the reduction, the senior class will have an efficient operating budget. Nichols said.
Running on the Andrews' coalition are Ed Wood, Wichita, for vice-president; Kathryn Bruning, Overland Park, for secretary; and Patrica Riley, Pratt, for treasurer.
On the Nichols' coalition are Steve Childs, Fowler, for vicepresident; Patricia Rich, Leawood, for secretary; and Suzy Bocell, St. Joseph Mo, for treasurer.
Andrews was a Freshman and Sophomore Class Congress representative, a member of the Junior Executive Committee, sergeant-at-arms and pledge trainer at Delta Tau Delta and SUA Popular Film publicity cochairman.
New Mobe to act
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The group that sponsored last November's massive antiwar protest in Washington plans to use the law and abuse the law this week to create havoc at draft boards in at least 70 U.S. cities.
For the first time since protests against the war in Vietnam became nationally coordinated, the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe) is openly advocating civil disobedience.
The plan of the New Mobe is two-pronged, to stage sit-ins to block draft board entrances in about 70 of the more than 100 cities planning antidraft demonstrations and to "strangle the draft system in its own bureau-
racy" by following the letter of the law.
"Civil disobedience means people will be having nonviolent sit-ins at induction centers and draft boards, blocking entrances to those building," a spokesman for the New Mobe said.
A spokesman at draft headquarters here said it has not made any suggestions to draft directors in the states on how to cope with the harassment activities.
That action is planned for Thursday, the climax of the period of activities and coincidentally the day the Senate Armed Services Committee opens hearings on the nomination of Curtis Tarr to become the new director of the Selective Service System.
SO YOU SAY YOU CARE.
SO DOES EVERYONE ELSE WHO DOESN’T VOTE.
Awbrey says 'not possible'
Referendum ordered by court
By WILLIAM MORRISSEY
Kansan, Staff Writer
The Student Court Monday night in a 7-0 decision upheld an appeal to leave the Wescoe Hall petition on today's ballot.
John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student and chief justice of the court, then ordered David Awbrey Hutchinson senior and student body president, as president of the Student Senate to carry out the order of the court and add the referendum to today's ballot.
Richard von Ende, Abilene, Texas graduate student and vice-chairman of StudEx, and Awbrey issued a statement to the Kansan in answer to the court's decision.
"The question of a referendum that would repeal the action of the Student Senate is no longer possible because those seeking the referendum question did not comply with the following requirement for referendum elections.
"They did not have signatures equal to 10 per cent of the student body.
"They did not turn in petitions within 2 weeks of the action by the Student Senate.
"The StudEx was empowered both through implied authority in Senate Codes and by delegated authority from the Student Senate at the March 4 Senate meeting to formulate any referendum questions it deemed proper for today's election.
"With that in mind StudEx committee on March 11, met and decided no referendum questions would go on today's ballots.
"We so empowered the Election Committee, as a result the Election Committee did not have ballots printed up concerning referendum questions for today's elections."
The court's decision was: "We feel the May, 1969 Senate Code was clearly thought by everyone to be controlling. No one knew the by-laws were in existence. We consider this a very strong point. Secondly if the by-laws are looked at we feel StudEx abused their discretion because there wasn't an emergency. We feel the StudEx has power but only in emergency. Otherwise they don't."
The initial appeal signed by Dan Beck, Mission junior and student body vice-presidential candidate, charged the Senate Executive Committee had
Beck's charges included:
"fraudulently postponed the referendum."
- Not all members of the StudEx were notified of an emergency meeting of the StudEx March 11, in which the referendum was taken off the ballot.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- No emergency was cited as section 6 of the 1969 Senate Code states.
- The StudEx did not have the power to supercede a simple majority of two-thirds of the Student Senate.
The controversy began after David Miller, Eudora senior and student body presidential candidate, circulated a petition calling for a referendum after the Student Senate voted Feb. 11 to issue a $7.50 fee per student-per semester to help with the state, pay bonds on Wescoe Hall.
At a Wednesday emergency meeting of StudEx Awbrey moved the referendum questions be on an April 7 ballot in a special referendum election. (Continued to page 16)
Notice!
h Year, No. 100 The University of KansasLawrence, Kansas Tuesday, March 17, 1970
The Monday issue of the Kansan contained an editorial by Mike Shearer endorsing one candidate for student body president.
80th Year, No.100
This editorial expressed the opinion of one person and was not necessarily the opinion of the paper or other Kansan staff members.
Officially, the Kansan has not endorsed any candidate or party, and it will not do so. The reader should understand the editorial was Shearer's opinion and not the Kansan's.
—Ken Peterson Managing Editor
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Bill to provide free heroin
NEW YORK-In an attempt to minimize Mafia profits from illicit drug traffic and eliminate crime by addicts, Rep. Bertram L. Podell, D-N.Y., announced plans Monday to increase legislation which would provide free heroin for addicts.
Troop removal refused
MOSCOW—Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia delayed his departure for Peking again today upon receiving Soviet promises to help him resist "imperialist provocations" and keep his nation neutral and sovereign.
The one-day postponement coincided with reports from Phnom Penh that Viet Cong and North Vietnamese officials, in their meeting Monday with the Cambodian foreign minister, refused to discuss the removal of their estimated 40,000 troops from Cambodia.
WASHINGTON - Government crackdowns on air pollution have largely backfired by hiding pollution sources and producing "pervasive bluish and grayish hazes . . . over at least half of the United States," according to a veteran atmospheric scientist, Vincent J. Schaefer.
Air pollutants lighter
Rivers pushes arms loan
WASHINGTON-A censored transcript today provided some of the answers behind the latest congressional effort to supply controversial arms to Nationalist China.
The transcript showed Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., almost singlehandedly brought about the House Armed Services Committee approval of a loan to Taiwan Formosa of three surplus, conventionally powered, attack submarines.
---
Veteran heckled during 'Sensitivity' speech
By JEFF GOUDIE
Kansan Staff Writer
Lt. Col. Jack Mohr, communist prisoner during the Korean War, was pelted by marshmallows Monday night when he spoke on the topic "Sensitivity training-an adaption of the brainwashing of mind control techniques."
Mohr said while he and a Catholic priest, who was later murdered, were in China they were subjected to the "communist art of psychopolitics, or the art of controlling the thinking of other people."
Mohr said because of his first hand experiences and because he had worked frequently with war prisoners,he felt he was qualified to speak about sensitivity training.
He visited the California Eslen Institute at Berkeley in 1961, Mohr said, which was the first institute to use sensitivity training. He said he found the institute practicing a "behavioral science."
The process which the Institute was practicing was similar to the process used in Korean prison camps, Mohr said. The similarities include group numbers, seminar format, and breaking down of personal defenses, he said.
The goal in brainwashing is to relax personal defenses, while in sensitivity training the goal was to a more permissive atmosphere. Mohr said.
Brainwashing, Mohr insisted, is achieved by a type of favor and reward technique. He compared this with the reward of group support which the individual received in sensitivity training.
Mohr offered two quotes which, he said, accurately described sensitivity groups and communist encounter groups. "Consistent practice of self criticism is another hallmark distinguishing our party from all other parties,"—Mao Tse Tung. Carl Rogers, administrator at the Western Behavioral Scientific Institute,—"Sensitivity training is a means of altering the basic structure of Individuals."
Americans have failed to notice the
(Continued to page 16)
WASHINGTON
Photo by Ron Bishop
Lt. Col. Jack Mohr and identified flying objects
Marshmallows pelted the member of the John Birch Society who spoke Monday night in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium. Lt. Col. Jack Mohr spoke on "Sensitivity training, an adaptation of the brainwashing of mind control techniques."
Vote!
The polls for students elections open today and Wednesday from 8 to 6 p.m. at Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union. Polls will also be open from 7 to 10 p.m. at Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Oliver and Ellsworth Halls.
GOOD YEAR
FAVORITH
Photo by Mark Bernstein
End of an era, Haworth to come down
Instead of the writing on the wall, students can see the writing on the sidewalk in front of Old Haworth Hall. Old Haworth is scheduled to be razed this summer after serving KU students as anything from an anatomy laboratory to an English class since it was built in 1909.
Highest court upholds car antipollution order
WASHINGTON (UPI) —The Supreme Court, over the objections of several large cities, Monday upheld a federal judge's order that automakers compete in developing and installing anti-pollution devices.
In general, the judgment bars any arrangement among the companies which might hamper development of antipollution devices. It also orders an end to a 1955 cross-licensing agreement on such devices.
In a brief order without opinion, the court upheld a "consent judgmen," worked out by the Justice Department and the automobile manufactures and decreed Oct. 28, 1969, by District Judge Jesse W. Curtis of Los Angeles.
The consent judgment in the antipollution case eliminated the need for a trial and, in the previously stated opinion of the Justice Department, "makes comprehensive relief available forthwith without the risks and delays of litigation."
Judge Curtis' decree grew out of a civil suit the department initiated Jan. 10, 1969, against the Automobile Manufacturers Association and General Motors, Ford, Chrysler and American Motors.
The complaint charged the defendants with violating the Sherman Antitrust Law by
2 KANSAN Mar. 17 1970
But Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott told reporters Monday that opposition has increased slightly and now numbers more than 30 senators.
Hart, meanwhile dropped a hint of a possible filibuster as Long contended to legal scholars opposed to Carswell were the same men who supported Fortas, who resigned underfire following disclosure of his connection with a jailed financier.
+ + +
Join the Lively Ones from Swingling London to Exotic Istanbul EUROPE
Long recommends 'B or C student'
--eliminating all competition among themselves both in buying patients for and installing pollution control equipment.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., said Monday "brilliant...upside down thinkers" on the Supreme Court were destroying the nation and recommended a straightforward "B student or C student" like Judge G. Harrold Carswell.
But Sen. Phillip Hart, D-Mich., said "its the first time I've heard that argument-and I hope it's the last-that we should look for mediocrity when we staff the Supreme Court of the United States."
The clash came on the first full day of debate on the nomination of the 50-year-old U.S. Appeals Court judge from Tallahassee, Fla., nominated by President Nixon to replace Justice Abe Fortas.
Sen. Brich Bayh, D-Ind., told the Senate Carswell's indiscrebably undistinguished career as an attorney and jurist is itself an affront to the Supreme Court." Court."
"...We should look for the best, the very best," Hart said. "Even those who advance his (Carswell's) cause have implied he is something less than that."
A UPI poll indicated last week that 51 senators are committed or are leaning in favor of Carswell, while 28 are firmly or tentatively against him. Twenty were undicided.
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Carswell debate begins
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never up." Hart said. "We were never allowed to bring it up. Now's the time to remind those who are sensitive about the length of this debate." A filibuster threat killed Fortas' nomination for chief justice in 1968.
Fortas later resigned from the court following disclosure of a financial rerelationship with a foundation headed by financier Louis Wolfson. Carswell was nominated to fill the vacancy following the Senate's rejection of Nixon's first nominee, Judge Clement F. Haynsworth.
Long jumped to his feet when Bayh began quoting legal scholars in opposition to Carswell.
"Didn't these same great legal minds . . . recommend Judge
Fortas and endorse the Miranda Decision which a majority of the Senate considered responsible for a 100 per cent increase in murder and rape?" Long demanded.
"We have enough of these upside down kind of thinkers," Long said of Supreme Court justices who participated in Miranda and other rulings broadening the rights of criminal suspects.
"Wouldn't it be better to have a B student or a C student instead of another A student? . . . That kind of reasoning and those kind of decisions are destroying our country. . . . A judge doesn't have to have all that brilliance to satisfy this senator."
Yuk owner unavailable to comment on 'hair' policy
Jess Roberts, owner of the Yuk Down, was unavailable Monday for comment on the reasons for his newly implemented policy of not admitting men with long hair.
Roberts told the Kansan Friday he would explain his policy "at the first of this week." Two
employees of the Yuk said Monday that Roberts had been out of town since Sunday morning.
The Yuk Down was boycotted Friday night by a group of 65 students after Roberts personally refused admission to several long-haired men.
The image is black and white, showing a person standing in front of a brick wall. The individual has long dark hair and is wearing a patterned dress with geometric shapes in various colors such as black, gray, white, and brown. The person's hands are placed on their hips, and they appear to be smiling at the camera. The background consists of a patterned metal window frame.
Ah spring! What a delightful, colorful season - such great new looks are to be found at the ...
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St.
Uptown V13-5755
Campus briefs
Chicago prof to speak on Dostoevsky
The department of Slavic languages has announced that Ralph E. Matlaw, professor at the University of Chicago, will speak at 7:30 p.m., March 18, in the Kansas Union Pine Room. His topic will be "Dostoevsky and the Golden Age."
Matlaw, who specializes in 19th century Russian literature, is the author of a monograph on "The Brothers Karamazov" and editor of "Notes from the Underground," "Russian Nights" and "Fathers and Sons." He has also written articles on Pushkin, Chekhov, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky.
Peace fast announced
The Vietnam Moratorium Committee has announced plans for a Peace Fast April 13-15 to precede the national war moratorium April 15.
The committee has asked that money normally spent for meals be sent to aid victims of war. The money will be distributed to the American Friends Service Vietnam Relief Committee, The National Welfare Rights Organization and the United Farm Workers.
Checks should be made payable to the Peace Fast Fund and mailed to the Vietnam Moratorium Committee, Suite 800, 1029 Vermont Ave., Washington, D.C.
Oread Bookstore to sponsor exhibit
A Faculty Book Exhibit will be held at the Oread Bookstore, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday.
A selection of Doubleday Anchor, Dolphin and Image paperbacks will be available for examination.
Ebert proposes boycott of Yuk
Bill Ebert, Student Senate presidential candidate, has issued a statement proposing a student boycott of the Yuk Down.
The proposed boycott is a response to alleged discrimination against long-haired individuals by the manager of the Yuk Down.
Student vote may affect building of Wescoe Hall
The statement also calls for student support of any legal action taken against the Yuk.
Mar. 17
1970 KANSAN 3
In a special referendum election on April 7, six questions will be decided by student votes.
One of the questions will relate to Wescoe Hall and the addition of $7.50 to student fees for 20 years. By casting ballots on this particular issue, students can influence the building of Wescoe Hall, the crowded conditions of class rooms, even prospective faculty members.
the demolition of Old Haworth Hall, he said.
Francis Heller, dean of faculties, said voting against the use of student fees could seriously affect the bond issue passed by the State Senate Saturday. He said bond buyers were reluctant to invest after such a vote by students.
"If the student vote reverses the Student Senate decision."
Heller said an alternative to building Wescoe Hall was construction of 40-50 temporary classrooms on the intramural fields and west of Iowa Street. But such an action could have a detrimental affect on the KU landscape and prospective faculty members, Heller said. It would be difficult to attract new faculty members to shacks for offices two miles away from campus, he said.
Heller said, "it would mean the loss of two and a half million dollars of student money."
Heller said the University had postponed the loss of such a grant by saying progress was being made. Examples of progress, he said, were the tearing down of Old Robinson Gymnasium and the installation of a major power connection at Wesco Hall. This year progress will be shown by
But the effect could be more detrimental than just the loss of student money, said Heller. He said the federal government was trying to get all its money back. By redesigning Wescoe Hall to a smaller scale, the federal government might withdraw its funds which would mean the loss of another $1.9 million.
Heller said there was obviously a "need" factor in new classrooms. The national standard for good classroom usage is for 30 hours a week, he said, with crash programs using them 36 hours a week.
NECTAR, 'NUTS, and NOISES
(Bud, of course) (in the shell) (Loud)
at
The
Lounge
From 12-7 daily, our Mini-Pitcher
with a dish of roasted in the
shell peanuts
Only 50c
Adjacent to
Pool and Pinball
at
Hillcrest
Billiards
S.W. Corner of
Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
SO YOU SAY YOU CARE.
SO DOES EVERYONE ELSE WHO DOESN'T VOTE.
KANSAN COMMENT
Weeding riffraff
"Home of the brave/Land of the free/I don't wanna be mistreated by no bourgeois."—Leadbelly
Everyone must have a shelter—a place where he feels safe and protected. A place he can expect to be treated well—home territory—where he is never an outcast.
Leadbelly found out early in his life that America was not his shelter, in spite of its many platitudes about freedom. It hurts, you know, to find out you're not respected in your own home.
For the past couple of years, Lawrence has been my shelter. The people of Lawrence have been exposed to many kinds of people and many styles of dress, and as a result they are not easily upset by the unorthodox appearance of many KU students.
I feel free to walk down the streets of Lawrence without being hassled just because I have long hair. And I can go into most of the restaurants, bars and stores and expect to receive the same service as anyone else.
It's not the same everywhere. In Kansas City, just 40 miles away, there is a totally different atmosphere and I can expect almost any kind of treatment. There have been times when I've been angered by incidents in Kansas City, but I've always relaxed when I got back to Lawrence. In Lawrence I feel at ease—and I feel free. I don't expect to be mistreated.
That is why I got a surprise when I went to Yuks the other night. Yuks is an establishment that has been taking most of its income from the pockets of college students. It's a nightclub geared to young tastes—rock bands,
dancing and beer. And it's located within the boundaries of our shelter.
But, you know, when I got to the door of the Yuk Down (the place where you dance) the manager was there to tell me I couldn't come in. They have a new dress code, he said, and my long hair made me unacceptable. He said the policy was formulated by the owner.
I asked the man how short my hair had to be before it would be acceptable. He replied that if he thought it was too long then it was too long —very logical.
I then asked him if the dress code had any other restrictions. "I don't think that's any of your business," he answered.
When I asked about the reasoning behind the new code I got the same response. So I left and went around to the entrance of the Yuk Up (the place where you shoot pool). The manager of Yuk Up didn't want me in there either. And like his counterpart downstairs, he didn't feel obligated to give me an explanation.
Since that night I have talked to five other students who got the same treatment. Perhaps this type of discrimination is not serious, but is discrimination all the same.
But what makes this policy repulsive is that some rich capitalist is sitting at home dictating fashion to KU students. He's become fat from sucking in our coins and now he can afford to tell us how to cut our hair.
Most of KU's students don't have long hair, but most of them have no qualms about associating with us riffraff.
And I think most of them will resent this invasion of our shelter by some business man's hypocritical dress code.
—Joe Naas
hearing voices—
To the editor:
There were a few points left unclear in the Feb. 19 issue of the Kansan on what our committee (Teacher/Course Evaluation) is trying to do.
First of all, we are not circulating any petitions. The petitions referred to in the article are the educational petitions that a student must use in the various schools and colleges to change the pattern of his education—to ask for a special major, to change a
Sorel's News Service
Edermann Ariel.
Don't judge a book by its cover-up
HARTFORD—Senator Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut, who was censured by the Senate for diverting political funds to his private use, has announced his candidacy for a third term. Senator Dodd declared that his campaign for re-election to the Senate "will be based on my record of more than 15 years in the Congress of the United States. That record is an open book."
This, in fact, is our main point; students must let their schools know what they (students) think about the educational structure—not just about requirements that are not needed, but about all aspects involved in learning.
requirement, etc. These must be picked up in the offices of the various colleges.
Secondly, various groups working on educational change, as was stated, do not have a central organization for exchange of information. We are attempting to be that office, to coordinate these groups. To do this, information on what students feel and think about educational change, must be sent not only to the officials of their schools, but should also be sent to our office.
In order to help in any way we can, we too must hear from students and faculty on changes they want.
For example, a thousand petitions and letters would help all of us understand the scope of the problems. These can only come from the students who want change, and they must write them to achieve change.
George Laughead Dodge City junior
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER Editorial Page Editor
Strong words, an occasional tsk-tsk, a haughtily delivered speech—all have become trademarks of the fraudulent Nixon administration.
Last week, Walter J. Hickel scolded Chevron for its responsibility in spreading another one of those monstrous, life-killing oil slicks across a coastline. This time, the slick was off the Louisiana coast and will cover a wider area than the Santa Barbara slick and be more devastating.
After Chevron admitted that it had not taken the required precautions to prevent the disastrous choking of the sea, Hickel responded with a typical Nixon administration statement—to let the public know that such travesties should not be tolerated.
Hickel said, "This never should have happened."
That's rotten. Walter J. Hickel and his phony boss are just the people to put a stop to pollution, and yet they choose to make their meager "pooh poohs" and let industry continue to lay claim to those valuable resources which should belong to living and breathing individuals. The air and water which has been so molested by these dirty old men disguised as America-loving businessmen must be returned to the people; further tsk-tsking by Hickel and Nixon's other do-nothings is intolerable.
The solution? Part of the solution lies in the punishment given to these dirty old men. Why should a long haired kid get a sentence for polluting his bedroom with burning pet smoke while unrepentant polluters of the air and water (and there isn't a respectable scientist around who wouldn't have to call these major pollution contributors murderers) get fines which fit easily into the company budget?
Where are all of these law and order phonies when the law is being broken by fat, wealthy and unconcerned industry leaders? Why all of the lynch mob chants when the crime is committed by a distitute and oppressed individual? And why all of the sickening silence when the crime is of such far reaching magnitude and is being committed by Andrew Carnegie's followers?
The truth is America has yet to realize the fact that uncontrolled business is not the "American way" unless the "American way" is to strangle the source of life and then life itself in a frenzied pursuit of MONEY! If that is the "American way" then perhaps the more extreme radicals who insist that the "American way" must be changed drastically—and soon—are right and must be heeded.
The prosecution of the Florida Power & Light Co. near Biscayne, Fla., is ridiculously appropriate for the Nixon administration. Everyone, by now, has drawn together the fact that Nixon is prosecuting a Biscayne corporation with the fact that Nixon's home is on Bascayne bay. The question seems to be, "When will that ecologist in the White House be concerned with the destruction of the environment when it is choking us peons?"
In the meantime, most of us (including, I guess, those people who came forward in the latest national opinion poll—a clear majority—to say that integration was moving too fast—shades of centuries past!) will continue to be placated by the fact that Nixon and Hickel are continuing to tsk-tsk at the crimes of big business.
Some of us, on the other hand, are looking for leadership which will grit its teeth and attack that most sacred of American sacred cows—free enterprise and big business.
Some of us believe Mr. Nixon's Mr. Hickel could do more than tsk-tsk.
Some of us believe that the air ain't the only thing that smells rotten in the state of America.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Griff & the Unicorn
BY SOKOLOFF
PRETTY WEIRD...
A BALL OF YARN
WITH ARMS AND
LEGS...
$ \textcircled{c} $ David Sokoloff 1970
KWSAN REVIEWS
FILMS: Not much magic
By KICHARD GEARY
Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
The most surprising thing about "The Magic Christian" is that it is funny a good deal of the time; sometimes even funny enough to make us forget how sloppy and uncontrolled the whole movie is.
Peter Sellers plays Sir Guy Grand, a British multi-trillionaire, who, with his newly-adopted son, Ringo Starr, enjoys seeing people make fools out of themselves over money. He fixes a boxing match so the fighters will kiss instead of punch; he pays off the Oxford rowing team; he gives a cop 500 pounds to eat a parking ticket; and, in a scene that is probably the all-time low point of screen taste, he sprinkles pound notes into a vat of manure and urine and sits back to watch neatly-suited businessmen bob for their fortunes.
Terry Southern's novel, a biting little comedy of greed and lust, was set immovably in America, which seems to have a corner on the greed and lust markets; the story was transplanted to England probably for the sole purpose of using Sellers and Starr. The less said about Ringo the better, but Sellers does a fairly decent job: he is at home with the Southern dialogue ("Grand's the name and money's the game") and manages to stand as a rock of sanity amid the senseless goings-on around him.
The film-makers seem to want to try everything. What could have been a spare, purposeful little satire is cluttered with various inane jabs at Vietnam, race problems, homosexuals, firearms and what-have-you, and camped-up with cameo appearances of everyone from Raquel Welch to Roman Polanski.
Comedy, more than any other form, needs control and understatement—almost to the point of austerity. You cannot simply throw in every wild idea that pops into your head and hope people will laugh. Chaplin, Keaton and the other silent comedians were careful to keep their fun within strict bounds.
But with such hit-or-miss technique, "Tht Magic Christian" could not help but have a few hits: a riotous art auction, a duck hunt with artillery, a subtly hilarious board meeting, and a surrealistic ocean cruise that rivals Fellini. But when most of the movie's insane episodes begin, we are never sure, as we are in the book, that Grand's money and mischief is behind them and they appear to be merely thrown in.
This film is clearly an attempt to reproduce the anarchic spirit of the Beatles movies, which, in turn, tried to recapture the free-form quality of the Marx Brothers' best work. Though "The Magic Christian" is intermittently funny in a crude sort of way, those involved should have known that it takes more than just a string of laughs to make a memorable comedy.
BOOKS: Paperback fantasy
By MIKE SHEARER
Editorial Page Editor
TELL IT LIKE IT IS, by Chuck Stone (Simon & Schuster paperback, 95 cents)
Chuck Stone is a prophet.
This collection of Stone's columns (from the New York Age, Washington Afro-American and Chicago Defender—three black papers) are angry and fresh even though they were all written before the Black Power movement as we know it. The columns date between 1959 and 1964 and cover everything from why white people like black babies and why white women have prettier legs than black women (Stone Says!!) to the relationship between blacks and Jews and Barry Goldwater's view of government.
And none of Stone's ideas or comments (except possibly his reference, on occasion, to blacks as colored people) is incompatible with the race issue today.
Here are some of Stone's observations on big men:
On Adam Clayton Powell: "Yes, Adam Powell occasionally embarasses us and even irritates us by some of his bewildering actions. But he's still our Adam Clayton Powell, who has built a foundation of militant achievements for colored folks which very, very few whites will ever match."
On Billy Graham: "In an era which nurtures middle-class mediocrity and phony religious values, the Rev. Billy Graham is exactly what we Americans deserve in our present inability to find lasting salvation in the true meaning of brotherhood."
On Roy Wilkins: "Roy Wilkins, in a fit of intemperance and ill choice of language, assailed the Negro 'foul-mouthed punks and hoodlums' responsible for violence who are setting back the civil rights movement (and implicitly undoing all of the noble work of Roy Wilkins). However, I don't recall ever hearing Wilkins talk about the poor white trash that has murdered and tortured Negroes in the South. Wilkins say anything nasty about those four Klansmen who are charged with killing Lieutenant Colonel Penn? Wilkins use any nasty words to describe the white men who tortured poor James Chaney in Philadelphia, Miss., beyond belief?"
NOTES TO THE HURRYING MAN, by Brian Patten (Hill and Wang paperback, $1.50)
The second volume of Patten's poems, Hurrying Man is a sensitive dip into the personal life of a young man.
Though the main concern of Patten is apolitical and amoral, stressing man's relationship to woman and to himself, a very simple and beautiful view of all of life is expressed. And Patten demonstrates a keen perception of the flaws of the masses.
For example, his poem "The Projectionist's Nightmare":
'This is the projectionist's nightmare:/ A bird finds its way into the cinema./ finds the beam, flies down it./ smashes into a screen depicting a garden./ a sunset and two people being nice to each other./ Real blood, real intestines, slither down/ the likeness of a tree./ 'This is no good,' screams the audience./ 'This is not what we came to see.'
Mar. 17
1970 KANSAN 5
Brodie ignores reality
By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer.
"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" runs Wed. through Fri. in University Theatre. The play has been described by director Jack Brooking, professor of speech and drama, as a character study of Jean Brodie. She is a teacher in a conservative Scottish girls' school who ignores reality and lives only for the beauty to be found in "truth and art."
How can someone who has lost touch with reality find beauty in truth? This seemingly paradoxical situation was discussed by Judy Levitt, San Clemente, Calif. graduate student, who portrays Jean Brodie.
Mrs. Levitt described Jean Brodie's philosophy of life as a constant search for glamour and beauty coupled with a preoccupation with fascism. She said the aspect of the fascist obsession was most difficult for her, as an
"She's a difficult character to identify with," said Mrs. Levitt. "She thoroughly believes in her own philosophy, none of which I personally agree with."
THE STAR SHOW
Jean Brodie, played by Judy Levitt, San Clemente, Calif. graduate student, tells her class of her affair with a soldier named Hugh, who fell on Flanders Field. "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" runs Wed. through Fri. in University Theatre.
"I think she only looked for the excitement it can offer, such as the great crowds and dynamic speeches," Mrs. Levitt said. "But I don't think she could have faced World War II. That would have been too ugly for her."
actress, to believe in.
Mrs. Levitt said it had been difficult to establish her characterization of Jean Brodie, and that it had been accomplished in gradual steps. To enter Jean Brodie's world, she read books on art history, and reviewed the history of the Spanish Civil War. Once a voice major, Mrs. Levitt said she shared a love of music with Jean Brodie.
"Miss Brodie loved Franco, and sent one of her girls off to fight in his war," Mrs. Levitt explained. "She never realized the girl would not have done it without being influenced by her teacher."
Mrs. Levitt toured with the KU troupe who presented "Kaleidoscope of the American Dream" in eastern Europe last summer. She said her stay in Italy helped her to understand Jean Brodie's passion for the artist, Jiotto.
"Jiotto broke away from a rigid style of painting and developed a very emotional style," she explained. "Jean Brodie also attempted to revolt against the times."
"Jean Brodie attempted to awaken her girls to the beauty she saw in art," said Mrs. Levitt. "She disagreed with the way in which the conservative school was run."
"I have to agree with her there," Mrs. Levitt asserted. "I think that aspect of her character will capture the sympathy of the audience. After all, she is stimulating and creative, and we've all had teachers who were just the opposite."
Speaking of her problems with
character development, Mrs. Levitt said she had to keep in mind that Jean Brodie always worked for the center of attention in any situation. She added that the many facets of the character were impossible to comprehend all at once.
"There is always a contradiction between what the actor knows about the character, and what the character knows about himself," she said. "What must come across to the audience is that which the character knows."
Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of man?
Peter Sellers &
Ringo Starr in
"The Magic Christian"
TECHNICOLOR*
Released by COMMONWEALTH UNITED
Matinee 2:30 Daily
Eve. 7:15 - 9:15
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
"A LYRIC, TRAGIC SONG OF THE ROAD! AN HISTORIC MOVIE!" - RICHARD SCHICKEL, LIFE
PANDO COMPANY in association with RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS presents
easy Rider
restricted
staring
PETER FONDA • DENNIS HOPPER
JACK NICHOLSON • COLOR • Released by COLUMBIA PICTURES
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Granada
TRATATE...Telefono W3-5284
Granada NOW! Adults 1.50 Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Box Office Opens 5:00
THEATRE...Inphone WI 3-5784
University of Kansas Theatre
presents
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Jay Allen
Adopted from the novel by Muriel Spark
MARCH 13,14,18,19,20
For Tickets Call UN 4-3982
Current registration card admits to $1.40 seat
University Theatre --- Murphy Hall
Women's rush results announced
KU's twelve sororities announced approximately 335 new pledges Monday night. The pledges are as follows:
Alpha Chi Omega; Janis Lynn Akers, Caldwall; Carolyn Marie Barth, Leawood; Rebeeca Ann Berry, Baldwin; Cathy Lynn Brown, Overland Park; Mary Susan Clovis, Salina; Judith Ann Doll, Overland Park; Debee Anne Ebeling, Chesterfield, Mo.; Jadean Loussee Mussier, Great Bend; Daniel McGinn, Overland Park; Suzanne Fieth, Overland Park; Deborah Marie Gerred, Mission
Sheila Harding, Elkart; Sandy Kay Herring, Overland Park; Marcela Ann Hunn, Lawrence; Marian Lynn, Kung Fu Kong; Ike Kongs, Prairie Village; Gail Ellen Krasne, Council Bluffs, Iowa; Marcela Ann Lear, Anita, Iowa; Lynnong Spring, Mo.; Mary Elizabeth Malone, Kristine Karluan Christie Mantooth, Wellington.
Pamela She McCann, Albuquerque, N.M.; Lana Kay Paecy, Wellington; M. Robert Patterson, Parksville; Gayle Marie Santucci, Chicago Heights, Ill.; Debbie Dee Skel, Lawn Ridge, Calif.; Marissa Thomas, Harriet Thomas, Caldwell, Janet Ellen Thompson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Sara Vesper, Glendale, Mo.; LuAun von膝膝, Parksville; Kathy J ean Orlander Park
Alpha Delta Pi: Kathleen Frances Antonich, Topeka; Terry Jeean Billingsham, St. Louis; Caroline Bingham, St. Louis; Carol Jane Dirkens, Larned; Kathleen Sue Ellis, Kansas Nancy Fuller, Prairie Village; Beth Anne Fulton, Prairie Village; Jill handkins, Berkley Heights, N.J.; Karen Helen Hartbauer, Washington,
Susan Jane Jackson, Prairie Village; Janice Kay Jantz, Marion; Annise Kuntz, Pauline; Jane Janetle McCaulley, Hill City; Judy Louise Perkins, Wichita; Kay Louise Polson, Wichita; Sherries Lyn Smol, Wichita Joy Paulline Stewart,
Alpha Gamma Delta; Janice Kay Baker, Kansas City; Barbana Ann Babbaker, Kansas City; Barbara Ann Brown, Overland Park; Marcia Buller, Lawrence; Joyce Ann Dunbar, Lawrence; Joyce Ann Dunbar, Prairie Village; Anne Hawkins, Topeka; Barbara Hock, Kansas City; Mo.; Martha Jane Hollister, Overland Park; Nancy Lee Irmen, Overland Paik.
Breecea Jean Johns, Mount Prospect, Ill.; Ariana Dior Krost, St. Louis; Aldla ay Lord Landland Park; Aarden Lark; Topeca Carol Susanne Magens, Leawood; Linda Marie McDermott, St. Louis; Jerry Ann Nester, Overland Park; Madeline Sloan, Kansas Meredith JoAnn Olson, Kansas City Mo.; Suzanne Olson, Leawood
Val Jean Parker, Hutchinson;
Stephanie Petersen, Grand Island,
Neb.; Rosemary Roodhouse, Yakimah,
Washington; Regina Anne Sante,
San Diego Calif.; Barbara erron
San Francisco; Elizabeths sas
city, Mo.; Susan G. Warps, Leawood;
Elen Carr Wilks, Pittsburg;
Kalyn Suse Worford, Wichita.
Alpha Phi Beverly Anderson, Mission; Nancy Lea Ashley, Aurora, Colo.; Bonnie Lynn Barker, Lawrence; Katherine Anne Blenne-Chappell, Laurence; Jan G. Comstock, Overland Park; Claudia Jean Dale, Prairie Village; Jo Roxanne Donaldson, McCook, Neb.; A. Mar. Downing, Eugenia Kay Downing, Manhattan; Eugenia Kay Godfrey, Toneka
Catherine Anne Oster, Frontenac,
Mo.; Marion Kay Parks, Overland
Park; Robert Lester, Bend;
Marcree Lee Reennard, St. Louis;
Robin Leigh Reuthain, St. Louis.
Mo.; Lyn Searcy Independence;
Michael Hickey Susan
Elizabeth White, Overland Park
Brebeca Jane Hygh, Overland Park; Cynthia Ann Johnston, indepedent; Karen Elizabeth Klein, Mission; Carol Lewallen, Billings, Mont.; Cynthia Lewallen, Nancy Kathleen McNiel, Manhattan; Darlene June Miller, Macksville; Mary Sue Mitchellson, Baxter Springs; Kubben Yoshiyie Ogino, Arlington Heights
6 KANSAN
Give of the Green
St. Pat's Day, March 17
- cards
- candles
- lapel buttons
- handkerchiefs
- party supplies
Chi Omega: Mary Linda Adzick, Prairie Village: Virginia Rae Alser, Ruthine Reefer, Ruthie Breecker, Wichta, Elizabeth Rose Carroll, Wichta, Elizabeth Susan Cowden, Hampshire, Diane Hamilton, Hutchinson, Diane Hamilton Dix, Junction City; Dorian Anen Doherty, Mission; Dorian Eben Dighton; Mary Harcourt, The Eagle
Mary Benson King, New Canaan,
Conn; Carol Ann Lippitt, Wichita;
Anita P. Martin, Mission; Lion McGown,
Overland; Park Jane Lea
Govenier, Wusamat; Susan Glenview
Glenview, Ill.; Becky Penney,
Topeka; Anne John Phelps, Lawrence;
Virginia Gay Ree, Lawrence; Debra Jill Roscoe, Salina.
TOWN CRIER
919 Massachusetts
open 'til 10 p.m.
COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY
BROADWAY
1940
Coeds receive bids
Elizabeth Stevens, Prairie Village; Ann Ann Thomas, Wetzel Park; Katherine Virtilio, Wichita; Sharon Louise Westernman, Prairie Village; Sue Ann Wong, Overland Park; Winnie Ann Wong, Overland Park.
Delta Delta Delta; Pamela J. Bailey, Overland Park; Cindy Batehel, Overland Park; Rachel Beaton, Overland Park; Cynthia Mary Boone, Dallas; Sheryl Katherine Brown, Lawrence; Paula Laura Butz, Winnetka, Ill.; Sarah Frances Carr, Wellesley, Ill.; Sarah Bradley, Debbie Eckdall, Overland Park; Mary Suzanne Geiger, Leawood
Jan Goering, Neodesha; Margi Jograham, Emporia; Cheri Lee Harris, Overland Park; Linda Sue Hayne, Olathea E. Kelsey, James Lee, Doborah JSenks, Lawrence; Marileen Kay McKeen, Kansas City; Margo Miller, Manhattan; Barbara Lynn Rademaker, Kirkwood, Mo.; Kathy Smock, Mission Hills; Judith Steep, Stepney Wins; Linda Lou Stassen, Elkhorn Wies; Cynthia Diane, Watt, Winfield
Delta Gamma: Carol Marie Allen, Wichita; Barbara Ann Baehm, Park; Barbara Ann Brauer, Overland Park; Dinah Jean Cave, Dodge City; Eighn Coach, Great Bend; Donna J. Davis, Wichita; Katherine Elleen George, Salina; Judith Elaine Hlatt, Leavenworth; Kathiee Suzanne
Phoebe Joan Johnson, Overland Park; Deborah Anne Luce, Overland Park; Joy Ann Lyman, Leawood; Paula Diane McCune, Overland Park; Karen Yee Mehman, Leawood; Mary Lynn Motley, Kansas City, Mo. Nanjing Zhang, Kansas City, Missouri; Sarah Hall Paterson, Overland Park; Kathleen Matteo, Overland IL.
Wassner, Ottawa; Melissa Susan Wayne, Prairie Village; Terril Lee Wright; Prairie Village; Barbara Jean Young, Lawrence
Loretta Elizabeth Poell, St. Mary's; Barbara Ann Porter, Prairie Village; Linda Kay Smith, Prairie Village; Carole Saunders, City College; Saura Lea Thull, Beloit; Karen Louise Truog, Kansas City, Mo.; Cindy Ullom, Leewood; Mary Teresa
Gamma Phi Beta; Jan Louise Booth, Prairie Village; Linda Kay Coffin, Prairie Village; Julie Darling, Prairie Village; Pamela Jean Diehl, Saling; Susan Hauser, Overland Park; Pamela Kay Henderson, Mission; Laurette Elise Hughes, Western Springs, Ill.; Candy Kowalski, Wich-
Kristin Adele Maxwell, Lawrence; Margaret Camille McAfee, Deerfield, Ill.; Linda J. Michel, Kirkwood, Mo.; Mary Lyn Morgan, Overland Park; Julie Motley, Kansas City; Jacqueline Elizabeth Murray, Glenview, Bl.; Natalie Tara Phillips, Overland Park; LeslieAnn Polst, Kirkwood, Mo.
Elizabeth Alleen Robinson, Overland Park; Dana Kay Rulk, Kirkwood; Carol Jean Schilemann, Overland Park; Cynthia L. Spivey, Wichita; Barbara Wells Spurkle, Overland Park; Janet Marie Garman, Prairie Village; Sally Jane Woodson, Prairie Village; Anita E. Zeck, Leaveworth
Kappa Alpha Theta; Beverlee Jayne Anderson, Overland Park; Pamela Jane Artman, Hays; Mary Katherine Carpenter, Overland Park; Caroline Virginia Claymann, Prairie Village; Susan Cusie, Wichita; Susan Eliza-Campbell, Park; Daniel Rae Dower, Topeka; Elizabeth Eddy, Overland Park.
Kristy Ann Fairbairn, Council Bluffs, Iowa; Marilyn Dubach Foster, Kansas City, Mo.; Shelley Hill Garwood, Hays; Mary Cary Juelen Heek, Kentucky; Gary L. Vince Park, Park; El Dorado; Rebecca Louise Kahler, Kansas City, Mo.; Debbie Kamitsuka, Kansas City, Mo.; Nikel Leit Kittrell, Bartlesville; Severity Jean Klauer, Dubuque, Iowa; Janet Marie Kloster, Kansas City, Mo.
Katherine Ann Knup, Newton;
Joanne Alene Lasley, Overland Park;
Constance Marie Leonard, Overland
Park; Clementia C. Lea, Ann
Ann Elizabeth Mastio, Wichita;
Kathryn Ann McCoy, Hiwatah; Miranda
Helen MecGavern, Des Moines;
Brenda Gay Miller, Hutchinson;
M. Price, Pinet Post; M. Price,
Des Moines; Joanne Regier.
Newton; Georgia Leslie Riss;
Overland Park; Cathary Ann Schultz;
Overland Park; Ann Tiffany Wilkin;
Priscilla Ann Wingert, Leawood
Louise Elizabeth Miller, Springfield, Ill.; Jill Gaye Mills, Manhattan; Betsy Morgan, Emporia; Mary Lothnaugli, Kansas City; Backy Jane Paulsen, Overland Park; Eliza Campbell, Lakewood; Patricia Rees Roderick, Salina; Carol Ann Schafer, Wichita; Diane Kay Schroeder, Topcka.
Isek Kocour, Kenilworth, Ill.; Sandra Lynn McPherson, Emporia.
Seconda Anne Shus, Parsons;
Nancy Nelson Stark, Lawrence; Jane
Nelson Stevens, Joan Vine;
Leawood Woody John Walton;
Prairie Village; Karen Weihnau,
University City Mo; Debra Rae
Morgan Cynthia Joan
Winn Owen Connell
Pi Beta Phi; Betsy Jeanne Adams, Overland Park; Barbara Jane Beeson, Prairie Village; Catherine Jean Berg, Kanan Man, Topeka Christine, Cattello, Bartlesville, Okla.; Alice Ann Crawford, Salina; Jane Cordry Dodd, Prairie Village; Ann Maude Dester, Kansas City; Julie Ann Evans, Westwood
Susan Elaine Haller, Wichita;
Shelle Jane Hook, Mason City, Ia;
Yndra ynde Larsen, Kansas City;
Janis Jann Larsen, Kansas City,
Mo.; Janet M. Macdonald, Hutchinson;
Jane Ann Moore, Tulsa, Oka;
Chris Mullenix, Lawrence; Barbara
Murrow, Topeka, Sage Nelson,
Garden City, Becky Nohe, Overland Park.
Carol Lynn Nothdurf, Prairie Village; Marcia Joan Robertson, Kansas City, Mo.; Melanie Ann Russell, Michigan; Becca Ann Schantz, Wichita; Elizabeth Ann Mackenzie, New Y. N.; Joanne Marie Walls, Leawood; Gifford Weary, Junction City
Sigma Kappa; Kari M. Baser,
Leavenworth; Patricia Susan Baser,
Baker; Sally Susan Baser;
Chevy Chase, Md.; Landel Jean
Case, Osakloaosa, I; Jeri Jane Crow-
mas, Isaacas, Mo.; Charles
man, Alto; Calif.; Charlotte
Degener, Parkville, Mo.; Margaret
VOTE NOW
John Linda Friedman Sheehy
Alliance Senators Liberal Arts
the cocoanuts
march 17
Joseph Santley, USA, 1929
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Norman Z. McLeod, USA, 1931
9:00 p.m. only Dyne Auditorium
march 17
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Ann Eberle, Kansas City; Linda Tina
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Hendricks, Overland Park;
Deborah Joe Kouloukis, Mission;
Wendy Larkin, Fort Worth, Tex;
Claudia Joy LeClaire, Overland Park;
Osmann Marteato; Mary Olio;
Lawrence; Sharon; Wakeman, Ohio; Ann C. Overshiner;
Overland Park; Ellen Marie Parenteau, Prairie Village.
Kay Ellen Porter, Amarillo, Tex; Phyllis Sue Rearne, Dallas; Kathleen Niles, San Antonio; A Schweitzer, Lawrence; Discance Shaffer, Fairview; Rosa Maria Spatford, Prairie Village; Karen Lee Indianola, Indiana, Iowa; Janet West, Wichita.
THOU SHALT NOT KILL
LETS HUMANIZE NOT BRUTALIZE
Is there a Paulist in the crowd?
Believe it or not, a campus protest group is *not* an unlikely place to find a Paulist.
Why? Because Paulists are the mediators of our time. . . standing between God and man . . . understanding, helping, loving . . . trying to bring together the extremes of the world we live in and the Church.
Wherever he is...as a college chaplain, working in a ghetto or helping in a parish...the Paulist is serving.
If you're interested in finding out more about the Paulist priestly spirit, write for our illustrated brochure and a copy of our Renewal Chapter Guide lines.
Write to:
Vocation Director
Paulist Fathers
Room 400
415 West 59th Street
New York, N.Y. 10019
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Empty stomachs and discipline listed
Slums, ghettos are part of their learning
By CLANCEY MALONEY
A little boy was hitting a little girl outside a classroom at New York school in Lawrence one day when the principal walked by.
Kansan Staff Writer
"We don't hit little girls here," he said.
"Why not?" asked the little boy, looking up at the principal. "My father beats my mother all the time."
Home environment problems like the one above are those which are hardest for education majors to face while student teaching in disadvantaged or ghetto schools.
Student teachers must learn how to give attention to children who come into their classrooms in the morning with no breakfast.
"How can a kid be interested in his schoolwork if he's had a hamburger, popcorn or nothing at all for breakfast?" asked Mrs. Marilou Denney, Lewenworth senior, who teaches first grade at New York.
Mrs. Jane Fox, Joplin, Mo., senior, said many children in her sixth grade class at Pinckney school receive no discipline at home, therefore they don't behave at school either.
"They're in school only because they have to be there," she said. "Even asking them to open a book can be a major battle."
To help prepare student teachers for such problems, the school of Education offers a special teaching methods course.
"Students meet with teachers in disadvantaged schools and learn about the problems teaching there," said I. N. Bowman, professor of education.
The course is designed to provide them with first-hand knowledge of the problems. Normally they would not get this from just book knowledge learned in regular education courses, Bowman said.
One of the student teachers, Mrs. Judith Day, Clinton, Okla., senior, has noticed black militancy shifting to the grade school level.
"This creeping militancy is very obvious in my class." Mrs. Denney said, "One day a first-grader came up to me and started talking about black power. He must have heard it at home from an older brother or sister."
KANSAN
Mrs. Fox said her class is divided into "cliques" according to cultural levels and mental abilities. Her biggest problem is keeping those of higher ability interested without going too fast for the others.
Mar. 17
1970 KANSAN 7
"We try to set up work groups which do not align with the cliques in the class," she said. She said that putting these different ability levels together hurts neither one.
"This way," she said, "it helps to minimize cultural walls, too."
Educational aids at both New York and Pinckney are adequate, the student teachers said.
David Ruhlen, Baldwin senior, who teaches music in two Lawrence schools, said there is a marked difference in both ability
World War I began Aug. 1, 1914, with Germany's declaration of war on Russia.
YOU
Peace Corps
Information & Applications
Call: Mario Karr-V12-6917 or
See: Dean Clark Coan-St. 226
Jan Akers, Caldwell freshman majoring in nursing to Rick Thompson, Caldwell junior majoring in pre-med. Phi Delta Theta.
and aptitude between disadvantaged and middle-class schools.
Barbara Rosner, Kansas City, Mo. freshman majoring in secondary education to Steve Straus, Mission freshman majoring in journalism.
"I really have to work on the kids at New York to get them to
Andi Goldstein, Overland Park sophomore majoring in liberal arts, Alpha Epsilon Phi, to Sinon Stras, Mission junior majoring in journalism.
sing," Ruhlen said, "By using popular songs they might hear on the radio at home, if they even have a radio. I can get them to
Who's whose Pinnings
Trudy Topping, St. Louis, Mo., junior majoring in occupational therapy, Sigma Kappa to Tom L. Ferrell, Great Bend senior majoring in secondary education, Phi Kappa Tau.
Kathy Rotegard, Coral Gables, Fla., sophomore majoring in biochemistry, Sigma Kappa, to C. I. Crouch, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore majoring in business, Theta Chi.
Mary Sturgeon, Dodge City junior majoring in medical technology, Sigma Kappa, to Brian Hughes, Dodge City senior majoring in business administration, Alpha Kappa Lambda at Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia.
The student teachers agreed that most of the problems which they encountered arose from home environments of underprivileged children in their classes. Because they have never experienced such problems themselves, they said, it takes them a while to adjust to and deal with such students. Most said that they have to learn to fill in what the the home life has not given the children, yet not seem partial to certain ones, particularly in mixed classes.
Sally Fleeson, Ft. Dix, N.J. senior majoring in Spanish, Sigma Kappa to Don Fisher, Kansas City junior majoring in education, Phi Kappa Tau.
Responsibility Communication Progress
Russ
WELSH
Student Senate-Liberal Art
"Accepting the middle-class values which the student teacher has been geared to is very hard for underprivileged children," one of the student teachers said
Alliance
Jan Fenner, Wellington, Mo., senior majoring in elementary education, Alpha Phi, to Fritz Clark, Wamego, Kappa Sigma at Kansas State University.
relate to the classroom situation."
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B & G gets the gate
Students break gates daily
The maintenance men working for the Buildings and Grounds Department can mend a broken arm for $7.50.
The mended arms belong to the gates of the X zone parking lot and the parking lot east of the Kansas Union. They are broken off 10 to 15 times a day, Harry Buchholz, director of the physical plant, said Monday.
Buchholz said the problem stems from "the number of kids that show up without a dime."
Anti draft board demonstrations begin Thursday
Demonstrations against draft boards in more than 70 cities, including Lawrence, will be staged Thursday as part of the Anti-Draft Week being sponsored by the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam.
Local Anti-Draft week activities began Sunday when 12 members of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom demonstrated at the entrance of the Sunflower Ordinance Plant east of Eudora. A spokesman for the group said the demonstrations will continue for several more weeks.
At 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sam Brown, Coordinator of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee, will speak at the University of Missouri—Kansas City in Pearson Hall.
Lewis Hall and Templin Hall are offering draft counseling during the week. Counseling in Lewis Hall will continue through Thursday from 5 to 6 p.m. and in Templin Hall from 5:30 to 7 p.m. through Wednesday.
8 KANSAN
Mar.17 1970
He also said many times the arms were broken off by students who had bought their entrance pass card but had left them at home and prefer to break the arm rather than pay.
"I have seen up to 10 arms broken off in an hour in one lot," Buchholz said.
The arms are bolted onto the gate but are constructed with two pieces butted together with glue and wooden dowels. The construction helps to preserve the gate mechanism when the arms are broken off.
Last summer new machines replaced the older gates because the Building and Grounds Dept. could not buy parts for them anymore, he said.
Buchholz said the maintenance men who regularly service the gates keep a supply of arms in their trucks.
During the fall semester, he said, there was a man to watch the gates during certain times which stopped some of the breakage. He said that even when people can be observed, as in the parking lot east of the Union, they still break the arms.
Buchholz said the result was a loss of revenue and the lot maintenance depended on the revenue collected. He said the money collected from 75 cars would be needed to replace the loss of one arm but not enough cars use the lots to make up the difference.
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"Safety first" is the slogan of the Jefferson County Highway Department — but sometimes they get a little rushed. This warning sign is on the approach to a county road bridge about 15 miles north of Lawrence.
Shrimpers file suit over oil slick
Shrimp, oyster beds threatened
Mar. 17
1970 KANSAN 9
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Louisiana shrimp fishermen filed a federal pollution suit Monday against Chevron Oil Co., claiming $70 million in damages from a giant oil slick that broke in half and began to circle an island home of migratory birds.
Nine shrimpers filed the suit in behalf of 2,000 of their fellow fishermen. They sought to pin liability for the oily hazard on Chevron, owner of the "Charlie" platform which has spewed crude oil into the gulf for a week.
A group of oyster fisherman filed a similar suit last Friday for $31.5 million in potential damages.
The oil slick, shoved toward the Louisiana coastline by southerly winds, began dividing and sliding around Breton Island Monday afternoon.
The Coast Guard said each arm of the slick was about 10 miles long and both arms were fragmented. One was moving about half a mile off the western tip of
The shrimp-rich coastal waters lie a few miles to the west and southwest of the island.
Breton Island and its wildlife refuge, and the other a mile off the eastern end.
A forecast for a shift to north- erly winds would move the oil toward the young shrimp crop. A Coast Guard spokesman said, however, normal tides would be enough to keep the slick from the shrimp beds unless the winds were very high.
Women employes sue Newsweek magazine
- NEW VORK (UPI) — Forty-six women employees of Newsweek magazine announced Monday they were suing the magazine under the 1964 Civil Rights Act, charging discrimination against them because of their sex.
The 46 released copies of a complaint to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in Washington in which they charged that "women at Newsweek are systematically discriminated against in both hiring and promotion and are forced to assume subsidiary role simply because they are women."
The letter was the initial step in the women's legal action against the weekly news magazine. Their demands included the immediate interagence of men into the research staff, where
most of the women are employed, and the "opening of correspondence, writing and editing positions to women."
Before moving toward the island, the slick had floated offshore and had been watched carefully by the Coast Guard observers.
They charged that although many of the female researches held "impressive credentials," including degrees from prominent colleges, academic honors and valuable work experience in other areas of journalism, "News-week's caste system . . . relegates women with such credentials to research jobs almost exclusively and interminably."
The slick, which has been floating in the gulf for one week, had not yet damaged coastal oyster beds or the young shrimp crop Monday.
But easterly winds pushed the huge slick toward the oyster and shrimp-rich area near the mouth of the Mississippi River.
"The slick is not more than 10 or 15 miles offshore," said an observer who flew over the slick. "If the wind comes out of the north, it is likely the slick would move into the Delta National Wildlife Refuge within 48 hours."
The weather bureau predicted the winds would come out of the north by Tuesday.
Workers shut off the flow to
the No. 1 well aboard the platform Monday and a Chevron spokesman said only three wells ran uncontrolled. One of those, however, was the No. 6 well, which has produced most of the oil pollution.
"Well No. 6 has to be killed from below," a Chevron-spokesman said. "The damage to the pipes is so extensive that it has to be killed from below—sort of like going in the back door."
HELP!
Change The College
VOTE
JOHN
FRIEDMAN
ALLIANCE Senator from Liberal Arts MARCH 17 - 18
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people-to-people
地球仪
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Students who need your help
People-to-People needs new executive board and committee members for next year. The six executive offices are President/Treasurer, Secretary/Publicity, Liaison Officer, Homestays Chairman, English-In-Action Chairman, and Hospitality Chairman. Members are needed on the Publicity Committee, Homestays Committee, Hospitality Committee, and English-In-Action Program. If you are interested in applying for one of these offices or committees, pick up an application form at the People-to-People office, B-104 Kansas Union, and return it by March 20.
Interviews will be held Saturday, April 11. You will be notified about the time and place.
For further information about People-to-People call 864-3758 or Dave Hann, 843-2332.
Weights, TV help make Kirk Gardner a gymnast
By DON BAKER
Kansan Sports Writer
When Kirk Gardner entered junior high school he became interested in lifting weights. However, by the eighth grade this strenuous effort to improve his physique became more work than fun so he turned to gymnastics to produce the same results.
"I just happened to see a gymnastics meet on television one day," he said, "and I decided it would be more fun."
Today this talented KU athlete is one of the top college gymnasts in the nation as shown by his number one ranking by the NCAA in his specialty event, the still rings.
KU coach Bob Lockwood has nothing but praise for the Atchison junior.
"Kirk is a very dedicated individual," Lockwood said. "He needs very little motivation to keep going, he's always trying to improve. Kirk is just simply a great gymnast."
Gardner has been an integral part of KU's success this year.
This year's results have been particularly gratifying to Gardner and everyone associated with the team.
Gardner said, "This year was a real question mark at the beginning. Clyne (Stan) was the key. But since he has made such a great comeback everything has clicked."
Clyne sustained a broken shoulder in March of last year while working out in Ames, Iowa preceding the Big Eight meet. At the time it was feared he would never participate in gymnastics again.
Presently Gardner is not concerned with past success but rather the Big Eight meet to be held this week in Manhattan and, more specifically, the routine he will use in the still ring competition.
"I have changed my routine for it," he said. "It is the same that I used against K-State. I got a lot of compliments on it and I think I can score well with it."
KANSAS
The Jayhawk gymnasts have a 10-2 dual won-lost record and Lockwood has termed it the best team in KU history.
But success is nothing new to Gardner. He was a member of Atchison High School's gymnastics team for four years, during which the school won four Centennial League championships.
Personal success was also a part of his high school career as is evidenced by his performances in state meet competition.
Gardner's superb development in high school made him a top college prospect but the jump to college gymnastics was not easy.
"It's really pretty tough for a freshman to make the team right off," he said. "It's quite an adjustment and it takes a lot of hard work."
But Gardner, like many of his teammates, did make the squad his yearling season and has consequently made rapid progress.
10 KANSAN Mar. 17 1970
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Lockwood expressed optimism with the routine but added they are still looking at all possibilities before making a definite decision."
Lockwood said, "We are trying
to find the routine that will score, first, best for the team, and second, best for Kirk so he can assure himself of a place in the national meet."
Gardner's best score this year
is a near-unbelievable 9.55 but Lockwood believes his star pupil is capable of scoring even higher with the new routine. The first test will come in Manhattan this weekend.
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Attention Women Students
APPLICATIONS are available now for women's personnel positions in the residence halls for the school year 1970-'71.
COMPLETED applications should be returned to the Dean of Women's Office by March 20,1970.
ANY junior or senior woman is eligible to apply.
OPPORTUNITY will be given to specify the particular hall in which the applicant prefers to work.
CONTACT a member of the Dean of Women's Staff if you have any questions.
RING DAYS
Next Tuesday and Wednesday, March 17 and 18
The Official Ring
OF THE UNIVERSITY
18 65
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KANSAS
A factory representative will be at the bookstore to help you personalize your KU class ring. Seniors-order now to assure delivery by graduation. Juniors-get your ring now and enjoy it for a year.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
23
Photo by Ron Bishop
Big guys duel . . .
Big Sam Lacey shoots over David Hall in recent tourney action. At 6-10, Lacey doesn't hesitate to shoot from 20-25 feet out and hits at 47 per cent accuracy from the field. He and his Aggies will face UCLA in semifinal action this weekend at College Park, Md.
Collins voted most valuable
By CHARLIE SMITH UPI Sports Writer
Aggies are 'frustrating'
New Mexico State is a frustrating basketball team. At least, that's the way they strike their opponents.
The Aggies of coach Lou Henson won the NCAA Midwest Regional basketball tournament here this weekend by whipping Kansas State, 70-66, in the semifinals and Drake, 87-78, in the finals.
And both losers left the court wondering why they didn't win.
Drake coach Maury John probably summed it up best.
Jimmy Collins, voted the tournament's outstanding player, scored 23 against Kansas State and 26 against Drake. And 5-8 Charles Criss added 13 and 14, respectively.
"I felt in our game, watching it from the bench that New Mexico State outscored the Bulldogs, 31-14, from the free-throw line."
As John said, "When one team goes to the line 45 times and another 24, it's pretty difficult to overcome that difference."
New Mexico State played a zone defense against both Kansas State and Drake, which is a radical departure from the Aggies' usual style. They're pretty much of a man-to-man defensive team.
Neither of New Mexico State's foes handled its guards in this tournament.
Yet, against New Mexico State's zone, Kansas State made only 31 per cent of its field goal attempts and Drake 40 per cent. So the Aggies managed to stay out of foul trouble and play better-than-average defense, too.
Pro ball to discuss problems
HONOLULU (UPI)—Pro football club representatives opened their annual meeting today, the first joint session since the American and National football league merged.
They began tackling the problems of uniform rules and procedures and the site of the 1971 Super Bowl.
The higher echelon-officials, coaches and owners of the 26 clubs were also expected to discuss the sale of the New York Jets and the stadium situation in Boston.
"I don't believe anything on the regular agenda will keep us locked up," Rozelle said on his arrival last week.
Football Commissioner Pete Rozelle said he hoped the meeting would end Thursday, but most observers felt that it would run through Friday.
The committee-composed of Vince Lombardi of Washington, Tex Schramm of Dallas, Paul Brown of Cincinnati and Al Davis of Oakland met last week to discuss the type of football to be used, the two-point conversion option, players, names on Jersey backs, and the official timing device.
Alliance
Rozelle also said that work will be done towards setting up administrative operations for the American and National conferences that make up the league.
Responsibility
Communication
Progress
Russ
WELSH
Student Senate—Liberal Arts
Alliance
But what killed Drake was Milton Horne, a 6-1 sophomore reserve who put 13 points on top of the contributions by Collins and Criss. That meant New Mexico State got 53 points from the guard positions against Drake.
Mar. 17 KANSAN 11
1970
Criss and Horne did their damage against Drake's Bobby Jones, while Gary Zeller was doing his best against Collins.
"Jones is a real fine defense guard," said John, "but he did not have real good quickness against those two. They were more ready to play than he was."
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Henson said Horne "does a great job of penetrating the ball. He's done this the entire year. We were concerned about Drake's speed and ability, but he gave us more flexibility."
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a unanimous choice for the all-tournament team. He was joined by teammate Sam Lacey, Kansas State's David Hall and Jerry Venable and Drake's Al Williams.
Kansas State's 107-98 victory over Houston in the third-place game set a Midwest Regional scoring record. Previous high was 103 by Houston in 1968 against Texas Christian.
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New Mexico State will meet UCLA in Thursday's semifinal round at College Park, Md. It will be the third time in three years the Aggies have run into the Bruins in the NCAA tournament. UCLA scored a 57-48 victory two years ago in Albuquerque, N.M., and won, 53-38, last season in Los Angeles.
Williams was a narrow choice over teammate Jeff Halliburton, who missed the first team by one vote.
Teammate Sam Lacey, a 6-10 senior, missed being unanimous by two votes on the all-tournament team.
KIEF'S
Collins, a 6-2 senior from Syracuse, N.Y., was named on 32 of the 44 ballots by newsmen and broadcasters for the outstanding player award.
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"Defensively, UCLA will have some problems if this club (New Mexico State) is having a good day," Drake's John predicted. "New Mexico State has the size that it takes to go against Sidney Wicks, Curtis Rowe and Steve Patterson."
Besides being named the outstanding player, Collins also was
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POLICE BREACH
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Campaigning might be hazardous . . .
Dennis Bosley, Dighton senior, has found being $13\frac{1}{2}$ feet in the air a novel method for campaigning for the campus elections. "The campaign has turned into a circus, anyway," Bosley said. Bosley learned to walk on stilts five years ago and describes the sport as "real good exercise."
Number of grass fires becomes local problem
Grass fires in Lawrence are becoming a serious problem for the city's fire department.
Fritz Sanders, the city's fire chief, said there had been a good number of grass fires reported in the past few weeks, and the conditions for a fire to get out of hand were good.
"We'd just as soon they didn't burn, but if they have to burn,
people should stay there and watch the fire until the last flame is out," said Sanders.
The grass is very dry right now and if the wind is extremely strong, these two conditions are capable of turning a harmless grass fire into a house fire.
KU had 788 foreign students from 86 nations in its spring semester enrollment of 17,800 according to a KU News Bureau release.
When the student election ballots are finally collected Wednesday night, a small group of people at the Computation Center in Summerfield Hall will begin feeding the ballots to a computerized sorter. After the ballots are counted, the sorter will reveal the victors of this spring's elections.
India led in the number of students with 97, followed by Nationalist China with 72, Iran with 70, Thailand with 54, Venezuela with 45, Hong Kong and the Philippines with 29, Korea with 28, Japan with 26 and Colombia and Germany with 19.
KU students represent 86 countries
Mrs. Nancy Dale, production control manager of the computation center said, "Once the ballots are collected and brought to our office, we will run the ballots through a 'mark-sense' device which detects the marks of the sensitized voting pencils. The machine then punches the ballots where voters have so indicated and the ballots are then placed into the sorter and counted."
12 KANSAN Mar. 17 1970
Canada had 18 students attending KU, Peru and Saudi Arabia had 15, Libya had 14, Mexico had 13, Great Britain, Israel, Nigeria and Turkey had 10, and 65 other nations had nine or fewer.
Student election results to be figured by computer
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Computerized counting of ballots is not new to the University of Kansas political system. According to Mrs. Dale, the sorter system was first used in October, 1963.
49
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"When it was first set up," she said, "the election committee used a different method of counting. The computer program would count the votes itself and a report was attached that evaluated the program."
KIEF'S
Fink award nominees due
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Nominations for four outstanding teacher awards, the H. Bernard Fink award and three others provided by the Standard Oil of Indiana Foundation, are due April I in the Office of the Dean of Faculties. Each award carries a stipend of $1,000.
Nominations can be made by any student, faculty member, school or department by submitting a letter of nomination to the Dean of Faculties. Winners of the awards will be announced during commencement weekend.
Late Wednesday night after the ballots are taken to the center ballots from the dean cards will be separated, Mrs. Dale said. The dean cards are a safeguard device to assure counters the voter is a student.
"The ballots are then separated by ballot number," she said, "and taken in numerical sequence. They are then put into the mark-sensing device, one at a time."
While that is being done, Mrs. Dale said others sort the dean cards and stack them by student numbers.
"This is done as a double-check," she said, "in case a student should try to vote twice."
INTEGRITY
INITIATIVE
LINDA SHEEHY
Liberal Arts
Student Senate
Alliance
Action
INTEREST
I'll keep it simple, just the text.
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Country House
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VI 3-5755
Country House
Weaving projects take full semester
If you major in weaving at the University of Kansas, you've chosen a university with more weaving courses than any other university in the nation.
For more than 10 years, the department of design in the School of Fine Arts has offered both a bachelor's and a master's degree in the art, Evelyn DeGraw, professor of design and head of the weaving area of study, said Monday. She said it was the largest area for study in weaving in the country.
There are 25 undergraduate students at KU with a major in weaving and 13 working on their master's in the field, Miss DeGraw said.
Most of the students enrolled in the six undergraduate courses are in Weaving I in which they learn traditional English and early American weaving patterns, said Jenifer King, New Canaan, Conn. sophomore and a weaving major. They also weave various samplers
before attempting intricate projects in the higher courses, she said.
The first major project comes in Weaving II. Miss King said the project involved a good academic background of design, mathematics, art history and drawing to be successfully undertaken. She is making a rug by a Swedish method with a tapestry backing. The project will take about a semester to complete during class time, Miss DewGraw said.
With higher courses in weaving come more variations in style
and intensity of the weave, Miss King said. With a more complex loom, a more intricate pattern can be woven.
Weaving is very much an art as is drawing or painting, Miss King said. She said she felt that the art of weaving had an advantage in that one could benefit from the work he had done more intensely. A finished painting can only be seen, she said. Woven art can be utilized in a more practical manner. Finished works of the students may be used as blankets, clothing, draperies, interior decorating and more, she said.
After graduation, Miss King said she plans to go to work for a textile firm or do free lance work in weaving and design. She said she has no fear of machines that could possibly overtake her work. There's much involved in the beauty of hand crafted work that is impossible for a machine to do alone, she said.
Miss DeGraw said that a large number of her students are now teaching courses in weaving.
Corbin College charter to unite students, faculty
A charter to provide a sound basis for working relationships among faculty, staff and students of Corbin College has been drawn up by members of the College and is now complete for final approval, said William Robinson, assistant director of the College.
The purpose of the charter, Robinson said, was to establish a functional and productive relationship among all interested students and faculty.
The charter will be submitted this week to George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, for final approval, Robinson said. It has been endorsed by the Corbin Council and the Educational Policies Committee of Corbin College.
The College-Within-a-College system has a tremendous potential, Robinson said Friday. With the time, financial assistance and dedicated effort of faculty, students and staff many things have been accomplished, he said.
But many goals hoped for presently have not materialized. The charter identifies the working
KU assistant prof wins history award
Kenneth R. Maxwell, KU assistant professor of history, has received the Robertson Prize of the Conference on Latin American History for the best article in the Hispanic American Historical Review for the 1968-69 year.
His article was "Pombal and the Nationalization of the Luso-Brazilian Economy" which appeared in the November 1968 issue.
Mar. 17
1970 KANSAN 13
group and the legislative body and lets them share the interests and efforts of all elements in the College, Robinson said.
The charter was suggested by Richard Cole, acting chairman of the philosophy department. Cole proposed a written form outlining the basic framework for all involved in the College, Robinson said. With this advice, a subcommittee of three students, two faculty members and a director of the College developed the charter.
The Corbin Council met recently to discuss the implications of the charter if it is approved. The charter sets up a definite role for the council, said Marilyn Solsky, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the council. She said it enables the council to know its specific powers and the goals it can work for.
Queen finalists named for Engineering Expo
Five University of Kansas coeds were chosen as finalists for the Engineering Exposition queen Sunday in the Kansas Union.
The Engineering Exposition queen finalists are: Carolyn Gibbs, representing Kappa Alpha Theta, Galesburg, Ill. sophomore; Pam Kulp, representing Gamma Phi Beta, Prairie Village junior; Vivian Poje, representing Naismith Hall, Kansas City junior; Karen Sanders, representing Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Memphis, Tenn. freshman; and Kaye Salminen, representing Alpha Chi Omega, Kansas City sophomore.
Engineering students will vote for the exposition queen during the week of March 30. The exposition queen will be crowned during opening ceremonies on April 17.
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Odds and Ends Sweatshirt Sale
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
All right, here it is, fans. Now you know the bookstore has had sales before—print sales, record sales, book sales, novelty sales—but this time we outdid ourselves. We're having a huge sweatshirt sale to get rid of our extra stock. There are sweatshirts T-shirts, turtle-necks, mock turtle-necks, and V-necks. Long-sleeved, short-sleeved, every color, and all sizes. The sale starts Monday the 17th and will go till Friday the 20th or until we run out of odds and ends.
Spring Break is just about here. Now you know nothing lights up the face of your little brother or sister like when you take them home something from KU. And you'd really enjoy watching your dad work in the yard in a sweater or sweatshirt you brought home to him. Think about it, fans. The time is right, the price is right.
HALF-PRICE!
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
kansas union BOOKSTORE
VOTE
TODAY
AND
TOMORROW
Student Body President and Vice-President Student Senate Class Officers
today & tomorrow
Tuesday and Wednesday, March 17 and 18th 8:00-6:00 p.m. at Strong, Murphy and the Union
Tonight Only GSP, Oliver, Ellsworth 7:00-10:00 p.m.
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the event of an emergency are needed to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysi-
of Western Civilization"
Campus Pad House, 411 W. 14th
St.
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately. $1200. See at Ridgeview Court, 3020 Iowa, Lot G23 or call V1-6258 after 6 p.m. 3-25
Elect, typewriter, paint, sprayer, intensity lamps, refrig. and cupboard, drafting table, table and tackle boxes, mud and snow tires, port. AM-FM radio and phono. Norelco record recorder and transcriber. 842-1970. 3-17
Corvette for sale, 1965, 365 H.P. both
for sale, 1970, 385 H.P.
7922, from 4-7 p.m. ask for Steve 3-17
1964 Chevrolet Impala Super Sport,
327, 300 hp., 4 speed, buckets, maroon.
Call 842-4774 after 6:00. 3-17
Vespa scooter 125cc, excellent mechanical condition, good body, nearly new and reliable for only $10.00 transportation call
Call U 4-3217 or 842-7305.
3-17
Nashua, '63, 10x55, 2 bdm. din. r., completely furm. carped, new auto.
washer, metal util. bldg., fenced yard; June occupancy only 842-416-
Ampex Stereo Tape recorder-automatic reverse, automatic threading, microphones, tapes, and demagnitizer, 2 years old, must sell before spring vacation, call Bob Brown, 843-5721. 3-17
Ephone 12-string guitar (acoustic)
for sale; excellent condition; fast action.
$110.00. Call Bill at 842-4059.
3-18
Walnut stereo speaker cabinets. These are beautiful floor models with 12" speaker systems. Perfect condition. Must sell! Call 843-6707. 3-18
GXT-1970, 440c.l, 4b., auto, air-
cond. AM-FM w/rear speaker, power
steering, vinyl roof, and disc brakes.
Must sell. Steve, 842-4275. 3-18
1969 Mustang, 302 V8 stick, blue with black interior; will sacrifice for quick sale. $1995. Call 842-2191 or 842-8780.
2-18
1969 Roadrunner Coupe -Save $1,100 on this beautiful year-old muscle car with pop-options like: 383 magnum, 335 h.p. *Torquefile*; power disc machine, F-7014 factory air and tape; Konix, F-7014 factory air and four more years of factory warranty. Ivy green with matching vinyl top, 13,000 miles, never raced or driven, not asking $2,995. Got married and need a wedding. 843-7747 or 2337 Murphy Dr. #4 (grey buildings east of Holiday Inn) after 2 p.m. 3-19
Bicycle—Schwinn Paramount Deluxe with sew up tires, tools, etc. Excellent condition. Make reasonable offer. Phone 843-3241 eve. 3-19
SAVE YOURSELF AFINE
Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95
T.I.R.E. co.
720 East 9th VI 3-0950
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*18
VOTE
March 17=18
Raney Drug Stores
Tire Sale—Tax time is here again,
must raise some loot. F071x4, $22.03
F.E.T. $2.44; G701x4, $23.55 +
F.E.T. $2.59; H701x4, $24.86. F.E.T.
$2.77; H701x4, $26.18. F.E.T.
$24.12 + F.E.T. $2.69; H701x4, $25.49 +
F.E.T. $2.85. Above tires are
premium quality. Glass belted, dual
white, also sale on all other pre-
made and finished tires. 2 pair
charter dickers. Please of all tires
are fully guaranteed. Discount
Tire Co. 906 N. 2nd. North Lawrence.
842-0899. 3-20
'65 Chev. SS. New wide tires, brakes,
shocks. Black with red interior
4-speed, 327. A.C. Call Stretch or Jim.
842-1200. rm. 234. 3-17
Motorcycle—Bass Amp. Triumph 650 bored to 700 ce. Sunn bass cabinet speaker. Fender Basman Amp. Best after. Ted, 842-7000, room 813
'68 Volkswagen Bug. Must sell. Call
842-8605. 3-18
1967 Wessels Motorscooter and helmet,
$125. Runs perfectly. 843-4243. 4-1
3 locations to serve your every need Plaza,1800 Mass. Hillcrest,925 Iowa Downtown,921 Mass.
1965 Triumph TR4, BRG. Stebro Exhaust, Pirelli tires, Lucas Lamps, luggage rack, excellent condition Call Rick, 843-3237. 3-19
Scuba equipment—Snark II deluxe regulator, tank and "N" valve assembly, by Seamless. $25.00 Backpack free. Call 842-5646. 3-19
Standard MGB hardtop, black, excellent condition, cheap. Call UM 4-3100 before 5:00. Call 842-7939 after 5:00.
4-1
NOTICE
Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries
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
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest to-go-business. Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Rins, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday ff
Audio Discount—Your A.R. Dyna-
dealer offers the best of audio at the
lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay
shipping plus 10% handling charge.
Revox and other lines available. Call
842-2047 evenings. 3-31
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in theses and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf
We'd like to serve you in the capacity of Senior Class officers. Randy Andrews, Ed Wood, Pat Riley, Kathy Bruning. 3-18
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18. 20% off. All handcrafted styles. Hodge Powder coat. 30% open Thursday night. 842-6828
Pilots - Optopac Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Catesia 150
120; Wheeler 85; B50; Chuckie
180; I80; 12$5.0; 2-seat chair
Phone 842-1124 after 6. 4-46
Change the College now! Vote John Friedman—Alliance Senator from Liberal Arts and Sciences. 3-17
---
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
8th St. Shoe Repair
105 E. 8th
We've got Beatles—the UDK ad in Tuesday's sold out our com-
mmercial. We can't sell them all again and still at low sale
prices at Tempo in the Malls. 3-19
Topsy's on the Mall has a special 21¾ gallon containers of butter-rcaramel or tangy cinnamon corn. Regular $3.50, now 25¢; off at $2.62. 3-20
Skiers—two cabins in Monarch Pass,
Colorado. Supply your own transportation.
at a very low rate, Spring break at
842-7509, Cathy, 842-6916
3-19
Graduate Ticket ISP—Sureendra Bhanna, Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed Kendall, Michael Vaughan, Leroy Mermott, Fred Oettel, Jerry Patterson, Harriette Stallworth, Joe Van Zandt, John Whalen. 3-19
Position: Poverty is bad for graduate students and other minorities; Eliminate (1) Fixed salaries, (2) Bad housing, (3) Fee raises. 3-19
LA PETITE GALERIE - Are you who?
Come and find out. Dresses, separates,
groovy pantuits, coats, swimsuit,
clothes, 910 Kentucky, 84d
0826.
HELP WANTED
Male or female commission sales representative wanted to sell medical supplies. Neat appearance and transportation necessary. Knowledge of medical supplies not essential. Leads furnished. Phone 842-5568. 3-17
Part-time help wanted—waitress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person. Earl's Pizza Parlor. 729 Mass. 4-2
Camp Fire Girls, Inc., is interested in graduate nurses, twenty-one and over, to work at their summer camp. There are also counselling positions available for girls over twenty. Write Mrs. Rhoda Havelock, 1014 Armstrong, Kansas City, Kansas 66102 for applications or call MAyafir, 11302.
Swimming Instructor for Girl Scout Camp. Unit Leaders, Counselors, Assistant Cook, Contact Mrs. Owen, Administrator of City Avenue. Kansas City Kansas 66101. 4-1
TYPING
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience at
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m.-842-0111. 4-3
608. (8:00 to 5:00 - 842-0111). 4-3
THE HTE in the WALL
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
730 New Jersey --- VI 3-4416
for
Table Tops
mufflers and shocks
612 N. 2nd St.
843-8943
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
ing, etc. Typed typewriter service.
Pica type. Computer service. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
miDAS®
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8
Your headquarters
Experienced typists desire manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style -plea or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
WANTED
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Call 843-281. Mrs. Ruckman
Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assistance with necessary English corrections. English teacher, M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. 842-9249. 4-1
Male guinea pig to mate with our female. Any color or type. Will negotiate terms. 843-8615. 3-19
Ride wanted—Topeka to KU, MWF,
must arrive by 9:30 and can leave at
2.30. Call CE2-0571. 3-18
Available now! Need one girl roommate to finish the year. Move in now for $45. April and May—$65. Close to campus. Call 842-9156. 3-17
Galilee Prideal
SERVICES OFFERED
Wanted: ride to California; S.F. or L.A. spring break. Will share expense. Call 842-7154. 3-19
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. 4-1
Need one roommate to share expenses with 3 other girls. For months of April and May $65.50 per month. Gatehouse apartments. Call 843-5192.
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear
1 our
all ne-
3-19
910 Ky.
7 DAY SPECIAL Cars Painted $34.95
Fred's Auto Painting
1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487
SHAW AUTO SERVICE
IT
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
UN 4-3474
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
Malls Shopping Center
Bicycle
PLANNING A TRIP??
DOWNTOWN PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
Let
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE
DRIVE-IN
AND COIN OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
TRAVEL SERVICE
音乐家
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 801½ Mass. $4.00 and up. tf
LOST
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
V1 3-9868
Lost—13th and Louisiana area, small
"Nellie." Reward. Call 842-1150. 3-18
VI 3-1211
PERSONAL
بُطَلَّا
High school ring, Thomas Alva Edi
Baldock, goo, ulsa, Oklahoma,
gold band, goo, ulsa, side,
side reward. Offered. Mike Melinger.
842-5003. 842-5002 between 5-7 p.m.
Black wallet; lost at the Granada Theater, March 11. If found telephone Fred Wilson $42-7000. Reward. 3-20
Wanted: bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18, 20% off. All shaved crafted styles. Hodge Pods 10:00-2:00 (open Thursday night). 842-6082
BURGER CHEF
FOR RENT
Try One Today
814 Iowa
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011% Mass. Returns $4.00 and up. tt
Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. 1f
66
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
1 bedroom, unfurnished apartment 2 blocks from campus, $110 per month plus utilities. Available April 1. Call 842-3750. 4:30 to p.m. 3-18
A clean four-room furnished apartment. Young responsible married children or pets. Utilities paid. Near campus. Available A 1 843-1585. 4-1
FOUND
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Found: A most exciting place to enjoy steaks by candlelight at their finest. Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-1
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Tony's 66 Service
Home of the "Big Shef"
"Sirloin
Always Pleasurable Dining
Stalking alights and fresh rainbow saplens await your watch you do inside the Sifton. We serve only at the Sifton. We offer a dinner service as you like them with all the dinner services at the Sifton for an uncomparable dining pleasure.
U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one mile half miles, north of the Raw River Bridge
843-1431
Referendum-
(Continued from page 1)
The motion passed 4-0.
StudEx gave three reasons why the referendum should be postponed.
- The time element which is insufficient to inform the student body of all the ramifications of the question.
- The fact the printers need the ballots today to be ready in time for the elections.
- The fact that the legislature has not yet acted on the pending bill to abolish the use of student fees to finance school buildings.
Bob Montgomery, Topeka second year law student and counsel for Beck, argued that Miller was following article 3 section 6 of a May 1969 resolution to the Student Code which stated, "The Elections Committee of the Student Senate shall establish the dates and administer the foregoing elections and is empowered to decide disputes therefrom, subject to Appeal of the Student Senate."
Steve Joseph, Wichita first year law student and counsel for StudEx, said the Student Senate on March 4, gave StudEx the authority to rule on referendums in today's election.
Joseph asked Awbrey to read article IV of the October, 1969
16 KANSAN Mar. 17 1970
Student Senate By-Laws which stated that, "Referendum proceedings shall be begun upon receipt of 10 per cent or more of the members of the Associated Students by the secretary of the Student Senate which requests that any legislative bill or part thereof of the Student Senate be submitted to the vote of all members of the associated students."
"The Student Senate shall prescribe a time and manner for such voting of the Associated Students, provided that such time of voting shall be not more than three weeks after receipt of such petition for referendum."
Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, was placed under contempt of the KU Student Court early Tuesday morning by John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student and chief justice of the Student Court.
★★
The action was taken after the Student Court Monday night in a 7-0 decision ruled that the Wescoe Hall referendum be placed on today's ballot.
Hampton ordered Awbrey as president of the Student Senate to carry out the decision of the court. Later in a phone conversation with Hampton, Awbrey refused to carry out the order. He said compliance was impossible by 8 a.m. today when the polls open.
Photo by William Sellers
Student Court in emergency session
Veteran heckled with marshmallows
The Student Court met in emergency session Monday night and upheld an appeal to leave the Wescoe Hall petition on today's ballot. It was not known if David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, would comply with the Court's directive.
(Continued from page 1)
danger in sensitivity training, Mohr said. The middle-aged military man said since 1917 Americans had been warned by the communists, that the U.S. would be destroyed from within. He added this would be done with a breakdown of the moral fiber of the American youth.
Americans were unruffled by the statements made by "a little funny man named Hitler." Americans should take heed and become aware of the inherent evil in sensitivity training, he said.
Mohr warned the audience to use the past as a signpost of the future. He said in the 1930's
In a question and answer period following Mohr's speech, a group began screaming and yelling and throwing marshmallows.
During his hour long speech, Mohr was interrupted several
times by a small group in the full Woodruff Auditorium.
Weather
Partly cloudy to cloudy and a little warmer with easterly winds 10 to 15 mph today.
---
Can Ya Dig It?
Midterms Here:
Midterms? Each semester they attack thousands of KU students. It's easy to identify the midterm-struck student by his (her) weakened condition, bad breath, glazed eyes, B.O., and/or the nervous twitch in his left ear. In the past KU alumni have tried to get the KU campus declared a disaster area during 6 week exams. (If they haven't, they should have!)
So what can you do as a student to escape midterm sickness? You can suffer and cram for the tests thus killing yourself. You can go to Watkins Hospital and get yourself declared legally sick. You can bomb out on the tests and tell yourself next time will be different.
Or you can pace yourself. Take a break. Relax. Come to the Captain's Table. At the Captain's Table you can choose from a variety of delicious midterm cures. Food from the Captain's Table can cure your weakened condition. (Time out for a bath, mouthwash and sleep cures the other midterm ill effects.)
The Captain's Table
Relax, The Captain's Table is here to help you through this agonizing week. Can you dig it?
THE CARTAIN'S TABLE
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Pollution bill called weak
WASHINGTON—The Nixon administration took its air pollution program to Congress Tuesday, but was told by Democrats its proposals were better in word than deed.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, who has offered an air pollution bill of his own, said the administration bill would permit less stringent regulations.
GI benefits raised
WASHINGTON—A House-Senate conference committee broke a five month stale-mate Tuesday and agreed on legislation that would raise GI bill benefits from $130 to $175 a month.
The compromise measure also would require new programs by the Veterans Administration to interest Vietnam veterans, and would subsidize colleges which offered remedial courses to veterans who never finished high school.
U.S. uses historic veto
UNITED NATIONS—The United States used its Security Council to veto for the first time in the nearly 25-year history of the United Nations Tuesday night, joining Britain to kill a resolution calling for the use of British force to overthrow Rhodesia's white supremacy regime.
U.S. reiects arms bid
WASHINGTON—President Nixon has decided to turn down for the time being Israel's request for more jet fighter planes, according to an administration official.
The State Department plans to make the announcement later this week, probably Thursday, and it will emphasize the United States will keep a close watch on the arms balance in the Mideast. The official said the situation will be reconsidered if it appears arms shipments to other nations in the Middle East threaten to disturb the balance of weaponry.
Post Office suffers strike
NEW YORK—Letter carriers throughout New York City went on strike today, the first such walkout in the history of the United States Post Office Department.
The walkout appeared to have been motivated to some extent by anger at President Nixon's plan to make the postal system a semi-private corporation.
Cambodia dumps prince
BANGKOK—The Cambodian National Assembly removed Prince Norodom Sihanouk as chief of state today, blaming him for the political crisis now raging over the presence in the nation of 40,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops.
The 47-year-old prince, Cambodia's leader since 1960, was in Moscow trying to enlist the Kremlin's help in removing the guerrilla troops, target of violent demonstrations last week.
Religion dean is named
The University of Kansas School of Religion will have a new dean Sept. 1.
Lynn F. Taylor, a native of Osborne, will succeed William J. Moore, the present dean who is resigning. Taylor is presently the assistant dean.
Moore said he is interested in the possibility of taking a sabbatical leave in the fall, but the shortage of faculty may require him to return as an instructor, he said.
Taylor received a bachelor's degree from McCormick Seminary and from the College of Emporia, a master's degree from the University of Nebraska and a doctorate degree in education administration from Nebraska. He has done post-doctoral work at the University of Michigan.
the Presbytery of Chicago. He also has been an associate in educational development and a leader in church officer training for the Presbyterian Board of Christian Education.
The newly appointed dean has been chairman of Christian Education for the Synod of Nebraska and
He has served as dean of the Chapel and professor of philosophy and religion at Doane College, Crete, Nebr.; vice president, academic dean and professor of English and Christian Education at Tarkio College, Tarkio, Mo., and has been an instructor in education at Nebraska University.
Taylor is a former Navy Chaplain. He served as pastor of Presbyterian Churches at Pratt, at Joliet, Ill., and at Fremont, Nebr.
The new dean extended his abilities into lecturing at regional training schools, synod meetings and various special institutes. He is the author of several pamphlets and published articles. He also has contributed to various studies in higher education.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 101 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, March 18, 1970
Army seeks court-martial
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Army filed court-martial charges Tuesday against 14 officers including Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster for allegedly covering up information concerning the reported My Lai massacre.
Koster, now superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, was accused of "dereliction in the performance of his duties" and "failure to obey lawful regulations." He was commander of the American Division in Vietnam at the time of the alleged massacre March 16, 1968.
The same charges were filed against Brig. Gen. George H. Young, Jr., the assistant division commander, and Col. Oran K. Henderson, who was commanding the division's 11th Infantry Brigade.
In addition, Henderson was accused of "false swearing" and "making a false official statement."
The charges were announced at a Pentagon news conference at which results of an inquiry conducted by Lt. Gen.William R. Peers were released.
The Peers inquiry was ordered Dec. 24. In closed hearings beginning Dec. 2, it took 20,000 pages of testimony from 400 witnesses.
Peers told the news conference that his investigation "clearly established that a tragedy of major proportions occurred there at My Lai on that date."
All of the officers charged are being transferred to Ft. McPherson outside Atlanta, Ga., where they are entitled to pretrial investigations to determine whether court martial proceedings will actually be held.
Until Tuesday 10 military men had been charged in connection with the actual incident, three captains, one lieutenant and six enlisted men.
Court directive given to Awbrey and Miller
The most serious charges have been brought against 1st Lt. William L. Calley, 26, leader of the platoon that swept through My Lai in search of Viet Cong snippers on the day of the massacre. Calley is accused of premeditated murder of 102 South Vietnamese civilians.
Calley is scheduled for courtmartial trial starting May 18 at Ft. Benning, Ga.
A directive will be issued this morning that David R. Miller, Hays senior, and David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior, show cause to the Student Court why they should not officially be placed in contempt of court.
Miller, co-chairman of the Student Senate Elections Committee, in answer to the official contempt charges, said the decision to issue the referendum was not his to make. "I don't have the authority" he said, "Student Senate Executive Committee does."
John Hampton, Lawrence, second year law student and chief justice of the Student Court, issued the directive after Miller and Awbrey failed to add the Wescoe Hall referendum to the ballot as ordered by the Student Court.
The Student Court has no power, Awbrey said, to overrule the authority of Student Senate Executive Committee and order the Elections Committee to print up the ballots.
Awbrey, student body president said he agreed the Student Court did not have the power to order the Elections Committee to carry out the court order. He said the Student Senate Executive Committee had told the Election Committee not to have the referendum questions printed for this week's election.
Awbrey said he is in contempt due to his disagreement with the powers of the Student Court. He said he hoped the matter could be settled by the University (Continued to page 20)
Among others charged is Capt. Ernest L. Medina, 33, commander of Company C, of which the Calley platoon was a part. Charges were brought against Medina last week. He is accused of four counts of murder, among other things.
When asked whether his investigation established that there was a cover-up, Peers said, "No." But he added "There was testimony and evidence that either wittingly or unwittingly, information was suppressed."
Under further questioning, Peers said the term "unwittingly" could not apply to a charge of false swearing. He said there was no question that some information was suppressed, and never went beyond Koster's division.
Jimmy Laye
Congratulations on your achievement!
Photo by Ron Bishop
Student elections in progress
Only 2,490 students voted Tuesday in the Student Senate and Class elections. Today is your last day to vote before the polls close at 6 p.m. in Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union.
CHANGE DOCTOR 12345
Photo by Steve Fritz
Holding hands with a changed machine?
The new change machine in the basement of Strong Hall has the features of always giving the correct change and having a very warm hand. The hand that startled students belongs to Thomas Breitenstein, St. Louis freshman, who is manning the change machine for his environmental design class. Receiving change is Patricia Rothe, Omaha graduate student.
Students charge George with misusing campus pass
Peter George is being charged by three law students for giving his campus pass and University parking permit to another first year law student.
The charges are the "Abuse of University privilege and violation of Article 23, Section C, Sub-section 2, of the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct," and will be brought before the new Judiciary which was formed March 15.
Those filing the charges are:
John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student, and third year law student David Kierst,
Overland Park, and Ronald Newman,
Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Kierst said he first noticed that a first year law student was parking on campus who was apparently in good physical condition and Kierst decided to look into the reason the student had the permits. At first Kierst said he was going to bring charges
against the law student for illegally having the passes to park on campus, but after obtaining a policeman to ticket the vehicle and after checking the records, he discovered the passes had been issued to Peter George.
Kierst said George had obtained a pass for a 1967 Ford and later one for a 1967 Fiat which George drives on campus everyday. Kierst said the pass for the Ford was given to the first year law student.
Mar.18 1970
2 KANSAN
"He used his committee work to obtain the permits and then fraudulently misused them," Kierst said.
KU lost first draftee
The first man drafted during the first peacetime conscription in the history of the United States was a KU graduate student. Elmo D. Hardy was drafted Oct. 29, 1940, when his draft registration number, 158, was the first drawn from a historic goldfish bowl by Henry L. Stimson, former secretary of war.
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The Alliance will reveal no specific information concerning its charges of salary skimming by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences until they have seen the authorities involved, said Bill Ebert, presidential candidate of that party.
The Alliance charged in a position paper released Monday that graduate teaching assistants had not received salary increases appropriated for them by the state legislature because "these monies were skimmed off the top, most particularly by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and placed in a pool that has been used to augment some professorial salaries."
THE
Ebert said the source of the information contained in the position paper was a member of the administration who wishes to have his name withheld at this time.
Ebert said the Alliance, regardless of the outcome of the election, planned to "confront" the principles involved in the salary skimming, but that there was no reason to release the specifics at this time.
Ebert reveals little about charge
San Francisco's cable cars are the oldest transportation system still in operation in the United States.
"We will follow up when we have a plan of action to submit. I am absolutely certain that the accusations in the position paper are true. The facts were confirmed by a member of the administration before the position paper was printed." Ebert said.
The presidential candidate said the skimming charges were easier to understand in percentage terms than in specific figures. He repeated the allegations of skimming contained in his party's position paper, saying graduate teaching assistants had never seen money appropriated for their salaries.
Ebert refused to set a timetable for further action on the skimming charges by the Alliance leadership.
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University of Kansas Theatre
presents
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Jay Allen
Adopted from the novel by Muriel Spark
MARCH 13,14,18,19,20
For Tickets Call UN 4-3982
Current registration card admits to $1.40 seat
University Theatre --- Murphy Hall
Campus briefs
KUOK to air election returns
KUOK, the KU campus radio station, will broadcast election returns tonight beginning at 7:30. Five-minute reports will be read every half hour until the complete results are tabulated.
Regents to meet Friday
The Kansas Board of Regents will hold their monthly meeting Friday at the State Building in Topeka. Max Bickford, chairman of the Regents, said the meeting will convene at 9:30 a.m.
Ralph Matlaw, professor at the University of Chicago, will give a lecture tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "Dostoevsky and the Golden Age." All interested persons are invited to attend this lecture, sponsored by the KU Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures.
SMOP applications available
Applications are now available for the Scholarship Money's Our Purpose (SMOP) committee's annual memorial scholarship.
The theme of this year's scholarship is "The Role of the Educated Woman in the '70's." The applications, available in 220 Strong Hall, are due on April 15.
Physics society to view film
Festival of Arts, 1970:
The Society of Physics Students and Sigma Pi Signa will hold a meeting and show a film at 7:30 tonight in 238 Malott.
The film, "Strangeness Minus Three," is a film concerning the development of ideas on partical symmetry groups and the discovery of the elusice omega minus partical. Coffee will be served.
Dean to speak on future of cities
Charles Kahn, Dean of the KU School of Architecture, will speak before the Faculty Forum Thursday noon.
Kahn's speech topic is "Future of our Cities."
The Faculty Forum meets in the Westminster Center at 1204. Oread A hot lunch will be served for $1.00. Call 843-4933 for reservations.
Engineering conference planned
The Department of Civil Engineering will sponsor the 15th annual Structural Engineering Conference April 3 in the Kansas Union.
The program, which will last one day, will feature speakers from KU's engineering departments. The theme of the program will be "Failures in Steel Structures."
The conference is open to the general public with a registration fee of $15 per person. The cost covers registration, a luncheon in the Union and a copy of the conference proceedings.
High school art meeting slated
The 27th annual High School Art Conference, sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, will be held April 10.
The conference is designed to provide high school students who are interested in a career in art with information on career opportunities and programs of study.
A representative display of KU student art work will be displayed during the conference.
Science lecture Thursday
The Rev. Stanley L. Jaki, research professor of history and philosophy of physics at Seton Hall University of South Orange, N.J., will speak at KU at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in room 124 of Malott Hall. Jaki's speech will be on "Science and the Mirage of Infinity."
Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, will sponsor a Spring Dance Concert April 18 and 19 at the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. The concert will be a combination jazz and modern dance by guest choreographer Marsha Paludan.
Tau Sigma plans concert
The concert will be free for all KU students with their ID's and tickets for the general public may be obtained at 201 Robinson.
African art exhibit planned
The Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City will have an exhibition of African sculptures on display from Friday through April 29. This exhibition will be shown in only two other galleries in the United States.
The display includes masterpieces from all major art-producing tribes of Africa and is being sponsored by the chiefs of the diplomatic missions from 34 African nations.
The International Exhibition Foundation is circulating the exhibition, which includes nearly 200 pieces from private collections in Europe, Africa and the United States.
William Fagg, African art authority at the British Museum, assembled and documented the exhibition.
Mar. 18 KANSAN 3
1970
Admission will be $1 for adults,
50 cents for students and teachers,
and 25 cents for children.
Students must have their ID cards.
Barbara Rose, art critic and author, and the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble, composed of three Juilliard musicians and two rock advocates, will appear as part of the 1970 Festival of the Arts in April.
Author, ensemble to appear
Appearing at 8 p.m. April 2 in Hoch Auditorium, Miss Rose is recipient of the College Art Association Award for Distinguished Art Criticism in 1966 and 1969 and regular columnist for Vogue magazine. She is also a contributing editor of Artforum, a publication of art news and criticisms.
Miss Rose has written five books on the history of American art and Dutch and American painting. A sixth book about the painter Helen Frankenthaler will be published in 1971. She has arranged the exhibit "A New Aesthetic" for the Washington Gallery of Modern Art.
After receiving her master's degree at Columbia University in New York in 1960, she was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to Spain in 1961 to work on her dissertation on sixteenth century navarrese painting.
She has taught at Queens College, Charlotte, N.C., the University of California at Irvine and San Diego, Yale University and Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, N.Y.
Miss Rose is presently living in New York and working on a new book on art and technology.
The New York Rock and Roll Ensemble will appear in concert in Hoch Auditorium, at 8 p.m., April 1. Formed in the spring of 1967, this group writes its own music and arranges other compositions.
The Ensemble has released three Atco LP's, "Reflections," "Faithful Friends — Flattering Foes" and "Kiss Her Once." Among their rock staples are cello, saxophone, English horn and oboe, which blend the dynamics of their playing into imaginative projections of tomorrow's music.
Through eclecticism, the group
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has developed an intelligent combination of musical forms. They carefully integrate their numbers, so that just when the inner ear is about to blow up out of the chaos, rhythm returns. Brutal pounding of the organ like a bongo drum neatly dissolves into Baroque harpsicord, and deadly drum beat might become sensitive and precise rolls.
The group has appeared at many of the major colleges, underground rock rooms and high-
brow concert halls. In addition, the Ensemble has also appeared on many of the major television shows including the Tonight Show, Merv Griffin, The Today Show, Steve Allen and the Mike Douglas Show.
They have just released their second album and will embark this year on their first European tour, starting at London's Festival Hall.
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Attention Women Students
APPLICATIONS are available now for women's personnel positions in the residence halls for the school year 1970-'71.
COMPLETED applications should be returned to the Dean of Women's Office by March 20,1970.
ANY junior or senior woman is eligible to apply.
OPPORTUNITY will be given to specify the particular hall in which the applicant prefers to work.
CONTACT a member of the Dean of Women's Staff if you have any questions.
KANSAN COMMENT
Getting uppity
With insistent and aggressive Sen. Mike Mansfield pushing from every direction, it appears the proposal to lower the voting age to 18 may find its way into existence.
It will either give birth to new freedom through the House's adoption of the Senate legislative amendment or go the longer and more painful route through a Constitutional amendment, requiring this time not only the approval of both houses and the President but also ratification by three-fourths of the states.
The red tape and the long road out of bondage are once again oppressively severe, unnecessarily cumbersome. But one way or the other, the voting age will be lowered some day.
And when given an inch, will those freed slaves again try to take a mile? There are many miles to go.
Perhaps it's premature to start lecturing these new voters, but Julian Bond's remarks about the failure of women seems appropriate. Bond said women had failed to do what the proponents of giving them the vote had said they would do: put sensitivity and compassion into politics. Women, in other words, have not taken a mile for their inch.
Youth, if relegated to their just position, will prove most beneficial to the American political system if they prove to be "uppity niggers."
The freed man who doesn't take aggressive steps toward more freedoms and who is content to assimilate into a less than perfect political system is not even as free as the law will allow him to be.
You can be a "sambo" in any shade.
hearing voices—
To the editor:
I am a student and an employee of the Computer Center. Recently I was notified by an associate director that the Che Guerva banner I have hanging over my desk must be removed because it was an "inappropriate" wall decoration. Other wall decorations at the Computer Center, apparently "appropriate" as no one else was issued any restrictions, include Beatle posters, Paul Newman posters, and various assorted family pictures, abstract art, photographs, etc.
To arbitrarily determine the "appropriateness" of a wall decoration, and to dictate what may be displayed and what may not, is inherently discriminatory. Obviously my decoration was selected for censorship due to its controversial subject matter. In short, the Computer Center is practicing a not very subtle form of political suppression. It is doubtful that I would have been harassed had my wall been graced with the pictorial presence of the likes of Richard Nixon, John Kennedy or Billy Graham.
In a conference with this particular associate director I was told that the censorship was being imposed because of the "political nature" of the banner. Such is the arbitrariness of his action—who is to say what constitutes a "political" display? Another employee (of associate director status or thereabouts) has a picture of a child—presumably his own—on his desk. I think it reasonable to suggest that there is no more dangerous political act—not to mention inhumane—than bringing children into the world that hasn't the ability to take care for
those already born. Any scientist can tell you that the world's exploding population is probably the greatest problem facing man's continued existence. Is this person's display of a child any less political in nature than my banner of Che?
Freedom of expression is a valuable commodity. It is being granted to some people at the Computer Center, denied to others. The value of the commodity diminishes each time someone is subjected to suppression of his views, whether they are "political" or "decorative" in nature.
The possibility exists that I will be fired by the Computer Center for refusing to acquiesce to such suppression. At the moment it is only the person who displays Che whose views are suppressed. If they can arbitrarily suppress my views, they can arbitrarily suppress anyone's. Who wishes to be next?
Eric Wolfe
Wichita, sophomore
* * *
To the editor:
having spent the last three days trying to decide amongst ourselves whether or not to use the word "zeitgeist" in the first line of this letter, and not coming to any decision, we have decided to not have a first line at all. The LHSU (Left-Handers Student Union) was conceived of under the influence of acute indigestion, perhaps caused by Ellsworth's roast beef. We reacted to a prevalent attitude in our society, which has allowed too many groups to take themselves too
seriously, too often. This attitude threatens to destroy our institutions by neglecting the factor of unity that threads its way through all mankind. The attitude is one of morbid introspection and social apathy. That factor of unity is brotherhood. Groups are made up of human beings reacting to human beings (that seems to have been forgotten all too often).
People's reactions to our demonstration have taken three forms. First, the largest group seems to have understood what we are now trying to explain. A second group thought we were racists and hated us for it. And a third group, most unfortunately, thought we were attempting "to bring Blacks to their knees," and loved us for it. It is the last two groups that we would now like to address:
- We are not racists. What has been called a parody of the BSU was in reality a parody of the aforementioned attitudes, and, in particular, the demands of the BSU. Most of us support the BSU's ultimate goal of true equality.
- We believe that we reflected the opinion of the majority of KU students. The publicity given the LHSU is indicative of the time-liness of its ideology. Confrontation politics are not needed at KU today as much as they may be at other Universities. The mechanisms are here. Concern, consideration, understanding, and dissemination of information are needed for the most efficient use of these mechanisms.
The LHSU was formed in the spirit of a political cartoon. We foresaw the possibility that some individuals would not appreciate it, but we in no way apologize for our actions. We do hope that this explanation will help everyone realize what our intentions were, and if you didn't get a laugh the first time around, perhaps you can reminisce and get one now.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and exam days. Accessed on the University of Kansas postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without restrictions. See the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
Ernie A. Bauer
Ernie A. Bauer
Clay Center senior
Richard Hubbard
KC, M. senior
Charles M. Masner
Anthony junior
Todd Salash
Shawnee Mission senior
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Griff & the Unicorn
BY SOKOLOFF
I WONDER WHY THE SUN COMES UP DURING THE DAY A INSTEAD OF AT NIGHT...
HOW SHOULD I KNOW?
WHY ARE TREES TALL AND WHY DOES THE WIND BLOW?
WHY ARE THE CLOUDS IN THE SKY AND THE GRASS ON THE GROUND?
WHY WAS I PUT HERE ON EARTH?
PROBABLY TO DRIVE ME OUT OF MY MIND...
David Sokoloff 1970
Sorel's News Service
Seward Price
Gall in the saddle
SACRAMENTO—Maureen Reagan, daughter of California Governor Ronald Reagan, recently returned from a USO tour of Vietnam. An advocate of military victory before her visit, she told newsmen that she now favors a negotiated settlement. Reacted her father the Governor: "While I'm partial to my daughter and love her very much, I don't think foreign policy should be decided by USO entertainers."
Alphabet soup and maybe an avocado
By MIKE SHEARER
Editorial Page Editor
No so very long ago in the not so very far off land of Ooze there was this joint, you see.
Now this joint wasn't just any old joint where just any old person could go. This joint had restrictions. It allowed in only people whose appearance satisfied the eye of the joint's personnel. And the personnel only liked closely-cropped or at-least-it-ain't-disgracefully-long hair.
This joint had an upstairs where you (if you looked the part) could play games, and it had a downstairs where you (ditto) could dance, drink and look the part.
The downstairs was quite naturally called Yech Down and the upstairs, equally naturally, was called Yech Up.
The joint belonged to a very merry fellow named Mr. Yech, who must have looked like a bartender in a beer ad or maybe a baseball announcer.
Mr. Yech's biggest problem was that Ooze was just oozing with people who had unclosely-cropped or disgracefully-long hair. Mr. Yech didn't realize that Ooze was a university town of the 1970's and not a rickety-rack-siss-boom-bah college town he had seen in a 1934 Lyda Roberti movie.
Ooze was, to Mr. Yech, a pin point on a monetary battle map, place where decent and fun-loving college kids could be expected to look like decent and fun-loving college kids AND spend money like decent and fun-loving college kids.
Yes, Mr. Yech thought college students looked best when they were either...
1. Clean-Shaven, short-haired, wholesome and generous with their money. . .
Well, one day word got around Ooze that Yech Up and Yech Down had been throwing people out because they didn't meet Mr. Yech's tastes. Mr. Yech didn't seem concerned if word got around, even though the one thing he liked better than decent and fun-loving college kids was their money. He didn't seem concerned because he was hoping college kids were still—at heart at least—like they were back in the 1934 movie, when kids appreciated having a place where they were protected from freaks and noncomformists.
...or...
2. Somewhere else.
So Mr. Yech sat back to watch his cash register receipts.
But at the same time, some students with reasonably short hair began to wonder just what right Mr. Yech had to ask persons with unreasonably long hair to leave his joint. Some students seemed to be concerned with the freedom to nonconform even when they chose to conform.
And so a conflict arose.
Did Mr. Yech find that he could intimidate the college kids of Ooze and intimidate them at a profit?
Did Mr. Yech find his discrimination an asset to his business as he hoped?
Or did Mr. Yech find that college kids didn't swallow goldfish anymore and weren't to ask their long-haired friends to swallow any just to satisfy some old rich man?
(EDITOR'S NOTE: I can't finish this fairy tale just now. Only the students of Ooze can finish it; there ain't any one else who can!)
Film to raise money for King's behalf
KING
A FILMED RECORD. MONTGOMERY TO MEMPHIS.
One night only
March 24th 1970 8PM
Tickets $5.00 tax deductible
All proceeds to
The Martin Luther King Jr...
Special Fund
This poster advertises the film to be shown Mareh 24 to raise money to carry on the works of the late Dr. Martin Luther King. The film is expected to attract one million people at theaters throughout the country
Poet former leader at KU conference
Edsel Ford, 41, poet who died of a brain tumor in a Little Rock hospital Feb. 19, was poetry leader at the University of Kansas Writers' Conference four times: 1961, 1962, 1963 and 1966. Ford, who lived in Fort Smith, Ark., was buried Feb. 23.
His last volume of verse, "Looking for Shiloh," in 1968 received the Devins Memorial Award, the major annual prize of the Kansas City Poetry Contests, which receive entries from all over the nation. Ford was the first Middle Westerner to take the Devin's Award. The prize was the book's publication by University of Missouri Press, in both hard covers and paperback, the sixth title in its Literary Frontiers series.
Ford's other collected poems
RECORDS
Joni Mitchell has a right to do those songs we've all learned to love through Judy Collins, because they're hers. And if Joni's over-all talent falls short of Judy's, she doesn't let that keep her from giving us a superb album: "Clouds." Highlights: "Tin Angel," "Chelsea Morning," "The Gallery," "Songs to Aging Children Come" and "Both Sides, Now."
Tourists can go fishing in the underground stream at Meramec Caverns on U.S. 66 in Missouri.
Mor. 18
1970 KANSAN 5
We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th
appeared under these titles:
"Manchild From Sunday Creek," Kaleidograph Press, 1956; "A Thicket of Sky," Homestead Press of Fort Smith, Ark., 1961; "Love Is the House It Lives In," Homestead Press, 1965. Innumerable poems by him appeared in top literary periodicals, popular magazines, and newspapers including the Kansas City Star, Christian Science Monitor, New York Times and Little Rock Gazette.
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Closed Sat. at Noon
From the Poetry Society of America he took two of its major prizes before winning the $3,500 di Castagnola Award in 1960.
The poet, who was in late years often called "The Robert Frost of the Ozarks," was in wide demand for literary lectures at which he talked about writing poetry or read his own verse. In 1965 he recorded selections from his work for the Library of Congress.
He served in the U.S. Army in Germany in 1952-54. He was honored as a distinguished alumnus of the University of Arkansas, and in 1966 the Edsel Ford Scholarship Fund was established for journalism students there in his honor.
On March 24, the most extraordinary movie "theatre party" ever to take place will be attended in more than 300 cities (including Kansas City and Lawrence) simultaneously by one million persons.
The single showing of the film they will see is expected to raise $5,000,000 to help support organizations dedicated to carrying on the work and teachings of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. More significantly, perhaps, this motion picture will document the civil rights movement in the U.S. during its more important and revolutionary period. As such, it will serve a great educational function in schools and universities for many years to come.
Entitled "King: A Filmed Record . . Montgomery to Memphis," the full-length two and one-half hour motion picture traces the work of Dr. King from
1955 until his death in 1968 and includes special performances by such stars as Harry Belafonte, Paul Newman, Charlton Heston, Anthony Quinn, Burt Lancaster, Sidney Poitier, Sammy Davis Jr., Ben Gazzara, James Earl Jones, Walter Matthau, Darren McGavin, Leslie Uggams, Clarence Williams III, and Diahann Carroll.
Ely Landau, the man who conceived and organized the event and produced the motion picture that will be shown that evening, quickly won active and enthusiastic support from prominent executives, creative people and top-ranking organizations. In addition, groups representing the three major religions agreed to lend their support to the massive job of selling tickets for the filmed tribute to the slain civil rights leader.
Best sellers
THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S
IAN, John S.
THE GODFATHER--Mario Puzo
THE HOUSE ON THE STRAND
Daphne du Maurier
TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT—
TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT—
Graham Greene
Grantman Greene
THE GANG THAT COULDN'T
SHOOT STRAIGHT-Jimmy Breslin
FIRE FROM HEAVEN-Mary Renault
THE INHERITORS-Harold Robbins
PUPPET ON A CHAIN-Alistair
THE SEVEN MINUTES—Irving Wallace
IN THIS HOUSE OF BREDE
Bumer Goddin
Nonfiction
THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1968—Joe McGinniss.
EVERYTHING YOU HAVE ALWAYS
NOW ABOUT SEX
—David Ruben
PRESENT AT THE CREATION—
Dean Acheson
MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS—Antonia Fraser
THE PETER PRINCIPLE—Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull
AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTION- ARX OF THE ENGLISH JAN-.
ARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE-William Morris, editor
in-other
THE COLLOPSE OF THE THIRD
THE GRAHAM KERR COOKBOOK-
'graham Kerr
IN SOMEONE'S SHADOW—Rod
MKYUzen
PRIME TIME—Alexander Kendrick
One liners...
NEW YORK (UPI)—If you're in the 20-25 age group and move each year, you're not unusual. According to a recent survey by Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corporation, more than 45 per cent of the people in this age group move each year.
* *
NEW YORK (UPI)—Despite the furor raised by women's fashion writers over pants suits in 1968, the men who make suits for women apparently proceeded with caution on the new style.
An analysis by Meinhard Commercial Corporation, factoring and financing subsidiary of C.I.T. Financial Corporation shows that production of women's suits in 1968 came to 8,132,000, down 3 per cent from 1967 and 11 per cent from 1958.
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In commenting on the overall project, Mr. Landau said, "The unique concept of a single-evening, nationwide showing of the film will not only produce maximum revenues to help carry on the life work of the late Dr. King but, with the held of the hundreds of individuals and organi-
izations that are contributing their time, talent and energies, will also serve as a dramatic tribute to Dr. King's Memory. We hope that in some small way this event will be worthy of, and do justice to, the cause to which Dr. King devoted his life."
Varsity
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An even longer version of the film, running over four hours will also be available for educational purposes following the March 24 event.
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ABC PICTURES CORP. PRESENTS A PALOMAR PICTURE
SCREENPLAY BY MARTIN LAVUT AND GEORGE BLOOMFIELD STORY BY DIANA GOULD
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SCREENPLAY BY MARTIN LAVUT AND GEORGE BLOOMFIELD STORY BY DIANA GOULD
"WAITING" WILSON NILSON PRODUCED BY EDGAR J. SCHERICK DRECTED BY GEORGE BLOOMFIELD
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Folk singer becomes song writer
PATRICK MARTIN
Popular folk singer Judy Collins
Composing contemporary art songs is another of the many talents of Judy Collins. She is acclaimed for her singing of traditional Anglo-American ballads. Her appearance before an audience has often been described as a religious experience.
KUMC students seek voice
Faculty-student disagreements at the University of Kansas Medical Center are moving toward resolution through a report by a student-faculty committee at the Center.
The students have been seeking involvement and participation in Medical Center affairs. A resolution was passed by the Student Senate Feb. 4 asking for an investigation into the restriction of students from school government. At that time the medical students were concerned about not being allowed to aid in choosing a new head to the surgery department.
Brian Biles, third year medical student and Student Senate representative, announced that a committee on goverance had been formed and was now considering the question of participation of students at the medical center.
The five-member committee is headed by Dr. Charles Brackett in the department of neurosurgery, with two student representatives. They are Edward Martin.
Mar.18 1970
6 KANSAN
fourth year medical student, and Melvin Roberts, resident physician.
into practice at the Medical Center what is already University policy, he said.
Biles said he thought Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. believed in this policy and was working in his own way to see that it would be done.
"We feel confident that when a report of that committee comes, it will place students in the decision-making process," said Biles.
It is just a matter of putting
Two freshmen appointed as KU-Y camp chairmen
Two University of Kansas freshmen were appointed Tuesday as chairmen of the 1970 KU-Y Freshman Camp. They are Janet Svoboda, Chapman, and Rick Marsh, Sioux City, Iowa.
The fifth annual Freshman Camp will be held this fall, said Tom Moore, director of KU-Y. It is a weekend of exchange among students, faculty and community citizens centered around vital ideas, he said.
The committee will now begin work on recruiting upperclassmen as counselors for the camp, Moore said. Other members of the 1970 Freshman Camp committee are Lisa Spence, Beloit, Wisc., sophomore; Terry Bridges, Norborne, Mo., sophomore; Beth Dupong, Falls Church, Va., freshman; and Beth Verchota, Glen Ellyn, Ill., freshman.
The camp was held at Tall Oaks, near Linwood, last fall. Outstanding leaders among the faculty and upperclassman cooperated with freshmen in the atmosphere of an ideal university. Moore said.
BRITONS LIKE SPUDS
LONDON (URI) - Britons are eating potatoes at a record clip.
The Ministry of Agriculture says a survey shows consumption of potatoes in the country in 1968 averaged 228 $ \frac{1}{2} $ pounds per person.
FISH SPECIAL
Henry's is here to help the pocketbook of the student again. This time with a fish sandwich special—every fish sandwich sold from Friday, March 20th to Sunday March
Henry's is here to b with a fish sandwich spec. 20th to Sunday, March 22nd will cost only 19c. Why buy fish sandwiches?
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Judy Collins, formerly labeled simply a folk singer, is now referred to as one of America's foremost singers of contemporary art songs, and recently, an important writer of songs herself.
Her most recent records have established her in the foreground of popular music interpreters. Her appearances at college concerts have given her a rare rapport with youth.
She has continued to grow as a performer and more recently as a composer, to the extent that her appearance before an audience has often been described by many as not just a performance, but as a religious experience.
Judy Collins was born in Seattle, the daughter of a prominent radio personality, and was reared in Denver. Her musical training began with piano lessons at the age of seven.
"At sixteen," she said in a press release, "I found that I needed to be together more than I needed to be alone. I found the guitar, and then the only discipline was my desire to get at the communication through lovely, beautiful songs, words put together with melodies that came from somewhere different, immediate, close. The songs were not so much songs as verbal lookings."
Miss Collins has recorded eight albums. The music she plays and sings on her most recent albums is lyrical and poetic. Along with
the songs of such writers as Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchell and Jacques Brel, are the songs' of Judy Collins.
Speaking of her new creative phase of writing, Miss Collins said, "I used to think of myself not so much as a singer but as a kind of storyteller who happened to sing. Finally, after all these years of looking for the beautiful songs that I could sing, wanted to sing, I started to write my own songs, and that is completely different. Paul Simon told me it straightens out your head, and he is right."
"Albatross" is the first song Judy Collins ever wrote. "I went over some kind of hump when I began to write my own material last spring. Now I feel regenerated in everything I do," she said.
Her plans are to continue to give concerts with her group of musicians, to write songs, to appear in motion pictures and creative television, to ski and mountain-climb with her young son, to work in peace movements and to travel.
The tiny principality of Liechtenstein has no army, daily newspaper, customs service, train station or airport.
Judith A.
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Art professor stresses practicality
West African tribes utilize art objects
By MARILYN MeMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer
West African tribes utilize the objects which we consider only from an aesthetic point of view, Roy Siebert, professor of art history at Indiana University, said Tuesday night. His statement came during a lecture on the role of art objects in African society.
Siebert spoke to a crowd of about 400 people in Woodruff Auditorium. His speech was part of the Humanities Lecture series.
Siebert said most people tended to associate African art only with sculpture. While there were no forms of two-dimensional painting, he added, carvings and metal works were also important forms of tribal art.
Siebert illustrated the talk with slides which he took while in Africa. He showed masks, carvings and sculptures used by several tribes.
"We tend to separate art forms from functions of society," the bearded artist said. "The West Africans incorporate every art form into ritual procedures."
One mask he showed was supposed to connect the world of the living with the world of the dead.
and was also used in criminal proceedings when a murderer was being sought.
"The mask is so important socially that it cannot be judged aesthetically," he said.
Siebert discussed art objects from the historical aspect, saying some objects dated back to the 16th century. He said the uses of the masks, carvings and sculptures has not changed.
Sculptured figures, Siebert said were used primarily in funeral rites. He showed statues which, he said served as houses for departed souls. He said several of the tribes believed that souls continued to be active for the good of the living.
Sculptured heads, which correspond to death masks, are used in funerals which take place after a body has been buried.
Siebert said persons were usually buried the day after they died, and it often took days or the family to gather enough relatives and regalia for a proper funeral. Death masks, which Siebert described as "associational portraits," were substituted for the previously buried corpse.
Many of the death mask sculptures were flat with features
Bernard M. Pritchard
Roy Siebert, chairman of the art department of Indiana University, speaks to an African student after his lecture Monday evening on the topic of African art.
Spirit of St. Pat's Day shown across nation
By United Press International
More than 100,000 New York City Irish cavorted up Fifth Avenue in a river of green Tuesday. Mayor Richard J. Dalile's idle legions in Chicago grumblingly consigned the day to history as the time of the great St. Patrick's Day drought.
Illinois Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie, who signed a bill that placed the state's 1970 primary election on St. Patrick's Day thus forcing the closing of all bars until 6 p.m.-sought to blame it on "the British government, evil leprechauns, Democrats and Ian Pailey".
President Nixon observed the day appropriately in a colorful White House ceremony marking the formal arrival of a new Irish ambassador to the United States.
The ambassador, William Warnock, brought along a traditional glass bowl of fresh shamrock flown from Ireland, and his wife, Dorothy, pinned shamrock sprays on the lapel of Nixon's gray suit and on Pat Nixon's pale green dress. In New York, Mayor John Lindsay marched hatless and coatless with his son, John Jr., 9, at the head of the Police Department's Emerald Society Band.
While the Chicago Irish sulked Tuesday, Ogilvie issued a statement obviously designed
molded on with pieces of clay. Details were added to personalize the portrait so it could be associated only with one person.
Mar. 18
1970 KANSAN 7
Siebert showed one such sculpture depicting a woman and child. He said such portraits always denoted queen mothers, who played an important part in tribal political hierarchy.
"I realize this will put the celebration of this great day under a severe handicap," he said. "But I am sure that any Irishman worth his shamrock can make up for lost time after the polls close. By 10 p.m. some of the celebrants may even have forgotten what we did to St. Patrick's Day."
Whatever the art objects depicted, Siebert said, they were always associated with leadership and rulers. He said heads tended to be quite exaggerated in figures, which showed the importance placed on wisdom.
to make up with the wearers of the green.
With the temperature down to 30 degrees, it was a day for Irish whisky but rather a poor place for it, because Shamrock officially is dry. However, a knowing newspaper publisher reported after a tour around town that spirits were being found somewhere.
He showed several figures depicting kings. Each was personalized not by facial features, but by behavioral characteristics or talents.
One figure showed a king with a drum. Siebert said the king had been noted for his extraordinary skills as a drummer during his life.
Green beer appeals to KU Irish
Many students at KU observed St. Patrick's Day by wearing green clothing, but others found it much easier to visit one of the local taverns and tip a few glasses of green beer.
Four of the Lawrence taverns, the Gas Light, Bierstube, Jayhawk and Stables, estimated they served 385 gallons of green beer to KU students.
Carved swords symbolized royalty, Siebert said. One he showed had a carved handle depicting three heads. Siebert said it was an illustration of a proverb which translated as, "Three heads are better than one." He explained the sword carried two types of symbolism. One was the outward symbolism which declared leadership and authority. There was also an inner symbolism, which applied only to the ruler. The carving served to remind him to counsel with elders before making important decisions.
The color of the beer did not seem to affect the enthusiasm of the drinkers.
Siebert said he refused to refer to African art as "primitive." He said that because of the deep and relevant social necessity of the art objects, they should be referred to as forms of tribal art. He added that African tribes did not associate aesthetic evaluation with the objects so vital to their ways of life.
"The tribes are very concerned with the preservation of the purity of the chiefs' souls," he said. Gold crowns and pendants, worn by priests and rulers, symbolized the purity of the ruler.
"We have not studied the relevance of African art forms with enough depth as yet," Siebert said. "But we have begun to
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Future plans indefinite
Johnson resigns as assistant athletic director
Monte Johnson, assistant athletic director and business manager at the University of Kansas, resigned Tuesday and indicated his future plans are indefinite.
"I would like to make it very clear that the decision to resign as assistant director of athletics was entirely my own," Johnson said. "In doing so, I want to express my heartfelt thanks to the many alumni, friends, and fans, too many to name individually, who have made my nine years with the athletic department so rewarding.
I don't believe anyone realizes
better than I, as a result of the position I have held in the athletic department, the importance of alumni and fan support to the
KANSAN Sports
eventual success of an intercollegiate athletic program. In this regard, the University of Kansas alumni, friends, and fans are second to none in their loyalty
and support of the University and its athletic program," Johnson said.
"Having experienced this support as an athletic department employee," he said, "I am now anxiously looking forward to the opportunity to continue to serve the University of Kansas athletic program as a loyal alumnus."
With the team title practically conceded to Indiana, the KU team will be swimming for All-American rankings in the National championships March 26-28 in Salt Lake City.
Kansas who had last week off after winning the Big Eight championships will take nine swimmers to the meet at the University of Utah.
Bolton, who picked up four firsts in the Big Eight meet, will swim the 50,100,and 200-yard freestyles as well as being on the freestyle relay teams.
Nine swimmers to enter nationals
Kim Bolton and Bob Hines will be after their second All-American ranking. They were on both the 400 and 800-yard freestyle relay teams last year.
Hines will swim the 50 and 100-yard freestyle races individually while competing on the 400 and 800-yard freestyle relay teams and the 400-yard medley relay team.
In the 400-yard freestyle relay Tom Ellis and Roland Sabates will join Bolton and Hines. Ellis will also swim the 800-yard freestyle and the 400-yard medley relavs.
Coach Dick Reamon said Tuesday that the best chances they had of placing would be in the relay events. "We have a good shot at All-American ranking in both freestyle relays," he said
Steve Rice, Bolton, Hines and Ellis will toe the mark for the Hawks in the 800-yard freestyle relay.
"This is not a meet in which anyone can go," Reamon said. "Everyone must qualify, it is an honor even to compete in the nationals."
Scott Skultety and Steve Trombold have qualified for backstroke competition. Trombold will swim both the 100 and 200-yard events and Skultety will swim the 200.
Mike Tackett will swim the 400 freestyle and the 400 medley. Bob Wright, who competed in the Big Eight meet with the measles, will go after the 400 medley and the 800 freestyle relay.
8 KANSAN Mar. 18 1970
--year, Johnson joined the KU athletic department in 1961 as promotion director.
GO
Athletic Business Managers Association and was slated to assume the presidency of the organization next January.
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When Stinson became athletic director in 1964 one of his first moves was to name Johnson his assistant. A year later on the death of Earl Falkenstien, long time athletic business manager, Johnson assumed the duties of that position.
He is on the board of directors of the Lawrence National Bank and trust Co. and also a director at the Lawrence Country Club. He plans to continue living in Lawrence at this time.
Reamon said that in the conference meet they pushed a team effort. This, he said, does not obtain a maximum individual effort but allows depth to come through. He said they were looking for individual improvement this week.
He said the team felt it was not only representing KU and theirselves but also all of Big Eight swimming. They are very optimistic about bettering their own times and school records, Reaemon said.
Johnson and his wife, Kay, have two children, Jackie, 7, and Jeff, 4.
"At the same time," Johnson said, "I would like to publicly express my complete optimism for the future success of the University of Kansas athletic teams. The future for KU athletics is bright indeed, thanks to the presence of coaches Rodgers, Owens, Timmons, Temple, Reamon, Lockwood, Burns, Norton, and their respective staffs. If I have properly judged the ability and dedication of these excellent coaches, and I am sure I have, many championships and rewards are forthcoming for University of Kansas alumni and fans."
Johnson recently was elected first vice-president of the College
"Monte's decision to leave is a great loss to the athletic department and the University of Kansas," Stinson said. "His capability and efficiency in handling all the department's business activities will be most difficult to replace."
Maravich named as player of the year
Reamon said he was more pleased with the workouts they had had going into the Nationals this year than he had been last year. "Their attitude has been much better this year," he said.
Wade Stinson, KU athletic director, reluctantly accepted Johnson's resignation and said he would begin an immediate search for an athletic business manager to succeed him.
Johnson, 33, played basketball at Kansas in 1957-58-59 and was a teammate of Wilt Chamberlain two seasons. He graduated from KU School of Business in 1959.
The slender, 6-foot, 5-inch Maravich, College basketball's greatest scorer in history, was an easy winner in the balloting for the Naismith Award conducted by the United Press International.
The young man with the
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pete Maravich, a guy who plays basketball as though he invented the game, is the proud possessor of a giant trophy, named after the originator of the sport, designating the Louisiana State University star the college Player of the Year.
Announcement of the award, presented by the Atlanta, Ga. Tipoff Club, was made jointly in New York and Atlanta.
Maravich, the scorer-playmaker whose list of accomplishments include 11 NCAA scoring records and 34 Southeastern Conference offensive marks, was named winner of the second annual James A. Naismith Award Monday.
Bob Lanier, the giant center for St. Bonaventure who is considered the best big man in the college ranks this season, was second in the voting with 63 votes.
tousled hair and the floppy socks was named the top player in the country by 467 of the 566 sports writers and sportscasters participating in the balloting.
After working in Skelly Oil Co.'s marketing division for a
Lew Alcindor of UCLA was the winner of the first Naismith Award a year ago.
Rick Mount of Purdue was third with 13, followed by Dan Issel of Kentucky with 12 and Austin Carr of Notre Dame with 11.
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Relays dedicated to Hershberger
Jim Hershberger, Wichita oilman, sportsman and philanthropist, will be honored at the 45th Kansas Relays next month, meet director Bob Timmons announced Wednesday.
The three-day track carnival April 16-18 will be dedicated to the former Jayhawk spinner, who last summer donated $125,-000 for the installation of an allweather track in Memorial Stadium.
The Kansas Relays will be the first competition staged on the new "Jim Hershberger Track," which was expanded to eight lanes when the synthetic surface was installed.
Hershberger won a Kansas Relays watch in 1951 when he led off the Jayhawks' winning distance medley combine. Earlier that year he anchored KU's championship mile relay team at the Big Eight Indoor.
After graduation from KU in 1952 Hershberger joined the Air Force and competed with the Forbes Air Base track squad. In a 1954 meet at Colorado Springs he ran the 220 in 20.9, the second fastest clocking in the world that year.
Hershberger maintains a keen interest in KU athletics and contributes three annual scholarships to the Jayhawks. He also retains
a zealous interest in physical fitness and engages in sports to a far greater extent than generally expected of a man whose collegiate career ended 18 years ago.
In addition to golf, tennis, swimming and water skiing, normal sports for a businessman his age, Hershberger still plays basketball in a Wichita city league, runs with the Wichita Track Club and is nationally ranked in paddleball.
In 1958 Hershberger played 180 holes of golf in 12 hours and 5 minutes, averaging 87 strokes for each of the 18-hole rounds. He had made a small wager he could negotiate the 10 rounds in 15 hours and shoot 95 or better per round.
While Hershberger's personal bet was quite modest, he estimates that $50,000 changed hands among the 6,000 persons who followed the zany exhibition at Wichita Country Club.
In addition to having the 1970 Kansas Relays dedicated to him, Hershberger is also planning to enter the meet. He is currently training for the masters mile, a new event this year for runners 35 and older.
It would be quite a feat to win Kansas Relays watches 19 years apart.
Football owners discuss 1970 Super Bowl bids
HONOLULU (UPI) - The 26 pro football clubs, in their first joint meeting since the merger of the AFL and the NFL, gathered today to listen to bids for the 1971 Super Bowl.
The members of the merged National Football League established some playing procedures Monday for this fall's regular season schedule.
The battle for the Super Bowl was expected to be between New
Mar. 18
1970 KANSAN 9
Orleans and Miami. Houston has pulled out and Southern California is considered by television interests to be a poor choice.
New Orleans, with Tulane Stadium's near 83,000 seats and a net income of more than $4 million for pro football from the 1970 championship game, was considered the favorite.
Miami, host of two Super Bowl contests, was expected to make strong offers to land the title game for the third time. But it was the general feeing that if Miami's 70,000-seat Orange Bowl is selected, cries would rise over the Super Bowl being "locked in" at one city.
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The day
the Store
burned down...
Dry grass, high winds and a spark—all the ingredients necessary for a rampant range fire. As the old Kanwaka store burned down, fields downwind kept a small overworked rural fire department busy, as they fought fire and smoke.
MELROSE, ALASKA - JULY 27, 1956 - A group of farmers working together to pour water into a new irrigation pond near their farm. The pond is being built to provide water for the crops growing on the nearby farmland.
When they saw the wall of the old store start to smolder, Sheriff's officers and neighbors tried to put it out with the equipment at hand (above), but their efforts were to no avail as less than 30 minutes later, the store was lost (right). It was a great show, and attracted a small group of KU students who gave the final flame a standing ovation.
SUNRISE
The fire started when a spark from burning trash ignited rain-starved grass. An old barn nearby went up like a torch, and the fire was in full swing. The fire was about 5 miles west of Lawrence at "Kanwaka Corner."
Photos by Rick Pendergrass
THE FIRE
Outward Bounders sought
Mountains, rapids are classrooms
Application forms for Outward Bound will be available at the SUA forum at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Forum Room. Norm Bos, Hutchinson junior who has participated in the Outward Bound program, will present a 45-minute color film about the program.
Outward Bound is a 26-day endurance program which builds leadership through experience and brings high adventure from hard work. Individual skills such as mountain climbing, expedition techniques, and navigation on the rapids are learned at the five Outward Bound schools in the United States, Bos said.
Six sessions will be sponsored during the summer in the schools located in Oregon, Colorado, Minnesota, North Carolina and at Hurricane Island, approximately 10 miles offshore of Penobscot Bay, Maine, he said.
Originally a course designed for young men, girls' schools are now operated at the schools in Minnesota and Oregon.
Bos said applicants must be over 16½ years of age, in good health and must have the desire to complete the Outward Bound
program. There is no upper age limit and no need for previous experience, only the desire to do one's best, he said.
Some scholarships, in the form of loans and grants will be available. Approximate tuition is $500, he said.
At the North Carolina school on the slopes of Tablerock Mountain, students are trained for mountain search and rescue, river rafting and wilderness travel, among other skills, he said. At the Hurricane Island school students spend days in 30-foot whaleboats acquiring such skills as navigation.
A variety of challenges are presented at each school. At the Minnesota school located on a densley forested peninsula in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area a few miles from Canada, Outward Bound students learn canoeing, kayaking, portaging, rock climbing, orienteing, cooking, emergency medical aid, and rescue techniques, he said.
Moutaineering skills are taught at the Colorado school, approximately 10 miles west of Aspen, while in the Northwest school, approximately 75 miles east of
Wind driven oil slick threatens Louisiana
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — High seas and 30-mile-an-hour winds wrapped two 10-mile arms of a growing oil slick around an island wildlife refuge Tuesday and threatened to whip the pollution toward Louisiana's rich offshore beds of shrimp and oysters.
Fighters of two renegade wells spewing crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico counted on rip tides as a last hope of keeping the messy slick away from land.
Louisiana shrimp and oyster fishermen have filed federal pollution suits against Chevron Oil Co., claiming more than $100 million in potential damages should the slick reach the marshy seafood beds. The pollution was six miles off the coast Tuesday.
Mar. 18
1970 KANSAN 11
A Chevron official said heavy seas and winds expected to reach 45 miles an hour damaged a barge network set up to control the pollution around "Charlie" platform that has fed the slick with gushing oil for eight days
The vast oil spill jutted like two giant fingers around Breton Island, a two-mile-long refuge for migratory birds 12 miles off the coast.
A team of men hoping to drive waterfowl away and save them from death went to the island and fired shotguns, firecrackers and small aerial bombs to scare the birds.
Eugene, Ore., students learn crevasse rescue, snow and ice training, and other mountaineering skills in the Cascades, he said.
"The operation seemed successful for all but a small species of beach birds that would not leave," a Coast Guard official said.
Bos said that instructors at each school teach skills through personal example and close attention with the understanding that the individual and group are being trained to become totally independent of his presence.
Migratory birds use the island as a stopping off place while moving north as the seasons change.
Training is provided early in the course, the instructors striving not only to teach numerous specific skills but to raise the individual student's level of physical fitness and degree of personal initiative, he said.
After the initial learning experience, students apply what they have been taught, going to the cliffs to rely on a lesson about
handling a climbing rope just presented to them, he said.
Competition at Outward Bound schools is between the different nine to 12 man patrols at the schools, he said.
Each patrol takes expeditions which test training in specific skills, physical limits, initiative, leadership and group cooperation. Frequently, patrols take expeditions that have not been attempted before in wilderness areas, Bos said.
Although the patrol instructor will be present on shorter expeditions, the final trip is taken alone by the patrol, which choosees its own routes and objectives and plans all its own food, gear and timetables, he said.
Bos said each school trains
students in emergency medical aid, and depending on the environment, firefighting, search and rescue and lifesaving techniques. Although not every patrol faces emergencies, in the past, Outward Bound students have evacuated mountaineering casualties and battled major forest fires, he said.
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Let's Get It Straight SCIENCE CAN---science has not yet caught up with God, or because the scientist has a bias against God and leaves Him completely out of his calculations.
Science can produce bigger and more destructive bombs, but it cannot control those who get hold of them.
Science can open up limitless doors of exploration and speculation, projecting the universe out to infinity, but it cannot comfort the heart of a bereaved mother with any hope of reunion with her child.
Science can discover and apply new remedies for physical and mental illness, but it cannot make men stop hurting each other.
Science can sometimes take away a young student's faith in God and the Bible, but it cannot control the reckless course of his life thereafter.
Christians need science and scientific advancements in order to function in a modern world, and they do not belittle its magnificent achievements. But conversely science needs the regulatory influence of Christianity if it is to function for the good of all.
No scientific fact is opposed to God and the Bible, though scientific speculation may be. If God made the world and inspired the Holy Scriptures, He certainly knows more about true science than any mere mortal. How, then, could true science conflict with God? If a conflict occurs, it is because
God knew from the beginning that man, grown wise in his own conceits, would depart from the truth. "For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe," says the Bible. In other words, the Gospel of salvation through the atoning death of Christ on the cross is self-authenticating to those who are open-minded enough to listen. Read the Gospels for yourself. They are the wisdom of God who made you and all that exists—including the scientists.
For free booklet, "SCIENCE SPEAKS," write to
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PETER LANE
12 KANSAN Mar. 18
1970
Welcome to scenic Lawrence
Photo by Steve Shriver
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Improvement plan outlined by Lawrence city planner
In a speech sponsored Tuesday night by the Ecology Action group at the University of Kansas, Ronald Short, Lawrence city planner, outlined what is being done to improve the city through better planning and development.
Short said the most important aspect to be considered in city planning is the development of a master or comprehensive plan to present an overall and long-term system for beneficial development of the city.
The plan itself, he said should show definite relationships of elements of the plan to land use, transportation community facilities and utilities so that specific benefits can be planned for specific areas of need.
An important aspect of city planning, Short said, is that planners and developers should recognize that physical limitations of the environment in which they will work.
The city must also take community inventories to determine the cultural and popular characteristics of the residents so that specific public and private needs of space for community institutions can be found, he said. Also, alternate plans for development can then be taken into consideration.
Also, he said, the board hopes to preserve such natural physical features as streams, ponds and wooded areas by long-term planning so that the natural beauty of particular areas can be left untouched.
Short said the Kansas Geological Survey has been working with the Lawrence planning board to provide information about soil composition and compatibility. This, he said, will give the planning board the opportunity to determine which direction city development should take place so that weak or unstable soil can be avoided since it can effect the life span of structures.
Along, with working on various urban studies, the Lawrence planning board has also developed subdivision regulations for the
Council to discuss quorum
The university Council will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall, Thursday. The agenda for the meeting is expected to include some discussion of the problems of the University Senate to maintain a quorum, Charles Oldfather said Wednesday. Oldfather is chairman of the University Executive Committee and associate dean of the law school.
"I think the problems are obvious," Oldfather said. One problem is how to finalize the business which the Senate was expected to finalize and the other problem is what steps ought to be taken in dealing with the recurring problem of maintaining a quorum."
Mor.18 1970 KANSAN 13
The University Senate has failed for three consecutive weeks to obtain a quorum. Consequently, none of the senate's business has been completed.
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1970
Meet Del Eisele
As a Certified Gemologist of the American Gem Society, he is constantly seeking for new ways to bring you real jewelry at modest prices. You can rely on his gemological training and ethics to properly advise you on your next important diamond purchase.
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city and the county to help preserve more open spaces and has also updated the comprehensive plan for the city.
Short, who received his masters degree in regional and city planning from the University of Oklahoma, has been a city planner for 10 years in the Southwest and has been with the Lawrence board since June.
KU-Y picks two for co-presidents
New KU-Y executive officers were elected Tuesday evening in a membership meeting at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union,
Officers are Gary Gardner, McPherson sophomore, and Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior, copresidents; Barry Albin, Topeka senior, and Dee Ann Cavineye, Paola sophomore, co-voice presidents; Doug Everley, Salina junior, secretary; and Phyllis Farrar, Norwich junior, treasurer.
Laura Friesen, newly elected co-president, said interviews for cabinet positions will be held during the second week of April. She also said the Trash Pickup Project will be held April 26.
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People-to-people
地球仪
A group of KU students
Students helping other students
地球仪
Students who need your help
People-to-People needs new executive board and committee members for next year. The six executive offices are President/Treasurer, Secretary/Publicity, Liaison Officer, Homestays Chairman, English-In-Action Chairman, and Hospitality Chairman. Members are needed on the Publicity Committee, Homestays Committee, Hospitality Committee, and English-In-Action Program. If you are interested in applying for one of these offices or committees, pick up an application form at the People-to-People office, B-104 Kansas Union, and return it by March 20.
Interviews will be held Saturday, April 11. You will be notified about the time and place.
For further information about People-to-People call 864-3758 or Dave Hann, 843-2332.
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VOTE TODAY LAST DAY
University Elections
Student Body President and Vice-President Student Senate Class Officers
VOTE
at
Strong, Murphy, and the Union
Polls Close Tonight 6:00 p.m.
REMEMBER TO VOTE!
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P-to-P project has problems
The People to People office is having problems finding homes for foreign students during spring vacation because of the great number of applications made, said Dave Hann, Kansas City senior and chairman of P-to-P.
The committee for homestays is rushing to find more hosts for the foreign students. They received 70 applications and they have only 20 homes available.
Efforts to get more American families interested in being hosts for foreign students are being made through radio announcements and publications in some
papers in Kansas City, Lawrence and small communities, in the area.
Foreign students living in dormitories face more complications in finding a place to stay during spring break, as all residence halls will be closed Saturday noon.
Hann said that P-to-P could not promise to find places for applicants, but were doing all they could to help.
During Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation, the People to People office received more petitions from American families
than from foreign students, but now the situation is reversed, he said.
For the foreign students, the homestay program is an interesting experience in many ways—it gives them a chance to practice the language, become acquainted with American culture and know more about Americans. It also permits them to talk about their countries to their hosts.
American families interested in offering their homes for the students should contact Judy Hankammer at the People to People office in the Kansas Union.
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Nominations for IFC will reopen Thursday
Election of the top officials of the Interfraternity Council will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union. Offices to be filled for the coming year include president, vice-president of rush, vicepresident of fraternity affairs and treasurer.
Nominations for officers were held March 5 at the regular meeting of the IFC. However, Dave Andersen, Wichita junior and IFC presidential candidate, said people other than those on the original ballot have expressed interest in trying for IFC offices. Nominations will be reopened for those people at the meeting Thursday.
Election procedures call for each presidential candidate to make a 10-minute presentation of his proposed program. This presentation and five-minute presentations of other candidates are
Official Bulletin
Wednesday
Cardillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 p.m.
Classical Film: "Dawn Patrol." Dyche Auditorium, 7 p.m.
Physics Colleq: Robert Dixon, graduate student. 238 Malot, 3:45 p.m.
Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 7
SUA Concert: Judy Collins, folk singer. Hoch Auditorium, 8.n.p.
Regina Love provides guest oral
guestionaries at Warwick Regional Rehersal.
"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodle",
"Freda Scalia," and "Mary Cox."
Classical Film: 'The Edge of the City.' Dyche Auditorium, 9 p.m.
Foreign Students; Sign up now for the Kansas City trip!inner and meet me on Friday, 226 Shrimp Street
Le Cercle Francais se reuña mercredi le 18, mars a 16h30 dans la salle Pine. Programme: 2 étudiants a Paris illustre.
University Council: 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m.
Lecture: "Subunits in Proteins:
Structure and Function." Dr. Howard K. Schachman, U. of Calif. at Berkeley, Dyche Auditorium, 4 p.m.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door,
Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m.
RU. Sychko Cult: Robinson Gymnasium Natatorium, 7-9 p.m.
Senior Recital; Nancy Crawford,
soprano Swarthout Recital Hall, 8
'The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie'
University Theatre, 8:20 p.m.
Mar. 18 1970 KANSAN 15
made to the IFC President's Council. The Council, consisting of fraternity house presidents and IFC representatives, will then elect the president.
All houses must have their IFC representative and house presidents at the meeting in order for their votes to be counted, Andersen said.
Support sought for humanities
Barnaby C. Keeney, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities, told a House-Senate subcommittee that the overemphasis on science education has threatened the education of the next generation.
Keeney said too much weight was being placed on the sciences from grade school to graduate school. Keeney, in pleading for more support for the Humanities Endowment before the subcommittee, said that Humanities could solve the problems which advancements in science have created.
He said that until the common people could use historical and philosophical material to help them decide the major public questions of the day, and until the general public could use the knowledge of the past to solve personal problems, we would not have an orderly society.
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coming to you from the wheel of fashion... A spectacular performance of colors and style ... for Spring's slinky numbers, knits and things.
From left to right: 1) Tempos open-toed, sides too, belted and buckled, quite a new look. Red, navy with striking white patent uppers. 2) Squared-off at the toe and heel. Fanfares black and white patent uppers touched with white patent on the toe and heel. 3) Fanfares squared-off toe and heel. Bone with black patent or camel with navy patent on the toe and heel.
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UNITED STATES POST OFFICE
JAMES K. MORTON
LAW ENFORCER
Photo by Marilyn Williams
Better safe than sorry
Mail theives? No such trauma. Lawrence police investigated a false alarm at the new U.S. Post Office at 23rd and Naismith Tuesday night. The new alarm system has habitually shorted out since its installation.
Nixon to seek laws dealing with bombings
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon is expected to ask Congress to pass new federal laws to help deal with bombings soon, Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott said Tuesday.
Scott talked to reporters following Nixon's weekly meeting
16 KANSAN Mar. 18 1970
"The President is reviewing and giving careful consideration to the need for federal legislation to deal with the problem of bombings across the country."
Scott said. He added that he expected a presidential request for special legislation on bombings "in the near future"—possibly later this week or early next week.
Scott said Nixon expressed concern about the recent wave of bombings and had asked government agencies to make recommendations for proposed legislation to deal with them.
Boston air struggle ends in triple shooting
BOSTON (UPI)—A passenger shot to death the co-pilot of an Eastern Airlines shuttle flight and wounded the pilot Tuesday night before being shot himself in a struggle with the pilot, who managed to land the plane safely.
State police said the assailant was apparently a hijacker but Eastern spokesmen said flatly he was not a hijacker.
"About 20 minutes later," according to Robert Wise, of Wayne, N.J., another passenger, "three or four shots rang out." Eastern said four shots were fired inside the plane, one striking and killing the co-pilot, James E. Hartley of Fort Lee, N.J., and the fourth hitting Di-
The shooting occurred about 10 miles from Boston when the passenger, identified as John Divivo of West New York, N.J., told a stewardess he did not have the money to pay for the $15.75 flight from Newark, N.J., to Boston.
The stewardess, according to Eastern spokesmen, called the pilot who told her he could not see the young man at that time because he was coming in for a landing. Then, the spokesmen said, the stewardess learned the young man had a gun and was advised by the pilot to bring him to the cockpit.
Fares on shuttle flights are collected en route.
vivo during a struggle with Wilbur.
The assailant then fell to the floor and Wilbur brought the plane in at 8:25 p.m. EST and taxied toward the Eastern airlines terminal.
"My co-pilot is shot, where the hell do you want me to put this thing." Wilbur radioed.
The airline earlier said the passenger had told Wilbur to "take me east" but then denied that it was an attempted hiacking.
Wise said after the shots were fired the stewardess went into the cockpit, then returned and asked if there was a doctor aboard.
"Thank God about 10 minutes later we landed," he said.
The DC9 carried 68 passengers and a crew of five.
As soon as it stopped, FBI agents and state police swarmed onto the plane and all three men were rushed to Massachusetts General Hospital.
Hartley was dead on arrival. Wilbur was reported in fair condition, while Divivo was taken into surgery and placed on the danger list.
William Allen White was a friend, critic and adviser to eight American presidents.
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Leader claims acts of vandalism
Black Muslims leave Alabama farm
PELL CITY, Ala. (UPI) — The Black Muslims said Tuesday they were abandoning one of their Alabama farms because of harassment by whites, but the Ku Klux Klan warned they'll "be boxed in" no matter where in the state they relocate.
Muslims accused whites in the area of organized vandalistic acts against the 1,000-acre farm they own near Pell City, and said 63 cows have been poisoned or shot in the past two and a half months.
Elijah Muhammad, leader of
the religious sect, said the alleged vandalism "only proves what the white people are."
"They don't want a black man to have any freedom for himself," he said. "As for their deeds, Allah will take care of that. We will move out of Pell City. If they buy the land, we will sell out and leave them. We will not stay where we are not wanted."
The Muslims' present farm is located about 20 miles from the Georgia border. They plan to move across state to Greene
County, about 30 miles from the Mississippi border.
Blacks are in the majority in Greene County, and the Muslims anticipate less trouble there.
Robert Shelton, imperial wizard of the United Klans of America, said his organization was keeping close watch on the move.
"We've got enough land leased down there in Greene County and we know what's going on," Shelton said. "You might say they'll be boxed in anywhere they're going."
The Muslims' announcement
Concert profit possibly slim
If they are lucky, the Student Union Activities (SUA) will make a clear profit of no more than $500 from the Judy Collins concert tonight.
Figures released by the SUA office show that Miss Collins has an $8,500 fee to appear here, and the cost of using the Hoch Auditorium facilities is approximately $1,500.
On the other hand, Hoch has
a seating capacity of 3,500, and the tickets for the concert average $3 a piece.
Consequently, the SUA is spending $10,000 and collecting $10,500 for the concert.
they were selling out in St. Clair County came one day after a state toxicologist's report showed that 24 of the cows which died on the farm last week had been poisoned with arsenic.
John H. Davis, manager of the farm, said he had started building a corral and loading chute and hoped to have the remaining 225 head of cattle ready for the 140 mile trip cross state within the next two days.
Signs have been painted around campus calling for a free Judy Collins concert. According to the Student Code of Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct, any student attempting to enter the concert without a ticket may face suspension from the University. Non-students may face criminal prosecution by local authorities.
the prices of the tickets we were too high. He said the object of the concert was to break even, not to make a substantial profit.
"We don't want any trouble with anyone," Davis said. "We just want to run a farm and live in peace. But somebody would not leave us alone."
Much of the opposition to the Muslims came from members of the Pine Forest Missionary Baptist Church, situated on a plot of land that adjoins the Muslim property.
The church filed a $250,000 sum against the Muslims last December, accusing them purposely driving cattle into the vicinity of the church to disrupt services, and of threatening church members.
SUA officers explained that the $500 profit will occur only if Hoch is filled to capacity. They also said any profit from the concert will be put in the SUA general fund for future SUA projects.
"We will send a thousand Black Muslims in there if the local residents attempt any violence," the suit quoted Walter Turner, a Muslim official, as saying.
Kent Longenecker, Mission senior and president of SUA, explained the financial problems with the concert in response to charges by some students that
Whites in the area had expressed fear the Muslims would set up an "armed camp" on the land.
School of Business awarded $1000 grant
Wallace Wyatt, a deacon of the church, said, "We at the church don't want it to appear that we drove them off," but added:
"It will be better for everyone if they do go someplace else. They won't have the resentment they found here."
Wyatt's brother, Ray, a white auto dealer and former state senator, sold a portion of the St. Clair County tract to the Muslims, and helped them purchase another part.
He came under heavy criticism from local whites, and his auto agency was burned out.
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The KU School of Business has been awarded an unrestricted grant of $1,000 by the Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America, a subsidiary of Peoples Gas Company of Chicago.
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Clifford D. Clark, dean of the School of Business said the grant would be used for assistance in the search for new faculty members and for the publication of papers by faculty and graduate students which are circulated for comments before official publication.
Mar. 18
1970 KANSAN 17
2
american directors
hawks rift
dawn of the city
700pm 9:00pm
MARCH 18 50c DYCH
bos
The best treat around is a Roast Beef Sandwich from Burger Chef. Try one soon for a snack or a meal.
— 100% Pure Beef —
9th & Iowa St.
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
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FAD TRAD?
Strictly 1970 — but in the strictest natural shoulder taste. When we widen those lapels, deepen the back vent, revv up the shape and silhouette of a natural jacket, it's authentic. Trad. Never mad.
The Town Shop
839 Mass. VI 3-5755
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633
Nixon asks loan subsidies to control housing costs
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon Tuesday took action to drive down interest rates and increase supplies of skilled construction workers to snap home building out of a year-long slump and control the spiraling cost of housing.
To lower interest rates, Nixon called on congress to act now on the administration's plan to subsidize federal loans to savings and loan associations and thus permit them to increase their mortgage lending.
He also urged Congress to authorize the Federal National Mortgage Association to buy conventional mortgages, thus freeing more private funds for additional lending. The agency now is limited to VA and FHA loans.
Describing construction labor as in "disturbingly short supply." Nixon announced these
steps to increase the number of skilled workers:
- Labor Department programs to train building trades workers will be expanded by 50 per cent.
- All federal construction contracts must contain a clause "that will require the employment of apprentices or trainees on such projects."
- Vocational education and apprenticeship programs will be expanded.
- Regulations prohibiting racial discrimination in construction employment will be vigorously enforced.
"Our most urgent need is for homes that middle and lower income Americans can afford." Nixon said in a message sent to the House and Senate. "Yet, today, the average price for all new houses offered for sale is $27,000."
Nixon recommended doubling,
Docking signs into law bill on flag desecration
TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking announced today he has signed into law a bill making it unlawful to desecrate the state flag or the flag of the United States.
Under the law, publicly mutilating or defacing the flags will be classified a misdemeanor.
Docking also has signed a bill which will allow Maj. Gen. Joe Nickell, state adjutant general of the Kansas National Guard, to be promoted to lieutenant general.
The governor said he will request the Kansas Senate to approve the promotion for Nickell when the legislature reconvenes next Monday.
The bill provides that an adjutant general who has served 15 years in that position may be promoted by the governor to the rank of lieutenant general. The promotion requires consent of the Senate.
The governor also signed bills which would:
- Absolve the recipient of an unsolicited credit card of any liability for charges on it if the card was lost or stolen.
To aid state and local construction projects such as for highways and hospitals, Nixon freed $1.2 billion which had been frozen since September as an anti-inflation measure. When added to $300 million in state and local matching funds, the action means a $1.5 billion boost for the construction industry.
rrom 223,600 units last year to 450,000 units this year, the construction of federally assisted housing for low and moderate income families. And to speed up early construction, he reallocated $1.5 billion worth of federal housing assistance funds.
- Establish a procedure to determine paternity and fix responsibility for support of children born to unmarried mothers.
Nixon also ordered federal agencies to plan their construction projects to minimize interference with private building. One method he suggested was to schedule federal construction in the winter months, a slack time for the construction industry.
Nixon also ordered federal agencies to plan their construction projects to minimize interference with private building. One method he suggested was to schedule federal construction in the winter months, a slack time for the construction industry.
Student wins award for architectural work
The winner of the area award given by the Portland Cement Association for architectural competition is Ronald Turner, Raytown, Mo., fourth-year architecture student.
The award qualifies Turner for the association's national competition and a possible $1,500 scholarship at the Fontainebleau School of Fine Arts in France.
The design submitted by Turner is for the new Lawrence Public Library.
Professor denounces blacklisting
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A Columbia University professor accused an Illinois organization Tuesday of running a "blacklisting" agency designed to block employment of people whose political views it opposes.
Alan F. Westin testified before a House banking subcommittee and said Congress should control agencies hired by employers to screen prospective employees.
Some of them, he said, are "very dangerous" and cited as an example "an ultra rightwing organization called the Church League of America, located in Wheaton. Ill."
Westin said one of the league's letters suggests that prospective employees should be screened on their "philosophy of life." He quoted the letter as saying, "Our working forces include more than a few radicals, socialists, revolutionaries, communists and troublemakers of all sorts."
The Big Eight Conference got its name in 1964, when it officially changed from the Missouri Valley Intercollegiates Athletic Association.
18 KANSAN Mar. 18 1970
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KIEF'S
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center
if you want a summer job, call Manpower $ ^{ \circ} $ .
- The pay is good.
- You can work when you please.
- The experience will help you later on.
nat sound you hear is Opportunity, knocking.
If you're a gal—and you have some secretarial skills—will you put to work. If you can type, operate various office machines or handle some stenography...knock knock knock.
If you're a guy, you might want factory or warehouse work—indoors or out. We've got both... and both can help you build up your experience ...and your bankroll. But we can't call you... so call us. Knock knock knock.
In 400 offices throughout the United States Manpower specializes in finding the right people to do the temporary jobs that have to be done. We've been at it for 21 years, so we know what you're looking for. Why not deal with the best. When you're home on vacation come on in.
Knock knock knock knock.
MANPOWER
TEMPORARY HELP SERVICES
An Equal Opportunity Employer
THE CHICHEEN'S
DENISE are here!!
at the Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Mass. St.
Uptown
VI 3-5755
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
University Daily Kansan are offered
in English. Students are required to
color, studed, or national origin.
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Ed.
Campus Medical House, 411 W. 14th St.
FOR SALE
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately $1200. See at Ridgway Court, 3020 Iowa, lot G23 or call I- 26318, after 6 p.m. 3-25
Walnut stereo speaker cabinets. These are beautiful floor models with 12" speaker systems. Perfect condition. Must sell! Call 843-6707. 3-18
Eiphone 12-string guitar (acoustic)
for sale; excellent condition; fast action.
$110.00. Call Bill at 842-059. 3-18
GTX-1970, 440c.l, 4b., auto, air-cond,
AM-FM w/rear speaker, power steering,
vinyl roof, and disc brakes.
Must sell. Steve, 842-4275. 3-18
1969 Mustang, 302 V8 stick, blue with black interior, will sacrifice for quick sale. $1995. Call 842-2191 or 842-8870.
2-18
Bicycle-Schwinn Paramount Deluxe with sew up tires, tools, etc. Excellent condition. Make reasonable offer. Phone 843-3241 e-mail 3-19
1969 Roadrunner Coupe--Save $1,100 on this beautiful year-old muscle car with pop-options like; 383 magnum, 325 h.p.; Torquillett; power disc brakes; power window locks and tape; Konis; F-70x14 Poliglass; and four more years of factory warranty. Ivy green with matching vinyl top, 13,000 miles, never raced or skipped a race. Got married and need a smaller boss. 843-7747 or 2337 Murphy Dr. #4 (grey buildings east of Holiday Inn) after 2 p.m.
Tire Sale—Tax time is here again,
must raise some lime. F07x104 $22.03
F.E.T. $2.59 H70x14 $24.86 + F.E.T.
2.77; F07x104 $22.43 + 2.50; G70x15
$24.12 + F.E.T. $2.69; H70x17 $25.49
+ F.E.T. $2.85. Above tires are
premium quality. Glass belted, dual
white, also sale on all other premium
and first line tires. 2 pair
tires are fully guaranteed. Discount
Tire Co. 906 N. 2nd. North Lawrence.
842-0699. 3-20
'68 Volkswagen Bug. Must sell. Call 842-8605. 3-18
1967 Wess Motorscooter and helmet,
$125. Runs perfectly. 843-4243. 4-1
Motorcycle—Bass Amp. Triumph 650 bored to 70 cc. sun Bass cabin basset 115 cc. lunar basset 135 cc. Fender Bassman Bassist. Offer. Ted. 842-7000, room 813. 3-20
1965 Triumph TR4. BRG, Stebro Exhaust, Pirelli tires, Lucas Lamps, luggage rack, excellent condition. Call Rick, 843-3237. 3-19
Seuba equipment--Snark II deluxe regulator, tank and "N" valve assembly, by Seamless $25.00. Backpack free. Call 842-5643. 3-19
Standard MGB hardtop, black, excellent condition, cheap Call UN 4-3100 before 5:00. Call 842-7939 after 5:00. 4-1
1968 VW Fastback. Must sell at whole-
sale price. Call 843-8191 after shipping.
sales2
"MOORE"BURGER
"The Biggest Hamburger In Town"
VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th
HAROLD'S 66 SERVICE
U-HAUL Trucks
and Trailers
1401 WEST 6th STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
phone 843-3557
HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE
VOTE
EBERT
THOMAS
March 17*15
VW-1966, beige, sunroof, AM-FM,
843-7922, immaculate. Call Swee-
m 843-7922 3-19
Research projects for class or per-
formance, thought or subject to
for sale: 842-6140 4-2
1966 Chevelle SS 396. Only 26,000 miles! Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new call. 843-2954. 4-2
Want to sell at once: 1965 Honda 305 Deluxe motorcycle. Completely rebuilt. Dual chrome exhausts. Self-starters. Dual chrome exhausts. $300. Dual-7977 or 842-1574. D4-2
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodorant Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz. Retail price per 24-can case $16.54. Sell price per case only $5.00. UN 4-445. 4-2
1970 Corvette Coupe, 350 CID, 350 H.P., 4-speed, AC, postcision, tinted glass, AM-FM radio priced to sell. 843-7756 4-2
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest to-gooodness, ask for Ribs. Chicken, Brisket are our specialties. YI 9-2610 Closed Sunday, Tuesday
Barn available for barn parts. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptad, VI 3-4032. 5-14
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynaco dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Ravox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
W'd like to serve you in the capacity of Senior Class officers. Randy Andrews, Ed Wood, Pat Riley, Kathy Bruning.
3-18
3-18
Xorox service on the latest and best
computers, workstations and disarticulations. Typewriters, adding
machines, office supplies and equip-
ments. Typewriter Co., 70 %
V3-1-36444
Wanted: Bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18. 20% off. Handcrafted styles. Hodge Podge nightwear (open Thursday night) 842-6082.
Pilots - Otocapc Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Chesapeake 150 $6.50; inverted Citaibla $8.50; Cherokee 180 $12.50; 2-sea sailplane $4.00
We've got Beatles the UDK ad in Tuesday's edition sold out our com- pany. The store them all again and still at low sale prices at Tempo in the Malls. 3-19
Skiers—two cabins in Monarch Pass,
Colorado. Supply your own transport-
able, waterproof, reasonable rate. Spring break. Ron.
842-7590. Cathy, 842-6916. 3-19
Topsy's the Mall has a special 21% gallon containers of butter-rich caramel or tangy cinnamon corn. Regular $3.50, now 25% off at $2.62. 3-20
LA PETITE GALERIE—Are you who?
Come and find out. Dresses, separates,
groovy pantsuits, coats, swimsuits,
clothes, 910 Kentucky, 843
0826.
Tony's 66 Service
PHILIPPINES
66
Be Prepared! tune-ups
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
IT
SOCIAL ACTION IN THE 70's
For Top Quality Head For Henry's
Graduate Ticket ISP - Surendra Bhaan, Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob Brown, Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Gudnath, Bob Huber, Karen Laub, Patterson, Harriette Stallworth, Joe Van Zandt, John Whalen. 3-19
Henrys
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience
Thesis Typing - 10 years experience
6048, 8:00 to 5:00 - 842-0111, 4-2
8:00 to 5:00 - 842-0111, 4-2
Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typerules, typewriter, typewriter Service. Pica type. Computer service. M-15 Wright. Phone 843-9554. M-15
Experienced typists design manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style—pica or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7774 or 842-6562. 3-31
Position: Poverty is bad for graduate students and other minorities; Eliminate (1) Fixed salaries. (2) Bad housing. (3) Fee raises. 3-19
TYPING
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Disser-
tations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.)
Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-
1522. 4-8
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman.
For the F finest
Shrimp, Chicken.
Hamburgers
etc.
Hurry to Henry
5th & Mo. VI 3139
PERSONAL
Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assistance with necessary English corrections. English teacher. M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. 842-9249. 4-1
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
Wanted: bare feet. Frostbite sandal sale through March 18. 10% off. All adored stiles. Hodge Wear 10:00-5:30 (open Thursday night). 842-6826. 3-18
Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-furn, 843-8074. tf
Need spring clothes? Come to a closet sale; sizes 3-7; Sat, March 21, 1-5 p.m.: 518 Frontier #10 (Across from Sunset Drive-In Theater) 3-19
New York—TWA 6 times daily, also Chicago, Florida, Hawaii, Las Vegas, across the U.S.A., to Europe, Africa, or around the World—military fares. 4-2
To my anonymous rose giver: Thank
yourself. Justice. Please reveal
yourself. Judgement.
.
---
Sirloin
Around 100 years ago, the French mathematician Gauss developed a method of finding the roots of a polynomial. Da Vinci discovered this method while working at the Claude-René des Echecs in Paris.
Always Pleasurable Dining
U.S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods
Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m.
One and one half miles north
of the Kaw River Bridge
843-1431
L. G. Balfour Co.
Exclusive Representative of
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Guards
Favor
- Recognitions
- Recognitions • Puddles
• Lavaliers • Stationery
Paddles
- Lavaliers
- CIF
- Gifts
- Plagues
- Sportswear
Rings - Crested - Letters
Al Lauter
645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #30
Across from the Red Dog
VI 3-1571
Across from the Red Dog
Susan, my love for you is almost as great as my love for Sprocket. Keep up the hard work and we'll make it.
Sprocket. 3-18
Ride wanted—Toppea to KU. MWF.
must arrive by 9:30 and can leave at
2:30. Call CE2-0571. 3-18
Need one roommate to share expenses with 3 other girls. For months of April and May. $65.50 per month. Gatehouse apartments. Call 843-5192.
WANTED
Male guinea pig to mate with our female. Any type=843-851-859 type 843-851-859
d-19
Wanted ride to California; S.F. or
C田. Will share 3-19
Call: 842-7154
FOR RENT
Wanted. Female figure to pose with exotic Italian sports cars for photography. Pays well. Call 842-5752 evenings. 4-2
A clean four-room furnished apartment. Young responsible married couple. No children or pets. Utilities in the campus. Available Apt. 1. 843-1585. 4-1
1 bedroom, unfurnished apartment 2
blocks from campus, $110 per month
plus utilities. Available April 1. Call
842-3750. 4:30 to p.m. 3-18
Furnished, carpeted, air-conditioned apartment. Suitable for two. Off-street parking. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. tt
Want to sablease my apartment in
postcard number 842-1234?
Please call 842-1234 after aix 4-2
HELP WANTED
Camp Fire Girls, Inc., is interested in graduate nurses, twenty-one and over, to work at their summer camp. There are also counselling positions available for girls over twenty. Write Mrs. Rhoda Havelrock, 1014 Armstrong, Kansas City, Kansas 66102 for applications or call MAyfair 11302.
Galvia Bridal
Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv.
910 Kv.
Home of the "Big Shef"
BURGER CHEF
Try One Today 814 Iowa
Part-time help wanted -waittress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person. Earl's Pizza Parlor, 729 Mass. 4-2
Swimming Instructor for Girl Scout Camp Unit Leaders, Counselors, Assistant Cook, Contact Mrs. Owen Kaiser, Contact Mrs. Avenue, Avenue City Kansas 66101. 4-15
SERVICES OFFERED
DOWNTOWN
PLANT
202 W. 6th
VI 3-4011
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. 4-1
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on
your first book of the Annual
Tax Form TAX 101.5 Mass. $4.00 up if
you buy a second copy.
LOST
快乐的男孩
Lost—13th and Louisiana area, small f-male calico cat, come to name "Nellie." Reward Call 842-1150. 3-18
FOUND
Black wallset at at the Granada Thunderbird and telephone and Wilson. 842-700-7000. Rover
HARVEY'S SHOE STORE
Gall Service
Harvey's
DISCOUNT SHOES
803 W. 23
Harvey's
DISCOUNT SHOES
Tail Service
Use Kansan Classifieds
Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Found. A most exciting place to enjoy steaks by candlelight at their finest. Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-1
803 W. 23rd
Open every day 9 - 9
Sunday 1 - 6
HARVEY'S SHOE STOR
See us also for the newest styles
Acme Dingo Cowboy Boots $18.99
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OP.
900 Miss.
VI 3-5304
P
COIN OP.
LAUNDRY
19th and La.
9th and Miss.
PICK UP
STATION
2346 Iowa
VI 3-9868
T
PLANNING A TRIP??
Let
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your Spring Break Reservations
Malls Shopping Center
VI 3-1211
Muskie to speak here
Senator Edmund S. Muskie, D—Maine, will speak at the University of Kansas, May 8.
The 1968 Democratic vicepresidential candidate confirmed his KU appearance Tuesday morning with Mike Dickson, Atchison senior and president of KU's Collegiate Young Democrats.
"We have to handle the time
and price details yet," Dickeson said. "Dean Heller is working on the source of money." he added
Muskie has not announced the topic of his speech yet Dickeson said but, "I'm trying to get him to make a speech like he gave in his political campaign."
Dickeson said one reason he asked Muskie was because he was a contender for the 1972 Democratic nomination for the Presidency. "I think this campus deserves and should get top political leaders at least once a year," Dickson said.
"I was really impressed with him," Dickeson said, "He never beats around the bush answering anybody. Even when he gets a loaded question, he told that person, he thought it was loaded; and then he answered it."
Wescoe Hall returns to appropriation bill
Student fees may be used to help finance Wescoe Hall as the Kansas Legislature decided to reconsider the decision to remove it from the appropriation bill.
Legislative appropriations for the $8 million building are bottled up in a legislative conference
Draft center target plan
ST. LOUIS (UPI)—The Peace Action Committee said Tuesday it plans to hold demonstrations Thursday at the downtown draft center and three suburban centers.
The spokesman said the group plans "the usual picketing and leafleting, but in addition these demonstrations, at the draft boards will include guerilla theater—activities which attempt to enact the effects of the behavior being protested."
The protests are part of the National Antidraft Week, sponsored by the New Mobilization Committee to end the war in Vietnam. Special emphasis is being placed on Thursday as "a day of public actions," a Peace Action Committee spokesman said.
committee and won't be considered until Monday.
"In this case," he said, "such guerilla theater activities would include appropriate costuming, such as death robes, enacting the sounds and gestures of killing and dying.
The Kansas House stopped consideration on the hall last week because of the objection to using student fees to help the financing. In addition they ceased consideration on a power plant and science building at Wichita State University and a recreational facility at Fort Hays State College.
Featured luncheon speaker for the seminar is, James Logan, former dean of the KU law school and 1968 primary candidate for the Democratic nomination of U.S. senator from Kansas.
20 KANSAN Mar.18 1970
This action won't mean, however, that the bill will pass but merely that it will be reconsidered. The committee must make the final decision on the fate of the hall. If the committee is unable to resolve the differences between the houses of the legislature, funds won't be provided, at least not during this session of the legislature.
Dickeson announced Muskie's visit and plans for a State Issues Seminar at last night's CYD meeting. The seminar, Dickeson stated, would be held April 4 in the Kansas Union.
Other speakers include: Bob Brock, Topeka businessman and former Kansas campaign manager for Robert F. Kennedy; Robert N. Woodson, director of Kansas penal institutions and former superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol; James Titus, professor of political science; Louis Douglas, professor of political science at Kansas State University; Tom Van Cleave, Governor Docking's special assistant on tax and Senator Harold S. Herd, senate minority leader in the state legislature.
Calcutta torn by communist riots
CALCUTTA, India (UPI) Communists rioters armed with bombs, guns and knives battled police and anti-communist Indian workers in Calcutta and elsewhere in West Bengal State Tuesday. The Indian army was placed on alert as the violence spread.
The violence erupted during a general statewide strike called by the Marxist Communist Party to protest the resignation of West Bengal Chief Minister Ajoy Mukherjee Mukherjee, leader of the non-Communist Bangla Party, resigned to protest the failure of the Communist-dominated state government to curb political murders, looting and arson allegedly committed by the
Marxists.
His resignation forced the collapse of the caolation government, which included 14 different parties, and raised the threat of imposed presidential rule by the federal government in New Delhi.
The Marxists sent goon squads into the streets of Calcutta to make sure the strike was enforced. Shopowners pulled down their metal shutters, public transport stopped, offices and schools closed and railways canceled all services as mobs placed boulders on the tracks.
There were numerous clashes in Calcutta between the rampaging mobs and workers opposed to the strike. Fighting also was reported in other nearby towns.
Coca-Cola
Photo by Rick Pendergrass
Begorra! It's a leprechaun!
The luck o' the Irish will be with this leprechaun if no one steps on his tail. A group of KU Irish, of all nationalities, braved the chill on the Hill Tuesday to stage a St. Patrick's Day parade down Jayhawk Boulevard.
Directive-
(Continued from page 1) Judiciary.
Hampton said the court ordered Awbrey, as student body president, and Miller, as co-chairman of the Election Committee, to carry out the court's decision since Awbrey had stated it would be impossible to get the Student Senate Executive Committee together in time to put out the referendum.
"Our decision was not against the Student Senate Executive Committee. It was to uphold the Election Committee's original decision to have the ballots placed on this week's ballot," Hampton said.
SIMON B. GRANT
"We dig everybody!"
"For a HEAVY thing come out and dig on the sounds of FIRE & ICE
THURSDAY and
WEDNESDAY Night Both
804
W. 24th
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
8:00 to 12:00
THE DRAUGHT HOUSE
I
Election appealed
An appeal to have the student election declared invalid and void will be decided by the Student Court following the spring break.
The appeal, filed with the Student Court Wednesday by Tim Miller, Wichita graduate student, asked the election be declared invalid and void "due to fraudulent practices."
Miller charged in his appeal that in the preliminary list of candidates published in the Kansan on March 3 (after the close of the filing period) 12 candidates were listed as Senate candidates from the Graduate School and on the official ballot 16 candidates were listed.
"Obviously four names were added after the close of the filing period, in direct violation of election regulations." Miller stated.
Miller said the addition of the four candidates seriously diminished his chances as a write-in candidate from the Graduate School.
John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student and chief justice of the Student Court, said "As far as the court is concerned the election is valid until Miller's appeal comes before the Student Court."
Hampton cited article 3 section 6 of the Senate Code giving the Student Court jurisdiction to hear the case. The article gave the Elections Committee the power to decide disputes arising from elections, subject to appeal
(Continued to page 16)
THE MUSIC BASED ON THE LIFE OF EDWARD J. HALLENBROOK
Photo by Ron Bishop
A victory cigar, a flashing smile tell it all
Alliance claims victory
The Alliance captured 52 Senate seats in the student elections held Tuesday and Wednesday. ISP followed with 25 seats, the independents took 6 seats and the Business College won 1 seat. (Continued to page 14)
Ebert wins
Bill Ebert, Topeka, junior and Greg Thomas, Shawnee Mission, sophomore won the student president and vice-president positions for the Alliance Party Thursday morning.
Ebert and Thomas outdistanced the Independent Student Party (ISP) by 400 votes with 1,937 votes. ISP captured 1,537 votes and 792 were cast for the Independent Party.
The announcement indicated 4,266 students voted; 704 less than last year's record turnout of 4,970.
Ebert and Thomas were at a party when the results were announced. The newly elected president's first reaction was "very pleased."
Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said they had "runners" between the election-center and the party. "It was really funny how everyone found out," Retonde happily said, "this guy told me to keep it quiet about Ebert so we could post it on a sheet. But, it just wasn't any use."
"I was just kind of standing there at the party," he said, "when a girl came up to me and smiled, I said, 'what's wrong?' and suddenly she was all over me telling me that I had won."
After Ebert and Thomas received friendly handshakes and numerous pats-on-the-back, they left the party for a tour through the election-center. As Ebert paused for a moment of reflection, he said, "I think that ISP
(Continued to page 16)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No. 102
Thursday, March 19, 1970
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Judy Collins performs
[Performer's image, black-and-white]
Photo by Ron Bishop
Judy Collins in concert
Judy Collins performed in concert at Hoch Auditorium Wednesday night before a capacity crowd of 3,500. The audience sat spellbound during her two hour concert, and gave her a standing ovation in tribute.
By ANN MORITZ
Kansan Staff Writer
A capacity crowd of 3,500 greeted singer and composer, Judy Collins, in Student Union Activities (SUA) concert Wednesday evening and left her with a standing ovation.
Her clear, emotionally vibrant voice penetrated a densely silent audience interrupted only by bursts of applause. She seemed pleased, inspired and exhausted by the performance she had given. She had mentally drawn herself out into the audience as the evening's performance progressed.
Somewhat nervous before the concert and during the rehearsal, Miss Collins seemed to have much to say in her songs and a strong hope that her audience would grasp her message.
Miss Collins sang the story of her political whims, sadness, loneliness and freedom to a captivated audience in Hoch Auditorium. She described the audience as "very nice, and unusually warm and receptive."
Miss Collins likes to bring contrast into the music she sings, she said. Many of her songs in the concert were contemporary in style. She sang about the ideas she personally felt most important, she said.
Miss Collins said she loved college audiences. She added she saw no real difference in audiences of different age groups, but that she had more to convey to an audience of college students.
It was not always necessary to understand the lyrics of her songs. The expressions of her talented voice conveyed many other personal feelings.
Miss Collins accompanied herself with both the guitar and the piano during the concert.
Miss Collins said on the rumor of a free concert that at many universities where she has performed, the concert has been free with the use of an activity ticket. She suggested KU might employ such a system. A university often sponsors fewer activities when it charges a fee to each event, she said. She said it is unfortunate that everyone is not easily able to attend university sponsored events.
Miss Collins said she is just beginning to compose her own music. To date she has only written four songs, she said. She has done much more extensive work in arranging the material she sings, she added. Miss Collins has recorded eight albums
(Continued to page 14)
By United Press International
UDK News Roundup
Democrat bolts party
WASHINGTON — The decision of a Southern senator, Sen. Harry F. Bird Jr., to leave the Democratic party and become an independent spurred hope among Republicans Wednesday that there may be enough Democratic defections in the House to put it under GOP control next year.
East-West summit begins
ERFURT, East Germany—Pro-Western demonstrators chanted "Willy! Willy! Willy!" today on the arrival of West German Chancellor Willy Brandt for talks with East German Premier Willi Stoph in the first summit since Germany split.
Western observers said the outbreak of emotion showed the East Germans manifested sympathy for Brandt's diplomatic initiative and for the West German government he represents.
Training called severe
WASHINGTON—A group of Missouri congressmen recommend in a report released today that the pace of recruit training be more closely supervised at Ft. Leonard Wood, Co., where meningitis claimed its fourth victim this week.
Rep. Richard H. Ichord, D-Mo., who headed the group of Missouri lawmakers who toured the base, said he and the others concluded that medical men at the base were doing all they could with the meningitis outbreak. But, he said, the training may have been too severe at times.
Buffy Sainte-Marie to perform here
Festival of the Arts attracts top talent
Award winning choreographer, Lucas Hoving and his company of dancers will appear on April 3, and Buffy Sainte-Marie on April 4, at the 1970 Festival of the Arts. The concerts will be held in Hoch Auidtorium and are sponsored by Student Union Activities (SUA) at the University of Kansas.
Hoving came to the United States from Holland and was associated for many years with the Jose Limon Company. He became known for his interpretation of roles such as Iago in "Moor's Pavane," the white man in "Emperor Jones," and the leader in "The Traitor." With his company he made several tours to the Far East, Australia, Europe
and South America under the auspices of the U.S. State Department.
He now performs exclusively with his own company, with which he has toured in Europe, Canada and the United States. His ballets have been choreographed and staged for the Kurt Jooss Folkwang Ballet in Germany, the Scapino Company of Amsterdam, the Ballet Nacional of Mexico, Birgit Culberg Balletten of Stockholm and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre.
Hoving has taught and lectured in most of the major dance centers of the world including the Universities of California, Utah and Wisconsin, Belles Artes Academia of Mexico, the Choreo-
graphic Institute of Stockholm as well as centers in the Far East.
Sponsors for Hoving and his Company have included the U.S. Information Service, the British Ministry of Education and the Association of American Colleges. For the Peabody Institute of Baltimore he has directed two operas, "The Magic Flute" and "The Fall of the City."
Lucas Hoving is presently on the faculty of the Juilliard School and Columbia University Teachers College, both in New York.
His choreography has earned him grants by the Dutch Government and the U.S. National Endowment for the Arts.
Committee reviews housing data service
Halina Pawl, committee chairman, said they should continue giving out information to students about housing codes, complaint forms and setting up various means to get the information to students.
The Student Senate Off-Campus Housing Committee met Wednesday to discuss suggestions to give newly-elected committee members when they take office.
The housing committee presently disseminates information through the Student Senate office and the Off-Campus Housing office. Miss Pawl suggested that new members of the committee have the information and speak before foreign students and out-of-state students during orientation week. She also suggested sending letters to new students before they come to Lawrence containing the state housing code.
William M. Balfour, dean of students, suggested updating of the housing lists. He said complaints received in the housing office should cause a landlord's name and properties to be taken off the approved housing list. If the landlord remedied the problem or a new landlord took over the property, he said that the facility should be put back on the list.
Miss Pawl said that problems would arise because of an inadequate inspection system. An inspector cannot enter the private rooms of a complex unless the occupant enters a written complaint. One of the committee members said that the committee should look into things that the student could not know about before renting as well as providing students with information about off-campus housing.
Balfour suggested setting up a liaison between the committee and the Human Relations Committee of the University Senate. That way, he said, the two groups could work together on complaints involving discrimination.
Another suggestion was to set up a booth or table in the Kansas Union to give out legal information and names of people who need roommates. The committee is also working on a model lease form to set up specific duties of landlord and occupant to present to the Landlord's Association.
KU-Y to sponsor meetings promoting student relations
herst colleges through a special exchange program. She acted the leads in several college plays and was voted one of the ten most outstanding seniors in her graduating class.
In addition to the discussions, participants will begin formulating plans for the International Gift Fair next fall.
After graduation, Miss Sainte-Marie came to New York and began performing at guest nights in Greenwich Village. When deciding what she wanted to do with her prospective career, she rewrote a few of the contracts that interested her and began independently accepting television and performance offers.
KU-Y is sponsoring five meetings scheduled every Tuesday evening beginning March 31 which will enable foreign and American students to meet in a series of informal discussions, said Tom Moore, director of KU-Y.
entente her father bought her a second-hand guitar and she quickly developed her own style. She discovered 32 different ways to tune the instrument.
"The purpose of the meetings is to work in a project together to gain a better knowledge of the values and differences foreign students bring to this country," Moore said.
At the University of Massachusetts, where she graduated with a degree in Oriental philosophy, she began to perform for an occasional friend and agreed to play at several coffee houses near the campus. She still concentrated in education and practice-taught first grade.
Miss Sainte-Marie attended Smith, Mount Holyoke and Amor the ORIENT
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The International Gift Fair will be at the Westminster Center next November. Imported gifts from all parts of the world will be sold with profits going to help support KU-Y activities.
In the case of SenEx removing the referendums from the student election ballots, it was felt by SenEx members that students lacked sufficient knowledge of the referendums to cast informed votes.
Although the Student Senate and the Executive Committee in certain situations can change the decisions of standing committees, the Student Court ruled that these changes can be upheld only if it is shown that irrepairable harm would result if changes were not implemented.
The Student Court, however, ruled that sufficient data had been diseliminated and that a postponement would not affect the issues and questions in the referendums.
All of the material that Buffy performs on stage is original, even traditional folk songs that she has found take on a new flavor through her interpretation. She has recorded six albums.
Miss Sainte-Marie found music at an early age. Orphaned as a baby, her foster parents bought an old piano and she became fascinated with it. She taught herself to play and began to make up her own tunes. At sev-
The Student Court also ruled that the Student Senate as a body may change the decision of a standing committee, such as the elections committee, in certain situations. The exception to this ruling occurs in cases where the Student Senate Executive Committee acts in behalf of the Student Senate in matters requiring expeditious action.
Referendum abused Student Court rules
Miss Sainte-Marie is not just a protester. Her repertoire ranges in source from traditional folk and blues, to country and western and just plain commentary.
In the recent case of Beck versus Student Senate Elections Committee the Student Court has ruled that the Student Senate Executive Committee abused its discretion in postponing the referendum questions until April 7.
Tony's 66 Service
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044
As a performer and composer, Buffy Sainte-Marie, a Cree Indian, carries her heritage with pride and sadness. Those of her songs, which may be classified as protest songs, have mainly sprung from her feelings of injustice towards her people. "Now that the Buffalo's Gone" and "My Country 'Tis of The People are Dying" show deep felt protest, anger and hurt bewilderment.
2 KANSAN Mar.19 1970
Max Bickford, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, replied Wednesday to a charge made in an Alliance position paper dated March 16 claiming garduate teaching assistants have not received salary increases appropriated by the state legislature.
"A six per cent salary increase does not mean an across the board salary increase for everyone," Bickford said. "A salary increase means that money is allocated on the basis of the total salary budget," he explained.
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Campus briefs
Drama festival to be held
More than 300 entrants from 34 smaller high schools in the northeast part of the state will participate in a district speech and drama festival Saturday at KU.
The festival is an official event of the Kansas State High School Activities Association. The KU speech and drama department and the University Extension are co-operating.
Twenty-two one act plays will be given in the University Theatre, Lawrence High School and Central Junior High School. All other events will be in Murphy Hall.
Library hours for break listed
The schedule of hours for Watson Library during spring break are as follows: Saturday-8 a.m. to noon, Sunday-closed, Monday through Friday-8 a.m. to 5 p.m., March 28-8 a.m. to noon, March 29- closed, March 30-regular schedule resumed.
Branch library hours are posted at the door of each library.
Strike stops N.Y. mail service
Due to a carrier's strike in New York City the University Post Office has announced that it will not be able to accept mail to the following places until further notice: New York City, N.Y.; Bronx, N.Y.; Brooklyn, N.Y.; Flushing, N.Y.; Far Rock-a-way, N.Y.; Jamaica, N.Y.; Long Island City, N.Y.; Staten Island, N.Y.; Minneola, N.Y.; Hicksville, N.Y.; and Riverhead, N.Y.
It is not known when the carrier's strike will end and when mail to these places will again be accepted.
Ninety per cent of money from donations now in use
About 90 per cent of the $19.6 million given to the University of Kansas through the Program for Progress campaign is already in use at the University, Maurice E. Barker, fund director of the KU Endowment Association said Wednesday.
Barker said he wanted to stress the fact that most of the money was used for specific purposes determined by the private donors. He said only about $1.5 million was unrestricted, approximately $600,000 of which is in the form of pledges still to be received.
The unrestricted funds, Barker said, will be allocated by the
Bites from poisonous snakes accounted for 15 deaths in the United States in 1968.
Executive Committee of the Endowment Association.
Of the money raised by the Program for Progress, Barker said, $2.5 million went to the Spencer Research Library, $350,- 000 to the Nunemaker College and $1.5 million was unrestricted; it was not given by the donors for a specific purpose. The rest of the money is put in trust funds to be used for such purposes as a medical research center, a museum of art, professorships, book supplies for Watson and Spencer libraries and scholarships and loans, Barker said.
Mar. 19
1970 KANSAN 3
The KU Program for Progress was launched in 1966, its goal being to raise $18,617,00. By December 1969, gifts and pledges totaled $19,600,000. In addition, $1 million in gifts had been made directly to the University during the campaign period.
"the purpose of raising private funds for the University is not to supply, but to supplement state funds," Barker said.
Community Clearing House:
Utilizing student and local volunteers to fill the needs of various civic organizations in Lawrence is the function of the Community Clearing House located in the Wesley Foundation at 1314 Oread Drive.
The Community Clearing House began in the Fall of 1968 as a result of an idea formulated by Associated Women Students (AWS).
Volunteers aid civic clubs
Becky Morrell, Prospect
Heights, Ill., junior and one of 12 Clearing House staff members, said many KU students are involved in the program but it is basically a community organization. She describes the operation as "a referral service where we connect student and local volunteers with organizations in Lawrence needing various types of help.
Institutions and organizations utilizing Community Clearing
Announcer banned from election room
KUOK was banned from the election room Wednesday night in its first attempt at live-coverage of student elections.
Joe Vaughan, Kansas City, Kan., senior and KUOK announcer was banned from room 110 in Summerfield Hall, the room used for last night's ballot-counting.
Vaughan was greeted at the door by Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student, who apologized for the station's banishment. "We're counting ballots in here," he said, "and only authorized people are allowed in here." Von Ende told Vaughan he could obtain the results as soon as they were posted.
According to Vaughan, the reason he wanted in was because KUOK had been authorized to use room 110.
"I was authorized two days ago by the head secretary of the computer office and by Frank Burge of the Union," he said. Vaughan had planned to use the room to phone election results to KUOK's newsroom and set up radio equipment in the Hawklet.
When Vaughan received confirmation to use the room, he said he was not aware the ballots would be counted in the same room. "I asked for a room assignment," he said, "and that's the room they gave me."
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Miss Morrell said a file is kept containing information on the needs of organizations and the names and qualifications of volunteers. Clearing House staff members then match organizational needs with volunteers having the desired qualifications, she said.
House services are Head Start, Lawrence Public Schools, Lawrence Department of Parks and Recreation, the Ballard and East Lawrence Centers and the Beth Stone Activity Center, which works primarily with retarded children.
Robert Sullinger, Overland Park, junior and general manager of KUOK, said, "We should have gotten written permission or else more authority than we did, but still the fact remains, a member of the press was not allowed in there to preserve the right of the people to know the results."
Clearing House volunteers engage in various types of work including working with children, tutoring, providing transportation and housing restoration, Miss Morrell said. Other volunteer jobs include secretarial and hospital work and helping the aged
She said a program to help the aged called Ring-A-Day has begun in Lawrence. The program utilizes Clearing House volunteers for telephone conversations with lonely, aged people who simply need to talk with someone.
"Response to the Clearing House has been good," Miss Morrell said, "but we definitely need more volunteers."
When a reporter later tried to find out why KUOK was banned, von Ende said David R. Miller, Hays senior and co-chairman of the elections committee, and the computer operator did not want anyone else in the room.
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McCall's
KANSAN COMMENT
To the editor:
A theory has been proposed which says that the "Now Generation" will become a group of "liberal Victorians," who will permit little dissent with liberal ideas. After the appalling demonstration given by some of the more radical members of the student body at Lt. Col. Jack Mohr's speech Monday night I am inclined to agree with the theory. There were those present who were disinclined to hear or even to permit others to hear Col. Mohr's opinions.
Although not in agreement with many of his ideas, I will firmly support his right to be heard, just as I support the right of the New Left or any radical group to be heard without disturbance.
Instead of being repudiated, Mohr was vindicated, as each of his statements about the youth of today were proven all too well.
Out of perhaps 800 there, there were possibly 50 or 60 who caused trouble. But they ran that meeting! They forbade their political opposition one of the rights that that 50 so piously defends and so piteously bemoans when it is denied to them!
But they were only a few! Yes, only a few. And it was only a few who in the 1940s killed six million Jews. "Twas only a few who dropped the bomb on Hiroshima. Yes, it was only a few.
M. Sidney Lynn Jr.
Kansas City freshman
ROH
To the editor:
A human being was crucified yesterday With marshmallows He really kind of enjoyed it Being not so physically painful As his years in a Korean prison camp. It seems that he came to say something Not too reasonable Not too believable Not too defensible Full of holes Like a sieve He would have been blown over With a few breaths of rational air But some had more evil plans for him. Smother him! Taunt him! Ridicule him! Bait him! Crucify him! "Peanuts, popcorn, cotton candy." Now in the center of the arena, folks! Tonight's main attraction! The paranoid John Bircher! Everyone participate! Fun for the whole family! Show your skill! Impress your friends! If you can, Stone the man in the circle Before he stones himself!! Kicks, man! Right on!!! Right on!!! The stoners and the stoned Curiously go together. They were made for each other. They need each other. They feed on each other. My sadness is We have not just the one Nor just the other; We have both.
Will Schubert
Shawnee Freshman
Integration: a flop?
By WILLIAM MORRISSEY
Kansan Staff Writer
The principle of integration has been accepted in this country since 1954, yet 16 years later, according to the best figures available, only 23 per cent of the nationwide total of more than six million black pupils go to integrated schools.
In short, integration has failed in America.
in short, integration has failed in America. The tragic failure was recognized by two leading black militants in a recent issue of Newsweek magazine.
Dan Watts, editor of the Liberator: "There's more race hatred in New York today than there is in Mississippi, and it all goes back to the schools. It's a traumatic experience, anyway, for a black kid to be bused clear across town for the privilege of sitting next to Miss Ann . . . We've got to move away from integration and toward coexistence."
Julius Hobson of Washington, D.C.: "Of course integration is a complete failure. . . What we've got is no longer an issue of race but of class, the middle class against the poor, with the Federal government standing idly by. The schools in Washington have deteriorated to a point almost beyond repair. If I could afford it, I'd send my own children to a private school. . . I have an opinion I hesitate to voice, because it's too close to George Wallace, but I think it's time we tried to make the schools good where they are . . . the integration kick is a dead issue."
Integration is a dead issue because most Americans have failed to realize what integration, on a significant scale, entails.
It is a simple matter to enforce integration on very short deadlines in rural Southern communities, where there is little residential segregation, but to apply it to all parts of the country is an enormously difficult process.
Bus loads of inner-city black pupils have to be transported miles to predominantly white areas and white students have to be bused into the inner city. Finances that could be spent in helping the educational quality of the schools go instead to transporting students to and from school daily.
These are the hard facts we face in large-scale integration. For it would hardly be just to require the small rural communities of the South to submit to the strict enforcement of integration and not the rest of the nation. This would only add fuel to the politics of George Wallace.
As noble as the principle of integration is, it can reach a breaking point. This has happened when whites have been sent to constitute a minority in a school that is largely black. The result has been a mass exodus on the part of the whites to a different section of the city where the schools reflect residential segregation. What it amounts to is resegregation where whites change places with blacks.
The Supreme Court in 1954 had no way of knowing the feasibility problems involved in nation-wide integration. It was hoped by the courts that the objectives of desegregation would eventually result along non-racial lines, thus creating a unitary school system from a dual one.
Sad to say, this has not been the case. It does no good to say that racism and bigotry have prevented integration from working; the
question is, How can you prevent whites from fleeing schools when they find themselves in the minority?
A more reasonable approach would be to apply integration to the extent possible up to the breaking point where resegregation sets in. Basically, this is what the Nixon administration has been advocating.
What seems to be the biggest difficulty with integration is the concept of racial identity. Historically, schools in America have been an extension of the family. The children have attended schools which reflected their class and cultural identity.
This concept of racial identity has to be broken down before integration can take place smoothly. The way to do it, however, is not by court orders for compulsory busing and racial quotas resulting in a heightening of racial tensions and violence.
The root of the problem goes deeper than the merits of compulsory busing or racial quotas.
One person who recognizes the depth of the problem is Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., who says, "The problem is not only the dual systems of education which existed 16 years after the Supreme Court struck them down in 1954. The fundamental problem is the dual society that exists in every metropolitan area—the black society in the central city and the white society of the suburb. Massive school segregation exists not because we have segregated our schools but because we have segregated our society and our neighborhoods."
Perhaps the answer lies here. As Ribicoff suggests, we cannot have an integrated school system unless we have an integrated society. And this, in all honesty, is not attainable within the near future.
We must now devote all our energies and resources to improving the schools where they are, while doing our best to open up middle class jobs and middle class suburbs to the Negroes. If there is to be a solution, it must come through cooperation—not force.
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. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68044. Classes, goods, services and employment advertised offered to students without regard to color, creed or national origin of student. Published at the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents.
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . Mel Adams
Business Adviser . . . Met Adams
Business Manager . . . Jerry Botfield
Assistant Business Manager . . Mike Banks
Advertising Managers . . Larry Cates, Joanne Boe
National Advertising Manager . Oscar Bassmonin
Classified Manager . . Shelley Bray
Promotion Manager . Jim Kugel
Service Manager . . . John Lagos
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . James W. Murrav
Managing Editor Ken Peterson
Campus Editors Ted Iliff
Editorial Editors Mike Shearer, Joe Nass, Monroe Dodd
Donna Shrader Sports Editors Brena Crainham, George Wilkens
Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkens
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Mmber Associatied Kollegiate Press
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Griff & the Unicorn
BY SOKOLOFF
?
?
David Sokoloff 1970
KNWSAN REVIEWS
CONCERTS: Judy remarkable
By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
A packed house in Hoch Auditorium last night experienced a remarkable and varied program of contemporary folk songs presented by one of the greatest of modern singers-Judy Collins.
The lady cannot be faulted. Her voice has physical presence, and each song she sings has the power to stay with the listener long after its last words have left her lips.
Last night's concert contained the best of her work from her past three or four albums as well as a great many ballads that were new for her. Backed up by a three-man—or rather two man, one woman—instrumental group, she gave beautiful renditions of "Early Morning Rain," "That's No Way to Say Goodbye," "Sisters of Mercy," and finished the first half of the program with her classic "Both Sides Now," which became more and more stylized with each verse.
She performed alone for a good portion of the second half, with Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne" and a number of her own delicately poetic compositions. Without the group behind her, her electrifying voice comes across with full force; it is a voice of incredible range and vibrancy, which may lack the purity of Joan Baez, but is more mature and much earthier.
The second half was highlighted by a richly affecting rendering of Ian Tyson's "Four Strong Winds" and the rousing, gutsy version of "Bird on a Wire."
After a standing ovation, she returned to the stage to sing "Turn, Turn, Turn" with its "A time for peace," perhaps in deference to the protestors gathered outside the auditorium (protesting the high price of "culture")
Despite the ill-feelings, the thunderous applause and two standing ovations were overwhelmingly deserved; for a memorable evening given by a wondrously gifted performer.
EIREAN DANCE
Photo by Marilyn McMullen
Sister Helena, played by Caryl Edwards, Monett, Mo. senior, who was once a Brodie protege, tells a reporter, played by John Ingle, Kansas City, Mo. junior, how her teacher's rejection of reality "created in me a reverse hunger." "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" continues in University Theatre, Thurs. and Fri.
THE WILD BUNCH
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Gideon's Power is quite a different sort of thing—another look into the professionally busy life of Scotland. Yard's astute Commander George Gideon. It, too, has sinister moments as Gideon works on several cases, the main one involving the sabotage of London power plants. But the accent is on police procedure, of which author J. J. Marric, as well as his title character, is a true professional.
Mar. 19
1970 KANSAN 5
See It Before You Leave?
ROBERT REDFORD · KATHARINE ROSS
ROBERT BLAKE · SUSAN CLARK
"TELL THEM WILL BOY
IS HERE" GP
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
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It doesn't matter who the father is...
Jenny has finally found someone to love.
It doesn't matter who the father is...
Jenny has finally found someone to love.
MARLO THOMAS ALAN ALDA
AS "JENNY"
ABC PICTURES CORP PRESENTS A PALOMAR PICTURE
SCREENPLAY BY MARTIN LAVUT AND GEORGE BLOOMFIELD STORY BY DIANA GOULD
"WAITING" WRITTEN BY NILSSON PRODUCED BY EDGAR J. SCHERICK DIRECTED BY GEORGE BLOOMFIELD
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MARLO THOMAS ALAN ALDA
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University of Kansas Theatre
presents
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Jay Allen
Adopted from the novel by Muriel Spark
MARCH 13,14,18,19,20
For Tickets Call UN 4-3982
Current registration card admits to $1.40 seat
University Theatre --- Murphy Hall
Student expulsion bill passed
A bill clarifying grounds and procedures for suspending or expelling high school students from public schools has been passed by the Kansas legislature. It is not yet known how Gov. Robert Docking will act on the bill.
The bill would authorize high school teachers to suspend or expel students who are found guilty of disruptive behavior or threatening the rights of other students.
School boards, administrators and teachers would be given authority to deal with disciplinary problems. The bill sets out grounds for suspension or expulsion and permits boards of education to adopt regulations extending the authority to enforce discipline to any certified teacher or administrator or committee of certified employees.
Before long-term suspensions or expulsions could be imposed, a hearing would be required. A short-term suspension would be allowed without a hearing, but it could not exceed five days, and parents must be notified.
Carl Knox, superintendent of Lawrence Unified School District #497, said that the bill contained essentially the same policies that are already in effect at Lawrence High School.
"Disciplinary policies should
High school workshop scheduled
"Your Sound in the Sonic Seventies," will be the theme of the seventh annual Student Council Workshop conducted by the Kansas State High School Activities Association Aug. 2 to Aug. 7 at KU.
Each Kansas senior high school will be allowed two delegates. Sponsors from both junior and senior high schools may attend.
Earl Reum, director of activities for the Denver, Colo., public schools, is the workshop consultant. The workshop will be in McCollum Hall.
6 KANSAN Mar. 19 1970
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be developed at the local level without state intervention," he said. "Every school district needs guidelines on discipline, but local administrations should formulate their own policies for their own problems."
The policy statement of the local Board of Education says:
"The school is basically an institution for learning. Any activity which disrupts the learning atmosphere or destroys the learning opportunities of any individual is an infringement on the right of that individual to learn. The protection of this right is a major responsibility of school teachers, administrators and the Board of Education."
LHS procedures for serious problems, such as failure to follow the directions of a teacher and continued distraction of other students, refusing to obey teachers or threatening them, fighting, profanity, and smoking on school premises, allow the student to be suspended for varying amounts of time.
These guidelines are not designed to deny students the right to disagree or dissent, but only to insure that the exchange of ideas is peaceful, said Knox.
Under the bill passed by the legislature, students could be expelled for the following reasons: willful violation of board-approved, published regulations or student conduct; conduct substantially disrupting school operations; conduct substantially impinging upon the rights of others, and conduct resulting in conviction of a criminal offense or disobeying the order of a teacher, policeman, school official or security officer or other authority when disobedience can be anticipated to result in disorder.
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Gymnasts look for loop crown
Currently ranked by the NCAA as one of the top ten teams in the nation, the KU gymnasts travel to Manhattan this weekend for the important Big Eight Conference.
In addition to determining conference team and individual champions, the meet will also decide team and individual qualifiers for the NCAA meet to be held April 2-4 in Philadelphia.
Under NCAA rules, only conference champions may vie for the national team title. However, any gymnast, regardless of his team affiliation, who places among his conference's top three in individual events, will also qualify for the national meet but on an individual basis only.
KU coach Bob Lockwood, who has termed this Jayhawk edition the best in KU history, is cautiously optimistic that his team can achieve its highest finish ever. The Jayhawks have never placed higher than the third place position they have occupied three of the last four years.
But the likelihood of a KU championship appears slim. Iowa State, unbeaten in dual competition, is currently ranked number one in the nation by the NCAA and is favored to win its fifth title in the last six years.
"Iowa State has to be favored," Lockwood said. "They have not scored below 160 (180 is a perfect team score) and they have the highest average in the nation."
While not conceding the team championship to the Cyclones, Lockwood is concerned with at least a second place finish.
"A second place finish is important to our program," he said. "It would be a great help to our recruiting."
The Jayhawk mentor said the top challengers to KU for the second place spot will be Kansas State and Oklahoma. The Wildcats are also ranked among the nation's top ten, behind Iowa State and KU, but Lockwood thinks Oklahoma may be a darkhorse.
"They just haven't put it together yet," he said. "If we miss our routines they could beat us—but then of course so could K-
Mar. 19
1970 KANSAN 7
State."
The key to KU's success according to Lockwood will be improvement in the side-horse and floor exercise.
"We must be more consistent in the side-horse," he said, "and the technical aspects of the floor exercise must be improved. We have worked hard on this for two weeks and hope it will make the difference."
Strongest individual KU threats will come in the form of Kirk Gardner and Gerald Carley.
Gardner, and Atchinson junior, ranks first in both the conference and the nation in still ring competition. Carrying an average score of 9.35, his top score is a 9.55 against K-State on March 6.
Gardner has changed his routine especially for the meet and coach Lockwood is confident he can win with it.
"We think this set can win for him at Manhattan and also score high nationally," Lockwood said.
Carley, a Wichita junior, leads the conference in the high bar with an average score of 9.20. His best score is 9.35.
Carley's strongest competition may come from teammate Roger Hemphill. The Lawrence junior is currently ranked fifth in the conference with an average of 9.05.
Long horse specialist Ron Faunce is another Jayhawk strong-point. Currently tied for second in the conference, the Topeka sophomore carries a 9.25 average.
Lockwood also sees possibilities in all-around performer John Brouillette. A Wichita junior, Brouillette is ranked fourth and according to Lockwood would need a great effort to make the top three.
Finally, Dan Bradfield, Stan Clyne and Richard Schubert drew mention from Lockwood as being threats. Bradfield, an Overland Park junior, and Clyne, a Wichita sophomore, are floor exercise specialists and can challenge anyone nationally, according to their coach.
Schubert, a Lawrence sophomore, is ranked sixth in the side horse but Lockwood said his last two weeks have been his best and he is capable of challenging anyone.
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LINE UP
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Bob Lockwood at work...
Gymnastics coach Bob Lockwood scrawls out the Jayhawk's lineup on the blackboard in preparation for the Big Eight meet this weekend in Manhattan.
KU trip to Tulsa is off
Kansas was snowed out of four baseball games Wednesday but quickly added two as coach Floyd Temple scheduled a doubleheader with Washburn University to open the Jayhawk's season March 25.
The twin bill with Washburn will be played at KU's Quigley Field at 1 p.m.
Earlier in the day Kansas' opening trip for doubleheaders in Tulsa with Tulaa University and Oral Roberts University this weekend was called off because of heavy snow. It was reported some areas in the Tulsa vicinity had received more than six inches of snow.
When it became impossible to work out corresponding opening dates with Tulsa and Oral Roberts, Temple decided to cancel the opening dates.
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Students who need your help
People-to-People needs new executive board and committee members for next year. The six executive offices are President/Treasurer, Secretary/Publicity, Liaison Officer, Homestays Chairman, English-In-Action Chairman, and Hospitality Chairman. Members are needed on the Publicity Committee, Homestays Committee, Hospitality Committee, and English-In-Action Program. If you are interested in applying for one of these offices or committees, pick up an application form at the People-to-People office, B-104 Kansas Union, and return it by March 20.
Interviews will be held Saturday, April 11. You will be notified about the time and place.
For further information about People-to-People call 864-3758 or Dave Hann, 843-2332.
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
Jim Hershberger
Recently chosen to be honored at the Kansas Relays, April 16-18, Jim Hershberger will also compete in the "Master's Mile," a new event open to those 35 and older. The Wichita oilman, sportsman and philanthropist is 38.
Miami is 'Super' site
HONOLULU (UPI)—Just call Miami, Fla. "Super City, U.S.A."
Football's grand classic—the Super Bowl—will be played in Miami for the third time in five years next Jan. 17.
Miami had been considered an underdog in the bidding for the National Football League title game mainly because it had already been played there in 1968 and 1969.
But NFL club owners meeting here voted almost unanimously Tuesday for the Florida city after hearing its sales pitch for the 1971 Super Bowl game.
"Im elated. I couldn't be more pleased," said Miami Mayor Stephen C. Clark, who led his city's Super Bowl delegation. He said the Orange Bowl, site of the game, will be expanded by 4,000 seats to a capacity of 80,000 and that for
the first time the SuperBowl will be played on artificial turf.
In addition, the mayor announced Miami will put on a major parade the night before the Super Bowl. Clark said the parade will follow the route of the annual Orange Bowl parade and will feature floats representing the 26 NFL teams.
8 KANSAN Mar. 19
1970
Other league action taken so far included decisions to:—use the NFL ball rather than the "pointier" ball the American Football League used before the two leagues merged—Keep the NFL one-point conversion rather than adopt the AFL two-point option.—Make the scoreboard clock the official timepiece on the field, an AFL policy—Put the name of each player on the back of his jersey, also AFL style.
William Howard Taft is the only president to become chief justice of the United States.
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NEW YORK (UPI)—Chris Gilbert, who played football for the University of Texas 1966-68, is the only major college player to gain 1,000 years rushing for three seasons. He finished his college career with 3,231 yards.
Sports briefs
FOSTEX
NEW YORK (UPI)—Army's Glen Davis set a record in 1945 that probably will never come close to being matched when he averaged 11.51 yards per carry during the season. He ran with the ball 82 times.
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NEW YORK (UPI)—Y.A. Tittle pased for nearly 29,000 yards during his pro football career that began in 1950 with Baltimore and ended with his retirement from the New York Football Giants after the 1964 season.
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NEW YORK (UPI)—The shortest touchdown pass in the National Football League record books is two inches. The toss came from Dallas' Eddie LeBaron to Dick Bielski over Washington in 1960.
* *
Wooden is top coach as Bruins vie for title
NEW YORK (UPI)—Davey O'Brien attempted 60 passes for the Philadelphia Eagles against the Washington Redskins in 1940. O'Brien completed 33, three short of Charlie Conerley's record made for the Giants against Pittsburgh in 1948.
Wooden, called the "Wizard of Westwood," for his ability to produce winning teams on the UCLA campus in Westwood section of Los Angeles, received 145 votes in the balloting among sports-writers and sports-casters across the nation while Rupp got 143 votes.
Frank McGuire, of South Carolina, was third in the balloting followed by Ralph Miller, whose Iowa team was unbeaten in Big 10 conference play; Dick Harter, whose Pennsylvania team gained a similar feat in capturing the Ivy League Crown; Larry Weise of St. Bonaventure and Joe Williams of Jacksonville.
NEW YORK (UPI)—The Alcindor era may have ended at UCLA but the John Wooden dynasty continues.
moved into post-season play seeking an unprecedented sixth national NCAA title.
Wooden, the man who built UCLA into a perennial national power, reached another milestone in his illustrious 24-year career as a college coach when he was voted the college basketball Coach of the Year Tuesday by United Press International.
Coach John Wooden appraised the chances of his defending champion UCLA team in these words today as the four finalists for the NCAA basketball championship gathered for the pressure-pit collegiate title playoff at the University of Maryland.
It marked the fourth time the 59-year-old Hoosier has won the奖. Wooden was Coach of the Year in 1969 while the Lew Alcindor-led Bruins marched to their third consecutive NCAA championship. He had won similar accolades in 1967 and 1964.
The 59-year-old Wooden, a native of Martinsville, Ind., beat out another well-known colleague for the 1970 honor, Kentucky's Adolph Rump.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI) — "We're in good shape physically, mentally and emotionally. We're a realistic, honest team. But my players feel that every team left can win it."
The winner of that battle goes into Saturday's finals against the victor of the Jacksonville-St. Bonaventure contest. The Dolphins are favored against the Bonnies because of the loss of All-America Bob Lanier through a knee injury.
Wooden's Bruins compiled a 22-2 regular season record and
The Bruins come to the finals bidding for an unprecedented fourth straight NCAA title with the semifinal Thursday against a strong New Mexico State aggregation their first test.
\* \* \*
Coach Joe Williams said at a round-robin telephone news conference that his Jacksonville Dolphins weren't taking their semifinal foe, St. Bonaventure, lightly even though the Bonnies lack the service of Lanier.
St. Bonaventure Coach Larry Weise suggested the only way his team could cope with the height of the Dolphins was "bring more stepladders."
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Juco transfers bolster 'big' schools fast
BY GALEN BLAND
Kansan Sports Writer
It was in the finals of the NCAA basketball tournament. Artis Gilmore, Jacksonville's 7-2 center, grabbed the ball, leaped high in the air and dropped the ball through the hoop to make his Dolphins the National Champions.
Well, not yet, but the Dolphins definitely have a chance at the crown. Many fans are wondering how the Dolphins made the gigantic climb from .500 ball to championship contenders in one year. The answer is simple—junior college recruiting.
Jacksonville found Gilmore playing for Gardner-Webb Junior College in Boiling Springs, N.C. Then they got another 7-footer, Pembroke Burrows, from Brevard Junior College. Gilmore, who was clumsy in high school but improved steadily in Juco, fulfilled his potential this year
and the Dolphins are 26-1 instead of 13-12.
Jacksonville is not the only team that has gone to the Jucos to fill the gaps that their regular recruiting programs have left. UCLA has remained a national power after superstar Lew Alcindor graduated with the help of hot-shooting John Vallely and Sidney Wicks, both junior college transfers from California.
Cliff Meeley, 6-8 forward, transferred to Colorado from Northeastern Colorado Junior College and the Buffaloes won the Big Eight with Meeeley leading the last year last.
Examples of junior college recruiting were shown in the Mid-West regional here last week. Drake, who lost four men off last year's team, was led by 6-5 Jeff Halliburton, Halliburton came from San Jacinto College in Texas. Houston had Ollie Taylor, who averaged 24.7, and Poo
Welch, both Texas Juco transfers. Jerry Venable, a transfer from Ferrum (Va.) Juco, was the big man for Kansas State's Wildcats.
Junior college recruiting has become an excellent means for college teams to quickly bolster their strength. The Juco crop of talent this year is again outstanding, but a few names, unknown now, have the best shot at becoming stars in the college ranks.
Harold Fox, a 6-2 guard who plays for Brevard Junior College in Cocoa, Fla., could be the best of the best. Fox led Brevard to a 25-1 record this year with his 263 average and his outstanding defensive play. Fox was the first schoolboy since Elgin Baylor to make All-Metropolitan Washington, D.C., three years in a row. Nearly 300 colleges, including KU, are after Fox.
Another standout can be found
Local club organizes meet expands area track circuit
The first of what is hoped to be the annual Mid-America Relays sponsored by the Kansas Track Club was held last Saturday at Wentworth Military Academy, Lexington, Mo.
Fort Hays State won the indoor meet with 46 points. Lincoln University finished a close second with 40. Ottawa University and Emporia State tied for third with 30 points each followed by Southwestern (Winfield) with 22 and the Kansas Track Club (KTC) with 18.
Individual highlights in the meet were provided by Lincoln's Walter Walker who ran a 6.1 in the 60-yard dash and Fort Hays State's Larbi Oukada who claimed three first place medals
with wins in the two-mile relay, two-mile run and the distant medley relay.
Jay Steinberg, Glen Elya, Ill. junior and president of the KTC, organized the meet along with Wayne Smith, meet coordinator and a Westchester, Ill. sophomore
Steinberg said the meet was, hopefully a stepping stone toward the meet's future success. He said the KTC's intention is for the Mid-America Relays to become a major relay in the midwest.
A similar outdoor meet is scheduled at Emporia State on May 1.
Saturday's meet was sanctioned by the NCAA and NAIA in addition to the United States Track and Field Federation. It was completely student-run with invited officials taking part.
Wes Santee, former KU miler, served as the official starter while Bill Easton, former KU track coach, served as an advisor to the KTC.
Steinberg said the coaches of the teams in the meet were optimistic that the Mid-America Relays can become an integral part of the track circuit. The KTC president said it is hopeful the meet will soon follow the Wichita State Relays, KU Relays and Drake Relays.
"We feel we are stepping in the right direction for the Relays to become a success, particularly with our outdoor meet in Emporia on May 1," Steinberg said.
Golfers taste first action as OSU shines
Oklahoma State easily swept their own invitational golf tournament last weekend in Stillwater. The Cowboys walked away with the first four individual spots.
Mike Holden led OSU by winning medalist honors with a 138 total for the 36 hole contest. He was followed by teammates Doug Tool, Mark Haze and Jim Shade.
State, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, KU and Tulsa.
The Jayhawks' next meet will be the Oklahoma Intercollegiate in Shawnee, Okla., on the third and fourth of April.
OSU topped runnerup Arkansas by 27 strokes. Other teams, in order of finish, were Wichita
more, shot a 158. DeLongy shot the low 18-hole score for the Jayhawks, a 75 on the first day.
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Perhaps that player will be Harold Fox or Charlie Dudley or maybe someone even more obscure. The players will be found, however, and a year from now some of them will probably be making their mark on college ball just as Gilmore and so many of his "cohorts" have done this year.
in Pratt. Paul "Boogie" Stovani, 6-5 leaper from Wichita, led the nation in rebounding with 25 a game and was second in scoring with a 32.5 average.
This week college recruiters are getting a chance to see the best of the juco players in head-to-head competition. The National Junior College tournament is being played in Hutchinson this week and college coaches will be after that one player they need to go all the way next year.
KU appears to have the inside track on 6-7 forward Bob Nash of San Jacinto College in Pasadena, Texas. Nash averaged 22.8 points and 18 rebounds a game this year. He was also the fastest man on this high-ranking team that produced Halliburton and Taylor.
Burlington College, the Juco home of Iowa's Fred Brown, has another standout this year in Charlie Brakes, a 6-7 forward.
Brakes, although bothered by injuries this year, has been climbing back toward his 25-point average of a year ago. Jacksonville, Iowa, Minnesota and Texas at El Paso are all in the running for him.
Steve Davidson, a 6-8 forward for Christian College in Dallas, is also being heavily sought after by many universities. Davidson threw in 23 points and grabbed 20 rebounds per game this season.
Charlie Dudley is a standout for the perennially strong Moberly, Mo. team. The little guard averaged 24 points for the Greyhounds and led them into the National Tournament this year.
The Vinceennes Trailblazers from Indiana were top-ranked most of this year. They have a tall team with six players averaging in double figures but most college recruiters are looking at Oscar Evans, a guard who averages only 13.4 points a contest. Evans does not shoot much but is an outstanding ball-handler and defensive player.
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The image depicts a group of soldiers in a snowy forest. They are running away from the camera, with their weapons held out. The trees and shrubs are covered in snow, indicating a cold environment. The soldiers appear to be in motion, suggesting an active combat situation.
Army ROTC cadets during morning patrol
Four Army ROTC cadets are caught in action during their first field exercise of the semester. A total of 35 ROTC cadets participated in the drill which took place at Sunflower ammunition plant. The purpose of the drill was to prepare the cadets for a summer camp at Ft. Riley.
Army ROTC cadets in field drill action
About 35 members of Army ROTC at the University of Kansas participated in the first field exercise of the semester.
The exercise, which took place at the Sunflower amunition plant about 10 miles east of Lawrence, was held in conjunction with the leadership lab of Military Science 3, although no academic credit was given for it.
The purpose of the drill was to prepare the cadets for a summer ROTC camp at Ft. Riley by rotating as many cadets as possible through command positions.
The exercise was designed and organized by cadet Capt. John Anderson, DeSoto senior. The process involved spending several hours on several different occasions at the exercise area, making maps of the area and devising various missions for the cadets.
10 KANSAN Mar. 19
1970
The cadets had been divided into four squads and were ordered to proceed in four different directions on simulated reconnaissance patrols. Along the path of each of these patrols, senior members of Pershing Rifles, an honorary ROTC organization, had been stationed to act as aggressors.
Later that afternoon, the four squads were formed into two units for a new exercise with the cadets acting as hunters and the Pershing Rifles acting as the victims.
The cadets were graded on the way they set up their position and also critiqued on their procedure of taking prisoners such as disarming and searching them.
Drainage basin environment study site
The Yankee Tank Creek drainage basin west of Lawrence has become a giant laboratory for scientists and ecologists from the University of Kansas during the last two years. The area has become the site for intensive environmental studies prior to further development of the city of Lawrence.
Paul L. Hilman, who is a geologist with the Kansas Geological Survey and oversees the project, said the project would be aimed at taking a pre-development inventory of animals, vegetation, water conditions and geological structures. This data will be compared with data from later studies, to be conducted after urbanization of the basin has taken place, to detect any changes occurring in the environment.
The idea of using a large plot of land such as the Yankee Tank basin, he said, is to set up a natural laboratory so that all the information about environmental change can be used as data applicable to similar drainage basins throughout eastern Kansas. He said this would give researchers and construction planners usable developmental guidelines for the future urbanization.
Frank B. Cross, professor of sytems and ecology at KU and director of the State Biological Survey, has been carrying out ecological research studies in the Yankee Tank area as part of the overall project.
The information, Hilpman said, can be used by planners who have no previous knowledge of the environmental situation to determine means of protecting the balance of nature.
Cross said his work involved research in animal environment and animal populations. He obtains ecological information on selected different kinds of animals so that local conditions and the
requirements of the animals can be observed to see how they influence the environment.
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Cross said in a habitat where a number of species of animals lived, some of them began to change slightly with an environment change. Later, a larger, more noticeable, change occurs.
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Cross said the smaller, more subtle change was the more important to observe, since it could reveal the reason for the change.
By learning the reason for the subtle change, he said, a farmer, landowner or planner could channel development around it to prevent the animal from dying out or moving on to another location.
Working on another aspect of the environmental research at Yankee Tank is Roger L. Kaesler, associate professor of geology at KU.
Kaesler said his work involved studying small crustaceans, called ostracodes, present in farm pond water. He said by studying these semi-microscopic animals he hoped to be able to determine what changes in the chemical composition of the water have been made over a peroid of time.
Hilman said that through Kaesler's work the proper correction for cleaning up the water could be made.
In a third area of the study, Robert Hoffman, professor of systems and ecology, is working on studies of the small mammal population in the area.
Hoffman and his researchers use a sample area and catch animals in live traps, mark them, and then free them. Later, the animals are recaptured in kill-traps and an assessment of the numbers of the animals is taken.
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BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI)—Rightwing opponents brusquely deposed Cambodia's neutralist chief of state Prince Nordom Sihanouk Wednesday while he was away in Moscow. Sihanouk warned the move could result in war with North Vietnam and vowed to return, even if it meant his arrest.
The official Phnom Penh Radio announced the Cambodian National Assembly had ousted Sihanouk, 47, blaming him for the "political crisis" created by the presence of at least 40,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops on Cambodian soil.
Air travel and communications with the Cambodian capital had
Nine University of Kansas graduate students spend their time flying across the country to such places as South Bronx, N.Y. and a Hopi Indian reservation in Arizona. They are giving on the spot help to 12 elementary school districts involved in Head Start's Follow Through program.
Students aid schools in Head Start program
The program was set up two years ago when 30 agencies were invited by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to submit proposals on how to eliminate the problems and reinforce the gains made by Head Start children when they enter elementary school.
Twenty proposals for follow through work were made to representatives of 100 school districts in the nation. These representatives then selected the program for their district that they thought most effective. Twelve communities now have KU's proposal made by the staff from the KU
New York Senate pass abortion law
Albany, N.Y. (UPI)—The state senate voted Wednesday 31-26 to give New York State the most liberal abortion law in the nation.
The vote came after an emotional five-hour debate during which critics of the bill charged it would "legalize murder."
The measure repealing abortion restrictions now goes to the Assembly which narrowly defeated a less liberal proposal last year. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller has indicated he would sign repeal legislation.
Kansas ranks fourteenth in size among the states of the Union. It is approximately one third the size of Texas.
department of human development and family life.
Mar. 19 1970 KANSAN 11
Some of the students' work can be done on campus, such as critiquing the techniques used by the teachers in the video films, but much must be done personally. They spend time in their areas training teachers and teacher's aids, setting up materials used by the teachers, training parents to teach for several weeks each term, and working out problems that arise as they come up, either in school, or between the program and the community.
"The children are all taught as individuals," said Sallie Rule, La Junta, Colo., graduate student and adviser to a Philadelphia, Pa., district. "Each is allowed to progress at his own rate. This means that no two children ever move together and requires a great deal more attention and training on the part of the teacher."
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Wednesday's takeover came only two days after Viet Cong and North Vietnamese negotiators ignored a Cambodian government demand that their troops leave the country and demanded, instead, that Cambodia pay them reparations for damages done to their embassies by anti-Communist Cambodian mobs that sacked the premises during three days of riotous demonstrations.
In Washington the White House had no immediate comment on the situation in Cambodia. "We're watching the situation very closely and have no comment on it," White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said.
Observers said the Nixon administration presumably was adopting an extremely cautious attitude because of the possibility that Sihanouk might still return to power and because of the generally delicate nature of Cambodian politics.
"Parents are used as teachers because this gets them involved, but also they are authority figures who help to reinforce good learning habits early that will always remain with the children," she said.
This reinforcement of head start is stressed through the third grade so that children sustain the benefits gained in the program. The entire national program is being studied by the Stanford Research Institute to determine how well the program works for the children and which one seems to work best of all those tried.
The key figure behind the takeover was believed to be Gen. Lon Nol, Cambodian premier and armed forces commander, who has led the recent drive to get Hanoi and the Viet Cong to withdraw their troops from Cambodia
been cut off shortly before the announcement. A correspondent for the Japanese Kyodo news agency reported that tanks and troops were moved in Wednesday morning, apparently before the ouster, to guard important government buildings in Phnom Penh.
the general's apparent attempt to seize power.
The broadcast said Sihanouk was replaced provisionally by Cheng Heng, 50, a millionaire lawyer and national assembly speaker who had been acting as chief of state since the Cambodian leader went abroad.
Lon Nol had previously tried to shift the government to the right in 1967 while Sihanouk was abroad in France. But the prince quickly returned and effected a government shakeup that foiled
Ecology Action campaign to advertise public hearing
Ecology Action, a University of Kansas organization fighting pollution, over population and ignorance, is conducting a leaflet campaign Saturday in Kansas City and Northeast Johnson County to inform the public of a public hearing scheduled Tuesday concerning the fixing of ambient air quality standards for Leavenworth, Johnson and Wyandotte Counties.
Mark Shapiro, Prairie Village senior and one of the club organizers, said they have already enlisted the support of the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Kansas City Kansas Junior College, and the Shawnee Mission High Schools. He said they were seeking more KU support.
The Kansas Air Quality Conservation Commission will hold a public hearing at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas City Hall Auditorium, 805 North 6th. Opportunity to be heard will be afforded to all interested parties.
Written request for appearances will not be accepted later than Sunday and should be sent to H. G. Saiger, Executive Secretary, Kansas Air Quality Conservation Commission, State Office Building, Topeka, Kansas 66112.
Information concerning the regulation and hearing may be obtained by contacting the Executive Secretary at (913) 296-3896.
Shapiro said the area papers had not given the hearing sufficient coverage and very few know about the hearing. All persons interested in participating should contact the Ecology Action office at 843-7151 or Mark Shapiro at 842-5596.
News of the ouster reached Sihanouk as he was ending a four-day visit to Moscow during which he was reported to have urged the Soviets to use their influence in obtaining the withdrawal of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces from his kingdom.
Before flying to Peking Wednesday, Sihanouk said he had been told by Premier Alexei N. Kosygin that "war will be inevitable between Cambodia and Vietnam, if the extreme rightists continue to attack our allies."
Enrollment for spring increases
Official spring semester enrollment at KU is 18,064, an increase of 6.5 per cent over last spring's enrollment, William L Kelly, registrar, said Monday.
There are 16,638 students on the Lawrence campus, up 995 over a year ago, and 1,426, at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, a gain of 105.
There was a decline of only 4.9 per cent, or 937 students., from the fall of 19,001. A drop of 6 or 7 per cent is normal.
The new students total for the spring semester was 775,92 more than a year ago. Among them were 141 new freshmen, 154 new graduate students, and 479 transfers from junior and senior colleges.
EXCLUSIVELY ON Warner Brothers Records
IN PERSON
Peter, Paul and Mary
Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE APRIL 6 S.U.A.
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KIEF'S
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center
STOP
TAKE A MINUTE
THERE'S SOMETHING TO
SEE ON THE TERRACE
BEHIND SPENCER
Photo by Ron Bishop
Curiosity killed the cat...
For those students who cared to investigate this sign, located Wednesday between Strong and Blake Halls, another sign was to be found to the rear of Spencer Library. The second sign announced that spring would soon arrive and invited students to come back then. What then? Only the sign-maker knows for sure.
Garden stops by-passers students watch reactions
Colorful little bouquets of paper daisies brightened up the sidewalk from the Campanile to X zone parking lot Wednesday. Students and faculty members stopped at the instant garden to wonder at the hardiness of the plants which appeared to be growing despite the recent front of cold winds and drizzle. While the pedestrians were watching the flowers, two architecture students were watching the reaction to their class-project garden.
Dick D'Harlingue, Crestwood, Mo., freshman, and Dave Perrin, Wichita freshman, said they planted the flowers to add color to an otherwise drab and lifeless scene and watch the reaction to the sudden burst of life.
University Council: 108 Blake, 3:30 p.m.
Today
Official Bulletin
Dean opposes Carswell nomination
The dean of the KU Law School has signed a statement opposing the nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell as an associate justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
Lecture: "Subunits in Proteins:
Structure and Function." Dr. Howard K. Schachman, U. of Calif. at Berkeley, Dyale Auditorium, 4 p.m.
Blades said he signed the statement because "They must get people of the very highest quality for the Supreme Court without regard to political alignment,
The statement also said that Carswell does not have the legal qualifications essential for service on the Supreme Court or on any high court including the one he now sits.
Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door,
Robinson, Gymnasium; 4:30 p.m.
Senior Recital: Nancy Crawford,
savano. Swarthout Recital Hall, 8
srvm.
KU Synchro Club: Robinson Gymnastium Natatorium, 7-9 p.m.
In addition to Blades, faculty members Jonathan M. Landers. John F. Murphy and Arthur H. Travers signed the statement. Blades said faculty members Lawrence Velvel and Keith Meyer would also have signed the statement if it had been presented to them.
Lawrence Blades said Wednesday that his signature was among those of 350 lawyers who had signed the statement opposing Carswell.
"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie." University Theatre, 8:20 p.m.
The statement said the group concluded that "the nominee possesses a mental attitude which would deny to the black citizens of the United States, and to their lawyers, black or white, the privileges and immunities which the Constitution guarantees."
Foreign Students; Sign up now for
meeting next month. 226 Strong Hall;
meetings next month. 226 Strong Hall;
High School Art Day: Headquarters:
Strong Hall, all day.
Blades signs statement
12 KANSAN Mar. 19
1970
"Almost all the people stop to look and laugh. One lady even asked us whether she could pick one of the flowers to take home with her," Perrin said.
"We have been watching this place for some time and people usually come off those stairs and zoom down to their cars. We wanted them to stop and look and listen to the beauty of the nature of this place," Perrin said.
Perrin and D'Harlingue said the project was for their Architecture 20 class.
The men said they had tried several different sorts of arrangements of the flowers and planned to plant them on the slope of X zone drive so the arrangement spelled "Peace."
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Friday, March 20
20 attend first school
Lawrence's first school was organized in 1855 in the back office in the Emigrant Aid Building. It had a term of three and a half months. Twenty pupils attended.
liberal or conservative. I don't believe Carswell has any particular ability for the job. He is not, in my opinion, one of the shining lights of the judiciary and I think his record shows that,
"We need men on the Supreme Court who are above reproach ethically and morally and who have demonstrated soundness and achievement in the judicial system. We cannot afford anyone less than the highest type."
"Judge Carswell may be passable and minimally competent, but that is not the type of man we need for this job. Character and ability should be the keynotes and I just do not believe he measures up. I was glad to see Abe Fortas relieved of his court post, I was glad that Clement Haynsworth didn't make it and I was glad to see Homer Thornberry denied. Political cronyism should be forgotten and Carswell, in my opinion, is not the man for the job."
The
The Bierstube
SPRING BREAK
PARTY
FULL Pitchers $.90
Friday, March 20
SPRING BREAK HOURS Mon.-Thurs. 4-12 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 1-12 p.m.
The building is illuminated by artificial lighting. The floor is made of concrete, and the columns are made of steel. The windows are large and have glass panes. There are no people in the building at this time.
Who Could Be More Convenient Than us?
Nobody, that's who, because YOUR University State Bank is located close enough to campus that your financial needs will only take a minute to take care of. Our 3 convenient drive-in windows are ready to serve you quickly and efficiently the second you drive up, and as an added convenience, they're open until 6:00 p.m.every Friday.
YOUR University State Bank is here to serve you, the college student. We can give you the most reliable service in:
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YOUR COMMUNITY MINDED BANK
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THE COLLEGE WEEKLY
Accent on Easter
-featuring-
Peggy Hadl in Young Innocent by Arpeja.
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Price: $30.00
70% Rayon
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Election results-and said she plans to release a new album in the near future. She said she preferred not to reveal the material included in the album.
(Continued from page 1)
Following are the final tabulations in the Student Senate and class elections. Winners are denoted by asterisks.
Oliver College
Iver College
*Brad Smoot (Alliance), 269*
*Steve Emerson (Alliance), 234*
*Gary Jacobs (Alliance), 199*
*Frances Ferman (Alliance), 198*
*Gay Powers (Alliance), 180*
*Thomas Chester (Alliance), 164*
Bill O'Neill (ISP), 153
Jack Lutz (ISP), 137
Concert-and said she plans to release a new album in the near future. She said she preferred not to reveal the material included in the album.
(Continued from page 1)
Miss Collins said she often "launches into a state of mind which influences any composing or arranging she does. She has to make a special effort to provide an air of contrast. In a concert performance, she said she makes a point to tell many stories.
Miss Collins commented on the Chicago conspiracy trial which she described as very "far out." She said there were very "dead" persons present and some persons very much alive. With a cigar in hand, Miss Collins said she gained much from the experiences and friendships made with the varied personalities.
Miss Collins and her company of musicians came to KU from a Tuesday concert in Austin, Texas. The performers are doing eight concerts in a period of 10 days, she said. They will travel today to Columbus, Ohio.
Someday, she said, she plans to write an analysis of "what performing is all about." There is much to gain as a performer, she said, "much of which too many people have little knowledge."
She said she would emphasize in her writing the excitement, the good feeling and friends and experience gained through such a way of life.
Miss Collins said her future plans are to continue to give concerts with her group of musicians, to write, to appear in motion pictures and creatively in television, to continue work in peace movements and moratoriums and to "experience life with her young son."
14 KANSAN Mar. 19 1970
THE HILL in the WALL
DELICATESSEN &
SANDWICH SHOP
Same Time — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver- 9th & III.
Will You Remember to send a card from Acapulco, Lauderdale or Vail Easter Sunday March 29
Tom Gaylor (ISP), 137
Karen Kuchar (ISP), 135
Michael Moffet (ISP), 118
Marilyn Foreman (OC), 98
Julie Boll (ISP), 87
Sherlene E. Burns (Alliance),
Pearson College
TOWN CRIER
919 Massachusetts
open til 10 p.m.
64
Pearson College
*Steve V. Hix (ISP), 120
*John Gage (Alliance), 93
*Jim Leek (Alliance), 82
*Bob Markwell (Alliance), 81
*Margaret Shramek (Alliance),
81
Norma Decker (ISP), 80
Mike O'Neal (Alliance), 70
Scott Shaffner (Alliance), 68
Pat Williams (Alliance), 68
John Pederson (indp), 67
Michael Sundermeyer (indp),
62
Bob Belcher (ISP), 61
Michael Lewis (indp), 60
Peter Ruddick (indp), 54
Al Mannio (ISP), 53
James Sanders (indp), 51
Arthur R. Levin (ISP), 48
Rick McKelvey (ISP), 44
Centennial College
*Byron Saunders (Alliance), 121
*Tommy E. Johnson (Alliance),
125
Corbin College
121
*Sandra Johnson (ISP), 117
*John W. Mize (Alliance), 111
*Mohammed Amin (ISP), 108
Les Schwartz (Alliance), 104
Colette L. Colow (CC), 102
Shannon C. Stinson (CC), 101
Sherry Horn (ISP), 97
Marsha Hildreth (ISP), 93
Janet Corber (Alliance), 86
Pan Pyle (Alliance), 84
Bill Peterson (ISP), 79
Michael Lee Schwab (indp), 78
Kathi Vrentas (CC), 78
L Lewis Wall (indp), 73
*Karen Baucom (ISP), 172
*Lynne C. Piller (Alliance), 144
*Brunner (Alliance), 143
*Dave Boles (Alliance), 141
*Barbie Downer (Alliance), 134
Ann Reed (ISP), 132
Richard Lauter (ISP), 123
Ben Entine (ISP), 110
Ann Wallin (indp), 110
Melody Zody (indp), 108
Sheila Fairleigh (ISP), 106
North College
*Barbara Buckman (Alliance), 167
ance), 115
*Lewis R. Scott (Alliance), 106
Suzanne R. Kelly (ISP), 103
Sam Conyers (Alliance), 101
Jean Stevenson (ISP), 101
Robert "Tuck" Duncan (indp),
so
*Barbara Ball (Alliance), 131
*Paul Shellitio (Alliance), 120
*Stanley R. Plummer (Alli-
145
88 Jeff Dunn (ISP), 72 Becky Heldt (ISP), 69 Terry M. Lee (indp), 68 Nick Soukup (ISP), 61 John Martin Prohodo (indp),
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
*Dave Awbrey (indp), 406
*Frank Zilm (Alliance), 385
*Louise Ewing (Alliance), 345
*Laura Friesen (Alliance), 342
*Mark Biddle (Alliance), 338
*Randy Youlue (Alliance), 289
*Terrie Webb (Alliance), 285
*Harriet Hensley (Alliance),
*Koleley Pendergrass (Alli-
ence) 290.
ance), 280
*Russ Welsh (Alliance) 278
*John Friedman (Alliance), 263
*Tim Williams (ISP), 259
*John Regier (Alliance), 252
*George Laughead (ISP), 251
Allan Blumenthal (indp), 162
Dennis Bosley (ISP), 247
Ed Dolan (ISP), 211
Lyle Fisher (ISP), 248
Barry Albin (ISP), 209
Larry Ashim (indp), 144
Edward Aten (Alliance), 144
C. Peter Goplerud (indp), 174
Don Hunt (Alliance), 233
Kevin LaGree (Alliance), 249
Robert Logan (ISP), 235
Norma Mueller (ISP), 238
James Riscoe (Alliance), 243
Don Gerber (ISP), 208
Vicki Wilburn (ISP), 238
Larry Rosen (Alliance), 249
Linda Sheych (Alliance), 19th
Tim Smith (Alliance), 234
Linda Sterwalt (ISP), 227
Gary Waldron (ISP), 229
School of Engineering
*Rick Stucky (Alliance), 124*
*Pete Martin (Alliance), 124*
*Harold Burger (indp), 123*
*Jerry Hood (indp), 122*
*Leslie Lampe (Alliance), 120*
*Thomas Coulter (ISP), 120*
Earl Clark (indp), 111
Mike Miller (ISP), 105
William B. Herpin (ISP), 101
Michael Hawell (ISP), 92
Garth F. Burns (ISP), 82
Richard A. Hirsekorn (ISP), 73
School of Architecture
*Marlin Jones (Alliance), 39*
*Mike Haggans (Alliance), 35*
*Ronald D. Lyle (ISP), 27*
*Pete Martin (Alliance), 23*
*Roger Little (ISP), 22*
School of Journalism
*Vince Frye (Alliance), 39
*Joe Bullard (indp), 37
Tom Slaughter (indp), 33
Richard Louv (ISP), 29
Tom Gleason (ISP), 27
I
Hey Baby!! I Really Need the Heavy Sounds of the "Facts of Life"
Julie Smith (ISP), 26
BUR
YUK
Julie Smith (ISP), 26
William Clarkson (Alliance), 25
Mark A. Bernstein (indp), 7
School of Law
*John L. Vratil (ISP), 58*
*William H. Ward (indp), 50*
Melvin L. Jenkins (ISP), 38
Carolyn Ann Reed (indp), 27
School of Education
*Pam Varney (Alliance), 226
*Susie White (Alliance), 226
*John Wilpers (Alliance), 218
*M. J. Logan (Alliance), 215
*Cathy Bott (Alliance), 212
*Molly Laflin (Alliance), 203
*Mary Ann Medved (Alliance),
190
*Val Fladeland (Alliance), 188
*Peggie Morgan (Alliance), 180
Pam Kulp (ISP), 178
Anne Boydston (ISP), 169
Norma Paterson (Alliance), 150
William B. Kissel (ISP), 143
Tess Frey (ISP), 139
Gayle E. Trigg (ISP), 134
Avis H. Craig (ISP), 132
James R. Sbordone (ISP), 127
Leanne Gray (ISP), 124
Judy Visin (ISP), 118
Harry G. Gianakan (indn), 115
School of Social Welfare
*Jerrie Moors (ISP), 12
*Janes A. Wise (indp), 12
Marsha Dixon (indp), 10
Brian A. Lane (ISP), 6
School of Business
School of Business
*Craig Ewing (Alliance), 61*
*David Myers (BC), 58*
*John Schmid (Alliance), 57*
David K. Lane (indp), 52
Scott Smith (ISP), 51
L. B. Carpenter (BC), 51
Larry Carilie (ISP), 34
School of Fine Arts
School or Fine Arts
*Debby Quick (ISP), 147*
*Richard W. Averill (ISP), 123*
*Jack Humphreys (Alliance)
*Hali Pawl (ISP), 113
Nancy McAlroy (Alliance), 105
Pam Hovland (Alliance), 104
Debbie Ling (Alliance), 103
Janice Marie Jones (indp), 100
Lea Orth (ISP), 92
Sophomore class
President— *John Wulf, 548
Vice Pres.— *Jeff Stinson, 515
Secretary— *Stephen H. Dreamer, 509
Secretary— *Cindy Winn, 932
Treasurer— *Stephanie Peterson, 924
Junior class
President— *Michael Helbert, 490
Andrew Bakaty, 406
Vice Pres— *David Bacon, 408
Secretary— *Marsha Brin, 810
Treasurer— *Ann Ladewig, 802
Senior class
President— *James A. Nichols, 569
Randy Andrews, 482
Vice Pres.— *Steven Childs, 554
Ed Wood, 481
Secretary— *Kathy Bruning, 597
Vice Pres. Rich, 461
Treasurer— *Suzie Boccali, 571
Pat Riley, 487
Graduate School
*Surendra Bhana (ISP), 140
*Harriette Stallworth (ISP), 129
*Frederick Oettle (ISP), 125
*Joe VanZandt (ISP), 125
*Tom Wickstrom (Alliance), 125
*Robert Brown (ISP), 124
*John Whalen (ISP), 122
*Karen Wade Laub (ISP), 122
*Jack Casey (ISP), 122
*Leeoy McDermot (ISP), 119
*John V. Patterson (ISP), 117
*Gene Roberts (ISP), 117
*Daye Blahna (ISP), 117
*Faria V. Clark (ISP), 116
Ed Gauthier (ISP), 115
Robert Hubert (ISP), 115
Weather
Travelers warning in east portion—Cloudy and cold with snow today accumulating two to four inches extreme east. Occasional snow ending tonight. Diminishing cloudiness and continued cold Friday. North to northeast winds 10 to 20 mph today. High today 30s. Lows tonight 20s. Precipitation probabilities are 100 per cent east and 50 per cent west today, 40 per cent tonight and 10 per cent on Friday.
Do not press
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SHIRTMAKERS
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The fabric: Gant's own blend of fine cotton and polyester. Tailored with singular precision—patently Gant. Trim Hugger body. In blue, maize, white. $8.50
University Shop
1420 Crescent Dr.
On the Hill VI 3-4633
WANT ADS WORK WONDERS
Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the newspaper or on the internet are served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale!
Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed.
Campus, Campus Mid House, 411 W. 14th St.
1967 VW, light blue, radio. Must sell immediately, $1200. See at Ridgeview Court, 3020 Iowa. Lot G23 or call I- 2 6318 after p. 6 on m. 3-25
Bicycle-Schwinn Paramount Deluxe with sew up tires, tools, etc. Excellent condition. Make reasonable offer. Phone 843-3241 eve. 3-19
1969 Roadrunner Coupe--Save $1,100 on this beautiful year-old muscle car with pop-options like: 383 magnum, 335 m.p.; Torquefile; power disc winch; suspension and tape; Konis; F-70x14 Poliglass; and four more years of factory warranty. Ivy green with matching vinyl top, 13,000 miles, never raced or got buried in mud. Got married and need a smaller boss. 843-7747 or 2337 Murphy Dr. #4 (grey buildings cast of Holiday Inn) after 2 p.m.
Tire Sale—Tax time is here again, must raise some loot. F70x14, $22.03 F.E.T. $2.44; G70x14, $23.55 + F.E.T. $2.59; H70x14, $24.86 + F.E.T. $2.77; H70x14, $24.98 + F.E.T. $2.12 + F.E.T. $2.69; H70x17, $25.49 + F.E.T. $2.85. Above tires are premium quality. Glass belted, dual white, also sale on all other pre-market and first tire lines. 2 pair cheer ticks. Plain tires are fully guaranteed. Discount Tire Co., 906 N. 2nd, North Lawrence. 842-6099. 3-20
Motorcycle-Bass Amp. Triumph 650 bored to 700 ce. Sunn bass cabinet 1300 ce. Fender Bassman Amp. Best offer. Ted. 842-7000, room 813. 3-20
1967 Wesley Motorscooter and helmet,
$125. Runs perfectly. 843-4243. 4-1
1965 Triumph TR4, BR4. Stebro Exhaust, Pirelli tires. Lucas Lamps, luggage rack, excellent condition. Call Rick, 843-3237. 3-19
Standard MGB hardtop, black, excellent condition, cheap. Call UN 4-3100 before 5:00. Call 842-7939 after 5:00.
4-1
Scuba equipment—Snark II deluxe regulator, tank and "N" valve assembly, by Seamless. $25.00. Backpack free. Call 842-5644. 3-19
1968 VW Fastback. Must sell at wholesale price of $1425. First offer takes—no holds. B43-841-891 after six. 4-2
Research projects for class or per-
formances, work or question or sub-
for sale. 842-6140. 4-2
WV91-1866, beige, sunroof, AM-FM.
WW91-1866, immaculate, Call Sushi
at 843-7922. 3-19
1966 Chevelle SS 396. Only 26,000 miles! Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-2
Want to sell at once: 1965 Honda 305 Deluxe motorcycle. Completely re-engineered. Self-start. Dual chrome exhausts. $200. Dual-47977 or 842-1574. D4-2
"The Biggest Hamburger In Town"
"MOORE"BURGER
VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodorant
Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz. Retail price per
24-can case $16.54. Sell price per
case only $5.00. UN #4-4547. 4-2
1970 Corvette Coupe, 350 CID, 350 H.P., 4-speed, AC, postaction, tinted glass, AM-FM radio priced to sell. 843-7756. 4-2
Minolta, SRT101, F14. Leather case,
skylight灯 recharge, chargeable stroke.
3 through camera, strobe unused.
$235 owed, best cash offer $435.
after 6 p.m. 4-3
Artleyte flute—excellent condition—new
dition; 12% price. 842-6048
'67 Barracuda Formula "S" Call
8-4 4326 or 843-0435. 4-3
1967 Renault R-10. Best offer. Call 842-3647.
4-3
NOTICE
515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Que. If you want honestly to-see goodbar 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 tf
Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptad. VI 3-4032. 5-14
Audio Discount—Your A.R. Dynaco dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in theses and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tt
Pilots—Ooptocap Club flying is a cheap
grill. Hourly, 80 cents. Cessna 500
capsule with glass. Cessna 650 capsule
keer 180 $12.50; 2-seat sailplane $4.00.
Phone 842-1124 after 4. 6-
We've got Beatles the UDK ad in Tuesday's edition sold out our com- them all again and still at low sup prices at Tempo in the Malls. 3-19
Topsy's on the Mall has a special 2½ gallon containers of butter-rich caramel or tangy cinnamon corn. Regular $3.50, now 25% off at $2.62. 3-20
Skiers—two cabins in Monarch Pass,
Colorado. Supply your own transport-
able cabin at a reasonable rate. Spring break.
842-759, Cathy. 842-6916. 3-19
842-759, Cathy. 842-6916.
LA PETITE GALERIE—Who are you?
Come and find out. Dresses, separates,
yards, pantsuits, coats, swimmers,
men's clothes. 910 Kentucky. 848
0826.
Graduate Ticket ISP -Surendra Bhana,
Gene Roberts, Dave Blahna, Bob Brown,
Faria Clark, Jack Casey, Ed
Davis, Kyle Kramer, John Fettler,
Leroy McMermott, Drew Oettle, John
Patterson, Harriette Stallworth, Joe
Van Zandt, John Whalen. 3-19
AUTO
CLASS
INSTALLATION
Table Tops
AUTO GLASS Sudden Service
Camp Fire Girls, Inc., is interested in graduate nurses, twenty-one and over, to work at their summer camp. There are also counselling positions available for girls over twenty. Write Mrs. Rhoda Havlockel, 1014 Armstrong, Kansas City, Kansas 66102 for applications or call MAYfair 11302.
TYPING
Family needs student to help supervise activities of two school-age boys this summer. Home on beautiful lake in upper New York state. Must be energetic and competent. Room, board and $75 a month. Call 843-911. 4-3
Weekend work. We need students to work Saturday and Sunday. Shifts are 8-4, 4-12, 12-7:30. Apply in person. Kansas Color Press. 2201 Haskell. 4-1
Swimming Instructor for Girl Scout Camp. Unit Leaders, Counselors, Assistant Controlls Mrs. Owen Kershaw, 747 Manhattan Avenue, City Kansas 66101. 4-1
Part-time help wanted - waitress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person, Earl's Pizza Parlor, 729 Mass. 4-2
Experienced typist will type themes,
theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
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Pica. Competent. service. Mrs.
Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15
Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter, (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8
Experienced typists des manuscripts, theses, etc. Type style -picra or elite electric. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-7747 or 842-6562. 3-31
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Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. W434-3281, Mrs. Ruckman.
Position: Poverty is bad for graduate students and other minorities; Eliminate (1) Fixed salaries, (2) Bad housing, (3) Fee raises. 3-19
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Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. ff
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Need spring clothes? Come to a closet sale; sizes 3-7; Sat., March 21, 1-5 p.m.; 518 Frontier #10. (Across from Sunset Drive-In Theater) 3-19
Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assistance with necessary English corrections. English teacher, M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. 842-9249. 4-1
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Thesis Typing—10 years experience—Marlene Higley. After 5:00 at 843-6048. (8:00 to 5:00—842-0111). 4-3
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Wanted: Female figure to pose with exotic Italian sports cars for photographing. Pays well. Call 842-5752 evenings. 4-2
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Appeal-
(Continued from page 1) of the Student Court.
Miller originally asked in his appeal that the Student Court enjoin the counting of any ballots until the case could be heard by the court.
Hampton told Miller he had to have a ruling of the Election Committee on his appeal before any rejoiner action could be taken.
The Election Committee's ruling was that "We intend to count the ballots and then any action is up to you."
Miller and his counsel, Bob Montgomery, Topeka second year law student, went to Summerfield Hall and asked for a ruling from the Election Committee.
Hampton later informed the Election Committee that the election was now subject to the Student Court's decision on the Miller appeal.
Post Office strike hits
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The first strike in the 195-year history of the U.S. Post Office hit the Nixon Administration at a time when it is pressing hard for major reforms to modernize the antiquated mail delivery system—including collective bargaining for postal workers.
The White House said Wednesday President Nixon is "concerned" about the strike in the New York City metropolitan area and that Postmaster General Winton M. Blount had been "working around the clock" because of it.
16 KANSAN Mar. 19
1970
Photo by Greg Sorber
Election validity placed in limbo
(from left) Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and member of the Elections Committee tells Tim Miller, Wichita graduate student and Bob Montgomery, Topeka law student that the ballots will be counted, despite Miller's appeal to the Elections Committee that the elections be declared invalid.
Bills signed by Docking
TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking Wednesday signed a batch of legislative bills into law. Included was a bill raising the maximum interest rates on bonds.
Under the proposal, maximum interest rates on general obligation bonds issued by taxing subdivisions will be hiked from $5 \frac{1}{2}$ per cent to seven per cent. It also increases the maximum interest rate on revenue bonds and temporary notes issued from six to eight per cent.
Also signed into law was a bill
making it a crime to promote obscene material to minors. The new law increases the penalty for such a violation from a misdemeanor on the first offense to a felony on the third conviction within two years after a previous conviction.
Docking also signed a bill requested by doctors at the University of Kansas Medical Center. It outlines a legal definition of death as part of the state's law providing for organ transplants.
Another measure signed raises
the salary of the chairman of the Kansas Corporation Commission from $15,000 to $19,500 per year and the pay of the other two commissioners from $14,000 to $18,000 per year.
Also signed were bills which would:
- Make opening, damaging or removing coin-operated machines a misdemeanor.
- Raise the maximum limit on damages in a suit for wrongful death from $35,000 to $50,000.
Victory-
(Continued from page 1)
has done some really important things for this campus. They have really opened some eyes. Dave Miller and Dan Beck, I think, have represented a significant number of persons very well, and I don't think that that should be discounted."
Retonde attributed Alliance's margin of victory to the freshman and sophomore votes. "The party," he said, "got more freshman and sophomores involved with the hope that by the time they become juniors and seniors, they'll still be interested."
Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student and presidential candidate for ISP declined to make a statement.
David Miller, Eudora, junior, and the Independent Party's presidential candidate said, "The 4,200 turnout was bad; not nearly enough for us to be elected."
Miller said he blamed the political machinery of the other two parties and the poor turnout at the polls for their defeat. "Independents," he said, "with no machinery have no chance at all unless there is a turnout of at least 6-7,000 voters."
Cigarette bill passes House
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House gave all-but-final congressional approval Wednesday to a bill that would outlaw cigarette commercials on radio and television effective Jan. 2.
The bill, which also would require a tougher health warning on all cigarette packages, climaxes a legislative and regulatory fight dating back to 1965. That was when Congress barred government action against cigarette ads while requiring the first health warning on packs.
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Controllers face pay loss in walkout
Bv UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
The slowdown in commercial flight operations slowly spread Monday across the country, and the government warned absentee air traffic controllers they faced a double loss of pay for each day they stay off their jobs.
Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe said the walkout, six days old, "will not be allowed to go on indefinitely."
Volpe refused to say exactly how he planned to break the back of what the Federal Aviation Administration considers an illegal strike.
For the moment, at least, his strategy appeared to consist of holding a stick over controllers taking part in the walkout and offering a carrot to those remaining at work, in the form of cash bonuses in some cases as well as favored consideration for promotions.
In the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, where only one-fourth of regularly assigned controllers showed up Monday at the regional control center, the FAA sent about 60 letters of "proposed separation" giving ab-
sentees five days to present valid excuses for staying home before they lose their jobs. Volpe made no mention of firings at his Washington news conference.
He said the result of a contempt of court hearing Wednesday against officers of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) could determine what the government does next. PATCO has ignored a United States District Court restraining order against the walkout.
A Brooklyn federal court judge, acting on a petition by 13 airlines and the American Transportation Association, issued a temporary restraining order forbidding any more "sick calls."
Judge Orrin G. Judd acted after attorneys for the airlines claimed the sick calls were "done intentionally and without any justification in law."
Judd's order directed PATCO to show Friday at 10 a.m. why the injunction should not be made permanent.
Meanwhile, with the New York-Chicago corridor operating at half its normal traffic load under FAA
orders, the situation in the San Francisco Bay area worsened, requiring a 50 per cent reduction in departures and arrivals there.
The slowdown hit Milwaukee for the first time, when half the 10 controllers at the Mitchell Field tower failed to show up for the morning shift.
An Eastern Airlines DC-8 arrived in Philadelphia 18 hours and 35 minutes late from Miami. Its scheduled departure time was 1:55 p.m. Sunday but not until 8:30 a.m. Monday did it get airborne.
Eastern blamed the delay on the controllers walk-out and said the plane burned so much fuel waiting on the runway it had to return for refueling before it could take off.
There were continued flight delays and cancellations, but crowds at many airports were about normal, suggesting that would-be air travelers had decided to seek other ways of reaching their destinations. Good flying weather in much of the country helped ease the controllers and supervisors on the job.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
80th Year, No.103 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, March 31, 1970
Photo by Ron Bishop
Neurosurgeon named acting head at KUMC
FUERTE DE LA FILIA
Haworth comes down
Haworth Hall is being demolished. The razing began last Thursday and with it went another of KU's traditions. The building will be replaced by the proposed Wescoe Hall which has been in the planning for more than two years. Wescoe Hall will provide the much needed classroom space which Haworth was not able to provide.
Dr. George A. Wolf Jr., dean of the Kansas University School of Medicine and provost of the Medical Center in Kansas City, has resigned. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers announced the acting provost and dean would be Dr. Charles E. Brackett Jr.
Brackett, who will serve while the search committee looks for a new administrative head for the Medical Center, will take control of the Medical Center about April 21.
He is presently chief of the neurosurgery section and professor of surgery at the Medical Center. He joined the staff there in 1952 as an instructor in surgery. He has headed the neurological surgery section since 1964 and has been director of an inter-departmental program to study the relation of head injury to vital organ functions since 1967.
Brackett. 50, is a native of New England. He was born in Portsmouth, N.H., received an A.B. degree from Harvard and his M.D. degree from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1944.
Wolf, who has been the chief administrative officer of the Medical Center since September, 1966, has accepted an appointment as professor of internal medicine at the University of Vermont at Burlington.
UDK News Roundup
By United Press International
Suit to end demonstrations
ST. LOUIS—Four Washington University students, three of them in the ROTC program. Monday filed a $7.7 million damage suit to compel Chancellor Thomas Eliot to stop anti-ROTC demonstrations which plagued the campus last week.
The suit blames university officials for the continuing disruptions of ROTC classes, saying they had the power to stop them but failed to do so. Last Friday's classes were cancelled for all students after a night of violence, in which eight policemen and one student were injured and windows in campus buildings were broken.
Quake toll nears 2000
GEDIZ, Turkey—Thousands fled the smoldering rubble that was once Gediz, and pitched tents today in hills above the wreckage, rescue workers said, may hide enough corpses to raise the death toll in Saturday's earthquake to 2,000.
New postal wage offered
WASHINGTON—The Nixon administration has given the nation's postal unions an undisclosed written proposal, presumably a new wage offer, as attempts continued today to solve the grievances which triggered the country's first post office strike.
The proposal apparently resulted from a meeting Monday between President Nixon and Postmaster General Winton M. Blount. Blunt said Nixon was "very hopeful we can conclude the negotiations very soon . . progress has been made to settle the differences."
Students hijack plane
FUKUOKA, Japan (UPI)— Fifteen radical students armed with daggers Tuesday hijacked a Japan Air Lines jet and ordered the pilot to fly to North Korea after the plane had spent five hours in captivity on an airport thronged with riot police and spectators.
The Boeing 727 tri-jet left Fukuoka airport at 10:39 p.m. with 102 passengers, two of them Americans, and seven crewmen.
Minutes before the plane roared down the runway and climbed steeply into southern Japanese skies, the plane's captors allowed 29 passengers to disembark. They were women and children.
The hijackers demanded that the pilot fly them to Pungnyung, located northeast of Pyongyang, capital of North Korea. The flying distance is about 500 miles and the flight would take about
one hour at normal cruising speed.
The plane was on a 90-minute non-stop flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka, a major U.S. and Japanese air base on Japan's southern island of Kyushu. It originally carried 131 passengers and seven crewmen when it was hijacked, the first air piracy in Japanese history.
Two of the students belonging to the extremely radical Red Army told the pilot, Capt. Shinji Iishida, they would blow up the American-built aircraft if he refused to fly across the Sea of Japan to a military base in North Korea.
The students held the passengers and crew prisoner while the plane was refueled at Itazuke Air Base. The refueling was completed at 8:05 p.m. Two hours and 20 minutes later the plane took off.
Two passengers were identified as Americans. They were the Rev. Daniel S. McDonald, a Roman Catholic priest and Herbert Brill, an executive with the Pepsi Cola Company of Japan.
Father McDonald, 35, was working with the Japan Junior Chamber of Commerce in Tokyo.
In Seoul, military authorities announced that South Korean air force planes may try to intercept the hijacked plane if it flies over South Korean territory.
Hundreds of Japanese riot police armed with clubs, tear gas grenades and high pressure water cannons swarmed into the air base where the plane was standing.
But Ishida, biting his lip,
waved police and spectators away
from the red, white and blue air-
craft while ground crews refueled
it for a flight to Communist
North Korea.
Campus briefs
Abbie Hoffman to speak at KU
Abbie Hoffman, a member of the Chicago Seven, will speak April 8 at Hoch Auditorium under sponsorship of the Student Union Activities Minority Opinions Forum. The meeting is open to the public and Hoffman's speaking fee will be paid out of the Forum's budget.
KU-Y gift fair seeks student help
The 1970 KU-Y International Gift Fair will need ten foreign students and ten American students to participate in a series of five planning meetings in March and April, said Tom Moore, director of KU-Y.
The meetings will be from 6:30 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday evening. The dates are March 31 and April 7, 14, 21 and 28.
The purpose of the meetings will be to plan and organize the International Gift Fair of November, 1970, Moore said. The event will provide a gift service to the University of Kansas and Lawrence and to raise money for the support of KU-Y, he said.
Applications may be obtained now at the KU-Y office.
Engineering society to meet
The Society of Manufacturing Engineers will hold its regular monthly meeting Wednesday in 308 Fowler Hall. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m.
A representative from Western Electric Company, Fritz Brosseit, will speak on the topic, "Inforced Ceramics Tooling for Industry."
IFC election results announced
Election of officers for the Interfraternity Council were held March 19 in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union. Officers were elected in a special meeting of presidents and IFC representatives from each fraternity.
Officers for the coming year include president, Dave Andersen, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Wichita junior; George Clemoes, vice-president of fraternity affairs, Alpha Phi Alpha, Kansas City sophomore; Rich Dwyer, vice-president of rush, Phi Delta Theta, Joplin, Mo. sophomore; Dave Beeler, secretary, Sigma Chi, Beloit sophomore; and Pat Williams, Delta Tau Delta, Wichita sophomore.
Travel ID cards available
Students who have ordered international student identity cards may obtain them at the SUA office, said Irv Robinson, Prairie Village junior and SUA travel forum board member.
Two hundred and one identity cards were ordered by students at earlier travel forum meetings, Robinson said. The identity card enables a student to receive reduced rates at European hotels, theaters, car rentals, restaurants and inter-European charter flights.
Approximately 130 persons have signed up for the 1970 SUA group flight to Europe, Robinson said. The flight departes June 10 from New York.
2 KANSAN
Mar.31 1970
York to Paris and returns Aug.
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Full payment of $249 is due on or before April 24.
KU council sets policy for Senate
The University of Kansas University Senate has been unable to adopt a policy statement on organizational membership in three frustrating sessions.
The University Council at their last meeting, deciding in behalf of the Senate, adopted a policy which permits efforts to overcome the results of past discrimination, a statement of principle banning discrimination on the basis of sex, and adopted rules and regulations of the Senate.
The council adopted the matters under a provision of the Senate code which empowers it to act in behalf of the University Senate.
The council voted on a recommendation to be given to the Senate suggesting that it change its quorum requirement. The present quorum requirement calls for a quorum both of the Student Senate and of the Faculty Council. The change would make a quorum 20 per cent of the members of the University Senate.
Millard Fillmore was the first president to have a step-mother.
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Regents delay Velvel's promotion
On March 20, the Kansas Board of Regents deleted the names of two University of Kansas instructors from a list of 113 faculty members recommended for promotions by E. Laurence Chalmers, KU Chancellor.
The names of the two instructors, Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama, were dropped because of their controversial activities at KU.
Velvet's name was deleted from the list because of his speech Feb. 17 on the steps of Green Hall to a group demonstrating against the trial of the Chicago Seven.
State Sen, Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, said a faculty member's position should be to squeelch protests rather than promote them.
Litto's name was deleted from
Folk group to perform in KU concert
Peter, Paul, and Mary, a well known folk trio who have recorded five Gold Record winning albums, will perform at the K.U. Relays concert on April 18 in Hoch Auditorium.
Block tickets will be available at $3.50, $4.00, and $4.50 each. No block order for less than 20 tickets will be accepted in any price division.
The block ticket drawing will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, by which time all block ticket request forms should be brought to the SUA office in the Kansas Union. Payment must be made in full at this time. No block ticket requests will be accepted after Thursday night, nor will any requests be subject to alteration. The drawing will consist of each group drawing a number which will determine the order in which the tickets will be allocated, the lowest numbers being assigned the better seats.
Tickets will be delivered Monday, April 6.
Regents to consider space plan
A plan to consider using Educational Building Fund (EBF) receipts for student fees as a temporary solution to space needs at the state's colleges and universities was sent to committee by the Kansas Board of Regents.
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., speaking for the Council of Presidents, asked the Board of Regents Friday to consider using EBF receipts so that an equal amount of fees can be used to guarantee revenue bonds for building projects.
The Regents would have to seek legislation to permit EBF money to be used for such a purpose.
The Regents' legislative committee will also consider a proposed policy that would permit faculty members to seek political office if these offices involved no conflict of interest or time. The proposed policy was drafted by Paul Wilson, KU professor of law.
The Board referred a new retirement policy affecting employees of student unions, athletic corporations and other groups associated with the colleges and universities to the athletic committee.
A computer study committee report was referred to the academic committee.
Mar. 31
1970 KANSAN 3
the list for his part in producing a film which was to be shown behind the Iron Curtain. The film, titled "Kaleidoscope, An American Dream" was criticized by Congress as showing poor taste for a film to be sent abroad. Congressmen have canceled the funds previously allotted for the production.
When Chalmers presented the list of promotions to the Board of Regents for approval, two Regents, Henry Bubb and Paul Wunsch, were opposed to approving Velvel and Litto. Chalmers then proposed to delay action on the two until additional information concerning their qualifications could be obtained.
Max Bickford, chairman of the Board of Regents, said Monday that the information had not yet been received from Chalmers. Bickford emphasized that the promotions of Velvel and Litto have been postponed and not denied.
"A final decision will not be made until we receive additional information from the Chancellor." he said.
In response to the Board of Regents action, five KU professors have circulated a petition among faculty members to gauge the support behind Velvel and Litto. The petition contains a statement pertaining to the Board of Regents' infringement on academic freedom and allows faculty members to express their support or disapproval.
Another petition in support of Velvel and Litto containing the names of 200 KU law students was presented to Sen. Shultz by Tom Ashton, Lawrence second-year law student.
Ashton said there could be many serious consequences if Velvel and Litto are denied promotions but the most serious would be censorship by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP).
Commenting on AAUP censorship, Richard Cole, KU professor of philosophy, said it would mean "an erosion of quality."
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KANSAN COMMENT
A new paddle
Remember the slogan, "Bring the war home"?
Slogans die fast, it seems. People may keep using them for awhile, but the period in which a slogan possesses true power is very brief.
This one didn't last as long as most. Probably because most of the people who went around shouting it didn't really want to bring the war home. At any rate, most of them weren't prepared to exert any effort toward converting this rhetoric into reality.
That slogan, like many of the others used in the anti-war movement, was really a kind of threat. (Weren't many of the marchers themselves actually threats—some subtle, but others very blatant?) It was a means by which we could make society listen to what we had to say. "Stop doing bad things across the street or we're going to do our damnest to give you a spanking here at home."
But America didn't listen to us and it didn't get a spanking either. And so we said, "Well we've tried, but they called our bluff and we've only got two choices left—get the hell out or play the game their way."
Sometimes we try to keep America from knowing that we've made this decision. But America knows. We might still march and shout our slogans, but it's only camouflage for our retreat and America knows.
But as with all movements, this one has members who refuse to take a step backwards. There were a few who weren't bluffing when they shouted that slogan. The newspapers call them extremists, fanatics, or crazies. But they are such a small minority that they haven't caused much alarm—until recently.
The crazies have a new paddle which they're using to teach America the difference between right and wrong. Their paddle is the bomb and it's beginning to throw fear into much of America. New York City, with several actual bombings and 200 daily bomb scares, is becoming particularly edgy.
Worried congressmen have already introduced bills designed to control the distribution of explosives. So far the victims of the bombings have been the revolutionaries themselves, but the unlimited potential violence of the bomb is frightening.
In America, the bomb is not a new political weapon. On May 1, 1919, 36 packages addressed to government and business leaders were intercepted by post office officials. The packages contained bombs—the 36 men had been marked for death.
This incident occurred when the Wobblies and Socialists were fighting for their political lives in America. It was the crushing blow. America reacted hysterically—every radical was seen as a potential bomber. Opposition to the conservative trend of American government was virtually eliminated.
If the current bombings continue to spread, a frightened America may force a showdown with the entire radical movement.
ii such a confrontation takes place, the 1970's could become as safe as a fortress for politicians like Nixon and Agnew—just like the 1920's became safe for men like Coolidge and Hoover.
So the crazies are forcing us to make a decision. We can either drop all pretense of protest and make our retreat complete—because we'll have to if America reacts as hysterically as it did to the bombings in 1920—or we can start gathering powder and blasting caps.
This may seem overly dramatic, but the radical movement in America is under such a severe strain that something dramatic is bound to happen.
The Panthers are facing annihilation and members of Weatherman have been forced into hiding by the police.
Are these people revolutionaries in the tradition of Samuel Adams and Thomas Paine, or are they fanatics? Should we join them or denounce them?
Can we justify bombing at home in order to stop the more violent bombings in Vietnam? The fate of the revolution is balancing on our decision.
Will these bombings be the end or will they be the beginning?
—Joe Naas
Number games
From the Colorado Daily, University of Colorado
That decennial statisticians' delight, the U.S. Census, is nearly upon us. The 1970 census will be a great deal different than the country's first in 1790.
The U.S. Constitution provides that "enumeration" of the population "be made within three years after the first meeting of the Congress of the United States and within every subsequent term of ten years."
The purpose of this was to determine how many representatives each Congressional district would be allotted in the House of Representatives.
Not until 1850 did the census ask the name of every inhabitant of the country.
Now every person the census takers can get ahold of will be asked: name, relation to head of household, sex, color or race, date of birth and marital status.
One person in five will also be asked his occupation, education, previous residences, national origin and military service.
Beyond that, one in 20 people will also be asked to answer questions the Census Bureau states will help the government figure out the nation's housing problems.
That's a long way from counting heads so that we can figure out the placement of Congressional representatives.
This is a world that is becoming increasingly impersonal and increasingly crowded with governing bureaucracies that the average person must both answer to and depend upon.
In an age of wiretaps and hidden cameras, people are finding it more and more difficult to maintain any modicum of privacy.
The census Bureau maintains that all information it collects remains "confidential." No organization, governmental or private, can have access to the personal files in the census offices.
It's not as if the people of this nation have been lied to before by their government—we just wonder about the veracity of the bureau's statements.
The military says it now has destroyed the data bank it admitted it was keeping on "subversive" people—like NAACP members.
Several times in recent years Congressmen have tried to establish a center of "vital statistics" for every man, woman and child in this country.
In a mechanized, systematized, bureaucratized and categorized society such as we live in, people don't have much hope of keeping to themselves, unmolested by big business and big government.
Supposedly this nation is a government of the people, by the people and for the people. Yet, time and again we see and feel the effects of a government more concerned about its own orderly perpetuation than the needs of its people.
Knowledge brings power; and power, control.
Why should people in this "free country" be required to divulge to government information they may be reluctant to tell their next door neighbors or best friends?
We see little reason why people should cooperate with the census.
hearing voices—
The handicapped and their minority
To the editor:
Having stood by (more accurately, sat by) and watched the controversy between BSU and the administration over the past year, and now the left-handed students' parody, I feel compelled at last by Mike Shearer's recent editorial ("A Cheap Analogy," March 10) to add a new dimension to the problem of discrimination.
Mr. Shearer stated, "If there are any persons left in America who actually believe that the plight of the American black is in any way parallel to the plight of other 'minority' groups, they had better take a step backward and look again." I have "taken a step backward" and "looked again" and feel certain that the plight of another "minority group" (using Mr. Shearer's definition—"The terms 'minority' and 'majority' refer to a power relation between the groups within a particular society, and a minority is weaker and hence suffers some kinds of disabilities at the hands of the stronger group. Second, a minority is to be distinguished from other depressed groups within a society, because the disabilities under which they suffer are related to special characteristics which the minority shares and of which the majority disapproves in some degree,") is quite as serious as the plight of the blacks—the plight of the disabled individual. Having been a member of this minority group for twenty years (I've been in a wheelchair since age six). I feel qualified to call to anyone's attention the widespread discrim-
ination, both conscious and unconscious, that a disabled person must endure.
Imagine, if you will, parking in the lot behind Frazer Hall and discovering you can't get onto the sidewalk to go to the Library because of a curb. If you are lucky enough to get up the curb, you discover you can't get into the library because of a flight of steps. (If you go between 8:00 and 5:00, you are fortunate in having an accessible basement entrance, but this is an exception to the rule in the case of public buildings.) If you are lucky enough to get into the Library, you discover you can't reach the top shelves in the stacks or the top drawers in the card catalogue, and you can't get a drink from the water fountain or even use the
restroom because of the narrow stalls. The situation is the same in nearly every building (Particularly irritating is the new Woodruff Auditorium with two unnecessary steps at its entrance), and just as restrictive in the community at large.
While you are adjusting to this physical discrimination (never getting thirsty and developing a strong bladder), you discover that you can't enroll in a course necessary for your PhD, because it meets on the third floor of Marvin Hall and can't be relocated. You also discover you are subject to the same ego-shattering discrimination that blacks endure when applying for a job. If there is anyone an employer is less likely to want on his payroll than a black, it is a handicapped person, no matter how qualified he is for the particular job.
There are places, such as the University of Illinois in Urbana, Illinois, where all physical barriers are removed, and the disabled student is able to participate as fully as his handicap permits in all activities and courses. He can get into all buildings thanks to ramps or flat main entrances and can move freely around the community due to melted curbs at street corners. But such universities and such towns are few and take years of crusading to develop. Reality and the "majority" dictates that the disabled individual will be subject to physical and mental humiliation and discrimination long after the blacks have solved their problems.
I comment here, not to arouse sympathy or pity (God knows, this is the subtleest and worst form of discrimination any handicapped person puts up with!), but merely to open people's eyes (including Mr. Shearer's) to some very basic and far-reaching discrimination that another minority of the Silent Majority is faced with,
S.C. & ED CREATED BY © 1970 ED OAKLEY S.C. WILSON
EDDIE,
WHERE IS
YOUR WEIRD
BROTHER?
Thank you
EDDIE. WHERE IS YOUR WEIRD BROTHER?
SPOOKY CHARLEY IS OVER THERE STONED.
WHAT WERE YOU LOOKING FOR ON THE GROUND?
I WAS SEARCHING FOR MY IDENTITY!
Cheryl Grosser Assistant Instructor in English
WHAT WERE YOU LOOKING FOR ON THE GROUND? I WAS SEARCHING FOR MY IDENTITY! Baldley & Wallace
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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
FESTIVAL: 'Kinetic Art I'
By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor
The first offering of this year's Festival of the Arts was probably a disappointment for some. The scheduled speaker, film director Martin Ritt, had been kept in Hollywood by his studio, and in his place was shown "Kinetic Art I" a program of eleven short films from all over the world. But despite the initial letdown, and despite the small 16mm screen and poor sound reproduction, the selections proved highly entertaining and offered a vivid look at the state of world cinema.
When one is offered the term "experimental film," one is reminded of the countless inane, immature efforts by the American underground. But the films shown last night in Hoch Auditorium, though a few were mediocre, displayed imagination and thought, as well as the less important experiment-for-its-owned-sake.
They were also of incredible variety: animated, abstract, dramatic, lyrical, comic; from France, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Japan, Germany, Italy and the U.S. The best on the bill were 1) "A Life in a Tin," a delightful Italian cartoon about the life and death of a machine-age man; 2) "Sophie et les Gammes," the story of a little girl at her piano lesson, using the technique of live animation and recalling the spirit of the silent comedies; 3) a little black comedy from Czechoslovakia, using antique toys and puppets; and 4) "An Apple," a poetic French piece about an artist's celebration of the ordinary things of life.
"Phenomena," a feast of moving color by the American Jordan Belson was also memorable as was a powerful Hungarian work about a small boy and the horrors of war, but the remainder of the program fell below the expectations that the other films exceeded.
Most movie programs of this kind are erratic and poorly constructed, but those who put together "Kinetic Art" (a three-part show of which this is the first segment) can be admired for the perception of their choices. This was a last minute substitute that deserved primary consideration.
Kyogen shown in three plays
By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer
Kyogen, the formal comic theater of Japan, will unfold at 8:20 p.m. Thurs. on the KU Experimental Theater stage and run through April 11. Three plays, one of which will be presented in Japanese, have been selected by director Andrew Tsubaki, visiting professor of speech and drama, to represent the style of Kyogen.
Kyogen, according to Tsubaki, dates back to the 14th century. The plays have been used traditionally as comic relief, and are presented in conjunction with the serious and stylized Noh plays.
"Although it is formalized, Kyogen is humorous and down-to-earth," said Tsubaki. "Usually one Kyogen play is presented between two Noh plays."
Authentic costumes have been ordered from Tokyo for the performances. They are the same costumes used in Japanese presentations.
Tsubaki said Kyogen follows set patterns of structure and plot. They relate to American TV situation comedies, and Tsubaki said he believed they would be meaningful to Westerners.
"It's a typical way of letting off steam," he said.
The first two plays will be in English. "Busu" tells the story of two servants, one clever and one stupid, and how they deal with their rich master after angering him by disobeying his orders.
"Dondaro" is a tale of a husband with a mistress, who tries to secure love from each.
LOOK, DON'T TOUCH
PETERBOROUGH, England (UPI)—When a labor union complained that a local firm sometimes ordered women employees to strip to make sure they weren't stealing, company manager Tommy Thomas said, "Some of our women employees have been known to tuck goods under their girdles and slips. Our security officers have strict instructions not to touch the flesh."
Mar. 31
1970 KANSAN 5
"Kamabara," which will be presented in Japanese, is the story of a farmer who plans to commit suicide with a sickle, and the problems he encounters while trying to kill himself.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, one of America's foremost living poets will perform as part of the annual SUA Festival of the Arts, at 8 p.m. March 31 in Hoch Auditorium.
Ferlinghetti's second book of poems, "A Coney Island of the Mind," is now going into its 16th printing with a quarter million copies in print. A novel, "Her," was published in 1960 and is now in its seventh printing.
Festival previews—Ferlinghetti
He has written poetry books such as "Starting from San Francisco." "Routines," and "Unfair Arguments with Existence." Other Ferlinghetti books include "After the Cries of the Birds," "Moscow in the Wilderness," "Segovia in the Snow," and "Pictures of the Gone World."
Born in Yonkers, N.Y., in 1919, Ferlinghetti received an A.B. degree from the University of North Carolina and a M.A. degree from Columbia University. Following Navy service in World War II, he emptied wastebaskets at Time magazine after which he lived in Paris from 1947-61 where he received a Doctorat de l'Universite from the Sorbonne.
When Feringhetti returned to the United States, he settled in San Francisco where he and Peter D. Martine founded City Lights, the first all paper-bound bookstore in the country.
While in San Francisco, Ferlinghetti began publishing the Pocket Poet Series, which included work by William Carlos Williams, Kenneth Rexroth, Allen Ginsburg, Kenneth Patchen, and many other young writers who he "discovered."
On campus this week
Tuesday
LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI (Festival of the Arts)-Reading by one of America's foremost poets.
SENIOR RECITAL — Suzanne Jouvenat, soprano in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Wednesday
NEW YORK ROCK AND ROLL ENSEMBLE (Festival of the Arts)—A highly unique musical group, combining the traditions of pop, classical and rock.
"THE CRAZY QUILT" (Classical Film) - A modest, lyrical little movie about an unlikely marriage. Made in 1966 by John Korty
FESTIVAL OF ORIENTAL
THEATRE (University Theatre)
An evening of Korean theatre, poetry and dance presented by Won-Kung Cho.
FINE ARTS HONOR RECITAL.
Swarthout Recital Hall.
Thursday
BARBARA ROSE (Festival of the Arts)—A leading American art critic talks on "The Uses of Modern Art."
"D A V I D COPERFIELD"
(SUA Special Films)—The American version, directed by George Cukor in 1934, gives us W. C.
Fields in his classical portrayal of Micawber.
FESTIVAL OF ORIENTAL THEATRE (Experimental Theatre)—"Kyogen: Comic Theatre of Japan."
STRUCK GOLD
NEVADA CITY, Calif. (UPI)— One October day in 1850, George McKnight was chasing his cow across a pasture in Nevada County when his foot struck an outcropping of rock that broke off quite easily. He stopped to examine the rock and found it was quartz that was shot through with gold.
From the very spot where the rock broke off came $1.5 million in gold and from just 150 feet away came another $4 million in gold.
Today a granite shaft topped with a large piece of gold quartz marks the spot.
Ferlinghetti has given poetry readings in this country and abroad including the Spoleta Festival, Berlin Literary Colloquain, and the historic poetry evening at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
His plays have been widely produced in college theaters and he has written film scripts for avant-garde production.
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Bonner Springs QB passes up Alabama
Jayhawks sign Jaynes to Big Eight letter
BETWEEN THE GUYS
The big one that almost got away ...
David Jaynes, standout quarterback for Bonner Springs high school, talks with KU coach Pepper Rodgers after announcing his decision to attend KU next year. The widely-sought aerial artist had signed a Southeastern Conference letter of intent, but, swayed by new Kansas facilities, he decided last weekend to pick KU. Jaynes said the nearness to his home of KU and the plush Jayhawk Towers meant more than following his idol's, Joe Namath, steps to Alabama.
KU's football recruiting program received a gaint boost Monday when the Jayhawks announced the signing of David Jaynes, a widely-sought, 6-1, 190-pound quarterback from Bonner Springs high school.
Did Namath ever personally contact Jaynes on Alabama's behalf?
Jaynes, who signed a Southeastern Conference letter of intent five weeks ago with Alabama, said Monday he will instead accept a scholarship at KU and assured coach Pepper Rodgers he will make the Jayhawks his final choice when the May 6 national signing date arrives.
"He's the finest quarterback we've recruited since I've been at Kansas," said Rodgers, who confessed he had all but given up on the Bonner Springs athlete. "We had time in our favor, and a lot of people helping."
"No, he never did. Maybe he should have."
In explaining the switch Jaynes indicated he decided he would rather play closer to home and that he felt KU football was on the upswing.
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"I've had a long time to think about this and weigh my earlier decision," he said. "After making the choice I began to wonder if I was right."
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"The people in Bonner Springs, all my friends and the kids I went to school with were disappointed because they had hopes of seeing me play in college."
"Also, Kansas University, with coach Rodgers and with their new facilities—the Jayhawk Towers and the new artificial turf on the field—is going to have a great future," he said. "They can't miss and I want to be a part of it and remain a loyal Kansan."
Rodgers was obviously pleased with Jaynes's signing when he said, "David's signing makes our recruiting program a success. I
Indiana won its third straight title with ease, USC was second, Stanford third, UCLA fourth and Cal State at Long Beach was fifth.
Oklahoma was the only other Big Eight team to score. Larry Peters won the consolation 100-yard butterfly to give the Sooners seven points.
Reamon said the trip was beneficial, especially to their returning underclassmen who went.
6 KANSAN Mar. 31 1970
"We're somewhat disappointed," Coach Dick Reason said, "but at least we were represented." Seven Jayhawks had qualified for the NCAA championships and the trip to Salt Lake City.
KU, Big Eight swimming champions, managed only seven points in national competition in Salt Lake City last weekend — but that was more than KU had ever scored in the national meet.
Some of Reamon's and the team's disappointment came in the 400 freestyle relay. He had hoped they could score. "We had one bad leg and you need only one bad one in that competition and you're out of it," he said.
Kim Bolton, Overland Park junior and a standout in the Big Eight meet, picked up all seven of Kansas' points when he won the consolation heat for seventh place.
The progress for KU swimmers in national competition has been slow. Three years ago, Kansas failed to score in the meet. Last year, however, they picked up four points. Of the 79 teams in the meet this year KU was 25th. Only 28 teams scored in the meet.
Bolton scores points in NCAA swim meet
expect David to have a great career with us."
Jayhawk assistant Terry Donahue was the first to become aware of Jaynes's intentions. While giving Jaynes and some Bonner Springs friends a tour of Jayhawk Towers Saturday night the prize prospect abruptly announced that he thought KU was a great school and that he was going to play football here and not at Alabama.
Jaynes, who quarterbacked Bonner Springs into the Class
3-A state finals last fall before losing, 21-14, to Wellington, said his earlier signing was prompted by an "ambition ever since I've been serious about football" of playing at Alabama.
"I remember the first football game I ever saw on television was when my brother said, 'Hey, come in here and look at this guy with the hobbly knees.'"
"Of course, it was Joe Namath," Jaynes said. "He was always my idol."
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Weede named college division referee for Relays
Dr. Garfield W. Weede, legendary former track coach and athletic director at Pittsburg State, today was named college division referee of the 45th Kansas Relays April 16-18.
Affectionately known as "Doc" to hundreds of athletes who competed for him and to countless friends in the collegiate sports world, Weede will be 90 years old
next fall (November 26).
This will be the second Kansas Relays officiating assignment for Weede, who was meet referee in 1950.
closely followed the fortunes of the school with which he is so much identified.
Weede retired as the Gorillas' track coach in 1951 to wind up a 32-year career at the southeast Kansas college that began in 1919. Since then he's continued to make his home in Pittsburg and has
Since retirement Doc has returned frequently to the Kansas Relays where his teams won 22 baton titles and seven individual events.
Weede's Pittsburgh squads won numerous championships, but the one he prized the most came in the early 1930's when the Gorillas bagged the team title at the Central Collegiate in Milwaukee. Weede's team was extended an invitation by the host Marquette coach, who shrewdly figured his
squad might win the meet, if he could find a way to keep Notre Dame from winning the mile relay.
Pittsburg beat Notre Dame in the relay, alright, but Doc's charges also won several other events and wound up with the team championship.
Weede graduated from Sterling College in 1901 and went on to Pennsylvania to earn a degree in dentistry in 1906. Eligibility rules being what they were in those days, Weede continued playing football at Penn and was chosen
at end on Walter Camp's 1004 All-
America team.
Doc never practiced dentistry. He began coaching at Washburn in 1906. Three years later he switched to Sterling and coached there until 1917.
BULLETIN
The doubleheader baseball game between KU and Emporia scheduled for today at Quigley Field has been postponed indefinitely.
Jaycats advance to AAU semifinals
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI)—Former University of Kansas star Rodger Bohnsteih's torrid shooting led the Lawrence Jaycats, a team comprised of ex-KU and K-State cagers, to a 122-92 romp over Burger Chef of Indianapolis, Ind. in the National AAU basketball championships Monday.
Bohnenstehl scored 34 points while hitting on 16 of 19 shots from the floor in the quarterfinal contest. It was the second straight day in the AAU tourney that he scored more than 20 points. He tallied 20 Sunday afternoon to guide the Jaycats to a 93-72 thrashing of the San Diego Jets in their tournament opener.
Jamie Thompson, a former Wichita State standout, tossed in 22 points and picked off 16 rebounds for the Jaycats.
Burger Chef was led by Ed Schilling, who hit for 25 points.
Lawrence streaked to a 55-42 half time lead and continued the second half blistering to down the
Burger Chef club that pulled a surprising upset over the Akron Goodyear Wingfoots in the opening round.
Lawrence's victory assured them of at least a fourth place finish and advanced into the semifinals of the AAU tournament.
Mar. 31
1970 KANSAN 7
Hawks split doubleheader
KU exploded for six hits in the fifth inning to down College of Emporia, 7-2, Monday in the first game of a doubleheader, but the Emporians rebounded to take a 7-3 decision over the Hawks in the second contest.
The Jayhawks, off to their best start in recent years, rode the pitchings of Corky Ullom, and first baseman Skip James' home run to chalk up their fifth win in six starts in the opening encounter. The second game was cut to five innings because of cold weather.
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I can't see it, but I know I hear a train
A surprised KU student walking down Jayhawk Boulevard tries to figure out if a train is really going to run him down or not. The sign was put up with accompanying sound effects March 20 in front of Flint Hall and left many students wondering and admiring the prank.
UCCF, Wesley to merge
Efforts to merge two University of Kansas campus ministries, The Wesley Foundation and the United Campus Christian Fellowship, are being made. Plan completions should be final by May.
Raphael Sanchez, staff member and adviser of United Campus Christian Fellowship (UCCF), said the idea is a follow-up from a state and nationwide plan to combine churches on the state level. He said many other college campuses have already done this. KU, he said, is one of the last universities to complete the merge.
Denominations that participate
Sanchez said the purpose of the merge is to get a more effective unity from Christianity. He said the merge is not merely designed to re-emphasize the common beliefs held by all Christian denominations. The merge, he said, will look for more meaningful things on a personal relationship basis.
Sanchez said that with such a merge three main goals would be accomplished. He said students would be less confused about denominations, the church could be a better help to the community and important issues would have the total support of the ministry, and there would be complete involvement from the church.
Students included in census
The 1970 census will be taken Wednesday for students at the University of Kansas, Haskell Institute and Baker University. The students will be counted where they attend school instead of at their home addresses.
Students living in dormitories and fraternity and sorority houses will be counted by special enumerator teams, while those students living off-campus, in private homes or apartments will be counted by mailing forms sent to all addresses in Douglas County.
If any address has not yet received a form those persons should call collect to the Census Information offices at (816) 374-3681 or 374-3682.
All students are requested to mail in their completed census form Wednesday, Census Day, though students living on campus may not be done with their census for two weeks. The directors of each living group were notified Saturday that enumerators will visit each residence within two weeks.
Census workers will be on duty to answer questions or to mail forms to those who have not received a form, today through Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Directors of all on-campus residences will be responsible for distribution and collection of forms. One out of five of these forms will be an in-depth form to gain sample views of life
Chancellor traveling in Central America
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and Robert P. Cobb associate dean of faculties for international programs, are in Central America this week.
8 KANSAN Mar. 31 1970
Although they will travel through several countries, their main objective will be to renew an agreement established in 1960 for a junior year abroad program with the University of Costa Rica. They will return this Friday.
Chalmers will attend a meeting of the Kansas Psychological Association in Topeka April 10. He will join James Doty, president of Baker University and John W. Gustad, president of Fort Hays State College to form a panel to discuss the topic of "Kansas Colleges and Universities, Their Responsibilities to Students and the 'Over 30' Generation."
styles, while the other four out of five will be the normal short "individual forms."
Students living off-campus in private homes or apartments will be included as part of that household they are presently living in. A household, the Census Bureau said, can be a family, person living alone, group of two or more families sharing living arrangements or "any group of
persons related or unrelated who share living arrangements."
Those students living two or more together off campus may have no specific "head of the household" and should mark "other" in the question relating to the head of the household. Those marking "other" should then specify in the space provided "roommates or partner," the bureau said.
in the merge would agree to share a common budget, staff, building facilities and a common strategy. Work done by any one of the ministers from the churches participating would be done in behalf of the other involved churches.
Both ministries work and have headquarters in separate buildings. They are the Wesley Foundation building across the street from the Kansas Union and the Westminster Center at 12th and
Oread. Plans are being made to work from one building instead of the two now being used. No decision has been made on which building will remain in service.
FOREST FIRE TOLL
SAN FRANCISCO (UFI)—Fires destroyed more than 19,000 acres of brush and timber lands in the national forests of California during 1969.
SCULPTURE
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We made it for people who like to drive on a road. Not just ride on it. That's why Camaro has an improved road-hugging front and rear suspension.
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Focus on people and issues
Ministry adapts to change
By TINA BORAK
Kansan Staff Writer
The institutional church in America is in a state of turmoil as it struggles to adapt to society's changing needs.
To better meet the needs of KU students, the campus ministry at KU, too, is changing its structure, expanding its theory of the focus of ministry.
Robert Shelton, assistant professor of religion, says most of the campus ministry is aware of the "hang loose" approach of students, and have shifted to person-to-person, issue-oriented services.
The building is no longer the focal point, says Jerry Catt, campus minister at the Baptist Center. The focus is people and issues, he says.
"We are involved in a total concept of campus ministry." Catt cays, referring to his participation in the Nov. 15 Moratorium in Washington, D.C. "The church and the University are agents for social change."
It used to be that the church often had to lead students into issues, says Otto Zing. UCCF campus minister. Now it is a case of going where the issues are, he says. "The students are already into it. The ministry helps them reflect on what is going on."
Programming is not determined by the ministry, but by people involved in the community. Zing says. Its task is to go into the things operating in persons' minds. This involvement can be seen in such programs as last year's seminars on White and Institutional Racism sponsored by the University Christian Movement, the Eros Urban Plunge
Mar. 31
1970 KANSAN 9
(interaction of people in the midst of an urban environment), and the series last fall on Student Dissent.
Although students often are "turned off" by the institutional church, Zing says, many of their ideals reflect the teachings of the church in which they were raised.
Father Arnold Tkacik, associate professor of religion, says the campus ministry is trying to bring about a change in worship to adapt to students' needs.
This semester for the first time, worship mass is being conducted in Danforth Chapel to make the worship service more available to students, he says. Mass has been structurely changed to include shared response to scripture readings and group participation aimed at current situations.
KU's campus ministry has made extensive changes toward an ecumenical attitude, says Tom Moore, executive director of the KU-Y. Moore recalls that when he came to KU in 1960 the ministry could be characterized as a "fragile fellowship." Any cooperative efforts were merely in terms of jointly sponsored buses for Sunday worship services, he says.
One of the first ecumenical actions of the ministry was hospital visitations by ministers. Patients were visited daily by designated ministers who rotated schedules, which tended to strengthen trust between denominations, Moore recalls.
Today campus ministry has become more specialized into a team approach, says Moore. A division of labor between denominations encourages each minister to develop a particular interest or concern. The work of one minister is in behalf of all denominations, he added.
Students are not so much interested in the practice of the churches, says Shelton, but in pursuing moral issues in a situation in which someone is not trying to convert them.
The ministry, most ministers agree, is trying to relate to the total University as a community. They say a lot of people would like to see this style adopted by the church. And as one minister says, "What's happening on campus today indicates what will happen in the church in the future."
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KU women go to AWS symposium
The education of women for social and political change is the topic of the National Associated Women Students invitational symposium. Three women from the University of Kansas have been invited.
This is the fifth annual symposium and it will be held at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Tex., today and Wednesday, Emily Taylor, dean of women, and two students, Kathy Newcomer, Omaha, Neb., junior, and Ellen Tyler, Kansas City senior, left today for the convention.
The symposium is sponsored by the Women's Symposium Committee and the Associated Women Students of Southern Methodist University. It will consist of a series of lectures and discussion groups.
The symposium will bring together a selected group of SMU women students, student representatives from other universities and women leaders in education, human relations and public affairs, said Rebecca Best, chairman of the symposium.
The purpose is to consider major social and political issues, to
explore the motivation of women to leadership in these concerns and to examine the obligation of the university to educate for the citizenship responsibilities, Miss Best said.
The goals of the symposium are to explore the barriers to women in realizing their full human potential and to challenge each participant to evaluate their identity in relation to the alternatives developed during the symposium. Those attending will also be shown how to identify the principal scientific advances in genetics and reproductive biology. They will examine the consequent
the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Margaret Mead, anthropologist and author, and Albert Rosenfeld, managing editor of Family Health Magazine and formerly the Science editor of Life magazine will also speak.
Jennings charged with manslaughter
Danny Joe Jennings, 21, Rt. 5 was arrested at 11:30 a.m. March 22 on charges of fourth-degree manslaughter in connection with a fatal traffic accident February 5 at 19th and Iowa. The victim, David Loren Gore, Pawnee Rock, junior and Jennings, were drivers of two of the three cars involved.
A student at a Kansas City, Mo., trade school, Jennings was arrested when he returned home for the weekend. The warrant for his arrest was issued March 17, on a complaint signed by county attorney Daniel A. Young.
The complaint signed by Young read that February 5, Jennings feloniously operated a car at a speed greater than reasonable and prudent, and in excess of the 45 miles per hour speed limit and that Jennings drove while under the influence of intoxicating liquor.
10 KANSAN Mar. 31 1970
changes in our traditional understanding in human relations and social institutions. Miss Best said.
Jennings' car collided with Gore's, the complaint read, causing Gore's death, "and that said death would not have resulted except for the unlawful driving of the said Danny J. Jennings."
Blood alcohol tests were taken from both Jennings and Gore on the day of the accident by the police.
Jennings posted $1,500 bond to appear in Douglas County Court March 19 to hear the charges brought against him. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for 10 am., April 17 in the County Court.
The maximum penalty Jennings can face for fourth-degree manslaughter is one to two years in prison or not less than six months in county jail. Young said that it also depended on Jennings past record. He may be placed on probation.
Gore's death is the only one reported in Douglas County during the first 81 days of 1970. Last year, six persons died in traffic accidents in Lawrence.
A feeling that he wanted "to tell about people" has led a University of Kansas journalism student to create a photographic display of huge proportions.
Among the featured speakers at the symposium will be Rita Hauser, attorney, United States Representative and member of
The 101-by-66 inch photographic collage was created by Bill Higgins, Mission junior, and entered in the annual KU Photo Contest.
KU photo student tells about people with huge collage
Described as a photo essay that was "just supposed to tell something about people," the collage contains about 1,100 individual photographs, mostly of peo all taken in New York during the last two weeks of November.
Higgins said he spent about two months processing, arranging, cutting and mounting the pictures to create the huge collage.
Although the display did not win any prizes in the KU competition Higgins said he was hopeful the work will be exhibited.
Let's Get It Straight
SEARCH FOR MEANING
QUESTION: I am a young person still searching for meaning in life. I went to church a few times, but all the preacher talked about was things that happened way back in Moses' day, or what we should give toward the church budget. Isn't there more to Christianity than that? Has it got anything to say to young people today?
ANSWER: In the first place, you cannot judge Christianity or the Church by a few sermons sampled at random. Only by attending a faithful Bible-preaching church regularly will you begin to grasp the meaning of Christianity and discover what it can do for you. If you are really in earnest about this, I suggest that you do just that.
Also read the Bible, especially the New Testament slowly, thoughtfully, and prayerfully. God will give understanding to those who are earnestly seeking the truth. Thirdly, seek personal counselling from the pastor of the church you attend—but let me emphasize again that it should be one where the preaching is true to the Bible.
The challenge of following Jesus Christ is the most meaningful one that can come to a young person. Today. Once you
accept His call to come after Him, you will find yourself beginning to understand what life is all about. Soon you will be cooperating with God Himself to make this meaning relevant in the lives of others. If you are seeking "self-fulfillment," as so many people are today, ponder again the words of that young man, Augustine, who said, "Lord, Thou midest us for Thyself, and we can find no rest till we find rest in Thee."
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FOR SALE
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1967 Wesley Motorscooter and helmet,
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1968 VW Fastback. Must sell at wholesale price of $1425. First offer takes—no holds. Call 843-8191 after six. 4-2
Research projects for class or personal use on and thought or subject-2
1966 Chevette SS 396. Only 26,000 miles! Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-2
Gillette Soft and Dri Deodorant
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1970 Corvette Coupe, 350 CID, 350 H.P., 4-speed, AC, postcapitation, tinted glass, AM-FM radio price to sell. 843-7756. 4-2
Minolta, SRT101, F14. Leather case,
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highlight camera, strobe umbrella
$235.00 or best cash offer. 843-1326
after 6 p.m. 4-7
Arteley flute - excelent condition
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'67 Barracuda Formula "S" Call
N 4-4328 or 843-0435. "4-3
1967 Renault R-10. Best offer. Call
842-3647. 4-3
'65 Chev. Impala, HT-PS/BP, auto
'42 Chev. Impala, 422 after L.
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Lovable 7 months old male Irish settter who wants a friendly home. AKC registered, loves people. Call 842-8835 after 7:00 p.m. 4-6
Gibson Hummingbird Guitar, acoustic excellent condition, must sell immediately. Best offer takes. Call Jim, 842-7307. 4-2
'66 Chevy Bel-Alr 4 dr. sedan. 283
Factory Air, P.S., P.B., 6 good tires.
$995. Call 842-4717, Wed., Thurs.
Fri. after 6 p.m. 4-6
New Canon FT QL single lens reflex,
f1.8 lens, meter, quick loading, case,
UV filter. More than $80.00 off list.
$187.50. Phone 843-9252. 4-6
63 wood LeBlanc-symphony model
clairinet ~$350; 28" Boys Schwinn
computer ~$49; Portable portabler
typewriter ~$40; Polaroid
camera~$10. Call 842-5280. 4-6
NOTICE
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
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515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want to see them. Quote this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special offer at T.J. Sports 1 V-2510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if
Audio Discount-Your A.R. Dynaco dealer offers the best of audio at the lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping plus 10% handling charge. Revox and other lines available. Call 842-2047 evenings. 3-31
Xerox service on the latest and best Xerox 3600 III. We specialize in theses and dissertations. Typewriters, adding machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. ff
Plilots - Optocap Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Cases 150 Ikea 180; Dresser 450. Charges tee 180 $12.50; 2-seat sailplane 600 Phone #84-1214 after 6. 4-6
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LA PETITE GALERIE—Who are you?
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groovy pantuits, coats, swimsuits,
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Need organist for newly-formed
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Wanted: Female figure to pose with exotic Italian sports cars for photographing. Pays well. Call 842-5752 evenings. 4-2
Want to buy 90 inch Dodge van. Call UN 4-4326 or 843-0435.
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I would like to borrow your old or
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perience. For details, call Art Black
842-809-8999
1-2 girls to share luxury apartment for summer; near campus, pool, air-conditioned, $68 monthly, all utilities paid. Call Sue, 842-7853, after 5:30
Country/Western band wanted for
Friday. For Florence,
Sat. April 25, Call 843-7835. 4-6
Actors wanted auditions for original
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7-10 p.m. UCCF 1201 Oread, 3-31
Desperate! Ride wanted: KU to KC,
Monday and Wednesday—can leave
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I am looking for a companion for
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TYPING
Complete prescription departments and fountain service.
- Deliveries to Strong Hall,
Tues. morning and
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Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8
McConnell Lumber
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Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ-
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Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assistance with necessary English corrections. English teacher, M.S. degree. Also, English tutoring for foreign students. 842-9249. 4-1
Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman.
Typing—thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Royal electric, elite type. Fast and accurate service. Paper furnished. 842-1561. Mrs. Nixon. 4-7
FOR RENT
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A clean four-room furnished apartment. Young responsible married couple. No children or pets. Utilities in the campus. Available A-1, 843-1585. 4-1
New York Cleaners
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Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. iff
PERSONAL
Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Flood.
Swimming Instructor for Girl Scout Camp. Unit Leaders, Counselors, Assistant Cook. Contact Mrs. Owen C. Siskin. 6101 North Kansas City Kansas 66101. 4-1
Family needs student to help supervise activities of two school-age boys this summer. Home on beautiful lake in upper New York state. Must be energetic and competent. Room, board and $75 a month. Call 843-911. 4-3
Furnished apt. for graduate couple-
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after 5. 4-6
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Weekend work. We need students to work Saturday and Sunday. Shifts are 8-4, 4-12, 12-7-30. Apply in person. Kansas Color Press. 2021 Haskell. 4-1
Table Tops
Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801$^1/2 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up tf
Available now, two bedroom ant. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tt
HELP WANTED
Part-time help wanted—waitress, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person, Earl's Pizza Parlor, 729 Mass. 4-2
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Found: A most exciting place to enjoy steaks by candlelight at their finest. Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-1
Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on
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Thank you!
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. 4-1
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Black tri-fold wallet. Please return
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Shultz needs funds to run
State Senator Reynolds Shultz of Lawrence will enter the race for the Republican nomination for governor this year if necessary campaign funds are pledged to him by April 15.
"I've set an April 15 deadline," he said. "If I have the funds by then I'll announce I'm a candidate."
Shultz has stated financing will be the deciding factor in his decision to enter the race. He estimated a "genuine, big-league
campaign costs about $250,000 and the primary alone will cost nearly $100,000."
"I've had some commitments made to me, but not enough," he said.
Attorney General Kent Frizzell and Raymond J. Vanskiver, both of Wichita, and Rick Harmon, 1968 GOP nominee, have already announced for this year's nomination.
student disorders, particularly at the University of Kansas.
Shultz, 49, has gained attention through a tough stand against
A farmer-businessman, he was re-elected to a four-year term in the Kansas Senate in 1968, his district including Douglas and Jefferson counties. He would not have to leave the Senate to seek election to the governor's office.
In 1964 he first won election to the State Senate after he and incumbent Don Hults tied in the GOP primary voting and Shultz
won in a drawing from a hat.
Shultz is director of Farmland Industries. He and his wife, Donna, live in Lawrence and have two daughters and a son.
He owns and operates 1,350 acres of land in Douglas and Jefferson counties, raising hogs, cattle, corn, wheat, soybeans and milo.
He has held key posts in the State Senate, including chairman of the federal, state and local affairs committee. The senator is a Marine Corps veteran of World War II.
Chalmers says innovations in education to mark'70s
Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, predicted in a speech last week that the seventies will be a decade of educational innovation forged by a new alliance between academic administrators and students.
Chalmers related the same theme to the University of Kansas medical students in another speech last week.
He predicted increased student participation "in the determination of objectives within areas of knowledge and within entire degree programs; in at least the social sciences and related professional schools, "there will be a complete blurring of the boundaries between the academic arena and the larger society; and "there will be a steady elimination of arbitrary blocks of time and arbitrary blocks of evaluation."
Chalmers cited three changes he foresees for the seventies, and believes will be the most "dramatic and the most significant."
Chalmers told the medical students "for the University, the marriage between the schools meant a more broadly based educational program, and greatly expanded research opportunities.
Chalmers said, "I am firmly and irrevocably committed to one University."
Chalmers said many issues have been raised in the last few years that have brought about the question of the relationship of the two institutions. The competition for limited financial resources "raises questions on both campuses, about whether each might fare better after a divorce," he said.
Chalmers said he felt persons on both campuses did not share his sentiment concerning the oneness of the University
His office could not personally handle the detailed interactions that should characterize the optimum relationship between the campuses, Chalmers said. The interaction must depend on students, in student government, between faculty members in faculty government, and between administrations for cooperation and coordination, he added.
Speaking of student participation in the establishment of course objectives and procedures for obtaining these objectives, Chalmers said, "The faculty
12 KANSAN Mar. 31 1970
member must be able to persuade the student he has better materials to suggest. The faculty member must articulate course objectives, and explain why they are better than student-suggested alternatives."
Chalmers said class periods and credit hour concepts must be removed. He suggested in their place should go statements of course objectives and careful measures of learning.
Chalmers predicted students and faculty would work together as an alliance to accomplish these changes. "They (the faculty) would gladly make significant changes in their behavior if only the opportunity and the incentive to change were provided."
Chalmers told the medical students that the students in government will be the trend for the seventies, Chalmers said extremist advocates disclaim a preference for co-optation involvement, stating they defend it solely on the grounds that the other forms will not work, "that is those who have the power will not yield to anything less than a greater power."
Chalmers said some students have begun to talk of organizing into unions and approaching their problems with a collective bargaining stance, pitting the administrator and the faculty member as adversaries. "Strikes and collective bargaining are incompatible with the learning process," he said.
Cash won't sing song for Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Country singer Johnny Cash has told the White House he does not want to sing the controversial "Welfare Cadillac" at a social on April 17.
Welfare and civil rights leaders protested the performance of the ballad which pokes fun at people on welfare and depicts a shiftless father who relies on "fool" taxpayers to buy a new Cadillac. Nixon had requested the song after hearing it on tape of country music at the White House.
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NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — A U.S. attorney said Monday a federal grand jury studying a large oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico could turn into a massive investigation of all offshore oil drilling.
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The grand jury convenes today to study charges by Interior Secretary Walter Hickel that Chevron Oil Co. violated offshore drilling regulations in at least 347 instances.
23rd & Iowa
The slick which formed March 10 at the site of a Chevron oil platform in the gulf has grown into the largest oil pollution in history.
U. S. Attorney Gerald Gallinghouse said the grand jury investigation could last at least three weeks.
Oil slick sparks inquiry
Rita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper
"We will begin the hearing with witnesses of the United States government—the Interior Department and the U.S. Geological Survey," he said.
Two of 'Seven bail out sixteen
Bennie Davis, one of the "Sevenen," stood at the east entrance of the jail and shook hands with each freed prisoner as he emerged.
"Then we will begin to call personnel and officials of the Chevron Oil Co—at least 20 witnesses over the next two to three weeks.
CHICAGO (UPI)—Two members of the "Chicago Seven" returned to Cook County Jail Monday and bailed out 16 of their old jail mates.
"These guys (the riot conspiracy trial defendants) said they would come back and get us but I didn't believe it," Sanders Nicholson, 40, said as he walked to freedom.
"They did, and now I'm out.
They're two beautiful people."
"If the investigation broadens as we anticipate, we can expect to hear testimony from in excess of 100 witnesses."
Davis charged that Warden Winston E. Moore ordered him out of the prison's record room with a threat to plant "a foot in your pants." Moore retorted that Davis is "a damn liar."
Gallinghouse said Chevron has agreed to provide all records of an oil platform fire which started Feb. 10 and resulted in the massive slick.
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Bernardo's classic sandal in
the lightest of leathers.
Small, medium or large.
White - Black - Brown
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
BERNARDO
"Tee" for two pretty feet,
Bernardo's classic sandal in
the lightest of leathers.
Small, medium or large,
White - Black - Brown
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
Simon and Garfunkel
Bridge Over Troubled Water
reg. $5.99
Simon and Garfunkel
Bridge Over Troubled Water
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr.
$3.99