Festival exposes a world of art See page 5 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No. 104 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, April 1, 1970 UDK News Roundup By United Press International Cambodia opposes pursuit PHNOM PENH—The government told the United States and South Vietnam today they have no right to send troops into Cambodia in pursuit of the Viet Cong or North Vietnamese. "Faithful to its policy of strictest neutrality, Cambodia opposes the right of pursuit as it is opposed to any violation of our territory by foreign forces regardless of whichever camp they belong in," the government said over Phnom Penh Radio. NBC violates doctrine WASHINGTON—The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) told NBC Tuesday its Huntley-Brinkley news program violated the fairness doctrine in November 1969 in criticism of the nation's private pilots. "The ability of private pilots was put in an unfavorable light," the FCC said, "without the contrasting view being presented." NBC was asked "in the reasonably near future" to achieve fairness in its coverage of air safety and private pilots. Troop consolidation urged WASHINGTON—Sen. George S. McGovern, D-S.D., a leading proponent of U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam, charged today President Nixon was needlessly endangering the lives of American troops by his phased withdrawal plan. In a speech prepared for the Senate, McGovern said the gradual withdrawals make troops left behind "vulnerable to concentrated attacks by the enemy" because U.S. forces must hold widely dispersed military positions. McGovern urged the administration, instead, to "stop our far-flung military operations in South Vietnam and consolidate our forces temporarily, in preparation for disengagement, in well-defended areas near the sea." Board criticizes student financing The University Planning Board called student financing academic buildings, "basically wrong." In a statement released March 17 referring specifically to the building of Wescoe Hall, the Student Senate voted to aid it; by a pledge of $7.50 per semester per student. The planning board called the senate action "in the best interests of the university and of its students" because of the special urgency of the situation. On April 7, the student body will vote on the Wescoe Hall issue voicing its opinion on whether or not they want to contribute $2 million from student fees toward the proposed $8 million building. The statement said, in part: "The University Planning Board wishes to express, as strongly as possible, its conviction that buildings needed for instruction should be provided by the state and that it is basically wrong to ask students to pay for the buildings in which they are taught. "On the other hand, all other alternatives for funding this particular, crucial project on time have been exhausted." The statement said that approximately $4 million was provided by the state legislature in 1966. This was supplemented by approximately $2 million from the federal government and $2 million from student fees. Without the student fees, the entire building is jeopardized, and if redesign is necessary—as it would be without the student money—the general government's share probably would be lost because of a rapidly approaching fiscal year deadline on use of the funds. If both those sources of funds dried up, that would leave about $4 million in state funds for a building. "The University Planning Board cannot commit the prime space on this campus to a $4 million structure that would be so sharply reduced in potential and function," the board's statement said. If Wescoe Hall is not built, "one out of every four classes in 1975 will either be homeless or have to be taught at best in temporary, portable classrooms, most of them at considerable distance from the campus," the planning board said. William Lucas, associate professor of architecture and urban design and co-chairman of the planning board said, "Because of the combination of situations, such as the need for space and the possibility of losing state funds, we were prompted to take this to the students." Students to vote on new Union University of Kansas students will have the opportunity to express their opinion on the proposed satellite union, April 7, in a referendum. It will be one of several questions presented for a vote to the students. The union building was considered as early as 1964, to meet the needs of the tremendous population explosion towards the southwest portion of the campus, said Kent Longenecker, president of the Student Union Board and Shawnee Mission senior. The satellite union, to be located northwest of Allen Field House, would extend the services of the increasingly over-loaded main Student Union. First satellite dies COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (UPI) Explorer 1, the tardy satellite that first took America into the space age four months behind Russia, burned up and died Tuesday in the dark skies of the South Pacific. It was 12 years old. The U.S. satellite outlived the Soviet Sputniks that won the race into space. Explorer 1 fell into the earth's atmosphere and burned up from friction-generated heat at 5.47 a.m. (EST) on its 58,376th orbit, a spokesman at the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) headquarters said. It is survived by 1,838 space objects, including 381 payloads in earth orbit, 32 payloads in deep space, 1,383 pieces of junk in earth orbit and 32 pieces of junk in deep space. sundries store, check cashing, multipurpose room for meetings, conferences and movies, lounges, and art display facilities. If accepted the building could go to bid in late spring and be occupied (Continued to page 16) Explorer 1 was launched into an egg- The $1.8 million proposal would be a modest service center, said Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union. It is designed to meet the minimum needs of the students, providing a restaurant, snack bar, dining room, book and Its radio transmitter operated for only 105 days but by then the satellite had discovered a belt of charged particles from the sun trapped by the magnetic field of earth. shaped orbit Jan. 31, 1958, from what was then Cape Canaveral, Fla., after a frustrating series of failures and national embarrassment caused by Russia's two Sputnik successes in 1957. The belt was named the Van Allen radiation belt after Dr. James Van Allen of the State University of Iowa who designed the instruments in Explorer. "The successful orbiting of Explorer 1 is one of the landmarks in the technical and scientific history of the human race," Van Allen said Tuesday. (Continued to page 16) MISSILES Photo by Kent Dannen Missiles placed on Naismith Photographs do lie—when they represent an April Fool's illusion. This picture resulted from the combination of two photographs to show a marked change in the KU's defense posture. Campus briefs Korean dancer to perform Won Kyung Cho, a Korean dancer-actor, will present a one-man show tonight at 8:20 p.m. in the University Theatre. He will assume a number of roles, both male and female, as he enacts a one-act play, gives a dramatic reading of Korean poetry, and performs six interpretative dances. Cho is appearing as part of the University of Kansas Festival of Oriental Theatres. Admission to the performance is free. Engineering meet scheduled More than 200 engineering educators and students from 12 schools will be at the University of Kansas April 9-10, for the annual meeting of the midwest section of the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE). Program topics will be related to these immediate problems: "Engineering Education for Blacks: Lower Standards")," "Student Unrest," "Liberal Learning for Engineers," "Needs of Metropolitan Areas," and "Increasing Role of Junior Colleges." Language exam deadline Friday The deadline for signing up for the foreign language proficiency examination is Friday. The test will be May 2 at 1:30 p.m. Students who wish to satisfy their college graduation requirement by this option should report to the various language departments to register. Ambassador to speak at seminar José Sanson Teran, ambassador from Nicaragua to the Organization of Central American States, will speak at a special seminar meeting at 4 pm. Thursday in the International room of the Kansas Union. Ambassador Teran is an international jurist and author who has been Minister of Education in Nicaragua and an ambassador to several European and Latin American countries. The topic of his speech will be "Organization of Central American States: Past, Present and Future." Principals' conference to be held The District I Principal's Spring Conference will begin today at 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union. The principals will meet in the Forum Room, and then divide into two groups, one for junior high and one for senior high. The purpose of the conference is to acquaint each principal with the others' problems and possible solutions. Discussion groups will speak at random on the problems which are brought up during the conference. Deadlines set for loan applications The Office of Student Financial Aid has announced the deadlines for loan applications. For the Summer Language Institute or the 1970-71 Junior Year Abroad programs, the deadline is April 15. For the summer session of 1970, the deadline is May 1. r 2 KANSAN e deadline is May 1, and applications for the fall semester of 1970 must be in before June 1. Apr.1 1970 The deadline for the spring semester of 1971 is December 1. The University of Kansas has signed a contract with the city of Wichita Falls, Texas which calls for KU to aid the city in the development of an integrated municipal information system, R. T. Aangeenbrug, acting director of the Governmental Research Center, said. KU will aid Texas town KU will contribute $750,000 in support over a three year period, Aangeenbrug said. Wichita Falls is the prime contractor along with BASYS Inc., a Washington, D.C. systems company. The Department of Housing and Urban Development originally selected the three parties from nearly 100 proposals received to negotiate the contract, he said. The Governmental Research Center at KU, Aangeenbrug said, will coordinate work on the project. Also involved are the Schools of Business and Engineering, and the departments of geography, economics, human development, psychology and political science, he said. The project is designed to develop automation of city management functions to the greatest extent possible with the use of current technology, Aangeenbrug said It is also aimed at improving the information and decision making capabilities of municipalities. The women's division of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce has designated April 1 to 12 for the clean-up, entitled "Make the Scene Clean." Projects outlined by the committee range from picking up litter from highways, streets and vacant lots to painting and discarding old, unneeded household items. 'Scene clean' begins today Even though the weather still hints of winter, today marks the beginning of this spring's city clean-up campaign. Mrs. W. W. Nash, chairman of the committee, has sent letters to various organizations at KU that may be interested in helping with the projects, she said. The committee has divided the campaign into three areas: fighting litter, fixing and painting and beautifying the city. Some of the specific projects Mrs. Nash listed were picking up litter from highways, streets and vacant lots, painting the train in Central Park and the airplane in Centennial Park. Fifty-five-gallon litter bags are available at the Chamber of Commerce office at 901 Kentucky, and a pickup service will be provided from April 5 to 12. Pardon us for Name Dropping... Lang Ladybug ALEXA H.I.S. you'll find these and lots more at the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Pardon us for Name Dropping... Lanz Ladybug ALEXA H.I.S. the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts 900 For a snack or a meal, it's Burger Chef. Stop in soon for a Super Shef. - 100% Pure Beef - 9th & Iowa St. LET'T'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS QUITE WHITE Cole-Haan In the Cole-Haan tradition of fine craftsmanship and spirited styling. Tempered with good taste. For gentlemen of fashion Quite right. (part of the great white line) $27.50 MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 Massachusetts Midwest students to compete Intercollegiate Rodeo coming to town By GALEN BLAND Kansan Staff Writer It's time to saddle your ponies and loosen your lariats because the rodeo is coming to town. The Jayhawk Rodeo Club will sponsor the fourth annual KU Intercollegiate Rodeo which begins Friday at the Douglas County Fairgrounds. More than 100 university students from the Midwest, members of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association, are expected to compete in the regular rodeo events. There will be open competition in calf roping for men and barrel racing for women. The wildest action of all, however, may come in the fraternity steer riding event. KU fraternities have entered 45 four-man teams in the steer riding, with 15 teams scheduled to compete in each rodeo session of the three-day event. The problem for the men entered in the event will be to capture a steer, saddle it, put one team member in the saddle and drag the steer and rider to the center of the ring. Jean Ann Groves, Arkansas City sophomore, who will reign as queen of the rodeo, expects the result to be total confusion. "Probably 95 per cent of those boys have never even touched a steer," she said. Four candidates unlisted in UDK It was learned Tuesday that due to an oversight four Senate candidates from the Graduate School did not appear in the list of candidates published March 3 in the Kansan. Tim Miller, Wichita graduate student, filed an appeal with the Student Court March 18 that the election be declared invalid since the four candidates were not listed in the Kansan but did appear on the ballot. The Student Court is to hear the appeal within the next two weeks. Apr. 1 1970 KANSAN 3 The team with the fastest overall time will be awarded a trophy. Each day a keg of beer will be given to the team with the fastest time for that day. Events will begin at 8 p.m. Friday. Saturday morning will be reserved for open competition in barrel racing and calf roping and regular competition will begin at 2 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday. In regular competition, women will be competing in goat tying, gate breakaway roping and barrel racing. Men's events will be bareback bronc riding, calf roping, ribbon roping, saddle bronc riding, bulldogging and bull riding. Anyone from this area is eligible for the open competition. The entry fee is $5 with an additional $1 for the roping contest as a "cattle charge." Barrel racers must have their own horses to compete, but local men in the calf roping event may use stock animals. Jayhawk Rodeo Club was organized in 1967 by six KU students, only two of whom had rodeo experience. They planned a rodeo that year but it was $nowed out. Weather interfered again in 1968. Rain shortened the competition but the event broke even. The 1969 rodeo was the first money-maker, and those profits are going into preparation for this year's show. Current club officers include Monte Antisdel, Lawrence junior, president; Marty Van Lerberg, Shawnee senior, secretary; and Mary Jane Bosilevac, Shawnee Mission sophomore, treasurer. Each contestant's $5 entry fee goes into a prize fund and are paid in graduated amounts to the top six competitors in each event. The University of Kansas Theatre International Theatre Studies East Asian Studies present Won Kyung Cho Korean Dancer-Actor in The Festival of Oriental Theatre University Theatre April 1.1970 Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. Performance Free to Public Graduating Seniors, Candidates graduation for Masters & Doctorate Degrees and Faculty Orders must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! KANSAN COMMENT Campus politics goes the old way KU's second student election under the 1969 Senate Code proved, unhappily, that this campus is not dissimilar to the outside world when politicians have their day. The campaign just finished seemed to be a fairly accurate replica of the state and nation prototype—filled with backbiting, false claims and grandstanding—that our generation purportedly detests. Events before the March 17-18 balloting saw one ticket wreak some publicity-seeking havoc on the delicate arrangements for the proposed humanities building. David Miller's contention, that the students were getting a raw deal in not being able to decide for themselves whether they should be assessed $7.50 more per semester, had a great deal of merit. But the fact remained that the Student Senate, in deciding the issue itself, took what it thought to be the only possible route in voting for the fee increase Feb.18. The administration had presented a choice to the Senate; either take action that night, or face the possibility of the question's becoming moot when federal funds were withdrawn. Believing that there was no time for a referendum before the Board of Regents' last meeting, the Senate voted. Yet Miller (who did not bother to speak up the night of the vote) termed the Senate's dealing with the affair "irresponsible." And in the subsequent hooplah over getting a referendum on the March 17-18 ballot, he tried to take full advantage of the voter's pocketbook reaction, leaving reason to the winds. It wasn't important that the students had little information on the complex issue; there had to be a referendum March 17-18 and no other time, period. Besides, Miller seemed to be saying, that's the way bond issues in states and communities are decided every year: by less than the full populace (usually less than half, as it would have been at the election here) and by poorly informed voters at that. On that basis, KU is on a par with, say, Kansas City, Mo., when it rejected school bond issues last year. Can we do no better? Another ticket cried long and bitterly over the mud that would be slung at it in the campaign's final week. The campus waited for the first glob to fly but none did—publicly at least. Peter George and Sharon Baucom were obviously hoping for some sort of protective reaction from the voters, yet no real need for sympathy surfaced. Perhaps they would have been smarter to have waited until the accusations were made, then pleaded for help. Once they were truly oppressed, a nice sideshow could have begun. And, in proposing the end of all academic requirements and grades and "all other unnecessary restrictions on the freedom of students to learn, and the faculty to teach," were George and Baucom becoming somewhat reminiscent of the junior high school politicos who promised that Coca-Cola would flow from the water fountains if they were elected? The Ebert-Thomas ticket, too, was not immune to creating a disturbance that was rather irrelevant to the election itself. Its charge that moneys allocated to graduate students' salaries were skimmed off and placed in a "slush fund" (Ah, shades of a hundred state and national campaigns!) are at least questionable. The administration, the Board of Regents, and the College deny the allegation; it is their word against the Alliance's. So far, Ebert has done nothing to prove that the sub rosa fund exists. What did the Alliance's revelation-timed to appear the day before election—say about the party's leadership qualities? Nothing. It only demonstrated that the Alliance had a better group of muckrakers than the others. The charge is interesting, and should by all means be investigated. Yet Ebert's use of it as a campaign tactic was deplorable. Like the other two candidates, he was apparently hoping the voters' emotions would lead them where their brains might not have gone. As back-room deals are the bane of democracy in legislative bodies, so are gut-appealing publicity stabs in the electoral process. Both are widespread on political levels higher than the University. KU's elected and would-be representatives have fallen easy prey to both temptations. Naivety says that such corrupt practices, overt and covert, don't exist here. Idealism says that they shouldn't. An ideal—in this case, the calm recognition and study of the issues and the capabilities of each candidate—isn't necessarily impossible to achieve. There is no better area, supposedly, for realizing an honorable goal than the university. Reality dictates that many ideas (for example, some of the ISP's) are nearly impossible at KU. For that, the administration is blamed. Yet students, who have the capacity and the will to effect their ideals in the campaigning process, haven't improved on their elders in terms of old-fashioned, irrational actions and responses when they ask for votes. Until they do, the spirit of the Senate Code with all the hopes it inspired for a new, effective and intelligent voice—the students'will have failed. —Monroe Dodd 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. Class postage paid at Lawrence, kan. 86044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered on campus or from other origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. 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 Bassisson Shelley Management Jim Huggins Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Lagios NEWS STAFF NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... James W. Murray Managing Editor ... James W. Murray Campus Editor ... Ken Peterson Editorial Editors ... Ted Hill News Editor ... Joe Naa, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke News Editor ... Donna Shrader Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver Designer ... Charlie Cape, Geoffrey Wire Editor ... Kc Cummins Women's Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Administrative Campus Editors ... Vicki Phillips, Nila Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein. Member Associated Collegiate Press Griff & the Unicorn YOU LOOK KIND OF DEPRESSED, SCALLION... WHAT'S BUGGING YOU? EVERYONE HAS LEGS, BUT ME ... I'D BE THE HAPPIEST PERSON IN THE WORLD IF I ONLY HAD LEGS... YOU'VE GOT TO BE KIDDING... $ \textcircled{c} $ David Sokoloff 1970 JUNK MAIL THE MINATKKE JOURNAL 02/15/84 'Come to think of it, the strike had its pleasant aspects.' hearing voices- To the editor: The recent disgraceful action of the Board of Regents in singling out and failing to promote Professors Velvel and Litto constitutes a terrible threat to the entire KU community. The action of the Regents amounts to an attempt on their part to repress the expression of political views which they find not to their taste. It amounts to a vicious form of political suppression of academic freedom and free speech. It seems to me that we in the KU community must unite, and raise our voices against this violation of our rights; otherwise we invite the Regents to pick off (and punish), one by one, those on campus who politically disagree with the prevailing doctrine. If we fail to protest this attack by the Regents (which after all is not only a direct attack on Velvel and Litto, but also an indirect attack on all of us), then we will have no one to blame but ourselves if later we come under direct attack. Howard Kahane Assistant Professor of Philosophy * * * To the editor: I am one of those captive consumers who, because of early classes and breakfast skipping, must appease my hunger with rolls and coffee in the Hawk's Nest. (The Union Cafeteria breakfast line closes at 8:30.) Every day, when I must hunt pennies to pay this increased price, I cannot but wonder why the Union must charge a more than $100% gross profit. Recently the Hawk's Nest increased the price of sweet rolls to 18c from a price of 15c each. Since that time, it has come to my attention that the Union pays Drake's Bakery only $7\frac{1}{2}$ c each for these rolls. Glazed doughnuts, for which the Union charges 10c, are purchased for $4\frac{1}{2}$ c each. Carol M. Weber Olathe graduate student P. S. By the way, who asked for Checkerboard Farms Fried Chicken (Two Crispy, Crunchy Backs for 25c), anyhow? $$ ** * * * $$ To the editor: To the Street People: One of your misinformed, and I hope self-appointed, street people has once again attacked a defenseless structure in our society. This exponent of the street culture took his stinging brush in hand, slung a bucket of bloodshed-red paint over his shoulder and out maneuvered Dyche alditorium. He left the stain of victory over a defenseless object when he so courageously spelled out, "Street People: Judy Collins is our culture. Make her free." Once again the malleable university is the brunt of a one dimensional misguided attack. The University is absorbing the criticism that should be directed against a less vulnerable and less disguised target—in this case Miss Collins herself. I am sure the SUA and the University would rejoice at the opportunity to have Judy Collins appear free of charge. Unfortunately this demagogue is no more a part of the street culture than is Andy Williams. You are being used. She sings for profit, a trait not characteristic of street people. At $3.50 a ticket, Miss Collins rides in a golden coach upon the streets in which you walk. Are you sure she is your culture? But if it is her music that is part of your culture, and you still want to hear Miss Collins free, you are invited to sit in the street outside of my apartment, and I will turn up my stereo. Don Hunter Abilene graduate student KWSAN REVIEWS FESTIVAL: Poetic pleasure By KAREN KLINKENBERG Kansas St Writer A gentle man, his poetry and his string sitar made up the second program for the Festival of the Arts. Lawrence Ferlinghetti communicated to his audience subjects from the sun to Jesus Christ in the language of his poetry for the "right on" people. Beginning the program with a chanting song on his impressions of the sun, Ferlinghetti sat on the floor and sang with his sitar. In a poem titled "Underwear" he made some provoking comments about the one piece of apparel common among all men. "It is all we have between us in the end," he said. "Underwear it is all we have between us in the end," he said. And then called "Poetry the underwear of the soul." A poem on overpopulation repeats the phrase "I must have misunderstood something here," when he reads a newspaper. Death, he said in the poem, is not the answer to our problem. Many of his poems were taken from books he had published of his poetry and others from a journal he wrote. Each topic dealt with a current problem or feeling. One poem took his audience on an LSD journey and another on a bus trip through Moscow, each conveying unique and different feeling of the poet. But the audience liked particularly a poem he wrote last night here in Lawrence while staying at the Ramada Inn. He called it just a rough draft but the poem was about a couple what he saw in their actions and faces. After a round of applause from a crowd that filled the first floor of Hoch, Ferlinghetti was met with a group of students backstage, and accepted an invitation to go and talk with people at a house. BOOKS: Cheap yarn Bv MIKE SHEARER NOG, by Rudolph Wurlitzer (Simon & Schuster paperback, 95 cents) Nog is a "head adventure" which is supposed to do to literature what Dylan has done to lvices. In fact, Nog is a cheap yarn with no core, no essence. This lack of a core, this essencelessness is wrapped in a sometimes imaginative plot and a series of drug adventures. The main character is a young man who identifies with an old eccentric he once met and who passed on a heritage to him. That heritage came in the form of a truck with a tank on its bed. In this windowed tank was an octypus, which turns out to be the most symbolic character in the book. The octypus turns out to be phoney, as phoney as the book itself. Wurlitzer would probably consider himself to be innovative and, indeed, avid garde. And, if, as often seems to be the case, innovation and avid garde means a break away from traditional clarity and meaningfulness, then Wurlitzer has succeeded. But since other innovators and avid garde writers have succeeded in making new application of old techniques, maybe Wurlitzer just knew how to sell a book. ✤ ✤ ✤ THE VOYEUR, by Henry Sutton (Fawcett, $1.25)—Last year's big dirty book (if you"pardon the term) is out in paperback, and it'll move fast at the super-markets. It's by the author of "The Exhibitionist," one Henry Sutton, and it has sensational appeal similar to that book and the writings of Harold Robbins and Irving Wallace. Where "The Exhibitionist" dwelled on the careers of a Hollywood star and his daughter (guess who), "The Voyeur" dwells on a magazine publisher named Irvin Kane, whose magazine is called Tomcat (naked girls and calendars and the like—are you getting the picture?). You have to read this one to see how unbelievably bad a book can be. And how it will sell. Apr. 1 1970 KANSAN 5 \* \* \* TELL IT LIKE IT IS, by Chuck Stone (Pocket Books, 95 cents) —A collection of columns by a young black writer who was labeled by Newsweek "the angry young man of the Negro press." The columns appeared in the New York Age, the Washington Afro-American and the Chicago Defender. As Stone observes himself, much of his writing seems tame alongside more inflammatory commentaries of the past few years. His theme throughout is black power—at the polls, in communities, in businesses and education, in government, in personal relations. He is no moderate, and in racial relations he has no use for moderates. His writings undoubtedly will anger many—especially liberals—and this seems his intent. DO YOU KNOW WHERE "AL'S RESTAURANT" ?? IS ?? Win $10.00 by guessing write c/o "Al's Restaurant" P.O. Box 808, Lawrence, Kansas Winner Will Be Announced in Friday's Paper (watch each day for clue) CLUE #1 SMALL COVER CHARGE CLUE #2 NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT The fourth annual Festival of the Arts will offer at 8 p.m. tonight the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble, in Hoch Auditorium. The group plays classical selections before intermission and returns to give rock adaptations of them. Festival previews - rock ensemble EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. (UPI)—John McGee, 17, was in a doctor's office for treatment of a heart condition. He was looking out the window while waiting for the doctor when he saw several youths acost Mrs. Rosemary Powell Jr., and grab her purse. McGee chased the youths and recovered the woman's purse. REAL HEART Ever Tried Being A Bachelor With A Wife And 3 Kids?? Before You Do... See 29 A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION wauer ingrid matthau bergman eacus FLOWER GOLDIE HAWN as TOMI Introducing Formed in 1967, the Ensemble has released two albums "Kiss Her Once" and "Faithful Friends ... Flattering Foes," pop-classical-rock with Brandenberg, Bach and soul. NOW! Eve. 7:20 - 9:20 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50; Child .75 They have developed their competence through ecleticism: an intelligent juxtaposition of musical forms. They carefully integrate their numbers, so that just when the inner ear is about to blow up out of the chaos, theme and rhythm return. Dorian Rudyntsky, Michael Kamen, Martin Fulterman, Brian Corrigan, and Clifford Nivison write their own songs and arrange other compositions. Granada THEATRE .. telephone VI 3-5724 Bob Carol Ted Alice "THE YEAR'S BEST COMEDY!"—Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review NEW "AS FUNNY AS ANY AMERICAN COMEDY THIS DECADE!" Richard Schickel, Life COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION NATALIE WOOD/ROBERT CULP ELLIOTT GOULD/DYAN CANNON Executive Product M | FRAMOVICH • Technicolor® Produced by LARRY TUCKER • Directed by PAUL MAURSKY RESTRICTED - Persons under 18 not admitted unless accompanied by parent or adult guardian R NOW SHOWING Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15 - 9:30 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1965 Ambergris It's the stuff they add to the world's most expensive perfumes. For the world's most expensive women. It's also the name of a new group and a new music. Nine of the weightiest musicians ever together. Blowing as one. AMBERGRIS. It's Larry Harlow, Jerry Weiss, Charlie Camulleri, Harry Max, Jimmy Maeulen, Billy Shay, Lewis Kahn, Glenn John Miller and Gil Fields. Their collective working experience? Very deep. Maynard Ferguson, Tito Rodriguez, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Orchestra Harlow, Machito, The Latin Dimension, Lionel Hampton, Eddie Palmieri. AMBERGRIS. It's whale rock. Young, soulful, spirited. Original. AMBERGRIS. It's also the name of their first album. Paramount On Paramount records and tapes. AMBERGIS. I PAS-5014 PARAMOUNT RECORDS a division of FAMOUS MUSIC CORPORATION A GUILD & WESTERN COMPANY Available Now... KIEF'S Court decision grants Pilots permission to sell franchise to Milwaukee interests SEATTLE (UPI) — A Federal Bankruptcy Court referee granted owners of the financially plagued Seattle Pilots permission Tuesday night to sell their one-year-old American League baseball franchise to Milwaukee interests. Sidney C. Volinn, the bankruptcy court referee to whom the Pilots turned for help out of their financial morass, ruled a $10.8 million offer for the purchase of the club by the Milwaukee Brewers was in order. Since the American League had voted approval for transfer of the club from Seattle to Milwaukee in a telephone conference call on Monday, the Pilots became the Milwaukee Brewers upon Volinn's consent. The Brewers had signed a purchase agreement for the Pilots on March 8 and the agreement was to expire at 10 am. CST Wednesday. Thus, Milwaukee, without a big league club since the Braves moved to Atlanta four years ago, rejoined baseball's select group, only this time as a member of the American League. For Seattle, it marked one of the shortest lived franchises in the history of baseball. You have to go all the way back to the turn of the century to find another city which held a big league franchise for so short a time. The Pilots reportedly lost $1 million in their one and only season in Seattle and stood to lose another $1.5 million if they remained there this year. Volinn's ruling came after a last ditch effort for dismissal of the case from bankruptcy court by William Dwyer, special Washington state assistant attorney general, was turned down. Volim listened to testimony day long in a steamy, hot court room before calling a halt at 3:50 p.m. PST. He set the next hearing for 10 am. Wednesday but was reminded that he ran the risk of voiding the contract entered into by the Pilots and Brewers. It was then that he said he would reach a decision Tuesday night. Jo Jo to coach at Owens' camp Jo Jo White, former KU great and Olympian performer who just completed his rookie season with the Boston Celtics, will be an instructor at all four one-week sessions of Ted Owens' basketball camp this summer, the Jayhawk cage coach announced Tuesday. The first session of the camp is June 7-13. The other three sessions begin June 14, June 21 and June 28. Additional information about the camp may be obtained by writing: Jayhawk Basketball Camp, 1116 West Hills Parkway, Lawrence, Kansas 60644. 6 KANSAN Left standing is an anti-trust suit filed by the city of Seattle and the state of Washington seeking $82 million in damages from the American League and the ire of Seattle baseball fans, among them U.S. Senators Warren Magnuson and Henry Jackson. The two have said they will move for enactment of a bill which would do away with baseball's immunity from the antitrust laws, which the sport has enjoyed since a 1922 Supreme Court ruling. Apr.1 1970 The American League came out of the mess with egg on its face and William Daley and Dewey and Max Soriano, principal Pilots owners, with a $1 million profit for holding the franchise just one year. Volinn said he pondered long and hard over his decision and came to the conclusion that he had only one way to go. "This is a problem of major magnitude because of the time element," Volinn said. "It might be a burden on all parties under the circumstance and because of the imminence of the baseball season an emergency does exist. "This matter presents a posture in which the doctor is without funds and the only alternative would be deficit financing by the American League, perhaps upwards of $10 million. "It's obvious that the club can not pay its debts and may well be insolvent. "The unique character of a major league baseball team has been AERIAL CONTRIBUTION COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)—Ohio claims the honor of being the birthplace of three pioneers in the air and beyond. Orville and Wilbur Wright conducted pioneer experiments in aviation in their Dayton, Ohio, bicycle shop before making the first successful powered glideplane flight at Kitty Hawk, N.C., in 1903. Neil Armstrong, the first human to set foot on the moon, was born in Wapakoneta, Ohio. SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 Expert Electronic Diagnosis Precision Workmanship By Appointment Phone Ray Pickering 842-3939 THE ENGINE CLINIC Using SUN Equipment 315 N. 2nd A II of the bankruptcy ace he is obliged to take their interests under consideration as well as those who came to him for help. considered and its importance to the community has been considered but it's obvious that the Pilots are incapable of carrying Volinn's concern, too, was the long line of creditors the Pilots have picked up. Under Chapter on. That is beyond the question." BARCLAY'S BRANDY All of these captivating candles — and more - at... Haas Haas 1029 mass. Hillteacher Nominations - Due April 13—Turn in at the Information Desk in the Student Union. - Selection will be based mainly on one criteria: the impact the teacher has made in the classroom. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind. - Nominations must be signed by 3 students. Include all those assets you feel qualify the person. - Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students. 湖泊风景 SOLUTION Near perfection Hawks send three gymnasts to finals A trio of KU gymnasts — Kirk Gardner, Gerald Carley, and Richard Schubert — will represent the Jayhawk gymnastic squad in the NCAA Championships to be held April 2-4 in Philadelphia. The threesome earned the right to participate in the NCAA finals by placing among the top three finishers in their respective events at the Big Eight meet held March 21 in Manhattan. In the conference championships the Jayhawks finished third KANSAN Sports behind favorite Iowa State and the host Wildcats. Gardner, an Atchison junior, grabbed a first place in the league meet by capturing the still ring title with a near flawless 9.4 score. Gardner, considered one of the top gymnasts in the country, has been ranked number one in the nation in the still rings and has been tabbed as the man to beat in the national championships. Apr. 1 1970 KANSAN 7 Schubert was the biggest Jayhawk surprise in the conference meet as he finished third in the side horse. The Lawrence sophomore was ranked only fifth in the conference preceding the meet but captured the third place spot and a trip to the nationals with a fine 9.1 score. Carley, a Wichita junior, placed second in the high bar competition with a score of 9.2. Carley went into the meet ranked number one in the Big Eight in the high bar event. SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office KU coach Bob Lockwood will accompany his three squad members to Philadelphia. The Jayhawk contingent is due to depart from Kansas City today by air for the trip to finalize the gymnastics season. Expos edge Kansas City No U.S. admiral has ever been nominated for the presidency. WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) — Steve Renko, a former KU pitcher, pitched and batted the Montreal Expos to a 2-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals Tuesday. Renko pitched six innings of four-hit ball and knocked in one of the Expo runs with a fourth-inning single. The winning run also came in the fourth when Kansas City centerfielder Amos Otis threw wild to the plate after fielding Renko's hit. Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn® THE NATIONS INNKEEPER Holiday Inn® 23rd & Iowa Gary Porteous, Innkeeper Rita Skaggs, Asit, Innkeeper Kansas City's only run came in the fifth when Ellie Rodriguez walked, losing pitcher Bill Butler doubled him to third and first baseman Mike Fiore singled. 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'It's a whole new world' Sky divers train students, faculty Sky-Hi Sky Divers, has trained more than 400 persons to parachute and sky dive, two thirds of them students and faculty at the University of Kansas. Jim Garrison, sky diving instructor and manager of the club, said of sky diving, "It's a whole new world." Garrison's club offers discount rates for University students to encourage students to jump. Student rates are $35 for the first jump, $5 for the next five jumps, and $3.50 for the next on if a sky diver has his own equipment. After five jumps most divers end up buying their own equipment running anywhere from $90 to $600 Garrison said. Garrison said it could cost $330 for a parachute, $120 to $130 for a harness, $30 for boots, $35 to $40 for a helmet, and $25 for coveralls. A parachute can be bought though, said one of the student divers, for as little as $50 from an army's surplus store, and the other parts of the equipment can be bought second-hand. Garrison said there were 1,200,000 jumps in 1968 and that the injury rate was very low, out of proportion to the number of jumps made—less than one tenth of one per cent of those diving received injuries. In the two years Garrison has been teaching sky diving in Lawrence, there have been between 2,500 and 3,000 jumps and out of this number there have been only two broken bone injuries. Only three times has a parachutist ever had to use his reserve parachute because of failure of the main chute to open. 8 KANSAN Apr.1 1970 Before the first jump the beginning parachutist is given lessons on how to jump, how to fall and what to do in case of emergencies. The first jumps are static line jumps in which the rip chord catches on the bottom of the plane and pulls open the beginner's chute. Later the parachutist jumps from the plane, counts three seconds and pulls his own rip chord. When a beginner has enough experience at jumping he may attempt to dive, which is jumping from the plane, counting off the seconds till he falls to a height of 2,500 feet, and then pulling the rip chord. Most of the "first timers" land within 100 yards of their target, Garrison said. By means of a walkie-talkie system the beginner's are given ground instructions to help them manuever themselves to a landing. After the initial parachute jumps and a few dives a diver may go up to 12,500 feet and fall a full 30 seconds before hitting his chute at 2,500 feet. Garrison said the standard height for pulling a chute was 2,500 feet. The divers, jumping spread eagle, will reach a maximum velocity of 120 m.p.h. after 12 seconds. One diver who had just completed a free fall from 7,500 feet was asked his reaction to diving. Still breathing heavily he answered, "It's a true emotional experience." He said electrocardiograms had been taken on sky divers as they were free falling and that scientists' reactions were that they had never thought the human heart could beat as fast as it did during the free fall. Garrison said sky diving was introduced in 1951 and had grown faster than any other sport introduced to the United States. At the time it was introduced the Soviet Union dominated the sport, though presently the U.S. holds 70 per cent of all parachuting records. The United States Parachuting Association sets the 2,500 feet standard for chute pulling and sets the types of license one can hold. Garrison has had 940 free falls and 300 jumps landing with combat equipment. Of these only once was he injured, breaking three ribs when he landed 60 m.p.h. on an asphalt road. For Complete Motorcycle ACTORS WANTED Insurance Auditions for an original script APRIL 1 & 2, 1970 Gene Doane U.C.C.F. 1201 Oread 7-10 p.m. Agency 824 Mass. St. VI 3-3012 Get Caught in the Rain With "Cravenette" It's time to shed those dank, damp, muggy clothes and come over to "Cravenette", the dry, crisp, fashionable side. Bring your outerwear—trench coats, jackets, heavy woolens—to Acme for its "Cravenette". We will shower proof them with the same process recommended and used by some of your favorite manufacturers-SurJac McGregor, Alligator, 77 Originals, Ken Venturi, and others. Stay dry as a bone, not soaked to the bone! © SCW.INC. at our Three convenient locations ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 Will KU students accept the drop? Hemlines fall from thigh to calf By ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer The explosion of the hemline is beginning to be heard. But the real noise may be only between the ears and scissors of our nation's fashion designers. Many designers are trying to build confidence by saving their calf-length dresses until fall. Others have introduced a summer stock of "midis." Geoffrey Beene, a designer for our nation's First Lady, Pat Nixon, said that' the hemline crisis, which is reaching mass-hysteria proportions, could boomerang. MARILYN MONROE Hemlines coming down Modeling this midi skirt is Debbie Fox, Overland Park sophomore and a member of the AWS Fashion Board. KU Judiciary drafts procedure for hearings The Kansas University Judiciary met Monday night to discuss procedural matters. Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering and chairman of the Judiciary, said that the Judiciary had drafted a basis for the hearing division of the University. Rosson added that the rules are in "shorthand notes" form and will be published for the students next week. Apr. 1 1970 KANSAN 9 "If women don't buy, designers could be thrust in the position of bankruptcy," he said. Beene thinks that the First Lady will be his most crucial test on the subject of long-skirt acceptance. For University of Kansas coeds a midi would be a drop of about a foot, said Pam Russell, Iola senior and president of the AWS Fashion Board at KU. The style will most likely take a long time to come to KU, she said. The change will be so gradual at KU that the style will have to prove it's going to stay before KU coeds will pick it up, she said. Department stores, who buy the new fashion, and designers, who create it, face some complaints. Buyers say that a long skirt will give girls an older appearance. In a world that is youth-oriented, it may not be a popular move. Also, instantly making a fashion obsolete will appeal to the budget of very few women, including college girls. The last major hemline crash came in 1947 when fashion designer, Christian Dior, predicted a drastic lowering of hemlines. Unhappy women protested, pouted and even carried posters and banners in the streets. But the hemlines went down. Miss Russell said that the women of college age won't fall for the long hemline as fast as older women. There are too many men helping the short skirt mood. But designers say things have to change. The longer skirt, often called "midis," "longuettes," or "Oh good grief" are being offered with a humble spirit. "Mini skirts have reached a saturation point," said Valentino, an Italian fashion designer for such women as Audrey Hepburn, Jackie Onassis and Gina Lollabrigida. American girls may stop following nervous fashion trends and begin to decide for themselves what they look good in. SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office Valentino, who admits that there may be millions of women out there who have reacted in opposition to the trend, plans to continue the long skirts for fall-winter 1970. His argument is that women will get used to the look in a few months, after all their initial kicking and screaming. "The only thing this change is going to help," said a man in Denver and quoted from Life magazine, "is Saturday and Sunday television. Guys who would ordinarily be out in the fresh air watching girls will be inside watching television." But the most wistful comment came from a congressman. He said he sort of felt a momentary regret for the passing of a golden age. We Want You To Join Our Church As An Ordained Minister And Have The Rank Of Doctor of Divinity We are a non-structured church, undemonstrational with no traditional doctrine or dogma. Our fast growing church is actively seeking new ministers who believe what we believe. All men are entitled to work together to Teek trust their own way, whatever it may be. Questions asked. As a minister of the church, you may etc. 4. Seek draft exemption as one of our work. 1. Start your own church and apply the emption from property and other taxes 2. Perform marriages, baptism, funerals and all other ministerial duties ing missionaries. 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While you are partaking of this fantastic bargain you can get out and groove to the very heavy sounds of WILL FOX 手指指向左侧 手指向上。 Don't miss this unbelievable evening of very far out pleasures brought to you by The DRAUGHT HOUSE. DRAU GHT HOUSE THE DRAUGHT HOUSE NOTICE: STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK -> APRIL 29 JOHN HUNT Finding where he was last spring . . . Awbrey ends long year By GREG SORBER Kansan Staff Writer It was not like last year. During election night last year, Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, was greeted by Chancellorelect E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. while his party's members flashed peace signs and waved flowers. This year there was no fanfare when Awbrey stood in the election headquarters. Awbrey entered and left the election headquarters several times during the evening this year, checking how the elections were proceeding and talking with the other candidates. He was running for student senator for the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, but those results weren't posted until 6 a.m. the next morning. Awbrey broke with the Independent Student Party (ISP), his successful party last year, early in the campaign. Running as an independent, he won a seat in the senate, receiving 406 votes, the highest number tallied for a candidate in the college. Head of the Alliance party and president-elect Bill Ebert, Topeka junior, will not be installed until the next Student Senate meeting. Awbrey said he will take it easier until then. Arriving when the college results were posted, Awbrey glanced at the paper and commented that the Alliance party made a large sweep in the elections. "You hear things about privacy that politicians always say," he said, "and it really is true. I am trying to define myself outside of the office and it is really difficult. The inner struggle I have had is the office versus the person, when to say things that you feel—when to not say things because it would damage the ultimate effect of what you are trying to do." Awbrey said he is trying to become a concerned person again—instead of a student official. He is trying "to find where I was last spring," he said. Awbrey will still have to act the student official in dealing with the contempt of court charges brought about when he acted with the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) in not placing six referendum questions on the election ballots. There are also the charges of Tim Miller, Wichita graduate student, which ask the student elections be declared invalid because of fraudulent practices. Awbrey is one of the persons Miller lists as a defendent Speaking about the referendum questions and the courts action,Awbrey said,"I think it is a good case,because it will set a precedence of judicial review, whether the student court or any court has the power to review or declare unconstitutional any legislation the senate passed." The Student Senate gave SenEx the power to decide the questions on any referendum posed before the student body and also to decide when the questions should be voted on. Awbrey said he dismissed the possibility the election would be declared invalid. He said, last spring his major concern was the establishment and interpretation of the new Senate Code, and expected no spectacular changes during his term of office. "The Code of course," he said, "was crucial. That is the one thing that had to be done." Awbrey said the University Council recently adopted an amendment to the University rules and regulations that stated schools and departments should be student represented on all policy making committees. Ebert, he said, was lucky to have tns power to wield. Awbrey said, "Next year students will have more power by being on committees to help make educational policy of different schools." Awbrey awaits election results Photos by Greg Sorber JAMES SCHNELLER Until April, Awbrey acts as student body president A No fanfare . . . Student policy voice increased Students will have greater representation in the policy-making of the University because of a resolution passed by the University Council March 19. The resolution states: "Each school and department shall make provision for the inclusion of a number of students on all policy-making committees and at full school or departmental meetings. The number of students shall be no less than a number equal to 20 per cent of the number of faculty members holding the rank of instructor or above." This guarantee of student representation is probably one of the most significant steps the university has taken, said Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student, in a Kansan interview. be sent to all departmental chairmen and school deans explaining the provision, its intentions and expectations. The provision should be set up and operative no later than September, he said, although many departments are already moving in this direction. The council has agreed that the procedures for choosing students for the committees should be the business of the individual department or school. Charles Oldfather, associate dean of law and chairman of the University Senate, said, "We are talking about what shall be the basic departmental structure of the University. We have decided that the governmental structure be democratic. All this recommendation says is, in effect, that a small number of students be accepted." Official Bulletin During the council meeting, The general argument against the resolution was expressed by some faculty members who said the resolution was too broad and did not define areas. They said that it would be dictating to departments what they should decide for themselves. They were opposed to the statement, but agreed with its principle. Von Ende had originally brought the resolution before the council. Von Ende said that letters will Tony's Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Today PHILIP'S 66 Carillon Recital, Albert Gerken. 7 p.m. Classical Film; "The Crazy Quilt", Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union. Fine Arts Honor Recital: 8 p.m. Swarthort Recital Hall. Festival of the Arts: New York Rock Ensemble, 8 p.m. Hourly, Auditorium. Foreign Students: Applications are now available for the Summer Crossroads programs in Colorado, California and Florida. Venezuelan Students: Sign up at esvice@uva.edu. Email interviews with Creole and Mobile. Faculty Senate: 3:30 p.m., University Theatre. Jayhawk Joggers Club: 4:00 p.m. East door. Robinson Gymnasium KU Synchro Club: 7-9 p. M. Robinson Gymnasium Natatorium. East door, Robinson Gymnasium KU Synch Club 7-9 p.m. Rob- bins 7-9 p.m. Festival of Arts: "Urban of Modern Athens" Barbara Rose, 8 p.m., Hoch Auditorium. Experimental Theatre: "Kyogen: Comic Theatre of Japan." 12:08 p.m. The powdered wig came into fashion in Europe in the 18th century. 12 KANSAN Apr. 1 1970 SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office E Go WIDE TRACKIN' with Pedwin. It's the going thing. Sandals with tiretread rubber soles that really grip the road. They're guaranteed too, against most road hazards and blowouts. Try a pair soon. Includes free installation Whitewalls not available Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Sepen Massachusetts Street 8 Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street 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 & Iowa the Country House invites you in for AFTER-EASTER SPECIALS DRESSES One Small Group—Wools 1/2 PRICE One Large Group—32 Cottons 1/3 OFF WOOL SKIRT BONANZA 64 TOP QUALITY SKIRTS 5|6 7|8 9|10 11|12 15 15 13 13 REG. PRICE $12.00 to $24.00 NOW $6 and$9 Size: Quantity 1314 8 EI Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown VI 3-5755 Photo by Ron Bishop CAUTION Phone company hurdles communication gap Dormitories will have individual room telephone services next fall. Trenches for the installation of telephone lines will be dug along Jayhawk Boulevard, from Danforth Chapel and along Naismith Drive and 15th Street. Twelve new telephone ducts will be installed to take care of phone needs for the next 35 years. Bell Telephone adds lines to dormitories Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. is laying new trunk lines across campus to provide telephone service to all KU dormitory rooms next fall. Twelve new telephone ducts will be installed along Jayhawk Boulevard, starting at Danforth Chapel, Naismith Drive and 15th Street. Southwestern Bell's business office manager, E. H. James, said the new telephone system should be completed by Aug. 9. He said all costs for laying the new trunks would be assumed by Southwestern Bell. The local student radio station, KUOK, provides students with an opportunity to learn the basics of radio broadcasting. It is not a professional station, but a thing of experience. "Some accuse radio of being a juke box," he said. Just like television or a circus, radio is an entertainment medium." He said the station has two basic problems: equipment which is old because there is not enough money to buy new materials and a lack of communication within the various staffs. Sullinger said the station, which plays the top 40 regularly, has a big music special coming up on Crosby, Stills and Nash. KUOK hopes to put in a telephone call for an interview with the group. KUOK has a staff of 110 students, Robert Sullinger, Overland Park junior, said, who run the station 24 hours a day, seven days a week. This staff is composed of people from speech 39, who are introduced to the basics of broadcasting, speech 79, who occupy staff positions, and journalism 80, who hold executive positions such as production director and general manager. "We are more liberal in our selection of music than commercial stations," Sullinger said. "We appeal to the 18 to 24 age group, not bubble gummers. We try and hit music of the age group that listens in." "Agnew says he wants better broadcasters," Sullinger said, "but there is no way with this equipment. We need help from the outside, like from NBC and CBS. We have got to communicate effectively," he said. TOY TRAIN TROUBLE KUOK staff learns broadcasting basics BEDFORD, England (UPI) It wasn't engineer William Blake's obsession with toy trains that annoyed the General Post Office. It was the 500 pounds ($1,200) worth of post office equipment he stole to build the toy complex. Blake, pleading guilty, said he hole telephones, cables and electrical goods over a five-year period. Apr. 1 1970 KANSAN 13 Ichthyologists report that a shark does not like the taste of human flesh. He will take one bite and spit it out. David Triggle, professor of biochemical pharmacology at the University of New York at Buffalo, will be the guest speaker for the Chemical Biology Seminar, announced the department of medicinal chemistry. Triggle will speak at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 122 Malott on Cholinergic and Adrenergic Legend-Receptor Interactions." Chemical biology seminar planned Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa BURGER CHEF Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN COIN OP. PICK UP AND COIN OP. LAUNDRY 900 Miss. 19th and La. VI 3-5304 9th and Miss. Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 109 Mass "Special College, Times" VI 3-5432 GIFT FOR GRADUATES 'YOUNG' GIFT FOR DAD NEW DOUBLE-LIFE LINKS Wear with or without Gen. Leather Wrap-arounds "TOWN & COUNTRY" CONVERTIBLE CUFF LINKS In all 12 Zodiac designs Sporty leather wrap-arounds or dressy formal cuff links—enjoy both with Anson Convertibles! Leather wraps reverse to show brown or black. Elegant ... modern! Only $850 GOOD YEAR ASK ABOUT OUR EASY PAY PLAN GOOD YEAR "ALL-WEATHER IV" TIRE GOOD YEAR ASK ABOUT OUR EASY PAY PLAN GOOD YEAR "ALL-WEATHER IV" TIRE BUY NOW 2 FOR $20.90 6.50 x 13 blackwall tubeless plus Fed. 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Wire Base Wiglet - Flexible wire base for height and styling - 100% Human Hair 270 987 Compare at 19.95 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE HOME Timberland BRIX Pic Nic Pak 3006 - Convenient - Convenient - No mess, no waiting - No bulky sacks - Just light the pak - Self starting Gibson GP 880 Tires 1775-14 1477 FET 2.20 DUNLOP NATIONAL 825-14 1497 FET 2.36 hardwood charcoal 22c Gibson's Discount Price. Blackwalls 735-14 1447 FET 2.07 775-15 1447 FET 2.21 825-15 1497 FET 2.46 Whitewalls 2.00 extra GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE - Perfect for picnics - Lightweight 33 Quart Styrofoam 79c - Well Padded For Dependable Protection --- - Rugged Construction, 33 - Metal handles Ice Chest 1533 - U L tested motor Crash Helmet - Approved Buddy L Smoker Wagon - Adjustable fire box & 2 chrome cooking grids --- 4450 Gibson's Discount Price - One piece flip-top hood with full view safety glass Compare at 24.95 D-10C Gibson's Discount Price - No taste 1097 U.S. QUART - 0.506 LITRE CHAMPLIN CHARACTER LIQUID WARNING: WARNINGS ON REF. NO. 1472, G. D. 1983, 1984 - No soot - No odor Compare at 75c 27c Gibson's Discount Price TRANSEASON Starter Fluid CMO Compare at 45c 17c 10,2030W DELUXE Compare at 60c Truckload Sale Champlin Motor Oils CMO 29c Champlin Charcoal 23c CHAMPLIN C.M.O. MOTOR OIL Buy the Best! BURGESS flashlight BATTERIES BURGESS HOME PROTECTED "D" Size Guaranteed! 9c GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the direction of the institution 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 Edition, Campus Med Houses, 41 W. 14th St. 1967 Wesley Motorscooter and helmet, $125. Runs perfectly. 843-4243. 4-1 1988 VW Fastback. Must sell at wholesale price of $1425. First offer takes—no holds. Call 843-8191 for six. 4-2 Research projects for class or personal use on any thought or subject for sale. 842-6140. 4-2 1966 Chevette SS 399. 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 Spray, net wt. 3.3 oz. Retail price per 24-can case $16.54. Sell price per 4-can account only $5.00. UN 4-4457-4 1970 Corvette Coupe, 350 CID, 350 H.P., 4-speed, AC, postraction, tinted glass, AM-FM radio priced to sell. 843-7756. 4-2 Minolta, SRT101, F1.4, Leather case, skylight灯照, rechargeable strobe. 4 inches of camera, strobe used. $235.00 or best buy offer. 843-1326 at 6 p.m. Artley fluke—excellent condition also Fender Rhodes piano—new condition. ½ price. 842-5648. 4-1 '67 Barracuda Formula "S". Call U 4-4326 or 843-0435. 4-3 1967 Renault R-10. Best offer. Call 842-3647. 4-3 '65 Chev. Impala, HT—PS/PB, automatic, call 843-1342, after 5. Clock sometimes works. 4-6 Lovable 7 months old male Irish settler who wants a friendly home. AKC registered, loves people. Call 842-8835 after 7:00 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 Gibson Hummingbird Guitar, acoustic, excellent condition, must sell immediately. Best offer takes. Call Jim, 842- 7307. 4-2 '66 Chevy Bel-Air 4 dr. sedan, 283 Factory Air, P.S., P.B., 6 good tires. $995. Fail 842-4717, Wed., Thurs, Fri. after 6 p.m. 4-6 '63-wood LeBlanc-symphony model classic car—$350; '28" Boys Schwinn typewriter—$40; Polaroid Swimmer camera—$10. Call 842-5280 4-6 TEXACO ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. TEXACO W. 9th ★ Student specials - Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 ★ New, experienced manage- THE HIVE in the WALL DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Some Time - Phone Order 843-7658 - We Deliver - 9th G. III "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th 7 DAY SPECIAL 7 DAY SPECIAL Cars Painted $34.95 Fred's Auto Pointing 1328 W. 9th, Ph. 842-9487 New York Cleaners For the best in: - Dry Cleaning - Alterations - Alterations * Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-050 Audio Discount-your A.R. Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10%; handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Siamsee kitten for sale. Beautiful 10- week study, price $15, call 842-1811 after 6:00 p.m. or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 4-7 '64 Chevellie, low miles, tires one month old, body and engine in excellent condition. Will include stereo system and many tape calls. Gait 6707 after 5. Walnut stereo speaker systems. (1) large floor models with 12" Danish speakers. (2) shelf model, with a 2-way 8" speaker system. Both sets sell for below retail. Both sets carry a full one year warranty. B43-6707. 4-7 GE stereo tape recorder with speakers, excellent condition. 1 year old. Best offer. Call 843-1408 after 5:00 p.m. 4-7 21" Zenith television, 6 months old. Oldsmobile sonic stereo. Call at 434-807-9007. Gibson steel-string—almost new—$75. Also GE stereo, 2 years old, in good condition—$50. See Kat at 1030 Ohio or call 842-6082. 4-7 Flat top guitar, western trim, $80. 542-2362. 4-3 Chavrolet-1969 Nova, V-8, automatic, only 9.000 miles, new condition. Phone Debi at 843-7600 after 5 p.m. Custom designed, multi - purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. Customised equipment, economical purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved 7575 lb. of Barbell Co., Inc.) 7575 lb. of assorted weight Call J.B. at 843-2103. 4-7 N-w demonstration A.R.5 speakers, 1 pair of 2AX's, full full year guarantee, 'factory cost only'. Ray Audio, Phone 842-2047 evenings 4-10 p.m. fff NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laptid. VI 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Queen, if you want to wear good bargain-B-B-Queen this is the place in Chicago. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket are our specialties. I V-2510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if 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 Massi, VI 3-3644. tt - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" 摄像师 HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. Pilots - Otocapp Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates. Cessna 150 12:45. Daily rates $8.50; Charteke 180 $12.50; 2-seat chairphone 864-1212 after 6. **4-6** Phone 864-1212 after 6. 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers VI 3-0330 HAROLD'S PHILIP 66 SERVICE LA PETITE GALERIE—Who are you? Come and find out. Dresses, separates, groovy pantsuits, coats, swimsuits, clothes, 910 Kentucky. 84f 0826. Accomplished folk or classical guitarist. I play guitar, dulcimer, harmonica, and write songs. Call Scott, 842-7260. 4-3 You guys—better look at the New Haggar and Levi Slacks at ROSS and TOMMY SMITH. Also our Spring Shirts by Van Heusen and Career Club have just arrived. 4-6 WANTED Wanted: Female figure to pose with exotic Italian sports cars for photographing. Pays well. Call 842-5752 evenings. 4-2 Need organist for newly-formed group, Call Carl Humphrey, 843-6455, or Gary Linde, 843-2250. 4-1 Want to buy 90 inch Dodge van. Call UN 4-4328 or 843-0435. 4-3 1-2 girls to share luxury apartment for summer; near campus, pool, air conditioned. $68 monthly, all utilities paid. Call Sue. 842-7535. after 5:30 I would like to borrow your old or antique radio, television, or phonograph on April 17th and 18th for a display in the KU engineering exposition. For details, call Art Black, 842-8699. 4-2 Country;Western band wanted for Flea Marketing. Call 843-7835. 4-6 Sat, April 25. Call 843-7835. 4-6 TYPING I am looking for a companion for this camera to scope this summer. Chip, 843-4942 4-2 Desperate! Ride wanted: KU to KC, Monday and Wednesday—can leave any time at 9:30. Call 842-7192 or RA 2-3088. Exclusive Representative College Pasadac Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typerules. Prepare job descriptions for Pica type. Competent service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 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 - Badges Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8 For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Sportswear L. G. Balfour Co. - Recognitions of - Guards 910 Kv. Rings - Crested - Letters - Favors - Gifts Al Lauter - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Lavaliers - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McGraw-Hill THE CONCORD SHOP - Stationery 645 Mass. - Stretcher Frames, ready-made and parts - Paddles VI 3-1571 McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 - Plaques - Stretcher frames, - Mugs LNB Bldg. #306 - Artist's Convasses 54" - 72" - 90" Across from the Red Dog Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Thesis Typing—10 years experience— Marlene Higley. After 5:00 at 843- 6048 (8:00 to 5:00—842-0111) 4-3 Typing—thesis, dissertations, papers, etc. Royal electric, elite tyne. Fast and accurate service. Paper furnished. 842-1561. Mrs. Nixon. 4-7 FOR RENT A clean four-room furnished apartment. Young responsible married couple. No children or pets. Utilities in our campus. Available A/B 1.843-1585. 4-1 Want to sublease my apartment in Stouffer Place as soon as possible. Please call 842-1224 after six. 4-2 Furnished single sleeping room. Use or refrig. For male. One bedroom suite with air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Available now, two bedroom apt, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tf Furnished apt. for graduate couple—no children, no pets. $125 a mo. Utill. paid. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-1209 after 5. 4-6 Modern 1 bedroom apt., A/C, private entrance, 2 blocks from campus, $125 furnished, $110 unfurnished. Call 842-4869. 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 Swimming Instructor for Girl Scout Camp. Unit Leaders, Counselors, Assistant, Montessori Mrs. Owen, Mentor, 747 Contest Room KC City 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 841-9310. 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. 2021 Haskell. 4-1 PERSONAL Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011% Mass., Returns $4.00 and up. tt THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S HAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA CK Patrick J. Norris Kenneth Koger Ears MEN'S MAKE STYLE ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3809 We Care About We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Acme Dingo Cowboy Boots $18.99 HARVEY'S SHOE STORE See us also for the newest styles Self Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students, Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. tf 803 W. 23rd Open every day 9 - 9 Sunday 1 - 6 New York—TWA 8 times daily, also Chicago, Florida, Hawaii, Las Vegas, across the U.S.A., to Europe, Africa, and or Around the World—many fares. SERVICES OFFERED Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Troup Tax, 80112. Mass. $4.00 and up. if LOST IF YOU need repairs, we need your business—besides we're less expensive than the competition . . . PERFORMANCE ENTERPRISES. 317 N. 2nd St., 842-1191. Repairs on all popular imports and sports cars. 4-1 Black tri-fold wallet. Please return to 1305 Vermont, Apt. 1, or call 843-9313. Reward. 4-6 Glasses with dark brown frames. In viensity of Gaslight. Return to Room 636 JRP. Reward. 4-6 FOUND BUY, SELL OR TRADE Found: A most exciting place to enjoy steaks by candlelight at their finest. Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-1 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf Kansan Classifieds Work For You! Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Guiling steaks and fresh seafood self-service now even at the Alfresco. We only enjoy the limited selection of alfrescos, you use them like with all the dinner dishes. Doing the dining at the Alfresco is uncomparable pleasure. Dine for pleasure. U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and one half mile north of the Kow River Bridge 843-1431 Students will vote (Continued from page 1) by Fall, 1972. The main Book Store in the Kansas Union is excessively overcrowded and is presently renting space off campus. The main Kansas Union is loosing participation in its programs because of the inconvenience for people in living groups in the southern portion of campus, said Longencker. Presently the 200 seat Hawklet in the basement of Summerfield is the only available facility for food and refreshment service for a commuter population of more than 1,500 students and more than 5,000 students residing in that area. The satellite union would mean about a $7 increase per semester in the student activity fee. However Keith L. Nitcher, vice chancellor of finance, said that the $3 operational cost in this amount could be deferred until the building becomes operational. There is no other way to fund the project, other than through this activity fee, Burge said. Delaying the building, said Longenecker, would only result in higher costs because of inflation. The facility is a highly desirable part of long range plans for the University as it grows, Longenecker said. 'Sick-out' move slowed By United Press International Lawyer F. Lee Bailey, leader of the absentee air controllers, urged his men to return to work Tuesday, one day before a contempt of court hearing on charges he ignored an order to end an illegal strike against the government. The executive director of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) told newsmen he had sent his membership telegrams saying that "those men not out legitimately should be back running air-planes." But Bailey said he had no idea whether the absentees would heed his plea and end their protest sick calls that have slowed down commercial flight operations from coast to coast, hitting the Northeast and Middle West especially hard. Bailey has denied throughout that the "sick-out" was a strike, as the government contends, but 16 KANSAN Apr. 1 1970 that the air controllers were really fatigued from overwork. However, he asked all the 14,000 air controllers last Thursday night to walk off their jobs, charging air safety was imperiled by the government's use of inadequately trained substitute controllers. On Tuesday, Bailey said his appeal for a return to work was "triggered by the need to persuade the public I am not in favor of a strike or a walkout." Snow and poor visibility caused further delays in flight departures and arrivals in the Northeast, from the Carolinas north and from Cleveland, Ohio, east. The Federal Aviation Administration claimed what it called a "decided upward trend" in air controllers reporting for work at its 21 regional air traffic control centers across the country, especially in New York, Cleveland, Chicago, Kansas City and Denver. On the 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. shift, the FAA said, absentee-ism was 29 per cent nationwide compared with 32 per cent during the same shift on Monday. He said that the University was "crisis oriented" and did not look at a problem until it is too big to ignore. By accepting the need now and beginning to meet it this policy could change. Longeneccker called the referendum a test of whether the students would vote responsibly. They must think of the students in 1972, he said, when more than half of the University's students will live in the southern part of the campus. (Continued from page 1) "Its instrumentation revealed the existence of a radiation belt of the earth and opened up a massive new field of scientific exploration in space. (Continued from page 1) Satellite dies- "It inspired an entire generation of young men and women in the United States to higher achievements and propelled the Western world into the space age." Van Allen said. The oldest man-made object in space now is the grapefruit-sized Vanguard I launched March 17, 1958. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said Vanguard may remain in orbit between 200 and 2,000 more years. Explorer 1, 80 inches long with its rocket motor attached, weighed 31 pounds when it was launched by a Jupiter-C rocket. It burned up between the continent of South America and New Zealand and between 500 and 1,000 miles southwest of Easter Island. a NORAD spokesman said. Sputnik 1, the first man-made object in space, dropped back into the atmosphere three months after launch Oct. 4, 1957. The oldest Soviet object in space now is Lunik 1, a moon probe that went into solar orbit Jan. 2, 1959. PLEASE STOP Photo by Ron Bishop Even stop signs yearn for spring Bob Johns, meteorologist in the public service unit of the U.S. Weather Bureau in Kansas City, Mo. attributed our unseasonal weather to an air pattern at around 20,000 feet. "Each time a storm like this appears," he said, "we always get snow on the north side of the low pressure area, or cold air." He confidently predicted the pattern would break up, "after a length of time." The International Club presents... the second of its exchange programs with Haskell Institute. Be a guest of the International Club this Friday night, when members of Haskell Institute will perform native American Indian dances before an international audience. At the Union Ballroom, 7:30 p.m., April 3rd. ADMISSION FREE — EVERYONE INVITED Sponsored by the International Club Seminar centers on crime By JOHN GOODRICK Kansan Staff Writer The Seventies will be the "Golden Age of Crime" said the Topeka Chief of Police Wednesday in a seminar on the prevention and control of juvenile delinquency. "The pig will become one of the most beautiful creatures in the Seventies," Dana Hummer told nearly 70 persons in his speech, "Problems for the Police." Area counselors, principals, judges, policemen, juvenile detention directors and persons who work with juvenile offenders attended the seminar in the Kansas Union and participated in the discussions with Hummer, a Wichita probate judge and a panel of high school students. "The only man you'll see at 3 a.m. is the man in the blue suit," Hummer said. Much of today's delinquency can be attributed to the widespread use of drugs, he added. Despite the fact that marijuana might not be harmful in itself "96 per cent of hard drug users started out on marijuana," he said. Fifty per cent of crimes are under the influence of drugs or to get drugs. The hippies using drugs are "using a crutch to guard from the confrontation of life," Hummer added. Seventy five per cent of the teachers in East St. Louis carry guns for discipline reasons. He said many schools across the nation need full time guards for protection. "We've come a long way," he said, "but the wrong way." The solution, he said is to "strengthen the home and family life." "We must go back to honoring thy father and mother," Hummer said. Young people today are brought up to believe there is no real, or right or wrong he said. Hummer recommended "discipline through love." Society today is becoming permissive he said children are brought up to respect "neither their parents or their Bibles." Hummer said there should be more told about the good students who do not riot and those who aren't delinquents. He said there is too much publicity about the bad students. Honorable Clark V. Owens, Wichita probate judge, said a penal institution is a "breeding place and training grounds" that can make a juvenile offender a hardened criminal in his speech, "The count's view of the juvenile offender." After three wayward offenses a child can be declared miscreant and sent to a juvenile home. If he then runs away from the detention home a few times he can be sent to a penal institution, Owens said. A 14-year-old going into an institution can come out a "homosexual, or know how to carry out an armed robbery, or peel a safe," he said. "You can't teach an old dog new tricks, but you can a new one," he said. Giving the juvenile his constitutional safeguards will cause more harm than good, Owens said. If you give the juvenile the right to bond, bail and trial by jury, then every juvenile offender will have to have his bond posted and bail payed on any offence he commits, instead of the usual releasing of the child to his parents until the case comes to court, he said. "A high 80 per cent of the juveniles we get come from broken homes," (Continued to page 16) --funds cannot be used now since the state legislature knows student fees are used for this purpose. UDK News Roundup By United Press International Neutralization plan offered WASHINGTON—State Department officials today expressed interest in a French proposal for international negotiations to neutralize all of Indochina, but reserved judgment until they had more precise information. A department spokesman declined formal comment on the French proposal, issued late Wednesday, that there be "negotiations between all interested parties" to try to neutralize Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. However, officials privately said they needed considerably more information before they could make any definite response or assessment. Grape strike ends LOS ANGELES—Two small growers of California table grapes signed a three-year labor contract with the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee Wednesday which provided for a closed shop union and a wage increase of 6 per cent. Army charges Medina WASHINGTON—The Army Wednesday charged Capt. Ernest L. Medina with being responsible for all murders of South Vietnamese civilians that occurred during the alleged My Lai massacre. Medina has denied he ever ordered a massacre or that he ever knew that one occurred. Agnew benched as starter Assistant Senate Republican Leader Robert P. Griffin of Michigan quickly pointed out that Agnew and Washington's other senators—the ones who are older and heavier—had some business Monday, too, like the Supreme Court nomination of G. Harrold Carswell. WASHINGTON—The starting pitcher for the official opening of the baseball season Monday is still in doubt. One thing sure—it won't be Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew. New strike threatens WASHINGTON—Postal union negotiators, faced with a new strike threat by New York letter carriers, today will discuss details of the government's double-barreled pay increase offer with AFL-CIO President George Meany before deciding whether to accept it. Added urgency was injected into the negotiations Wednesday when letter carriers in New York, where the nation's first postal strike began March 18, voted a new strike authorization. --funds cannot be used now since the state legislature knows student fees are used for this purpose. 80th Year, No. 105 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 2,1970 Students to vote on hospital needs An increase in the activity fees for new medical facilities at KU will be one of the questions students will decide in the referendum vote Tuesday. Full-time students now pay $20 a semester for health services. The exact increase has not been set, said William Balfour, dean of student affairs. He estimated the increase at $10 a semester. The final amount hinges on whether a new facility is built or just an addition is made to Watkins Hospital. There is no way to finance the student health services other than student fees, Balfour said. State A committee is presently working out the hospital's needs which will include more waiting rooms, examination rooms and laboratories. More money will also be needed for doctors, nurses and medical technicians, Balfour said. The ideal number of doctors, Balfour said, is one for every thousand students. Presently there is 1 for every 1700 students at KU. Additional facilities are needed to correct two major (Continued to page 15) Astronauts set for lunar exploration CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — The countdown starts Sunday night for the launch of Apollo 13's three astronauts April 11 on a daring moon expedition. The trio will land in a moon valley littered with rocks that may date back to the birth of the solar system. The launch crew was prepared to begin the long countdown at 10 p.m. (EST) and head toward a 2:13 p.m. (EST) blastoff Saturday for Navy Capt. James E. Lovell, 42, Lt. Cmdr. Thomas K. Mattingly II, 34, and civilian Fred W. Hise, 36. It will be America's third moon landing mission, and the first to explore a hilly stretch of terrain selected for its scientific interest. Apollo 13's landing site is called the Fra Mauro formation named after a 16th century Franciscan monk who was a noted geographer and mapmaker. The touchdown target itself is in a relatively smooth valley nestled in the foothills of the rugged lunar highlands. "If you had asked me on Apollo 11 to go into Fra Mauro, I would have had considerable doubts." Lovell said in an interview. "But I've seen what the system can do, and I've got all the confidence in the world." Lovell, a three-time space veteran (Continued to page 16) Snowman in a chair. Photo by Ron Bishop Buddha surveys the situation The almighty Buddha looks serenely across the sinful wastelands of a local apartment complex, perhaps meditating on transcendental realization or perhaps on the foul weather that has besieged Lawrence. Campus briefs Pharmacists to discuss new drugs About 250 pharmacists and prospective pharmacists will attend the 26th Biannual Pharmacy Extension Course of the University of Kansas on one of four successive afternoons, May 5-8. The meetings will be consecutively in Dodge City, Wichita, Junction City, and Kansas City, Kansas. Four faculty members from the K.U. School of Pharmacy will present 45-minute sessions, followed by question and answer periods. Topics will be new drugs for Parkinsonism and epilepsy, expanding population and the contraceptive dilemma, factors affecting drug availability, and allergy, natural and drug induced. Paul Ehrlich, whose book "The Population Bomb" is one of the standard texts on ecology will speak at 8 p.m. on April 28 at Allen Field House. The lecturers will be professors Duane G. Wentzel, James D. McChesney, Arnold J. Repta, and Carlton K. Erickson. The topic of the speech will be "Society for the Study of Darwin's Hangenail." Ehrlich to speak at Field House A KU graduate, Ehrlich is professor of biology and director of graduate study for the Department of Biological Sciences at Stanford University. He has made frequent appearances on national television and on campuses trying to awaken people to the possibility of mass starvation which he and others predict will occur unless immediate action is taken. Health council to discuss food Applicants for positions as resident assistants in men's residence halls for the 1970-71 school year are being interviewed in the office of the Dean of Men, Fred McElhenie, associate dean of men said. "We have 104 applicants who filed for the job before the March 16 deadline," McElhenie said. "However, there are only going to be 32 to 35 openings." Nutrition and malnutrition, or "Well Fed or Fed Up?" will be the theme of the annual meeting of the Kansas School Health Advisory The applicants will be selected on the basis of interviews, letters of recommendation, overall grade point average and observation of group problem solving. McEl- "Applicants will be divided into small groups and given a problem they might come up against as a resident assistant," McElhenie explained. "This way we will be able to find clues that will help us to determine what type of resident assistant the applicant Interviews in progress Immigrants entering the United States from 1820 to 1967 totaled 44,070,927, reports the Immigration and Naturalization Service. henie said. might be," he said. "We are trying to gather as much information about each applicant as we can." McElhenie said. The more information we have the better the selections for the position will be, he said. ACTORS AUDITIONS TONIGHT U.C.C.F. 1201 Oread 7-10 p.m SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Council April 9 in the Student Union building of Wichita State University. The keynoter will be M.E. Kraynak, professor at the University of Oklahoma. His subject at the 9 a.m. session will be "Nutritional Status of American School Children." Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Edwin Hovey of the Food and Drug Administration, Washington, D.C., will speak on "Food Additives, Facts and Fallacies." Other program features will be reports on the White House Conference on Nutrition and a review of Kansas school food service programs. Jayhawker Office Apr.2 1970 2 KANSAN Artcarved WEDDING RINGS FULICO CollegeMaster - Satin-toned, bright cut or florentine finishes. CLARION SET JUST ONE OF OUR 300 DIFFERENT STYLES 14K J AILLEMINE A WE in sales and service to Men and Women in the college market. Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI2-4650 - Traditional, plain, modern, wide, medium or slim styles. No.1 - 14 Karat yellow gold, white gold or elegant two-tone combinations. All by Artcarved, the most trusted name in wedding rings since 1850. As seen in BRIDE'S Marks Jewelers DEL ESSLEE Certified Gemologist American Gem Society 817 Mass Authorized Member VI 3-4266 Authorized Artcarved Jeweler Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 68th anniversary 68 THE ski cot coth THE Nass polye rayon nylon woven What could be more sporting than these fashion separates SPECIAL BUY! 2 FOR $5 THE TOPS: Polyester/cotton knits that are Penn-Prest $ ^{®} $ , too! Short sleeve, solids and stripes. V-neck or crew neck styles, some with trimming. S, M, L. THE SKIRTS: The newest scooter skirts. Mini fashion in polyester/ cotton solids and Avril $ ^{ \textcircled{1}} $ rayon/ cotton prints. Sizes 5 to 15. THE SHORTS: Jamaicas and Nassau lengths in Penn-Prest® polyester/cotton plus Avril® rayon/cotton, cotton and stretch nylon double knit. Solids and woven patterns, 8 to 18. All-American paper award is Kansan's third in a row A third consecutive All-American rating has been awarded to the University Daily Kansan, it was announced Monday by Otto W. Quale, executive director of the Associated Collegiate Press at the University of Minnesota. Approximately 600 newspapers from colleges and universities throughout the United States were evaluated in the 82nd All-American Critical Service competition. Issues of the Kansan published from September through December 1969 were judged on coverage and content, writing and editing, editorial leadership, physical appearance and photography. Marks of distinction for superior achievement may be awarded in each of the five categories and a paper must receive four such credits to be rated All-American. The Kansan received marks of distinction for superior accomplishment in writing and editing, editorial leadership, physical appearance and photography. "Covering the college campus and relating to national and international events offers an increased challenge to the newspaper staff working with limited time and funds," Quale said. "An overall study indicates that the majority of the entries in our competition are doing an outstanding job, fully aware of the opportunities of a free and responsible press." Specifically cited as examples of "good, responsible journalism" were the Kansan's pleasing balance between news and features, a number of exceptionally welldone photographs and the colorful writing in several feature stories. The Kansan received a mark of distinction for editorial leadership in its "dispassionate treatment of vital issues such as ROTC and the moratoriums." The Kansan was commended for "giving a studied, yet vigorous, view of these important issues." UNITAN INCLUDING: EVIL WAYS/JINGO YOU JUST DON'T CARE PERSUASION/WAITING CS 9781*1C reg. $4.98 NOW $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. state geologist in 1957. He became full professor in 1962. Chalmers announces geological director 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 Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced the appointment of William W Hambleton, associate director of the Kansas State Geological Survey at the University of Kansas and associate dean of faculties, to the posts of state geologist and director of the geological survey during the Kansas Board of Regents meeting March 20. Patronize Kansan Advertisers "Dr. Hambleton is an ideal choice," Chalmers said. "He was recommended by a representative committee nominated from the staff of the survey, from the faculty and from the Mineral Industries Advisory Council." Hambleton received his Ph.D from KU in 1951 and then was appointed assistant professor of geology. He was appointed associate director of the State Geological Survey and associate Apr. 2 1970 KANSAN 3 The new Toyota Mark II ...a bigger version of Toyota economy • Approximately 25 mpg • Nylon Carpets • Top Speed: 105 • Power Brakes all around with Front Disc Brakes • Reclining Bucket Seats • 108 hp Single OHC Fri. TOYOTA COMPETITION SPORTS CARS East of bridge on Hgwy.10 celebrate. LIVE ROCK BAND SATURDAY BELL BOTTOMS·SHIRTS·LEATHER·PIPES·GIFTS STRAWBERRY FIELDS 712 MASS. photo by S. CROMWELL KANSAN COMMENT Illegal strikes: the only way? The classic battle of labor against management has been plaguing government in the United States ever since it decided it had an obligation to help resolve industrial shutdowns that endangered the national interest. Until recently, the government could remain a relatively neutral mentor to labor disputes. Now, however, it has discovered that it can—and has—become a party to such battles, and government seems unsure of just what to do. Striking teachers, sanitation workers, police and firemen have brought many cities to a moral impasse. One way or another, the disputes have been solved, or at least papered over, but city governments have yet to formulate a workable policy for avoiding stoppages by employees whose everyday services are a necessity. The postal workers defied court injunctions, their own leaders' pleas to return to work and a call-up of the National Guard to replace them. Likewise, last week's postal workers strike and the continuing "sick-out" by air traffic controllers caught the federal government off guard. By law, U.S. employees cannot strike, but they did, call it by whatever name they may. The Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, led by its attorney, F. Lee Bailey, also refuse to heed a restraining order requiring the union to withdraw its support of the nationwide slowdown. In the face of overwhelming resistance to its orders, the government grew more strict. Congress refused to act on the workers' demands so long as an ax was over their heads. Soon, though, the logjam was broken. Postmen returned to work and, as of this writing, the air traffic controllers were doing the same. Now that the pressure has been slightly relieved, negotiations have started, tempered by union threats of more walkouts if they don't proceed satisfactorily. During the height of the mail stoppages congressmen, appointed officials, newspapers and other citizens complained indignantly about the government employees' riding roughshod over services guaranteed them by the Constitution. But the blame lies with a stubborn and unseeing Congress and executive. Although President Nixon denies it, union leaders and some congressmen have claimed that he tied any postal wage increase to reform of the system. The President's alleged intransigence was matched only by that of Congress, which was slow to accept even the idea of reforming the cumbersome post office department, let alone of writing it into law. The postal workers, the air traffic controllers—all government workers—claim the law against their striking leaves them little hope for improvement in their working conditions. Theirs is a worthy argument. The postmen, for example, are paid from $6,176 to $8,442 a year—the latter figure attainable after 21 years on the job. They demanded a 40 per cent increase, to a scale of $8,500 to $11,700, but even that was cropped by union leaders to 12 per cent retroactive to last November. The government seeks to go lower than that. Meanwhile, the air traffic controllers were protesting the heavy work loads imposed upon them by the Federal Aviation Administration and the concomitant reduction of safety standards. All federal workers are distressed by the President's freeze on federal pay raises (part of his inflation fight). Honest grievances, such as these, cannot be legally redressed by government employees. They must wait for government to act, and government is often slower than the greediest corporation. Can federal workers, then, strike against the national interest? Other groups have made good use of civil disobedience, not only to publicize their grievances, but to get concrete results. Distasteful as it seems to a nation which depends on the mails and the airlines, striking may be the workers' only way out. They are, of course, responsible for their actions, and if jailings and fines are the results, the strikers must accept them. The unfortunate part of the whole affair, is that government is under no danger of such penalties. Unless, of course, the electorate rises in support of the complainants. hearing voices一 —Monroe Dodd To the editor: I would like to address several questions to those persons who disrupted the March 16 SUA Minority Forum. I would include the member of the Forum committee who gave the most abominably discourteous introduction I have ever been embarrassed to sit through. You speak of totalitarianism, of denial of basic freedoms, of enslavement by a corrupt system. What makes your philosophy so different from those totalitarianisms who have historically, consistently sought to repress ideas in conflict with their own? Who have seen the danger of freedom of speech and have destroyed it? Is there really much difference between the philosophy of you who would pelt a man, who seeks to express himself, whether right or wrong, with insults and marshmallows, and those who seek a more permanent repression of freedom of opinion with bombs and bullets? Why do you so energetically seek to protect your own freedoms and deny another man his? How can you justify such a system that seeks freedoms for a few? In contrast to your tactics, Lt. Col. Jack Mohr did not attempt to force his opinions upon me. He accepted an invitation to express himself in an atmosphere of intelligent give and take designed to arrive at the validity of his statements. Unfortunately those who attended his speech intending to make their own decisions about the validity of these opinions, were deprived of this right. I protest this mental enslavement. I demand my right to freedom of thought. Kay C. Martinez Lawrence junior * * * To the editor: Perhaps our educational system stands justifiably condemned by the employees of the Kansas University Printing Service. They are, after all, products of our educational system and while their minds may not be "polluted" like the minds of those of us still committed to the values of a free press and a free society, they are obviously experiencing a great deal of difficulty in understanding their own history and their own society. How sad and even tragic that men could believe today that the North's victory in the Civil War and the 13th Amendment were all that was needed to assure basic human dignity for "some elements of our society." (Would it have been so very painful for "great and silent majority" of printing service employees to call our black students "people" or "men" instead of "elements?") How unfortunate that men would choose the issue of taxation as the most important issue of the American revolution and as the most important problem facing the great majority today, when we were then and are now being torn apart on problems of human survival, dignity, and freedom. (How ironic that men who are being paid by taxpayers should despair taxes.) Perhaps the next time the employees of the printing service walk out on their jobs (are these walk outs, by the way, "disruption(s) of the orderly process of the university" that should be brought to the attention of Senator Shultz?) they might walk in on a few classes and try to find out if they are asking the right questions as well as try to learn whatever they want to learn. Maybe if they tried being students for a while they would even come to understand the extraordinarily limited nature of current student "rights" and "freedoms." Mary Kay Cordill Instructor of Sociology and Kansas City graduate student To the editor: Violence is as American as apple pie. That has been shown to be a fact. However, one group of Americans, the blacks, has remained basically non-violent, at least until very recently. Perhaps this is one reason they are still so discriminated against. Even since slavery they have been good niggers to the white folks: they have refused violence as an alternative. Now, the whites are in danger of losing their whipping boy. More and more blacks are discovering, sadly, that violence is indeed the American way. Because of this, white Americans, with their right to oppress being threatened, have renewed their level of violence against black persons (Lamar, S.C., is a recent example). Many black and other revolutionaries, however, are trying other forms of violence as an answer. Instead of using physical violence, which their past has shown they cannot consciously accept, they are experimenting with such things as symbolic violence, i.e., violence against property. (The throwing of the UDK's into Potter's Lake is a recent example.) Maybe white America still has its whipping boy, who still refuses to play the game by the rules. I know this letter contains generalizations, but certainly no more than does Mr. Moser's of last week. Jim Merryfield Bartlesville, Okla., junior ROSSAN CRISIS YEARS OF PARTISAN POLITICS U.S. MAIL SERVICE C. W. TG. THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL 'Who put that stupid tree up there?' 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 postponed periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class payment. Lawrence KC 60044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisements. Students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . James W. Murray News Reviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson Campus Editors ... Ted Ifford News Editor ... Donna Shrader Editorial Editors ... Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnah, Steve Shriver Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkens Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Web Design Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Reviews Editors ... Geneile Richards, Rich Geary Assistant Campus Editors ... Wendy Palilho, Mark Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Ssexon, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffelwright BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager 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 Shelley Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Inglis Member Associated Collegiate Press I REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. '360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 KANSAS REVIEWS FESTIVAL : One, not two By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer From the various tidbits floating around about the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble, I expected last night's concert to be a stodgy first half of classical music followed by a somewhat livelier rock concert. From the first number that impression was thankfully shattered. The Ensemble did not separate its training in the classical from its enjoyment in rock but combined them into one concert, not two, and what has to be one of the most exciting performances I have seen. The classical vein was advanced mainly through the playing of the group's extremely versatile keyboard man, Michael Kamen, who switched back and forth from the electric piano to the organ. His playing would begin to remind you of a Bach fugue, but then he would be getting into something else. Several times during the concert the group traded its guitars and drums for the cello, oboe and English horn in departures that served to spice up the performance. The second half of the concert erupted into hard-driving rock and the music became undoubtedly heavier. But the classical influence was still there. Just as the scene seemed about to explode into chaos, the group returned to the melody and rhythm. At times the bass guitar sounded like a cello or violin. The Ensemble is one of the most solid, versatile and original groups around. Much is said about the musical trips of Hendrix or the Airplane but with these the listener seems to sense where the trip is taking him. The Ensemble with its originality and abrupt changes that surprised the listener just when he thought he had figured out where the music was going, led the audience on a musical trip which it followed right up to the climactic "rush" ending with the chaotic national anthem. Last night's performance was a truly exciting musical experience. ACTORS : One man show By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Restraint and stylization characterized the performance given by Won Kyung Cho, a Korean dancer-actor, in a one-man show in University Theatre Wednesday evening. Cho's performance comprised the rendering of an original one-act play, several Korean love poems, and six interpretative dances. To enjoy the performance, a viewer needed some knowledge of traditional Korean drama. Extensive program notes and explanations of poems by Cho greatly aided appreciation of an extremely exotic form of entertainment. The play, which concerned the awakening of sexual desires in a young novice monk, was novel, but the plot advanced slowly. All costume changes were made on stage, creating several intervals of complete silence and prolonged loss of story continuity, which western audiences are not used to. Cho assumed both male and female roles in the dances he performed. Long sleeves, extending about two feet beyond the fingertips, were the point of attention of dancing costumes. Their flowing and twining were Nevertheless, Cho's beautifully poetic monologue and excellent characterization of a young man torn between service to his Lord and love for a woman, made the drama poignant and appealing. Apr. 2 1970 KANSAN 5 reminiscent of a hula dancer's hands, which tell the story and render meaning. Of the six dances, the Fan Dance, or Sorcerer's Dance, was most exciting. It was characterized by fierce leaping, which Cho executed with infinite grace. The entire performance was an unusual view of oriental dramatic genre. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 C Varsity THEATRE ... telephone VI 3-1065 Festival previews - art scene Art is the media featured for the fourth night event in the week long Festival of the Arts. Barbara Rose, a young 33-year-old art critic is scheduled to speak to Festival-goers at 8 p.m. tonight in Hoch Auditorium. DO YOU KNOW WHERE "AL'S RESTAURANT" ?? IS ?? Win $10.00 by guessing write c/o "Al's Restaurant" P.O. Box 808, Lawrence, Kansas Winner Will Be Announced in Friday's Paper (watch each day for clue) Mrs. Rose who writes and speaks on art extensively is this year serving as a Regents Professor at the University of California at San Diego. In 1966 and 1969 she received the College Art Association Award for Distinguished Art Criticism. CLUE #3: LARGEST PARKING LOT IN TOWN But in 1955 because she realized the need for a change she ventured to France to study at the Sorbonne. After that she continued her studies at New York's Barnard College where she had the advantage of the major New York art galleries and many private collections. She received her B.A. from Barnard. In 1960 she What do you do when your girlfriend wants to meet the wife and 3 kids you don't have? You see... T was awarded her M.A. in art history for her thesis on Dutch and Flemish Painters in Spain from 1519-1598. A Fulbright scholar in 1961 she used her fellowship to work on her dissertation on 16th century Navarese Painting. WALTER INGRID MATTHAU BERGMAN cactus FLOWER introducing GOLDIE HAWN as TONI NOW! Eve. 7:20 - 9:20 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50; Child .75 Mrs. Rose began her career as an art writer in 1959 when she worked as editorial assistant for "Art News." She became the contributing editor of "artform" and a regular contributor to "Vogue" while teaching at Sarah Lawrence College in 1966-1969. She also Granada TELEFON/RE-Telephone VI 3-5724 The most explosive spy scandal of this century! 書 ALFRED HITCHCOCKS TOPAZ Eve. 7:00 - 9:15 Mat. Sat.- Sun. 2:00 Hillcrest taught at the University of California at Irvine and at Yale University. Joseph E. Levine presents An Avco Embassy Film GENERATION We're just married and the baby's due in 3 days... OOPS! See the fun begin when the father of the bride comes to visit DAVID JANSSEN • KIM DARBY CARL REINER IN CON EMBASSY Idensee M1 Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 THE Hillcrest "Why do we fight our wars for them Christopher Jones in THE TOOKING GLAZER WEB THE LOOKING GLASS WAR THE LOOKING GLASS WAR EASTMAN COLOR / PANAVISION® / From Columbia Pictures Hillcrest3 Eve. 7:30 & 9:25 Mat. Sat. 2:20 Ends Saturday University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $.75 Kuhn slaps Denny with half-season suspension By VIETO STELLINO UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK (UPI) — Painting a picture of star pitcher Denny McLain as a man who was duped "by his own gullibility and avarice" into thinking he was buying into a bookmaking operation, Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn Wednesday slapped the Detroit Tigers' star with a half-season suspension. McLain, said Kuhn after a two-month investigation of gambling charges against McLain, was guilty of "conduct not in the best interests of baseball." The ruling by the baseball commissioner was revealed by him to President Nixon on Tuesday, and Kuhn said the President had called the action "very fair." McLain, who won 31 games for the Tigers in 1968 when they won baseball's world championship, was at home in Lakeland, Fla., when the decision was announced. He has been under indefinite suspension since Feb. 19 while Kuhn conducted an investigation of charges made against him in a magazine. In general, Kuhn, himself a lawyer, found McLain guilty of two items of conduct in 1967: First, he bet on college basketball] games on at least two occasions. The commissioner stressed that "there is no evidence to indicate that McLain ever bet on a baseball game involving the Detroit Tigers or any other team," and that "there is no evidence to indicate that McLain gave less than his best effort at any time Jayhawks to entertain Cowpokes Kansas starts Big Eight baseball play this weekend against defending champion Oklahoma State in a three-game series at Lawrence. A doubleheader Friday at 1:30 p.m. at KU's Quigley Field opens conference play for both teams. The series concludes with a single game Saturday at 1 p.m. The Jayhawks take a 5-1 record into the league race. The Cowboys are 3-3 after splitting six games at Houston last week. Kansas hopes to continue its climb in Big Eight play. The Jayhawks were sixth with a 7-12 mark a year ago after a cellar finish in 1968. 6 KANSAN Apr. 2 1970 Chicago including: Poem For The People In The Country/The Road It Better End Soon/Where Do We Go From Here? Chicago Chicago including Poem For The People in The Country The Road It Better End Soon Where Do We Go From Here? KGP 24 A brand-new specially priced two- record set from the group whose music spells excitement all over the world—Chicago! NOW $599 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. while performing for the Detroit Tigers." Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg, former Kansas athletic director, today was named one of the recipients of a newly created Helms Athletic Hall of Fame Award for retired athletic directors who have made a great contribution to collegiate athletics. Flint, Mich., bookmaking operation as a partner. Actually, said the commissioner, the deeply-in-debt Detroit pitcher was being played for a sucker by the gamblers. NOW $599 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. More serious was the second count—that McLain had turned over $5,700 to gamblers in the belief that he was buying into a Although required to retire from the KU directorship six years ago when he reached 65, Lonborg continues to fill an important role in the Jayhawk athletic program as director of events. This is the second time Helms Foundation has honored Lonborg. He is already enshrined in the Los Angeles athletic group's Basketball Hall of Fame. A three-sport star at Kansas immediately before and after World War I, Lonborg was an All-America guard in basketball, an all-conference end and quarterback in football and the baseball team's regular third baseman for three years. Lonborg will receive the award June 23 in Houston at the annual banquet of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. Honor to 'Dutch' The Horton native graduated from the KU law school in 1921, but never practiced a day. Instead he spent 29 years in the coaching ranks before returning to his alma mater in 1950 as athletic director. Lonborg's first coaching job was at McPherson College, starting in the fall of 1921 as the Bulldogs' first full-time coach. He handled all sports, but his basketball teams were the most successful, winning 23 of 27 games over two seasons. In 1923 he-moved to Washburn where he put together his famous 1925 team which won the National AAU championship, the last collegiate undergraduate unit to bag that tournament. Northwestern beckoned in 1927, following a four-year stand at Washburn, and Lonborm moved up to the Big Ten where he remained 23 years to fashion a record of 237 victories against 198 losses. Lonbong severed as chairman of the NCAA basketball tournament committee from 1947 to 1960 and it was under his direction that the cage championship grew from an eight-team event to its present 25-team format. He also served as chairman of the U.S. Olympic Basketball Committee for the 1959 Pan American Games and the 1960 Olympics. Lonborg was manager of the 1960 U.S. Olympic team that won the world title at Rome. POTENS TERRA ARMIS ROBLEE presents the Old World Look $20 ... for the man who thought he had everything. It's Roblee's fashion-right shoe made in hand-antiqued leathers. It not only boasts the new rich looking finish, but also has the perfect shape for traditional clothes. McCoy shoes 813 Mass. St. VI 3-2091 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT available in beautiful, cool Rocky Mtn. National Park For employment information write ROCKY MTN. PARK CO. Denver, Colo. 80203 601 Broadway, #414 Use Kansan Classifieds Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 68th anniversary Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 68th anniversary TOWNCRAFT® DRESS SHIRT SALE 3 for $10 REG. 3.98 Our high-powered dress shirts are fine quality style-setters. Choose from long point button-down, Kingdor spread collar styles . . . and lots more. In a full spectrum of top, fashion-right colors and white. Towncraft shirts, Reg. $5, NOW 3 for $12 Bucks vie for NBA championship Playoffs to test Alcindor's leadership NEW YORK (UPI) — Everybody agrees Lew Alcindor is good. But how good? Nobody can say exactly. Not at the moment, anyway. The answer could come in the next few weeks. It all depends on whether the Milwaukee Bucks can win the NBA world championship and that's a rather large order. They to the club most likely to go all the way the club usually mentioned is the Atlanta Hawks. KANSAN Sports The Hawks were simply too much for Chicago in those first two Western Division playoff contests, cutting up the Bulls, 129-111, and 124-104. After the dust had cleared a bit, Dick Motta, Chicago's fine young coach, shook his head over the Hawks and said: Hawks Are Devastating lead Philadelphia in the Eastern Division playoffs right now, two games to one, but around the league when the talk gets around "They're devastating. I've been coaching 16 years, and I told my wife I've never been beaten as badly as in those two games. Believe me, I've been beaten badly before, too." Getting back to Alcindor though, he's now in a position to help bring the Bucks from last place, which they occupied last season while he was a little busy coach with the Bucks, Larry Costello, claims his super-rook already is ahead of both at a comparable stage in their careers. with the big boys. He proved it in a dozen ways. Part of the proof is contained in such a seemingly insignificant statistic as "assists by centers." Alcindor led 'em all with 337 in 82 games. at UCLA, all the way to an NBA world championship. If the rookie, 22-year-old Alcindor can do that, he isn't only good, he's got to be one of the best of all-time. Claims Alcindor Is Ahead A neutral observer such as Willis Reed of the Knicks says Alcindor can be as good as Russell and Chamberlain some day. Another observer, Alcindor's Only one man has ever been able to do it and that was Bill Russell, who returned from the 1958 Olympics in Melbourne and led the Boston Celtics to a world championship that same season. "MOORE"BURGER Alcindor proved he can play "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th KU's scheduled spring football practice was called off Wednesday by coach Pepper Rodgers as he watched the early morning snowfall blanket the ground. Snow stops workouts "I won't waste one of our practices by going indoors," he said. "If we have to we'll practice on Sunday afternoon to make up for it." "I just don't know," he said as he watched the snow tumble to the ground. "I'm just going to play it by ear." As to when the Jayhawks will return to work, Rodgers is uncertain. Rodgers was generally pleased with Monday's initial practice saying that the team's overall condition, attitude and hustle was good. The coaching staff greeted approximately 75 players with eight others excused. Among the missing were Karl Salb, who will be spending his spring throwing the shot put for the KU thinclads, and Keith Lieppman, who is playing shortstop on the KU baseball team. One thing Rodgers is certain of is that he will not use one of the 20 spring sessions in Allen Fieldhouse. Rodgers is planning on 28 of last fall's 44 letterm to be the backbone of the 1970 club. Apr. 2 1970 KANSAN 7 "Our biggest problems will be in rebuilding our offensive line and settling on a quarterback," he said. With the exception of Steve Lawson, a two-time letterman, the entire offensive line was wiped out by graduation. Among the missing are Dale Evans, a second team All-America center, and tight end John Mosier, the school's all-time leading pass receiver. "This is the first time in three years the quarterback position is wide open," Rodgers said, "although Phil Basler (Independence, Mo., Junior) holds a slight edge because of his experience." Contending with Basler for the quarterback position are upcoming sophomores Rich Jones of Columbus and Bob Bruegging, a Kansas City, Mo., product. Another strong candidate who is presently running number two behind Basler is Dan Heck, a mid-term transfer from El Camino (Calif.) Junior College. Basler started the last four games as a sophomore last fall after Jim Ettinger was sidelined with a shoulder injury. Asked how he thought this KU football team might do in next year's Big Eight race, Rodger's said, "Like the past two years, we could finish first or last." In typical Rodgers fashion he added, "We've proved the last two years that nobody has any idea what we're going to do, including myself." seeing spots? UNIVERSITY If you see spots before your eyes . . . the pimple kind .. better get Fostex. It's the super spot checker. Wash with Fostex and you see yourself smooth and clear. It helps remove blackheads, dry up pimples and oil, and fight germs. CENTANA INCLUDING: EVIL WAYS, JINGO YOU JUST DON'T CARE PERSUASION/WAITING CS 9781*1* reg. 4.98 NOW $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. For the clear look ... get Fostex Cake. Sold in drugstores. Foslex FOSTEX KIEF'S International Club presents... the second of its exchange programs with Haskell Institute. Be a guest of the International Club this Friday night when members of Haskell Institute will perform native American dances before an international audience. At the Union Ballroom, 7:30 p.m., April 3rd. Sponsored by International Club Admission Free --- Everyone Invited FREE BEER FRI. RISING SUNS RED DOG DOLLAR NITE SAT. ADM. $1 Pitchers $1 DANCE TO THE HEAVY SOUNDS OF FLARE SHOW THE Bad Dog Inn [Image] Three people playing in a snowy field. One person is running away from the other two who are holding a dog. They are surrounded by large snow piles. The background features a building with snow-covered windows and a tree with branches covered in snow. April on the Hill 1234567890 One of many snowball fights Co., Inc. Overcrowded bus at Naismith Digging out . . . 1950 Photos by Marilyn McMullen and Ron Bishop i I I s 3 l. a H U o [Image of a snowman sitting on a snowy ground, with trees and vehicles visible in the background.] April fool's snowgirl In an attempt to combat the more than sixinch accumulation of snowfall yesterday, the University's maintenance department and Lawrence's Street Department dispatched several crews of men to the hazardous and slick streets of the city and campus. "The Snow Patrols," dumped more than 300 tons of sand and calcium in an effort to loosen snow for road graders. The most troublesome areas on campus are the hills of Naismith Drive to Jayhawk Boulevard; Mississippi St, behind the Kansas Union and Sunflower Road, below Watson Library, said Leo Ousdahl, assistant director of KU's physical plant. The University usually needs nearly 125 tons of sand and calcium to treat the streets of Mount Oread. "It usually takes several hours," Ousdahl said, "to treat the campus during heavy storms. Sometimes we work a full day and into the night if we need to." Arnold Wiley, foreman of the City Street Department, said, "We had trucks out at 7 a.m. this morning. First the snow and slush was bladed from the streets and followed by 200 to 300 tons of sand, salt and calcium." Snowman Every load of sand the city dumps, is mixed with 5 tons of salt and 80 pounds of calcium. Wiley said, "Thoroughfares and hills are most important to treat first." Dragon at Templin THE MOND. Nature's creative architecture A snowman in the middle of a snowy street. In the background are buildings and trees. Lewis Hall stool pigeon? Housing group initiates plans The executive committee of the newly formed Unorganized Housing Association (UHA) held its first organizational meeting Tuesday afternoon in the Kansas Union. The purpose of the meeting according to Puf Bailey, Atchison senior and UHA president, was to establish some kind of rules for the internal organizational structure, to draw up a budget and to discuss possible UHA projects. The UHA is the Student Senate representative of all students who live in off-campus housing. It was created last year with the adoption of the new Senate Code but has been inactive, Bailey said. This semester it was decided to organize the UHA into a functioning organ since students living in off-campus housing now constitute 52 per cent of the student body, Bailey said. He said this is by far the largest single block, yet they are the least represented. This is due partially to lack of organization and the lack of funds. by next fall a brochure listing all the off-campus housing complexes, the facilities each provides and their rental costs. The brochure could also list restaurants, what they offered and perhaps grocery stores and their hours. Bailey said he wanted to establish a good rapport with the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Students living off campus have more ties with the community and for all practical purposes are citizens of Lawrence. He said that the possibilities for interaction and cooperation in the area of community service were almost unlimited. Bailey said the UHA had an advantage over the other programs to aid off-campus living groups through the Housing Office or the Off-campus Housing committee because the UHA can act independently of the University but, at the same time, work in cooperation with the other housing organizations. Bailey presented several ideas for UHA projects to the committee. One idea was to draw up Association chooses attorneys as officers Bailey said the biggest problem facing the UHA now is getting organized. For Top Quality Head For Henry's Howard M. "Tony" Immel, Iola attorney, was elected president of the Kansas Alumni Association at a recent meeting of the association's board of directors. henrys The Association of University Residence Halls is sponsoring a snow sculpturing contest for all residence halls today and Friday. Judging will take place Friday afternoon with awards to be given to the snow sculptures showing the most ingenuity and creativity. 10 KANSAN Apr. 2 1970 Williams was elected a director last year. He has been alumni representative on the Athletic board since 1964 and is co-chairman of the John H. Outland Scholarship Fund. This year he has served as chairman of the Alumni Organization and Activities Committee. Odd Williams, Lawrence attorney, was chosen executive vice president of the association. He will succeed Immel as the group's president. Immel has been a director of the association since 1966. He has served as co-chairman of the Alumni Development Committee, and chairman of the Alumni Publications Committee. 1971, is to be filled by Karen Renstrom Chambers of Shawnee Mission. She is a 1968 alumna of KU and, according to Wintermote, is the youngest member ever to serve on the board. The selection of a young person was a deliberate move by the board to give a voice to young people, he said. Dick Wintermote, executive director of the group, said that serving as executive vice president gives the incoming president a chance to familiarize himself with board officers before taking office as president. For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken. Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. V13-2139 Others elected at the meeting were the following area vice presidents: East—Charles Haines II, New York City architect; Central—W. F. Barber Jr., St. Louis, executive vice president of Brown Shoe Co., and West—Mrs. Patricia Penney Bennett, a partner in the Penney and Bennett public relations firm. They will serve one-year terms. Immel's regular term on the board, which runs until June of AURH to sponsor sculpture contest Use Kansan Classified MR YAK FREE TGIF with KU ID See the world of Classic Sound MR YA.K Stainglass Window MR YUK Till Fri. MR YUK GILLETTE RIGHT GUARD 7 oz. Deodorant Limit 2 $.88 Clip 'n' Save $$$ Clip These Coupons and Come to Kroger's and Save On These Specials SYLVANIA FLASHCUBES Package of 3 Limit 2 pkgs. $.88 pkg. TURTLE WAX CAR WAX 18 oz. bottle Limit 2 $.88 MEN'S NECKTIES Regularly $1.27 Limit 2 $.88 each KODAK INSTAMATIC FILM CX126-12 Limit 2 $.88 BUFFERIN TABLETS 100 Tablets Limit 2 $.88 OVAL BRAIDED RUGS 8½' x 11½' Reversible—$39.88 Value Limit One Red, blue, green, brown $15.88 WENDY FOAM PILLOW Washable Limit 2 Odorless $.88 Permanently Plump $.88 BATH TOWELS Assorted colors, styles Limit 4 $.88 each Women's Packaged Panties 100% Elastic leg briefs Acetate 3 pairs per package $.88 pkg. $1.19 Value Limit 2 PHILLIPS 66 MOTOR OIL 10, 20, 30 W 3 cans/$.88 Limit 6 cans MISSES SHIFT GOWNS Spring Pastels—100% Nylon Regularly $1.99 Now Limit 2 $.88 23rd and Alabama Open Daily 9 to 9 Sundays 9 to 6 kroger FAMILY CENTER Clip Scissors d Alabama Open Daily 9 to 9 Sundays 9 to 6 Kroger FAMILY CENTER Kroger FAMILY CENTER Residence halls to undergo change Regulations governing residence halls at the University of Kansas will undergo many changes next year. More coeducational halls and more open house privileges in the halls will be the pattern at KU next fall. Each dormitory will be operating under a different plan, so stu- Debate squad wins honors in tourneys The University of Kansas debate squad, coached by Donn W. Parson, associate professor of speech and drama, took first place at the Missouri Valley League Big Eight Championship debate tournament held on March 20 and 21. In the tourney, which was held at the University of Oklahoma, the four-man team of Diana Bratelli, Pittsburg sophomore, Phyllis Culham, Junction City senior, Bill Russell, Omaha, Neb. freshman and John Masterson, Falls Church, Va. freshman, won the top honor. On March 23 and 24, the KU squad competed in the National Debate Tournament District Four Eliminations. Parson said that 800 teams from eight regions of the country attended, with 44 teams ending up in the final rounds. Of the 24 teams representing the nine midwest states, KU took second and third places. Winning the honors were the teams of Bob Prentice, Turon BARNACLES IN THE WATER NEWPORT, Ore. (UPI)—You'll probably never find your water lines jammed shut by barnacles. But that's one of the problems the Marine Science Center here has to contend with. To fight it, the center uses two separate pipelines to keep water moving freely from nearby Yaquina Bay through the center. Each line is used for a maximum of three weeks, then shut down while the other line is used. By running fresh water through the unused线 the barnacle growth is inhibited. Apr. 2 1970 KANSAN 11 sophomore and Dan Beck, Mission junior, and Bob McCullock, Prairie Village senior and David Jeans, Independence, Mo. senior. Parson said by winning in this tournament, KU has the privilege of competing in the National Debate Tournament held at the University of Houston April 16-19. This is the twentieth year in the 24-year history of the tournament that KU has sent squads to compete, and that, Parson said, is a record. Parson said that the teams of Bob Prentice and Dan Beck, and Bob McCulloh and David Jeans would compete in the tournament, which is the first time that a school has sent two teams to the tournament. In the National Alpha Sigma Rho Tournament, held last weekend at the University of Alabama, the team of Diana Bartelli and Phyllis Culham took fourth place. dents may request the hall which will best fit their wants. Freshman girls will have a choice of five dorms instead of four next year, with only one having mandatory closing hours. Also available to freshman women will be a hall that includes women students from all classes, a coeducational hall for all classes, and one freshman-sophomore coeducational hall. INCLUSING: EVIL WAYS, I'MGO YOU JUST DON'T CARE PERSONAL WAITING All residence halls will have some open house privileges, but these privileges will vary from hall to hall. INCLUING: EVIL WAYS/!NGO YOU JUST DON'T CARE PERSUASION/WAITING CS 9781*/ reg. $4.98 NOW $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Pearson and Templin Halls will house male students of all classes with no mandatory closing hours. Open house privileges will be permitted at any time, with open house periods to be decided by residents of each floor. Hashinger and Lewis Halls will include women students of all classes and upperclass women respectively, and will have the same regulations as Pearson and Templin. reg. $4.98 NOW $299 KIEF'S Corbin, Oliver and Gertrude Sellards Pearson halls, the freshman dorms last year, will also see changes. Corbin will house only freshman women and will not have mandatory closing hours. Only residents will be permitted in the building during locked hours. Open house privileges will be permitted on weekends. Oliver will be coeducational for freshmen and sophomores with no mandatory closing hours. No visitors will be permitted in the building during locked hours, and open house privileges will be permitted on weekends only. GSP, for freshman women, will be the only dorm with mandatory closing hours, and open house privileges will be permitted on special occasions. Ellsworth will be coeducational for all classes with no closing required. Open house privileges will be permitted anytime. McCollum SCULPTURE BY TOBIAS THE OMNIBUS Ninth & Indiana exhibited through April 11 will also be coeducational and will have the same regulations as Ellsworth, but will house upperclass students. Dwight Boring* says... PETER A. PARKER The Arafura Sea is located between Australia and New Guinea. College Life created the BENEFACTOR especially for college men. It has behind it the planning and research of the original and only life insurance company serving college men only. You should know all about the BENEFACTOR policy. I can tell you its short story with a happy ending—a short story you'll be glad he heard through the years ahead. Check into it. Call me. *Dwight Boring 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Graduating Seniors, Candidates G GRADUATE for Masters & Doctorate Degrees and Faculty 4 Orders must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! Professors passed by for promotion Students asked to support Velvel, Litto University of Kansas students are being asked to express their support next week for two KU professors passed over for promotion by the Kansas Board of Regents. Activities are being planned by a group of individuals who want to see that something is done about the issue, said Lawrence seniors John Naramore and John Writt, yesterday. New AURH officers sought for next year The Association of University Residence Halls Council met Wednesday evening in Ellsworth Hall to discuss the forthcoming election of officers. Keith Jorgensen, Mission junior and AURH president, said anyone living in a residence hall was eligible to run for office, but some first-hand knowledge of how the AURH functions was desirable for a candidate. There are five AURH offices to be filled. Committee chairmen The elections will take place at the April 22 AURH Council meeting. The time and place have not yet been announced. At the meeting, any individual may announce his candidacy or may be nominated from the floor. will be appointed by the Executive board. After nomination speeches, a panel discussion will be held. Following the discussion, members of the Council will vote. A candidate must receive a majority of the votes to win. Campus police disturbed by barrage of snowballs and policeman were the object of the snowballs. A second car arrived on the scene, only to be met with a second barrage of white projectiles. Both officers retreated to the safety of their cars. What may be the first confrontation of the "spring offensive" took place in front of Strong Hall Wednesday afternoon. The officers pleas were met with glee and another flourish of hurling white objects. After a few tense moments of silence, the policemen retreated to the Jaya-hawk Drive traffic control booth. The two professors, Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama, were dropped from a list of faculty members recommended for promotion, because of their controversial activities. Naramore and Writt said the matter went beyond Velvel and Litto. For two years this University had been going through a process of securing and insuring student rights and University autonomy, they said. Efforts were being made to develop a working system whereby the University could handle its own affairs. By their action the Regents were negating all that had been done, Naramore said. Their retreat was termed an obvious victory for the People, by activist leaders. week on the issue. Tentative plans include a mass meeting Tuesday night in the Kansas Union or Wesley Center, a demonstration Wednesday afternoon in front of Strong Hall and a possible strike against classes one day next week. Velvel had been dropped because of his speech Feb. 17 to a group demonstrating against the trial of the Chicago Seven. Littos name was deleted for his part in producing a play which was to be performed behind the Iron Curtain. The play was criticized by Congress as being in poor taste to be sent abroad. The goal of the students is to inform the people, Naramore said. Leaflets will be distributed next A group of students, engaged in a snowball fight, were confronted by a campus policeman and asked to stop the melee. Regents can say what is taught and who teaches it," said Writt. As the situation stands, the According to Naramore, this was an issue that should draw total University support since it concerns everybody, whether they realized it or not. "They are exercizing their authority too much and playing politics with the University. The Regents are making University structural government ineffectual," the students said. TEXACO As the policeman arrived, red light flashing, the dissidents drew back and reformed. Soon the car 12 KANSAN Apr. 2 1970 TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO ★ Student specials ★ New, experienced manage- ment ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 Chicago including Poem For The People In The Country The Road It Better End Soon Where Do We Go From Here? KGP 24 A brand-new specially priced two-record set from the group whose music spells excitement all over the world—Chicago! NOW $599 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Hillteacher Nominations - Due April 13—Turn in at the Information Desk in the Student Union. - Selection will be based mainly on one criteria: the impact the teacher has made in the classroom. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind. - Nominations must be signed by 3 students. Include all those assets you feel qualify the person. - Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students. Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 68th anniversary PANTY HOSE SALE! GAYMODE® AGILON® 1.66 REG. $2 NOW SAVE 34¢ Superb savings . . . superb fashion! Gaymode® panty hose now reduced for a limited time only. Reinforced heel or nude heel styling in Agilon® stretch nylon, proportioned for the closest, smoothest fit a girl could ask for. Colors, too — pale through pow! Short, average, long and extra-long lengths. Irresistible? Definitely! Retired health service director dies Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service at the University of Kansas from 1928 until his retirement in 1965, died early Tuesday morning at his home. Canuteson, a native of Wisconsin, volunteered and served two years in the Army infantry in World War I. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1924 and received the doctor of medicine degree from the University of Minnesota in 1926. In 1928 Canuteson came to KU to organize the first major student health service, which was made possible by the building of He pioneered many innovations in this field, and his services were recognized in 1965 when he bea student hospital by Mrs. Elizabeth M. Watkins. Apr. 2 1970 KANSAN 13 PETER J. MURRAY came the fourth person to receive the Hitchcock award of the American College Public Health Association. He also served that organization for four years as secretary-treasurer and three years as president. He was president of the Kansas TB and Health Association from 1951 to 1963 and served as president of the Mississippi Valley Conference on TB and of the Trudeau Society. He was also a board member of the National TB Association for 20 years. Canutelson was active in the fight against tuberculosis and was among the first to make skin tests and chest X-rays a routine part of student physical examinations. Canuteson was the recipient of the Samuel J. Crumbine Medial of the Kansas Public Health Association in 1956, and in 1962 he received the Hoyt E. Dearbolt Memorial Medal of the Mississippi Valley Conference on tuberculosis. Canuteson was one of the organizers and the first president of the Kansas Heart Association. He is survived by his wife. He is survived by his wife. INVENT A SLOGAN • WIN A PRIZE "Whatever Your Cause, It's a Lost Cause Unless We Control Population" That's the best population slogan we've been able to come up with. Can you top it? A citation and an honorarium of $10 from the best slogan turned in to the advertising team for paper before the forthcoming Environmental Teach in on Earth Day, April 22. The winning slogan from this campus is eligible to compete for the national $500 PRIZE to be awarded for the best slogan prepared by a student on any of the 215 campuses where this ad is appearing Rules Simply derive a brief state. ment of the importance and urgency of checking population growth — to the extent of peace. Send it on or before April 22 to this newspaper addressed "Population Watch" at http://populationwatch.org, three members of this paper's staff appointed by the ad manager. All designee must be eligible for big national prize; to be judged by Paul Ehrlich, David Brown. Write your slogan today. One entry per student. For free literature on population explosion, write Hugh Moore Fund, 60 E. 42nd, New York 10017. "As far as I'm concerned, The DRAUGHT HOUSE is going to be the PLACE to groove this FRIDAY and SATURDAY night. TOGETHER will lay some really heavy vibrations on your far out ears and you can really get down and Do Your Thing. Now don't forget, FRIDAY and SATURDAY groove with 'TOGETHER' C Can you dig it? $1.00 ADMISSION $1.00 PER PITCHER 8:00 to 12:00 804 W.24th The DRAUGHT HOUSE Water, trash, population provide dangers Pollution problems threaten environment (Editor's note—Information and statistics used in this report are taken from a series of articles prepared for HATPIN (Housewives Alert to Pollution in Northfield) and was first printed in the Northfield News of Northfield, Minnesota. It is printed in the Kansan with the cooperation of Ecology Action of Lawrence.) By JIM ROTHGEB Kansan Staff Writer Pollution is all around us. Like it or not it is closing in on our environment at a quickening pace. Emphasis on ecology seems to be the early trend of the seventies and more and more ideas have been devised in order to fight the newest war on pollution. One can be convinced of the dangers of pollution and still not know what to do about it. It is sometimes hard to realize that as individuals we can cut down on pollution in our every day life. A person can write his congressman, appear before the state legislature and demand adequate sewage treatment plants in his area. But until he has tried to eliminate sources of pollution from his own home, he can not honestly say he has done all he can do. One problem facing us is the scarcity of water. Our growing population has placed added pressure on the water shortage. In comparison with 1900, the population of the country is two and one-half times as large, but industry uses 11 times more water, agriculture uses seven times as much for irrigation, and homes use 10 times the amount they KC truck drivers join other strikers KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Teamsters union members in Kansas City joined their fellow truck drivers across the nation Wednesday in a work stoppage, causing a shutdown of the Kansas City truck freight industry. Local of the Teamsters has from 5,000 to 6,000 members. Stan Stanhope, executive vice-president of the union local, said all members were off the job Wednesday. 14 KANSAN Apr. 2 1970 used to. Three hundred fifty-five billion gallons of water are needed every day in the United States, and it is estimated that in 10 years this total will soar to 600 billion gallons. After being used, water is able to purify itself. But now there is hardly enough time for this cycle to occur. This is why it is becoming more important that adequate sewage treatment plants are built to help make water more quickly usable. But this makes up only a fraction of the problem. Many people obtain their water from under the ground, by drilling wells. However, in many places water is drawn out of the soil faster than it can flow back into the surface. Western Kansas is a good example of this where the water table has dropped 1,000 feet. What, then, can be done? Besides demanding better regional management of water, there are many ways of cutting home use alone. Ecologists suggest that automatic washers should not be run until they contain full loads. Children can take baths together; showers can be run at half-force for half as long. Toilets need not be flushed after every use. Another area in which ecologists have shown much concern is that concerning trash. The average United States resident creates five pounds of trash every day and that total is increasing. The problem now exists as to what exactly should be done with the trash pile-up. As people crowd each other more and more, one man's "away" becomes part of another man's property. Cities must decide on refuge areas which will satisfy both the local residents and the conservationists. In some cities these sites are scarce. The two most common methods of discarding trash are burning it and dumping it until space runs out. Incinerators are both expensive to the taxpayer and, in some cases, very dangerous. Many plastic goods are made of polyvinyl chloride which gives off a poisonous gas when burned. Possibly the smartest way for a city to dispose of trash would be to make separate collections of organic matter, acceptable combustibles, glass goods, and metals. The organic matter would be buried and would eventually become soil again, non-dangerous combustibles burned and the resulting cinders used in some manner (the Japanese make building blocks for example) and glass and metals returned to industries for re-use. Many aluminum companies are experimenting with collecting the metal used in their products after they are used. Ecologists encourage this idea because aluminum does not degenerate as do the "tin" cans. As usual, the entire problem of trash wastes can be placed on each individual. Ecologists offer these suggestions: - Do not buy items that are meant to be used only once; use sandwich boxes instead of plastic sandwich bags, metal trash containers instead of giant plastic bags. - Whenever there is a chance, purchase soft drinks, beer and any other liquids in refillable or returnable containers. - Buy products that have the least amount of packaging to discard. For example, buy cheese that does not advertise "individually wrapped slices" and buy hardware items that are not imprisoned in plastic bubbles. - Try to conserve on paper by saving magazines and newspapers for paper drives, taking shopping bags along for purchases, and using cloth rather than paper towels. The biggest threat of all to our environment is that of the population bomb. We must immediately begin to think of leveling off our numbers if any sort of "good life" is to be found on earth. The world population adds 2 per cent to its total every year. This means that in 35 years the world's population will double. By the end of the century that means six billion people. Debate rages among the experts as to where the limit of food production lies. Some say there are great untapped potentials, while others warn that the limit is already being exceeded. Whatever the truth is, food production today increases only 1.2 per cent annually for a population increase of 2 per cent and 35 million babies are born each year for which there is not enough food. Too often people think the population problem has not hit the United States yet. This is probably because more than 70 per cent of the population live on less than 2 per cent of the land. The problem is that this country is already at the upper limit of resources. The best solution to alleviate the population growth problem is to put the brakes on the birth rate. SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office DIAMONDS DIAMONDS ARE A GIRLS BEST FRIEND SO ARE WE Christian's WITH A COMPLETE SELECTION WEDDING SETS CHINA CRYSTAL SILVER "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 Kansas Jewelers Association Peter, Paul and Mary THE BLUE MONOON IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50, $4.00, $3.50 TICKETS ON SALE APRIL 6 S.U.A. The Chili Bowl 1528 W. 23rd Chili 842-8861 sm. reg. lg. Mild and Dry ___ .85 1.10 1.35 Spicy Western ___ .85 1.10 1.35 Tamale Spread ___ .95 1.15 1.45 Spaghetti Red ___ .95 1.15 1.45 Chili–no beans ___1.10 1.35 1.60 Chili burger __ .50 Chili dog __ .60 Chili To GO, Reg. 1.10, at Order Dill Pickles ... 1.15 Coffee, ice tea, milk ... 1.15 Mexican Food Draught Beer (chilled mugs) Taco, .30 ea.; 3/.85; 6/1.70; 12/3.20 Jumbo Tamale ...20 Tostada ...25 Burrito ...45 Meat Burrito ...45 Combination Burrito ...50 Frijoles (refried beans) ...25 .85, $ \frac{1}{2} $ gal. 3.50, gal 6.75 Pie ...35 Full pint soft drink ...15 light or dark ___ .30 Open 11 A.M. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the handbook of Karmas are offered to all students. We 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. 140 St. 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 any thought or subject.2 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 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, posttraction, tinted glass, AM-FM radio priced to sell. 843-7756. 4-2 Minolta, SRT101. FL4. Leather case, skylight light, rechargeable strobe 4 through camera,镜头 strobe umused $235 00 on best cash offer 843-132- 90 after 6 p.m. 67 Barracuda Formula "S". Call 4-326 or 843-0435. 4-3 1967 Renault R-10. Best offer. Call 842-3647. 4-3 65 Chew Impala, HT-PT PB, auto 422 after 5 a.m. sometimes works. 4-6 Lovable 7 months old mate mite 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 New Canon FT QL single lens reflex. fl1.8 lens, meter, quick loading, case, UV filter. More than $80.00 off list. $187.50. Phone #834-9252. 4-6 '69 Chevy Bel-Air 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 Audio Discount=your A.R., Dynaec, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 '63 wood LeBlanc—symphony model carrier—$350; '28. Boys Schwinn typewriter—Smiley; Polaroid typewriter—$40; Polaroid image camera—$10. H42-5230. 4-6 GE stereo tape recorder with speakers, excellent condition. 1 year old. Best offer. Call 843-1408 after 5:00 p.m. 4-7 Siamsek kitten for sale. Beautiful 10- week study, price $15, call 842-1811 after 6:00 p.m. or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 4-7 THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S MAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA W SCHOOL KIT ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT Patrick J Morris Kenneth Ragor Everett MEN'S MIDDLE STYLE APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 7 DAY SPECIAL Cars Painted $34.95 Fred's Auto Painting 1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487 New York Cleaners For the best in: · Dry Cleaning · Alterations · Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 - Passports - Portraits - "Please call for appointment" - Applications HIXON STUDIO R & P '64 Chevellie, low miles, tires one month old, body and engine in excellent condition. Will include stereo system and many tapes. Call 6707 1075 after 5. 4-7 Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Bob Blank, Owner Walnut stereo speaker systems. (1) large floor models with 12" Danish speakers. (2) shelf model, with a 2-8 speaker. (3) speaker system. Both sets priced far below retail. Both sets carry a full one year warranty. Call 843-6707. 4-7 21" Zentich television, 6 months old. 21" Zentich television, Cal at 49. 843-00755 843-00755 Gibson steel-string—almost new—$75 Also GE stereo, 2 years old, in good condition —$50. See Kat at 1030 Ohio or call 842-6082. 4-7 Flat top guitar, western trim., $80. 542-2262 4-3 Ch. cvrol t—1969 Nova, V-8, automatic, only 9,000 miles, new condition. Phone Debi at 843-7600 after 5 p.m. 4-2 Custom weight - designed, multi - purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus for space. Ideal economical purchase for apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved by York Barbell Co. Inc.) Call J.B. at 843-210-6 assorted weighted 4-7 N w d晨装ation A.R.5 speakers, 1 pair of 2AX's, full 5-year guarantee, factory cost only, Ray Audio, Phone 842-2047 evenings 1-4 p.m. tf Diamond engagement ring, 1/5 carat, round brilliant cut, silver Tiffany setting, matching band. Call 842-3823 4-8 Three student nursing uniforms, worn one semester, price $12. Call Nancy, 760-355-8210. '69 VW. 13,000 miles, excellent condition, warranty good, 842-4249, 4-6 Manual Underwood Five typewriter for a table--for information call 842- 2265 after 6:30 p.m. and before 9:00 p.m. 4-6 Bowman 8-track car stereo tape player—never used—in original carton -$50. 842-6814. 4-8 NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid. V 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want to be a guest, call Quince. This is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special- ity and it comes at no extra cost. I 2-951-610. Closed Sunday. Tuesday if 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 Pilots—Ooptopac Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Catesa 150 € 85.50 Chateau 85.50 Chateau 1kee 18$12.50; 2-seat萍水 Phone 842-1124 after 6 4-46 Accomplished folk or classical guitarist. I play guitar, dulcimer, harmonica, and write songs. Call Scott, 842-7260. Galactic Paradise LA PETITE GALERIE - Are you who? Come and find out. Dresses, separates, groovy pantsuits, coats, swimmers, clothes, 910 Kentucky. 843- 0826. Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 910 Kv. You guys—better look at the New Haggar and Levi Slacks at ROSS and WILLIAMS. Also, also at ALAN. Also our Spring Shirts by Van Heusen and Career Club have just arrived 4-6 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 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 U 4-3426 or 843-0435. 4-3 Notice: Enjoy the finest food in the historical and cultural atmosphere of the Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-8 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon I would like to borrow your old or photograph on April 17th and 18th in display in the KU engineering ex- For details, call Art Blank 842-869-8399 WANTED Country Western band wanted for Forest Grove, Fla. April 12, Call 843-785-3000 4-6 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 Desperate! Ride wanted: KU to KC, Monday and Wednesday—can leave any time after 9:30. Call 842-7192 or RA 2-3088. 4-6 I am looking for a companion for this summer. Cate, Chip, 834-4924 +2 Home of the "Big Shef" BURCEK CHEF Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. types; typography; paper writer; Plexa type. Competent service. 5-15. Wright. Phone 843-9554. Misses. Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8 TYPING 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. HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Acme Dingo Cowboy Boots $18.99 HARVEY'S SHOE STORE See us also for the newest styles Thesis Typing - 10-year experience attendance (8,000) to S: 000-842-1011. 4-3 8:00 (8:00 to S: 000-842-1011). 4-3 Salt Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 803 W. 23rd Open every day 9 - 9 Sunday 1 - 6 FOR RENT Typing—thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Royal electric, elite type. Fast and accurate service Paper furnished. 842-1561. Mrs. Nixon 4-7 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, and term papers-plus stencil cutting, and duplication. Pick up and delivery offered. Bake 842-3597 or 4-296 6562. Want to sublease my apartment in Stouffer Place as soon as possible. Please call 842-1224 after six. 4-2 Furnished single sleeping room..use of refriger. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders north and near downtown. Phone 843-5767 Furnished apt. for graduate couple- no children, no pets. $125 a mo. Unl. paid. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-1209 after 5. 4-6 Available now, two bedroom ant, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tt Modern 1 bedroom apt., A C. private entrance, 2 blocks from campus, $125 furnished, $110 unfurnished. Call 842-4869 LOST Glasses with dark brown frames Return Room 616 JRP Reward 4-8 Room 616 JRP Reward 4-8 Black tri-fold wallet Please return Apt. 1, Ant. 2, 843-931 Reward. 4-6 One Lady Sheffield watch with brown leather band in vicinity of Learned or Daisy Hill. Call Nancy, 415 Lewis Hall. 4-6 DELICATESSEN & HATE in the WALL DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill. Same Time Phone Order 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. Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Staying inside and fresh air enhance levels away your home when you do leave the kitchen. We only allow the female .. preparing the hotest dishes as you leave there with a set of utensils at the Kitchen for you to use immediately during pleasure. U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. Open Daily Except 4:30 p.m. One and one half miles north of the Kow River Bridge 843-1431 PLANNING A TRIP?? Malls Shopping Center Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 Cigarette lighter at Hawk's Nest. In- crease: Sgt. Jarvis, Reward. 4-8 36-6a PERSONAL Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved, our clients. Group Tax, 8011 Mass. Returns $4.00 and up tf Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rolfhuss, 843-8074. ff HELP WANTED New York—TWA 8 times daily, also Chicago, Florida, Hawaii, Las Vegas, across the U.S.A., to Europe, Africa, or around the World-most fares. 4-2 Part-time time wanted -waltess, pizza maker, delivery boy (male or female). Apply in person. Earl's Pizza Parlor. 729 Mass. 4-2 BUY, SELL OR TRADE SERVICES OFFERED 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 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736 tt Your KU LD. in worth $1.00 off on the coupon. Off with any Group Tax 5015; Mills $4,000. Research? Let COMPSTAD analyze your data. Do the processing and statistical services P.O. Box 1781 La Jolla, Calif. 92037, 714-459-3831. AUTO GLASS Table Tops AUTO CLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 L. G. Balfour Co. Exclusive Representative For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Favors - Guards - Mugs - Recognitions - Paddles - Recognitions - Paddles - Laundry - Stations - Lavaliers - Stationery - Lavailiers - Stationery - Gifts - Planners - Gifts - Plaques - Plaques Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog VI 3-1571 SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for miDAS® mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 Crime and delinquency discussed (Continued from page 1) Owens said. As the high school panel spoke a discussion developed on several questions including a student's long hair, the definition of the establishment, and the students' obligation to their parents and their parents' obligation to them. Although the high school students said they didn't feel they were put on the spot, the questions invoked replies from three college students. One said, "I feel like I've been put on the defensive." The panel consisted of moderator, Robert Lowe, school psychologist for Lawrence School District; Mark Wintermote and Bob Augelli, sophomores at Lawrence High School and Kathy Robb and John Pettengill, Tonganoxie High School seniors. Lowe said he thought juvenile delinquency could be attributed to seven or eight factors including, "machinization of society, freedom to attack the establishment, alienization, loss of parental church, affluence, mobility, and money." Lowe gave the example of a boy with an upper middle class family who regularly attended church, with a civic minded father that was committed to a juvenile home at age 16. He also cited an example of a boy whose father was an alcoholic and mother a prostitute, the boy was committed to a juvenile home, but became a responsible citizen upon his release. Winternote said everyone expressed some form of delinquency in their childhood because, "It's fun to be chased." One of the problems with juvenile delinquents is that juveniles are only considered delinquents when they are caught, Wintermote said. Another problem with juvenile delinquents is that once they are committed to detention homes and released, most other children's parents won't let their children associate with the delinquent children, he said. Because of this, Wintermote said, "Usually the delinquents stay in this cycle of juvenile delinquency," and delinquent children will only associate with other delinquent children. problems of delinquents worsened with the newspapers covering all the "bad" news about students. "I never hear about the good Pettengill said he thought the Astronauts ready- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) making his last flight, and space newcomer Haise are scheduled to land in the lunar module Aquarius on the moon at 9:55 p.m. (EST) April 15. Mattingly, also making his first space flight, will remain in the command ship Odyssey and carry out the most detailed moon photography yet attempted by an astronaut circling the moon. He will use a telescopic camera designed to pick out objects on the lunar surface as small as a cardtable. SEOUL (UPI) — South Korea told the hijackers of a Japanese jetliner today they would be allowed to take the plane to North Korea if they release the 100 passengers who have been held captive for more than 48 hours. The pirates apparently rejected the condition. The hijackers, believed to be South Korean Defense Minister, Chung Nae-Hiuk, told newsmen that the hijackers may be holding a meeting to discuss his offer "but so far they have not answered the proposal." Passengers asked for- hijackers say 'no deal' eight Japanese students belonging to the radical Red Army faction, said earlier that they could not trust the officials because two days ago authorities tried to trick them into believing they were in North Korea after they landed in Seoul. 16 KANSAN Apr. 2 1970 Reports said air inside the plane was becoming foul, and overflowing toilets had to be emptied on the ground underneath the belly of the aircraft. One report said two male passengers were sick, one from a heart ailment and the other from high blood pressure, but Japanese embassy officials in Seoul said they could not confirm the report. In their 33 hours and 27 minutes on the moon, Lovell and Haise will carry out two surface excursions lasting from four to five hours apiece, set up a nuclear-powered observatory, drill 10 feet into the lunar surface and hopefully scale a crater-capped ridge 400 feet high. 4. 7 billion year date generally accepted as the age of the solar system. The oldest known moon samples returned to earth so far —in Apollo 11's Sea of Tranquility treasure—were dated at 4.5 billion years. Students vote- (Continued from page 1) problems, he said, space and money restrictions. There is just enough space now for one office for every nine doctors. This means a doctor can see only one person at a time. With extra offices and examination rooms a doctor could be talking to one patient while another is being prepared for examination, thus saving the doctor's time. The amount of money that can be paid to medical personnel is so low that many people go elsewhere instead of working in Lawrence, Balfour said. The hospital is functioning this year and next year on reserve funds, he said, so in the future the health fees will have to increase at least $3 anyway to operate the present facilities. things," he said. The police were encumbered by "red tape" and because of this they have trouble dealing with offenders, he added. CONTOURA™ for Beautiful Happenings $300 $400 Diamonds and Contoura tell the world you're in love. Contoura crafted for your finger as the ultimate in comfort. These bridal sets are available in 14-karat white or yellow gold. Select the most beautiful diamond rings in the world. By Feature Ring BRIMAN'S leading jewelers If the students decide they do not want new facilities, Balfour said, they will have to put up with the present crowded conditions and "it will be the students who suffer," he added. Augelli said he thought many times the authorities were prejudiced, for example, delinquents from good homes are often let go on first offenses. If a black or a child from a lower class home was picked up for delinquency he would be prosecuted, he said. Fra Mauro is of great scientific interest because geologists believe it is covered with a hummocky blanket of rock debris scattered over a broad area of the moon by the explosive meteoroid impact that gouged out the Mare Ibmrion Basin to the north Miss Robb said she thought the home and a "Christian environment" were of key importance. She cited an example of a friend who was sent to jail for a short time and was sorry for what he did, but found it difficult to return to society. She said his parents gave him "a lot" of material things instead of love. She added, "They were no substitute." "By going to Fra Mauro, we hope to discover, pick up and bring back some of this basin type material that was thrown out by the early catastrophe at Imbrium," Lovell said. Dr. Lee T. Silver, an Apollo researcher from the California Institute of Technology, said he would not be surprised if the Apollo 13 astronauts bring back samples up to 5 billion years old. That would be older than the KU's Allen Field House cost $2½ million to build. It has a seating capacity of 17,000. Convenient Budget Terms Illustrations Enlarged SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office Your Single - Double Breasted Suit Confused? That's what the clothing consultants are for. The British Tan is the only doublebreasted suit we can recommend to fit any man's dressrobe due to its year-round polyester and wool blend and versatile color. $90.00 the Clothing Consultants MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS ed UDK News Roundup By United Press International Hijackers free hostages SEOUL-Eight hijackers freed 99 hostage passengers from 79 hours of captivity on a pirated airliner Friday, halting the exodus once to take aboard a Japanese official for the flight to North Korea. Vice-Transportation Minister Shinjiro Yamamura boarded the Boeing 727 jet at 12:59 a.m. EST after the hijackers had released 58 of the passengers. Then the hijackers freed the remaining passengers. Legality of war challenged BOSTON—Massachusetts has issued a historic challenge to the federal government's constitutional authority to conduct the Vietnam war without a mandate from Congress. Republican Gov. Francis W. Sargent, who participated in October's antiwar moratorium demonstrations, Thursday signed a bill, which goes into effect immediately, permitting Massachusetts servicemen to refuse combat duty in undeclared wars as Vietnam. Inquest notes missing BOSTON—Information obtained from officials having knowledge of the case indicates court stenographers' notes containing the testimony of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and other witnesses at the secret inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne may be missing or improperly impounded, UPI learned Thursday. The notes, the only original record of the four-day secret inquest, have not been impounded at Suffolk Superior Court in Boston, which is the official custodian of the 764-page transcript of testimony and the report of Judge James A. Boyle, who presided over the inquest in Edgarton District Court. Committees allocate funds Nearly $17,245 for student activities was allocated in a combined meeting of the Student Senate Executive committee and the Finance and Audit committee Thursday. Mark Retonde, chairman of the Finance committee, and Dave Awbrey, president of the Student Senate presided. Awbrey said the committees had acted in accordance with the Senate Code, Article VI, which states, " (The University Senate Executive committee) shall act on behalf of the Student Senate in all matters requiring expeditious action." The allocations will come out of a $30,853 reserve fund of the Student Senate and will be used for fund budget requests for the remainder of the year. This is the first year the Student Senate budget has equalled or exceeded the Senate's income, said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. A committee headed by Dennis Embry, Great Bend junior, was set up to research the question of buying movie and movie-related equipment that could be available to all campus organizations. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.106 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 3, 1970 Wescoe Hall question in two parts Students will vote Tuesday on whether they want another classroom building on campus. The question of the new $8 million humanities building will appear on a referendum ballot in two parts: "Do you think $7.50 per semester should be used to help finance the proposed humanities building, Wescoe Hall?" and, "Do you agree with the policy of using student fees to help finance academic buildings?" The building question was brought to a referendum vote through petitions with more than 1400 valid According to a statement issued March 17 by the University Planning Board, there is no way of funding the project other than through an increase in student activity fees. signatures, turned in by David G. Miller, Eudora junior. The petition was begun after the Student Senate voted to pledge the student fees at its February 18 meeting. The proposed $7.50 fee increase would make up the difference between the $8 million cost and the $5.5 million that had already been obtained—$3.6 million from state appropriation and $1.9 million from federal funds. The federal money will be lost if there is further delay in the project, according to the University Planning Board statement. If the question is rejected by the students, (Continued on page 12) Regent's decision protested A protest rally and strike was organized Thursday night against the Kansas Board of Regents for passing over the promotions of two KU faculty members. Student government leaders, Black Student Union (BSU) members and graduate assistants supported the move, but each group expressed different reasons for Wednesday's scheduled action. David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said it should not be up to the Regents to control the moral and political atmosphere of KU. "We should make sure the University is an autonomous community," he said, "not an organ of the Regents." Awbrey referred to the passing over the promotions pending further investigation of associate law professor Lawrence Velvel's action and speech in the February 17 demonstration against the Chicago 7 trial. and assistant professor of speech and drama, Frederick Littot's part in the production of play scenes criticized by the U.S. Congress which were presented behind the Iron Curtain. Students should be informed of the "Regent's clamp" on the atmosphere of the University, said John Naramore, Lawrence senior. Students should get "dramatically involved and should support the strike next week." BSU members expressed their feelings that the Regents had been abusing blacks for a long time by rejecting their demands and thus "tearing down their humanity." Velvel appeared at the meeting and said he appreciated the show of support for the cause "of academic freedom and freedom of speech." John Spearman, Lawrence senior and BSU president, said they planned to support the strike, but they "would do their own work." The BSU will continue to be concerned with the limiting of academic freedom by the Regents, he said. A group of graduate assistant instructors and teaching assistants voiced their gripe against the Regents. Robert Asch, New York City assistant instructor in German acting as spokesman, said graduate instructors wanted the abolishment of their fees. The Regents, he said, considered such a measure last year but deferred action, and "so far have done nothing about it." The graduate assistants also want an increase in base pay to $3,000—an increase of $425 effective September 1, 1970. Asch said. Graduate assistants will support Wednesday's strike, but decided to delay acting on their causes until the week after because, "lumping all the grievances together would water down the issues." Asch said. Lenny Zeiskind, Lawrence resident, was appointed by Awbrey to do research to determine the exact relationship of the Regents to the University. Other members were asked to talk with students in residence halls, sorority and fraternity houses and scholarship halls. Final preparations for Wednesday's rally and strike will be made Tuesday in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room after scheduled newsreels, Awbrey said. LAKESIDE KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1946 OFFICIAL USE ONLY OPEN TRENCH LAKE & FLAMBE RENTAL SERVICES Ooops... Photo by Steve Fritz Despite signs a Buildings and Grounds truck fell into the trench near Danforth Chapel Thursday. The trench is part of the work of the telephone company to install phones in all the rooms in KU residence halls. The mishap was attributed to the heavy snowfall. IFC rejects Spring Week The Interfraternity Council will not participate in the planned Spring Week April 19-25, David Andersen, Wichita junior and IFC president, said Wednesday. Spring Week Andersen explained, is a combination of Greek Week and Spring Fling. The change from the traditionally separate Greek and Independent spring festivities was proposed early last September by Pamhellenic Council, Andersen said. the same goals of meeting people, making contacts with people in other living groups, and having a good time." Andersen said. "The combination was made because both of the activities had "Both the IFC President's Council and the IFC Representative Council voted down the proposal that the IFC participate in the Spring Week activities," Andersen said. Andersen said the IFC voted down the proposal because of the time element involved. Spring Week would take place three weeks before finals, and new contacts made would be lost over the summer vacation, he said. the proposal was that the activities of the week were on too large a scale for proper planning, Andersen said. Another reason for rejecting "The week should be planned all year and take place in the fall." he said. Andersen said if the week were scheduled in the fall, new friendships would have a chance to develop through the school year. "We tried to plan a Greek weekend," Andersen said, "but the IFC could not finance it alone. We asked Panhellenic to participate and split the cost, but they decided to go ahead with Spring Week." 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 Table Tops AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 Use Kansan Classified Expo to view half century of innovation Innovations in engineering and a preview of accomplishments expected during the next 50 years will be presented at the 50th annual Engineering Exposition beginning April 17 in Learned Hall. Robert A. Bibb, Mission senior and chairman of the Exposition Committee of the Engineering Council, said there would be 32 displays, with industry, professional societies and University departments to be represented. Entraits, Bibb said, would compete for trophies in three categories. Phillips Petroleum and Western Electric will display their industrial facilities. University departments are displaying computers and an aerospace wind tunnel. Professional societies will enter displays which will be judged on their correlation with the exposition theme. "Profiles of Tomorrow." First, second and third place trophies will be awarded April 19 in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. The Exposition will open at noon the seventeenth with the crowning of the engineering queen by William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering. The ceremony will take place at the main entrance of Learned Hall. Queen candidates are Vivian Poje, Kansas City junior; Carolyn Gibbs, Galesburg, Ill. sophomore; Kay Salminen, Kansas City sophomore; Karen Sanders, Memphis, Tenn. freshman; and Pam Kulp, Overland Park junior. SIGNS RESTRICTED SINGAPORE (UPI) — Fifteen firms comprising housing development companies, beauty salons and insurance agencies were fined $10 to $133 for displaying signboards carrying their business names and advertising. Official permission is required in Singapore before a firm may post a sign. 2 KANSAN Apr. 3 1970 SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office Captain's The Table We Will Now Be Open 7 Days A Week For Your Convenience. Monday — Saturday 7:00 a.m. - 2:30 a.m. Cafeteria Hours 10:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; 5:00 p.m.-8:00 Sunday 11:00 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. Restaurant Hours 7:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.; 2:30 p.m. - 2:30 a.m. The Menu Dinners Filet Mignon ... 8 oz. — $3.25 Top Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 2.50 K.C. Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 3.25 Top Sirloin ... 12 oz. — 3.25 T-Bone ... 12 oz. — 3.40 Chopped Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 1.25 Cubed Beef Steak ... .75 All of the above are charbroiled and are served with lettuce, sliced tomato, and a wedge of dill pickle. Roast Beef ... 6 oz. — $1.30 Baked Ham ... 6 oz. — 1.75 Breaded Veal Cutlet ... .80 Pepsi Cola, Dr. Pepper, Teem ... .10 Milk, Iced Tea ... .15 Hot Chocolate, Hot Tea ... .15 Coffee ... .10 Sandwiches Charbroiled Hamburger $ .45 Charbroiled Cheeseburger .50 Charbroiled Hamburger Deluxe .70 Charbroiled Cheeseburger Deluxe .75 Charbroiled Cheese Steak .80 Reuben Sandwich 1.15 Roast Beef Sandwich .65 Baked Ham Sandwich .70 Combination Salad .30 Wedged Tomato & Cottage Cheese .30 Cottage Cheese .12 Mashed Potatoes & Gravy (till 8 p.m.) .10 Suzy-Q Fries (our own specialty) .15 Vegetables .10 Pie .30 Rolls & Butter (Rye & White Dinner) .14 ACROSS THE STREET FROM LINDLEY HALL Campus briefs Mrs. Barbara Rose, art critic, was not able to come to KU's Festival of the Arts Thursday night due to weather conditions. Her lecture is re-scheduled for April 12 at 7 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets already purchased can be used April 12. Lecture by art critic rescheduled Book and Author Dinner plans set The sixth annual Book and Author Dinner sponsored by the University Women's Club will be held at the Hotel Muehlebach April 18. There will be social hour at 6 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. The authors to be featured are. Eric Segal, Webster Schott, Thomas McAfee and Joan Kahn. The public is invited. To make a reservation, call WE 1-5400. Tickets are $7 per person. Send self-addressed stamped envelope and check to: University Women's Club, Book and Author Dinner, 4618 Warwick Blvd., Kansas City, Mo., 64112. Gift Fair Committee to meet April 9 The International Gift Fair Committee meeting scheduled for this week has been changed to April 9 at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union, Tom Moore, KU-Y director, said Thurs. Moore said the committee will plan an International Gift Fair set tentatively for next Nov. Moore said the fair would, ideally, be a cross cultural communications laboratory which would explore intercultural communications problems. Synchro Club to perform ballet The University of Kansas Synchro Club will meet April 9-10 at 8 p.m. in Robinson Natatorium, to perform their annual water ballet program. The theme for the water show is "A Splash of Disney." Poetry contest open to students The department of English is sponsoring the William Herbert Carruth Memorial Contest. The contest is open to all students, undergraduate and graduate, and cash prizes will be awarded. Entrants must submit three copies of from one to three poems written under a pseudonym. Each entry must be accompanied by a sealed envelope containing the writer's name and pseudonym. Entries should be taken to the English department office, 152 Carruth-O'Leary, by April 15 at 5:00 p.m. Apr. 3 1970 KANSAN 3 The entries will be judged independently by a panel of three judges. bos KU Clean-up Day will be Saturday said Mrs. Barbara Day, executive secretary of Ecology Action, a newly-formed group dealing with pollution and overpopulation problems. contact the Ecology Action office at 843-7151. Relaxing is much more enjoyable when you've got a Big Shef. Try one soon and find out for yourself. Any re-usable trash collected such as paper, aluminum cans or beer bottles should be taken to 12th and Massachusetts where people will be stationed for pick-up. -100% Pure Beef- 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS KU clean-up drive Saturday In cooperation with the Lawrence spring clean-up campaign, which runs through April 12. ECONOMICS CHEMISTRY BUSINESS BIOLOGY RB + MAGIC ACCOUNTING GOODWORK APPROVAL SOCIAL HURRAGES LITERATURE MATHEMATICS NURSING PHILOPHYSY PUNCH PICK-A-PROJECT THIS SUMMER Reach out, expand your world of people and ideas at the University of Pennsylvania. Summer Sessions. Over 290 courses, from Archaeology to Zoology, offer credit toward an undergraduate, graduate or professional degree. For complete information, mail this coupon today. Saturday and Sunday and April 11-12 was set as clean-up day for the University community. Mrs. Day stressed the importance of students organizing their own groups to go on neighborhood drivers. Interested students wanting to help may meet at 9 a.m. at the Wesley Foundation on April 4, 5, 11 or 12, or may PICK-A-PROJECT THIS SUMMER Reach out, expand your world of people and ideas at the University of Pennsylvania Summer Sessions. Over 290 courses, from Archaeology to Zoology, offer credit toward an undergraduate, graduate or professional degree. For complete information, mail this coupon today. New! Four special courses in music at Teton Village, Wyoming. July 20 to Aug. 28. Name_ Address_ City_ State_Zip_ UNIVERSITY of PENNSYLVANIA Summer Sessions Room 15C, College Hall Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 Name___ Address___ City___ State_Zip___ UNIVERSITY of PENNSYLVANIA Summer Sessions Room 15C, College Hall Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 SANDALWOOD TRUCK DOWN April 2-3-4 SALE FREE BEER FRI. RISING SUNS RED DOG DOLLAR NITE SAT. ADM. $1 Pitchers $1 DANCE TO THE HEAVY SOUNDS OF FLARE SHOW KANSAN COMMENT The rating game By CASS SEXON Assistant News Editor In an effort to avert film classification by legislation, the Motion Picture Association of America developed a rating system for films made by its members. "GMRX," now amended to "GGPRX" because of parental confusion as to whether their children were mature or not, has, if nothing else, made it easier for threater-goers to pick the films they want to see. The next logical step in the rating game would be for book publishers to rate their product on a scale from "W" for "Winnie-the-Pooh" to "D" for "Dirty," or at least put a table of page numbers in the front so that readers would not find it necessary to skim the whole book to find the juicy passages. In fairness to the new motion picture ratings system, it has two saving factors—it saves parents the price of an admission ticket to preview a film before sending their children to see it, and it saves those who prefer films with sex and violence from the boredom of sitting through a film with little of either. Imagine the chagrin of thousands of people who found "The Graduate" too blatant for their tastes to find that the film would have rated only an "M" (or a "GP") , or the indignation of school children forbidden to see "The Satan Bug" when, as it turns out, the film would have been given a "G" rating. The classification system was set up as a compromise between total freedom and the threat of government classification. As such, it has become a mockery of the situation it was to alleviate. An "X"-rated film is a box-office draw, especially so when it stars a well-known entertainer. The impression given by many recent films is that a top star is used to get the attention of the theater-goer, and enough sex is thrown in to earn the "X" rating as a drawing card. The success of "Midnight Cowboy" is a prime example of how well the combination works. On the other end of the rating teeter-totter are the films striving for the "G" rating. The typical shoot-em-up scene in a western, where the man in the black hat always loses, are rapidly becoming a thing of the past. Film producers must be cautious about portraying too much blood or filming scenes in which the hero does a little more than just kiss his leading lady, but the "G" rating is not jeopardized by making the hired killer the hero. Presumably that situation is in keeping with community standards. The idea of what warrants a restrictive rating is, at best, ambiguous, and at worst, downright mystifying. Films showing any sort of "perverse" sexual activity or a too-generous helping of normal sexual activity are always given a rating of at least "R." Yet the guidelines for the display of violence are so loose that they are farcical. Perhaps this is related to the idea that modern American society has no conception of "perverse" violence, or that in a war-oriented society, it is almost impossible to conceive of children receiving a more generous helping of violence in a film than they receive daily in the mass media. Still another drawback to the rating system, though minor in comparison, is the fact that films from other countries, films by non-members of the MPAA and other free-lance films technically rate an automatic "X" rating, meaning that they have not earned the Production Code Authority "Seal of Approval." In order to get a rating, films made by industries outside the MPAA must be submitted to the same panel that rates MPAA films. For many foreign films, this would be a waste of time. But it would be no more of a waste of time than the entire rating system. The major accomplishment of the MPAA classification attempt, and perhaps its only worthwhile accomplishment, is that it keeps classification out of the hands of the government. As poor as the system is, the alternative of rating by legislation could hardly be an improvement. Sorel's News Service 21 Marmalade WASHINGTON—Tricia Nixon feels that Vice-President Agnew's attacks on the news media had a salutary effect: "I'm a close watcher of newspapers and TV. I think they've taken a second look. You can't underestimate the power of fear. They're afraid if they don't shape up . . ." Little Miss Nix It THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--UN-4 3-6464 Business Office--UN-4 4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods, in the mester, 10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. 27% fee on goods, services and employment education expenses students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Advisor ... James W. Murray Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson Campus Editor ... Ted Iliff News Editors ... Donna Shrader Editorial Editors ... Naomi Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnahan, Makeup Editors ... Charlie Campbell George Wilkens Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors ... Carolyn Bowers Arts and Reviews Editors ... Genelle Richards, Rick Geary Asst. Campus Editors. Vicki Phillipery Nila Walker Asst. News Editors . Cass Sexson, Rachel Reece Photographers ... Ron Bishop Bruce Bernstein, Randy Lefflingwell Griff & the Unicorn BUSINESS STAFF Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF Business Advisor ... Mel Adams Business Manager ... Jerry Bottenfield Asst. Business Mgr. ... Mike Banks Advertising Mgr. ... Larry Cates, Joanne Bos National Ad. Mgr. .. Oceane Bassisson Classified Mgr. .. Shawn Shearer Promotion Manager .. Jim Huggins Service Manager .. John Lagios Mmber Associatied Collegeiate Prss Mmber Associatied Collegeiate Prss BOY! YOU LOOK EXHAUSTED! I FEEL EXHAUSTED. I HAVEN't SLEPT FOR THREE NIGHTS... WHAT'S THE PROBLEM? I KEEP HAVING THIS DREAM WHERE A MYSTERIOUS VOICE FROM NOWHERE KEeps SAYING, "COKE HAS THE TASTE YOU NEVER GET TIRED OF, COKE AFTER COKE AFTER COKE..." David Sokoloff 1970 hearing voices— To the editor: Several weeks ago, I was assigned by the editors of the Kansan to write a story on reported discrimination within the scholarship hall system. Officially and unofficially I found none within that system. As a matter of fact, the scholarship hall residents seem more than willing to accept residents of minority groups into their living situation. But, in the course of my investigation, I discovered something about myself, as well as about discrimination. This "thing" which I discovered is perhaps elementary, but it caused my news write-up to be quite slanted, and much too personal by good journalistic standards. Because of this slant, my story was not printed in the Kansan. This points up the flexibility and good judgment practiced by most Kansan staff members. But, these are not what I intend to write about. Because I am a white, Anglo-Saxon and a sometimes Protestant, many of the aspects of discrimination against minority groups seemed to be merely problems of an official nature, that is, they could be solved simply by passing laws and making new policies which would eradicate official discrimination. After talking with several members of such minority groups, particularly Dr. Robert Sanders of the University Human Relations Board, I realized that discrimination cannot be solved this way. Of course, I knew this, but human nature was evidently something which I had completely discounted in this area. But, this is the type of discrimination which the blacks are fighting. I didn't think I would encounter it on a so-called "liberal" campus, but it's here. Whites today are becoming increasingly upset because blacks do not want to accept middle-class values and ideas of integration, whether it be busing children to schools or job quotas. Why? Because black collegiates are trying to find their racial identity. And, why not? They haven't had any for 300 years! They certainly can't find it in the predominantly white fraternities, sororities or scholarship halls. As a white, I would not want to live in an all-black living situation. I would feel as outnumbered as they would, having to formulate a completely new set of patterns and securities. And, if I were the only white or a white smaller group member, I too would term my membership in the living group tokenism. How can the white culture expect to learn about the black culture from one or two individuals of a group simply by living with them? No, the problem lies elsewhere, in the minds of the prejudiced individual. This is the type of discrimination which blacks are fighting or ignoring. Yet, contact is the only way to help these unenlightened, prejudiced individuals jump the gap to understanding. Fighting this discrimination takes more than laws or policies; it takes self-evaluation and objectivity and outside investigation on a personal level. I don't know how you can make people to do this, but it has to be done somehow. If only everyone would at least work on it, then perhaps, people won't have to worry about the color of their skins to be able to communicate with one another. Clancey Maloney Roeland Park, junior X X X To the editor: Monday, March 16th I attended a lecture by Col. Mohr on the subject of sensitivity training and sex education and I have never in my life been so sickened and disgusted at the behavior of an audience. I wanted to hear what Col. Mohr had to say but was prevented by those that came only to break up the meeting. They broke it up by shouting filthy words, cheering loudly at any mention of pornography, sex, or communism, by throwing marshmallows at the speaker and simply by making so much noise Col. Mohr was not able to talk. I understand that a whole busload came from another city in order to assist in breaking up the meeting. This was done in an organized manner from all parts of the auditorium. These people evidently feel that their right of free speech somehow takes precedence over and allows invasion of another's right to freedom of speech. No action was taken. Many of the students were as disgusted as I and one made the comment that maybe if more of the outside community knew what was going on it could be stopped. Why is this invasion of the constitutional right of free speech and this invasion of the right of free and peacable assembly permitted? By permitting this, aren't we in reality guilty of condoning and encouraging it? Other communities have met this problem. For instance; in Salt Lake City, Utah last January three persons were sentenced to 6 months in jail for breaking up a meeting. Perhaps force is the only thing this type of person understands. If we ignore this situation it can only get worse; it certainly won't just go away. Many of us that were at this meeting want to know what will be done about this situation in the future? Mrs. Katherine Tarr Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN REVIEWS PLAYS: delightful experience By MARILYN MCMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Kyogen is a delightful experience. Fine acting and three very amusing plays provide highly rewarding, if unusual, entertainment. Credit goes to the actors who played in "Busu" and "Dondaro." Both plays were performed in English but retained the stylized movements and exaggerated speech inflections of the traditional Japanese genre. Vowel sounds are drawn out in Kyogen, so that an exclamation of suprise is rendered, "Whaaaaaat did youuuu saaaaaay." A little is lost in the translation. The effect of such exaggerations in Japanese is much more effective. Nevertheless, John Myers and Mark Yates made successful use in comical facial expressions in their portrayal of scheming servants, which brought deserved laughs from the audience. Steve Anderson as Dondaro captured the genuine flair of the stylized movements and incorporated them well in his performance. Janet Svoboda and Janet Ruppenthal, as Dondaro's mistress and wife, were properly restrained with their characterizations. Apr. 3 1970 KANSAN 5 SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office ALICE'S RESTAURANT A "THE FIRST TIME" and "WHERE IT'S AT" 7:00 Alice's Restaurant 9:00 Where it's at 10:45 The First time Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 6 "Kamabara," the story of a henpecked but lazy woodcutter who decides to commit suicide, was performed in Japanese. Director Andrew Tsubaki assumed the lead role and was supported by Yoichi Ohtake as his wife and Nobu Obia as the arbitrator of their argument. All three men turned in fine performances which gave the viewer an appreciation for traditional Kyogen. Tsubaki's graceful movements and telling facial expressions made his monologue exciting, and, in places hilarious. A synopsis of the play was included in the program. "Kamabara" was the funniest of the three plays, and derw the most laughs. Its success was due to the ease with which one can relate the stylized humor of Kyogen to the Japanese language. The simplicity of the scenery left the success of the performance solely to the ability of the actors. The entire cast was more than capable of the task of making a success of a most difficult and unusual style of drama. Barbara Rose to appear Barbara Rose was unable to appear at the Festival of Arts Thursday night due to the nationwide air traffic tie-up. She is rescheduled for 7 p.m. April 12 in Woodruff Auditorium. Elizabeth Miller Watkins, KU benefactress, was born in 1861 and died in 1839. What do you do when your girlfriend wants to meet the wife and 3 kids you don't have? You see - - the auspices of the State Department. 4 WALTER INGRID MATTHAU BERGMAN CACETUS FLOWER introducing GOLDIE HAWK as TOMI NOW! Eve. 7:20 - 9:20 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50; Child .75 Granada THEATRE ...Telephone VI 9-5120 A man and woman talking "Why do we fight our wars for them Christopher Jones in THE LOOKING GLASS WAR THE LOOKING? 9722 MVH EASTMAN COLOR | PANAVISION* | From Columbia Pictures Hillcrest Two nights remain in the 1970 Festival of Arts and the two programs of promising entertainment are on the bill for Festival-goers. Festival previews - two more nights HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA Eve. 7:30 & 9:25 Mat. Sat. 2:20 Ends Saturday Saturday night the weeks festivities will be climaxed by the appearance of Bucy Sainte-Marie, one of the most sought after young concert artists in America. Reviews say she is blessed with a rare artistic ability of communication. "Cactus Flower"-A glossy Hollywood product that is sometimes genuinely funny. It performs the service of proving that Goldie Hawn's tremendous talent is wasted on "Laugh-In." "The Looking Glass War"—A brutal, despairing spy story, with Christopher Jones as a combination James Bond—James Dean. A very cold-blooded and humorless movie, with a few gripping moments. Lucas Hoving and his dance company will perform at 8 p.m. tonight. Hoving has toured with his company both in this country and in Europe in the last few years. He began his career as a dancer when joined the Jooss Ballet. Later he became a member of the Jose Limon Dance Company for which he achieved fame for his portrayal of Lago in "The Moor's Pavane, and the White Man in "Emperor Jones." With this company he made four overseas tours under The Weekend Scene "Generation"—The "gap" again, with David Janssen as a distraught father and Kim Darby as his pregnant, unmarried daughter. 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 "Alice's Restaurant"—Arthur Penn's uneven but sympathetic look at life among the nations outcasts. C "What's New, Pussycat?"—A funny script by Woody Allen is ruined by Clive Donner's sloppy, uncontrolled direction. Peter Sellers and Peter O'Toole manage to look good, then. 1965. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1-3-1065 "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" —A very funny, very biting look at American attitudes toward the new morality. Excellently written, with superbly natural 132 The most explosive spy scandal of this century! ALFRED HITCHCOCKS TOPAZ Eve. 7:00 - 9:15 Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:00 Hillcrest performances by Elliot Gould and Dyan Cannon as the last two title characters. We're just married and the baby's due in 3 days... OOPS! See the fun begin when the father of the bride comes to visit Joseph E. Levine presents An Avco Embassy Film GENERATION Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 DAVID JANSSEN - KIM DARBY CARL REINER OR OR EMBASSY helpline THE Hillcrest University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $.75 Royals' success to center on strong outfield and pitching FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI)—Talk to the Kansas City Royals folks for any length of time and you'll find yourself talking about their highly promising young outfield of Lou Piniella, Amos Otis, and Pat Kelly. From left to right, it looks like this: Piniella, a righthanded hitter who was "rookie of the year" in the AL last year at 25, is the solid starter in left field. Manager Charlie Metro thinks that in 1970 "he'll certainly be one of our better hitters." Otis, 22, also right handed, is installed in center field. He was obtained from the New York Mets in exchange for third baseman Joe Foy and the Royals think they have come up with a real star. The Royals also are convinced they've got a future star in Kelly, a 25-year-old lefthanded hitter. Metro calls him "the most improved guy down here this spring—all around improvement." The infield is set only at second, where ex-Red Soxer Jerry Adair, who hit 250, holds forth, Jayhawks headed for Texas Relays The University of Kansas track team begins competitive battling for watches at the 43rd annual Texas Relays with seven individuals and five relays entered, but without NCAA shotput champion Karl Salb. and shortstop, where Jack Hernandez, despite his low average last year, has been designated "my shortstop, period" by Metro. First base is a platooning proposition between lefthanded Mike Fiore, 274, and righthanded Bob Oliver, 254. It was decided late this week by track coach Bob Timmons that Salb would remain home to concentrate on his studies while a majority of the track team would travel to Austin. Last year, Salb led teammates Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop to a sweep in the shotput and finished fourth in the discus. This will be the first competition for the Jayhawks since their crushing 99-55 defeat to UCLA last Saturday in Los Angeles. The track team will remain at less than full strength as distance man Roger Kathol is still suffering from poison oak and half-miler Dennis Stewart is ailing with a leg problem. Spinner Marvin Foster will also not compete because of an ankle injury. Not all is gloomy as the Hawks approach this weekends competition. Jim Neihouse and Mike Solomon, who preformed their best at UCLA, will be running legs on some of the relays. Neihouse won the 880 with a career low of 1:49.0 and Solomon finished third in the mile with his personal best of 4:06.0. Last year at Austin, KU won the 880 relay, finished second in the distance medley and four mile and was third in the sprint medley and two-mile. Preliminary line up for this year's competition is: 440 relay — Frank Johnson, Phil Reaves, Julio Meade, Mickey Mathews Paul Schaal, who hit .374 at Omaha and .263 for the Royals, has the inside track at third base, but Ed Kirkpatrick, Fred Rico, Dennis Paepke, Bill Harris, and Oliver Ally are contenders. 880 relay — Johnson, Mathews, Reaves, Meade 6 KANSAN Apr. 3 1970 SENIORS LAST CHANCE Jayhawker Senior Picture Sunday April 5 3-5 p.m. Jayhawker Office Metro has a four-way scrap going for the No. 1 catching job among John "Bucky" Martinez, .229, Jim Campanis, .157, Ellie Rodriguez, .236, and Paepke, who hit 5 at Omaha. Four-mile relay — Neihouse, McElroy, Doug Smith, Solomon Sprint Medley relay — Johnson (220), Meade (220) Randy Julian (440), Brian McElroy (880) Distance Medley relay — Neihouse (880), Meade (440), Smith 1,320), Solomon (mile) Pole Vault — Jan Johnson, Bill Hatcher Long Jump — Reaves Javelin — Sam Colson Three mile — Jay Mason Shotput — Wilhelm, Knop Discus — Knop, Wilhelm The Royals appear a bit better fixed for relief pitching than for starting pitching, Veteran righthander Moe Drabowsky, who was 11-9 with a 2.94 earned run average and 11 saves last year, is the top fireman and could get a lot of help from Bob Johnson, who came from the Mets' organization where he was 13-4 at Memphis. Righthander Wally Bunker, 12-11 was the staff's top winner last year and figures again to be the No. 1 starter. Others in the front firing line are lefty Bill Butler 10-10, Dick Drago 11-13, Dave Morehead 2-3, Roger Nelson 7-13, Mice Hedland 3-6 and But if the Royals, who got off to a staggering start in spring training by losing 12 of their first 17, are going to catch fire, it's the outfield that will have to strike the matches. Griff's Griff's WEEKEND SPECIAL Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Griff's will give you a 10$ drink Free with the purchase of one of our tasty Fish Sandwiches for only 35$. Come in this weekend and take advantage of this SPECIAL. Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W. 23rd International Club presents... the second of its exchange programs with Haskell Institute. Be a guest of the International Club this Friday night when members of Haskell Institute will perform native American dances before an international audience. At the Union Ballroom, 7:30 p.m., April 3rd. Admission Free Everyone Invited Sponsored by International Club TREASURES Young Sharp Two-Tones Freeman presents a new dimension in footwear. Follow the action! These young, sharp shoes are strikingly continental. Straps enliven the square toe. The combination of colors is strictly masculine. It's a look that happened tomorrow. And it's yours today! All it takes is a little guts and two kinds of polish. Available in all colors. by FREEMAN McCall's Seaver to appear on opera quiz show James Seaver, professor of history, will depart from his usual work in the history and western civilization departments today, and travel to New York City. He is going to take part in a radio quiz program about opera, his favorite hobby. The opera quiz will take place during intermission of the Metropolitan Opera performance which has been broadcast on radio every Saturday since 1930. Texaco Oil company sponsors the broadcast. Seaver will be among opera experts from all over the United States. Panelists, he said, would be asked all kinds of questions concerning opera by announcer Edward Downes. This will be Seaver's fourth time on the panel. His first invitation to participate on the panel resulted from a letter written to the program's sponsors by Resse Wade of Independence, Mo., who was a regular listener to Seaver's Friday evening radio show, "Opera is My Hobby" on KU's FM station KANU. Geraldine Souvaine, promoter and organizer of the program for Texaco, decided Seaver would be valuable to the program after an audition from his KANU show tapes. Seaver said his interest in opera began when he was a child. "When I was 12-years-old," he said, "I had what might be called a catastrophic conversion after so because he would be staying with former KU Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe, who live near the Metropolitan Opera. Promotions for 75 University of Kansas faculty members have been approved by the Kansas Board of Regents. They will become effective July 1. The broadcast, which will feature Bellini's "Norma," will be aired in Lawrence at 1 p.m. Saturday on KANU. Radio stations WIBW in Topeka and KXTR in Kansas City will also carry the program. In 1962 Seaver received a special award for Outstanding Broadcaster of Kansas from KU's radio and television department. Faculty promotions approved by Regents Those faculty members promoted to professor are: Karel H. Blaas, stringed instruments; Kenneth Bloomquist, cello; nellie Bell, Paul R. Burton, physiology and cell biology; Donald E. Chambers, social welfare; Wakefield D. Jr., geology; Dickson, French and Italian; Benjamin J. McKenzie, physics; Mrs. Grace M. Heider, psychology; Kenneth C. Kammyer, sociology; M. Dale Kinkade, anthropology; Manuel de la Plata, man, aerospace engineering; Gary M. Maranell, sociology; John C. Moel, architecture and urban design; James N. Neelley, speech and drama; Charles W. Neilley, life and human development and life unit; Roskam, aerospace engineering; Sakari Sarolia, sociology; L. Don Scheid, n. Neelley, speech and drama; instruments; Harry B. Neilley, ing; Andrew M. Torres, botany, Nick D. Vaccaro, drawing and painting; Charles K. Warner, history; Rosalie K. Warner,解剖学; Ann Ruth Willner, political science; Ann Ruth Willner, anthropology; and Glen Wolf, physiology and cell biology. Those promoted to the position of associate professor are: John T. Alexander, history and Slavic and Soviet physics; Benjamin F. Brown, armstrong, physics; Benjamin F. Brown, Dessia J. Bush, design; Donald Bushnell Jr., human development and family life; Jerry D. Chaffin, education; Michael D. Cherniss, English; Michael E. Cherniss, biology; Edward E. Dayan, biology; Laurence Day, journalism; Edwyna C. Gilbert, education and English; Paul A. Haack, music education. F. posers, he said, include Mozart, Wagner, Verdi and Straus. Among his favorite singers are Martinelli, Caruso, Melchior and Flagstad. Apr. 3 1970 KANSAN 7 Seaver said he had built up a library of thousands of records which included rare operas, unusual singers and albums from foreign countries he had visited such as Israel, Italy and Costa Rica. Some of his favorite com- Seaver said he was looking forward to the trip to New York al- hearing Verdi's 'Il Trovatore'. It was so beautiful that I started listening to other operas and collecting records of them." Allen Hanson, anthropology; Richard F. Hardin, English; Robert E. Hinshaw, anthropology; Charles K. Hoag, music theory; Gary Gorsuch, Hoeltke, education; Thomas B. Martin, engineering; Norris J. Lacy, French and Italian; Chae-Jin Lee, political science; James B. Lingwall, speech and language; John M. Phillips, philosophy; James D. McChesney, biography; biology; Robert D. Michal, education; L. Keith Miller, human development and family life; and sociology; Thurston M. Moret, physiology; F. Murphy, sociology; Jack R. Perez, mathematics; Tom P. Rea, speech and drama; Harvey M. Rubenstein, architecture and human design; Edgar A. Brown, human biology; physical education; John O. Toleffson, business administration; William M. Tuttle, history; W. Randall M. Tuttle, geology; Charles R. Wyntenbach,物理学; biology; and Lee F. Young, journalism Those promoted to assistant professor are: Jane Abbott, piano; Anise V. Catlett, physical education; Darrell D. Dandel, music theory; Jacquelineull McCarthy, therapy; Carrye Mac Mason, journalism; Larry speech, and drama; L. Marlene Mewson, physical education, and Mary Elizabeth Townsend, psychology Promoted to Librarian III was Anna promoted to promoted to Librarian II was East Georgetown. Chemist receives research stipend Robert G. Carlson, associate professor of chemistry, has received a research fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation in New York. Carlson will use his $16,100 two-year stipend for research in synthetic organic chemistry. ACE JOHNSON EATS AT THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE 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 If you think you're getting a great shave with a razor blade, feel your face. A razor blade can give you a good, close shave on the easy parts of your face. Like your cheeks, Because your cheeks are almost flat, like a razor blade. But what about the hard-to-shave parts of your face? Feel your neck Feel how your beard grows down on part of your neck? And up on another part? (Some beards even grow sideways.) To give you a close, comfortable shave on your neck, we designed the Norelco Tripleheader with 18 self-sharpening rotary blades that shave in every direction. Feel your chin The heads go in where your chin goes in, and out where your chin goes out. To give you a really close shave, without irritating your skin. (In independent tests, the Tripleheader shaved as close or closer than a stainless steel blade in 2 out of 3 shaves.) The Norelco Tripleheader has 3 Microgroove shaving heads that float to follow the curves of your chin. Feel your upper lip The hard thing about shaving your upper lip with a razor blade is shaving close enough. Again, the unique Norelco design lets you maneuver around your nose and mouth, to shave your beard in every direction. Feel your sideburns The biggest problem with shaving sideburns is to get them straight, and even on both sides. The Norelco Tripleheader has a pop-up trimmer that lets you see exactly what you're trimming. So it's a lot harder to make a mistake. Now, run your hand over your whole face. If your beard feels uneven, maybe you should be shaving with a Noreico Tripleheader. It comes in two models. The Cord Model Tripleheader (with easy flip top cleaning). And the new Rechargeable Tripleheader (the shaver that gives you up to twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable): Either one will give your face a whole new feel. Norelco you can't get any closer $ \textcircled{c} $1970 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017. The Draught House Presents SUNRISE TOGETHER Tonight and Saturday Night One Dollar Admission One Dollar per Pitcher "Can You Dig it?" NOTICE: Strawberry Alarm Clock April 29 New emphasis on form Knits cling to new fashion scene By JEFF GOUDIE Kansan Staff Writer The sum-up of this spring's look is smooth sleekness. The body clinging fabrics in pastel mist colors or print water washes have an almost dreamy aura about them. To add to the overall effect of classic elegance, accessories are trimmed down, and for the daring, the accent for hemlines is on the midcalf. Leading the lineup of spring fabrics are cotton knits. Cotton knits, once used almost exclusively for T-shirts and undergarments, have now emerged as fashion leaders, and with variations, are suitable for almost any occasion. Knits are ideal for this season's close - to - the - body silhouette. Clingy jerseys are for soft-shirred or pleated fashions and for blouses, with skinny rib knips for lean T-shirt dresses and tops, and string crochets and raschels for long vests and lacy evening attire. Pants, too, are pared down and will appear much less frequently than in the past. Legs are straighter but there's more detail—new seaming, new cuts and new kinds of tops to go with them create a whole new dress-up category in a softly feminine mood. Just because it's spring and pastels are in full bloom doesn't mean that accessories also need to be pastel soft. A dark tone delacate leather bag is a perfect contrast for the delicate shadings of a spring pastel dress. Linked leather belts, a leather piece wrapped around one's neck or an ornamented girdle cinching in a water wash print add sharp contrast where needed. Fringed belts and Indian print scarves liven up any of the sleek spring looks. Apr. 3 1970 KANSAN 9 PHILADELPHIA RUTHERFORD 66 Tony's Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Knits can easily be dressed up for a city trip. A gold slinky belt, bracelet or necklace adds a touch of sophistication for a night on the town. Crinkle patent leather shoes or platform shoes are the accent for nightlife footwear. Also ideal for the city is the shirty, clean-cut look of the spectator suit in white or beige canvas, offset with lots of hardware. The economic-minded with a dropper. Colors can also be varied after the fabric has been dyed and dried, either by rubbing it with chlorine bleach or boiling it in a color remover. The forecast from France this spring focuses on a midcalf hemline. Top designers on both continents are showing long narrow dresses in crepe or a heavier jersey. Jackets will be longer, with the midi-length beach coat making the scene. Whether the midi length will interest the college coed remains a question of interest, and certainly has some financial overtones. spring's wardrobe with two things in mind: close fitting fabrics demand svelte bodies and the field is open for your own creative whims. creative flair will delight in the revival of the tie-dye fabric. The trick to tie-dyeing is in mastering five basic formations: resettes, gathers, pleats, marblings and bunches, all of which are held together with a rubber band. The dyer can either dip the clumps or drip onto them with an eye- KANSAN Women WHAT'S NEW PUSSYCAT April 3,4 Barring all else, begin this Union Aud. 7:00 and 9:30 50c Provocative - Funny Theologically-tinged drama Norm & Sandra Dietz of New York City present: "Fresh Cookies" At UCCF Center, 1204 Oread Tues., April 7, 7:30 p.m. (Tickets at $1.00. Available at churches, student centers, KU-Y office or at door.) Leisure Dining At Its Best Cool — Quiet — Relaxing Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS Charbroiled Steaks – Italian Foods Chicken – Sea Foods Daily Luncheon Specials Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS Graduating Seniors, Candidates graduation M for Masters & Doctorate Degrees and Faculty Orders must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! Photo 'essay' pleas Ozark preservation A photographic essay by freelance photographer, Leland Payton, which makes a pictorial plea for the preservation of the Ozarks, is being shown now in the South Lounge of the Union. "The record of life coming up through 300 million years of occupation in one place is still intact here," said Payton, talking about his exhibit. "We have a chance to preserve these last small pieces of Ozark wildland. Why should we? That is the subject of the exhibit," he said. For the last few years Payton has been trying to get jobs which keep him near the highlands, the subject of his exhibit. He is currently working on a book, which will be the pictorial story of this region. He is also trying to get enough signatures on an initiative petition to place on the ballot a referendum which will zone the 850 miles of Ozarks for parks. "The Ozarks has the potential of becoming a huge low density slum area," said Payton, "and you can't cut down trees for development without washing everything away." Payton expressed hope that with the current emphasis on ecology, people would get on the bandwagon to save the Ozarks. Speaking again of the exhibit, he said, "This exhibit is the product of looking at the Ozarks — Scholarship essay contest announced An essay contest with a first prize of up to $500 bearing the title "Ethics in Society" was announced by the Office of Student Financial Aid Monday. The essay is to give an account of the Judaeo-Christian ethical tradition as applied to social and political matters. Competition entries may take the forms of a research paper, a proposal or design for some useful social project accompanied by a supporting essay and budgetary statement, a well-grounded and thoughtful personal statement or a creative work (painting, sculpture, etc.) together with an appropriate essay. Deadline for contest entries is May 4. 10 KANSAN Apr. 3 1970 seeking a viewpoint — I hope the immense importance of having these wild portions stay wild will be realized before the entire earth becomes a concrete, glass and asphalt development, formless and the same to the death." Payton will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday, in the Forum Room on the topic, "The Ozarks: Fragments of Wilderness." He will show slides and still shots featuring the region. He said he hoped there would be enough interested students to have a discussion after the speech. Payton has been commissioned by the Ozarks Bi-Cultural Center, a federal institution to education, to create a travelling exhibit of the Ozark's national and cultural features. He is also working on several books and photographic essays concerned with the national history of the Ozarks. He recently was engaged by the Mark Twain National Forest to photograph the Eleven Point National Scenic Riverway. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records 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. 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 MR YUK FREE TGIF with KU ID See the world of Classic Sound MR YUK Stainglass Window hair YAK Till Fri. NRS X-K Open Boots Olof Daughters of Sweden Do your thing in wooden things! Clogs . . . direct from Sweden in fashion colors of navy, red and white leather uppers. Suede upper in brown, navy, gold and green. Try a pair today. Bunny Blacks Royal Bunny Black's Royal College Shop 837 MASS. VI 3-4255 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the workplace may be credited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Clv. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed. Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. Minolta, SRT101, F14. Leather case, skylight light, rechargeable strobe. 4 travel through camera, strobue unuse $235 off best cash offer, $43-6 after 6 p.m. '67 Barracuda Formula "S", Call 4-1 4-326 or 843-0435. 4-3 1967 Renault R-10. Best offer. Call 842-3647. 4-3 '65 Chev. Inmalp, HT-PS PB, auto- speed. After 52 weeks. sometimes works. 4-6 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 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 67 Chevy Bel-Air 4 rd, sedan. 283 Factory Air, P.S., P.B., 6 good tires. $995. Call 842-4717, Wed., Thurs. Fri, after 6 p.m. 4-6 '63 wood LeBlanc-symphony model carrier;-$330; '28" Boys Schwinn typewriter;-$54 Smiley portable typewriter;-$40; Polaroid card;-$10 Mouse 842-5280, 4-6 Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaec, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Slamese kitten for sale. Beautiful 10- week study, price $15, call 842-1811 after 6:00 p.m. or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 4-7 GE stereo tape recorder with speakers, excellent condition. 1 year old. Best offer. Call 843-1408 after 5:00 p.m. '64 Chevelle, low miles, tires one month old, body and engine in excellent condition. Will include stereo and many tapes. Call 6707 1025. Walnut stereo speaker systems. (1) large floor models with 12" Danish speakers. (2) shelf model, with a 2-8" speaker system. Both sets priced far below retail. carry a full one year warranty. Call 843-6707. 4-7 Gibson steel-string—almost new—$75. Also GE stereo, 2 years old, in good condition —$50. See Kat at 1030 Ohio or call 842-6082. 4-7 21" Zenith television, 6 months old. 22" Zenith stereo stereo stereo. Call at 447-833-0073. 443-807-0035. New demonstration A.R.5 speakers, 1 pair of 2AX's, full-year guarantee, factory cost only. Ray Audio, Phone 842-2047 evenings 4-10 p.m. tf - Applications - Portraits - Passports 摄 "Please call for appointment" HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 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. HAROLD'S SERVICE PHILIPS 66 U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Flat top guitar, western trim, $80. 542-3262. 4-3 Custom designed, multi - purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. May be used in 8' x 8' 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. 4-7 Three student nursing uniforms, worn one semester. ½ price. Call Nancy, 415 Lewis Hall. 4-6 Diamond engagement ring, $ \frac{1}{2} $ carat, round brilliant cut, silver Tiffany setting, matching band. Call 842-3823. A.D. '69 VW, 13.000 miles, excellent condition, warranty good, 842-424-9. Manual Underwood Five typewriter for a table—for information call 842- 2265 after 6:30 p.m. and before 9:00 p.m. 4-6 Bowman 8-track ear stereo tape player used—in original carton 842-6814 842-6814 German Shepherd, male, 9 weeks, and half. 842-388-gidress, father-half, and half. 842-388-gidress, father-half. NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid, VI 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you wish. Michigan is this the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat! V-2-951. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if 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 - Ooptopac Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Cessna 150 12.50; Airbus A320 85.00; Chuckle 180 12.50; 2-seat sailplane 842 1124 12.60 Phone 842-1124 12.60 4-46 Accomplished folk or classical guitarist. I play guitar, delucimer, harmonica, and write songs. Call Scott, 842-7260. 4-3 LA PETITE GALERIE—Who are you? Come and find out. Dresses, separates, groovy pantuits, coats, swimsuit, clothes, 910 Kentucky. 84f 0826. You guys—better look at the New Haggar and Levi Shacks at ROSS Sports. You can also see the Allo also our Spring Shirts by Van Heusen and Career Club have just arrived. 4-6 "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th TEXACO Student specials ★ New, experienced management W. 9th TEXCO TEXACO - Open / 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 ment ★ Open 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 SAVE YOURSELF AFINE Notice; Enjoy the finest food in the historical and cultural atmosphere of the Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-8 For Top Quality Head For Henry's 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 T. I.R.E. co. THE STABLES- S=students' favorite establishment. T=talk up a storm. A=? B=beer for all. L=life style; our students come from all walks of life. E=enthusiastle bunch of bartenders. S=see you there. 4-7 henrys WANTED STABLES action! Saddle up your horses (cars, go-carts, little red shoes) in your front door and drink place in town. Include the Stables in your plans for the week. 1-2 girls to share luxury apartment for summer; near campus, pool, air-conditioned. $68 monthly, all utilities paid. Call Sue. 842-7535, after 5:30 Want to buy 90 inch Dodge van. Call UN 4-4326 or B43-0435. 4-3 For the Finesst Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's & Mo. VI 3-21 6th & Mo. V13-2139 Country/Western band wanted for Friday, April 15. Call 843-785-536. 4-6 Sat, April 25. Call 843-785-536. The Captain's Table—now open Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. See our ad for Fri, and Mon, and check out the menu. Then come in for something more than a greasy hamburger. 4-7 Desperate! Ride wanted: KU to KC, Monday and Wednesday—can leave any time after 9:30. Call 842-7192 or RA 2-3088. 4-6 Rent-free house available for summer. We need student or faculty couple to take care of house in our campus. Please apply in writing to Raymond Cerf, 1000 Sunset Dr. 4-9 TYPING Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typerules, other services, service for Plea case. Competent. 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 typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman, KIT THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S MAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT Kenneth "Roger" Evers MEN'S HAIR STYLIST Patrick J. Norris APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 Home of the "Big Shef" BURCER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Cowboy Boots $18.99 Acme Dingo See us also for the newest styles HARVEY'S SHOE STORE Soft Service Jarvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 803 W. 23rd Open every day 9 - 9 Sunday 1 - 6 Thesis Typing—10 years experience (840. 6 (8:00 to 5:00 -842-011). 4-3) 840. (8:00 to 5:00 -842-011). 4-3) Typping—thesis, dissertations, term papers, et al. Royal electric, elite type. Fast and accurate service. Paper furnished. 842-1561. Mrs. Nixon. 4-7 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil and duplication. Pick up an delivery offered. Bake 842-3597 or 842-6562. Furnished apt. for graduate couple- no children, no pets. $125 a mo. Uill. paid. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-1209 after 5. 4-6 Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom suite—conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-7567. 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. 4-9 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom ant. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116 Santee Apts. ttF Alvamar's Quail Creak Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kaskad Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to Alvamar's apartments, adjacent to and overlapping Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. Available to families with children up to $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $225. To view these luxury rooms, visit Alvamar houses, can David Rhodus, 842-2312 or McGrew Agency: 843-205-306. Modern 1 bedroom apt, A/C, private entrance, 2 blocks from店, $125 furnished, $110 unfurnished. Call 842-4869. DELICATESEN & THE HTE in the WALL SANDWICH SHOP DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III. SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for miDAS® mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 LOST Glasses with dark brown frames. In vicinity of Gaslight. Return to Room 636 JRP. Reward. 4-6 Black tri-fold wallet. Please return to 1305 Vermont, Apt. 1, or call 843-9313. Reward. 4-6 One Lady Sheffield watch with brown leather band in vicinity of Learned or Daisy Hill. Call Nancy, 415 Lewis Hall. 4-6 Cigarette lighter at Hawk's Nest. In- sertion: Sgt. Jarvis. Reward. 832- 964. Class ring in front of Union. Call 842-6600, ask for Paul, room 313. Reward. 4-16 Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801!₂ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up ¶f PERSONAL HELP WANTED Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fenns, 843-8074. tf BUY,SELL OR TRADE 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 SERVICES OFFERED Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf 7 DAY SPECIAL Cars Painted $34.95 Fred's Auto Painting 1328 W. 9th PH. 842-9487 Your KU L.D. is worth $1.00 off on their Fax Packages. The Group Tax Tax 8011%; Mass $4.00 and up, if you buy the Mass Package. Always Pleasurable Dining TITANIC BIKE Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. 3rd Sirloin U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods Open Daily Except 4:30 p.m. One and a half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1431 Stugging stocks and fresh茶叶松弛 awake when you die at the dinner. We steal only this... preparing the selection as you like them with all of your favorite flavors. At the Silicon Valley for uncompromising dining please. Malls Shopping Center DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. K PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 1-9868 Local freight stalled-strike ends By JIM CZUPOR Kansan Staff Writer Lawrence Freight Line truck drivers returned to work Wednesday after Tuesday's stall due to Teamsters' union strikes in Kansas City and Topeka. More than 200 scattered strikes by Teamsters occurred in more than 35 cities around the nation since expiration of the old contract at midnight Tuesday. Lawrence truck drivers delivered local freight Wednesday which was already in the warehouse, but were unable to transfer freight from Kansas City. The Lawrence truckers were not formally on strike. Thursday, truck drivers in Kansas City were ordered back to work by the Teamsters Union local on the basis of a report of a retroactive-pay agreement worked out in Washington negotiations. A tentative agreement was announced Thursday on a 27.5 per cent pay raise over three years, and the union urged striking drivers to return to work. The agreement, covering 450,000 truck drivers, would provide a $1.10 per hour raise over three years for Teamsters now being paid an average of $4 an hour. Many local leaders and members have indicated their decision to return to work was influenced by promises from union negotiators that any agreement would be retroactive to April 1. The action was not officially a strike, a spokesman said in St. Louis, but merely the result of a contract expiration between the Teamsters and the Trucking Employee, Inc. In Kansas City, a spokesman for the Teamsters local No. 41 reported all 5,000 local members were off the job Wednesday. Back - to - work movements Thursday, however, were reported in Kansas City, Minneapolis-St. Paul, San Francisco, Indianapolis, Milwaukee and Cincinnati. Merle Crook, assistant manager of Lawrence Freight Line said he felt it was too early to tell whether agreements would be reached. "There's no way of knowing for sure," he said, "be- Homemade bomb explodes An explosion from a homemade bomb ripped at the front door of the home of Douglas County Judge Charles C. Rankin, 801 Tenn., at 11:55 p.m. Wednesday. No reasons for the bombing or names of possible suspects were released Thursday by Sheriff Rex Johnson and Assistant County Attorney Mike Elwell, who are supervising the investigation. The bomb exploded, breaking glass in the door and damaging the wooden section of the door. Fragments of the bomb's container, apparently a lead pipe, scattered throughout the living room leaving holes in the walls and ceiling. Rankin and his son, Paul 18, were nearly 25 to 30 feet from the front door when the bomb exploded. They had left the living room only two minutes before the explosion, the Judge said Thursday. Elwell unofficially estimated damages at $300. "About all I can say is I'm very disconcerted about the incident, Rankin said, "but I do suppose it is one of the hazards of my profession." Judge Rankin described the explosion as sounding like an M-80 firecracker, and said probably black powder was used. Elwell theorized the device had been placed between the screen and the weather-proof doors, and some form of triggering device activated it. No estimate as to a possible time lag between the placing of the bomb and its detonation can be made, Elwell said. Footprints were observed in the snow, and photographs were taken of them. THE CONCORD SHOP - Decoupage Materials - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Oils and Acrylics - Stretcher Frames - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-387 hour increase the first year, 25 cents the second and 35 cents the third for local drivers who are paid hourly. Long haul Teamsters average nearly $13,000 a year now and local drivers nearly $10,000. Management and union spokesman refused to disclose the terms of the wage agreement but sources close to the talks said it would provide for a 50-cent an crease which in turn would raise consumer retail prices. - Due April 13—Turn in at the Information Desk in the Student Union. - Selection will be based mainly on one criteria: the impact the teacher has made in the classroom. This will include a far wider range of candidates than before. Keep that in mind. Hillteacher Nominations - Nominations must be signed by 3 students. Include all those assets you feel qualify the person. cause the information we get is only rumor." - Selection will be made by a committee of 3 faculty members and 6 students. Wescoe Hall question- Crook warned that if negotiations failed, a strike would affect every business establishment in Lawrence. If wages increase, he said, then freight rates would in- (Continued from page 1) Francis Heller, dean of faculties said, some second thoughts may come up on proceeding with the project. April 3,4 "The Humanities Building is critically and urgently needed," said the University Planning Board statement. "Without it, one out of every four classes in 1975 will either be homeless or have to be taught at best in temporary, portable classrooms, most of them at considerable distance from the heart of campus." 12 KANSAN Apr. 3 1970 WHAT'S NEW PUSSYCAT Union Aud. 7:00 and 9:30 50c 1528 W. 23rd The Chili Bowl Chili 842-8861 sm. reg. lg. Mild and Dry ... .85 1.10 1.35 Spicy Western ... .85 1.10 1.35 Tamale Spread ... .95 1.15 1.45 Spaghetti Red ... .95 1.15 1.45 Chili-no beans ...1.10 1.35 1.60 Chili burger ... .50 Chili dog ... .60 Chili To GO, Reg. 1.10, qt. Order Dill Pickles ... .15 Coffee, ice tea, milk ... .15 Draught Beer (chilled mugs) Mexican Food Taco, .30 ea.; 3/.85; 6/1.70; 12/3.20 Jumbo Tamale ...20 Tostada ...25 Burrito ...45 Meat Burrito ...45 Combination Burrito ...50 Frijoles (refried beans) ...25 .85, $ \frac{1}{2} $ gal. 3.50, gal 6.75 Pie ...35 Full pint soft drink ...15 light or dark ...30 Open 11 A.M. Regents delay prompts letters The delayed action by the Kansas Board of Regents on the promotion of two University of Kansas professors has prompted letters to the Regents from the Council of Deans and the Student Senate Executive Committee (SenEx). In its letter, the Council of Deans urged the promotion of Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech. Support for the student strike of April 15 was expressed in the SenEx letter, which protested the Regents' passing over of the two promotions. Dave Awbrey, student body president, said the SenEx supported the proposed student strike scheduled for Wednesday. The statement says: "We, the Student Senate Executive Committee support the student strike on April 8. Further, we ask our fellow students to support the student strike in an effort to protect academic freedom at the University." The SenEx letter, however, did not receive full support from its members. Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and SenEx member, said he was refusing to join in the signing of the letter. He called it "counter-productive to getting the promotions." Awbrey said the other six members of the committee have either signed the letter or intend to do so. r signed the letter or intend to do so. The letter from the Council of Deans (including all academic deans and the dean of faculties and the directors of libraries, University Extension and the computation center) appealed to the Regents to accept the recommendations. The letter stated "these recommendations reflect careful professional academic judgments made by the faculty and administration at all levels." The letter acknowledged the Regents' authority to deny the promotions, but stated that "the Board has never before rejected the professional and academic judgment of the University's committees and administrators in matters of promotion." It also stated the Council believed that Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. agreed with them without reservation. Students have started action concerning Wednesday's strike. Handouts are to be distributed by students encouraging student participation in strike activities today and Tuesday, said Awbrey. Students would also be visiting the living groups each night to explain the strike and encourage its support he said. A general meeting for coordinating final plans will be held Tuesday at 9 p.m. in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room. Awbrey said there would be a table in the Union with facilities to stencil "t"-shirts. The students must provide their own shirts. "Students will picket all buildings on campus to encourage strike participation," Awbrey said. A mass rally will be staged at 1:30 p.m. in front of Strong Hall, he added. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN After the demonstration there will be a rock festival at Potter Lake that Abbie Hoffman is expected to attend, said Awbrey. --and Bulletin The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, April 6,1970 Recently when one or two members of the Board of Regents questioned two recommendations for promotion, I requested that consideration be delayed until the University could submit a statement to the Board concerning the policies and criteria used to select candidates for promotion. The Board of Regents concurred with my request since periodic review of institutional policies is entirely within the proper purview of the Board. The suggestion that there should be a student rally or a boycott of classes on Wednesday may be inappropriate in light of certain facts concerning the approval of promotions. 80th Year, No.107 The following is a prepared statement released from the Chancellor's office Sunday: When Board members have received and reviewed these policies and criteria, I am confident that they will agree that every candidate submitted by the University of Kansas is qualified for promotion. Unfortunately these materials will not reach members of the Board until the middle of this week. Consideration by the Board of Regents prior to receipt of materials promised by the University would be an unreasonable expectation. I trust that each student and faculty member will give careful consideration to these facts as well as to the freedoms and sanctions of the new Student Code of Conduct before deciding upon his or her participation in any irregular activity. E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr. Cancellor of the University Singer explains Indians' problems By KAREN KLINKENBERG MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writers More American Indians have died in the past three years than the number of Americans killed in Vietnam, Buffy Ste. Marie, a Cree Indian folksinger, said in an interview after the Festival of Arts concert Saturday. "The biggest problem facing American Indians today is our phenomenal death rate," she said. "Our infant and maternal mortality rates are 10 times higher than any others on this continent." Miss Ste. Marie spent Sunday afternoon at Haskell Institute with the people she sings about and is fighting for "Non-Indian people can't possibly know how we feel—how it is to be an Indian," she told a packed auditorium of Haskell students. Miss Ste. Marie began the afternoon with a free concert in the auditorium. She sang two Cree songs and several of the songs she performed at her KU concert. But she did more than sing to them. She talked to them about being an Indian. Attributing the modern Indian's plight partly to public ignorance, Miss Ste. Marie, an Oriental philosophy major in college, said it would be "great" if all universities instituted a program of Indian culture. She suggested that KU students might sponsor an American Indian weekend and invite Haskell students to participate. Miss Ste. Marie attacked non-Indians for their exploitation of Indians over the years. But she told her Haskell audience that, after talking to students on the Hill, she knew people "on the outside" wanted to come in. "They really wish you well," she said. White students suffered with the Indians because they have been stiffed by a system that turns out "plastic children." "I think there is a great fallacy in childrearing and education in America," she said. "I call it the 'Carrot syndrome.'" Parents and teachers hold a child's future potential in front of him, like a carrot in front of a mule." "This isn't done to Indian children until the age of six when they are taken from their mothers and placed in boarding schools. It blows their minds to be treated like white kids after having six years to be themselves." She told Haskell students to keep informed about the abuse to Indians on the "outside." She reminded them of the problem at Fort Lawton, Okla., where, she said, a defense base no longer used by the government should, by a treaty agreement, be returned to the Indians. She also spoke of the trouble in Washington where the government revoked the Seneca tribe's fishing rights, established by a treaty signed by George Washington. The government wanted the land to build a dam, but had a choice of two sites, she said. "I'm not going to let the non-Indian public go uninformed anymore, she pledged. "All over they're going to find out about Haskell." "It's a matter of honor to me: I'm an educated American, and as long as I'm (Continued to page 12) UDK News Roundup By United Press International Postal rate raise opposed WASHINGTON—Congress tackled the negotiated postal pay package today with leaders predicting quick passage of a pay raise, but certain defeat for President Nixon's proposal to raise the six cent stamp to a dime. Ambassador murdered GUATEMALA CITY—Their ransom demands unfulfilled, terrorist kidnapers murdered the West German ambassador to Guatemala and left his body in a deserted shack Sunday in the hills above Guatemala City. --that the latter question listed only two courses, but referred to all general courses, including mathematics, that are required for majors in the College. However, this question did not concern requirements for a particular major in a department, he added. Comp, draft on ballot By TINA BORAK Kansan Staff Writer Concerning academic freedom, the ballot asks, "Do you favor the elimination of the Western Civilization comprehensive examination as a requirement from any school or department of the University?" and, on a separate ballot for juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, "Do you favor the elimination of all general requirements (language, speech, etc.) as a prerequisite for graduation?" George Laughead, Dodge City junior and chairman of the Course Teacher Evaluation committee of the Student Senate, said Sunday Two other questions, "Do you favor immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam?" and "Do you favor an immediate end to the military draft, replaced by a voluntary army?" were placed on the ballot by the steering committee of the Student Mobilization Committee. These questions are part of a national effort to bring the issues to ballot, a member of the student Mobe steering committee said Sunday. The reiterend Tuesday is an opportunity to get student response near the beginning of National Anti-War Week, April 13-18. he explained. He said a favorable result would be significant because it might influence those who have some power in the country. Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and newly-elected student body president, said that if the questions on academic freedom passed, they would provide good statistics in stating the cases to the policymaking committees. If the student vote approves the questions, Ebert said, the proposals would be presented to the College Educational Policy committee which would make recommendations to the College faculty. He said the College faculty would make the ultimate decision on the policy. Shultz says Chalmers weak on unrest Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, has criticized Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. for "batting pretty near zero in dealing with the problems of campus unrest." PATCO says public deceived By United Press International By United Press International Air traffic controllers Sunday accused the government of lying in an effort to deceive the public and entice them to end their "sickout." A spokesman for the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) particularly objected to an announcement by Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe that controllers in Cleveland, a key point in the nation's air control system, were returning to work in large numbers. He said the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) was turning out false information in an effort to make it look like the controllers were returning to work all over the country, thus persuading those controllers who were still out to return. The FAA, meanwhile, reported no major air traffic delays. The FAA said Sunday that more and more controllers were ending their protest—a demand for more personnel and better equipment—and reporting for work. At Cleveland, the FAA said 60 controllers who had previously been on the sick list returned to work Sunday morning. However, it said the men were not returned to their control duties, but were being "processed" by a flight surgeon to determine if they really had been sick. PATCO, however, said this was not true—that as of noon Sunday 291 of the 380 Cleveland controllers were on the sick list—only 13 fewer than on Saturday. The controllers, as federal employees, are forbidden to strike. Instead, they are staging their "slowdown" by reporting to be ill. Nevertheless, a federal judge here issued an injunction forbidding a walkout and the union leadership told 7,500 PATCO members to stay on the job. The order, however, has been widely ignored. Official Bulletin Todav Film: "Animal Farm." 3 Bailey, 3:30 p.m. Physics Colloquium: "NAL Prog- reme" T. Yamanakau 238. 518; 3-45 m Tennis Club: 173 Robinson Gymnasium. 6.45 pm. 9.45 pm. Gymnasium, 6:45 p.m. to 9:45 p.m. KU Judo Club: Robinson Gymnasium Luso-Brazilian Studies Colloquium: "Problems of Higher Education in Brazil" Dean George Waggoner. Oread Room, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. prano, Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Experimental Theatre, Kyogen. Kyogen. Lecture: "Ozarks: American Wil- land Island Payton, Kansas Uni- ton," 8 p.m. Tuesday College Faculty Meeting; Forum Room, Kansas Union, 4:30 p.m. Jayhawk Joggers Club: East door, Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m. Special Film: "Charlie Chan in London, Boordert Auditorium, Kansas on 7am." African Studies Lecture. "Tribalism in Africa." Prof. Carl Lande. KU Pine Room, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. Christian. Science. Organization. Pine Room, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. Christian Science Organization: Dana R. Foster Jayhawk Rodeo Club: Room 2A Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. Senior Recital: Compositions by Author Molina. Swallow Recital Hcl 8 p. 31. Experimental Theatre: Kyogen: Comic Theater of Paris " 1908 " n. 299. Coline Theatre of Japan. 8:20 p.m. Special Film: "Brown Blossoms" Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, 9 p.m. EXPENSIVE CANAL. HELSINKI, Finland (UPI)—The Saimaa Canal, built by special agreement between the governments of Finland and the Soviet Union, will cost Finland next year 20 times more than it is expected to earn. 2 KANSAN Apr. 6 1970 Shultz made these comments Saturday in reference to a speech he gave at a Law Day seminar Friday in Topeka. "Chalmers hasn't taken a firm stand," Shultz said. "I think that when he does, certain things won't be tolerated on the University campus. Ninety nine per cent of the students and 99 per cent of the faculty will then back him up completely," he said. Shultz said that Chalmers had had little choice in denying demands made this year by the "The only stand he's taken that I know of is when he turned down the demands of the Black Student Union," Shultz said. Black Student Union, because they were "ridiculous." Shultz also criticized the news media for its coverage of the Feb. 17 demonstration at the Douglas County Courthouse. He said that the news media, particularly television, was aware of the demonstration in advance and had come to Lawrence the night before. "Apparently they came in and told the students, 'We want to see some action.' It was a planned march," Shultz said. Shultz said that, for the benefit of the news media, the demonstrators continued to the court-house instead of finishing at the statue of "Jimmy" Green in front of the law building. The march had originally been scheduled to end there. Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson was praised by Shultz for his handling of the courthouse demonstration. "If the sheriff had gone in and forcibly removed them we would have had another Chicago here," he said. Shultz said Lawrence Velvel, professor of law, "should have been playing it down rather than adding fuel to the fire." Velvel made a controversial speech to the demonstrators at the Green statue. The longest fingernails in history were grown by a Buddhist monk in Tibet. His ten nails averaged 22 inches. Captain's The Table We Will Now Be Open 7 Days A Week For Your Convenience. Monday — Saturday Sunday 7:00 a.m. - 2:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. Cafeteria Hours Restaurant Hours 10:00 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.; 7:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.; 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 2:30 p.m. - 2:30 a.m. The Menu Dinners Dinners Filet Mignon ... 8 oz. — $3.25 Top Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 2.50 K.C. Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 3.25 Top Sirloin ... 12 oz. — 3.25 T-Bone ... 12 oz. — 3.40 Chopped Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 1.25 Cubed Beef Steak ... .75 All of the above are charbroiled and are served with lettuce, sliced tomato, and a wedge of dill pickle. Roast Beef ... 6 oz. — $1.30 Baked Ham ... 6 oz. — 1.75 Breaded Veal Cutlet ... .80 Pepsi Cola, Dr. Pepper, Teem ... .10 Milk, Iced Tea ... .15 Hot Chocolate, Hot Tea ... .15 Coffee ... .10 Sandwiches Charbroiled Hamburger $ .45 Charbroiled Cheeseburger .50 Charbroiled Hamburger Deluxe .70 Charbroiled Cheeseburger Deluxe .75 Charbroiled Cheese Steak .80 Reuben Sandwich 1.15 Roast Beef Sandwich .65 Baked Ham Sandwich .70 Combination Salad .30 Wedged Tomato & Cottage Cheese .30 Cottage Cheese .12 Mashed Potatoes & Gravy (till 8 p.m.) .10 Suzy-Q Fries (our own specialty) .15 Vegetables .10 Pie .30 Rolls & Butter (Rye & White Dinner) .14 ACROSS THE STREET FROM LINDLEY HALL Campus briefs Lecture on Brazilian education set George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will speak at 7:30 tonight in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. The speech is part of the Luso-Brazilian colloquium series. The title of Waggoner's speech is "The Problems of Higher Education in Brazil." Texas professor to lecture University of Texas professor Max Westbrook, an authority on American literature, will speak Thursday at 4 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Westbrook's lecture will be "The Confidence Child: Social Protest and the American Character." Workshop planned for grades 5-12 Westbrook has written two books and numerous essays on American literature. He is also a frequently published poet. The lecture is being sponsored by the English department. The KU Museum of Natural History has announced its plans for a summer workshop program for fifth graders through senior high students. Each of the 10 two-week sessions will have a maximum enrollment of 10 students and will continue from June 15 to Aug. 21, said Al Bielland, the museum taxidermist. Bjelland and Larry Watkins, a candidate for a master's degree in systematics and ecology, will teach the program, which costs $30 per session. For those who have not attended the sessions previously, seven of the sessions will deal with "Survey of Natural History" and the advanced students will be concerned with the topics "Woodland Communities," "Aquatic Communities" and "Water in Our Environment." Artists to exchange ideas at sculpture conference Hundreds of persons from the United States, Canada and other countries are expected to attend the sixth National Sculpture Conference April 23-25 at the University of Kansas. The purpose of the conference is for artists and art industries to exchange ideas, information and research on the technology of today's sculpture. A. Bret Waller, director of KU's Museum of Art, said the sculpture exhibits will be divided into three categories. They are small indoor pieces, large outdoor pieces and inflatable airborne pieces. Inflatable airborne pieces are also known as atmospheric art because this type of sculpture can be filled with helium to ascend hundreds of feet. Atmospheric art, said Waller, is a new development in the world of sculpturing, and it is hoped that this category will arouse discussion. The large outdoor category will be displayed near Memorial Stadium, while the small indoor pieces will be shown in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. The KU Museum of Art will not be used "due to a lack of space and inadequate facilities, said Waller. Waller said that no one artist or his work will be featured at this conference. Artists were encouraged to bring only one piece of work. Professor Elden C. Tefft, department of design, formulated the program and is conference director. The idea came from the suggestions of sculptors who attended the seminar here two years ago. Speaking of artists and the art industry, Teftt said the industry has greatly helped the artist in the use and availability of materials. Besides the non-traditional inflatable art, topics include light magnetics; computers; new uses of traditional methods and histology, which involves the use of three-dimensional images by means of lasers. Payroll checks stolen from KU campus mail Payments on the checks have been stopped. The amounts vary from $29 to slightly less than $700, and all were dated April 1. An estimated 23 payroll checks, totaling more than $7,500, have been stolen from the KU campus mail according to University officials and the Douglas County Sheriff's Department. The payroll checks, to students, staff and faculty members, were issued to both men and women and to employees of the Museum of Natural History. Apr. 6 KANSAN 3 1970 During this biennial conference, members of the advisory board for the National Sculpture Center will also meet. KU is the national center for the organization. College dean expects no change in requirements during spring By GALEN BLAND Kansan staff writer Many students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as indicated by a poll at spring semester registration, would like to change the foreign language graduation requirement of the College. Merker's attitude, however, was hardly indicative of a joke as he used worn-out cliches to express his feelings toward ROTC on campus. Yet George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said in an interview Friday that he would be surprised if any changes in graduation requirements were made this spring. To accomplish this, the Education Policy committee would have to forward a motion to the faculty and the faculty would have to vote for abolishing the requirement. A committee from North College will meet with the Education Policy committee Tuesday to discuss the possibilities of abolishing the language requirement. Johnson added, "We figured it was a joke and went along with it; but he didn't pursue it any further and that's it." Long haired and bearded, Merker said that the presence of ROTC on campus was in direct conflict to a liberal academic atmosphere that should prevail on campus. "He got himself out of it." Johnson said, "by not signing up for an interview. We were ready to accept him." No chance for male color girl nominee eliminates himself "There are committees that are in the process of deciding the goals of the College," he said, "but we must know what our goals are before we start changing our requirements." Waggoner said there were several groups in the college that favored dropping the 16-hour foreign language requirement or the language proficiency exam. He said there was a large group of students who were opposed to Eric Johnson, an Overland Park junior and chairman of the NROTC committee for choosing a color girl, was emphatic that no pressure was used to get Merker out of the competition. The only non-female nominee for KU Navy ROTC color girl, Randy Merker, removed himself from competition Friday night at a NROTC color girl meeting when he failed to sign up for an interview. The Overland Park junior, who was nominated by Naismith Hall originally as a joke but later taken as a serious means of protesting ROTC on campus, said it was obvious he didn't have a chance. He said, "its presence on campus gives tacit support to the war in Vietnam which I'm strongly against." John Friedman, a Mission junior and vice-president of Naismith Hall, served as a spokesman for both Merker's nomination and for the movement behind it. WEDNESDAY will be another Fantastic DIME (10c) Night with the sounds of "The CHESSMEN" 8:00 to 12:00 DRAUGHT HOUSE 804 West 24th Don't miss it! ALSO on April 29th The THE DRAUGHT HOUSE STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK He said, "We would like to abolish academic credit in courses that involve instruction in combat." With Merker's absence the NROTC now has 19 women students, all nominated by living groups on campus, to choose its color girl from. Following Tuesday and Thursday evening interviews, the field will be cut to six. These six will be voted on by the entire NROTC membership to decide the top three finalists. An honor company will vote to decide the color girl and her two attendants. foreign language requirements. This group, he said, has combined with a smaller group of students who are opposed to all requirements in the College. This latter group, he said, says any requirement keeps people "from doing their own thing." Waggoner said he believed that students in the college should have a choice of what they want to study, but that they must be able to write well, speak well, have a knowledge of mathematics and of a foreign language. "It would be absurd," he said, "to leave it up to the student if he wants to speak well or not, or whether he wants to write well, or learn a foreign language." He said that anyone who took four years of a language in high school would be able to pass the exemption test. There are also exemption tests in math and speech, he said. He said that one-third of the students in the college use the exemption test to fulfill their speech requirement. "People who know a foreign language will use it," he said. He cited travel as one area in which the language could be put to use. "You have seen the trouble that foreign people who cannot speak English have when they come to this country. Traveling will increase during the seventies and people will need to know other languages," he said. Waggoner said that the study of a foreign language helped the student to better understand English. The The Look what we're hatching for the chic... at the... Country House Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown VL3-5755 KANSAN COMMENT First priority: a new hospital In 1931, Mrs. J. B. Watkins donated Watkins Memorial Hospital to the 4,000 students of the University of Kansas. The building provided good service to those mid-Depression few, but remained virtually unchanged as the number of students quadrupled and the campus extended far to the south and west. Criticism of the hospital's leaky walls and roof, poor lighting and ventilation, faulty plumbing, and most of all its lack of space, mounted over the years. The complaints were met by varying degrees of promises and placation, but the promises remained unfilled and the placation resulted in festering student disgust with the long interval between check-in and treatment, and the halls-turned-crowded-waiting-rooms. In November, however, the Student Senate Health Committee issued its 13-page report on the state of Watkins. The report proposed either an addition to the present structure (which it termed a "half-way" measure) or a new hospital at a more favorable site. The Senate approved a resolution supporting the second choice—a $2 million, two-story structure providing for later expansion. Final action depends on the results of Tuesday's student referendum. Two of the nine questions on it concern health service. The first—Do you favor construction of a new University Health Center?—should and, in all likelihood, will be answered in the affirmative. Phrasing the question in terms of a new building, instead of an addition to the present one, reflects the Health Committee's findings that the annex plan would mean a great deal of disruption of the old building's operation while the new wing was constructed, that the parking situation would become worse with increased congestion of vehicles serving the hospital, that further expansion could only be upward, and that the result would be somewhat unpredictable and very costly. The second question—Would you be willing to pay $10 a semester to help finance a new hospital, without which it cannot be built? (student funds alone pay for university hospitals) is not only crucial to the hospital plan but is the most significant issue on the ballot. If the Health Committee's recommendations are followed, the new structure would have waiting rooms with adequate space and proper ventilation to prevent infection, sufficient secretarial and record areas, reasonably soundproof examination rooms, dining rooms for special diets and in-patient meals, and a large pharmacy area. The site would probably be the parking lot north of Allen Field House and east of Jayhawk Towers apartments, where the parking problem would be eliminated and there would be room for new wings. So a yes vote on this issue which has been the focus of a multitude of student gripes seems the only reasonable, consistent and provident one. Yet there are two other money questions on the ballot. The satellite union would require about $6.50 a semester and the humanities building $7.50 a semester. Should all three be accepted, students would be tacking $24.50 to their semester fee statements next year, in addition to the incidental fee raises already announced by the Board of Regents. (The Senate might subtract a few dollars from the student activity fee, but maneuvering room is limited within the $12 amount.) The total might be reduced another way, though—by rejecting the satellite union, the need for which is small compared to that for the hospital. The Wescoe Hall fee is probably in, whether the students approve it or not. Some members of the Board of Regents have already said that they will take the Student Senate's previous yes vote as their mandate to continue with plans. Only a sizable defeat by a large voter turnout might change the Regents' minds. One avenue is open to students who disapprove of the precedent of using student fees to finance academic buildings: rejecting the question which asks just that. Given those escape hatches—minor as they may be—the $10 assessment for Watkins should be approved. After years of crying in the wilderness, KU has an opportunity to guarantee many of the students here, and all those to come, relief from the intolerable hospital situation that otherwise can only deteriorate. —Monroe Dodd hearing voices— To the editor: It is time for the students, faculty, and administration of this institution to stand up and be counted. The current ill-advised and unwarranted actions by the Board of Regents threaten to destroy the University of Kansas. For the first time in the history of the University, the Board of Regents has questioned the promotions of faculty members after the recommendations have been made by the administration. This action has been clearly provoked by the ignorance of Senator Shultz who somehow feels required to make political hay out of minor incidents occurring on one of the quietest large campuses in the nation. Such a reaction does not discourage the type of actions that Shultz objects to, but merely brings unwarranted attention to bear on minor incidents. It is clear that the response by the student body to the actions of the Board of Regents must be carefully planned. While it is necessary that a quantum of pressure be applied, it must be applied in a fashion that is not counterproductive. Actions which produce a negative response in the minds of many people can only subject the Regents to greater pressure to crack down on the academic freedom and autonomy of this University. The net result of the actions of the Board of Regents is to cast a pall over free speech and academic freedom. Such an action can only result in the eventual erosion of the quality of students and faculty at this University. If the Regents do deny the promotions there is a distinct possibility of mass resignations among the faculty and of censure by the American Association of University Professors. These events would be catastrophic to the future academic excellence of the University of Kansas. Thomas E. Ashton, III Lawrence second year law student Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKO10FF THAT SIMON IS A WEIRD LITTLE GUY, ISN'T HE? BOY! I'll SAY! HE LOOKS LIKE HE JUST CAME OUT OF A BOTTLE OF INDIA INK! © David Sokoloff 1970 OK! So we give up a little of our right of assembly and free speech under Mitchell's riot control act ... OK! So we give up a little of our right of assembly and free speech under Mitchell's riot control act ... so we lose a bit of our right of privacy under Mitchell's wire-tapping policies . and so we forfeit our 5th amendment protection under Mitchell's plan to forcibly take a suspect's fingerprints, blood test, urine specimen, photographs or make him stand in a lineup! After all, there are certain sacrifices required in obtaining the benefits of complete security. so we lose a bit of our right of privacy under Mitchell's wire-tapping policies . . . so we lose a bit of our right of privacy under Mitchell's wire-tapping policies . . ent to its, to a After all, there are certain sacrifices required in obtaining the benefits of complete security. I think I'll just use a blank line to represent it. It's very common in comic books and comics to fill out the blank spaces with empty text or simply put them where they are. This image is too simple to contain any text, so I'll just use a blank line. After all, there are certain sacrifices required in obtaining the benefits of complete security. National pastime... upside down under (Editor's note: the writer is a native of Australia who became an American citizen in 1960.) By JOHN B. BREMNER Associate Professor of Journalism Cricket Blue, 1936 The rounders season begins today. Americans call it baseball. It is a national passion, a sacred tribal rite. To Americans, baseball is even more sacred than the Constitution, the Statue of Liberty, plastic food franchises and the separation of church and state. Foreigners, particularly those of us who learned cricket at their mothers' knees and at other joints, never quite understand what baseball is all about. It seems to center on a character grotesquely garbed in 19th century bicycle breeches who throws a five-ounce leather ball the length of a cricket wicket at another character similarly costumed. Any weekend cricketer, especially an Australian, could clout this ball into the next state. But these baseballers get three chances. And they rarely connect. All hell breaks loose when they do. A man who misses only two balls out of three becomes a national hero. These two breeches boys and the seven other characters who make up a team receive higher salaries than university professors and are far more highly respected. So Character A, the bowler, throws this ball to Character B, the batsman. Figuring he has a couple more chances, the batsman lets the ball pass through to Character C, the wicket-keeper. A dignified gentleman in black, clothed in a Mae West life preserver, raises a snappy finger and apologetically announces, "Strike!" The foreigner at the ball park does not know what "strike" means but he can see that the dignified gentleman in black is considered by many of the patrons to be more than somewhat unreasonable and maybe even a little prejudiced. The gentleman in black is supposed to be the umpire. If the foreigner happens to be British and therefore brought up to regard an umpire's decision as infallibly sacrosanct, he blushes in bewildered shame. The batsman then insults the umpire's mother. The batting team's supporters throw beer cans. The manager leaps out of his trench and shakes a naughty finger. The umpire insults the manager's mother. The bewildered foreigner wonders whether anybody in the whole stadium was born in wedlock. The bowler throws the ball again. This time the batsman taps it to a fieldman, hurls his bat away and starts running. The fieldman stops the ball with gloved hand. Remember, that ball weighs five ounces. In New Guinea the fieldman's father used to catch grenades with bare hands. The son now pirouettes, gavottes and tosses the little ball to another gloved gladiator standing on a white piece of canvas. The batsman charges into this gladiator. They roll on the canvas in a flurry of white chalk. The mob yells, the chalk settles and the umpire's mother is back in the script. And so it goes on. It goes on for three or four hours a day from April through September. October comes around, and two teams chosen from the best in 13 states, one province and the District of Columbia stage a series of games to decide the championship of "The World." It's good clean American fun. You never get to understand what it's all about but you can't help loving this childlike, big-hearted people. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newsp An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers UN.4.3648 Business Off 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 rate, $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Access to goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press KWSAN REVIEWS FESTIVAL: Buffy communicates By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer Buffy Sainte-Marie has developed that rare talent that artists are always seeking—the ability to communicate with her audience. From her very first number Miss Sainte-Marie had reached her listeners Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium. They responded to her and she responded to them as she talked and sang her emotions and ideas. Much of her material was political in content. The songs which reflect the tradition and history of the Indian, and his desperate situation, songs such as "Now that the Buffalo's Gone" and "This is My Land" are some of Miss Sainte-Marie's better material. They convey her intense sincerity and concern for her people. But her political comment covered a wide range of subjects, and much of this comment served to disguise some very poor material. Miss Sainte-Marie, with her strong and vibrant voice, presented an exciting vocal performance. She is a talented guitarist and pianist with a good background in folk, blues and country and western music. The songs she does which are not excessively political, such as "Piney Wood Hills," are the best of her compositions. But Miss Sainte-Marie's concerts serve more than just the single purpose to entertain. She uses her appearances to arouse the public's attention to the pitiful plight and treatment of the American Indian and the urgency of the situation. One of her comments Saturday night probably sums it up best for KU students. "If you want to learn about Indians, all you have to do is go down the road aways and talk to the kids." FESTIVAL: dance in new light By KAREN KLINKENBERG Kansan Staff Writer Refined, expressive body movements set to electric music turned out to be quite a different dance program from the syncopated, rhythmical dancers of Swan Lake days. The dance company of six and their leader Lucas Hoving presented dancing in a new light for the Friday night Festival of the Arts. Once you got used to the reeb, drinkle and squack music and stopped trying to make the dancers keep to a four-four rhythm, beauty and words came from dancers arm swings and positions. Each dancers body was as expressive as, and perhaps more truthful than the spoken word. One dance featuring Hoving, told the story of a son's struggle to break away from his father. A girl comes to capture the son's heart, but the father cuts off the relationship. The story ends with the son rolling with pain at his loss of the girl and failure to gain his freedom. Another outstanding number was one with dramatic heavy breathing and screeching background. The story seemed to be an appeal for peace, especially the conclusion when the dancers drifted into the audience. It was like them saying, if you want it (peace), go and get it. The final number included talking by the dancers to accompany the movements. Sometimes short stories were told and other times it was just words of wisdom, like "Life is good . . . like a mocking bird with a cavity." Despite the lack of a published program and the long mood breaking pauses between numbers, the program was good receiving three curtain calls from Festival-goers. BOOKS By MIKE SHEARER Kansan Reviewer NARROW ROAD TO THE DEEP NORTH, a play by Edward Bond (Hill and Wang paperback, $1.50). By the playwright who gave us Blow-up, Narrow Road is a deeply profound and sensitive look at politics and religion used as weapons. Set in Japan "about the 17th, 18th or 19th Centuries," Narrow Road takes the poet Basho and dictator Shogo through a series of incidents showing the evil in men and the horrors in life itself. Poet Basho, who, like everyone else in the play, is both good and bad, is an observer through most of the play, making comments directly to the audience. In many ways the play is superior to Blow-up. The characters are ingeniously used by playwright Bond to depict all facets of political, religious and social bigotry. If Bond's view of man is less than favorable, his effective portrayal of the fugacious element in human nature is undeniably accurate and worthy of study. * * THE PASSIONATE PEOPLE: WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A JEW IN AMERICA, by Roger Kahn (Crest, 95 cents)—A view by a Jew of the contemporary American Jew. Kahn discusses the KANSAN 5 place of the Jew within industry and commerce, within intellectual and cultural life, within the whole of American culture, and shows how the Jew still is shut out in many circumstances. The book has much to say in a time when Jews are under attack quite different from the anti-Semitism of the past, a new, liberal anti-Semitism, in some cases. Apr. 6 1970 Wilma Harrison had a wealthy husband. A big playboy lover. A beautiful home. "BROKEN BLOSSOMS" (SUA Special Films)—D W. Griffith's eloquent little masterpiece about a poverty-stricken girl and her friendship with a gentle China- "CHARLIE CHAN IN LONDON" (SUA Special Films)—The famous Chinese sleuth solves another baffling mystery. (Woodruff Aud. 7 p.m. only.) Tuesday On campus this week Best sellers Fiction THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN—John Fowles THE GODFATHER—Mario Puzo TRAVELS WITH MY AINT. COOK Graham Greene THE HOUSE ON THE STRAND And a horrible death PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents THE LAWYER IN COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE COMING SOON THE Hillcrest HILLEBERT SHOPPING CENTER • 914 AND IOWA MR. SAMMLER'S PLANET—Saul Bellow SHOOT STRAIGHT--Jimmy Breslin FROM HEAVEN-Mary Renna THE INHIBITORS—Haroid Robbins THE HOUSE OF BREED—Rumen Godman PUPPET ON A CHAIN—Alistair Maclean THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1968 - Joe McGinnis EVERYTHING YOU HAVE AL- WAYS KNOW ABOUT SEX- David Heubner MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS—Antonia Fraser THE LAWYER PRESENT AT THE CREATION— Dean Acheson AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 914-738-6050 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 914-738-6050 William Morris, editor-in-chief THE DEER SUNSHINE KERR HUIH THE GRAHAM KERR COOKBOOK Galway Court Wednesday AMHERCY CULTURE AND COMMITMENT—Mergersd. Med. IN SOMEONE'S SHADOW—Rod McKuen AMBASSADOR'S JOURNAL—John K. Galbraith GOVERNOR'S TAKE man. With Lillian Gish and Richard Barthelmess; 1919. (Woodruff Aud. 9 p.m. only.) HONG KONG (UPI) — Sir David Trench, the governor of Hong Kong, receives a salary of 9,900 pounds sterling $23,760 a year. ALFRED HITCHCOCKS TOPAZ ALFRED HITCHCOCKS TOPAZ A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR® ENDS TUESDAY Eve. 7:00 & 9:15 Adult 1.50; Child .75 THE Hillcrest2 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND KWIA "THRONE OF BLOOD" (Classical Films)—Violent and poetic translation of "Macbeth" into the Japanese idiom. A film by Akira Kurosawa; 1957. (Woodruff Aud. 7 and 9.) THE Hillcrest 2 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER - STYL AND JOWA ABBIE HOFFMAN (SUA Minor Opinions Forum) — The liveliest and loudest member of the Chicago 7. (Hoch Aud. 8 p.m.) Thursday "OPEN CITY" (KU Film Society) the pioneer of the Italian neorealist movement. Directed by Roberto Rosselini; 1945. (303 Bailey Hall 7 p.m. only.) "THE BICYCLE THIEF" (KU Film Society)—Simple, powerful story of an Italian worker's search for his stolen bicycle. Directed by Vittorio DeSica; 1947. (303 Bailey Hall, 9 p.m. only.) Joseph E. Levine presents An Avco Embassy Film GENERATION It's all about what it's all about IN COLOR An AVCO EMASSY Release ENDS TUESDAY 7:30 & 9:30 THE Hillcrest A Distinguished Company Breathen Life Into Shakespeare's Lusty Age of FALSTaff (CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT) HARRY GALTZMAN PRESENTS AN ORSON WELLES FILM RELEASED BY PEPPERCORN WORMASER, INC. FILM ENTERPRISES COMING SOON THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • STYL AND NOW All Week "KYOGEN" (theatre production)—"Kamabara," "Busu," and "Donadaro" will provide the theatre-goer something different and interesting in the field of drama. (Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m.) --- He's 1-A . . . Hung Up . . . . . . Dropped Out . . . Splitting From His Girl COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS Anouk Aimee Gary Lockwood BY JACQUES DEMY'S Model Shop ENDS TUESDAY Eve. 7:25 and 9:25 THE HILLCREST COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS Anouk Aimee Gary Lockwood by JACQUES DEMY'S Model Shop Hillcrest3 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI-3-1665 University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $.75 Short Shots wwww5 By DON BAKER Korean Sports Write The KU Jayhawks, delayed by snow and wet grounds, managed to get in their second spring football practice Saturday afternoon. The three and a half hour session was capped by a $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ hour scrimmage. KU head coach Pepper Rodgers was pleased with his team's hustle and desire but was dismayed with the sloppiness of the scrimmage. However, after considering the practice was only the second of the spring, Rodgers expressed overall satisfaction. Individually Rodgers had high praise for quarterbacks Phil Basler and Dan Heck. Basler, an Independence, Mo. junior, completed 10 of 15 passes in the scrimmage and ran well from his position. Heck, an El Camino Junior College (Torrance, Calif.) KANSAN Sports transfer, completed 8 of 19 attempts. Currently Basler is listed as the number one quarterback with Heck running second. Other quarterbacks getting into the action were sophomores Rich Jones and Bob Bruegging. Jones, from Columbus, Kan., completed 4 of 7 passes while Bruegging, from Kansas City, Mo., failed to complete a pass in five attempts. Rodgers said at the outset of spring practice that the quarterback position is of prime concern and is a question that needs to be answered before fall. Rodgers also noted that John Riggins, the Big Eight sophomore of the year in 1968 but who fell to only mediocrity in 1969, looked as if he had regained his form of two years ago. Vince O'Neil, the controversial transfer from Hutchinson Junior College, showed why he was so highly sought in the early moments of the scrimmage when he broke through the middle for a 75-yard run. The 6-1, 200-pounder displayed great running ability in addition to power. An unfamiliar but popular figure to the 200 or more interested observers was Don Autry. Autry, a tailback two years ago who suffered a severely broken leg in the second game of the season, is still trying to make a comeback. Working out with the quarterbacks, Autry showed promise of such a comeback although it is still not likely that he will be ready by September. The Jayhawks will return to the practice field today with a 3:30 session in Memorial Stadium. Robisch returns Baseball coach Floyd Temple announced last week the return of All-Big Eight pitcher Dave Robisch to the Kansas baseball squad. The 6-9, 230-pound left-hander had previously decided not to compete in baseball because of an extremely tiring basketball season. Robisch was the leading pitcher on last year's 12-14 team with a 2.57 earned run average and a 4-2 record. All three games between KU and Oklahoma State scheduled for Quigley Field Friday and Saturday were called off because of bad weather and wet grounds. Norway is called the Land of the Midnight Sun. 6 KANSAN Apr. 6 1970 Michigan edges Iowa State for gymnastics team crown Michigan rode a sterling horizontal bar routine by the final performer in the meet to win the team title by one-tenth of a point over Iowa State Saturday in the NCAA gymnastics championships. Michigan's final performer, Ed Howard, scored a 9.4 out of a possible 10.0 on the horizontal bar to boost the Wolverines past Iowa State, the leader after the first round Friday. Michigan finished with 164.15 points to Iowa State's 164.05. Temple was third with 159.90. It was the second team championship for Michigan and the second year in a row the title went to the Big 10 representative. Michigan, which won in 1963, upset defending champion Iowa in the Big 10 tournament. Michigan also successfully defended its team championship in separate trampoline competition Friday. Iowa State had already completed its exercises in the six events when Michigan began on SHAWNEE, Okla. (UPI)—Defending champion Oklahoma State University Saturday braved chilling temperatures and rain to win its 10th intercollegiate golf championship in the 11-year history of the contest. Central State College won the college division title. Cowboys snatch title the horizontal bar. The Wolverines needed a total of 27.75 points from their top three competitors, or an average of 9.25 per man to tie. Other University division finishers were: Oklahoma City University 940, Nebraska 943, Kansas State 951, Tulsa 957, Bradley 963, Kansas 963, and West Texas State 976. Iowa State lost one full point when one of their top side horse When Howard, a junior from Winnetka, Ill., approached the horizontal bar he needed a 9.3 to tie. His 9.4 gave Michigan a 27.85 score in the event. performers fell off the apparatus during his routine. Kansas' Kirk Gardner, ranked number one in the still rings prior to the meet, missed his compulsory routine in individual competition and scored a disappointing 8.25. He rallied to score a 9.3 in his optional routine and rank 10th in the nation. The Jayhawk's plane into Philadelphia was several hours late and the KU contingent arrived only 10 minutes prior to their scheduled performances. They were able to warm up only once. were able to warm up only since Biggest surprise for KU came in the side horse from Richard Schubert, who scored a 9.0 in the optionals and an 8.7 in the compulsories to rank 9th in the nation. Gerald Carley, KU's only other entry, finished 14th with an 8.5 optional and an 8.3 compulsory routine. Street hurls perfect game 'Cats, Huskers win in last at-bat LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)—James Street, the quarterback who led the University of Texas to 20 straight football victories, pitched the first perfect game in modern Southwest Conference history, a 4-0 victory over Texas Tech Friday. It was Street's second no-hitter of his collegiate career, equalling the Texas record set by another football-baseball great, Bobby Layne. \* \* \* HOUSTON (UPI) — Nebraska shortstop Dennis Jorgensen ripped a double down the third baseline Saturday to score two runners in the ninth and ice a 4-2 win over 30th-ranked University of Houston. MANHATTAN (UPI) — Dave Klenda hurled one-third of an inning and plated the winning run with a sacrifice fly as Kansas State whipped Colorado, 5-4, in 10 innings Saturday in a Big * * Eight Conference baseball match. The winning run was set up in the 10th when left fielder Bob Gartner tripled in the tying run and set up Klenda's winning blow. Provocative - Funny Theologically-tinged drama Norm & Sandra Dietz of New York City present: "Fresh Cookies" At UCCF Center,1204 Oread Tues., April 7, 7:30 p.m. (Tickets at $1.00. Available at churches, student centers, KU-Y office or at door.) Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. $110. That $110 buys you three weeks of unlimited First Class train travel on 100,000 miles of railroad in all of those thirteen countries. You can also buy a one-month Eurailpass for $140, a two-month one for $180, or a three-month one for $210. All give you too much for your money. And what's more, European railroads are fast, frequent and punctual. You cannot get your Eurailpass in Europe. So see your Travel Agent soon for complete details of Eurailpass, Eurailgroup for groups of ten or more, and Eurailtariff for specific individual itineraries. Meanwhile, send in the coupon below for your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. CN EURAILPASS The way to see Europe without feeling like a tourist. EURAILPASS, Box 519, Lindenhurst, New York 11757. Please send me your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. Name:___Street:___ City:___State:___Zip:___ Curtis Mills leads Aggie super sprinters in record-shattering Texas Relays victory By CHARLIE SMITH UPI Sports Writer AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) — Texas A&M's super sprinters wiped out another Texas Relays record Saturday afternoon, elipsing the 440-yard relay record with a 39.7 clocking. A sunshine-sprinkled crowd of 11,000 brought to the track by the Aggies' 1:22.1 world record tie in the 880 relay Friday night, watched as Scott Hendricks, Curtis Mills, Marvin Mills and Rockie Woods ran off and left the field. Then, in the last event of the day, the Aggies added yet another coup, winning the mile relay, giving the College Station, Tex., school three university relays victories. The mile relay time was 3:08.4. Four more records fell Saturday, making a total of seven for the two-day carnival. A&M, which set the 440 relay standard of 40.1 in the Friday preliminaries, whipped off the 39.7 with ease. Runnerup Oklahoma State was far back in 40.6. Texas-El Paso also set a university relay record, running the four-mile relay in 16:39.2. The Miners were anchored by Kerry Ellison's 4:09.5. Ken Lundmark of Brigham Young established a new standard in the high jump when he cleared 7-1 and Rodney Milburn of Southern University ran 13.7 in the 120-yard high hurdles, breaking the old record of 13.8 he had tied in the preliminaries. Texas A&M was voted the meet's outstanding university team by 21 of 22 writers voting. Curtis Mills, who anchored both the 880 and mile relay victories, won the outstanding performer award. Curtis got 12 votes and his younger brother, Marvin, received 10. In the mile relay, Curtis ran the anchor quarter-mile in 45.5 seconds. Abilene Christian finished second in 3:09.9. Apr. 6 1970 KANSAN 7 Kansas State won its second straight two-mile relay, but ran a disappointing time of 7:23.5. The Wildcats were anchored by Ken Swenson, who ran a 1:50.2 half-mile with a big lead. College division relays were won by Howard Payne, 7.33.2 in the two-mile; Southern, 40.6 in the 440, and Prairie View, 3:10.2 in the mile. Prairie View, which also won the 880 relay Friday, was voted the outstanding college division team. Two Big Eight Conference representatives, Steve Wilhelm of Kansas, and Mel Gray of Missouri, successfully defended individual titles they had won a year ago. David Eisenhower to toss first pitch on opening day WASHINGTON (UPI)—David Eisenhower, 22, right-handed son-in-law of President Nixon, warmed up his pitching arm on the south lawn of the White House Saturday in preparation for throwing out the first ball of the baseball season Monday. The Senators Saturday confirmed earlier reports that the young Eisenhower would get the nod in performing the ceremony traditionally offered first to the President. Eisenhower will become the youngest person ever to toss out the first ball at the Washington Senators opener when the hometown team meets the Detroit Tigers to kick off the 1970 season. Regular starters President Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew had to decline the offer because of other pressing business, primarily key votes on the nomination of Judge G. Harold Carswell to the Supreme Court. David and his wife, Julie, 21, his catcher, wore white baseball caps as they played softball on the lawn near the south portico not far from the state dining room where a dinner honoring the Duke and Duchess of Windsor was being prepared. Holiday Inn THE NATIONS INNKEEPER Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn THE NATIONS INNKEEPER Holiday Inn 23rd & Iowa Gary Porteous, Innkeeper Rita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper Stereo 105.9 on your FM Dial Heavy KLWN FM underground ten-six night-time GRAF Photo by Ron Bishop Creativity takes a new twist Eight new art professors display works expressing ideas instead of images in the basement of Spooner Art Museum. The display will continue through this week. Exhibit features art of new professors An art exhibit featuring the work of eight new faculty members is now being shown in the basement of the Spooner Art Museum, said A. Bret Waller, director of the museum. The exhibit, which will last through this week, features the works of the following new members of the art department: Phil Blackhurst, Michael Ott, Richard Dishinger, Jo Lubnsku, Michael Bravo, Norman Gee, Roger Shimonura and Robert Price. "The current show is an expression of ideas rather than images and in some cases simply an implied thought," said Waller. There was some question on whether the museum would show an oil painting titled "Hollywood Headboard" by Robert Prince, which shows a large bed in background and Fraser Hall in the foreground, but the museum was assured by Price that the painting was not political, said Michael Ott, instructor in drawing and painting. Ott also said there was a certain amount of controversy concerning a poster which the faculty members designed to publicize the show. The group submitted the poster, entitled "Eight Punk Proposals," to the Lawrence Outlook and was told it seemed to represent a certain thought about the draft, said Ott. 8 KANSAN Apr. 6 1970 bos The best treat around is a Roast Beef Sandwich from Burger Chef. Try one soon for a snack or a meal. Lee Weiner, one of the Chicago 7, will speak at a rally April 15 in Kansas City, Mo., Bill Black, Kansas City sophomore and member of the Student Mobilization Committee said Sunday. — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF Weiner was one of the two persons acquitted of all charges in the trial. He was, however, cited for contempt. Rally will feature Weiner The rally will be sponsored by the Student Mobe, the Black Panthers, the Kansas City chapter of the National Welfare Rights Organization and other groups opposed to the Vietnam war. Student Mobe is planning meetings April 12, 13 and 14 in the Daisy Hill residence halls to prepare for the rally, Black said. The Mobe will show movies in the Kansas Union April 13, 14, and 15, and will sponsor buses from KU to the rally. PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil (UPI) —Four gunmen tried to kidnap a U.S. diplomat early Sunday and shot him in the back in a wild street fight. The American ran down one of the would-be abductors with his car and escaped. Kidnapper run over as diplomat escapes Black said the Student Mobe will decide final plans, including the time for the parade and rally, this week. The hero of the aborted kidnap, Curtis Cutter, 41-year-old U.S. consul in this city of 1 million people in southern Brazil, was reported in satisfactory condition at a hospital where surgeons removed a single slug from his lungs. Cutter is from Sacramento, Calif. Cutter's wife, Katherine, and a friend identified as H. Clark of the U.S. Foreign Service, were with him when the terrorists struck, but neither was hurt. Police and U.S. sources said Cutter was at the wheel of his station wagon returning home about 12:15 a.m. when the terrorists, armed with submachine guns and revolvers, overtook him from the rear in a Volkswagen and stopped the car in Port Allegre's nightclub district. Cutter suddenly gunned the engine of his car which sideswiped the Volkswagen and struck one of the gunmen, dragging him for about 60 feet. The other three men then opened fire on Cutter's car and one bullet hit him. Police later found the Volks- wagen abandoned and set up roadblocks in an attempt to trap the gunmen. The Cutters arrived in Porto Alegre last November. He has been in the Foreign Service since 1957 and previously served in Cambodia and Peru. OKAY BY THEM HONOLULU (UPI)—University of Hawaii students voted in a poll by a 4 to 1 margin in favor of on-campus recruitment by business and military. Bands will play at the rally and there will be a dance at the University of Missouri at Kansas City afterwards. Reagan speech delayed by shot into hotel lobby SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)—Police had no suspects and few clues Sunday in the firing of a riffle bullet into the crowded lobby of a hotel about an hour before Gov. Ronald Reagan was to speak there. The shell fell harmlessly to the floor Saturday night after ricocheting through the lobby and restaurant of the Woodlake Inn. It was fired from outside, either by a pedestrian or a motorist on a nearby freeway, police said. Reagan, who was delayed 45 minutes by lawmen while they checked the area, joked about the incident in his speech to 1,000 persons attending a California Republican assembly banquet. "We wanted to see what the new open season was and on who," he told the crowd in explaining the delay. The .22 caliber bullet missed scores of restaurant and bar patrons after smashing through the lobby door. It went through a lampshade, glanced off a stained glass window behind the bar, ricocheted off two restaurant tables and pierced another plate glass window at the rear of the restaurant before falling to the floor. 9th STREET MASSACHUSETTS Weaver's Inc. Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1887 Little Loves from Knitique to move into the scene .100% cotton and that means we're great for campus, about town, travel. Great styling and workmanship. Choose stripes and prints. Junior sizes. $16 2nd Floor 'No win' policy protested Minister leads Washington march WASHINGTON (UPI)—Thousands of persons marched, sang and prayed for military victory in Vietnam Saturday in a $5\frac{1}{2}$-hour demonstration that wound down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Washington Monument. The "March for Victory," organized and led by radio preacher Carl McIntire to protest what he called President Nixon's "no-win" policy in Vietnam, went off without major incident. But brown-shirted Nazis stood at the fringes of the march with signs reading "drop Nixon on Hanoi" and "Marxism is Jewish." Bearded hippies heckled speakers and set off a stink bomb at the rally. Police arrested a Nazi and a spectator who scuffed. Park police estimated 50,000 persons participated in the march and rally, which combined patriotic fervor with a revivalist atmosphere of hymn singing and prayer. But Jerry Wilson, District of Columbia police chief, estimated 10,000 to 15,000 participants. The crowd was far below the more than 250,000 "antiwar" protestors who staged the biggest demonstration in the capital's history last November. Chemistry students receive HEW grant Graduate chemistry students at the University of Kansas lacking specific requirements for teaching are being aided by the new Education Professions Development Act (EDPA). The program, instituted last year by a Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) grant, and directed by Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry at KU, is aimed at preparing the students for teaching at the community college level, said Richard Middaugh, associate professor of chemistry who tutors some of the students. Middaugh said the program helped students who had gone to colleges that had not given them satisfactory undergraduate preparation. It also helps students who lack necessary requirements because they decided too late in their college career to pursue graduate work. The first year of the program. Middaugh said, includes some undergraduate work and weekly studies to fill gaps that might be present yet not large enough to warrant the need to take a full course. During the second year, he said, the students take more graduate courses and have the opportunity for teaching experience. Middaugh said there were five students presently in the program. Middaugh and Robert V. Dilts, visiting professor from Vanderbilt University are tutors. Gem company offers diamonds for poetry The subject is love. The medium is poetry.And the prizes are diamonds. Orange Blossom, a diamond company and leading creator of diamond rings in the United States, announced its first annual national poetry contest, open to all individuals between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one. "This contest is an effort by Orange Blossom to encourage the creative talents of young people in the field of poetry, far too often neglected in national competition," said Carl Bross, the firm's general manager. "We feel this is the best possible way to produce an awareness of a new generation's emotions and abilities," he added Contest entries will be judged Each entrant may submit up to five poems, totaling up to 200 lines in length. Each poem will be judged separately on literary merits, individuality and originality. by a prominent panel of poetry experts, including singer-composer Glenn Yarborough; Michael Mesic, editor of "Poetry" magazine; and Marsha Lee Masters, poetry editor of the "Chicago Tribune" and daughter of poet Edgar Lee Masters. Error found bridge pair wins tourney Orange Blossom will present specially designed diamond pendants to the five first award winners. A series of merit commendations will be given to runners-up. Ellsworth Hall took first and second places in the AURH bridge tournament Sunday night, but only after the judges had detected an error in the initial point totals. Contest rules and entry blanks are available in Lawrence at Marks Jewelers, 817 Massachusetts St. "We were just lucky," Yu said. Ernie Bauer, Clay Center senior, and Jim Urich, Marysville senior, took second place with 62 points. Walter Yu, junior and Kwong Ching Li, senior both from Kowloon, Hong Kong, took first place with 64 points. Ching said that the judges first credited them with 60 points —good for about fifth place.Later they discovered the miscalculation,which gave them 64 points and first place. Apr. 6 1970 KANSAN 9 Closing date for entries is May 15. Winners will be notified on or before August 15 by telegram. Black lite personality Day Glo Psychology today Zodiac $1 - 5 & high intensity Black Lights 300 POSTERS Democratic Gov. Lester Maddox of Georgia, a featured speaker, addressed his audience as "God-fearing, flag-waving Americans" and drew cheers with a ringing denunciation of national leaders. He spent much of his 20-minute address assailing the federal government's school desegregation policies. TOWN "The only military victories this country has had since World War II have been in Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama," declared Maddox. While Maddox spoke, about 200 youthful hippies sang "Dixie," and heckled him with shouts of "sig heil" and "go home." One of them set off a stink bomb which exploded in a puff of yellow smoke. CRIER 919 Massachusetts Maddox wound up his speech by accusing the news media of tion had been given the same publicity as last November's antiwar march. ignoring the demonstration. He said two million persons would have shown up if the demonstra- Army ROTC shapes theory into practice Putting classroom knowledge into living action, the KU Army ROTC underwent a field training exercise Saturday and Sunday in an open area adjacent to the Sunflower Ordnance Plant east of Eudora. KU Army ROTC members will spend from June 13 to July 20 at Fort Riley for what Scheffner termed "the real thing" Doug Scheffner, Manitou Springs, Colo. junior and an assistant information officer, said the exercise was a chance to transmit classroom knowledge to the field. He added the exercise also served as a prep for summer camp. With both the ROTC Juniors and the Pershing Rifles serving as the aggressors, over 60 men took part in the simulated battle that lasted 26 consecutive hours. WHAT'5 ROUND, PEAR-SHAPED OVAL , RECTANGULAR DIAMONDS from Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 --- THE BLAZER YOU WILL WEAR ALL YEAR AROUND The year round blend of wool and dacron let you be comfortable in July or January. Available single or double breasted in a wide variety of shades. The shaded waist, broad lapels and deep center vent will give you an enviable fit. 65.00 MISTER GUY The Clothing MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS KU deans air views on requirement School of Education drops Western Civ By ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer The Western Civilization requirement in the School of Education has been abolished, said Dale P. Scannell, dean of the school. The measure will become effective immediately. The faculty of the School of Education met recently and voted to drop the requirement after nearly six weeks of subcommittee work, Scannell said. Faculty members and many students in the school have expressed a concern about the requirement for some time, Scannell said. The administrative committee of the school appointed a subcommittee early in January to study the role of the Western Civilization program in the School of Education, he said. In early March the recommendation was made to the faculty to delete the requirement. The school still requires at least 12 hours of course work in social studies, languages and the humanities. In light of the remaining requirements and what is important to an education of present day teachers, the requirement has been abolished, Scannell said. Deans and administrators of the other schools and the College have since been interviewed about their feelings concerning the Western Civilization program in their departments. In the School of Architecture and Urban Design, the Western Civilization program has traditionally never been a part of the curriculum, said Charles Kahn, dean of the school. It is one of the two schools on campus where students may begin as freshmen, he said. Most other schools admit students after they have filled the College requirements, including Western Civilization. Kahn said there are many courses of study that would be of value to students in the school, including Western Civilization, but the courses most pertinent to architecture and urban design must be considered first. 10 KANSAN Apr. 6 1970 The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers the program to the campus and requires it for graduation in the school. George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, predicted that the requirement would not be abolished in the near future in the College. In a meeting later this spring, Waggoner said there would be a thorough discussion of all the requirements of the College. There is no Western Civilization requirement in the School of Fine Arts. Thomas Gorton, dean of the school, does not foresee the addition of the requirement. Of all the degrees in the School of Engineering, eight do not require the Western Civilization program and two degrees do, said William Smith, dean of the school. In the department of chemical and petroleum engineering, the program is required, Smith said. He said many of the faculty in the department have been interested in the program and some have taught in Western Civilization discussion sessions. In order to give students as much choice as possible in engineering courses, requiring courses in Western Civilization would only further limit the student's choice of electives, Smith said. The School of Journalism has always maintained the requirements of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said Lee Young, acting dean of the school. Students must have filled these requirements before they may enter the School of Journalism after their sophomore year. Western Civilization is one of the requirements. Serious discussion has occurred in faculty meetings about the requirement, Young said. The topic came up again for debate in a faculty meeting last fall, he said, and will be discussed again this spring. Young said that he could not speculate on the future of the requirement in the school but that a number of the faculty have differing opinions on the matter. The School of Pharmacy will accept credits in Western Civilization to fill the 16 semester hour requirement in the humanities and social sciences, said Howard Mossberg, dean of the school. The program itself is only an elective. Welfare has been expressed by the students, said Arthur Katz, dean of the school. There have been discussions in faculty meetings, but not of a dissentive form, he said. No desire to change the requirement in the School of Social The school requires Western Civilization I and II but not the comprehensive examination, Katz said. Students spend their first two years in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Mossberg said that 75 per cent of the students in the School of Pharmacy do not come from the University of Kansas. It would not be fair to ask the students from other universities and colleges to drop back and take a sophomore requirement when they have already filled their humanities and social studies requirements, he said. Studies in social welfare should include an understanding of Western Civilization, Katz said. The content of the program is valuable and it is a critical part of the background that students will need for the work they will do, he said. Students in the School of Business may take both the Western Civilization courses and the comprehensive, and count them toward filling requirements for the school, said Arnold Knapper, chairman of the undergraduate affairs committee of the school. But the program is not a requirement, he said. Business students have history and humanities requirements to fill, Knapper said, that cover much of the same type of material in these requirements. Weather ABOUT GANT SHIRTS FLAIR/FIT/SHOW GANT We've just received a great portion of our spring shirts—both long and short sleeves—stop in. Next To The Captain's Table On The Hill THE University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. On the Hill VI 3-4633 Zone 7-Fair and mild today through Tuesday. West to northwest winds 10 to 15 mph today. ABOUT GANT SHIRTS FLAIR/FIT/SHOW GANT We've just received a great portion of our spring shirts—both long and short sleeves—stop in. Next To The Captain's Table On The Hill THE University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. On the Hill VI 3-4633 groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" So you've discovered that being a woman is more than being just a pretty face . . . AWS (Associated Women Students) wants to help insure that all women have the opportunity to pursue their individual goals freely. AWS needs your help Now. Petitions for 1970- 71 AWS officers are available in the Dean of Women's office. Deadline Tuesday, April 7. All women living on campus and off campus are eligible. 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 Sale! Revised, comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Ed. Campus Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. 65 Chev. Impala, HT-PS PB/, auto 42 after 42, after 5. Closest sometimes works. Minolta, SRT101. Fl4. Leather case, recharge, rechargeable strobe. 4 rolls through camera, strobe unused. $235.00 or best cash offer. $43.50 after 6 p.m. 4-7 Lovable 7 months old male Irish settter who wants a friendly home. AKC registered, loves people. Call 482-8353 after 7:00 p.m. A-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 '613 wood LeBlanc--350" 28" Boys Schwinn cyclewear $30; Smartron portable portable phone $40; Polaroid Swinger scaperp $10; Call $42; $280 Audio Discount—your A.R., Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Sixlane kitten for sale. Beautiful 10- week study, price $15, call 842-1811 after 6:00 p.m. or call at 2416 Jasu Drive. 4-7 GE stereo tape recorder with speakers, excellent condition. 1 year old. Best offer. Call 843-1408 after 5:00 p.m. 4-7 64 Chevalle, low miles, tires one month old, body and engine in excellent condition. Will include player and many tapes. Call 845-6707 107. after 4-7 Walnut stereo speaker systems. (1) large floor models with 12" Danish speakers. (2) shelf model, with a 2-way 8" speaker system. Both sets need fair below retouch. Both carry a full one year warranty. Call 843-6707. 4-7 21" Zenith television, 6 months old. Monobose stereo. Call at 483-804-0757. Gibson steel-string—almost new—$75. Also GE stereo, 2 years old, in good condition—$50. See Kat at 1030 Ohio or call 842-6082. 4-7 Custom designed, multi-purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. May be used in 8' x 8' 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.R. at 843-2103. 4-7 New demonstration A.R.5 speakers, 1 pair of 2AX's, full 5-year guarantee, factory cost only. Ray Audio, Phone 842-2047 evenings 4-10 p.m. tf 415 Lewis Hall. 4-6 Bowman 8-track ear stereo tape Diamond engagement ring, 11, carat, setting, matching band. Call 842-8833. setting, matching band. Call 842-8833. Three student nursing uniforms, worn at the price $1. Call Nance- 415 Lewis Hall Bowman 8-track car stereo tape 105-842-6834 -in original carton -$50. 842-6834 Manual Underwood Five typewriter for a table—for information call 842- 2265 after 6:30 p.m. and before 9:00 p.m. 4-6 TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO Student specials New, experienced management ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 2 "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" 1414 W. 6th VI 3-9588 SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for MI DAS mufflers and German Shepherd, male, 9 weeks, 34 lbs. pedigree, father, 4 years, and half. 882-750-3144, 4-7 612 N. 2nd St. '69 VW, 13,000 miles, excellent condition, warranty good, 842,424-4. 6 shocks 843-8943 31% silicate portable xylophone for Excellent condition Phone 843-2767 4-10 Phone 843-2767 Attention Flocaincellaihilipfllieators! For Sale: Lite-Gem-hi-intensity lamp; forcible electric shaver 8 silver capacitor; Coorey case set; Silver trays; New calf wallet and key case; Wine decanter with four matching glasses; Tray table; 2 speed electro room heater; Black desk organizer box; Baskets set; temp-humidity gauge; Japanese tea set; British flag; AM-FM Short Wave radio. Call 843-1400. 4-10 1968 Fiat 850 Sport Coupe—Bahama Orange, black interior, 2000 C.P. driving lights, Pirelli radials, rear tires per gallon, cheap. Call 843-4154 5154 Elsworth Dorm, Speak to, or leave message for Mike McComb. 4-10 phone number. Call 617-292-8355; cymbals owned by a little old lady who dug Bach. Call Jeff at 843-1711. Norelco tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 4-24 250 Yamaha. Best offer over $300. Call me for Mike McCormack. For Mike McCormack: 1968 Zenith top-of-line portable stereo phonograph. 5 speakers. Original cost $200. Call 843-2191 for price offer and additional information. 4-10 NOTICE Barn available for barn parties, Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Laptid. Vi 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Q, if you want some honest to-gooodness Bar-B-Q; if you want Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty, Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone II 9-2510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf Xerox service on the latest and best machines, specialize in theses and dissertations. Takes up machines, office supplies and equipment. Lawrence Typewriter Co., 700 massi, VI 3-3644. ttf Pilots - Optocap Club flying is a cheap thrill. Hourly wet rates: Cessna 150 180 $12.50, Airbus 150 $8.50, Phone 180 $12.50, 2-seat plane Samsung 4-60 Phone 842-112 after 6. THE STABLES-S=students' favorite establishment. T=talk up a storm. A=? B=beer for all. L=life style; our students come from all walks of life. E=enthusiasiic bunch of bartenders. S=see you there. 4-7 STABLES action! Saddle up your caterers, go-carts, little red wagons, eat ice cream or drink drinking place in town. Include the Stables in your plans for the week. Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-10 Notice: Enjoy the finest food in the historical and cultural atmosphere of the Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-8 Wanted—unattached swimmers interested in joining team being formed for intramural swimming meet. Call 843-6776, after 6 p.m. 4-10 Fred's Auto Painting 1328 W. 9th Ph. 842-9487 Cars Painted $34.95 7 DAY SPECIAL U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 The Captain's Table—now open Sun- day from 11:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. See our ad for Fri. and Mon, and check out the menu. Then come in for something more than a greasy hamburger. 4-7 Home of the "Big Shef" You guys—better look at the New Haggar and Levi Slacks at ROSS Elsie Men's MEN'S ELSE Also our Spring Shirts by Van Heusen and Career Club have just arrived. 4-6 Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, or as like a butterfly, bright bright dresses fervidulous, fickle, etc. Lepidoptera Creations W. 9th. 4-10 LA PETITE GALERIE—fashions for the bold, the beautiful . . . for you. Groove with "Tomorrow's Clothes, Today." Follow Kentucky to 910. ift Students of Objectivism—meets every Monday, 7.30, Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rahn. If desire for information, call 842-6210 5.30 4-17 BURGER CHEF FOR RENT Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom suite air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown Phone 843-5767. Furnished apt. for graduate couple- no children, no pets. $125 a month. Ull. paid. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-1209 after 5. 4-6 Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. ff 814 Iowa Try One Today Alvamar's Quail Creak Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasidan Drive. space atmosphere unique to apartments live atmospheric ad jacent to and overlobing Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly im-portant locations available to mature singles; studios from $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms from $210; apartments and town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2312 or McGrew Agency: 842-2055. tf Modern 1 bedroom apt, A/C, private entrance, 2 blocks from campus, $125 furnished, $110 unfurnished. Call 842-4869. TYPING Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- ing resources, and server order. Pica tape. 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 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 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, thesis and term papers-plus stencil and duplication. Pick up an delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 4-29-6562. Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckmank. Typing—thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Royal electric, elite type. Accurate service. Paper furnished. M.S. degree. Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Assistance with necessary directions. Teacher. M.S. degree. English for foreign students. 843-9249. 4-9 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist Office-size electric (office-citation). Office-size electric. For appointment phone 843-2873. 4-10 LOST Glasses with dark brown frames. In vicinity of Gaslight. Return to 4-8 Riocity of Gaslight. Return to Reward. Reward. 4-6 Black tri-fold wall. Please return to 1305 Vermont, Apt. 1, or call 843-9313. Reward. 4-6 One LadyysSheffield watch with brown leather band in vicinity of Learned or Daisy Hill. Call Nancy, 415 Lewis Hall. 4-6 Cigarette lighter at Hawk's Nest. In- ception: Sgt. Jarvis, Reward 843-364- 394. Class ring in front of Union. Call 600, ask for Paul, room 313. ward. 14 Woman's gold Bulova (?) wristwatch. Found, call 843-5479 or 843-1380. Rewind. WANTED Braechet of sterling silver vests with hook clasp. Lost in Hoch Auditorium, night of July Collins concert. Reward. Call 842-9938 after p. 5. 4-10 THE For Top Quality Head For Henry's DELICATESEN & Country/Western band wanted for Friday at 6:30 p.m. Sat. April 25, Call 843-7853, 4:40 For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's henrys L. G. Balfour Co. in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP 6th & Mo. VI 13-2139 of Exclusive Representative For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III. SANDWICH SHOP - Guards - Recognitions - Badges - Mugs - Favors THE CONCORD SHOP PERSONAL - Paddle ready-made and parts - Stretcher frames, - Lavaliers - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services - Sportswear - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Gifts - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon Unele Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801½ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up ff Fritzite: Thanks for the help. Couldn't have done it without you. Ily, Goof. Across from the Red Dog Al Lauter Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. if 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Access from the Red Door - Stationery Whoever liberated my blue leather shoulder bag in the Union lobby Thursday, April 2; keep the money and goodies, but please return the ID cards and glasses! No questions asked—just leave them at Naismith Hall desk with a note for Linda, Room 616. 4-17 McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Interested in Jazz? I am looking for a pianist and other interested musicians to form group with expert phonologist. Call Allen Tennis 842-1420. 4-10 SERVICES OFFERED 1-2 girls to share luxury apartment for summer; near campus, pool, air-conditioned. $68 monthly, all utilities paid. Call Sue. 842-7535, after 5:30 VI 3-1571 Rings - Crested - Letters Rent-free house, available for summer. We need student or faculty couple to take care of house in our absence. Sorry, no children or pets. Resumes required. Please apply in writing to Raymond Cerf, 1000 South Dr. 4-9 - Plaques Desperate! Hide wanted. KU to KC. Monday and Wednesday—can leave any time after 9:30. Call 842-7192 or RA 2-3088. 4-6 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. tf Phone 843-2736. BUY, SELL OR TRADE tune-ups starting service Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Truck, tax 801.1% Mass, $4.00 and up. If Truck, tax 801.1% Mass, add summer wardrobe ready. Add shoes. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-10 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups Cowboy Boots $18.99 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 lowe VI 2-1008 803 W. 23rd Open every day 9 - 9 Sunday 1 - 6 HARVEY'S SHOE STORE Acme Dingo "Please call for appointment" - Portraits - Passports See us also for the newest styles - Applications 摄影 Bob Blank, Owner NJ 2033 Self Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Stacks steak and fresh cheese confetti await you when you do join us at the Salmon. We arrive only the final preparer of the selection as you like them with all the delicious flavor, from the Salmon for uncomparable pleasure. U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods DOG Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and one half miles north, of the Kaw River Bridge 842-143-78 T PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Malls Shopping Center Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 Fire-bomb discovered An attempt to start a fire behind Strong Hall was thwarted Sunday afternoon when University Traffic and Security patrolmen discovered a Molotov cocktail. "A Seven-up bottle containing some sort of flammable liquid was found by the East door of Strong Hall," said Keith Lawton, vicechancellor of University operations. The bottle was stuffed with a soaked rag and a book of matches was discovered nearby. Lawton said University Police were currently testing the liquid solution. Building site proposed "If the student body votes to have a new building to serve its health service, it will probably be located on the south side of Sunnyside Avenue between Illinois Street and Robinson Gymnasium," Francis H. Heller, Acting Provost at the University of Kansas and co-chairman of its Planning Board announced today. Students at the University vote Tuesday, April 7 on a number of matters including whether new student fees should be authorized to finance the construction of a new health service facility. "The precise placement of the building would depend on detailed engineering studies," Provost Heller said, "and the plans must, of course, receive the approval of the Board of Regents." The location was recommended to Chancellor Chalmers by the University Planning Board. 12 KANSAN Apr. 6 1970 Singer explains-walking around, America is not going to do this to us." (Continued from page 1) After she received a standing ovation at Haskell, she returned to the stage and said, "I love you too." Then she sang more songs, including the hard-hitting "My country 'tis of thee people are dying." She concluded her concert by reminding the audience, "If you really want to get anything done, you've got to do it yourself—not let your roommate do it." Miss Ste. Marie then went on a tour of the Haskell campus with members of the Student Council. She listened as the students talked about their troubles in an institution of the government. While talking with a group of students, she announced opportunities being initiated for Indians. Among these was the creation of an Indian theater specifically for the display of Indian arts, and to depict Indian history as it really happened. Among these was the creation of an Indian theatre specifically for the display of Indian arts, and to depict Indian history as it really happened, not as the white man has written it. She made an appeal to students interested in theatre to come and work as light technicians, costumers, dancers, painters, writers and business workers. The theatre is to start in June, and after a year of organization they will probably open. She added they were beginning two touring companies for the Indian arts. She added she is writing a cookbook of food which was prepared here before Columbus came. She also told them it was becoming, "very un-hip among younger Indians to drink." As a final action to help the students get something going to help the Indian, she offered to help sponsor a conference at Haskell, and to help them get speakers. When asked what sort of topics they would like to have, they all nodded agreement on one discussing the communication with the white man. She got many volunteers to start work on the conference. In an earlier interview, Miss Ste. Marie discussed her disillusionment with the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). She said Indian people did not need to be handled by an alien society. "We would be more capable of handling our own day-to-day problems, because we would be more dedicated. We would put 27 hours into the job," she said. She added it was not a racial issue, but a matter of empathy. "The BIA cannot train a person to be an Indian," she declared. Miss Ste. Marie also discussed termination, which she said was a policy being perpetrated by the government. She described it as a method of reclaiming Indian lands by making the American public think reservations were so squalid that Indians should be relocated. "We don't want to be relocated," she declared. "Reservations aren't squalid, they're just poor. Americans read that the BIA has received $60,000 and think 'Good, the Indians are being taken care of.' What they don't know is that the money never reaches Indians. It pays the salaries of BIA employees." She said few people know that Indians must have BIA permission to draw money out of their trust funds, and added Indians were subject to the same tax and draft laws as other Americans, but were not allowed to manage their own financial affairs. Miss Ste. Marie said the government had good intentions of training Indians to assert themselves, but said that when they did they were jailed. Most of her friends, she said, were now in jail with no way of paying bond, for "trespassing" in a BIA office. She said they were arrested after making suggestions and demands on behalf of three Indian women who had received deserved promotions. She said Indians had the right to reclaim land such as Alcatraz, which had been loaned to the government. "I can't see how we can be called unpatriotic for simply taking back what is rightly ours after the government has stopped using it. The time to stretch is here. Everyone is ready." Shoe House Look what we're hatching for the chic... at the... Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown VI 3-5755 Country House oring... 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. GRABLE Available in spring's ultimate mood-capturing colors ... Navy Kid, Red Kid, Cuero Brown Kid, Black Patent & White Patent Capture the mood of Spring Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 V/here Styles Happen THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, April 7, 1970 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 80th Year, No.108 Court upholds validity of election The University Student Court last night ruled in a three to two decision that a repeal of the student body elections by Tim Miller, Wichita graduate student is not warranted and that the graduate school election is valid. The original complaint, contesting the validity of the elections, was made against the M Photo by Ron Bishop Exhibit features freshman art Two and three dimensional art forms are being shown in an exhibit on the third floor of Strong Hall which features the work of KU freshmen art students. The exhibit, titled "Freshman Foundation" will last through next week. (See related story on page 3) Student Senate Elections Committee; David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president; Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and official of the Student Senate Executive Committee; the Student Senate, and other committees and individuals involved in the elections. Miller charged the Student Senate Elections Committee violated its own regulations by extending the March 2 deadline for filing for the elections thus committing a fraud. The defense represented by Steve Joseph, Wichita law student countered the complaint by suggesting a mistake was made in the University Daily Kansan when the original list of candidates appeared on March 3 and later on March 10, and that all 16 names of the Graduate School candidates were submitted on time. A question arose on the exact number of seats to be filled in the Graduate School, David R. Miller, Hays senior and Elections Committee co-chairman, said the original number was thought to be 15 seats by a count of the graduate school enrollment from last semester. Another question brought out in the testimony pertained to the wording of an advertisement which appeared in the Kansan before the filing deadline. The ad stated all names must be filed in the Student Senate office "prior to" March 2. The court decided this was in error because this was understood by those concerned to be "by" March 2. The final decision of the court stated Miller's fraud accusation was not warranted because there is nothing written which requires publication of the names on the (Continued to page 8) Vote Voting on the student referendums will be held today from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Strong Hall rotunda and in the Kansas Union lobby. Students may vote at Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Oliver and Ellsworth Halls from 7 to 10 p.m. UDK News Roundup By United Press International Quake hits Manila MANILA-An earthquake equal in intensity to one that killed 315 persons 20 months ago in Manila hit the city today, causing widespread damage and panic but light casualties. Panicky office workers quickly left their buildings in downtown Manila and were told by police to stay away from tall structures for fear they might collapse. Many sported gaping cracks. Newspapers may strike NEW YORK—A shutdown of New York's major newspapers appeared today to be a strong possibility. Labor Mediator Theodore W. Kheel said the papers and the 10 unions involved were "miles apart." BULLETIN The following is a prepared statement released from the Chancellor's office this morning: We are on the eve of a day that could distinguish, or severely damage, the University of Kansas. Freedom of speech has been challenged by those who would prevent a Col. Mohr, a Professor Velvel or a Abbie Hoffman from presenting peaceably his point of view. Freedom of speech is threatened as severely by rude interruption or intimidation as it is by those who would ban controversial speakers from this campus. Tomorrow we will determine whether freedom of speech will prevail or be replaced by disruption and subsequent repression. Only extremists of either persuasion would be served by the latter. Their expectations will be denied if each of us quietly pursues his freedom to attend class, to assemble peaceably and to permit those who speak to be heard by those who choose to listen. That after all, is the essence of a great university. E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. Chancellor of the University Strike challenged The Student Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) and the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) expressed agreement with the statement made Monday by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers opposing the proposed Wednesday student strike. The SenEx statement, issued by the majority of the committee, said: "We are forced to ask this question: Why have a strike? There are several possible answers. First, a large number of students and faculty may not be aware of the true situation. Second, it may be that some of the 'strike organizers' are trying to get publicity, impress Abbie Hoffman, polarize the Board of Regents and the state from the University, and create a situation which could result in the election of Senator Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, to the governorship." The "true situation" as expressed in the SenEx statement is that the University's recommendations concerning the promotions of Lawrence Velvel, associate law professor, and Frederick Litto, assistant professor of speech, will be honored by the Kansas Board of Regents. "The University and the governance system have effectively worked up to this point, and we have no doubt that the Board will approve the promotions of Velvel and Litto." "There are those who seek to shut down the University just for the hell of it," it continued. The statement urges students not to participate in any activity that would "be without cause and that could destroy the University by turning it into an armed camp." It is signed by Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and student body president-elect; Greg Thomas, Shawnee Mission sophomore and newly-elected student body vice-president; Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y. law student and chairman of SenEx; Rick von Ende, Abilene, Texas, graduate student and SenEx vice-chairman; and Philip Weiss, Philadelphia, Pa. graduate student. Opposition is based on the official AAUP attitude found in the Statement on Faculty Participation in Strikes approved by the National AAUP Council for publication in April, 1968. It emphasizes that the objectives—"promotions based upon accepted academic standards, free from political or other extrinsic pressures, and judgments as to academic proficiency made by competent University authority—can and should be accomplished by negotiation and rational discussion." Copies of a letter from the University Theatre stunt to the Chancellor, in support of Litto's nomination for promotion, were "unauthorized" in their use, said Jed The mimeographed sheets were "unclear" and made it appear as if the University Theatre staff supported the strike and protest rally, Davis said. Davis, professor of speech and drama and director of the Theatre. In statements issued Monday night the strike committee said they "refuse to accept the Chancellor's statement," but they also cautioned students against any action that would give the Regents an excuse to deny the promotions. "Our goal," the statement said, "is to draw support for Velvet and Litto from the students and show that support to the Regents. "This support will be demonstrated by a boycott or classes, picket lines in front of buildings, a rally in front of Strong Hall and free music at Potter Lake. "Persons who look for some confrontation should note that Abbie Hoffman will be on campus and any action might lead to his being charged with crossing state lines to incite riots," the statement said. The procedures and criteria used by the University in judging faculty members were questioned by the strike committee after 110 faculty members were promoted. Only Velvel and Litto were not promoted. "The issue was not procedure," the committee said, "but academic freedom and freedom of expression." "The proposed strike is not contrary to any provi- (Continued to page 8) --- Reform policies discussed With the present structure of many requirements in the University which were set up 10 years ago, many students think it's time to do a little analyzing and changing, said Francis Horowitz, director of the department of Human Development and Family Life. She spoke during on informal discussion among faculty, administrators and students on education and reform in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences last night in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. The meeting was intended to promote communication among students and faculty, said George Laughead, Dodge City junior and chairman of the course-teacher evaluation committee. The ability of the University of Kansas to make significant changes without substantial financial support was explained by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. He said that such a situation called for a encompassing method of student activity. "One can't separate the financial funding of a University from the quality of that University, but financial backing may be separated from the University's structure," Chalmers said. He said that one may arrive at such an unstructured approach through the autonomy of the faculty, students and schools involved. Members of an institution may successfully attempt to bring change as long as they work around the edges, but one cannot work into the structure of a University without affecting its development, said Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Lear, Lawson prizes awarded by College The winners of the Veta B. Lear awards for 1969 and the winner of the Paul B. Lawson award for 1969-70 have been announced by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College. Monday. The Veta B. Lear awards are given each year to the College student with the highest academic record for their freshman year. This year an unprecedented number of 14 students received an average of 3.0 in 30 hours or more. Lear award winners are; Margaret A. Earley, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore; Barry W. Homer, Paola sophomore; Linda Susan Legg, Dodge City sophomore; Ann Poppe, Wichita sophomore; Linda Lee Handy, Emporia sophomore; Justin T. Hunt, Conway Springs sophomore; Jerry Steven Morgan, Wichita sophomore; Leonard L. Wall, Overland Park sophomore; Howard C. Harmon, Wichita sophomore; Kenneth Klassen, Overland Park sophomore; Kathryn M. Nemeth, Oberlin sophomore; Lewis Wesselius, Topeka sophomore; Stephen Winters, Wichita sophomore; and Mary Ellen Youle, Kansan City, Mo. sophomore. The Paul B. Lawson award is awarded every year to the student in the College of Liberal Christian Science Organization: Danforth Chapel, 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Rodeo Club, Room 2A, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. Theatre: Kyoigen; Comic Theatre of Japan; 8:20 p.m. Special Film: "Broken Blossoms." Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union 9 p.m. Today Official Bulletin Pontifical Carillon Recital: Albert Gerken, 7 Classical Film: "Throne of Blood." Woodruf Auditorium, Kansas Union, 405 W. 1st St. Senior Recital: Rita Matousek, pianist. Swarathout Recital Hall, 8 p.m. SUA Minority Forum: Abbie Hoffman, Chicago. Hoch Auditorium, 8 Experimental Theatre: "Kyogen: Comic Theatre of France." 8:20 p.m. Petitions and legal requests continue to be made to administrative committees, said Dennis Embry, Great Bend junior, but many significant changes don't come before the concerned students have left school. Arts and Sciences who has acheived the most outstanding record for his first three years in the college. 2 KANSAN Apr. 7 1970 The 1969-70 winner of the Lawson award is James A. Reaves, Prairie Village senior. The Lear award is given in memory of Veta B. Lear who for many years served as the assistant to the dean of the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences. At the time of her death a group of her friends started a fund through the Endowment Association. APRIL APRIL 7 CHARLIE CHAN IN LONDON BROKEN BLOSSOMS PSEUDO - CHINESE FILM SERIES April 7 An arrangement is currently being researched to enable discussions and decisions to occur more frequently, Embry said. The student role in such an arrangement must begin at the base of every group or committee on campus and continue through to the top, said Mrs. Horowitz. An improved level of voting participation of students is only one of the methods to make such an arrangement succeed, she said. The Lawson award is given in memory of Paul B. Lawson who served as dean of the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Requirements of the University, including the language requirement, were discussed. The reconstruction of a system of requirements involves an alteration of responsibility, construction and style, Chalmers said. Many members of the Educational Policies Committee think it is bad strategy to raise the language requirement alone for change, said Ronald Calgaard, associate professor of economics. Course requirements in English, Western Civilization, and mathematics, for example, are of equal importance for consideration, Lewis said. A person who is liberally educated ought to be able to handle various areas of knowledge competently, said George Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. If he cannot prove his competence through proficiency examinations, he must learn through some form of required system. There is still a basic fear of letting students go at an education on their own, Calgaard said. He said the faculty felt more confident knowing students are under the same basic curriculum. BE READY! Thursday and Friday, April 9th and 10th, Henry's is offering another special to KU students—10-cent hamburgers. Let Henry's handle your hunger. hennys 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 FIDELITY UNION LIFE FIDELITY UNION LIFE FUL ICD CollegeMaster CollegeMaster 6th & Iowa FOR COLLEGE MEN Fidelity Union Life Insurance Co. VI 2-4650 Use Kansan Classified The Firesign Theatre presents DELL HALL MOSH LEWOM HOW CAN YOU BE IN TWO PLACES AT THE SAME TIME? NOT ANYWHERE AT ALL On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ctr. Beautiful New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing at Malls Olde English Village - interior roominess - wall to wall carpeting - air conditioning Come see 2 and 3 bedroom units afternoon weekdays and weekends id conditioning - all electric Frigidaire kitchens - dishwasher - disposal 2411 Louisiana - suana baths - recreation rooms 842-5552 WHAT? YOU SAY ANOTHER T. B. E. OU SAY ANOTHER DIME NIGHT?" "I'LL BE THERE, WHAT ABOUT YOU?" WEDNESDAY NIGHT WEDNESDAY NIGHT 8:00 to 12:00 THE DRAUGHT HOUSE 804 West 24th 102 Ecology "sellout" denied Hickel wants youth involved MANHATTAN (UPI)—Concern for the environment is not a "sell-out" of other issues of the day, but rather a way the government can prove it cares and also get youth involved, Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel said today. In a speech prepared for the Alf Landon lecture series at Kansas State University, Hickel said "the environmental crisis may well present our last chance to bring significant numbers of potential future leaders back into the political process. "Government can and must prove that it can respond, and encourage youth involvement," Hickel said. One way to do that is to expand the program of getting youth to help with the environment problems, he said. The Federal Water Pollution Control Administration (FWPCA) has a program called "scope" in which youngsters contact federal officials and secure technical information on pollution. "I have decided to expand this program from FWPCA into a wider framework," Hickel said. "We are exploring the possibilities of expanding it into an interdepartmental organization. In this way, it could have an impact on all the federal agencies working on pollution problems." Freshman art featured this week at Strong Hall An art show featuring the work of freshmen in the various fields of art is now being shown KU troupe to stage musical comedies Two one-act musical comedies will be presented April 19 by the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company. The two shows, "Cox and Box" and "Trial by Jury," represent two stages in the development of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas. "Cox and Box" was written in 1869 by Author Sullivan and F. C. Burnand, before the Gilbert and Sullivan collaborations. "Trial by Jury" was written by Gilbert and Sullivan in 1875. Two shows will be presented, at 5:30 and 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $1 at the SUA office or at the door. Apr. 7 1970 KANSAN 3 ATTENTION SPRING SING SPRING SING-in connection with Spring Fling will be held April 23 or 24. It is open to all members of organized living groups—fraternities, sororities, dorms and scholarship halls. There will be four divisions of entries: Women's Groups, Men's Groups, Mixed Groups, and Singles. The groups will be allowed six to ten minutes and the singles will have a maximum of five minutes. If interested (group or individual) please contact Mr. Kim Farewell at VI 3-7922 by Wed. noon April 8. ※ Spring Week Committee on the third floor of Strong Hall, said Mrs. Eleanor DuQuoin, instructor in design, Monday. The show titled "Freshman Foundation," was put together by Mrs. DuQuoin and Frank Young, Delaware, Ohio graduate assistant working on his doctoral degree in education. Mrs. DuQuoin said the show covered two and three dimensional work, drawing and general foundation work. "It's a good show." said Mrs. DuQuoin, "which makes it obvious that the freshmen are becoming aware of his intuition, his ideas and his thoughts." "By no measure does the environmental crusade conflict with man's struggle for equal treatment and justice," he said. Hickel said he had bee beckled at some speeches by those who thought worries about pollation masked the larger problems of society. I am very proud of you. He said he told the American Petroleum Institute, "the oil industry . . . stands in danger of becoming the monster of American society. The industry must respond because the 'crusaders are up in arms,'" he said. ROD McKUEN In Concert Sunday, April 19th, 8 p.m., MUSIC HALL Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo. TICKETS ON SALE NOW—Auditorium Box Office $3.50 - 4.50 - 5.50 - 6.50 groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" DO IT NOW Graduating Seniors, Candidates for Masters & Doctorate Degrees Faculty Orders for CAPS & GOWNS must be submitted by must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! president Nixon asks the money to be used in pensively to authorize place, which will be be incentive for small place. Our own war risks the area, were and to provide a but the debtor we pay. o help them meet the risks, and injuring the entire signa- mil of borrowing factors of ownership be milt onal message the asked by no pro- posed the Secretary of Commerce want of a new post-Major II class estimated and Secretary of State year end of the public body detect the COB proposal of the public body Regressed Ex and and 200 million m back capital in the problems his firm is in improving THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL TM All rights reserved 1939 'This is my idea of a good newspaper.' KANSAN COMMENT Pressing the press Cartoonist Bill Sanders has a particular reason to resent the pressure that Agnew has been applying to American newspapers. The Milwaukee Journal recently suspended Sanders for two weeks without pay because he had drawn four cartoons for a local underground newspaper, the Kaleidoscope. The cartoons were political caricatures of four of Milwaukee's finer citizens, including the police chief. Journal editor Richard Leonard said that Sanders was suspended because he hadn't asked for permission to sell materials to another publication. But Sanders said that he has been doing free lance work since 1968 for several Milwaukee publications without asking for permission. It was not until the Kaleidoscope venture that the Journal management became upset. An incident like this would not be at all unusual except for the particular newspaper that was involved. The Milwaukee Journal has an oustanding record of fighting for liberal causes. During World War II the Journal alienated segments of the Milwaukee business community by taking a strong stand against the local pro-German political organizations and activities. A few years later, the Journal had the courage to fight Sen. Joseph McCarthy in his home state. Perhaps Agnew's speeches have had more of an effect than anyone realized. Liberal newspapers have always faced the difficult task of saying what they believe without losing their advertisers. When the Vice-President shows so little respect for freedom of the press, it becomes much harder to convince local businessmen and advertisers that they have no right to determine editorial policy. Another Wisconsin journalist, publisher William Schanen, is also catching hell for his association with Kaleidoscope. Because Schanen agreed to print Kaleidoscope, his own three weekly newspapers have been the targets of a damaging boycott. Schanen's advertising revenue has dropped to about ten per cent of what it used to be. Two of his papers are now for sale and the third appears to be crumbling. When local businessmen can break a newspaper so easily, very few publishers are going to hold out for their ideals as devotedly as Schanen. The one encouraging aspect of Schanen's struggle is that many of the boycotters have lost business because of the lack of advertising. Local merchants depend heavily on the local newspaper. They have little to gain by killing it. Perhaps when they learn that a healthy paper can mean healthy business for them, they will begin to care about freedom of the press. —Joe Naas S.C. & ED CREATED BY © 1970 ED OAKLEY S.C. WILSON S.C. & ED CREATED BY © 1970 ED OAKLEY S.C. WILSON TODAY I'M GOING TO GIVE A DEFINITION FOR THE ANXIETY COMPLEX. HARUMPE! GARGLE SNORT! GRUMBLE BOARD GLUB! WRITE THAT DOWN! IT'LL BE ON THE FINAL!! TODAY I'M GOING TO GIVE A DEFINITION FOR THE ANXIETY COMPLEX. HARUMPET! GARBLE SNORT! GRUMBLE BURP GLUB! WRITE THAT DOWN! IT'LL BE ON THE FINAL!! hearing voices— To the editor: The campus-wide referendum on April 7 provides us with an opportunity to express our opinions on a number of issues which directly affect the future of this University. Especially significant is the question of student financing for the construction of Wescoe Hall. Two months ago your Student Senate voted by a narrow margin to fund a portion of the indebtedness on this construction through a $7.50 increase in student fees. I voted against that resolution and would like to indicate here why I think it should be rejected by you on April 7. I believe that those Senators supporting the resolution were genuinely impressed by the urgent need for additional classrooms, and they felt that by granting the administration's request, students could obtain important concessions from the administration and the Board of Regents. These concessions were: (1) a promise that student fees would not be used in the future to construct academic facilities, (2) that students would be represented on committees planning Wescoe Hall, and (3) that students have some voice in the selection of architects for future campus construction. I believe this "bargain" to be unsound, both as a matter of principle and as "real" political strategy. First, it is bad precedent. As long as Kansas University continues to grow, we will require new classrooms, or new offices, or new labs, ad infinitum. Since the raising of sufficient state revenues for education becomes more painful each year, it seems highly probable that when student fees have been used to finance academic buildings one time, it will be easier to do it a second time. Secondly, the proposal allows the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature to avoid their legal responsibilities. According to the "system," the support of public education in this state is the responsibility of the Legislature and ultimately the taxpayers of Kansas. As students, we should not be asked to build Wescoe Hall, for if we do, we're letting our elected and appointed officials cop out. If we bail out the Regents and the Legislature now, they can avoid facing the voters of Kansas with the crucial choice: better public education and necessarily higher taxes, or a continuation of the status quo in public financing and necessarily lower standards of education. Finally, we won't get any thing for our $7.50. At the Student Senate meeting in March, Chancellor Chalmers indicated that he had the authority to grant the first two student demands (with the implication that they would have been conceded without the question of student financing) and that the selection of architects was entirely the perogative of the State Architect and the Governor (ie., patronage). I personally doubt the weight of Student Senate demands in those offices. In short, I am willing to endure the miseries of portable classrooms in order to achieve what I believe to be a "right" result. I urge you to make your opinions felt on April 7. Frank Bangs Wichita, third year law student An All-American college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates; $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson Campus Editor ... Ted Illiff News Editor ... Donna Shrader Editorial Editors ... Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rielek Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkes Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Sciences Editors ... Geneile Richards, Rich Geary Assistant Campus Editors ... Willa Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffingwell BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser Mel Adams 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 Shelley Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Laxton Member Associated Collegiate Press H REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC., 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 Oscars tonight to honor film's best By GENELLE RICHARDS ide & Reviews Editor Arts & Reviews Editor Once again tonight Oscar will descend on those mystical creatures of Hollywood to honor their bests, be it actors, movies and so forth. Who will win is unknown until that world famous sealed envelope is opened this evening containing the winner in each category. In the division of Best Picture, the contenders are: "Anne of the Thousand Days," "Midnight Cowboy," "Hello Dolly," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and "Z." To many the idea of an X-rated picture winning the award is something definitely unheard of. I mean what would people think, especially the Mothers of America. If the Academy would examine the picture realizing that it is the finest produced during the year, they would see that "Midnight Cowboy" is the most deserving of the award. "Z" could very well take the award but, like "Midnight Cowboy," it has one thing against it—it is a foreign film and not even British at that. My choice is "Midnight Cowboy." In the Best Actor category it appears impossible to beat John Wayne for his performance in "True Grit." Oscar tends to get sentimental and therefore Wayne has the best chance. This is his 40th year in the movies and some say he is long overdue the recognition he deserves. Peter O'Toole in "Goodbye Mr. Chips" gave one of the greatest performances I have yet to see by an actor and deserves the award. He, like Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight of "Midnight Cowboy", who were also excellent, may very well be overlooked because of the strong support for Wayne. My choice is Peter O'Toole with my second choice going to Dustin Hoffman. My choice is Jane Fonda. In the Best Actress division we find five nominees who have not been nominated for the Oscar before. Anyone could win but, it does and should, look hopeful for Jane Fonda with an excellent performance in "They Shoot Horses, Don't They." I imagine Jack Nicholson will win the award for the Best Supporting Actor if the Academy is willing to accept "Easy Rider" with its motorcycles and an American International production. Elliot Gould, "Bob & Carol & Ted & Glove," shows that he is going to be even greater in the future than he was as Ted in this very funny movie. My choice is Elliott. Gould Dyan Cannon, "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice," should undoubtedly win the award for Best Supporting Actress as the spouse of Gould in one of the important films of the year. APRIL 7 APRIL 7 CHARLIE CHAN IN LONDON BROKEN BLOSSOMS PSEUDO - CHINESE FILM SERIES April 7 JIC CHARLIE CHAN IN LONDON BROKEN BLOSSOMS Senior to premiere own works 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-10AS Molina, whose father is a musi-cologist, began his formal music training at Eastman School of Music three years ago. He studied under Edward Mattila, professor of theory at KU, for two years. First on the program will be "The Ox and the Nightingale," written for flute and piano. Molina described it as a "philosophical piece on interpersonal relationships." Apr. 7 1970 KANSAN 5 Antonio Molina, senior in composition from Manila, will premiere five works at a student recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. By MARILYN MCMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Two instrumental pieces, a work for brass choir and two works for choral ensembles will be featured. It is written in three movements, entitled "Encounter," "Games," and "Love." Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Affirmations for Brass and Percussion" will follow. It is Molina's first composition for brass. He said most of his works have been for choral groups, and he wanted to write for brass "for a change." Molina will use two sets of five brasses each with percussion in the center. The piece is based on old church hymns and chants. Kenneth Bloomquist, director of bands will conduct. The third work in the program will be "Interlude for French horn and piano." "Two Meditations" will be sung by a group of students selected by Molina. They will be accompanied by French horn and harp. Going to Europe? Then you are going to New York Either way SUA can help. K. C. - New York $121.00 Depart: June 10, 12:15 p.m. Return: August 12, 7:10 p.m. New York - Paris $249.00 sua The International stage triumph blossoms on the screen! A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION wauer ingrid mannau bergman cactus flower introducing OOLDIE HAWN as TOMI TECHNICOLOR® From Columbia Pictures Granada TREATHE...Telephone VI 3-5784 ENDS TONIGHT Eve. 7:20 - 9:20 Adults 1.50; Child .75 The last number will be a choral arrangement of "you shall above all things be glad and young," a poem by e.c. cummings. It will be performed by the Concert Chorale. Molina will conduct both choral numbers. The Firesign Theatre HOW CAN YOU BE IN TWO PLACES AT THE SAME ATTENTION? NOW ANYWHERE AT IT The Firesign Theatre presents OLE HOLL MUHAH LEYMONI On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. KIEF'S PEOPLE ARE THE ULTIMATE SPECTACLE DJ JACK & BUBBLE THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!" National Board of Review A SUBSIDIARY OF THE AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANIES, INC. DISTRIBUTED BY CINEMAS RELEASE CORPORATION "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!" National Board of Review "BEST ACTRESS-JANE FONDAI" -New York Film Critics "BEST ACTRESS- JANE FONDA!" Granada THEATRE----Telephone VI 3-5784 STARTS TOMORROW Adults 1.50, Child .75 University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $.75 Esposito brother clash is likely in hockey playoffs NEW YORK (UPI)—With the Niekro brothers, there's no question about it. Blood is thicker than water. The Esposito brothers go along with that too up to a point. When it begins interfering with business . . . well . . . that could be the point. Tony Esposito, as practically everybody knows, is the Chicago Black Hawks' goalie. He's good. So good, he set a National Hockey League record this season with 15 shutouts. Tony's older brother, Phil, centers for the Boston Bruins and he's good also. He won the league scoring title a year ago and would've won it again this year if it wasn't for an unbelievable thing. The unbelievable thing's name is Bobby Orr. Phil Niekro does the heavy duty for that other brother combination. He won 25 games for Atlanta last year and is being counted on for about the same number this year. His kid brother, Joe, pitches for Detroit now and that doesn't create any problem, but there was a minor one the last couple of years because Joe was with the Chicago Cubs and San Diego Padres and the two Niekro boys simply said they didn't want to pitch against each other. "I don't believe in that," says Tony Esposito. "If you're a professional, you're a professional. You go out and do what you have to even if your brother does happen to play for the other club. Phil and I are close. Very close. We get together after the game and discuss a lot of things. Even things about hockey. If he feels I'm doing something wrong he'll tell me. When we're out on the ice though, that's different." The chances are good the Esposito brothers will be going up against one another soon in the Archibald guides South to title in all-star meet HONOLULU (UPI)—When it was announced that Pete Maravich and Rick Mount wouldn't play in the Aloha Basketball Classic, the promoters winced because suddenly they were without a major drawing card. They hadn't counted on Nate Archibald. The 5-foot-11 Texas jackrabbit put on a Maravich-style shooting-dribbling-passing show to lead the South team to the championship with three straight victories, including a 127-100 rout of the East in Saturday night's title game. Archibald, one of the smallest men in the four-team college allstar tournament, scored 23, 51 and 48 points in South's three wins. Largely because of him the attendance jumped from 3,700 Thursday to 5,500 Friday and to a full house of 7,450 Saturday. Third place in the round robin event went to the West team with a 110-103 win over the Midwest. Archibald, a University of Texas-El Paso star who was drafted by Dallas of the American Basketball Association, was named the tournament's outstanding player. No one else even came close. 6 KANSAN Apr. 7 1970 With him on the all-tourney squad were guardmate Joe Hamilton of North Texas State, also drafted by Dallas of the ABA; Jim McMillian of Columbia, Seabern Hill of Arizona State and Dave Cowens of Florida State. Most of the proceeds from the second annual event go to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary Stanley Cup playoffs. Tony Esposito is especially good. He seems to know precisely when to make his play. Even against his own brother, EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE SUA OFFICE SOA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND KIEF'S BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. The Firesign Theatre presents MURK LEVINON HOW CAN YOU BE IN TWO PLACES AT ONCE WHEN YOU'RE NOT ANYWHERE AT ALL On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The Firesign Theatre presents ZILL HOLL MUHAN LEMMON The German Club presents: BROTHERS KARAMAZOV A film adaptation of Dostoyevsky's immortal novel of the Karamazov family. German dialog with English subtitles. DYCHE AUDITORIUM Two showings: 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. TONIGHT 75c BRITISH ISLES Rome SPAIN Mediterranean ITALY Paris France England the INTERNATIONAL STUDENT I.D. is offering many student discounts in EUROPE Now available at the SUA OFFICE cost $1.00 BRITISH ISLES Rome SPAIN Mediterranean ITALY Paris France England Swing into the super shape of today. Curves that set a now mood . . . swerves that make a plain one-strap a turned-on, strapped-on party shoe. It's all you,girl,and it's great. CoNNiE* Arensberg's = Shoes Arensberg's = Shoes Where Styles Happen 819 Mass. 843-3470 Arensberg's = Shoes Where Styles Happen 819 Mass. 843-3470 In shimmering silver. Just the color to bring out the formal in you, babe. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the overseas market are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Clv. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Edition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 141st St. Minolta, SRT101, F1A, Leather case, skylight light, rechargeable strobe. 4 rolls through camera, strobe stuned unless a best cash offer 843-854 after 6 p.m. 4-7 Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Siamsek kitten for sale. Beautiful 10- week study, price $15, call 842-1811 after 6:00 p.m. or see at 2416 Jasu Drive. 4-7 GE stereo tape recorder with speakers, excellent condition. 1 year old. Best offer. Call 843-1408 after 5:00 p.m. 4-7 '64 Chevette, low miles, tire one month old, body and engine in excellent condition. Will include stereo system and many tapes. Call 6707 at 2:50. Walnut stereo speaker systems. (1) large floor models with 12" Danish speakers. (2) shelf model, with a 2-way 8" speaker system. Both sets are below retail. Both carry a full one year warranty. Call 843-6707. 4-7 21" Zenith television, 6 months old. Magnaxav console stereo. Call at 6:00 p.m. 843-0073. 4-7 Gibson steel-string—almost new—$75. Also GE stereo, 2 years old, in good condition-$50. See Kat at 1030 Ohio or call 842-6082. 4-7 New demonstration A.R.5 speakers, 1 pair of 2AX's, full year guarantee, factory cost only. Ray Audio, Phone 842-2047 evenings 4-10 p.m. tf Custom designed, multi - purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. economical purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design approval for Barbell Co. In-Apprenticeship 557.5 lb. of assorted weights. Call B.J. at 843-2103. 4-7 Diamond engagement ring, $ _{1/2} $ carat, round brilliant cut, silver Tiffany setting, matching band Call 842-3823. 4-8 Bowman 8-track car stereo tape player; used—in original carton 482-841-624 German Shepherd, male, 9 weeks, half ball, 842-8847 French shepherd, diegree father, 4-7 315 octane portable xylophone for phone 843-276-7619. Excellent condition. Phone 843-276-7619. Attention Flocinaceinihilppilificators! For Sale: Lite-Gem-hi-intensity lamp; Noreloel electric shaver; 8 silver electric coaster; Silver tray; Silver trays; New calf wallet and key case; Wine decanter with four matching glasses; Tray table; 2 speed electric room heater; Wicker desk heaters; White countertop; temp-humidity gauge; Japanese set ; British flag; AM-FM Short Wave radio. Call 843-1400. 4-10 Tony's 66 Service starting service Be Prepared tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 . . . 111111 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 7 DAY SPECIAL Cars Painted $34.95 Fred's Auto Painting 1328 W. 9th, Ph. 842-9487 HE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S MAIRSTYLING TECHNICIUE IN AMERICA SCORE LINE K Patrick J. Norris Kenneth "Rager" Everett MEN'S HAIR STYLIST SQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT APPPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 SAVE YOURSELF AFINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 1968 Fiat 850 Sport Coupe—Bahama Orange, black interior, 300,000 C.P. driving lights, Pirelli tires, rails per gallon, cheap Call 842-5154 250 Yamaha Best offer over $300 Call Ellsworth Dorm. Speak to or leave call number. Four silver-sparkle drums, 3 Zildjian and two Gibraltar drums. Two who dug Bouch, Call Jeft at 843-711, 605-9262. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 T. I.R.E.co. Norelole, tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St., #4-24 1968 Zenith top-of-line portable stereo phonograph 5 speakers. Original cost $200. Call 843-2191 for price offer and additional information 4-10 Cycle—new Yamaha 100cc, 1,000 miles, warranty, 4 speed, oil injected, good shape. Great for campus Call 842-432 or Larry--443. Tennis 842-1290. '62 VW. Like new. New engine—less fuel. '63 MK4. Bought for Steve, 843-billed to 4-13 1965 500c offer Triumph cycle, must sell, consider any Call Bob, must at 4-13 Honeywell Strobonar 400 electronic flash unit, fits most cameras, used very little, filters, accessories, must sell immediately. Jim, 842-7307 4-9 Fairchild Old Blue. 1960 blue Chev. 6, 23, 57, 85, 140, 147, 238, 433, 438, or best offer. Call Ken. 843-633-4-13 1969 Honda CL350 Scramble, blue, white, 1400 miles, 4 months old, helm, cover, cover, and insurance. $625 Call Larry, 842-7260. *4-13* 1962 Comet, good condition; also four images, excellent condition. CAT: 842-526-3513 NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for winner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. SV 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want to meet Chicken Brisket, this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our speciality. I V-26510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday th 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 3-1644. tf THE STABLES-S=students' favorite establishment. T=talk up a storm. A=? B=beer for all. L=life style; our students come from all walks of life. E=enthusiastic bunch of bartenders. S=see you there. 4-7 STABLES action! Saddle up your horses (cars, go-carts, red shoes) for the day and drink the drinking place in town. Include the Stables in your plans for the week. Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations. 19 W. 9th. 4-10 Notice; Enjoy the finest food in the historical and cultural atmosphere of the Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-8 Wanted—unattached swimmers interested in joining team being formed for intramural swimming meet. Call 843-6776, after 6 p.m. 4-10 Raney Drug Stores Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Downtown, 921 Mass. Plaza,1800 Mass. Hillcrest,925 Iowa 3 locations to serve your every need The Captain's Table—now open Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. See our ad for Fri. and Mon. and check out the menu. Then come in for something more than a greasy hamburger. 4-7 Complete prescription departments and fountain service. its and roulton service. Home of the "Big Shef" Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous, to mate. Lepidoptera Creations, W 9th, 4-10 Students of Objectivism-meets every Monday, 7.30, Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand If desire information, call 842-621-4 5.30, 842-621-4 4-17 BURCEN CHEF LA PETITE GALERIE—fashions for the bold, the beautiful . . . for you Groove with "Tomorrow's Clothes, Today" Follow Kentucky to 910. ft Anyone seeing an accident in O-Zone involving a 65 Rambler American (red and white) on Thursday, April 2, please call 842-7254. 4-13 Try One Today 814 Iowa FOR RENT Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders town and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. ttf Alvamar's Quail Creak Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to Alvamar; live-in family ad jacent to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly indoor rates; rated as fun from fares and mature singles; single floors for $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms from $225; four apartments; luxury apartment and town houses; call David Rhodus: $42-2312 or McGrew Agency: $43-2055. tf Modern 1 bedroom apt. A/C, private entrance, 2 blocks from campus, $125 furnished, $110 unfurnished. Call 842-4869. Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, wall-to-wall carpeting, all conditioning, sound conditioning, all dishwashing, Frisbee, dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces. Additional benefits include laundry, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprising inexpensive rates. See www.mallsoldeenglish.com weekdays and weekends at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE. 2411 Louisiana. 843-552-3. 4-13 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished, with air conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool, On W. 24th, 842-1160. Come today at W. 24th, 842-1160. 1-13 TYPING Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations. Electric Typewriter, (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- ing, copywriting, paperwriter Pica type. Competent. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service 5-15 THE HTE in the WALL DELICATESEN & SOMEONE 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III. SANDWICH SHOP SHAW AUTO SERVICE Same Time — Phone Order Your headquarters for miDAS® mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stenel thesis and diary works. Up delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 842-6562. Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Call 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 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. 4-9 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist or Speech-Dication). Office-size elec. For appointment phone 843-2873. 4-10 Typing done in my home. Term papers, reports, etc. Call 842-5261. 4-13 Rent-free house available for summer. We need student or faculty couple to take care of house in our building. Please apply in References required. Please apply in writing to Raymond Cert, 1000 Sunset Dr. 4-9 Interested in Jazz? I am looking for a pianist and other interested musician to form group with experienced saxophonist Call Allen Trophy 842-1400. 4-10 WANTED Wanted--your voice for Spring Sing. If interested, call or contact Mr. Kim Farewell at 843-7922 as soon as possible. 4-9 Are you leaving KU this year? Grad. student would like reference to a clean utility or one room apartment close to campus with rent less than $100 / mo. Call 842-1568 or UN 4-4220. Ask for Mention. 4-13 Want to buy used Ludwig or Rogers sound systems good condition 4-135 743-748 evening 4-13 Want to live in Chicago suburb after graduation? Will share roomy furnished house near city lake jwm. Reasonable. Call Jo, Lm. 302, 842-1340. LOST Class ring in front of Union. Call 800-634-5255, ask for Paul, room 313 4-ward. Woman's land. call 843-5479 or 843-4-8 Rowan. Cigarette lighter at Hawk's Nest. Inscription: Sgt Jarvis. Reward: 4-8 Bracelet of sterling silver rings with hook clasp. Lost in Hoch Auditorium, night of July Collins concert. Reward. Call 842-9938 after 5 p.m. 4-10 Black bilfold, April 1 snowmast. If found, please drop in my mailbox at 1601 Tenn. I need my ID cards. Reward offered. Mike Hein. 4-13 Man's black billfold. Keep money, Large sward. Large reward. @ 842-1157. Call 5-13 Galactic Bridal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv. 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 --- PERSONAL SERVICES OFFERED Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801% Mass., Returns $4.00 and up tt Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-funn, 843-8074 ff BUY, SELL OR TRADE Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on any item purchased with Group Tax, 8015 Miles $4.00 and up, if Boycott cars! Eschwe phony model changes until the industry takes meaningful steps to cure America's paramount polluter. Hurt the industry where it lives—sabotage sales! D. Mills. 4-9 Whoever liberated my blue leather shoulder bag in the Union lobby and goodies, but please return the ID cards and glasses! No questions asked - just leave them at Naiamit Hall with a note for Linda. Ritha 616 4-77 Time to get your spring and summer wardrobe ready. Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-10 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tt FOUND DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 Small, black-brown beagle(?) puppy Sit. nite: call 842-734-6 4-9 Music Teacher Kansan Classifieds Work For You! AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey VI 3-4416 New York Cleaners - Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN AND COOP OIP 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 KING COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 PARKS Photo by Judy Gerling Warmer weather draws classes outside A group of math students and their instructor take a break from their usual classroom routine and hold a class at the edge of Potter's Lake. Warmer weather in this part of the country has drawn many classes around campus outdoors. Court confirms- (Continued from page 1) ballot, and the Kansan was clearly in error in the publication of the names. In a statement after the hearing, Miller said he agreed with the court's decision and that no fraud was committed. However, he said it was "incredible" that the Kansas could publish faulty information more than once and the election committee would not check for errors. He said the elections committee exhibited "great negligence" in the elections, in the mispublication of names, the number of candidates on the ballot and the wording of the full-page newspaper advertisement. He added he would take no further action against the Student Senate or the Student Senate Elections Committee. Carswell vote today WASHINGTON (UPI)—Successfully past one crucial vote and a day away from the final decision, the Supreme Court nomination of G. Harrold Carswell of Florida appeared today to depend on seven senators. These seven-five Republicans and two Democrats—were uncommitted on the controversial nomination and their positions were not known, publicly or privately. 8 KANSAN Apr. 7 1970 Cathay is the old name of China, used by Marco Polo. Generation Rap! The cool new look needs an old hand with the needle. Our fitter-tailors have the hand — and a deft way with the small alteration that makes the suit you like the suit you can't live without. Rap with our salesman first, to find the suit, then rap with the man who'll wrap it up with a great fit. The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—The Apollo 13 astronauts went ahead today with final preparations for a Saturday takeoff to the moon but doctors are expected to ground them if blood tests show there is a chance they could come down with the measles in space. If any of the astronauts have the disease, the most likely time for it to strike would be during the April 16 moonwalks, the most strenuous hours of the mission. "We will not be sending them up there if there's any reasonable chance they will get the measles," said a space agency official. A postponement of the scheduled 2:15 p.m. (EST) Saturday blastoff would mean a delay until at least May 9 of the nation's third lunar landing mission, because of the requirements of hitting a new landing area. The problem of measles developed Sunday night when backup command module pilot Charles Duke fell ill with what was diagnosed as German measles-medically called rubella and normally a childhood disease characterized by runny nose, sore throat, fever and a pink rash on the skin. Prime astronauts James A. Lovell, Thomas K. Mattingly and Fred W. Haise have been working daily side-by-side with Duke during preparations for the moon flight. None has been vaccinated against German measles. Apollo 13 flight threatened Chief astronaut physician Dr. Strike- (Continued from page 1) sions of the student Bill of Rights," the statement continued. Article eight of the Bill states, "discussion and expression of all views are permitted within the University subject only to requirements for the maintenance of order." Charles A. Berry gave the Apollo 13 crewmen their last scheduled complete physical examination Monday morning—shortly after learning from a colleague at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston that Duke had turned himself in sick the night before. He found them "in excellent physical condition." But he took blood samples from each of them, froze the blood and had it flown to Houston for analysis in the spacecraft cer.ter's biomedical laboratory. The space agency expected to know the results of the Houston lab tests by late today or Wednesday morning. At the spaceport, naval officers Lovell and Mattingly and civilian Haise went ahead with preparations for the blastoff—but were put in strict quarantine limiting their contacts with outsiders. The astronauts were reported in good spirits and showing no signs of sickness. German settlers established the first kindergarten in America in Columbus, Ohio, in 1838. 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 You've got a lot to live... And as a University woman you have a lot to give. You're working toward a goal now — a degree, a career, marriage, maybe. Will your being a woman close some doors to you? The statistics say yes! Both here at KU and in society. AWS wants to make sure that all women have the opportunity to pursue their goals freely. Won't you become involved? Petitions for 1970-71 A W S president, vice-president and treasurer are available now in the Dean of Women's Office. Deadline Tues., April 7. All on-campus and off-campus women are eligible. 女 Non-violence pleas unheeded STRIKE Photo by Judy Gerling Preparations continue . . . Stencilling of tee shirts was done all day Tuesday in front of the Kansas Union. Strike preparations continued amid pleas from student government officials and the Chancellor's office that the strike not be held. Despite pleas for non-violence from the Chancellor, faculty members and student leaders, arson attempts and fire bombs were reported last night on campus and in the Lawrence community. Shortly after the conclusion of a procedural meeting for the student strike, police reported a possible arson attempt on the old Haworth building. Lawrence policemen at the scene said suspects were seen running away from the building at about 10:15 p.m. Smouldering debris was found under a stairway in the partially-demolished building. One ladder truck was dispatched to the scene by the Lawrence Fire Department, and firemen searched the second floor for other possible fires. Shortly after 1 a.m., police investigated a bombing at Anchor Savings and Loan, 900 Ohio. No suspects were apprehended, though an unidentified man was questioned and released. Damage to the building was minor. Police searched the building with the aid of spotlights for other suspects. At 3:15 a.m., police reported two or more bombs were thrown at the animal research labs near New Haworth Hall. Policemen present said the bombs appeared to be molotov cocktails. Only one bomb exploded and caused minor fire damage to the outside of a window. Earlier in the night, bomb threats were investigated at Smith Hall and a laundromat on 9th Street. At a strike meeting in the Kansas Union Ballroom Tuesday night, students and faculty stressed the need for non-violence. Roy Laird, professor of political science and representative for the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), said the executive committee of AAUP did not support the strike because of the possibility of an "ugly turn." "It only takes one act of violence, and there is enough of an element of tension on this campus to exploit your strike and hurt the cause you are championing," Laird said. John Narrimore, a coordinator of the strike, said that pickets stationed at every entrance of 19 buildings on campus would "try to talk students out of going to class" but would not do anything violent. Peace should be maintained, Narrimore said, because any violence would be attributed to the presence of Abbie Hoffman, scheduled to speak in Allen Field House tonight. Hoffman, a member of the Chicago Seven, was recently convicted for crossing a state line to incite a riot. David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and another strike coordinator, gave the schedule of events for the strike, which is to include a rally at 1:30 and a "Pleasure Fair" at Potter Lake. (See related pictures on page 3) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, April 8, 1970 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 80th Year, No.109 Moonshot still in doubt CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — With blastoff of America's third moon landing mission only three days off, a space medical team raced through new tests today to determine whether two of the Apollo 13 astronauts are coming down with German measles. It takes anywhere from 14 to 21 days for the German measles virus to develop in an individual. This means the astronauts—if they are going to get the measles—would probably become sick next week, possibly while circling or walking the moon. The situation became confused Tuesday night, when the Space Agency said a recheck of laboratory tests indicated a radical change in the condition of one of the astronauts. Dr. Charles A. Berry, the Apollo medical director, said laboratory tests in Houston showed that James A. Lovell's immunity to the illness "looked good." Later tests confirmed this. But Berry said in an afternoon statement that tests indicated that Thomas K. Mattingly and Fred W. Haise have a "subclinical case" of German Measles, which means they are either developing the disease or their body is trying to fight it off by building up an immunity to it. Late Tuesday night, however, the Space Agency said a recheck of the tests showed a major change in Mattingly's blood samples—from a "insignificant" number of measles antibodies to none at all. This, said a Space Agency spokesman, indicated that Mattingly is more susceptible to the German Measles than originally thought. The earlier tests, doctors said, meant that Mattingly and Haise Hospital vote well favored were struggling with the children's disease. By BOB WOMACK Kansan Staff Writer "It's like a fight in the body," said a Space Agency official. In a referendum vote Tuesday with only 2,725 voting, University of Kansas students expressed overwhelming support for a new hospital, the elimination of the Western Civilization comprehensive exam as a requirement for graduation from any school of the University, and voiced a desire to eliminate general requirements as prerequisites for graduation from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. In addition to approving the $2 million Health Center, by a vote of 2,430 to 255, students also expressed their willingness to pay for the new facility to be financed by an increase "It could go either way." in fees of about $10 per semester. Before the vote, William Balfour, dean of student affairs, had said students would have had to continue to put up with the inadequate facilities of Watkins Hospital had they refused to accept the fee increase. By a vote of 1,979 to 742, students expressed their willingness to help foot the bill for the Health Center, to be located east of Robinson Gymnasium. The proposed satellite union did not fare as well in the voting. A majority of those voting voted no in answer to the question; "Do you favor the construction of a satellite union on the west side of the campus. Berry said that if symptoms are to develop," "they can be expected in from 24 to 48 hours." (Continued to page 20) If either astronaut does develop German Measles, Space Agency officials have indicated they will postpone the launch of Apollo 13 until the next opportunity to start the mission on May 9. The three astronauts were exposed to the measles, also known as rubella, when their backup lunar module pilot, Charles Duke, developed the disease last week. Duke is now resting at home in Houston and in good condition. Doctors will continue to closely observe the three astronauts and more laboratory tests will be run Wednesday, Berry said. In the meantime, Dr. Thomas O. Paine, the Space Agency administrator, directed that countdown preparations continue toward the 2:13 p.m. EST launch date Saturday. Additional decisions on continuing preparations will be made when further medical results are available, officials said. Lovell, Mattingly and Haise continued to prepare for the flight. Experts said they were con- (Continued to page 3) Weather Variable cloudiness, windy and turning cooler today. Winds shifting to the north by afternoon and increasing to 15 to 30 mph. Tonight, clear and cool with diminishing north winds. Tomorrow, clear to partly cloudy and colder. High today, mid-70's—low tonight mid-to upper 30's. Precipitation probability today is 10 per cent, zero per cent tonight and tomorrow. BULLETIN We strongly urge all students of the University to recognize the strain which the proposed student strike has placed upon KU. In light of several abortive attempts to destroy University property, we ask all students to refrain from activities upon the campus this evening. We recommend that students stay away from the campus proper as much as possible. This is in order to protect students from being unjustly implicated in any illegal or irrational acts. David S. Awbrey President, Student Senate Bill Ebert President-elect, Student Senate 1. ★ ★ ★ ★ UDK News Roundup By United Press International Kopechne case closed WASHINGTON—Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, showing relief, says he hopes the grand jury's decision to end its investigation into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne will bring the case to a close. "I'm obviously very much satisfied that the district attorney and the attorney general and the grand jury didn't feel that there were matters that should be pursued," Kennedy told reporters Tuesday after learning that the Dukes County Grand Jury in Edgartown, Mass., had voted no indictments after a two-day inquiry. Deployment halt urged WASHINGTON—President Nixon, under increasing pressure from Congress and advisers to put a stop to missile deployment, called a meeting of the National Security Council today to plan U.S. strategy for next week's arms talks with the Soviet Union. In Congress, an advisory resolution giving the Senate's advance approval to a U.S.-Soviet freeze on any further deployment of nuclear weapons has all but four of the votes needed for passage. In addition, private disarmament specialists were urging the President to propose a temporary, unilateral halt on deployment of multiple-warhead missiles. Campus briefs Ethan P. Allen Lecture set Robert H. Salisbury, chairman of political science at Washington University in St. Louis, will be the speaker for the second Ethan P. Allan Memorial Lecture. He will speak at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Pine Room. The title of Salisbury's speech will be "Public Policy and Public Education." Awbrey backs Chancellor Dave Awbrey, student body president, said Tuesday that he totally agreed with the Chancellor's statement about no violence in regard to the strike today. "There is no way we want violence," he said. "It would hurt the entire student movement. There is no rational reason for violence in the University community." KU-Y plans white racism study A lab on white values in black-white America will be held April 11 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union and will be sponsored by the KU-Y, Tom Moore, KU-Y director, said Friday. Moore said the lab, which would last from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., would be a study of today's white racism in America and on the college campus. The lab will use tapes and short films as the basis of discussion. Moore said the lab would need interested people to serve as "reactors" during the afternoon session. There will be a training session, he said, for the "reactors" April 9 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. All interested persons should sign up at the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. Senior wins Marshall award Christopher Lee Saricks, Lawrence senior, has been chosen as one of 24 college students in the United States to receive a Marshall Scholarship this year. Saricks is the second student in KU's history to receive the award, which has been given by the British government since 1953 as an expression of gratitude for Marshall aid. The highly prized Marshall awards are for two years' study in England. Valued at around $3,500, they cover tuition, books, traveling and living costs. According to the British consulate in Chicago, the awards are given on the basis of "distinction of intellect and character as evidenced both by activities and achievements." Late in February Saricks was also selected as one of 17 KU seniors chosen as Woodrow Wilson Designates. 150 attend engineering conference The 15th annual Structural Engineering Conference, sponsored by the Civil Engineering department at the University of Kansas, was held Friday in the Kansas Union. The conference consisted of a number of papers presented by visiting professors and engineers. John T. Easley, associate professor of engineering at KU, was chairman of the conference which was held in conjunction with the out-of-state highway commission. An estimated 150 people attended. Agenda includes structure revisions Basic revisions of the national structure and several issue discussions are on the agenda for the national KU-Y, YWCA convention to be held this weekend in Houston, Texas, said Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior and KU-Y co-president Monday. The delegates from KU who will be attending the convention are KU-Y members: Mary Jane Logan, King City, Mo. junior; Sandy Euman, Wichita sophomore; Mary Ann Olish, St. Anne, Mo. sophomore; Jill Wiekman, Prairie Village junior and Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior. The delegates at the convention will discuss poverty, racial injustice, environment, student leadership, women's liberation and peace, said Miss Friesen. KU-Y cabinet interviews begin Interviews began last night for 1970-71 KU-Y cabinet positions. Members interested in applying for a cabinet position may come by the KU-Y office, 110B, in the Kansas Union to pick up an application form and sign up for an interview time, said Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior and KU-Y co-president yesterday. Interviews began last night for 1970-71 KU-Y cabinet positions. The positions open are: publicity chairman, financial resources chairman, children's chairman, special activities chairman, faculty firesides chairman, youth friendship chairman (two positions open), Operation Tutor Match chairman, Rock Chalk producer, Rock Chalk business manager and international gift fair chairman (tentative position). Interviews will continue on Wednesday and Thursday from 6:30- 10 p.m. Interviews are also tonight for those interested in being on the Model United Nations and Model Organization of American States Planning Committee. Miller quote corrected Tim Miller, Wichita graduate student, said that he was incorrectly quoted in Tuesday's Kansan as saying he agreed with the courts decision and that no fraud was committed in the recent student elections. Miller said Tuesday, "I agree there was a basis for the courts decision, but rather than no fraud was committed, I said no fraud was proved." There were grounds other than fraud, Miller said, such as negligence which in his opinion should have Apr. 8 1970 2 KANSAN reversed the courts decision and declared the elections invalid. AWS undergoes changes The Associated Women Students (AWS) is changing its name. In the future, AWS will be known as the Commission on the Status of Women of the University of Kansas, said Reagon O'Neill Rheinfrank, AWS president. The Commission will concentrate on the same basic philosophy of the old AWS, but it will no longer be composed of required representatives but of open membership of concerned women, Mrs. Rheinfrank said. "This will insure that our mem- KU journalism senior winner, photo contest James Ryun, Wichita senior, won a $100 scholarship for photojournalism in the William Randolph Hearst Foundation's Journalism Awards Program. Taking first in the competition was John R. Fulton Jr., Indiana University senior. Fulton was awarded a $1,000 scholarship by the contest judges who considered 19 other finalists from colleges and universities throughout the nation. The $55,200 journalism awards program awarded eight other scholarship winners including: Michael Hayman, University of Nebraska, $700; John Nollendorf, University of Nebraska, $400; Richard L. Olsenius, University of Minnesota, $250; Sandra Eisert, Indiana University, $100; Alan R. Kamuda, Ohio University, $100; Jim Richardson, Kansas State University, $100; Paul Levin, University of Maryland, $100; and Roger Nystrom, University of Minnesota, $100. All are seniors except Kamuda, a sophomore. The universities the students attend will receive identical grants. The contest judges were Robert E. Gilka, National Geographic Magazine's director of photography; Rich Clarkson, photo director of the Topeka Capital Journal; and Sam C. Pierson Jr., of the Houston Chronicle and past president of the National Press Photographers Association. bershift is active, interested and self-initiated," she said. The organization will continue its membership in the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students, she said. Also awarded in the competition were foundation scrolls for the entries of: Jacalyn Hartman, Boston University; Stephen R. Ward, Iowa State University; Peter J. Menzel, Boston University; Brian Payne, University of Washington; T. Craig Ligibel, University of Missouri; William Tiernan, West Virginia University; Grant Haller, University of Washington; Gary L. Gaynor, University of Arizona; Richard J. Snyder, University of Colorado; and Gina Urbina, San Fernando Valley State College. The Commission is currently seeking University women living either on campus or off campus for the position of president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer, Mrs. Rheinfrank said. Applications have been distributed in the individual women's living groups, but more are available at the Dean of Women's office. Applications must be returned to the Dean of Women's office by Wednesday at 5 p.m. Interviews will be held Wednesday evening and the election of officers will be held in the living groups on Monday, Mrs Rheinfrank said. The awards program, held in cooperation with the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism, comprises one photojournalism and six news writing categories, with championship brackets in each division. She said that all candidates should have had some previous AWS experience to be eligible for office. SUA Classical Film Series Throne of Blood Akira Kurosawa, Japan 1957 Wed., April 8 7 & 9 p.m. Woodruff Aud. 75c Public education conference set for April 9-11 A symposium on "Behavior Analysis in Education in 1970" will be held April 9-11 in the Kansas Union, said Charles Salzberg, conference manager. Salzberg said 23 scholars from 13 universities will give presentations relating to public education in the first of a planned annual symposium. Papers will be presented all day April 9 and 10 with formal presentations scheduled for the evenings, he said. The conference is sponsored by the U.S. Office of Education through its "Follow Through" program in cooperation with the KU department of human development and family life... From 1943 to 1946, Senator James B. Pearson served as a Navy pilot based at the Olathe Naval Air Station. For Complete Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. St. 824 Mass. St. VI 3-3012 SHELBY LADYBUG makes it... at the ... Country House Country House Country at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown VL 3-5755 Uptown VI 3-5755 --- Photo by Ron Bishop Cause... Three to four molotov cocktails were thrown at two windows of the Animal Radioactive Research Lab west of the Buildings and Grounds Garage at 3:15 a.m. this morning. Edgartown case closed EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) — A fourth investigation into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne lasted only three hours and 15 minutes. It added nothing to the public knowledge of what happened on Chappaquiddick Island the night of July 18, 1969, but did open the way for the release of the secret inquest into Miss Kopechne's death. The Dukes County Grand Jury questioned four persons peripherally connected with the Kopechine case Tuesday, then announced it had no action to take. District Attorney Edmund Dinis said this meant the case was closed and he would notify the Superior Court clerk there was no proposed prosecution. This would allow release of the impounded inquest transcript under state Supreme Court rules. It should be made public in a few days. Miss Kopechne, 28, drowned in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's car. Twenty grand jurors sat two hours and 15 minutes Monday and one hour Tuesday, at standard pay of $14 per day, to question the four persons. Was it, in effect, a token investigation? The special session was requested March 17 by the Jury foreman, and Dinis on March 24 concurred in the request. Shortly before 11 a.m. Tuesday, the foreman, Leslie H. Leland, reported to the judge: "The grand jury has no present indictments." It was reported the grand jury had asked for the locked up manuscript and the judge's report of the secret inquest here in January-764 pages covering four days of testimony by 27 prime witnesses—and had denied it. Apr. 8 KANSAN 3 1970 Moonshot in doubt- (Continued from page 1) vinced Apollo 13 commander James A. Lovell is immune to German measles. But they were so unsure about command module pilot—Thomas K. Mattingly and lunar module pilot Fred W. Haise that chief astronaut physician Dr. Charles A. Berry ordered new blood samples of these two taken Tuesday night and rushed to the Manned Spacecraft Center Biomedical Laboratory in Houston, A discrepancy in results of blood samples taken earlier of Mattingly and Haise left project officials concerned not only about the health of the astronauts, but also about the validity of the tests upon which they hoped to base a decision whether to launch Saturday or postpone the mission until May 9. Berry learned Monday the prime Apollo 13 crewmen had been exposed to German measles through working closely with backup astronaut Charles Duke, who came down with the disease last weekend. Berry said if Lovell, Mattingly and Haise "have no antibodies to this virus at the present time, the odds are very high that they would get it." If any of the astronauts show definite signs of contracting the measles, the Saturday takeoff on the 10-day mission would almost certainly be postponed until May 9, the next date on which the sun will be in position to provide proper lighting for the tricky touchdown on the moon. Although their medical status was in doubt, the astronauts held to their pre-flight training schedule. They went through a final rehearsal of the moon landing with mission controllers monitoring them Tuesday, and today planned to practice docking the two spacecraft in lunar orbit and key phases of the moonwalks of Lovell and Haise. A day-by-day list of highlights from the flight plan of Apollo 13, America's third lunar landing, set for launch April 11 at 2:13 p.m. EST with astronauts James A. Lovell, Thomas K. Mattingly and Fred W. Haise: Saturday, April 11—Launch, television from earth orbit, blast out toward the moon. Sunday, April 12-Course correction opportunity, television, mandatory course change to take dead aim on the moon. Monday, April 13—Course correction opportunity. Tuesday, April 14-Television, final outward-bound course adjustment chance, blast into lunar orbit. Wednesday, April 15—Television of landing site from altitude of nine miles, Lovell and Haise make moon landing at 9:55 p.m. Thursday, April 16- Two televised moonwalks by Lovell and Haise to gather rocks; Mattingly conducts scientific experiments in lunar orbit. Friday, April 17—Blast off from lunar surface, television, jettison empty landing craft and crash it into moon. Saturday, April 18—Start back toward earth, two television shows. Sunday, April 19—First home- ward-bound chance to adjust course. Monday, April 20—Course correction opportunity, final telecast. Tuesday, April 21—Last chance to correct aim, splashdown. HELP FOR DISADVANTAGED PHILADELPHIA (UPI)—Disadvantaged students here can now train for an aerospace or aviation job while studying for their high school diplomas The Academy of Aerospace and Aviation—a joint venture of government, civic groups and industry—opened here with 42 students. They are taking courses in airframe and powerplant mechanics, electronics, passenger service or pilot training. Upon completion of the required courses, students receive a high school diploma and an academy certificate recognized by participating aerospace and aviation *firms in the area. Air traffic controllers 'sick,' claims Iowa psychiatrist WASHINGTON (UPI) — Dr. Wayne Sands, a psychiatrist from Des Moines, Iowa, told a federal court Tuesday that about half the nation's air controllers should be in bed because they are too sick or tired to work. Sands also said that 50 to 60 per cent of the controllers need psychiatric care and that an abnormally high number suffer from ulcers, high blood pressure and diabetes. Air controlling involves more stress than any profession he has encountered, Sands said. Sands was the key witness for the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) at a hearing on a government motion to cite PATCO for contempt of court. This motion was based on the "sick-out" of controllers that has cut air traffic in half and caused delays at some major airports. The government contends PATCO has violated a temporary restraining order against encouraging or conducting an illegal strike. The "sick-out" was in its 14th day Tuesday and the Federal Aviation Administration said the situation was about the same as Monday when 79 per cent of the controllers reported for work. F. Lee Bailey, the criminal lawyer who is PATCO's executive director, asked how many men would be absent if every controller who was too sick or fatigued to work staved in bed. "Oh, I'd say about half," Sands testified. Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn Photo by Ron Bishop Result... Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor of operations at KU, and a Lawrence Public Safety officer investigate a blackened building exterior and a broken window caused by molotov cocktails thrown at the Animal Radio-active Research Lab early this morning. none of the molotov cocktails went through the windows. Campus and city police were kept busy Tuesday night and early this morning by several acts and threats of violence. Ship to return PHNOM PENH (UPI) — The hijacked U.S. munitions ship Columbia Eagle with its cargo of napalm bombs will be returned Wednesday to the U.S. government, Cambodian officials announced today. The captain of the ship, which was en route to Thailand when it was hijacked, and its 12-man crew will sail the vessel from the Cambodian port of Ream after ceremonies marking its release. Holiday Inn® AMERICA THE NATIONS INNKEEPER® Gary Porteous, Innkeeper 23rd & Iowa 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 Maine Fire Department Rita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper Call In Your Order! V13-9588 "MOOREBURGER" HAS BY FAR THE BEST HAMBURGER IN TOWN. COME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF! WANT THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY? 1414 W.6th MOORE BURGER MALTS SHAKES ABBIE HOFFMAN TONIGHT! APRIL 8 8:00 PM ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SUA MINORITY DEMINISM FORUM SUA MINORITY DEPARTURE FORUM KANSAN COMMENT NRA and bombs In the past few years the National Rifle Association (NRA) has fought diligently to preserve our right to bear arms. Whenever the cry went out to pass strict laws governing the sale, transportation and use of firearms, the NRA has muffled that cry. The time has come again for the NRA to fight for those rights. Now the federal government is seeking to deprive citizens of their explosives. Because of the recent bombings throughout the country, President Nixon has asked Congress for strict laws governing the sale, transportation and use of explosives. The NRA need alter their gun control arguments only slightly to fight explosive control. For example: The Constitution guarantees each and every citizen the right to bear arms. It is a basic right necessary for the preservation of home and country. Explosives are arms. If the federal government establishes controls over explosives, it will be only the first step toward dictatorship. History bears this argument out. Hitler issued laws controlling arms in Germany. Without explosives, his opponents had to sit and watch as he established his brutal tyranny and plunged the whole world into disaster. If federal controls are placed on explosives, those controls will harm only the good, peace-loving citizens of our country. There will be no decline in the crime rate, as many predict. On the contrary, the crime rate will rise sharply. Criminals will run rampant knowing that their victims do not have protective explosives. What man can sleep soundly knowing that he lacks an explosive booby trap to surprise a lurking criminal? Bumper stickers—"Register criminals, not explosives"—should be distributed to alert the public to the grave dangers it faces if the federal government is allowed to overstep its bounds. Explosive control laws will be a great hindrance to those hobbyists who might wish to add a few items to their intriguing collections of TNT, nitroglycerin and hand grenades. Most important, explosives in the home of every loyal American will fight communism. The Communists will think twice before trying to sweep into our country if every household has a munitions dump. —Mike Rieke 27 JAN. 1843 DYNASTY OF MARY SMITH There is a cigarette for the two of you hearing voices— To the editor: After three years in the School of Fine Arts, it has become apparent to me that mandatory attendance must be ranked somewhere below force on the academic stupidity scale. For reasons unknown to me, many instructors feel that 40 hours of class are equal to 40 hours of knowledge and experience. Indeed, there is experience—that of being confined to drab, overcrowded rooms where imminent distraction becomes one's excuse for not working. The incentive to work passes into the blahs and students pass the time opening windows, condemning the instructor and taking breaks. The main motivating force for working in class is not a creative, liberal environment, but only that it is more convenient to use class time rather than free time. Whatever the reason for the department's policy and the instructor's compliance on the issue of attendance, there is a valid criticism of their method-academic purpose. When the credits are stamped on the grade sheets, they should be the product of effective work and effort, not time spent with classmates conferring about the number of holes and scratches on a desk. To think that a classroom experience is the ultimate experience is ridiculous. Ideally it should be; but there are few ideal humans in the world and none of them are here. If courses were taught properly and the method was valid, this would be enough incentive for high attendance. In most cases classes are improperly taught and the method is invalid; so the department has no alternative but to require attendance regardless of academic value. As explained to me by the dean, this is and always has been the policy. I suppose this is supposed to justify the policy, but the policy has been antiquated by progressive students in a stagnant situation. Instructors can play all the tricks for a good show of heads, but passing a course because of regular attendance says nothing of performance. Then there is the way the curriculum is slicked up in order to put all the required courses under a few instructors. Whereas progression in one's major is obtained by a series of continuing courses in one's major, this should not apply to professors. If a required course is taught by someone who is prejudiced against or unappreciative of one's style, one's only alternative is to not enroll and wait out that instructor's tenure before graduating. The choice of instructors is exceptionally limited but exceptionally important. I suggest that if the goal of this department is to continue an orderly educational process, it should concern itself more with progressive education and less with the surviving order. Gary M. Glandening Salina junior LEFT WING EXTREMISTS THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Down mit der fascist pigs und up mit der new order.! THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription费;$6 a semester; $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 600-7250 (advertisements, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students with 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 Illff News Editor... Donna Shrader Editorial Editors... Joe Naead, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rlekke Sports Editors... Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver Makeup Editors... George Wilkes Wire Editor... Ken Cummins Women's Sports Editors... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Reviews Editors... Genia Bernich, Rich Geary Assistant Campus Editors... Macki Phillips, Mike Walker Assistant News Editors... Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffingwell 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 Bassinon Classified Manager ... Shelley Bray Promotion Manager ... Jim Huggins Service Manager ... John Lagos A young man stands on a raised platform in front of an apartment building. He is wearing a light-colored shirt and dark pants, holding a small object in his hands. In the background, there are two individuals sitting on the ground near a tree trunk. The building has a wooden exterior with large windows and balconies. Ennui It's such a Bore Being always Poor. Langston Hughes FILMS: truth, laughter By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" is a rarity among recent movies: a slick, very manufactured Hollywood comedy that treats its subject (modern attitudes toward sex) with freshness, honesty and originality. At first glance, it looks somewhat artificial, but it digs into some of the myths about the new morality (which is getting pretty old) with wit and liveliness and may make more than a few people see—and laugh at—themself in the four title characters. Bob and Carol are a young, upper-middle-class, self-consciously "with-it" couple, who become turned on to a free, open sexual life during a weekend sensitivity session at a mountain spa, and return to convert their more conventional friends, Ted and Alice, who have all the blocks, repressions and neuroses about sex common to almost everyone. Ted and Alice come around slowly, and, finally, all four are in bed together in a Las Vegas hotel, where they realize that they've been working ridiculously hard for something they don't really want or need. This final scene may seem a cop-out to some, but it is the only honest way the film could end—with everyone coming nicely down to earth. The movie's excellence lies in its script, by Larry Tucker and Paul Mazursky, constructed in a way that lets every scene really reach us, with dialogue that rings true. No frenetic cutting or slap-dash continuity here; the story is built of long, smoothly-played sequences that probe deeply into the characters and their interrelationships. Delightful performances also make this movie a treat. Elliot Gould and Dyan Cannon, as the last two title characters, are brilliantly natural, especially Miss Cannon in a scene with a psychiatrist that is staggering in its perception and insight. Robert Culp, acting in his familiar "I Spy" style, is excellent as Bob, though sometimes he seems too casual and too improvisatory to be believed. Only Natalia Wood as Carol fails to register. As a star, she is very manufactured herself and can't help look and perform as if she's made from tough, shiny plastic. Apr. 8 1970 KANSAN 5 Academy Award Goldie Hawn Best Supporting Actress walter mattiad & goldie hawit inario berman cactus Flower TECHNICOLOR THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA Eve. 7:30 - 9:30 Adults $1.50 Children 75c 图 WATER MATTARD GOLDIE HAWN INARIO BEROMAN cactus Flower TECHNICOLOR THE Hillcrest2 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA I'll just put the text here. Let me re-read the image. It's a black and white photo of a person wearing a suit, leaning back with their hands on a surface. The background is blurred, likely indicating an indoor setting with bookshelves or a desk. There's no clear text to transcribe directly. I'll just provide the content as it appears. If you need more specific details, please provide additional information about the image. I NEVER CRY AT WEDDINGS OR FUNERALS . . . I DON'T SEND CHRISTMAS CARDS . I DON'T SEND CHRISTMAS CARDS . . . & I D'CHEAT ON MY WIFE . . . IF I HAD THE TIME I'VE ONLY ONE SOFT SPOT: A MAN IS INNOCENT UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY! PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents PARKER THE LAWYER IN COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE BARRY NEWMAN HAROLD GOULD EVE. 7:00 & 9:15 MAT. SAT. & SUN. 2:00 ADULTS $1.50 CHILDREN 75c Hillcrest MORE THAN JUST A MOVIE IT'S A SPECIAL EVENT!! MORE THAN JUST A MOVIE IT'S A SPECIAL EVENT!! A Distinguished Company Breathes Life Into Shakespeare's Lusty Age of HARRY SALTZMAN PRESENTS AN ORSON WELLES FILM ("CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT") D. Blakeman PATRICK BROWN MIDDLE EAST FILM STUDIO FaLSTaFF STARRING ORSON WELLES · JEANNE MOREAU · MARGARET RUTHERFORD · JOHN GIELGUD · MARINA VLADY KEITH BAXTER DIRECTED BY ORSON WELLES · RELEASED BY PEPPERCORN-WORMSER, INC. FILM ENTERPRISES Hillcrest3 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA EVE. 7:15 & 9:25 MAT.SAT.& SUN.2:15 Special Limited Engagement Adults 1.50,Child 75c Technically, the moviemakers seem to be very cautious, and occasionally, the film's high spirits droop slightly due to Mazursky's heavy-handed direction. But imagination, wit and sensitivity, not "technique," are what keep "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" well above water and firmly down-to-earth. NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? STARTS TONIGHT Eve. 7:20 - 9:30 Granada THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? 67 67 Granada THEATRE ... telephone VI 5-5783 Adults 1.50, Child .75 "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice is about four TOM HARRIS people who love each other. What's wrong with that? COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION NATALIE WOOD ROBERT CULP ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON Executive Producer M. J. FRANCHARD + Technochaus baked by LARRY TICKER - Dedicated by PAUL MAURIZAN C 2nd WEEK Matinee 2:30 Daily Eve. 7:15 - 9:40 Varsity TMLATR...telephone VI 3-1065 'Midnight Cowboy' is year's top film By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor After such tremendous suspense and buildup, the Academy Award ceremony can never help but be a disappointment. So rarely do one's favorite artists win, and so rarely do even those obviously deserving of the award walk off with it, that the whole thing sometimes seems like a joke; a silly in-game for the Hollywood old guard, with no purpose save publicity for the various movies. Last night's activities occasionally brought that feeling to life, though the show was quite gratifying in many ways. First of all, the image-conscious academy members simply could not ignore the unmistakable fact that "Midnight Cowboy" was the best picture of the year. That such a picture was even nominated was a breakthrough of sorts, and it's good to know that those people can recognize a genuine work of art when they see one. High points of the ceremony included a delightful montage of film clips from Cary Grant's old movies, though Grant looked depressingly old and tired when he accepted his special award; a few dance steps by Fred Aaire, who is beginning to show his years too; and an all-too-short series of interviews with world film directors—Bergman, Fellini, Kurosawa, etc. Entertainment-wise, the rest of the show was a string of low points, reaching the all time depth with Shani Wallis singing—yes, singing—the names of those nominated for best adaptation of a musical score. It was pre-ordained that John Wayne would be chosen best actor; there was no getting around the fact. He has been a fixture in Hollywood, playing the same role, for 40 years, and it's best to just sit back and accept the academy's irrationality in cases like these. Big John made his presence known at various times during the evening, to prepare us for the inevitable, and even went so far as to mention that he does his work with his clothes on, which is reassuring. At least Maggie Smith deserved her award for her superbly controlled, solidly professional performance in "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," though Liza Minnelli brought more depth and range to Pookie Adams in "The Sterile Cuckoo." Gig Young was excellent in "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" but Jack Nicholson gave life and wit to "Easy Rider." Goldie Hawn proved herself an adept comedy actress in "Cactus Flower," but it was a sin to overlook Catherine Burns' miraculous portrait of dumpy Rhoda in "Last Summer." Good choices—adequate choices —But not great choices. As for the technical awards, who's to know who deserved what? In most cases, good cinematography means you can see the actors, and good sound means you can hear them. The evening's only really maddening disappointment was the honoring of William Goldman for his original screenplay for "Butch Cassidy." With the flawless scripts of "The Wild Bunch" and "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" in competition, it seems a crime to award Goldman's collection of lame gags and one-liners. The evening's big relief was that Bob Hope gave his traditional opening monologue and was seen or heard for but little the rest of the show. One cannot help but be slightly schizoid about the Academy Awards. The suspense and the John Wayne chosen as Oscars' best actor; 'Butch Cassidy' 'Hello Dolly' each win four HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — The 1969 Academy Award winners in the 42nd annual Oscar competition Tuesday: Best achievement in sound: "Hello, Dolly," by Jack Solomon and Murray Spivack. Live action shorts: "The Magic Machines," by Joan Keller Kern. Cartoon short subjects: "It's Tough to be a Bird," by Ward Kimball for Disney Productions. Best achievement in cinematography: "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," Conrad Hall. Best achievement in film editing: "Z," by Francois Bonnot. Best achievement in special visual effects: "Marooned," by Robbie Robertson. Best score of a musical picture: "Hello, Dolly," by Lennie Hayton and Lionel Newman. Best original score: "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," Burt Bacharach. Best achievement in documentary production: Features-"Arthur Rubinstein—the Love of Life," Barnard Chevry. Short subjects-"Czechoslovakia, 1968." Denis Sanders and Robert M. Fresco. (2) Photo by Marilyn McMullen Dondaro, played by Steve Anderson, Topeka sophomore, listens to his mistress. Janet Svoboda, Chapman freshman, tell him she has taken a husband in his prolonged absence. "Kyogen" continues through April 12 in the Experimental Theatre. Dondaro hears the truth French Club speaker will discuss plays The French Club, Le Cercle Francais, will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room. Kenneth White, associate professor of French and Italian, will speak on two plays by Ionesco which will be shown in Lawrence next week. Best achievement in art direction: "Helly, Dolly," John Decuir, Jack Martin Smith and Herman Blumenthal. Set decoration: "Helly, Dolly," Walter M. Scott, George Hopkins and Raphael Brettoh. Best achievement in costume design; "Anne of the Thousand Days," Margaret Furse. Best foreign language film: "Z," Algeria. Best performance by an actor in a supporting role: Gig Young, "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" Best performance by an actress in a supporting role: Goldie Hawn, "Cactus Flower." Best song: "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head," Burt Bacharach and Hal David. Best screenplay based on material from another medium: \*\*\* By VERNON SCOTT BFT Hollywood Correspondent Placard carrying Chicanos chanted at movie stars stepping from limousines for the 42nd annual Academy Awards Tuesday night crying for more Mexican-Americans in films. Despite the uproar outside, arriving celebrities waved at bleachers filled with cheering fans. Among the early arrivals were Jean Peters, Raquel Welch, Jerry Lewis, Angie Dickinson, Cliff Robertson, Kim Darby and nominees Jane Fonda, Genevieve Bujold, Jon Voight. Biggest cheer was reserved for John Wayne, popular favorite to win the Oscar for best actor in "True Grit." "Midnight Cowboy," Waldo Salt. Best story and screenplay based on material not previously published: "Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid," William Goldman. Best achievement in directing: "Midnight Cowboy," John Schlesinger. Best performance by an actor: John Wayne, "True Grit." Best performance by an actress: Maggie Smith, "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie." Best picture of the year: "Midnight Cowboy" produced by Hal Wallis. tradition and the personalities have their tantalizing elements, and it's interesting, sometimes, to know the politics of the organization. But the elaborate process of presentation is glossy and phony, as only Hollywood can make things glossy and phony, and the selections are erratic, to say the least. Surely more than one film buff turned his set off in disgust last night and vowed never again to watch the travesty, but chances are most of them will be sitting expectantly in front of the tube again next year. 6 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 Miles Davis In A Silent Way CS 9875 The ever-versatile Miles Davis lends a contemporary flavor to compositions like "It's About Time," "In a Silent Way," and "Morris' Fast Train From Memphis to Harlem." On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Miles Davis In A Silent Way On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S BRITISH ISLES Rome SPAIN Mediterranean ITALY Paris France England BRITISH ISLES Rome SPAIN Mediterranean ITALY Paris France England the INTERNATIONAL STUDENT I.D. is offering many student discounts in EUROPE Now available at the SUA OFFICE cost $1.00 groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" 1970 Design student surveys her assignment for the day Spring designs at Potter Two design classes at the University of Kansas were instructed to make something interesting yesterday that would float or fly, said June Lucas, Arlington Heights, Ill., freshman and student in one of the classes. The students were asked to interpret their own idea of an object, Miss Lucas said. They took their projects to Potter Lake as shown in the pictures. Styrofoam objects, balls, plastic bottles and intertubes were among the types of objects used, Miss Lucas said. Her project consisted of plastic bottles, made water-proof by pieces of inner tube, assembled to present an interesting effect to the eye, she said. Other pieces of styrofoam were constructed to give the effect of dice. Balloons were stuffed in the legs of nylon stockings to give an interesting interpretation by another student in the class. WESTERN SUMMER One student's answer to the Loch Ness monster A Floating crap game? Photos by Bruce Bernstein Overseeing a floating sculpture show Mothers juggle classes, family By CHARLENE MULLER Kansan Staff Writer Motherhood is no longer considered a full-time job. Most young women who have small children are involved in more outside activities than their mothers were, and still are not neglecting their families. Mrs. David Nixon, Pratt sophomore, who has an 11-month-old daughter, Kim, is enrolled this semester in 16 class hours. Although her daughter and husband come first, she believes it to be an advantage to her family that she is attending the University. "Each day before class, I take Kim to the babysitter. Because she is able to play with other Women children she is not as timid as those who stay home all day with their mothers when they are young." Studying at home is a problem, Mrs. Nixon admits. "I go to campus two hours before classes and stay two hours later," she says. "Between classes I use every spare minute to catch up on reading." Mrs. Nixon doesn't have time to make a big production of cleaning house and preparing meals. Her husband, she says, helps out in these domestic areas. Another KU coed, Mrs. Jim 8 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 Dwight Boring* says... PETER SMITH "If You'd Like to Know How to Get the most for your life insurance dollars, contact me and I'll tell you about College Life's BENEFACTOR, a famous policy designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred life insurance risks. No obligation. Give me a ring now." *Dwight Boring 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA Banks, Grand Island, Neb., sophomore, studies and does household chores after 2-year-old Braxston goes to bed. "Fairness is the principle Jim and I use in raising our son," she says. "If I have an exam Monday and haven't studied by Sunday night, I won't infringe on Braxston's play time to cram. I'd rather stay up all night than make him unhappy." ...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Mrs. Jim Gilbert, graduate student in speech communication and human relations and instructor of speech, has a 5-year-old son, Chad, who attends KU nursery school. "My hectic schedule has forced me to become organized, and make excellent use of time. We work together as a family so our busy schedules don't interfere too much with our home lives." Discipline was discussed by all three KU mothers. Mrs. Gilbert said her child rearing practices had been influenced by her husband's profession (psychology). She agrees with current thinking in psychology to reinforce good behavior and ignore bad. She calls herself a strict disciplinarian and said she expected a lot from her son but that he seldom disappointed her. Mrs. Banks thinks it's important to be flexible. She does not believe in punishing her child except in extreme cases when his Mrs. Nixon said most parents tend to ignore good behavior. safety and well-being are involved. She believes her son should become independent. Discipline, she said, should be kept at a minimum. A parent should never say "no" without giving a reason. Parents, she said, should not become authority figures to their children but friends. This way they will be respected. Another young mother who is not a student and was not identified because she is unwed, carries her seven-month-old son around campus in a pack on her back. "When a child is playing quietly, a parent thinks he should leave him alone. I always try to reinforce my daughter with affection and praise at these times. It seems to work better than attending to her bad behavior with scolding or punishment." "My son goes everywhere with me," she said. "He is a happy baby and likes people. He is no trouble at all." She thinks honesty is the most important thing a parent can teach a child. "When my son learns why his father and I never married," she said, "he'll understand that the reason was an honest one. The most important thing is that he'll always know who his father is." A woman holds a baby in her arms as she looks into a mirror. KU Motherhood G NG SPRING HAS SPRUNG! R SP P S SUPER BUG VW 1967, 76 h.p., racing suspension, stereo tape hook up, good tires, excellent condition throughout. $1500 FIAT ROADSTER $1000 GTO 1966, 5 speed, near perfect white exterior with blk. interior. TRIUMPH TR-3 1959, metallic blue with white top, bug eyes, wire wheels, good tires, needs interior work. AUSTIN HEALY 3000 MARK III 1966, yellow with blk. conv.top,blk.interior deluxe wheel covers Motorola stereo speakers and hook up,engine like new,4 spd. 1967, attractive white with blk. top, blk. interior, wire wheels, excellent condition. $2300 TRIUMPH TR-4 1965, Red with white top, fully equipped, good tires. TRIUMPH TR-4A 1962, white with red interior, excellent paint and new tires. AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE $1500 MGB 1965, British Racing Green, excellent body, overhauled transmission. $1400 $1400 1967, IRS, beautiful British racing green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelin X tires. $800 $1800 TRIUMPH TR-4 1964, British Racing Green, deluxe interior excellent shape throughout. $1200 S CARS SPORTS COMPETITION SPORTS CARS $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mi. E.of Bridge on Hgwy.10 Questions answered Faculty gets ROTC report A report by the University Senate temporary committee on ROTC was unveiled to the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences faculty Tuesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science and a member of the committee on ROTC, read the report and then answered various questions which members of the faculty asked. The report called for the substitution of regular University courses for as many ROTC courses as possible. In addition to the University courses, the military science student would take a related military course. The student would receive academic credit for both courses. Several members of the faculty objected to this point. They said it would be difficult to find military men who were qualified to teach academic subjects in the University as well as military courses. Others objected to the cost of hiring extra instructors for these new courses. Lujan said the committee's position was between those who would give no credit to any military science courses and those who would give credit to all military work. Under their plan, he said, courses such as drill and military discipline would not receive academic credit. The report stated that if a substitute course could not be found for a military science course, then the course would be team-taught by military and academic instructors. Several faculty members objected to this point. They argued that some courses were so military that regular academic instructors could not contribute to them. They argued also that courses such as these should bring no academic credit. Lujan replied that it would be unfair to penalize a student who wished to pursue these fields for his career even though the courses might be unrelated to the academic programs of the University. Lujan said the report was a preliminary one and if it was approved the committee would work out the specific problems. A copy of the report has been mailed to the University Senate Executive Committee. FUR SEALS RETURN SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (UPI)—The Alaska fur seal has reappeared on the California coast to breed again for the first time in 130 years. Ecology Action joins city spring clean-up Lawrence and KU are getting a spring cleaning April 1 to 12. Members of the Ecology Action organization were at work last Saturday and Sunday cleaning the campus. The next and final cleanup day for KU will be Saturday. Jim Swindler, Pratt freshman and organizer of the KU cleanups, said that a group of 12 students on Saturday and 15 on Sunday collected 80 or 90 bags of trash. He said there were probably a dozen independent collectors. Swindler said those who wished to participate in this Saturday's cleanup, the last day of the cleanup, should meet at the Ecology Action office in Wesley Hall at 10 a.m. Swindler expressed gratitude to three organizations that helped with the cleaning, Green Construction Co., he said, gave the use of two trucks to move the trash, the Junior Chamber of Commerce gave 100 trash bags and the Lawrence Sanitation Department aided with men working overtime and the use of their trucks. Bags of trash collected Saturday should be taken to 12th and Massachusetts, Swindler said. Jobs overseas plentiful for American students Summer work in foreign countries for American students is being sponsored by a non-profit organization in New York. The Council on International Education is sponsoring summer work programs in Great Britain, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, a release reported. The council will help qualified students to obtain working papers and to find jobs. Most of the job opportunities are unskilled types such as work in stores, hotels, resorts and offices. The release said that wages were not high,but were adequate to cover living expenses and some traveling costs. To get into the program, students must apply and be accepted, then pay $25 to the Council. In return the student is sent information about the countries and employment opportunities. Orientation sessions and overnight accommodations are provided when students arrive for the first night in the country. More information about the program can be obtained by writing the Council on International Educational Exchange, Department ISE, 777 United Nations Plaza, New York, New York 10017. KU professors to debate on population growth rate Two scientists from UC Santa Cruz discovered a tiny colony on San Miguel Island near Santa Barbara, about 3,000 miles from the animal's present homeland in the Bering Sea. Two University of Kansas professors, concerned about the continuing increase in the population growth rate, will present their fourth annual "Population debate" at 11:30 a.m. Friday in room 226 of Lindley Hall. Nunley said Monday that he is taking more of an environmental approach to the problem in that, to alleviate future overcrowding of cities, the growth rate of the population should be slowed down. In other words, he said, better and more effective methods of birth control should be used. Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography, and Robert W. McColl, associate professor of geography, will debate about the problems and possible solutions to the increasing population growth rate. Nunley said that McColl, who KANSAN 9 was not available for comment on his stand, is taking more of a "human conquest" type of view, that is, man is on the earth to control his environment and that numbers of people are really not important because we do not have a true understanding of what the problem really is. The debate itself, Nunley said, is designed to be more of a "team teaching" effort than a real debate. This gives the students a chance to formulate their own opinions by being exposed to two equally-balanced points of view. The Alaska fur seal is a hardy sea-going mammal once in danger of becoming extinct by overhunting. Tryouts for yell leader to be held April 21 Yell leader tryouts will be held at 7 p.m. April 21 in Allen Field House. Clinics for the purpose of learning cheers and techniques will be conducted at 8 p.m. April 9 and 14 in the Field House. In A Silent Way Miles Davis In A Silent Way CS 9875 The ever-versatile Miles Davis lends a contemporary flavor to compositions like "It's About Time" "In a Silent Way" and "Morin' Fast Train From Memphis to Harlem." On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S KIEF'S "SALE" on FAMOUS NAME BRAND SLACKS Valued to $12.00 Now SALE PRICED AT $5.00 Broken Sizes RossDISNEY MENS WEAR 811 Mass. Open Thurs. Till 8:30 p.m. IT'S HERE The LiBeRATED SHIRT! 417 by VAN HEUSEN* Turn thumbs down on uptight shirt fashions! Change over to Van Heusen "417" shirts with the liberated look! We have 'em now in a collection of wide awake stripes and solids. In your choice of the new longer point Brooke collar or the classic button-down style plus the no-ironing convenience of permanently pressed Vanopress. Rise up, rebels... It's time to spring for a new "417" shirt from Van Heusen. RossDISNEY MENS WEAR 811 MASS. VI 3-3160 University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $.75 --- OREAD BOOKSHOP & LIBRARY BOOKSTORE FOR SELECT PAPERBACKS SPRING BOOK SALE BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS April 8-18 SAVE 20 to 80% Come early for a variety of excellent publishers' remainders and other popular titles. Also many technical & reference titles, all at $1.95. OREAD BOOK SHOP 8:30 to 5:00 weekdays,10:00 to 1:00 Sat. Evidence of face lifting process... Adjustment essential for sororities By ANN MORITZ Kansan staff writer The sorority system has nationally been marked as a tool of tradition and conformity, a member of the establishment. Sororities at the University of Kansas may be showing evidence of a face-lifting process. Students want to be more independent in their way of living, said Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and the president of the Panhellenic Council. Sororities must continue to adjust to the independent attitudes and work them into their structure. Membership in a sorority does not offer all the opportunities many women would like to experience before leaving school, Miss Hoefer said. Sorority life is one way of living, but there are others to be tried. Sorority members cannot be singled out for criticism of non-involvement or isolation, Miss Hoefer said. "While not all sorority members are instrumental in instigating demonstrations and in planning anti-war rallies, a large per cent are actively involved in both academic and extra-curricular areas of the University," she said. A large number of students don't take full advantage of the activities or develop a full awareness and involvement in the campus, whether they live in a sorority or not, she said. It is easy for a person in a sorority to isolate herself if this is what she has in mind, Miss Hoefer said. Any living group can serve as a buffer between the individual and the University. There has been no diminishing of interest in sorority living at 12 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 KU, said Emily Taylor, KU dean of women. The number of rushees pledged from year to year has remained amazingly stable since the 1960 freshman rush, she said. In the 1969 fall rush, 486 girls began the process and 336 pledged. In the 1970 spring rush, which was just completed, she said 542 girls started at the beginning of rush and 335 pledged. Most of the houses have expanded in the last 10 years, Miss Taylor said. Two new houses have been accepted into the Panhellenic Council in that same period of time. There are two other sororities which exist outside the council membership. Discriminatory clauses no longer exist in the constitutions of any sorority member of the Panhellenic Council, Miss Taylor said. She said that some of the sororities never had such clauses. All members of the Council at KU have signed an agreement to hold no discrimination of University women on the basis of race, religion, color or national origin. Along with room and board, a sorority offers leadership opportunity, social activities, experience in one's own self government and informal and academic assistance to its members, Miss Hoefer said. Sororities also sponsor cultural events, speakers, guest faculty members and other events. Three sororites are now jointly involved in a community service project where they have raised $1200 to date, Miss Hoefer said. With continued success, she said, other houses may join in the project. Different houses have various other projects for community services. The Panhellenic Council has recently established an operating philanthropic committee and a council for cultural affairs, Miss Hoefer said. Losing junior and senior members in the houses is presently not a major problem in the sorority system at KU, Miss Hoefer said, but it has the potential of becoming one in future years. The Panhellenic Council has looked into the possibility of allowing seniors to move out of their houses without giving up their membership. Actives may presently move out of houses only for academic or financial reasons. Miss Hoefer said the alumnae groups have been both a help and hindrance to sororities at KU. Alumnae who serve as local advisers to chapters do an excellent job of helping the houses run smoothly, she said. But some of the rules and advice that comes from the national organization of each sorority is not as far reaching and progressive as may be desired. Miss Hoefer said participation of alums should be in the affairs that concern alums. The affairs of the girls should be handled by the girls alone, she said. This includes especially membership selection, chapter government and the formulation of house social policies. Dr. Doris M. Seward of the University of Kentucky spoke at the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) last October in Miami, Fla. She said the image of current sorority members does not match the old ideal of the traditional fraternity. She predicted that coming emphasis of fraternal living will be academic and possibly an agency of social concern. The continuing growth and strength of young people today. in the face of challenges from outside sources, lie in the ability to provide close personal relationships, a bond of friendship among persons of similar interests and the right of free and voluntary association, said Mrs. William Nash, a former chairman of the conference. The role of the sorority on today's college campus as pointed out by the NPC will depend on the difference in the student body from previous years and the changing characteristics of today's college women. Last fall, one sorority on campus was closed. The strain placed on the girls within, criticism from the outside and the general nature of any sort of selective system brought on the closing of the house, said Karen Elledge, Mason City, Iowa, senior and former president of the house. When members of the house took the effects of the system and circumstances personally, the battle became harder to fight, Miss Elledge said. If the stereotypes in sorority living of the last 50 years stay with us, another house may go off the hill in a few years, she said. The Greek houses were organized as intellectually stimulating, social institutions, she said. They have tended to become social instruments. Expert Electronic Diagnosis Precision Workmanship By Appointment Phone Ray Pickering 842-3939 THE ENGINE CLINIC Using SUN Equipment 315 N. 2nd RADIO SHACK Associated Store George Corbett, Owner NEW LOCATION 1000 Massachusetts Phone: VI 2-1566 Open 10-8:30 a.m. Daily 3 Compact Assimilation Recorder Large 5 Compact Convention Recorder 29'95 RADIO CASSETTE RECORDER - With All the Wanted Features Found in Higher Priced Recorders! - Single Knob Function Control - Automatic Level Control - Cassette Ejection Lever - Remote Control Microphone Designed by Realistic to give high-price performance at a very modest price! Instant-play solid state circuitry, AC adapter jack for use on house current, record safety interlock to prevent accidental erasure, fast forward and rewind controls. There's also a record and battery level indicator, an input for off-the-air recording and a remote control mike. With earphone, mike case, batteries. 3995 ne "JetSet" CTR-6 AC/Battery Portable Swing into the 70's with the low-cost, modern recording breakthrough — cassette! The CTR-6 makes it easy to record or play tapes anywhere you go. A single knob controls fast forward, stop, record, play and rewind. Built-in AC cord and earphone jack. Incomparable sound. Save on Compact Cassette Cartridges Radio Shack cuts the price without cutting the quality! Buy this excellent tensilized polyester recording tape at Radio Shack's low, low price. Comes with red and green polyester leaders for easy track identification. Polyester wafer pads with anti-static lubrication for long life. Each packed in a rugged, heavy duty case with protective keeper for auto storage. For even greater savings, buy at special 'quantity' prices below. 30 min. $1.09 60 min. $1.49 90 min. $1.99 120 min. $2.49 Former KU Chancellor receives institute honor A former KU chancellor, Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, will receive the Midwest Research Institute 1970 national citation for his achievements in medicine, education and communication. Murphy, who will receive the award at the annual dinner meeting of the MRI trustees May 12 in Kansas City, was chancellor at the University from 1951 to 1960. He is currently chairman of the board of the Times Mirror Co. in Los Angeles. The announcement was made Tuesday by George E. Powell Jr., chairman of the board of MRI Murphy, receiving the award during MRI's silver anniversary celebration, join a group of 13 other distinguished Americans who have been similarly honored with the MRI citation since it was first awarded to Ralph J. Cordiner, president of General Electric Co., in 1956. Charles Kimball, president of MRI, said Murphy was nationally recognized for his imaginative leadership and insight in the demanding area of corporate decision making. "He is that uncommon man," Kimbala said, "equally at home Apr. 8 1970 KANSAN 13 in many areas of human endeavor medicine and science, industry education, journalism and the arts." Murphy was appointed dean of the KU School of Medicine in 1948. During that time, he developed a health plan that encouraged physicians to extend their services to small Kansas communities. While he was chancellor of the University, he increased the institution's national stature by creating and building endowed professorships, gifted student programs, international education and library holdings. In 1960 he was appointed chancellor of UCLA where he directed the largest expansion of its history: $100 million in new buildings, three new schools-Fine Arts, Dentistry, and Architecture and Urban Development, and the development of a major research library. He was elected chairman and chief executive officer of the Times Mirror Co., which has extensive newspaper, telecommunications and educationally related activities. Murphy has been a trustee of MRI since 1950. He is a trustee of the Committee for Economic Development, the Urban Institute and the Menninger Foundation. NATIONAL CATTLEMAN'S ASSOCIATION MEAT PRICES HIGH HIGHER RIDICULOUS AGRICULTURE DEP'T. IMPORT QUOTAS THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL. PM. © ALL rights reserved 1976 Publication Hall, Milwaukee 'Believe me, madam. Our scale is a very accurate measure of weight.' Spring Is Here—(It's time to put away your wool clothes PHONE ACME For Refrigerated Box Storage FREE Box Storage and Moth-Proofing. All woolens are now Moth Proofed, Odor Proofed and Mildew Proofed Free! No additional charge other than the cleaning charge. Box storage is our facility for storing your winter garments for the summer. This Box is large and will hold any number of garments. All garments are cleaned before storing and will be freshly pressed when you are ready for them in the fall. Note: You don't have to pay for your cleaning until you pick it up in the Fall! INSURANCE FOR THE FIRST $300.00 VALUATION $3.95 2% Extra for Additional Valuation ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 Drago faces Hunter tonight Oakland trips Royals in season opener By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor KANSAS CITY—A sterling relief performance by Roland Fingers and home runs by Sal Bando and Don Mincher sparked the Oakland Athletics to a 6-4 opening day victory over the Kansas City Royals Tuesday before 18,127 fans in Municipal Stadium. Bando's two-run homer, a long shot down the left field line, sent Felipe Alou scampering home ahead of him in the Athletics three-run third inning. Center- KANSAN Sports fielder Rick Monday tallied the first run of the inning when he tripled off first baseman Mike Flore's outstretched glove and scored when Alou cracked a single to center. First baseman Mincher led off the fifth inning by blasting a Wally Bunker fastball over the right field fence, just inches inside the foul pole, to lift the Athletics to a 6-3 advantage. Oakland's starter, John "Blue Moon" Odom, picked up the initial win for the Athletics although he was forced to retire in the sixth when Bob Oliver led off the inning with a triple and scored on a wild pitch. KC Ruala Dick Drago Royals' righthander will face Jim "Catfish" Hunter tonight The struggling Odom was tagged for six hits, four runs and struck out three while issuing three base on balls in his five innings of action. Fingers stops Royals But Fingers came in to douse all the Royals' fireworks by setting down twelve of the next thirteen Kansas City hitters. Amos Otis' eighth inning single was the only blemish in Fingers' near-perfect four inning relief stint. The Athletics battered Royals' starter Bunker for six runs and nine hits, including five for extra bases, before he was lifted for a pinch hitter in the fifth. Oakland started the scoring for the day when shortstop Bert Campaneris opened the first with a triple to left-center and scored on Monday's solid double to right field. The Royals struck back to knot the score, 1-1, in the bottom of the first when Pat Kelly lined a single to center, took second when the ball skipped past Monday, and then scored on two infield outs. The Athletics scored again in the fourth when Monday walked, went to second on Bunker's balk and dashed home on Reggie Jackson's two-out single to right Royal relief pitchers Jim Rooker and Moe Drabowsky held the Athletics scoreless in the final four innings. The Royals will host Oakland again tonight at 7:30 in Municipal Stadium. Dick Drago will be on the mound for Kansas City and Jim "Catfish" Hunter will start for the Athletics. Hunter hurled a perfect game last year to become the only American League pitcher to do so since 1922. Acreage planted to rice in Texas now is five times greater than in 1930. SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS 1704 West 24th 842-1160 Beautiful one and two bedroom units NOW renting for summer and fall all units include: drapes . . . carpeting . . . air conditioning . . all electric kitchen with disposal . . pool . . laundry storage. . . furnished or unfurnished. Convenient location on bus route See them today Misses Detroit opener Tigers go on as McLain goes home WASHINGTON (UPI) — Denny McLain knows what he's doing. He had a choice of coming out to the ballpark or going back Golfers set for Missouri meet The KU golf team is busy this week preparing for a round-robin tournament this weekend at Missouri. The Jay hawks haven't fared well so far this year, but coach Wilbur Norton is certain his team will do better this weekend. In addition to KU and Misouri, teams from K-State, Nebraska, and Iowa State are entered in the tourney. Norton is expected to take the same five players to Missouri: David Ross, Arkansas City senior; Jack Rogers, Keokuk, Ia. senior; Warren Wood, Independence senior; Jim Demnerline, Paola freshman; and Craig DeLongy, Derby sophomore. Norton said, "What we need is good weather so that we can improve our game. I hope we'll do better at Missouri because the good weather this week has given us plenty of practice." In last weeks Oklahoma Intercollegiate Invitational at Shawnee, KU finished in a tie for ninth. The five Kansas golfers finished 61 strokes behind champion Oklahoma State with a total of 963. Low man for the 'Hawks was Ross with a 234 over the 54 holes. Other scores were Rogers with 241, Wood with 244, Dennerline with 245, and De-Longv with 250. KU finished seventh last year in the conference race. Oklahoma State is the defending champion. The conference race is decided each year in the Big Eight meet, which will be held May 15-16 in Lawrence. 14 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 Despite the lack of success Norton is still optimistic. "We've got some boys who are coming along," he said, "and I think they'll do real well once they get a chance to play." home to Lakeland, Fla., and he never wavered a moment. He went back home He went back home. Most of the 45,015 who came out to watch Monday's Detroit-Washington opener at miserably damp, ice-box-like Robert F. Kennedy Stadium envied him. They did everything they could to try to keep warm and then after four innings or so they did the smartest thing. They got up and left. President Nixon knew what he was doing too. He waited around in the White House where it was warm and let his young son-in-law, David Eisenhower, toss out the first ball in his place. Nixon did come out to the park in the fifth inning, though and stayed through the end. "I wish he'd gotten off completely," the outfielder said. "I don't see where anyone can say it was a mild penalty. I don't think Before the ball game got under way Al Kaline relaxed in the Tigers' clubhouse waiting around with all the others for the rain to let up. Kaline, who collected two of the Detroit's nine hits once the game began, was startling his 17th season with the club. Most people are saying McLain got off mildly. How did Kaline feel about the suspension? anything really was proven against Denny. All I know is I'm glad he's going to be back in baseball and back with our club. I think baseball needs him. We certainly need him." New Zealander Relays speaker Arthur Lydiard, New Zealand's national track coach, will be the guest speaker at the Chamber of Commerce dinner held for the coaches of KU Relays track teams. The annual dinner event, sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce's sports committee, will be at 6:30 p.m., April 17 at the Ramada Inn. Lydiard, one of the world's foremost authorities on track and field, has coached such sports figures as Olympians Peter Snell and Murray Halberg. THE HITE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685 — We Deliver — 9th & Ill. - Napkins - Candles - Table Covers · Paper Cups Stock Reduction Sale 50% Discount on All Party Items Also selected numbers of Eaton's Stationery DOORES PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLIES 927 Mass. VI 3-1833 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Depart: June 10, 12:15 p.m. Return: August 12, 7:10 p.m. Then you are going to New York Either way SUA can help. K. C. - New York $121.00 New York - Paris $249.00 "Where Good Printing Is a Habit Going to Europe? sua SCULPTURE BY TOBIAS THE OMNIBUS Ninth & Indiana exhibited through April 11 O PITCHER A hard throwing right hander Dennis Ranzau, a husky 6-4, 220-pound Sooner pitcher will be one of the many faces opposing the Hawks when they make their first conference start in a roadswing to Oklahoma this weekend. Ranzau compiled a 6-1 record last year and is looking for an even bigger senior year. He led the Sooners with 39 strikeouts and had the second lowest ERA, 2.29. Casper gunning for first Masters win AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) — Even though it backfired last year, Billy Casper plans to play it nice and easy in the Masters golf tournament. Casper, one of the all-time greats of the '60's but never a winner here in 13 tries, came within a stroke of winning the Masters last year after leading for three rounds. "There was nothing wrong with my plan last year," the 38-year-old Californian insisted. "I simply ran into a little bad luck on that final front nine and didn't have time to make it up." The Masters begins its 34th run over the par-72, 6,980-yard Augusta National Thursday morning. The course was to be closed to practice shortly after noon today to permit time for a final manicure. The firing is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. EST and, in keeping with a long masters tradition, the first twosome off the tee will include 87-year-old Freddy McLeod, the 1908 U.S. Open champion, and 85-year-old Jock Hutchison, the 1920 PGA chapm. The field will be cut to the low 44 scorers, and ties, and anyone else still within 10 strokes of the 36-hole leader after the second round Friday. The final two rounds, Saturday and Sunday, are being nationally televised CBS with no area blackout as prevailed here prior to last year. Three-time champion Jack Nicklaus, only man to win the Masters two years in a row 1965- Apr. 8 1970 KANSAN 15 - Books - Magazines - Posters - Candles - Cards - Newspapers TOWN CRIER 919 Mass. Open 'til 10 p.m. 66; South Africa's Gary Player, only foreigner to win here in 1961; and non-winning but long-hitting Tom Weiskopf who has been under par in his last seven Masters rounds, are figured as this year's favorites. And there's always support for four-time champ Arnold Palmer. Hawks begin conference schedule against Sooners The KU baseball team, off to a flying start with five wins in its first six contests, will open Big Eight Conference play this weekend when the Jayhawks travel to Norman, Okla., for a three game series with the Oklahoma Sooners. The series will open Friday with a doubleheader on the agenda and will conclude with a single game Saturday afternoon The Sooners, second in the conference a year ago, sport an experienced pitching staff and one of the top offensive teams in the conference. Oklahoma lost only one starter off the 1969 squad that went 23-10 overall and 17-3 in league action. Joining Swenton in the outfield is Chris Rickey. Rickey, a third baseman last season, carries a powerful bat as he hit for a .298 average with 22 RBI's and a team high 7 home runs a year ago. Heading the Sooner outfield will be hard hitting Mike Swenton. A husky, 6-3, 195-pound junior. Swenton was named to the all-Big Eight team last year in right field. He was the Sooners' leading hitter with a .327 average while collecting nine doubles, three homers and 29 RBI's during OU's 33 game schedule. A strong OU infield is paced by slick-fielding second baseman Scott Harrington. Harrington, also an all-Big Eight selection, batted 315 last season after leading the team with a sizzling 344 average as a sophmore. An excellent fielder, he played his first 18 games as a sophomore without an error. He has outstanding speed and topped the club with 16 stolen bases last season. A KU infield composed of first baseman Skip James, third baseman Paul Womble, and shortstop Keith Lieppman has carried most of the early season load for the Jayhawks. James is currently sitting atop the Jayhawk hitting chart with an excellent .529 average, including a home run against C of E. Womble is close behind with a .471 mark and 2 homes. Lieppman is slapping the ball at a .450 consistency and has chalked up a club high three two-base blows. Dennis Ranzau tops the Sooners' experienced pitching corps. Ranzau, 6-4 and 220 pounds, compiled a 6-1 record last year while leading the team with 39 strikeouts. He posted a fine 2.28 ERA, second lowest on the team. The Jayhawks venture to Sooner country with the hopes of continuing their same fine brand of baseball that has seen them drop Washburn twice, Emporia State twice and College of Emporia once. Their lone loss was a weather-shortened five inning affair against the C of E. The young Hawk squad is also intent on improving a disappointing 12-14 season last year that saw them struggle to a sixth place finish in the conference. Southpaw Corky Ullom and Bill Stiegemeier, a former trackster, have provided KU coach Floyd Temple with the stingy pitching that the 'Hawks lacked last season. Ullom has posted two wins in as many decisions and is sporting a remarkable 0.64 ERA. Stiegemeier has gathered 14 strikeouts in 11 and one-third innings and carries a 0.79 ERA. The Oklahoma swing should give coach Temple and his squad a good indication of how the Jayhawks will fare in the upcoming conference race. Miles Davis In A Silent Way CS.9875 The ever versatile Miles Davis lends a contemporary flavor to compositions like "It's About Time," "I'm a Silent Way" and "Morning Fast Train From Memphis to Harlem." On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. DO IT NOW Graduating Seniors, Candidates for Masters & Doctorate Degrees Faculty Orders for CAPS & GOWNS must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! SWIMMING The image shows five swimmers in a pool, each wearing large earphones. They are swimming parallel to the pool's edge, and their bodies are slightly raised above the water surface. The background features a large circular object with a dark center and light edges, possibly part of a swimming competition setup. Photo by Mike Radencich Mickey Mouse takes to water The KU synchronized swimming club will present its annual water show at 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday in the Robinson Natatorium. The swimmers, complete with ears, are practicing for the program titled "A Splash of Disney." Two profs guest speakers at speech, drama festival Bobby R. Patton, associate professor of speech and drama, and Donn Parson, associate professor of speech and drama and KU debate coach, are among the guest speakers to be featured at the annual Speech-Drama Symposium April 24 and.25. The symposium will be held at South Dakota State College in Madison. Findings of a major research project on the foreign language requirement were presented to the Educational Policies Committee of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Tuesday morning. Language research reveals problems For the best snack around, come to Burger Chef. You'll love our Super Shef. — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF The Committee on Language Research began its first major project with the foreign language survey conducted during spring enrollment, said Robert (Tuck) Duncan, Wilmette, Ill., freshman and chairman of the committee. According to those polls, both formal and informal, the foreign language area most needs improvement, he said. The meeting yesterday consisted of solid, worthwhile discussion of the problems and possible solutions, Duncan said. On an economic level, not enough support establishes the quality of courses necessary to develop a good understanding of the language and culture, Duncan said. Lectures by experts in certain fields and the incorporation of related fields into the class directly may be one solution to the problem, he said. The student should be drawn You'll love our Super Shef. — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF Armadillos are mammals closely related to sloths and anteaters. into an area by the merits of the field, rather than being introduced to it by "a backdoor," Duncan said, referring to the language requirement. Duncan said he didn't know how long it would be before the EPC revealed any action taken on the report. 16 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 The last major review of language at KU was in 1959, through the efforts of Chancellor Murphy's committee on foreign language study. Too much has happened since then to ignore the possibilities for reform and change, Duncan said. WALK PRETTY in shape-up sandals by Scholl In Shape The shape-up Sandals with the exclusive toe-grip action that turns on your legs when you walk. Made of smooth, sculpted wood in flat or raised heel. Bone or red straps. $12 95 PATTI'S SHOE SERVICE 1017 Mass. Dal Dag Day FRI. NITE Pitchers 1c Buy one pitcher at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only Adm. 1c Buy one ticket at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only featuring COLLECTIONS FRI. & SAT. NITE 8 p.m. SAT. Only—Dollar adm., Dollar pitch. Dollar NITE RED DOG INN —Always the finest Entertainment— Pitchers 1c Buy one pitcher at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only Adm. 1c Buy one ticket at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only Duck Duck Duck COLLECTIONS COLLECTIONS FRI. & SAT. NITE 8 p.m. SAT. Only-Dollar adm., Dollar pitch. Dollar NITE RED DOG INN — Always the finest Entertainment — Strike Committee infers charge AIRFIELD AVE. NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 37201 Shultz denies pressuring Regents Sen. Reynolds Shultz Sen. Shultz relaxes on courthouse steps Tuesday. State Senator Reynolds Shultz (R-Lawrence) today denied the charge that he had threatened the Board of Regents with legislative pressure if promotions were granted to two University of Kansas professors. The promotions for the two men, Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama, are pending with the Regents until additional information is furnished by KU Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. A bulletin released Monday night by the Strike Committee had inferred that Shultz had talked the regents into questioning the promotions of Velvel and Litto. The bulletin said that Shultz had a closed door session with the regents before Chalmers met with them to discuss promotions. Of the 110 names submitted by Chalmers, the bulletin said, only two were questioned and these two had "previously incurred the wrath of Shultz." Shultz said that on March 20, the day Chalmers presented the candidates for promotion to the Oil drilling speech set The guest speaker will be John Brooks, an employee of the Halliburton Services Company in Wichita, who will speak on new methods of fracturing in oil drilling. The Petroleum Engineering Club at the University of Kansas is sponsoring a guest speaker at its meeting this evening at 7 p.m. in room 238, Lindley Hall. Floyd W. Preston, professor of petroleum engineering at KU, said that fracturing is a method by which oil drillers actually "crack" oil-bearing strata of rock so that oil will flow more freely. Brooks, Preston said, will discuss new methods that have been developed only months ago. Brooks will be honored with a dinner given by the officers of the club before the meeting, Preston said. Apr. 8 1970 KANSAN 17 The public is invited to attend the lecture. Kansas is the site of the geodectic datum of North America from which all North American mapping is made. WHO'S BUCHER ... just about every with-it type who sees our '70-edition bush jacket. We like its looks on vacations, on the golf course . . . just about everywhere a man can enjoy himself this summer. You'll like it, the minute you slip it on. WHO'S BUSHED? The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 The Town Shop 839 Mass. VI 3-5755 legislators will be disappointed if Velvel and Littto pass." "If Velvel would tell the students not to strike, it would change the attitudes of a lot of people," Shultz said. Regents, the names of Velvel and Litto were not discussed until late afternoon. "I left before noon," Shultz explained. Shultz added that prior to March 20 he had no knowledge that Velvet and Litto were being considered for promotions. "I don't think the legislature will take a stand one way or the other," Shultz said, "but many TONIGHT! ANOTHER FANTASTIC DIME (10c) NIGHT Beer will be only 10c a glass from 8:00-9:00 and only 20c a glass from 9:00-10:00. From 10:00-12:00 beer will only be 30c a glass. All of this while doing some very heavy grooving to the good vibrations of the CHESSMEN SQUARE DON'T FORGET APRIL 29th STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK The DRAUGHT HOUSE The DRAUGHT HOUSE Park plans revealed Advice given on Docking's third term TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking said today he's getting advice from friends both for and against seeking an unprecedented third term. Docking said he will announce his intention on or before May 11, the date he used in 1968 to announce his candidacy for re-election. Docking also announced plans to appoint a special committee to work for a prairie national park in Kansas, and called for statewide seminars to educate Kansas youth on the ills of drug abuse. The 44-year-old governor was asked what his feelings were about the fact that no Kansas governor has ever won a third term. His father, the late Gov. George Docking, failed in such an attempt in 1960. "It's somewhat difficult to say, for there been quite a change in attitudes across the nation," Docking said. Gov. John Love of Colorado has announced his candidacy for a third term and he is popular here with Kansas Republicans. Would Kansas Republicans deny him another question?" The Democart also mentioned a number of other state officials in Kansas and national figures who have served more than two terms. "It would be less of an issue today than it was in 1960." Docking said, referring to his father's last campaign. "Those who say I should run feel we should continue with our programs," he said. "Those who oppose it are many people I'm in business with, who want me to come home and get back to work." During the news conference, Docking was asked how he feels about a prairie national park for Kansas. Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel, a native Kansan, endorsed the idea at Manhattan Monday. for establishment of such a park. The recent legislature failed to act on a resolution to serve the same purpose. "I favor such a park, and I have for some time," Docking told newsmen. "We are in the process of forming a governor's advisory committee to work for establishment of a prairie national park in Kansas. We will announce it officially as soon as the members are selected." In a special statement, Docking also announced he will ask the governor's committee on criminal administration to sponsor seminars around the state to educate young Kansans on drug abuse. "Perhaps in this way we can begin to reach young people before they become involved in experimentation with drugs, or the serious consequences of drug abuse," Docking said. Docking said he plans to appoint an advisory panel to work Docking was also asked if he felt it inconsistent for him to oppose passage of increased school aid without funding, but yet support the new teacher retirement program enacted by the recent legislature which may drain about $17 million from the state general revenue fund in its second year. "I don't see any inconsistency," he responded. "It was a matter of importance and priority." Docking said if he was governor when the legislature next meets, he might have some recommendations on further funding of the program. 'Exit control' system cuts down book thefts An "exit control" system at the University of Kansas Medical Center Library has drastically cut down the amount of carelessness and theft of some of the library's 20,000 books. In the new system, Earl Farley, director of the library said, a thin foil-like piece of metal is inserted between two pieces of paper and then glued into the books. As a person exits through the turnstyle, the system automatically checks to see if a book is on the person's possession. If so and the book has not been charged out, the alarm is tripped and the turnstyle locks. "This system," Farley said, "has cut out carelessness that was part of the problem. It hasn't cut out the deliberate theft." He said he felt the system had been successful because it had indicated the problem by publicizing it. Also the publicity has prevented students from forgetting to sign their books out in their rush to class. "Only about 4 per cent of the 2,500 to 5,000 persons per week coming through the system." The system, which has an initial cost of $7,000 with an additional 11 cent per metal plate cost, has sharply reduced the number of books lost. Before the system's installation, the number lost was 1400 books; since the installation. only 362. Farley said, "trip the alarm. The turnstyle then won't budge." He said the person was then asked if he had forgotten to charge anything out. Usually the person just overlooked possession of the book. The system is an exit control type, Farley said, not a theft control. It won't stop those who are determined to rip out the metal insert and steal the book. "These books are expensive to replace," he said, "last year the cost was $1,200." He said he wanted to go to the different groups-faculty, students and employees of the hospital — and explain to them that it is a community resource that is being abused. "This is their problem," Farley said. "We can't play detective because we would be doomed to failure. If the condition doesn't improve, we will just have to keep replacing the books." When asked why such a system had not been installed at Watson Library, Farley said there were two reasons: size and the difference between a science and university library. He said the emphasis at a university library was on older material which was weeded out by a medical library. This exit control system, he said, has been about 90 per cent effective. European hospitality tour offered for student travel A European hospitality tour is being sponsored this summer by Jeunes, Aide and Loisirs, an educational association for international travel and hospitality exchange in Belgium. Students, trainees, young couples and members of the exchange program from all parts of the world who are between the ages of 18 and 26 qualify for the tour. In most of the cities, towns and rural areas to be visited, host communities have arranged for visitors to stay with families in their homes and have planned a program of visits to factories, local government offices and radio and television stations. The tour's objectives do not involve sight-seeing alone but The tour will begin June 26 and will conclude the last week of August. Countries to be visited are Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Yugoslavia, Italy, Monaco, France, Switzerland and Great Britain. The fee for the tour is $500, which includes transportation and lodgings not provided by host families. For more information or application forms, students should write to: include experience in international exchange. Troop cut to be announced Ave. Marie-Louise, 20 J. A.L. Belgium Applications for the tour should be returned before April 25 with the full tour fee. WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon will make an announcement this month regarding further U.S. troop withdrawals from South Vietnam the White House said Tuesday. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler did not give a date for the announcement. The latest phase 18 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 of the withdrawal of GIs is to be completed April 15. Allies with troops also in Vietnam are expected to withdraw some of their forces, too, if the President decides on a new troop cut. Australian Defense Minister Malcom Fraser is in Washington reviewing with Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird the question of how many men Australia might take home. FLORENCE MARSHALL Bandolino VIA Italy—Today's newest look in sandals for every occasion. Pictured style is only one of many to choose from in a wide range of colors. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the brochure should be provided to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. V FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed. Campus Mid House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Diamond engagement ring, $ \frac{1}{2} $ carat, round brilliant cut, silver Tiffany setting, matching band. Call 842-3823 Bowman 8-track car stereo tape player used—in original carton 842-6814 314 oultce portable xylophone for Phone 843-2767 Excellent condition Phone 843-2767 4-10 Attention Floceinaucinaihilpplificators! For Sale: Lite-Gem-hi-intensity lamp; Noreloe electric shaver; 8 silver cooler; Coatholder; set; Silver troys; New calf wallet and key case; Wine decanter with four matching glasses; Tray table; 2 speed electric room heater; Wicker desk chair; 4-speed therm-humidity gauge; Japanese tea set; British flag; AM-FM Short Wave radio. Call 843-1400. 4-10 1968 Fiat 850 Sport Coupe—Bahama Orange, black interior, 200,000 C.P. driving lights, Pirelli radials, road tires per gallon, cheap. Call 4-82-5154. 250 Yamaha. Best offer over $300. Call Ellsworth Dorm. Speak to or leave message for Mike McComb. 4-10 Four silver-sparkle drums, 3 Zidgian cymbals owned by a little old lady who dug Bach. Call Jeff at 843-1711. A-10 1968 Zenith top-of-line portable stereo phonograph 5 speakers. Original cost $200. Call 843-2191 for price offer and additional information. 4-10 Norelec tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. St. Cycle—new Yamaha 100cc, 1,000 miles, warranty, 4 speed, oil injected, good shape Great for campus. Call Aaron or Larry--443. Temp- 413-842-1200 '62 VW. Like new. New engine—less than 10,000 miles. Priced to sell. Ask for Steve. 843-8085. 4-13 1965 650cc Triumph cycle, must sell, consider any offer. Call Bob at 842- 1157. 4-13 Honeywell Strobonar 400 electronic flash unit, fits most cameras, used very little, filters, accessories, must sell immediately. Jim, 842-7307 4-9 Faithful Old Blue. 1960 blue Chew.v. Faithful Old Blue. 1960 blue Chew.v. or best offer. Call Ken. 843-636-4-13 1969 Honda CL350 Scrambler, blue-honda 1400 miles, 4 months old, helmet, cover, and insurance. $625 Call Larry, 842-7260. 4-13 Northwestern golf clubs for sale -4- breads 7-8 Call 842-535-8500 and 4-14 brees 7-8 Call 842-535-8500 1962 Comet, good condition; also four magnets, excellent condition 842-5261 1966 Fiat Roadster-5 speed, white with black interior, $1,000,842-219.1 Galvan Rajadh Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. TEXACO W. 9tn TEXACC ★ New, experienced management ★ Student specials ment ★ Open 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. Pth & Miss. 842-9413 For Top Quality Head For Henry's henrys One man's Naismith contract for rest of year. Call 842-4770. 4-10 1966 Honda S-90, good condition, fixed for trial, engine rebuilt 500 miles ago. Also, Corvair, new starter and best best. 131 W. West L. A-25, after 5 p.m. 4-10 Harley Sportster—XLH. Perfect condition, bags, windshell. $1100. See Ron. Apt. 1, 1726 Kentucky, between 6:30-8:00 evenings. All day weekends. Office furniture - desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, hardware set, no accessoryEd est at no extra charge Lawrence Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3643. tf 1966 GTO Convertible—yellow with black top and interior—4-pd, deluxe wheel covers, Motorola speakers and stereo tape hook-up $1500 842-2191. For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken. Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 5th & Mo. VI 3-213 1967 VW Super Bug—silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., racing suspension, stereo speakers and hook-up, good tires. $1500. 842-213- 4-14 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRS, beautiful British racing green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelinix tires. $1800. 842-2191. 4-14 1959 Triumph TR-3, metallic blue with white top, bug eyes, good tires, wire wheels, needs interior work. 842-2191. 4-14 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III, white with black top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition. $2300.842-2191. 4-14 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white gears, equipped good tires. 842-129-119 4-14 1965 MGB. British racing green, ex- 1965 MGB. British transmitted green, 4-14 842-129-31 1962 Austin-Healey White, white with red interior. new tires. $800. 842-231-511 1964 Triumph TR-4, British racing green, deluxe interior, excellent shape. $1200. 842-2191. 4-14 1360 tan VW, Excellent condition, low malfunction, new front suspension 842 - 769- 876 4-10 NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information. call Max Laptid. V 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St., B-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 tf Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-10 Notice: Enjoy the finest food in the historical and cultural atmosphere of the Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 4-8 Wanted—unattached swimmers interested in joining team being formed for intramural swimming meet. Call 843-6776, 2 p.m. 4-10 Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous and playful. Lepidoptera Creations W. 9th. 4-10 Students of Objectivism—meets every Monday, 7.30, Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand If desired, information, call 842-6250 4-17 5.30 LA PETITE GALERIE—fashions for the bold, the beautiful. . . for you Groove with "Tomorrow's Clothes, Today." Follow Kentucky to 910. tt "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W.6th "MOORE"BURGER Acme Dingo Cowboy Boots $18.99 HARVEY'S SHOE STORE See us also for the newest styles Self Service Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 803 W. 23rd Open every day 9 - 9 Sunday 1 - 6 Zone involving a '65 Rambler American (red and white) on Thursday, April 2; please call 842-7254. 4-13 It's that time of the year again (for instance, that is), so get your shoes and accessories at Arenaberg's 819 Mass. 4-10 Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown Phone 843-5767 University of Nebraska challenges both KU and KSU to canoe races for the University Trophy Cup. Races held at Marysville, Kan., 60 miles from KU, and at mile course Sunday, April 12, 1970. An open for everyone: Four classes: 1) fiberglass, 2) aluminum and wood, 3) couples, 4) under 16. 4 trophies awarded in each class. Entry fee $5.00 after 4:00 p.m. Entry fee 0-0546 after 4:00 p.m. Entry fee chance on $200.00 canoe to be given away. 4-10 FOR RENT Will the person who found my wallet ask forick or leave a message. 4-10 Ask forick or leave a message. 4-10 Available now, two bedroom ant one-block from campus, furnished $130 unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116 Santee Apts. tt Alvamar's Quail Creak Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. apartment living in Lawrence, adjacent to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly impressive apartments and town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2312 or McGrew Agency: 843-2055. tt Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English building; available to family TYPING Modern 1 bedroom apartment for summer or longer, air conditioned, furnished. 4 blocks from campus. 100/month. 842-0002. 4-14 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers -plus stencil drawings and duplications. Pike unix delivery offered. Call 842-3897 or 842-6562. U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 66 - Portraits - Applications "Please call for appointment" 救人 - Passports Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 Experienced typist will use type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ. templates, copywriter, postwriter. Pica tape. Competent. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service 5-15 T Experienced typist will type, your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. Typing—Term papers, Theses, Dissertations, Electric Typewriter, (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, VI 3-1522. 4-8 Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experience. Electric power. Assistance with necessary education. Teacher's M.S. degree. Also, English training for foreign students. 842-9249. 4-9 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and booked by experienced typist K.U.B.S. Exec (office administration). Office-size electric. For appointment phone 843-2873. 4-10 Typing done in my home. Term pa- Typing done in my home. Term papers, reports, etc. Call 842-5261 4-13 WANTED Rent-free house available for summer. We need student or faculty couple to take care of house in our absence. Sorry, no children or pets. References required. Please apply in Raymond Cerf, 1000 S.W. Dr 4-9 Interested in Jazz? I am looking for a pianist and other interested mu- ture to form group with experience saxophonist. Call Allen Troxel 842-1400 Wanted--your voice for Spring Sing, If interested, call or contact Mr. Kim Farewell at 843-7922 as soon as possible 4-9 Are you leaving KU this year? Grad. student would like reference t) a clean utility or one room apartment close to campus with rent less than $100/mo. Call 842-1568 or UN 4-4220. 4-13 Want to buy used Ludwig or Rogers 843-743-838 evening 4-13 Want to live in Chicago suburb after graduation? Will share roomy furnished house near city lake. Jm Rm 302.482-1340 Reasonable. Call jake. Rm 102.482-1340 LOST Cigarette lighter at Hawk's Nest. In- telligence: Sgt. Jarvis. Reward. 4-8 36¢/4 Class ring in front of Union. Call 400-693-800, ask for Paul, room 313. ward. Bracelet of sterling silver rings with hook clasp. Lost in Hoch Auditorium, night of July Collins concert. Reward. Call 842-9938 after 5. a.m. 4-10 Black bilfoil, April 1 snowstorm If found, please drop in my mailbox at 1601 Tenn. I need my ID cards. Reward offered. Mike Hein. 4-13 THE CONCORD SHOP ready-made and parts - Artist's Convasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Stretcher frames, - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon Malls Shopping Center McConnell Lumber - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plan Early With Us V1 3-1211 Woman's gold Bulova (?) wristwatch found, call 843-5479 or 843-138- 3605. WRENDA If found, call 843-5479 or 843-1380. Reward. 4-8 Man's black bilffold, Keep money, just return. Large reward. Call Bob at 842-1157. 4-13 Checkbook, western scene printed on checks, brown cover. If found, call Kathy in 914, 842-6600. Reward. 4-14 Prescription sunglasses with brown frame in a black case. Vicinity of Blake Hall. Contact David, room 765 McColum Hall. 842-6600. Reward. Black-framed glasses in Yuk Down night. Reward Call Georgia 842-9174. 845-9174 PERSONAL Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 80112 Mass, Returns $4.00 and up . . . if SERVICES OFFERED Whoever liberated my blue leather shoulder, bag in the Union lobby, lay on the floor with me and goodies, but please return the ID cards and glasses! No questions asked — just leave them at Naimish Hall with a note for Linda. Room 616 Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Ruthfess, 843-8074. ff Boycott cars! Echew phony model changes until the industry takes meaningful steps to cure America's paramount polluter. Hurt the industry where it lives—sabotage sales! D. Mills. 4-9 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to group Tax 8011$_2$ Mass. $4.00 and up. tf. To get your spring and summer wear, go to the things we’re wearing in winter Alterations and dressmaking. 10 years experience. 843-2767. 8-5. 4-10 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store. 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tt FOUND Married couple, grad. or teaching for Minnesota girls camp. Each exp. in one area, tennis, rifley, theatre canoeing. 842-0578. 4-14 66 Tony's 66 Service HELP WANTED Small, black-brown beagle(?) puppy Nite-sat nile 842-7346. 4-9 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 PHILIPS 66 Service Lawrence, Kansas 66044 starting service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service Exclusive Representative For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry L. G. Balfour Co. - Favors - Badges - Guardas - Respuestas - Recognitions - Paddles - Recommendations - Podcasts - Lavaliers - Stationery - Gifts - Stationery - Bloquer - Sportswear - Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldd. #306 Across from the Red Dog LNB Bldg. #306 "Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining stainless steaks and fresh salmon sealsides await you when you sit at the Sitium. We serve only the flame-grilled preparing the seabass as you have them with all our accompaniments, and the Sitium for uncomfortable 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 17 Photo by Ron Bishop Student referendum vote small Less than 20 per cent of the student body turned out to vote Tuesday on the student referendum issues. Those who did cast ballots rejected the use of student fees for the building of Wescoe Hall, but approved the use of fees for the construction of new student health facilities. Hoffman speech set tonight Abbie Hoffman, author of "Revolution For the Hell of It" and member of the Chicago Seven, will speak at 8 p.m. tonight in Allen Field House. Hoffman, who has been called a cross between Lenny Bruce, Che Guevara and Robin Hood by his yippie cohorts, will stop at KU on his way to the West Coast, said Kathy Nelson, Lincoln, Ill., senior and chairman of the Student Union Activities (SUA) Minorities Forum. Miss Nelson said Hoffman would also speak Thursday night at Marymount College in Salina. Calling himself a "cultural revolutionary," Hoffman has stated in his writing that he believes violence is inevitable in the clash between the emerging culture and the dying one. He has said he believes that the new culture should be defended by any means necessary, including the use of self-defensive violence. He is the author of various underground press articles under numerous pseudonyms and has also authored "Woodstock Nation," which he dedicated to his fellow revolutionary, Lenny Bruce. In the biographical sketch "Woodstock Nation," Hoffman's "notable" history is described as beginning when he was a student 20 KANSAN Apr. 8 1970 at Brandeis University where he studied under such men as Herbert Marcuse and Maurice Stein. He attended graduate school in psychology at the University of California at Berkeley and was a psychologist at Worcester State Hospital for two years. In 1962 he campaigned for peace candidate Stuart Hughes in a senatorial race. From this point on Hoffman became active in the civil rights campaign, the anti-poverty campaign and, most prominently, the anti-war campaign. In 1967, Hoffman met Jerry Rubin, who encouraged him to play a role in the March on the Pentagon. He and others worked out the scenario for what was called the "Exorcism of the Pentagon" and recruited people to strike in Washington "Woodstock Nation" states that since the march on the Pentagon Hoffman has been "hounded by neanderthal forces in the Pig power structure," including the FBI, Chicago and New York Intelligence divisions, local police forces and the courts. The self-termed "Yippie nonleader" was recently convicted on charges of crossing state lines to incite a riot during the Democratic Convention. Summing up his political beliefs in "Woodstock Nation," Hoffman says: "We shall not defeat America by organizing a political party. We shall do it by building a new nation—a nation as rugged as the marijuana weed born from the seeds of the Woodstock Festival. "This nation shall be built on love, but in order to love we must survive and in order to survive we must fight." Diplomatsto leave GUATEMALA CITY (UPI) — The Guatemalan army promised "harsh and fast justice" Tuesday for the kidnap-murderers of the West German ambassador, but the terrorists remained at large and a whole exodus of foreign diplomats appeared likely. lomatic staff. Four diplomats have been assassinated in Guatemala in recent years and other embassies were reported trimming their staffs. West Germany, angered at the murder of Ambassador Count Karl I von Spreti, announced it would withdraw its entire dip- Troops and police still searched for the killers and the country remained under a state of siege similar to martial law. Rumors of possible coups circulated through the city. The military warned Monday the public should be aware of such rumors. Hospital vote- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) adjacent to Allen Field House?" Those voting yes totaled 1,251, those voting no 1,476. The question of financing the union from student fees, perhaps as much as $6.50 a semester, was rejected even more soundly by a vote of, 2,200 to 505. The satellite union had been considered as early as 1964 to meet the needs of the population explosion towards the southwest portion of the campus. The building, which had been estimated to cost about $1.8 million, was termed "a modest service center" by Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union. The negative vote Tuesday apparently means the construction will be delayed indefinitely, because it was to be financed entirely by student fees. Another major project receiving a negative blow in the referendum was Wescow Hall. By a vote of 1,886 to 828, voters gave a negative answer to the question of whether $7.50 per semester in fees should be used to help finance the new Humanities Building. Wescoe Hall has been projected to cost nearly $8 million, with nearly $5.5 million from state and federal funds and the remainder to come from the increase in fees. The building question was included in the referendum through petitions turned in by David G. Miller, Eudora junior. According to a statement of the University Planning Board, there is no way of funding the project other than through an increase in student activity fees. Dean of faculties Francis Heller said a negative vote by the students means there will be some second thoughts on proceeding with the project, although several members of the Board of Regents have indicated the students' opinions have little to do with the funding of projects for the University. A broader question asking if students agreed with the policy of using student fees to help finance academic building received only 649 yes votes. Opposition to this idea gained 2,075 votes. The question on whether the Western Civilization Comprehensive exam should be eliminated as a requirement for graduation from any school of the University was supported by a vote of 2,226 to 497. Course determination was also involved in a special ballot which juniors and seniors in the College received, asking if they favored the elimination of general requirements such as language and speech as prerequisites for graduation. Those supporting the elimination of such requirements numbered 443, with 252 voting against elimination. The two questions above were merely opinion questions, with no authority, beyond the force of an expression of student feeling. Two other questions, "Do you favor immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam?" and "Do you favor an immediate end to the military draft, replaced by a voluntary army?" were placed on the ballot by the steering committee of the Student Mobilization Committee. Both immediate withdrawal and an end to the draft were supported. Withdrawal was favored by a vote of 1,715 to 965, and a volunteer army by 1,864 to 833. Although the purpose of the referendum was chiefly to express student opinion, the refusal of students to support fee increases for the satellite union, and academic buildings including Wescoe Hall will likely have a damping effect on immediate go aheads on their construction. Prairie park controversy begins anew MANHATTAN (UPI) — The decade-old fight for a prairie national park in Kansas came to life again here Tuesday during a seminar sponsored by Kansas State University as part of its "environmental awareness week." Participants were Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Muncie; Rep. Byron Brooks, R-Manhattan; Mrs. Viola Dodge, an Olsburg rancher and E. Raymond Hall, professor of systems and ecology at the University of Kansas. Steineger authored a resolution in the 1970 legislature to establish a commission to work for such a national park in Kansas. It died in a conference committee. Steineger said a section of tall grass Kansas prairie must be preserved for future generations. "Our generation should not be the generation that had the last chance and failed," he said. Hall said tall grass prairie is almost gone in some other states. He said the minimum amount of land would be an area about six by seven miles or 30,000 acres. It would take about one-sixth of one per cent of the state's grass-land, he said. Mrs. Dodge said the movement for a prairie national park began in 1958. She said that in 1963 at Kansas State there were U.S. Senate hearings on the proposal, which was finally tabled. She said the area envisioned increased during the years from 34,000 acres to 60,000 acres. She said the proposal of such a park offends many ranchers. Buzzi and Associates, Inc. Insurance Agency Tony Croman "For the Professional Approach to Your Insurance Needs" Bob Joyce Ray Terrell Ray Terrell - Arden Gray - Mike Reeves - Janice Peterson Bill Mu - Ralph Light - Steve Gibson - Gene Hadl 1048320079956 Lloyd Buzzi Let us help you with: Auto Insurance Renters Insurance Life Insurance Computer Programs Health Insurance Group Insurance Disability Insurance Mortgage Insurance Tax Sheltered Programs Buzzi and Associates 2323 Ridge Court V12-7771 Gary Garrett Rie Marshall Ric Marshall Lee Sells Doug Powell Doug Powell THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No. 110 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 9, 1970 Hoffman says degree 'useless' PALMER COOPER Abbie Hoffman at Allen Field House Abbie Hoffman spoke to nearly 8,000 students in Allen Field House Wednesday night. He told them a college degree is "useless" and the function of the University is to provide a "training ground" for revolutionaries. The role of the University is to serve as the training ground for revolutionaries, and the college degree is a meaningless document, Abbie Hoffman told nearly 8,000 students Wednesday night. In his Allen Field House speech and earlier in a Kansan interview, Hoffman, a defendant in the Chicago seven trial, said "People have really got to make up their minds that they are going to destroy the University. If they accept the student's role, they accept the role as a slave. The student is a nigger," he said. "Law is not for maintaining justice, it is for maintaining power," Hoffman said, so strikes really do not affect the power structure of the University. Student apathy is a myth, Hoffman said, perpetrated by the ruling class. "Students aren't apathetic if the issues are communicated effectively. If one feels a part of the community, he has no problem relating to its needs or desire." KU students should adopt the Yippie slogan he said, and that would be "as soon as you find an injustice, stand up and say, Why?" Rock concerts, strikes, or any group activities causes one to experience identity as a people, and as people they have power, Hoffman said. "The question is what to do with this power." Hoffman said Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law whose delayed promotion prompted Wednesday's strike, and anyone who "engages in free speech is in trouble in America." He likened the Board of Regent's alleged suppression of Velvel's free speech, concerning the statement Velvel made concerning Judge Julius Hoffman at the Feb. 17 Chicago Seven demonstration, with the suppression at his trial. "The first thing a dying dinosaur empire does is to try to devour its young." Hoffman said, and "America is a dying empire and its institutions are crumbling." The hippie, yippie movement feels many institutions are going to crumble on our heads, Hoffman said. "We are living for the revolution and dying for it." The basic role of the student, Hoffman said, is to present the (Continued to page 20) Strike peaceful and fun Despite rumors of violence, KU students combined protest with pleasure Wednesday as strike day events continued peacefully throughout the day. Events included a rally, a "pleasure fair" and an open class during the day which coincided with a talk given Wednesday night in Allen Field House by Abbie Hoffman, one of the Chicago Seven. (See related pictures on page 12) A rally scheduled at 1:30 p.m. in front of Strong Hall was scheduled to be the focal point of the student strike in protest of the Kansas Board of Regents delay in the promotions of Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Frederic Litto, acting professor of speech and drama. A crowd of nearly 4,000 people gathered on the lawn of Strong while David Abbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, read a statement demanding the Regents promote Velvel and Littio. "We demand that this threatened abrogation of our freedom to pursue truth and express that pursuit to others be immediately corrected," Awbrey said. "The University of Kansas does not need statue painting or window breaking,"Awbrey said."What the university does need is the support of the Board of Regents." The statement called the action of the Regents "imperative" in protecting educational freedom. It also asked that action be taken immediately "against outside political pressure." Awbrey took part of his statement from a prepared statement of demands which the strike committee sent to each member of the Board of Regents, 35 Kansas and Missouri newspapers, the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times "in an attempt to make the public aware of the issues as the members of the University community see them." In the statement of demands, the Regents were asked to sign as being in support or opposed to principles established in Article One of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, the 1940 Statement of Principles of the American Association of University Professors, the Supreme Court of the United States and the policy statement in the First Biennial Report of the Kansas Board of Regents. Bill Ebert, Topeka, junior and newly-elected Student body president, then read a statement urging all students to refrain from campus activities that evening. Following the rally at Strong, a "pleasure fair," scheduled at Potter Lake, was to feature a nudein and a rock band. The nude-in failed to come off, as did anyone's clothes, and consisted of one duck, two dogs and about ten students clad in jean shorts frolicking in the lake's murky waters. The highlight of the afternoon, which had consisted of the band, conversation and frisbie games, occurred at 3:45 p.m. with the appearance of Abbie Hoffman. A group of nearly 200 students, many with cameras and tape recorders, gathered around Hoffman to ask questions or just look. (Continued on page 20) Carswell defeated WASHINGTON (UPI)—A bitterly divided Senate rejected the Supreme Court nomination of G. Harrold Carswell by a 51-45 vote Wednesday in a second stunning repudiation of President Nixon's efforts to restore "the kind of balance" he says the court needs. In resolving its anguish over party loyalties and doubts about Carswell's fitness for the high bench, five moderate Republican votes were decisive. But it was not until the roll call had neared the finish and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, Maine, softly uttered her "no" that the outcome was no longer in doubt. President Nixon said through a spokesman that he was "of course disappointed" and would name another "strict constructionist" to the court in due course, although he had no names in mind. In Tallahassee, Fla., Carswell said: "It's a relief." He said he wasn't bitter about the outcome even though "it's always disappointing not to win." Nixon spoke to Carswell by telephone shortly after the vote and gained his agreement to remain on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. (Continued on page 20) UDK News Roundup By United Press International MOSCOW—The Soviet surgeon, Dr. Vladimir Demikhov, who won fame by grafting a second head on dogs now hopes to beat the problem of transplant rejection by using organs from monkeys which have been given human blood. Transplant to use monkeys His theory, Demikhov said, envisages transplanting organs from a monkey surviving on human blood to a human. The transplanted monkey organs would take over part of all of the work of damaged or ailing human organs. Kite harasses planes LINCOLN, Neb.-Police Wednesday received a call from the airport about something harassing airplanes at 2,200 feet. They found 11 University of Nebraska students had managed to get a 6-by-4-foot kite more than a third of a mile into the air. The students pulled in their creation and moved to a place out of range of airplanes. U.S. firm in Paris talks PARIS—U.S. Ambassador Philip C. Habib warned the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese today their attacks pushing GI losses to a seven-month high are "not compatible" with peace talks. --- Four new satellites launched by U.S. CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) America put four new satellites into orbit Wednesday two to watch for violations of the nuclear test ban treaty, a new weather reporter that should improve long-range forecasting, and a mapping moonlet. The U.S. space agency launched a 1,368-pound Nimbus 4 weather satellite aboard a Thor-Agena rocket from Vandenberg Air Spring Fling replaced with 'Fun in Sun' event Independent organized living groups and social sororities at KU are replacing the annual Spring Fling this year with a program called Spring Week April 19-25. Congress passes bill for settlement of possible strike This year's spring program is WASHINGTON (UPI) — In rapid succession, the Senate and House Wednesday approved and sent to the White House, President Nixon's plan for a forced settlement of a rail dispute. The bill, approved by a voice vote in the House an hour after passing the Senate 88 to 3, would impose on four railroad shopcraft unions a contract tentatively accepted by them last December but later repudiated by the Sheet Metal Workers Union. With a congressionally imposed moratorium on a nationwide rail strike expiring at midnight Friday, Nixon was expected to lose no time in signing the bill into law. The legislation, bitterly opposed by the Sheet Metal Workers and opposed generally by labor, would be the first time the federal government ever imposed a contract settlement in a labor dispute. The lowest temperature recorded in the United States was minus 76 degrees at Tanana, Alaska, in January, 1886. 2 KANSAN Apr. 9 1970 WEDDING LOVE RINGS. PATIQUE SET ArtCarved the Love Ring people entitled "Fun In The Sun" and marks the first time that Greek and independent living groups have co-sponsored the event. Force Base in California at 2:18 a.m. We have Love Rings from Art- Carved for people who know that love is what a wedding is all about. Our Love Rings are beautiful. Whether you choose a contemporary sculpture, a tradi- tional scroll or a ribboned design, ArtCarved Love Rings are for you. Come see. The twin 770-pound Vela satellites, each worth $7 million, will be on sentry duty to watch for and report on any nuclear detonations either in the atmosphere or in space. The satellites can also detect solar radiation concentrations in space which might threaten astronauts. Proceeds from the carnival and an April 24 drive to gather empty aluminum beer cans to sell back to distributors will go to a local scholarship fund. The scholarships will enable local elementary school children to attend summer classes at KU in biology and ecology. BRIMAN'S leading jewelers determining positions on the earth's surface. Some of the Spring Week events include individual pairing activities April 20-21, an ice cream social April 22 and Spring Sing April 23. The Air Force followed less than three hours later from Cape Kennedy, Fla. with a spectacular dawn launch of a Titan 3C carrying the Vela nuclear detection robots. A greased pig catching contest is scheduled for Potter 25 at Potter Lake as well as a balloon toss, an undressing contest, an ice block race, a "bod-passing" contest, a medicine ball game and a tug-of-war across Potter Lake. Other events scheduled for April 25 are a gymkana at 8 a.m. in Lewis Hall parking lot, a carnival and art sale from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the deck of Spencer Library and a street dance in Oliver Hall parking lot in the evening. The Nimbus and its traveling companion went into an orbit over the poles ranging from 679 to 689 miles. Nimbus 4 is the fifth of seven planned space weather observatories. Riding along as a hitchhiker with the weather satellite was a 40-pound satellite called Topo-A, the first of a series of satellites to be launched for the U.S. Army's Topographic Command. The Velas went initially into an orbit ranging from 68,912 to 10,-647 miles above the earth. In the next few days, the satellites will maneuver themselves into a circular orbit some 69,000 miles high and on opposite sides of the earth. The satellite will experiment with new techniques of accurately The Nimbus will make the most comprehensive study ever undertaken from space of the earth's atmosphere. Scientists hope the information from the new space station will lead to accurate weather forecasts two weeks in advance by the end of the decade. groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" DO IT NOW Graduating Seniors, Candidates for Masters & Doctorate Degrees Faculty Orders for CAPS & GOWNS must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! Campus briefs Geology specimens presented A collection of 1,500 glass slide geological specimens has been presented to the University of Kansas by the Humble Oil and Refining Company. The collection was assembled over a 15-year period by John W. Skinner of Midland, Tex. and Garner L. Wilde of Denver, Colo. The two were co-workers in Humble's exploration activity. The collection was brought from Midland by Alan K. Kamb, assistant curator of the KU Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology. Contestants sought for pageant Contestants for the Miss Lawrence Pageant May 7 and 8 in Murphy Hall are being sought by the Lawrence Jaycees. The contest is a preliminary to the Miss Kansas and Miss America pageants. Contestants in the pageant must be between the ages of 18 and 20 on September 1, must be a high school graduate and must never have been married. The local winner will be selected on the basis of talent, poise and beauty. Talent presentations can range from dramatic readings to professional presentations. Entry forms may be obtained from Kelly Twogood, Buddy Jones, Ted Luber or the Dean of Women's Office and must be returned by April 14. Senior to present piano recital Fred Toner, Caney senior, will present a piano recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Toner holds the Lawrence Music Club Carl Preyer Scholarship, the Rertenshaw academic scholarship for Montgomery County students and has been an honor student for four years. Ad clubs to view silent movie A joint meeting of ADS and GAX, advertising honoraries, is scheduled for tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. Featured at tonight's meeting is a movie that has won acclaim for its communicating ability despite the lack of sound or music. Frizzell promises cutbacks TOPEKA (UPI) — Attorney General Kent Frizell, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, pledged today to bring economy and efficiency to Kansas government. The gubernatorial hopeful said he saw no reason for the governor to have five full-time security men and two public relations men. Frizzell pledged in the first year to cutback expenses in the governor's office 10 per cent. Frizzell made the comment in a news conference in which he announced William Falstad of Fredonia would be his state campaign chairman. Falstad is mayor of Fredonia and a businessman Frizzell said the governor should set an example for the state in economy and efficiency, and that Gov. Robert B. Decking had not set a good example. cent in three years," Frizzell said. "We're talking about a man who throws $1,500 office parties at taxpayer expense, and increases his office budget 98 per Frizzell also noted that in the past three years the number of state employees had increased by 3,600. He said he would not fire employees, but he might not fill vacancies "until the financial condition of the state improved." Frizzell also proposed a state motor pool to correct abuses in the use of state vehicles which he said exceed 5,000 in number. He said instead of five employees taking five separate cars on a trip to Wichita on the same day, for example, they could all go in one car. Chairman named at Med Center The attorney general said he had no idea if his bid for the GOP gubernatorial nomination would be endangered if state Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, entered the race. "If he doesn't though, I would like him on my side," he said. Two other candidates have already entered the GOP gubernatorial primary race. They are Rick Harman, of Fairway, the 1968 party nominee for governor, and Raymond Van Skiver of Wichita. GUATEMALA CITY (UPI)—A self-styled rightist terrorist group strangled a suspected leftist Wednesday in a move described as "the beginning of retaliation" for the kidnap-murder of West German Ambassador Karl Von Sprei. Terrorists 'retaliate' for diplomat's murder A note delivered to the fire department gave instructions on how to find the body, stripped of personal belongings and left in an abandoned adobe shack only five miles from the site where Spreti's body was found last Sunday. Soldiers continued stopping and searching automobiles in the city and on its outskirts, looking for the kidnap-killers of Spreti. "The reprisals for the death of Karl Von Spreti have begun," said the note found at the fire department. The note said that the person strangled had participated in the kidnap-slaying of the German diplomat, who was killed when the government refused to pay $700,000 in ransom and free 22 political prisoners in exchange for his safe release. Dr. Edward Carl Defoe Jr. has been named chairman of the department of preventive medicine at the Kansas University Medical Center. The body of the alleged leftist terrorist was taken to a morgue for examination. It was not immediately identified. well as the leftist Rebel Armed Forces (FAR), as being equally illegal and dedicated to terrorism. Spreti's body was to be taken to the National Palace Wednesday night to lie in state until Friday, when it will be flown to West Germany. The note was signed by the "Mano Blanca" (White Hand), a rightist group organized several years ago to counter the Communist insurgency threat in Guatemala. The government has denounced the Mano Blanca, as Defoe will assume duties July 1. Docking has not announced whether he will seek another term, but he said Monday he would make his decision public on or before May 11. Texas is the nation's leading livestock state. Lana Nyro Nas York Tendboy Lama Nyro New York Tendibay On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Defoe comes to the center from the University of Minnesota, where he has been a project director of the Community University Health Care Center. He received his B.A. and M.D. degrees from Stanford University and did residency training in pediatrics there. Aid available for law agents A financial aid program open to students who are planning careers as law enforcement agents was announced by the Office of Student Financial Aid Wednesday. "The Law Enforcement Education Program (LEEP) is a federal assistance program designed to help improve the nation's criminal justice system by enhancing the quality of criminal justice personnel through opportunities for higher education," says the brochure published by LEEP. A LEEP loan will provide up to $1,800 in loans per academic year to cover tuition, fees and related expenses. However, Jerry Rogers, associate director of financial aid, said that so far only $2,500 is available from LEEP at KU. For further information, contact Rogers in the Student Office of Financial Aid, 26 Strong Hall. Three students win scholarships Three KU students have won scholarships for next year. Donna N. Booth, Topeka freshman majoring in civil engineering, won one of the scholarships which was provided by the Topeka Auxiliary of the Kansas Engineering Society. The National Honor Scholarship from the University of Chicago Law School was given to Donald Crook, a senior from Wichita. John E. Findley, Lawrence graduate student, won the competition for the best research paper at the recent annual meeting of the Missouri Valley branch of the American Society of Microbiologists. Lyra is professor of linguistics and American literature at Marie Curie-Shladowska University in Lublin, Poland and holds a Ph.D. degree from Indiana University. Expert on Faulkner to visit An expert on the American novelist William Faulkner, Francis Lyra of Lublin, Poland, will be a visiting scholar at the University of Kansas from April 27 through May 9. Visiting organists perform While at KU, Lyra will give a lecture on Polish American literary traditions. Lady Susi Jeans and Myron Roberts, visiting lecturers in organ, will share programs April 13-16 at the University of Kansas. Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 3 is a native of Vienna. Roberts holds an appointment as Foundation Professor of Organ at the University of Nebraska. Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... a classic and a kick Two styles to o A bold new c in brass. Or kick. A san honest-to- rubber so it's a cool, c choice. Make M'Cool shoes 813 Mass. St. Phone V m'cook shoes Two styles to choose. A bold new classic trimmed in brass. Or the new style kick. A sandal with real honest-to-goodness tiretread rubber soles. Either way, it's a cool, comfortable choice. Make it soon. ROBLEE. $8.95 McCoy shoes Phone VI 3-2091 KANSAN COMMENT Testing the war The Supreme Court, at least ten years late will finally have to make a ruling on the legality of an undeclared war. They should have made this decision before 40,000 men lost their lives in Vietnam. Even now, the court is not acting on its own initiative. It has taken the governor and legislature of Massachusetts to force the court to face up to its responsibility. Why has the Supreme Court been avoiding this issue for so many years? War is certainly a constitutional matter. The Supreme Court should not have to shirk any case which involves the Constitution. But the court has refused to hear any of the several challenges (one from KU's own Lawrence Velvel) aimed at determining the legality of the war. The philosophy behind these challenges is that American soldiers have been committed to combat in Vietnam without a specific declaration of war by Congress. From this view, it does not seem absurd to assert that the Vietnam War is unconstitutional. The so-called balance of power between the three branches of the federal government is not always even. Perhaps the Supreme Court, which has faced such bitter criticism in recent years, does not wish to become involved in a potentially damaging struggle with the powerful executive branch. LBJ might have considered the Tonkin Gulf resolution of 1964 to be a declaration of support for military activities, but it does not seem reasonable that a court could accept this resolution in lieu of an actual declaration of war. If the Supreme Court strikes down the principles of the Massachusetts legislation, then it will also be striking down the prinicples of the US Constitution. The matter of war will be taken completely out of the hands of Congress. Massachusetts Governor Francis Sargent has said, "The intent of the so-called Vietnam bill is sincere, but its effect is doubtful." The first test case has already begun. The state's attorney general, Robert Quinn, is prepared to defend a Massachusetts soldier who has refused orders to travel to Vietnam. The odds are heavily stacked against this soldier and the new Vietnam bill. But if nothing else comes of the matter, the Massachusetts legislature has at least forced the Supreme Court to clarify a point of law which involves thousands of American lives. —Joe Naas Sorel's News Service P.E.C.P. The Collectivist Speaks WASHINGTON—Speaking before the Governors Conference, Vice-President Agnew surprised many in the audience by his use of classical Stalinist rhetoric. He called on the Governors "to withstand the criticism of the liberal community, who are presently so blinded by total dedication to individual freedom that they cannot see the steady erosion of collective freedom . . ." Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF YOU DON'T HAVE TO BELIEVE THIS, BUT THERE'S SOME GUY BUILDING A BOAT AND LOADING ANIMALS, BY TRUS, INTO IT... AND GET THIS, HE CLAIMS THERE'S GOING TO BE A GIANT FLOOD! IMAGINE! A Giant Flood WHEN THERE ISN'T A CLOUD... IN THE... SKY... $ \textcircled{2} $David Sokoloff 1970 Cleaning up By STEVE SHRIVER Assistant Sports Editor Spring cleanup week is rapidly approaching its end. Friday, and from the appearance of many of the "student slums" around Lawrence, a general University contribution is in order. One only need take a short tour through any alley between the 1100 to 1500 blocks of Louisiana, Ohio, Tennessee or Alabama streets, to view some of the more aggravated areas. Old broken down cars, busses, refrigerators and various articles of furniture litter many backyards and alleys, not to mention the tons of tin cans and waste paper. Several reasons behind the trash and litter problems of student living areas might help explain their nature and clean up their condition. Most students are renters and most renters don't keep up their living quarters as well as home owners do. A typical student renter might take the attitude, "It's not my house and it's not my town. I'm only going to be here for four years, so why should I keep it up or clean it up?" Consequently, the problem compounds. And a typical proprietor might retort, "They mess up my house, so why should I clean it up again for the next group to mess up again? Why should I lower my rent or spend money on maintenance and repairs when my house will depreciate at a rapid pace anyway?" Community trash areas, usually located in the rear of such student apartment complexes, and sometimes, directly in back alleys, pile up. The student renters point their fingers at the proprietors, who don't seem to provide enough trash receptacles, and the proprietors pass the buck back when the students stack their trash in sacks around the already-full grabage cans. Neighborhood dogs add to the mess when they rummage through the waste, overturning trash cans and sacks in their search for food. The city garbage disposal trucks will pick up only the trash they find in the cans, and many times, will leave more trash behind on the ground than they carry away with them. To most new male students entering the University, the adjustment to college life, especially in an apartment, is quite a transition. Housekeeping is a new chore, both time consuming, laborious and womanly, and their responsibility to such chores wavers. The official Spring Cleanup Week, April 1-12, organized by the City of Lawrence is not designed to benefit just the permanent residents of Lawrence. It is designed for the University and its students, who make up such an integral part of the local community. What more worthy cause could University-educated students, who seem so concerned with such worldly problems as pollution, find than in such a general cleanup as in their own backyards? hearing voices— To the editor: Ecology today is a household word. The vast majority of students are concerned about auto exhaust, DDT, lead emissions in exhaust, cleaning up our rivers, keeping water pure, etc. These concerns are, of course, timely, and it is fine that KU students are "on the bandwagon." But, lying alongside the bandwagon is a local problem of equal magnitude that is receiving little attention. This problem is garbage here in Lawrence, and there are goodly numbers of KU students who contribute to it. Raw garbage scattered about alley-ways; the major cause of this is insufficient cans to protect the stuff from dogs, cats and wind. Make use of cans that are around. If your landlord refuses to supply them (not likely), get yourself some sizable cartons from the supermarket and tie trash up in them securely (after covering with old papers). As the situation now stands, how many parts of Lawrence are little more than open sewers? Of course, I am not implying that this is all due to KU students, but the fact that even part of it is disgraceful in view of the noise we all make over pollution. A source of pollution almost entirely due to KU students involves the several beer joints alo... 14th St. near campus. Take a walk down there and tally up the shiny aluminum cans, crumpled cups and broken bottles left behind by a few disgusting, infantile, inconsiderate slobs as they toddle from bar to bar with their drink clutched tightly in hand. Is it phallic, or is it some kind of declaration of independence to parade around with a can, then toss it in the street, or into a yard? Come on people; let's wake up. Like so many other things, environment "begins at home." A student's environment is where he is, and if he adds to the crud therein, he's no better than a corporate power doing the same. It's all well and good to be concerned about pollution, but while hunting with binoculars, don't lose sight of what's at your feet. Should this letter be printed (and I sincerely hope it shall be), it will probably be assailed as "establishment" by some. To these I say think back—have you added to the mess? George R. Pisani New York City, graduate student 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 subscriptions: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 660-7382, accommodations, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press H REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 RECORDS: reminiscent experience By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer The album, Morning, recorded by Joe Brooks and his partner who simply calls himself Rosco, reminds me of a lot of things. The music at times reminds me of a combination of Simon and Garfunkel, The Seekers, Rod McKuen and nameless folksingers from the past. But the album also reminds me of childhood days lost forever, of the early moments of spring and the haunting softness of summer, of that first moment when I recognized love. The poetry is some of the best I have read or heard in a long time. The style and imagery remins me of nothing that I have read before which, I guess, says a lot about its originality. On much of the album, Rosco speaks the poetry while Brooks plays a folk guitar and sings in the background. Sometimes what he sings is the same verse that Rosco is reciting. BOOKS In the title song, "The Morning of Your Life," Rosco gives the impression that the past is too painful for him and the future is coming on too quick. He speaks of the simple things of life, such as the world in early morning, saying "That's all there is." We must not take refuge in the past but in the present. This theme, the futility of past experiences, is the spirit that binds the album together. We must search for happiness in the simple thing, and within ourselves. One song on the first side, "Special Kind of Morning," is reminiscent of the early Seekers. The lively folk song is somewhat of a departure from the album, but it still carries the theme. "There's not time to waste in worry," Rosco says. "Today's the day you patch up the dreams that went astray." THE VINES OF YARRABEE, by Dorothy Eden (Crest, 95 cents) —In the romantic tradition of such people as Daphne du Maurier and Mary Stewart is Dorothy Eden, her new novel taking place in 19th Century Australia—a young English bride, the master of Yarrabee, a servant girl, a young artist. This is not Gothic in the sense of the author's earlier works; it is more like the romantic historical novels so popular about two decades ago, after "Gone with the Wind" paved the way for them. The second side of the album is the better side. It is created as an entity with three songs featuring the singing and guitar playing of Brooks. Three short poems by Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 5 TONIGHT! RU FILM SOCIETY DE SICA ROSSELLINI ITALIAN NEO-REALISM BICYCLE THIEF OpenCity 9 PM 303 BOLLEY 7 PM - 303 BOLLEY THURSDAY AT 10 AM Rosco, each entitled, "Indian Summer," provide the transition between the songs. PETER BURNS ROD McKUEN In Concert Sunday, April 19th, 8 p.m., MUSIC HALL Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo. TICKETS ON SALE NOW—Auditorium Box Office $3.50 - 4.50 - 5.50 - 6.50 JONS ROD McKUEN In Concert Sunday, April 19th, 8 p.m., MUSIC HALL Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo. TICKETS ON SALE NOW—Auditorium Box Office $3.50 - 4.50 - 5.50 - 6.50 PEOPLE ARE THE ULTIMATE SPECTACLE! THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? "BEST ACTRESS--JANE FONDA!" -New York Film Critics NOW Eve. 7:20-9:30 ADULTS 1.50, CHILD .75 The poetry recalls the reckless, free days of summer at a time when summer is dying. And then everything is dying. It is also an end to something in everyone's life. And although it is also a beginning, the despair of the poem reveals that the ending is more real. "Somewhere outside the smallest township of South Dakota . . . beneath a 1947 Cheverlolet lying at the bottom of the THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? "BEST ACTRESS-- JANE FONDA!" New York Film Critics Granada THEATRE...telephone VI.3-5789 NOW Eve. 7:20-9:30 ADULTS 1.50, CHILD .75 THEY SHOOT HORSES DON'T THEY? "BEST ACTRESS JANE FONDA!" THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. Varsity 7:15 THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 9:40 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 Varsity EVE. THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 9:40 A Distinguished Company Breastes Life Into Shakespeare's Lusty Age FALSTAFF "CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT" HARRY SAFTZMAN PRESENTS AN ORSON WELLES FILM Orson Welles Sir John Gilgud Margaret Rutherford Eve. 7:15 & 9:25 THE HILLCREST junk heap . . . Here, is where is where it ends." A Distinguished Company Brexthes Life Into Shakespeare's Lusty Age FaLStaff (PHILAEC AT ANDROGUT) A Distinguished Company Breathes Life Into Shakespeare's Lusty Age FALSTAFF ('CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT') HARRY SALTZMAN PRESENTS AN ORSON WELLES FILM Orson Welles Sir John Gilgud Margaret Rutherford Eve. 7:15 & 9:25 THE Hillorest 3 The album ends with the song, "A Different Side to the Morning Rain." Brooks sings that "in the playgrounds of uncertainty is where we have to play." When the album ends, the listener knows that he must go and find a different side to the morning rain. The words are the most important in this album, but Rosco and Brooks have created some good material to advance their art. The poetry invokes and the imagery cuts through many different listening preferences. Unfortunately, I doubt whether you will be able to find this album in this area. It was released on an obscure label out of New York. WITH THE UNINHIBITED SEVENTIES COMES THE LAWYER Eve 7:00 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 THE Children 75c Hillcrest R Starting BARRY NEWMAN HAROLD GOULD ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN GOLDIE HAWN ... that Kooky Star of LAFF-IN! "... Why don't we stay in night — and scramble something" walter incrip Matthew Bergman cactus Flower Featuring GOLDIE HAWN Co-directed by JACK WESTON PROY LENZ - WITH SOUTH - BEHIE HEWETT Shipment Fax 801.638.4290 TECHNOLOGY Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 Adults $1.50 THE Hillcrest Children 75c THE Hillcrest FULLCAST SHOPPING CENTER + STYL AND SHOES University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $ .75 FEL BLDRIEGE Photo by Randy Leffingwell State troopers set up roadblocks The Kansas Highway Patrol imposed this roadblock Wednesday to check incoming traffic along Iowa Street for guns, molotov cocktails and other home-made bombs. This was only part of a tight security net upheld by police Wednesday as a precautionary measure during the student strike. FTC sees profit rise WASHINGTON (UPI) — The government said Wednesday sales by U.S. manufacturers climbed 9 per cent last year and profits rose 3 per cent despite a decline in earnings in the final quarter. The joint report by the Federal Trade Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission said total sales in 1969 were higher in every category except the aircraft and bakery industries. The greatest after-tax advances, it said, were in drugs, primary metals, tobacco and dairy products. But in the last three months of the year, both pre-tax and after- tax earnings dropped 6 per cent with profits sharply down in the automotive, aircraft, rubber, plastic, leather and textile industries Total sales for 1969 were $694.6 billion, 9 per cent above the 1968 total. Release of transcript delayed by court order 6 KANSAN Apr.9 1970 BOSTON (UPI) — The Massachusetts Supreme Court Wednesday ordered a Superior Court clerk not to release the transcript or judge's report of the secret inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's car "until further orders." ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI)—A gang of more than 100 Negro students lit a fire on the roof of the Cornell University campus store Needs stressed in water projects POLARIZED CARE WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., said Wednesday that water resource programs should be accorded greater priority in the national budget. He called for a readjustment of priorities noting that the amount allocated annually for water projects "is less than two weeks cost of the war in Vietnam." Symington said more emphasis should be given to water projects for their "human benefits" such as, promoting development in rural areas and as a recreation source. Violence erupts at Cornell "It is high time for us to realize that a continued supply of fresh clean water is as vital to our overall security, more vital to our prosperity, than, for example, the space program," Symington said. POLARIZED CARE FOR YOUR GARMENTS Now's the time... STORE YOUR FURS AND CLOTHES FOR SUMMER Don't bother taking your winter clothes home this summer have them cleaned with free moth-proofing and stored all summer ready for you when fall comes. Repairs, Alterations and Reweaving Fur Cleaning Coat Linings Pick-up and Delivery Service CALL: VI 3-056 New York Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance "It is sad but true that at a time when we should be accelerating water resource development," Symington said, "the whole program is being ham-strung because of lack of funds, partly because many project benefits receive only passing consideration when evaluated." The fire, referred to as a "bonfire" by a university spokesman, was ignited using goods stolen from the store Monday by the blacks. Campus police confirmed a car was overturned. Windows were broken at Olin Library, Simpson Hall, Noyes Lodge and "some of the new North Campus dormitories," according to the spokesman. protest the April 1 destruction by fire on the Africana Studies and Research Center. Ithaca Fire Chief Charles M. Weaver revealed Wednesday his investigation "supports the theory" that cause of the fire "was arson." The incidents follow a week of demonstrations on the campus to building Wednesday night and then roamed the campus, breaking windows and overturning at least one car. On Monday, the first day of classes after spring vacation, about 100 black students presented Cornell President Dale R. Corson with a list of demands and then marched to the store when they stole approximately $3,000 worth of records, clothing and books and caused $1,000 in damages. Denmark became a member of the United Nations Oct. 24, 1945. New York Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Serving Students for 58 years NewYork Cleaners NewYork Floor Model Close Out Sale Malls Shopping Center Records & Stereo 1—only KLH Model 24 reg. $319.00 now $277.00 2—only KLH Model 21v reg. $299.00 now $165.00 Special—Masterwork 4800 $139.95 1—only Ampex 85 Cassette record & play unit req. $199.00 now $160.00 1—only Ampex 50 Cassette Deck reg. $95.00, new $95.00 KIEF'S 1—only Motorola 8-track cart. player req. $109.00 now $90.00 1—only Ampex 95 Cassette stack record & play unit reg. $269.00 now $235.00 1—only Motorola 8-track cart. player reg. $79.95 now. $66.00 SPECIAL BUY! 10.88 Wherever you go, these jackets go, tool Here in ever-popular Dacron® polyester/cotton poplin that's right for keeping out cool breezes. Sunnied-up with slash pockets and self belts. 3-button style in gold, beige or blue. 4-button style in ale, green or beige. In misses sizes 6 to 16 **10.88**. Like it . . . charge it! Penneys THE FASHION PLACE One astronaut could develop measles Substitute considered for moon shot space." CAPE KENNEDY (UP1) — Space Agency officials said Wednesday they were considering substituting a backup astronaut for Thomas K. Mattingly, whose susceptibility to the measles threaten a one-month delay in the Apollo 13 moon landing mission. Swigert, he said, appears immune to the measles and "is fairly well prepared" for the mission. Doctors, however, were continuing to make new laboratory tests to determine if Mattingly's condition has changed from tests run earlier Wednesday. Physicians said the tests showed Mattingly could become ill with the measles in space if launched Saturday. fly a mission under such conditions. On one of the Gemini flights the two prime crewmen were killed several weeks before the launch in a plane crash and the backup crew flew the space mission. If the $375-million expedition is delayed until the next launch opportunity, May 9, it would cost taxpayers $800,000 the Space Agency said. Public affairs officer Alfred Albrando said backup command module pilot John L. Swigert was under consideration as a possible substitute for Saturday's launch. "Whether we go with him or not, that decision has not been reached," Alibrando said. Such a switch would mark the first time in U. S. space history that a backup pilot was called upon to men, veteran James A. Lovell and Fred W. Haise, were found to be immune to German measles, a common children's disease. All three were exposed to the measles last week when backup astronaut Charles Duke fell ill with the disease. The other two Apollo 13 crew- Dr. Charles A. Berry, the Apollo medical director, said Monday that if tests on the astronaut's blood showed that any of the pilots were without disease-fighting measles anti-bodies, "the odds are very high that they would get it." "The latest analysis indicates that command module pilot Thomas K. Mattingly has no immunity to this disease," the Space Agency said in a mid-day statement. "This finding creates the To keep the Apollo spacecraft from being cooked by the sun on its journey to the moon, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration use a rotating motion recommended by Harold L. Finch. Berry said earlier that measles "certainly could" disable a moon pilot. Finch, an engineering graduate of the University of Kansas who is now working toward his doctoral degree in Education Administration, said that the spacecraft is rotated to insure a fairly uniform temperature over the vehicle. Vehicles in space are subject to great extremes in temperature, Finch said. When temperatures on the sunny side were boiling hot, the shaded side of a vehicle could be in a deep freeze, he explained. "We know that temperatures in space are fatal to people and dangerous to vital parts of the vehicle." Finch said. The shadow cast by the foot of the Lunar Excursion Modual (LEM), he said, when the Apollo vehicle was in a position that shaded the engine, would cause the temperature of the engine to drop 500 degrees. In one of the Gemini flights, two jets froze up because of this problem, he said. As a senior engineer at Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Finch, under a grant from NASA, worked out a program which enabled scientists to predict the temperature of the Apollo craft at any instant, in any position, anywhere in space. KU graduate aids in Apollo Finch said NASA needed to know when and where the dangerous temperatures would occur and then would be able to counteract the extremes of temperature. possibility that unless there is a change in Mattingly's condition between now and launch, he could develop German measles in To find out where the sunshine and shadows occurred a model was built, and a searchlight shined parallel beams to simulate the rays of the sun. Lennon duo separates psychiatrists' orders Yoko sleeps in one bedroom, John in another, and they communicate by letter because the psychiatrists recommended it, he said. The two American psychiatrists—a man for him and a woman for her—were flown to London to watch over the couple during Yoko's pregnancy, the spokesman said. LONDON (UPI)—Psychiatrists have separated Beatle John Lennon and his Japanese wife, Yoko Ono, a spokesman for the couple said Wednesday. Yoko suffered a miscarriage last year, and was admitted to a London nursing home this year because of complications in the early months of her pregnancy. A model was made because a computer could not calculate the different configurations. The information is physically recorded and then fed into a computer, he said. Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 7 Temperatures that the spacecraft could not tolerate were matched with a technique to counteract them. Finch said. "We found roughly that a rotation once every hour was best," he said. If the spacecraft rotated faster, he said, the efficiency of the astronauts would drop. If too slow, the vehicle, like on a rotisserie, would start cooking, he said. Nixon policy forum topic Prior to this semester, Finch was the dean of instruction at the new Johnson County Community College in Kansas City. Finch said he was going into education because he found that he is more interested in working with people than "things." The Latin American Club at KU is sponsoring a panel discussion on "Nixon and the American Policy for Latin America" on Monday April 13 at the Kansas Union Forum Room, Robert Ortiz, Pemberton, N.J., freshman and chairman of the social committee said. The forum will be conducted by Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science; Robert E. Himshaw, associate professor of anthropology; Robert Nunley associate professor of geography; Sakari Sariola associate professor of sociology; Milton Clarke, graduate student and Reverend Sanchez, adviser at the Westminster Center. Floor Model Close Out Sale 1—only KLH Model 24 reg. $319.00 now $277.00 2—only KLH Model 11w reg. $199.00 now $166.00 1—only Motorola 8-track cart. player 1—only Motorola 8-track cart. player reg. $109.00 now $90.00 1—only Motorola 8-track cart. player res. $79.95 now. $66.00 1—only Ampex 95 Cassette stack record & play unit reg. $269.00 now $235.00 reg. $269.00 now $25.00 1—only Ampex 50 Cassette Deck 1—only Ampex 50 Cassette Deck reel $129.00 new $25.00 1—only Ampex 50 Cassette Deck req. $129.00 now $95.00 1—only Ampex 85 Cassette record & play unit req. $199.00 now $160.00 Special—Masterwork 4800 $139.95 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center We sell swim suits that sell You the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Lawrence ENGINEERING EXPOSITION 1970 profiles of tomorrow learned hall university of kansas lawrence, kansas 66044 april 17, 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m. april 18, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. april 19, awards banquet 6:00 p.m. SHORT SHOTS John Novotny, University of Kansas athletic counselor the past three years, was elevated to the dual position of assistant athletic director and athletic business manager. The move was announced by Wade Stinson, athletic director, after his appointment of Novotny was confirmed by the KU Athletic Board. Novotny, 32, succeeds Monte Johnson, who resigned after 10 years, will begin his new position July 1. Stinson said a successor to Novotny as athletic counselor will be named later. The new athletic business manager, who holds three degrees from KU, was born at Dewey, Okla., and reared at Claflin, Kan. He earned a B.S. degree in education at Kansas in 1960, an A.B. in history and political science in 1961 and a masters degree in history in 1963. Randy Culbertson, standout guard from Raytown (Mo.) South, is the first basketball player to sign a Big Eight letter of intent with KU this year, coach Ted Owens announced Wednesday. The 6-foot athlete led Raytown to a 27-1 record and the Missouri state championship. He averaged 15.4 points per game through his senior year and was selected to many Missouri and Kansas City area all-high school teams. Pepper Rodgers and his Kansas football staff will hold open house for high school coaches Saturday at their new offices in the Allen Field House annex. The Jayhawk staff will hold informal discussions with visiting coaches and be available for question and answer sessions. In the afternoon, the prep coaches will be invited to attend the KU practice session, including a controlled scrimmage at Memorial Stadium. Rodgers said another similar open house is planned for the following Saturday, but indicated the scrimmage on April 18 will be scheduled during the morning to avoid conflict with the closing afternoon session of the Kansas Relays. KU's baseball game against K-State at Lawrence April 18 has been moved up to begin at 11 a.m., Jayhawk athletic director Wade Stinson announced. Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN Hawk shortstop shows versatility By DAVID SCHWARTZ Kansan Sports Writer Keith Lieppman, Kansas City, Mo. junior, is a busy athlete at KU. Each fall the 6-1,200-pounder turns his attention to the gridiron where he is a member of the Jayhawk football squad. As soon as the football season concludes he turns his talents to baseball. This year is Lieppman's second as the starting shortstop for the Jayhawk nine. Last season he hit for a .261 average and led the team with three home runs and 17 runs batted in. Returning to the same top notch form this year, Lieppman has smacked the ball at a remarkable .450 consistency in the 'Hawks first six encounters. The slick-fielding shortstop possesses good power also as evidenced by the three doubles he has cracked early in the season. Although the Jayhawks stumbled to a 12-14 season last year and floundered in the second division of the Big Eight race with a 7-12 mark, Lieppman expects the team to be much improved this year. The 'Hawks, off to one of their better starts are currently 5-1 and leave today for a weekend series with Oklahoma in Norman "With the addition of pitcher Dave Robisch, a good defensive infield, and more overall experience I think we can improve on last year's finish," he stated. "If we do well at Oklahoma this weekend, I think we have a good chance at grabbing a spot in the first division." Lieppman started playing baseball at the age of eight in the 3 and 2 League in Kansas City. The last four summers he has played for the Katz team in the Ban Johnson League, and he intends to do the same this summer while going to summer school at KU. Lieppman was a member of the Ban Johnson all-star team in both 1966 and 1968. As a shortstop, Lieppman feels the most important things to concentrate on are keeping the knees bent and the glove down. As for hitting he says, "Most of it is instinct, but concentration is essential so you don't develop bad habits." "I've always enjoyed baseball," he said. "Most of it has come naturally to me." His goal is to play pro baseball. Lieppman's future already seems bright as he was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1966, but decided to attend KU before giving the pro's a try. The first American to win a Nobel Prize for literature was Sinclair Lewis in 1930. Relays attracts three top milers Three of the nation's leading middle distance runners, all of whom ran at the KU Relays as collegians, today accepted invitations to compete in the famed Glenn Cunningham Mile at next week's Jayhawk baton carnival. John Lawson, Tom Von Ruden and John Mason, all representing the Pacific Coast Club, assured meet director Bob Timmons that they will run in this invitational race named in honor of KU's great miler of the 1930's. Lawson competed for KU in 1964-65-66, won numerous championship, including the 1965 NCAA cross-country title, and ran with nine winning relay teams on the Kansas-Texas-Drake baton circuit. The former Jayhawk captain has a best time of 3:59.3. Lawson turned in one of the biggest suprises of the past indoor campaign when he upset Kip Keino, the Olympic 1,500 meter champion, at Los Angeles with a 4:00.6 effort, the fastest mile of the 1970 indoor season. Mason, the former Fort Hays State ace, is also well known to KU Relays fans. He enjoyed a banner indoor season and his 4:00.8 at Vancouver ranked third nationally behind Lawson and Keino, who posted identical 4:00.6 times in their thriller at Los Angeles. Von Ruden, one-time Oki- ahoma State star, owns the best mile of the three with his 3:56.9 in 1967. He posted a 4:02.4 this past winter when he also smashed the world record for 1,000 meters. While at Oklahoma State Von Ruden was a member of many crack relay teams, including a two-mile outfit that once held the world record. Since then he's continued to run in the service and with the Pacific Coast Club and has ranked high among the world's best from the 880 through the mile. He was a member or the United States 1,500 meter trio at the Mexico City Olympics with Jim Ryun and Marty Liquori. Von Ruden finished ninth in the finals. The Glenn Cunningham Mile is scheduled for 2:30 on the closing Saturday session of the Kansas Relays. The three-day meet begins Thursday, April 16, and will be the first competition on KU's new Tartan track. Beautiful New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing at Malls Olde English Village - interior roominess - wall to wall carpeting - air conditioning - sound conditioning - all electric Frigidaire kitchens - dishwasher - disposal Come see 2 and 3 bedroom units afternoon weekdays and weekends - fireplaces 2411 Louisiana - suana baths - recreation rooms Jayhawk shortstop Keith Lieppman carries a big stick for Floyd Temple's club. 842-5552 KU Keith Lieppman FREE PRIZE DRAWINGS Win a trip for 2 to the 1970 Indianapolis 500 as the personal guest of Mario Andretti A pair of new Firestone "500" tires! 005 500 "Come in and register for the big prize drawing contest...no cost or obligation. You may win a free trip to the 1970 Indianapolis 500 race as the guest of Mario Andretti...a pair of new, firestone '500' tires. You owe it to yourself to see the new Firestone '500' today!" 500 $ \textcircled{4} $ Mario Andretti Void where prohibited by law Firestone THE MILEAGE SPECIALIST FRITZ CO. "Firestone Corner" 8th and New Hamp. "Firestone Corner" 843-4321 THE HOUGH MASTERS Photo by Jim Ryun Tennis anyone? Back in action again this year for the women's tennis team is Susan Ege. Miss Ege is one of the five returnees from last year's team selected to the squad Wednesday after three days of tryouts. KANSAS KANSAS KANSAS A top flight trio KU's awesome weight trio of Karl Salb, Doug Knop and Steve Wilhelm will head the Jayhawks when they meet Indiana in a dual meet this weekend in Bloomington. Other track team members will represent the 'Hawks at the Wichita State Relays and the Emporia State Relays. Blues thump North Stars ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Ab McDonald and Terry Crisp scored two goals on Wednesday night to give the St. Louis Blues a 6-2 win over the Minnesota North Stars in the first game of the Stanley Cup quarterfinals. Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 9 The Blues, who breezed to the Western division title again this year, beat Gump Worsley for the first time ever. Every diamond tells you he loves you Truly a bouquet of fire diamonds in this bridal duo. $269 14 Karat white or yellow gold Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 The first year tennis coach said during competition women appeared jovial on the surface, but underneath were quite serious. She said defeats and mistakes aroused the greatest emotions. But not all ten of the women selected will compete. She said that the six who will represent the school will be selected upon the basis of practice performance just prior to the meets and according to their class schedule. Wednesday, after three days of tryouts and consideration by Coach Suzi Cammon, the KU women's intercollegiate tennis team was selected. Twenty women participated in this year's tryouts, but only 10 will have the chance to represent KU in competition. Three days of tryouts conclude "The ones that really cared kept coming and coming." Miss Cammon said, "the others just sluffed it off." KU women's tennis squad selected Their emotions are not revealed in swearing, Miss Cammon said, "but in facial expressions and attitudes." She said they often clam up after a mistake or defeat. Participation in women's inter-collegiate competition does not require the scrutinization that the NCAA does. They must be a full time undergraduate student, but it is only suggested that they have 1.0 grade point academically. year's squad Susan Ege—returnee from last year's Sarah Conrad—returnee from last year's squad This year's competition and team members are: squad Ann Gensman—returnee from last ... new year—returnee from last year's squad Ann Gennemann—returns from last yé quáid Brenda Grimes—returne from last year's squad Sandy' Stanek—returnee from last year's squad year's squad Ariana Krost Joannie Lindsmouth Margaret McBride Susie Tawarter Deborah Tolefree Wade Stinson, KU athletic director announced in a news conference held for regional media Tuesday night, that the Athletic Board has decided on an allweather football surface to be installed in Memorial Stadium. Sports Bulletin Stinson said the surface, which is a product of the 3-M Company, will be installed as soon as the Board of Regents approves the construction. In order to have the surface installed for football games next fall, the Regents must approve the installation by June 1. Stinson termed the all-weather surface as "a highly desirable addition to the University and the athletic department. He added that several items needed to be worked out and he hoped to have the Tartan surface installed next fall. He said that he couldn't comment on how the proposed surface will be financed, but a statement would be issued later to clarify some points concerning the financing of the new surface. Tentative schedule April 25—dual with K-State at Lawrence April 28-dual with Emporia at Lawrence May 2—tournament at Atchison May 9—tournament at Columbia COLUMBIA STEREO TAPE CARTRIDGE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including The Beatles Baby Driver Blue Bird Love Amen to Customer Satisfaction Bridge Over Troubled Water On COLUMBIA STEREO TAPE CARTRIDGE Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr World's Finest Automatic Turntables Garrard 59.50 M3D 15.75 75. 25 NOW SL55B and Shure M3D Cartridge All for just 1 Cent More, ★ Flawless, Silent Synchronous Speed 5951 ★ Viscous Damper Cueing With Shure M3D ★ Overarm Swings Out of Way for Single Play ★ Fully Adjustable Anti-Skating Control ★ Over Size Turntable ★ Slide-in Cartridge Clip ★ Light Weight, Tubular Aluminum Tone Arm ★ Fixed-Position Damper Counterweigh* ★ Built-in Styles Forle Adjustment Many More Professionally-Inspired Features Base and Dust Cover Extra 3 Day Special — Thurs., Fri., Sat. THE STEREO STORE UDIOTRONICS HOURS: 9:30 - 5:30 Daily Open 'Till 8:30 Thurs. 928 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kans. Phone 843-8500 O Hard-hitting Sooner All-Big Eight outfielder Mike Swenton will be on hand this weekend when the Jayhawks venture to Norman to meet the Sooners in KU's conference opener. Swenton sported a .329 average last year as a sophomore and topped OU in RBI's with 39. Shannon aching to rejoin Cardinals ST. LOUIS (UPI)—Yesterday was the first day of the baseball season for the St. Louis Cardinals, but Mike Shannon was flat on his back in a hospital. The Cardinals won their opener with the Montreal Expos in Montreal, but Shannon was 1,000 miles away from third base in Jarry Park. Shannon's ailment is a kidney condition called gomerulo nephritis. It's the kind of ailment that flattens a strapping 6-foot-3 200-pound baseball player who is still the picture of health. Shannon has been in the hospital for more than two weeks and has at least another week of seemingly interminable tests. He'd like to move about, but the doctors have told him to remain quiet. They've explained that his condition could be worsened by exercise. "I'm going to whip this," says Shannon with the same Irish stubbornness that helped him to switch from the outfield to third base a few years ago as suggested by St. Louis manager Red Schoendienst. Many said the swapping of positions was silly, but Mike fielded grounders all winter at Fairgrounds Park in St. Louis and then helped the Cardinals to the next two National League pennants. Confusion on Future Even the doting of the nurses at Jewish Hospital in St. Louis is little consolation for the handsome athlete beset with confusion about his future. "It's become a game of checkers now," he said. "They take some tests and give me some medicine, then more tests and more medicine. The doctors still haven't nailed it down, and so I'll just have to wait some more to find out how bad it is." Dr. Stan London, the Cardinals' team physician, had indicated that Shannon would be out of baseball until at least July. Since the hospital tests began, the doctors have concerned themselves only with Shannon's health, not his baseball career. Mike waits impatiently. "I want to get back as quickly as I can," he said. "But they tell me I need rest and relaxation. So I just have to be quiet and let 10 KANSAN Apr. 9 1970 the doctors and the laboratories do the work." Mail Deluge Shannon has spent some of his time by answering fan mail. He has been deluged by it since that day in spring training when his ailment was announced and Mike began packing his suitcases for the long trip home. "People have been just wonderful to me," he said. "They've been sending me letters and telling me they're praying for me, and some have included mass cards. Let me tell you that those prayers are very much appreciated." Schoendienst acknowledges that the Cardinals are having a problem in manning third base. Really the problem is being analyzed and tested and diagnosed at Jewish Hospital. A clean bill of health for Shannon would be the healthiest development for the Cardinals. Offense tops Poke practice STILLWATER (UPI) — Oklahoma State University footballers hammered their footway through a two-ring scrimmage session before the camera Wednesday as the four offensive units produced nine touchdowns. "There was good hitting," Coach Floyd Gass claimed. "It's too early to display good techniques, but we'll have to concentrate on techniques before our next scrimmage." The two top offensive and defensive units used one half of Lewis field and the reserves staked out the other end. Numerous players shuffled between the various units. Junior college quarterback Tony Pounds hit 8 or 17 passes for 124 yards and a 40-yard scoring screen pass to newcomer James Williams. Johnny Ballard hit five of 13 passes for 75 yards and a touchdown including a 15-yard toss to Bucky Utter. Assault controversy goes on Flanker Alan Oliver caught four passes for 60 yards and yearling Pryor Nunn rushed for 50 yards on 13 carries from the fullback position. He caught four aerials for 35 yards. Hockey trial continues OTTAWA (UPI) — A sports broadcaster testified Wednesday that St. Louis Blues forward Wayne Maki "speared" Boston Bruins defenseman Ted Green during their fight at an exhibition hockey game here Sept. 21. Fraser Cameron, a sports commentator for the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., took the witness stand on the second day of Green's trial on a charge of common assault. If convicted by Judge Michael Fitzpatrick, Green would become the first National Hockey League player ever found guilty of a criminal offense on the ice during a game. Cameron's testimony was the first so far in the trial to support the defense contention that Maki poked Green with his stick before the two players began a stick-swinging battle. Green suffered a fractured skull in the fight and has missed the entire season because of his injuries. Under further questioning from Crown Prosecutor John Cassells, Cameron said that "Maki appeared to get free and then brought his blade up into Green." He said he "believed" Maki's stick hit Green's body. The newsman said the players collided in the Boston end while chasing the puck in the 13th minute of the first period. "Green did everything he could to keep Maki out of play," Cameron said. "He tied Maki up, their arms were tangled and Green held Maki against the boards. Green made a motion of his arms towards Maki's head, and then Maki got loose and made a spearing motion with his stick." Cameron also backed up earlier testimony by game officials that Green got in a solid swing at Maki before the St. Louis player ended the fight with a "tomahawk type swing" that fractured Green's skull. The newsman said Maki's blow seemed the more powerful of the two stick swings. "In my estimation, Maki's blow was the harder blow," Cameron said. Drago pitches Royals past A's to even series KANSAS CITY (UPI) — Dick Drago pitched a four-hit shutout and Ed Kirkpatrick singled in a fourth-inning run Wednesday night to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 2-0 victory over the Oakland Athletics. Although the A's stranded seven runners, none of them got past second against Drago as he posted his third major league shutout. The Royals' first run was scored in the fourth inning when Amos Otis singled, went to second on an infield out and scored on Kirkpatrick's single to right. They added their other run in the eighth when Bob Oliver opened with a double, went to third on an infield out and scored on Luis Alcaraz' suicide squeeze bunt. Alcaraz, credited with a sacrifice, was tossed out by first baseman Don Mincher, who didn't have a play at the plate and threw to second baseman Dick Green at first. Oakland starter and loser Jim Hunter went the first six innings before being lifted for a pinchhitter. Hunter gave up five hits and struck out eight. Diego Segui finished up for the losers. The A's stranded two runners in the second and fourth innings. Both times Hunter ended the threat, grounding out in the second and striking out in the fourth. The victory evened the series at one win apiece as the A's took the season's opener from the Royals, 6-4, Tuesday afternoon. Luna Nyro New York Tendobay On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Peace Corps GRADUATES Make your first step towards the future with the Peace Corps. Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries. In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry. 100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-5917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong A woman stands behind a man reading a book while two other women lie on their backs on the ground. They are all wearing swimwear. The background features a building with large windows and stone steps. Photo by Jan Bishop Sunbathing grows in popularity As the weather remains warm, many KU students begin work on their summer suntans. Members of the Alpha Phi sorority catch the sun from the roof of their house. Servicemen release sought LAFAYETTE, La. (UPI)—Bud Mahurin of Los Angeles, president of the American Fighter Pilots Association, said Wednesday night his group is working through a former French government official to obtain the release of pilots and other servicemen captured by the North Vietnamese. Mahurin, vice president of space marketing for North American Rockwell, which makes Apollo space crafts, spoke to a new fighter pilots chapter here enroute to Cape Kennedy for the moon launch. He said his group, through the Free French Fighter Pilots Association, had communication with an ex-foreign minister of France who was a personal friend of Ho Chi Minh. The Frenchman, whom Mahurin did not name, was a member of the Indo China high command and attended Ho's funeral as France's representative, he said. Mahurin said his group hoped to achieve what Dallas billionaire H. Ross Perot set out to do in obtaining release and fair treatment of American prisoners. He said the communists, not understanding how Perot could be representing only himself and not the The Star Spangled Banner was designated the National Anthem by Act of Congress March 3, 1931. U. S. government, did not trust the Texan. He said he hoped a group action would overcome such suspicion. "Together, we hope we can push this thing through," Mahurin said. "We hope this will complement T. Ross Perot's efforts." Mahurin said his group hoped to impress upon the Nort Vietnamese that release of prisoners would be the first step to any peaceful negotiation for ending the war. APRIL 9 APRIL 9 OCT. 1946 BIRDY FLAKIN, N.Y. TIDD. E.M. ONLY Onstream Auditium Onstream Auditium SHADOWS OF CHINATOWN THE GOOD EARTH PSEUDO-CHINESE FILM SERIES USSR, West Germany nearing settlement FRANKFURT, GERMANY (UPI) - Cautious but determined, skeptical but unconcealably excited, West Germany under Chancellor Willy Brandt is edging toward settling its differences with the Soviet bloc Those differences and a new Soviet attitude toward them came to light this month in four parallel sets of preliminary East-West talks—in East Germany, Russia, Poland and Berlin. After more than 30 hours of German-Soviet talks in Moscow, 15 hours of German-Polish talks in Warsaw, an unprecedented East-West German summit in Erfurt, and the opening of Berlin talks in Berlin, the demands appear to boil down to these: The Soviets want West Germany to recognize Communist East Germany practically as a foreign country. They also want West Germany to cede to Poland German land placed under Polish administration after World War II, pending a Four-Power peace treaty with Germany which the Russians have relentlessly blocked. The United States, Britain and France want Russia to guarantee the lifelines of West Berlin, which sits 110 miles inside East German territory. Bonn wants Moscow to renounce claims as a World War II victor to be able to intervene militarily in Germany. By calling the Four-Power Berlin talks this week after an 11-year hiatus and without making advance demands, the Soviets have indicated some receptiveness to Western demands. Settlement seems a long way off. But already some West German political commentators are predicting when it comes, it will take the shape of Locarno. This was the 1925 treaty guaranteeing Germany's Western borders with France and Belgium. Signing it cost Germany its claim to the rich coal mining region of Alsace-Lorraine and two counties in Belgium. It also led to troop withdrawals from German territory. In so doing, Lucarno ushered in a short period of peace and security between World Wars I and II. Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 11 Today the Soviet bloc is demanding that West Germany give assurance on its Eastern borders—something which the original Locarno failed to do adequately. Brandt has indicated a readiness to do this. But as he told East German Premier Willie Stoph at the Erfurt summit March 19, Germany and Berlin are still the responsibility of the Four Powers and final settlements of borders must have their approval. Brandt appeared thus to rebuff a possible Russian desire to sign a separate peace treaty with Germany, enabling both to skirt the Western Allies. German leaders are aware the original Locarno treaty arrangements collapsed because Britain refused to back France in guaranteeing borders in the East. Given America's commitment to protect Western Europe over the past 25 years, they hope Washington will act differently. Brandt has informed the American, French and British leaders of the talks to date and said futher steps toward the East will be decided only after his April trip to Washington. NEW YORK (UPI)—Thirteen Black Panthers listened in near total silence Wednesday while defense attorneys questioned police witnesses about firearms, "pipe bombs," and gun powder seized when the Panthers were arrested just over a year ago. Panthers' testimony continues The hearings resumed Tuesday after a six-week recess called by Supreme Court Justice John Murtagh in response to repeated outbursts in the courtroom by defendants and spectators. Testimony Wednesday was devoted to the third in a series of 13 defense motions to suppress evidence. When the hearings are completed, the Panthers' trial on conspiracy charges will begin. They are accused of plotting to bomb department stores, policee stations and commuter trains. Visit the Colonel Kentucky Fried Chicken. Visit the Colonel Take a bucket or box home for studying You can pick up Col. Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken at: KEEP OUT It's finger lickin' good Kentucky Fried Chicken You can pick up Col. Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken. at: West 23rd and Alabama Streets 一 The strike day rally... Photo by Mark Bernstein BEGINNING OF THE SUMMER CAMP. MEN AND WOMEN ARE IN AN ENORMOUS GATHERING. A LARGE FREEDOM IS BACK FOR THE YOUTH. A micro Woodstock? Photo by Greg Sorber Strike day A man climbs a rope above water in front of a crowd. STROKE Photo by Ron Bishop Just like falling off a log... Strike in the pluperfect Photo by Marilyn McMullen FRIDAY AND SATURDAY GROOVE TO THE VERY HEAVY SOUNDS OF THE FACTORY ONLY $1.00 ADMISSION AND $1.00 PER PITCHER COME ON OUT FOR THE BEST SOUND IN TOWN CAN YOU DIG? DON'T FORGET-APR.29-STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK The DRAUGHT HOUSE Jane with Jane and Kate. Kansas Relays queens announced The Kansas Relays queens are, from left to right; Susan Brimacombe, a senior journalism major from Kansas City, Mo., representing Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority; Debbie Blattner, a sophomore Liberal Arts major from St. Louis, representing Delta Gamma and Joan Butcher, a sophomore personnel administration major from Wathena, representing McCollum Hall. Police continue report in Tunney murder case CHESHAM, England (UPI) A magistrate court Wednesday ordered Joan Tunney Wilkinson held in custody for another week while police continue their report on charges she murdered her husband. Mrs. Wilkinson, daughter of former heavyweight boxing champion Gene Tunney, stood in the docket during the brief preliminary hearing. She showed no outward signs of emotion. A police inspector told the court that police needed until April 15 to complete their formal report on the charges and that detectives needed time to continue their investigations. Mrs. Wilkinson, 30, was arrested March 29, and charged with murdering her 31-year-old husband, Lynn Carter Wilkinson, in their three-room cottage outside London. The dark-haired mother of two daughters was formally charged with murder March 31. Police have declined to comment on motive or the weapon. Police sources said earlier Wilkinson died of head injuries. The Department of Civil Engineering will present a guest speaker to talk on the effects of environmental problems on the development of water resources Friday. Lecturer to outline water policy 14 KANSAN Apr. 9 1970 Victor A. Koelzer, head of the engineering and environmental sciences staff for the National Water Commission, will speak at 10:30 a.m. in the Council Room at the Kansas Union. Koelzer's staff, said John McNown, professor of civil engineering at the University of Kansas and host of the guest lecture, supports the commission's role in national water resources policy and action, especially and consideration of water problems and their relationship to the total environment. Applications are being accepted for 1970-71 AWS-Fashion Board. They are available at the Dean of Women's Office and are due no later than 5 p.m., April 14, 1970. Questions? Contact Pam Russell at VI 3-3910 Prof urges trust of students Eagleton added, "I believe, and the Kansas City authority believes, that the essential responsibility for subsidizing urban public transportation lies with the state and local governments." Wright spoke of a number of people who thought that action by a small group of people is futile. He said his response to them would be to ask them if they were really aware of all the efforts of the KU people to make KU a "real learning experience." Wright made the statement and several others relating to Wednesday's strike in his 12:30 human development class, which was open to any person who wished to come and voice his opinion on Wednesday's activities. The legislature must learn that the students can be trusted and that this is the foundation on which a good university can be built—and a far better one than they could build themselves, said John Wright, professor of human development, in Hoch Auditorium Wednesday. Wright mentioned that he had never particularly agreed with some campus leaders, but that he had learned to listen to them. He said he felt that there was a large group of serious, concerned people who were trying to communicate on a meaningful level at KU. He urged students to take a good look at the University and then to decide if KU was really trying to repress intellectual curiosity. Several students gave brief talks, nearly all in support of the thrust of the strike, but some stressing the need for nonviolent activities. The bill to provide grants to help put off costs of servicing debts could be "of significant assistance in St. Louis," Eagleton said. But in Kansas City, the bill could only be "of peripheral assistance." Kansas City public transit needs subsidy says senator WASHINGTON (UPI) - Public transportation in Kansas City, Mo., "cannot survive without some form of operating subsidy," Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo., said Wednesday. Kansas City's system has had to put in a 50-cent fare, Eagleton said, "an intolerable burden on those persons—primarily the aged, the handicapped, and the poor—who must rely on public transportation." Eagleton testified to a Senate subcommittee on housing and urban affairs, concerning proposals for emergency federal help for urban public transit systems. stop-gap measure," and it threatens to accelerate the loss of business. The fare is unfortunate in two respects, he said—it "is merely a The first parking meter in the United States was installed in 1935. --nobody,but nobody can match our shirts and ties C Campbell's 843 Mass. MEN'S WEAR 843-0454 Ford official comments on school ills In the view of Mario D. Fantini, program officer for public education for the Ford Foundation, the problem with American schools is this: "We are expecting an educational system rooted in the nineteenth century to solve twentieth- and twenty-first century problems." If, in the 1970's, the nation is to avoid the costly errors of the 1960's, the schools need an entirely new set of guiding assumptions, Fantini said. In the 60's, Fantini said in an article in the April issue of Today's Education, journal of the National Education Association, schools reacted to crash programs St. Louis TV stations subpoenaed for films ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) — U.S. Attorney Daniel Bartlett Jr., said Wednesday that area television stations had been subpoenaed to appear with film clippings before a U.S. grand jury investigating recent disturbances at Washington University. Bartlett said on television station, KMOX-TV, had already turned over films to his office. Bartlett would not name the other stations subpoenaed. The attorney said the subpoenas involved "nothing that would constitute the invasion of newspaper privileges." "The subpoenaes are simply for film and photo mats, motion picture film and photographs," he said. dealing with the poor. "They are returnable forthwith," Bartlett said, "but usually by agreement we sit down and work out some time for the convenience of the media." Bartlett said the films would be used primarily to identify persons. a spokesman for KSD-TV said his station had received word that Winn sponsors bill for ecology college WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., sponsored a bill Wednesday to set up a national college of ecological and environmental studies. The use of such terms as "culturally disadvantaged," he said, implied something was wrong with the learner when, in fact, the problem was with the institution. The bill is similar to measures introduced by other Republicans Wednesday. Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 15 members of the U.S. attorney's office would probably be coming Friday to view its film. MAJOR ARCHIVES A spokesman for KTVI-TV said the station had received a subpoena for films used on the air and all other clippings. At KPLR-TV, a spokesman said the station had not received a subpoena, but added that federal agents had already viewed the file of films on the university disturbances. "In a pluralistic society, diversity is an important value that our educational institutions should express," he said. 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VI 3-4266 Authorized Artcarved Jeweler Fantini said the "direction of desired reform" appears to be: - A parental and community role in matters of budgeting, personnel and curriculum. the total educational system has been ponderous and unresponsive to the growing aspirations of those who use the schools—both consumer (students, parents) and practitioner (teachers, administrators)." bear some relevance to the students' lives and with newer kinds of content and procedures that will help students answer deep personal concerns and rediscover their own integrity. Some consumers may therefore seek other options—such as private schools. But, Fantini said, many others are demanding change and reform through direct participation — decentralization and community control. - The present heavy emphasis on cognitive subject matter to be tempered with materials that - A wider spectrum of staff to include professionals, laymen (parents, community residents and students) and specialists from other disciplines and professions. "The participants who lead reform in the 70's will be those closest to the action—teachers, parents, students. Participation of these publics in the governance of urban schools carries the potential for triggering changes in substance and personnel," he says. "However, the embassy stressed there will be no meeting with government officials or Red Cross representatives should we be allowed in," Mrs. Wood said. "The Polish embassy in Stockholm told us we will have final word in the matter when we go to Vienna on Thursday," Mrs. Wood said. COPENHAGEN (UPI) — Four American women touring Europe on behalf of more than 1,000 U.S. servicemen either missing or held captive in Vietnam said Wednesday night they had not given up hope of visiting Communist Poland although official doors had been closed. visas. WE Mrs. Laird Gutterson, Mrs. Patrick Wood, Mrs. Jack Vanloan and Mrs. Ivan D. Appleby, all of Tucson, Ariz., made a second stopover in Copenhagen on their mission. They told UPI they may get to Warsaw on ordinary tourist Wives hope to tour Poland "But talking to the people in the streets would be almost just as good," she said. All by Artcarved, the most trusted name in wedding rings since 1850. Starting at $8. As seen in BRIDES' Marks Jewelers DELUXE Certified Gemologist American Gems Society 817 Mass. V1 3-4266 Authorized Artcarved Jeweler The women will fly to Vienna Thursday. bell bottoms CLOTHES GIFTS STROBE CANDLES UNDERGROUND PAPERS INCENSE LAMPSHADES JEWELRY SCARVES PIPES INDIA PRINTS STRAWBERRY FIELDS 712 MASS. Stalin's daughter hopes to be U.S. citizen Svetlana becomes wife of U.S. architect PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) Svetlana Alliluyeva, the daughter of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, said Wednesday her marriage to a prominent architect would bring her closer to American life and that she hoped to become a U.S. citizen. Miss Alliluyeva, 44, who defected from the Soviet Union in 1967, married William Wesley Peters, 57, in a private ceremony near here Tuesday. At a news conference Wednesday, the couple described their first meeting of only three weeks ago when Miss Allilluyeva came to visit Taliesin West, the architectural school of the late Frank Lloyd Wright. Peters is chief architect for Taliesin Associated Architects, the organization which has carried on the Wright Foundation's work. He had been an associate of Wright since 1932 and was formerly married to the Wright's eldest daughter, also named Svetlana. She was killed in an auto accident in Wisconsin in 1946. Miss Alliluyeva decided to visit Taliesin West and the Wright family after corresponding with another Wright daughter, Iovanna, who lives here with her mother. The Kremlin-born Svetlana said she was moved by the "unique quality" of Miss Wright's letters and the coincidence of the name of the sister who was killed. Mrs. Frank Lloyd Wright, also a native Russian, told reporters she felt a "closeness" to Miss Alliluyeva from the moment they first met. Peters said his decision to marry the attractive Miss Alliuyea came about through "almost miraculous circumstances." He recounted her defection from her homeland in protest of a lack of freedom and said it seemed more than coincidence that she had found her way to Taliesin West, which he described as "the essence of American democracy." Cambodians release hijacked munitions ship SIHANOUKVILLE, Cambodia (UPI) — The U.S. munitions ship Columbia Eagle, hijacked at sea last month by two American crewmen, set sail Wednesday from this port after being released by Cambodian officials. Capt. Donald Swann, skipper of the 10,636-ton freighter, would not disclose its destination but, presumably, it was the U.S. Naval base at Subic Bay in the Philippines. Swann, in a shipboard news conference before sailing, said the two men who hijacked the ship appeared to be Vietnam War protesters under the influence of narcotics. The captain identified the hijackers as Clyde McKay and Alvin Glatatoski, both in their early twenties and said each had a pistol. They received political asylum in Cambodia after diverting the ship here from its original destination, Sattahip, Thailand. When it was hijacked March 14 in the Gulf of Thailand, the ship had a cargo of 750 and 500-pound bombs for use by Thaibased American aircraft in the aerial war over South Vietnam and Laos. Swann, 51, of Portland, Ore, said the hijackers told him they did not want the ship's cargo to reach its destination. "Both of them were so nervous and shaky and didn't make anything quite clear. At the time it happened, I do think they were under the influence of drugs," he said. Swann said he encountered the hijackers when he left the bridge and returned to his quarters, where they were holding the chief mate. Swann said his first order was to abandon ship. Twenty-four of the Columbia Eagle's crewmen left the vessel in two lifeboats. They were later picked up by another ship. "No one else on board knew what was happening except the chief mate and myself, and he was under the gun and I was under the gun. I was giving orders to the bridge by phone." Swann said that when the ship arrived off Cambodia, March 15, McKay flagged down the operator of a pleasure boat, gave him a piece of gold from a small bag and asked that Cambodian officials be notified he was seeking asylum. With 11 other crewmen still on board, Swann said he then gave orders to get underway and steer a course for Sihanoukville, Cambodia's principal port. After the ship docked, Cambodian officials refused to release it until Wednesday. LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Sandy Koufax holds the National League record for the most victories for a left-handed pitcher. He won 27 for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1966, his last season. ance of the State Department, she eventually entered the United States in April. 1967. The moon was the only satellite which could be observed before the invention of the telescope. SOUTHPAW MARK Dick Wright, manager of the Yuk, said Wednesday that the policy is still in effect "up to a point." Wright added that he felt additional news coverage of the controversial policy was unnecessary because the Yuk has "made its point." 16 KANSAN Apr. 9 1970 She said she felt it is "a hopeless dream" to try to bring her children by her first two marriages to this country. "But I hope some day we eventually will be reunited here," she said. if it continued, a steady escalation of price supports. Wright said the policy was initiated after "a certain element" began frequenting the Yuk. For feed grains, the new legislation includes a guarantee of corn supports at $1.35 per bushel on production from half of each farmer's planting base. The old tie to a percentage of parity would also be cut for these grains. Last March the Yuk Up and Yuk Down, located in the Hillcrest Shopping Center at Ninth and Iowa, began a policy of refusing admittance to people with long hair. The new Mrs. Peters said it will be "in God's hands" whether they have children of their own. The children, Joseph, 25, and Katherine, 20, were left behind when Miss Alliluyeva went to India to attend burial rites for her fourth husband, Brajesh Singh. Their marriage was never recognized by the Soviet government. The new subcommittee grain measures now go to the full committee which is developing an omnibus farm bill to replace a measure scheduled to expire at the end of 1970. A cotton subcommittee, considering a measure similar to the grain plan, was scheduled to meet Thursday. The victory over backers of plans which would allow escalation came as a House agriculture subcommittee approved, by a 9-8 margin, compromise support plans for wheat and feed grains developed by Rep. Page Belcher, R-Okla., in collaboration with Agriculture Department and White House officials. Farm support plan approved While in New Delhi, she slipped away from the Soviet embassy and sought refuge in the U.S. embassy there. With the assist- Hair policy still upheld WASHINGTON (UPI) — Administration farm officials Wednesday won a narrow but vital first-step victory for a new plan designed to continue farm support spending at approximately current levels for the next three years. Both critics and backers of the Administration officials had opposed retaining parity formula because inflation has increased parity prices. This would mean, The three-year grain legislation would guarantee support for wheat earmarked for domestic consumption at $2.77 a bushel for the 1971, 1972 and 1973 crops. This flat dollars-and-cents figure would replace the current system under which supports are tied to the "fair earning power" parity price. new plans saw the action as foreshadowing probable approval by the full House Agriculture Committee. WANT A PLACE TO DO YOUR SPRING THING? TRY the Lounge HILLCREST BILLIARDS S.W.CORNER OF HILLCREST BOWL 9TH AND IOWA BUDWEISER ON TAP OF COURSE MILES DAYS BUTCHES BREW ON COLUMBIA 2-record set $4.99 at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center (Warning: Do not listen to this alone) Federal officials call busing plan extreme WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Justice Department suggested Wednesday a federal judge may have gone too far in ordering massive busing to achieve a racial balance in schools at Charlotte, N.C. In proposing that an alternative plan be considered, the department said the question was whether the judge "invoked a remedy so extreme as to constitute an abuse of discretion." The department laid down its position in a friend-of-the-court brief filed with the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals at Richmond, Va., which opens a hearing Thursday on an appeal by Charlotte school officials. Assistant Attorney General Jerris Leonard, in line with President Nixon's recent sequestration statement, cited 31 higher court rulings which he said suggest "that courts might carefully consider whether, for the purpose of achieving a precise, system-wide racial balance, a plan would require a school board involuntarily to make unreasonable increments in transportation expenditures, the number of students bused, distances travelled." U. S. District Judge James B. McMillan's desegregation order involved the busing of 3,000 pupils, in addition to the 24,000 now being bused, to achieve a balance among the 70 per cent white and 30 per cent Negro pupils in the 84,000-pupil Charlotte-Mecklenburg County school district. The school board said it would require 526 more buses. Back to work move builds among striking teamsters by United Press International BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL A back-to-work move spread through the ranks of striking truck drivers in several key transportation hubs across the nation Wednesday. Teamster Union members headed back to their runs in Milwaukee, Wis., Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn., and San Francisco's East Bay area. There was a limited back-to-the cab movement in hard-hit Los Angeles, where a spokesman for Teamsters Joint Council 42 estimated 15 to 20 per cent of the strikers ended their walkout. Trucking companies sent telegrams to 10,000 other Los Angeles drivers telling them they were fired. There were no signs of a break, however, in wildcat strikes that paralyzed truck freight operations in St. Louis, Mo., and crippled operations in several Ohio cities. Strikes spread to York, Pa., and involved 400 drivers in San Diego, Calif. A selective strike by Chicago Teamsters spread to a huge suburban food distribution center of the Jewel Companies, halting deliveries to 270 food stores in Northern Illinois and Southwest Michigan, and to the key distributing center of Goldblatt Bros. department stores. Zenith Radio Corp. suspended work at four plants in the Chicago area and laid off more than 6,000 workers because of the truckers' strike. Ford Motor Co. plants at Louisville, Ky., and St. Louis shortened work shifts. WORK SHIRTS. The wildcat strikes were an expression of dissatisfaction with a national agreement between industry and Teamster officials, worked out in Washington last Apr. 9 1970 KANSAN 17 week, which would provide an average hourly increase of $1.10 over three years. Chicago Teamsters, who bargain separately, turned thumbs down on the $1.10 settlement and are conducting selective strikes in an effort to raise the ante sharply. Union officials in Chicago say more than 400 companies there have agreed to grant increases totaling $1.70 over three years. Teamster Union officials said "roving bands of goon squads" were keeping at least 17,000 truck drivers off the job in the Cleveland, Columbus, Akron and Toledo areas. Governor defies judge BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI) Gov. Claude Kirk Wednesday defied a federal judge who has threatened to cite him for contempt. Kirk ousted, for the second time, the Manatee County school board, thus apparently blocking a school integration plan. Kirk signed an order resuspending the entire board, including one member who had just announced he was resigning rather than implement the plan, which calls for mass busing. Kirk had previously suspended the board but Federal District Judge Ben Krentzman overruled the governor Tuesday and told the board to have the plan in operation by Thursday. The judge also ordered Kirk to appear in his court Friday to show cause why he should not be cited for contempt for interfering with the court's orders. Attention Seniors FULLEDIO CollegeMaster A CollegeMaster Representative will be in touch with you. Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI2-4650 Attention Seniors FULLICO CollegeMaster J. S. A. THE DIFFERENT LOOK IN JEANS AND THINGS RICH AND SASSY AND PRETTY FANCY THE RANGERS DAUGHTER NOW YOU KNOW WHAT DROVE THE WEST WILD! Jay SHOPPE Price: $13.00 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 • 835 MASS. • VI3-4833 THE DIFFERENT LOOK IN JEANS AND THINGS RICH AND SASSY AND PRETTY FANCY RANCHER'S DAUGHTER NOW YOU KNOW WHAT DROVE THE WEST WILD! Jay SHOPPE Price: $13.00 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 835 MASS. VI3-4833 THE GOLDEN STAR KU coed crowned Miss Leavenworth A first semester freshman at the University of Kansas, Elizabeth (Libby) Laming of Tonganoxie, was named Miss Leavenworth in the 1970 Miss Leavenworth contest Saturday night. Miss Laming was crowned by her predecessor, Nancy Dix, and will represent Leavenworth in the Miss Kansas pageant later this year. The small staff of doctors and nurses labored into the night to save the lives of the injured children, many of them huddled two to a bed in cramped hospital quarters. Gas explosion rocks Japanese city Five hours after the fiery eruptions, Osaka police said they expected the toll of dead and injured to reach 300. OSAKA, Japan (UPI) — A thunderous explosion at the site of a leaking gas main, followed by a series of lesser blasts, killed or injured more than 200 persons in a crowded Japanese residential and shopping district Wednesday and touched off a number of fires. Physicians amputated limbs The explosions occurred just after 5 p.m., during the evening rush hour in Oyodo in the eastern section of Osaka, Japan's major industrial city, far from the site of Expo '70 at Senri Hills about 11 miles north of Osaka. Many of the victims were in a crowd of curious bystanders who had gathered at a subway construction site to watch a repair crew of the Osaka Gas Co. trying to fix a leak in a 20-inch pipe. They were felled in the first blast. The initial explosion triggered a series of lesser blasts and touched off fires in an area of about 21,400 square feet that gutted at least 30 buildings, most of them houses and small shops. Firemen battled for more than three hours to bring the fires under control. Injured children at the school were rushed to a hospital in Husseina, 16 miles west of Bahr El Bakar. Ten villagers nearby were also cut by shrapnel and hospitalized. KSTA group will discuss school needs hicle with a loudspeaker drove through the area warning residents to leave their homes because of a gas leak. When he ran The State Representative Assembly of the Kansas State Teachers Association will meet in a special session in Topeka Saturday to discuss the financial condition of public schools in the wake of the 1970 legislature. 18 KANSAN Apr. 9 1970 Police patrol cars and taxicabs were mobilized to transport the injured to 18 hospitals in the city. Junji Matsushita, 34, a liquor store owner, said that shortly after 5 p.m. a gas company ve- Two of the recommendations to be made are the possibility of asking the National Education Association to investigate the Kansas school situation, and urging each KSTA member to ign a 1970-71 contract for a 6 per cent cost-of-living salary increase. The KSTA Board of Directors will meet Friday night to discuss recommendations to be made to the assembly. About 350 delegates will attend the meeting. Thirty youngsters between the ages of 8 and 10 were either crushed to death by stone debris or fatally slashed by flying shrapnel, some of it two feet long, the witnesses said. A 30-year-old teacher also was killed Massachusetts has had 64 governors since 1780. outside, he saw flames coming from the subway construction site. But witnesses said five bombs and two rockets fell from the American-made warplanes, three of the bombs smashing into the school building and grounds. "Then I saw the gas company car go ablaze," he said. "More than 10 minutes later, there were several explosions with enormous sound. The ground shook as if it were attacked by earthquake." Lava Nyro New York Tendiboy Lana Nyro New York Tendency On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Egyptian youngsters killed in bombing raid HUSSEINA, Egypt (UPI) — Eighty children, none more than 18 years old were playing in the dusty schoolyard near here Wednesday when two Israeli warplanes swooped low across fields toward them, witnesses said. The children dashed in panic from their games of tag and soccer. They sought refuge in their six-room, single story stone schoolhouse in the tiny village of Bahr El Bakar, 81 miles northeast of Cairo. from at least three children. Many suffered severe fractures and burns and were listed as very serious. Some witnesses identified the planes as U.S.-made Phantoms, as did an official Egyptian statement. US State Department deplores Israeli attack WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United States State Department Wednesday said it deplored an Israeli air attack on Egypt in which school children were reported killed. "We have seen press reports of shocking loss of life to a number of children in Al Sharkiyyah Province in the United Arab Republic as a result of an Israeli air attack," said Robert J. McCloskey, State Department spokesman. "If these reports are confirmed this tragic incident would be another deplorable and saddening consequence of the continuing disregard for the U.S. Security Council cease fire resolutions," he said. ELECTRONIC PIONEER ARCADIA, Calif. (UPI)—Santa Anita Race Track, opened in 1934, introduced and developed the photographic start and finish and electrical timing. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT available in beautiful, cool Rocky Mtn. National Park For employment information write ROCKY MTN. PARK CO. 601 Broadway, #414 Denver, Colo. 80203 PEOPLE TO PEOPLE For Birds of a Different Feather! Both American and Foreign Students Can Take Advantage of Our Discussion Groups and English Tutoring Programs. Call or Leave a Message with the PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE office in the basement of the Union Building, UN 4.2852 Call or Leave a Message with the PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE office in the basement of the Union Building. UN 4-3853 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the course of the program 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 Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. --- Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 31% octane portable xylophone for sale. Excellent condition. Phone 843-2767. 843-2767. Attention Flocineacinihilphilippiscator: For Sale: Lite-Gem-h-intensity lamp; Norelco electric shaver; 8 silver drinking cups; Cooper chaing dish set; Silver trays; New calf wallet and card holder; New calf wallet with matching glasses; Tray table; 2 speed electric room heater; Wicker desk organizer and picnic basket; Taylor temp-humidity gauge; Japanese tea radio; FM-SM Short Wired Radio;电话 843-1400. 4-100 Yamaha. Best offer over $300. Call Welworth Dorm. Speak to or leave message for Mike McComb. 4-10 Four silver-sparkle drums, 3 Zildjian cymbals owned by a little old lady who dug Bach. Call Jeff at 843-1711. Norelle tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands, Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. - 624 lar $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands, Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 4-24 1968 Zenith top-of-line portable stereo phonograph 5 speakers. Originally 2191 for offer and additional information. 4-10 Cycle—new Yainaah 100ce, 1,000 miles, warranty, 4 speed, oil injected, good shape. Great for campus. Call John—442 or Larry—443, Templein, 842-1200. 4-13 62 VW. Like new New engine—less than 400 miles Priced to sell. Call Steve, 843-8085. 4-13 1965 650ce Triumph circuit, must sell, consider any offer. Call Bob at 842-1157. 4-13 Honeywell Strobonaar 400 electronic flash unit, fits most cameras, used very little, filters, accessories, must be waterproof, 842-7230. 4-13 Faithful Old Blue 100ce Turbo cyl., radio, good tires. Must sell, $175 or best offer. Call Ken, 843-6536. 4-13 1969 Honda CL350 Scrambler, blue-white, 1400 miles, 4 months old, helmet, cover, and insurance. $625. Call Larry, 842-7260. 4-13 1982 Comet, good condition; also four magnets, excellent condition! $475.00 Northwestern golf clubs for sale—4- borella—$70 Call 842-5578 4-14 1966 Flat Roadster- 5 speed, white with black interior, $1,000, 824-219-11 One man's Naismith contract for rest of year. Call M44-874-70 1966 Honda S-90, good condition, fixed for trial, engine rebuilt 500 miles ago. New starter and tires, best offer. Call M411-131 West Lot A-25, after 5 p.m. 1980 Harley Sportster-XLH. Perfect condition, bags, windshield. $1100. See Ron, Apt 1, 1726 Kentucky, between 6:30-8:00 evenings. All day weekends. Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impacceable copies, theses, dissertations; collating included documents for the Lawrence Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3644. 1966 GTO Convertible-yellow with black top and interior -4 spd., deluxe wheel covers. Motorola speakers and stereo tape hook-up.$1500.842-2191. 1967 VW Super Bug—silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., racing suspension, stereo speakers and hook-up, good tires. $1500.842-219. 4-14 1967 Triumph TR-4A-IRS, beautiful British racing green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelinix tires. $1800.842-219. 4-14 1959 Triumph TR-3, metallic blue with white top, bug eyes, good tires, wire wheels, needs interior work. 842-2191. 4-14 SAVE YOURSELF AFINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T. I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III white with black top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition. $2300.842-2191. 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white tires. You equipped good tires. $125.84-219.19 4-14 19b. 4-14 been, excellent ooay, overaunded transmission $1400. 842-2191. 4-14 1962 Austin-Healey Sprite, white with red interior, new tires $800. 842-2191. 1962 Triumph TR-4, British racing green, deluxe interior, excellent shape $1200. 842-2191. 1964 tan VW. Exertion condition, low mileage, radio, new front suspension Call 842-8291. 1960 tan VW. Exertion condition, low mileage, radio, new front suspension Call 842-8291. Custom designed, high-purpose light weight training, excellent shape. May be used in 8' x 8' space ideal, economical purchase for individual apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved by York Barbell Co. for lifting. Weight of weights. Call J.B. at 843-1201. 4-15 63 Rambler 660—Classic V-8 wagon runs, runs good, good gas mileage, new tires and spare. Must sell-all bids considered? Inquire: Todd's Shoe店 at Louisiana After School. Cash. KI 2-2828. 4-20 Carmel Everyday. Classic cut flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduate students. Flowers and Gifts 826 Iowa 842-1320. 1969 Bulletco 200cc, 1,800 miles. Trail or street bike 842-5492, 5:00-7:00. 4-15 $125.00! Corvair. Must sell to highest bidder soon. Engine and general mechanics good. Bad seat covers, murifiers, off color box. Call 5267. 4-15 Silverstone 60 watt piggyback guitar or amplifier, like new. $60. Also excellent solid black folk guitar. Gift 843 W. 25th. No D. or B43-7039. 4-15 Gold clubs. 3 Palmer woods. 8 Hogan irons, wedge, putter, bag, cart. Good condition, call 843-6900. 4-13 Yamaha Classic guitar w/case. Excellent condition. $60. Contact Mary Beth. 842-7450. 4-15 Durable steaks. Russian Sturgeon meat to satisfy the hungriest. Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat bank for hot beetles or form a call Max Lapid. VI 3-4032. 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-gooodness Bar-B-Que this is the place you go so easily. We are on specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone II 2-5150. Closed Sunday. Tuesday f. Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a butterfly, chest warmed in Lepidoptera Creations. 19 W. 9th. 4-10 Wanted—unattached swimmers interested in int-amural swimming meet. Call 843-6776, after 6 p.m. 4-10 Dipetroptera, especially a butterfly thinned by as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous, fickle, etc. Dipetroptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-10 Students of Objectivity meets every day. 3:00. Student uses to cuss the ideas of Ayn Rand. If desire more information, call 842-6210 after 5:30. 4-17 LA PETITE GALERIE—fashions for the bold with the beautiful for the fool with the "Titmouse's" today. Follow Kentucky to 910.If Anyone seeing an accident in O-Zone involving a 65 Rambler American (red and white) on Thursday, April 2, please call 842-7254. 4-13 Gallerie Bridal Formal Wear 910 Ky. Beautiful Bridal Apparel It's that time of the year again (formal time, that is), so get your shoes and accessories at Arensberg's Shoes, 819 Mass. 4-10 New York Cleaners University of Nebraska challenges both KU and KSU to canoe races for the University Trophy Cup. Races held at Marysville, Kan., 60 miles north of Manhattan on a 54 mile course. Sunday, April 12, 1970, open for everyone: Four classes; 1) fiberglass, 2) aluminum and wood, 3) couples, 4) under 16. 4 trophies awarded in each class. Entry fee $5.00 per person. Classes: 1) 4:00 pm. Entry fee includes chance on $200.00 canoe to be given away. 4-10 For the best in: ● Dry Cleaning ● Alterations - Reweaving FOR RENT Will the person who found my wallet please contact me again at #434-0723. Ask for Dick or leave a message. 4-10 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the CAPTAIN'S TABLE and the TABLES in form for the Captain's Table, for give or take lunches, and dinner. The Stables stands for Bud, fun, and... See you! If 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Now, at enlightened prices, custom made sandals, leather clothes, etc.—THE LEATHER WORKS—1309 Ohio grand opening Sat, April 11 hours p.m., daily, except Sun.—4-13 New York dining spot.—The Captain's Table Now.—Sunday 11 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Come in after church or Sunday evening for great food—pried for the student. Check out our menu! 4-13 Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom with condition apt. Bordery campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. tf Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116 Alverna's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to apartment living in Lawrence, adjacent to and overlooking Alvarna College Course. Quality design and interior layout. Expensive rates. Available to families and mature singles: studios from $130; one bedroom units from $130; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms from $190; apartments and town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 843-2055. tf Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village, 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring air conditioning, sound conditioning, all electric Frigidaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces. Additional benefits include tune-ups starting service Tony's 66 Service 2434 Iowa V1 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Be Prepared! 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 TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil and duplicate. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-3897 or 4-2526562. Experienced typist will type themes, theseas, term papers, other misc. typing, copywriting, paperwriter Plain type. Competent Service. Plain Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service. 5-15 Special rates now. Papers, dissertations, theses. Experienced. Electrician. Experience. English necessary English correct. English teacher M.S. degree. Also, English for foreign students. 842-9249 4-9 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and written by experienced typist KU B.S. Eng. (Office-citation). Office-size electric. For appointment phone 843-2873. 4-10 Typing done in my home. Term papers, reports, etc. Call 842-5261. 4-13 Experienced typist will type your dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-3281. Mrs. Rauckman. WANTED Rent-free house available for summer. We need student or faculty couple to take care of house in our absence. Sorry, no children or pets. References required. Please apply in writing to Raymond Cormack, 1000 Rock Dr. 4-9 Interested in Jazz? I am looking for a pianist and other interested musicians to form group with experience of phonograph. Call Allen Tropter 842-1400. 4-10 Wanted--your voice for Spring Sing. If interested, call or contact Mr. Kim Farewell at 843-7922 as soon as possible. 4-9 Are you leaving KU this year? Grad, student would like reference to a clean utility or one room apartment close to campus with rent less than $100/mo. Call 842-1568 or UN 4-4220. Ask for Mention. 4-13 Want to buy used Ludwig or Rogers used air condition good condition 843-7438 7389 4-143 Want to live in Chicago suburb after graduation? Will share roomy furnished house near city/lake with a reasonable. Call Jo, Rm 4-123 842-1340 Urgent!! 3 girls need a roommate for April and May. $60 per month plus utilities. Immediate occupancy. Call 842-6948. 4-10 LOST Class ring in front of Union. Call 405-628-9001 ask for Paul, room 313 ward. ward. 4-16 Bracelet of sterling silver rings with hook clasp. Lost in Hoch Auditorium, Munich, Germany. ward. Call 842-9389 after 5 p.m. 4-10 Black bilfoil, April 1 snowstorm. If found, please drop in my mailbox at 1601 Tenn. I need my ID cards. Receive offered. Mike Hein. 4-13 My's black bilfoil. Keep more just return. Large reward. Call Bob at 842-1157. Prescription sunglasses with brown france. Prescription sunglasses with brown frame in a black case. Vicinity of Blake Hall. Contact David, room 765 McCollum Hall, 842-600-800. Reward. THE HTE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill. Some Time — Phone Order Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Guards - Favors - Recognitions - Paddles - Mugs Recognize Layoliers - Lavaliers Gifts - Stationery - Sportswear - Plaques Rings - Crested - Letters VI 3-1571 Al Lauter 645 Mass. Across 1 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 Jazz Player Checkbook, western scene printed on 10.5x8.25 inch paper. Kathy in 914, 842-6600. Reward: 4-14 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 Black-framed glasses in Yuk Down night. Reward Call George at 842-974-1 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS PERSONAL SERVICES OFFERED Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, $801^{1}$ Mass., Returns $4.00 and up Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. ff COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. M Whoever liberated my blue leather shoulder bag in the Union lobby with his phone and goodies, but please return the ID cards and glasses! No questions asked—just leave them at Natalshin Hall with a note for Linda. Ringer 616. 4-17 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Raney Drug Stores Boycott cars! Eschwe phony model changes until the industry takes meaningful steps to cure America's paramount polluter. Hurt the industry where it lives—sabotage sales! D. Mills. 4-9 Your KU I.D. is worth $1.00 off on the Group Tax, 801.5$Mass, $4.00 and up if PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey --- VI 3-4416 Time to get your spring and summer wardrobe read. Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-10 FOUND Small, black-brown beagle () puppy Sat. nite: call 842-7346. 4-9 Complete prescription departments and fountain service. HELP WANTED Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Student to work in mail dept. of, UDK, MWF for approximately 1½ hours each day. $2.50 per day. Prefer someone who can continue next fall. Call Todd Smith, 842-8200 after 5 p.m. tf Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass. Married couple, grad. or teaching for Minnesota girls camp. Each exp. in one area, tennis, rifley, theatre canoeing. 842-0587. 4-14 THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S HAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA MEN'S HAIR STYLIST 3 locations to serve your every need APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 Patrick J. Narris Kenneth "Roger" Everett KUT STORYTIME ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2223 RIDGE COURT AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for miDAS mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 M Photo by Ron Bishon Old and young enjoy 'Pleasure Fair' The young were very young, and the old were not so old, but all seemed to enjoy the music and the weather Wednesday at the 'Pleasure Fair.' The 'Fair' was held as part of the protest. Impeachment possible WASHINGTON (UPI) — After four months of study, some House Republicans are near a decision whether to bring impeachment charges against Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. The decision could come next Monday. House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford launched a staff study on the possible impeachment in November, and he is reported very close to determining whether to proceed. Reps. Louis C. Wyman, R-N.H., and William L. Scott, R-Va., are working along the same lines, reportedly looking for leadership. At least one Democrat, Rep. John R. Rarken, D-La., is also Strike - (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) Earlier in the day John Wright, associate professor of Human Development and Family Life, opened his 12:30 class in Hoch Auditorium to anyone interested in discussing the strike. At this meeting, Walker Hendrix, Overland Park junior and one of the strike coordinators, and several other students expressed their views about the strike. Student strike coordinators had asked that there be no violence during Wednesday's daytime activities, and the events were peaceful. There was no physical action taken to hold people out of classes, no nude swimmers in Potter Lake and no excessive amount of drugs circulating at the "pleasure fair" as had been feared by strike opponents. Wednesday's strike day was however, clouded by three firebombings which occurred late Tuesday night and early Wednesday despite heavy police patrolling. University officials said that despite picket-bearing students who appeared at the entrances of most of the campus buildings in an effort to persuade students to boycott classes, class attendance appeared relatively normal. 20 KANSAN Apr. 9 1970 threatening an impeachment effort. Opposition to Douglas has centered around his liberal views and court opinions. Recent publication of Douglas' controversial book, "Points of Rebellion," has further angered some House members. One particular passage of that book which has bothered some congressmen reads "violence may be the only effective response in dealing with the so-called establishment." Two other points which would probably be called into any impeachment proceedings are Douglas' former involvement with a charitable foundation which had ties with Las Vegas gambling interests, and his judicial views on obscenity. Douglas survived an impeachment effort in 1953, initiated by former Rep. W. M. "Don" Wheeler, D-Ga., who was irked because Douglas granted a temporary stay of execution to atom spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. The impeachment resolution at that time died in committee. NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—Louisiana Stream Control Commission executive secretary Robert Lafleur says the first of three mud samplings shows "no substantial" amount of oil in Louisiana coastal oyster beds. Senate rejects Carswell (Continued from page 1) Little oil found in costal beds Lafleur, in Washington Wednesday and today to discuss the Chevron Oil Co. fire and oil spill off the Louisiana coast, made the statement to WDSU in New Orleans before he departed. Thirteen Republicans deserted Nixon to join 38 Democrats in opposing the nomination. Twenty-eight Republicans and 17 Democrats—all from southern or border states—voted for Carswell. Four senators were absent, two of them ailing and two overseas, but had they voted, they would have canceled each other out. Laffleur said the first of the three mud samplings he referred to was taken after the Chevron platform caught fire Feb. 10, but before the blaze was put out and oil began spilling March 10. James B. Pearson and Bob Dole of Kansas voted in favor of the Florida jurist. Laffleur refused to speculate whether the second sampling, taken during the oil spill, or the third sampling, taken after the wells were capped, would prove the 20,000-barrel oil spill did not harm oysters. Dole, two hours before the vote, predicted the exact outcome, saying the Carswell nomination would either be defeated, 51-45, or confirmed, 49-48. Dole sharply criticized Carswell's opponents and said their real purpose was to embarrass President Nixon. If Carswell is defeated, Dole said in his prevote Senate speech, Nixon should leave the Supreme Court seat vacant and "take this issue to the people in the November congressional elections and then appoint a justice. Some Republicans who helped defeat Nixon's first choice of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for the Abe Fortas court vacancy last November, including Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott and his assistant, Robert P. Griffin of Michigan, went along with Carswell this time. Scattered applause — rarely heard in the Senate chamber—greeted Mrs. Smith's vote, which was considered undecided to the last. Loud applause and whistles, and some booing as well, erupted in the galleries when Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew was handed the tally and said; "On this vote the ayes are 45 and the nays are 51. The nomination is not agreed to." the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Carswell, a former U.S. attorney and a U.S. district judge from 1953 to 1969, had been elevated with Senate confirmation last year without a dissenting vote to He was regarded as a "strict constructionist" of the type Nixon wanted without any of the financial indiscretions which opponents used to block Haynsworth. But Carswell's 1948 speech Hoffman- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) government with the "kinds of dilemmas that it can't deal with." Present action, Hoffman said will be the Yippie mobilization behind Timothy Leary and Bobby Seale, both who will soon be tried for murder. The fight is against political repression in this country, he said. Yippies are beginning also to collect money to support a "nationwide abortion network," he said, and in this way men can support the women's liberation movement. Other activities of the Yippies will be the releasing of a soundtrack album of the Chicago conspiracy trial with the "original cast." Speaking of the Chicago trial, he said, he thought the members would have to serve time for the contempt charges. "They lost too much blood in the trial not to extract some from us," he said. During the Field House speech, members of the Black Student Union (BSU) questioned Hoffman's support for the Black Panther Party leader, Seale. Hoffman replied he wasn't at KU on a "guilt trip." With this comment he put on his jacket and said he wanted to get to Dallas, his next stop. pledging eternal loyalty to the concept of white supremacy, his role in turning the public golf course in his home town of Tallahassee, Fla., over to a private group to avoid the need to integrate it, and his record as a judge whose opinions were reversed more often than is usual—summed up as "the mediocrity issue"—combined to defeat him. A little more than an hour before the long-awaited vote, Nixon agreed with his lieutenants in the Senate when he told White House visitors that the situation was "tight, very tight." In the House of Representatives, talk revived even before the Senate vote of impeaching Justice William O. Douglas, attacked for his former links with a foundation which listed a Las Vegas gambling casino among its sources of income. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va. advanced the impeachment possibility if Carswell were rejected. APRIL 9 USA, 1946 7:00 p.m. only Orchestra Auditorium APRIL 9 Burberry Franklin, USA, 9:00 p.m. only Orchestra Auditorium SHADOWS OF CHINATOWN THE GOOD EARTH PSEUDO-CHINESE FILM SERIES Sew for Spring with bright burlap plain printed kettle cloth spring summer trims from Pound's Fabrics 925 Mass. Alternate astronaut tested CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—In a last-ditch effort, to avoid a month's delay, backup astronaut John L. Swigert underwent an Apollo 13 cram course Thursday to determine if he can safely replace Thomas L. Mattingly for Saturday's planned launch to the moon. An eleventh hour decision to substitute Swigert for measles-prone Mattingly—or go with Mattingly May 9—will be based primarily on the recommendation of Apollo 13 commander James A. Lovell, informed sources said. The final verdict is expected to be made by space agency administrator Thomas O. Paine about noon (EST) today, a spokesman said. A delay, he said, would cost $800,000 and mean "you take a chance that some element might not be ready when we try to go again." Forecasts of considerable cloudiness and a chance of rain for Saturday increased the threat to an on-time 2:13 p.m. EST start of the $375 million lunar surface expedition. Lovell, a three-time spaceflight veteran, is expected to base his recommendation on the outcome of moon piloting drills that got underway Thursday morning. Space agency officials said the exercise served as an examination of the capability of Swigert to work with Lovell and Fred W. Haise in maneuvers requiring "rapid and close coordination." A pilot's error could mean the difference between mission success or failure. Lovell, lunar module pilot Haise and command module pilot Mattingly have trained together since Aug. 6, 1969. A highly-placed source said some concern has been expressed in the space agency hierarchy about breaking up the team at the last moment. Swigert drilled in all the critical maneuvers in a spacecraft trainer with Lovell and Haise. One of the most ticklish operations practiced was the descent in lunar orbit down to a 50,000 foot altitude. That operation would be performed by Swigert. Mattingly has said a one-second over-burn during the firing of the command ship's main engine at that point could send Apollo 13 crashing into the moon. He said chances were "extremely small" of that happening, but added: "We have a mutual interest in not overburning so it turns into an all hands The command module pilot also must fly solo for 41 $ \frac{1}{2} $ hours while Lovell and Haise explore a valley on the moon. operation." Mattingly had not shown any symptoms of the measles Thursday, but doctors said he would probably break out with the children's disease sometime next week—when he would have been in space. For that reason doctors recommended he not be allowed to fly Saturday. Tests Thursday confirmed that the man Mattingly was exposed to—backup lunar module pilot Charles Duke—does have the disease. Duke was reported to be suffering from a rash and arthritis in the hands. Swigert, 38-year-old civilian who has not yet flown in space, is immune to the measles. Backup astronaut Swigert practiced with two thoroughly rehearsed prime crewmen today to see if he can step in at the last moment to fly the Apollo 13 command ship to the moon Saturday in place of Mattingly. The U.S. Space Agency is considering substitute Swigert for Mattingly in order to avoid a one-month delay of the $375 million moon mission, now scheduled for a 2:13 p.m. EST blastoff. Mattingly is grounded because of his susceptibility to German measles. A decision on the last-resort switch is expected Friday. Adding an additional threat to the launch schedule is the prediction of considerable cloudiness and a chance of rain at flight time. Project officials said they would give much weight to Swigert's performance of the demanding command module pilot's tasks in rehearsals with James A. Lovell and Fred W. Haise that got underway only two days before launch time. But the officials also must consider the psychological feasibility of substituting a backup astronaut for a fully trained prime crewman so close to blastoff in order to avoid a delay in the mission until May 9 at a cost of $800,000. Swigert, a 38-year-old civilian who has never flown in space, was given a briefing by Mattingly on intricate phases of the 10-day mission in a small office of the crew training building at the spaceport. By mid-morning he was inside a spacecraft simulator starting the workout with Lovell and Haise. UDK News Roundup By United Press International Hoffman speaks at Salina SALINA, Kan.—A crowd estimated at 1,400 filled Pioneer Hall on the Kansas Wesleyan campus to capacity Thursday night to hear militant revolutionary Abbie Hoffman. Hoffman, who referred to the town as "Saleena," opened his performance by tossing a basketball back and forth with members of the audience and picking his nose with his finger wrapped in a miniature American flag. Laos considers peace plan VIENTIANE — The government made public today its reply to a five-point Pathet Lao peace plan, calling for a cease-fire and the withdrawal from Laos of North Vietnamese troops. Prince Souvanna Phouma wrote the reply to the Pathet Lao leader, Prince Souphanouvong, his half brother, saying "we are ready to discuss the five points" but proposing first the stadium and withdrawal. Perot fails to deliver mail PARIS — H. Ross Perot, millionaire founder of a Dallas-based computer firm, arrived Thursday with two batches of letters—more than 200 for U.S. prisoners in North Vietnam, and 50 written by North Vietnamese held prisoners in the South to their relatives in the North. He failed to get the mail in Nort Vietnamese hands. Oil shipments opposed WASHINGTON — The United States Thursday expressed opposition to proposed Canadian legislation to regulate use of the frozen Northwest Passage by ships such as the U.S. oil tanker Manhattan. Fearing damage to the ecology of Arctic waters, the Canadian Parliament is considering legislation to set conditions for shipping through the northern waters to extend Canadian territorial sea limits to 12 miles, and to extend pollution-control jurisdiction as far as 100 miles. L.A. teachers strike LOS ANGELES—A teachers strike which could cripple the nation's second largest school system next week was approved. Thursday night by a 2-1 margin in voting, by members of United Teachers-Los Angeles. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 10, 1970 Dole, Pearson comment on Carswell's rejection Senator Bob Dole, R-Kansas, said Associate Justice Earl O'Connor of the Kansas Supreme Court is a possible candidate for President Richard Nixon's next Supreme Court nomination. O'Connor's chances were "greatly enhanced," Wednesday after the Senate's 51 to 45 rejection to the nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell, Dole said. He added he will urge Nixon to consider the Kansas judge. For the present, however, Dole said he urges the President to leave the seat vacant so he can "take the issue to the people," and use it to elect a Republican Senate in November that would approve a conservative Supreme Court candidate. Senator James B. Pearson, R-Kansas, said he had no objection to conservatives on the Supreme Court. "What we need is a person who understands what life is going to be like in the last third of this century," he said. Speaking of Wednesday's defeat of Carswell, Pearson said "I don't think he was the man of my choice but I saw no reason to vote against him. I don't think he's racist or incompetent, but I think I could find someone else though with better qualifications." Pearson said O'Connor "is the finest lawyer in the state of Kansas, and one of the most respected judges to serve on the Kansas Supreme Court." Pearson added O'Connor is one of his best friends and an "outstanding man." Nixon Thursday said he wants his next Supreme Court nominee to be from outside the South because he feels the Senate will not accept a conservative Southerner. Nixon told reporters he had told Attorney General John N. Mitchell to recommend someone from outside the South for his third nominee for a vacant seat on the court. "Ive never been embarrassed about exercising my best judgment," Pearson said. His comment came in response to several Senators statements which said they felt embarrassed over Carswell's rejection. The first two Nixon nominees, Judges Clement F. Haynsworth and G. Harrold Carswell, were beaten in the Senate. Both are Southerners—Haynsworth from South Carolina and Carswell from Florida. In his first public comment on the Senate's rejection Wednesday of Judge Carswell, Nixon said both Carswell and Haynsworth had been subjected to "vicious and unwarranted" attacks. Both Haynsworth and Carswell were subjected to "vicious assaults on their honesty and character and integrity" and had been "falsely charged with being racist". Nixon said. When all the hypocrisy is stripped away, the President said, "it is their philosophy and the accident of their birth" that caused their rejection by the Senate "as presently constituted." Nixon said more than 25 per cent of the people in America live in the South but only one member of the Supreme Court is from the South. This was a reference to Justice Hugo L. Black. (Continued to page 12) H Up, up and... If the tree doesn't catch the kite, perhaps it will catch the wind. Warmer weather and gusty winds provided many KU students with the elements for a favorite Springtime activity. Campus briefs Jay Janes offer scholarships Applications are available now for Jay Janes scholarships to be awarded to two University of Kansas undergraduate women. Forms may be obtained at the Dean of Women's office and are due by noon, April 17, said Cecilia Jecha, Timken junior and president of an upper-class women's pep club. The two winners will be announced on April 27 at AWS honors night, Miss Jecha said. Any undergraduate woman with at least a 1.00 grade point average may apply for the scholarship. Pulitzer winner to read poetry W. D. Snodgrass, Pulitzer Prize winner in 1960 for "The Heart's Needle," will give a reading of his poetry at 4 p.m. Monday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Snodgrass studied at the University of Iowa and has taught at Cornell University, the University of Rochester and Wayne State University. He is now a member of the staff of Syracuse University. The reading is sponsored by the English department and SUA. Mobe requests work party The Student Mobilization Committee will sponsor a work party to make posters, signs, and leaflets, at 1:30 p. m. Saturday. Bill Black, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, said the work party will be held in preparation for Anti-War Week, April 13-18. The work party will meet in the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. BSU collects $60 for program The Black Students Union (BSU) collected nearly $60 at the conclusion of the speech given by Abbie Hoffman in Allen Field House Wednesday evening. John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and president of the BSU, said the money collected would be used for a breakfast program the BSU has planned. Spearman said the program was bogging down 2 KANSAN Apr.10 1970 because of a lack of funds, and several local merchants would not accept vouchers from the BSU. Bass WEEJUNS' CASUAL COORDINATES Bass WEEJUNS CASUAL COORDINATES for campus or career. With a flair for the spectacular. And all the comfort and fashion you want and need. Only Bass makes genuine Weejuns® moccasins. No other is quite the same. See our many new styles today. NAVY AND ANTIQUE TAN. Sizes 4 to 10 Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Four attend speech meeting Four KU professors are attending the Central States Speech Association (CSSA) regional convention, held April 10-11 in Chicago. Wilmer Linkugel, associate professor of speech and drama is serving as president of the organization and is chairman of a special program scheduled for today. About 95 per cent of Argentina's population is Roman Catholic. The Central States Speech Association is one of four regional organizations within the Speech Association of America. It covers a 12-state area. Linkugel said the CSSA holds an annual convention at which papers written by speech professors are presented. Thomas Beisecker, assistant professor of speech and drama, will present a paper entitled "The Theory of Games: A Model for Negotiation Behavior?" Lynn Osborn, professor of speech and drama, will speak on "A Speech Educator Views the Speech Communication Needs of the American Indian Student." chairman of a program concerning graduate training in communication for the 1970's. Calvin W. Downs, professor of speech and drama, will serve as CITY OF CKY THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S MAINTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA Patrick J. Norris Kenneth "Roger" Evans MEN'S HAIR STYLE TITLE EQUIRE BARKER SERVICE 2123 RIAGE COURT APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 942-3699 groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" AFTER Planning a wedding dinner, reception, luncheon? The Castle Tea Room will provide you fine dining in a luxurious atmosphere. The Castle Tea Room The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence Reservations Suggested 1307 Mass. 843-1151 安保部長 Colonel inspects KU Army ROTC Cadet Major John Fisher (right), an Independence, Kan. senior, is questioned by Col. Jack French (center) as the KU Army ROTC inspection began. Battalion Commander and Cadet Col. Robert Newton, Tulsa senior, looks on. KU Army ROTC program Inspection team evaluates KU's Army ROTC underwent the suspecting eye of an inspector general Thursday afternoon but came away from the annual affair all smiles in hopes of passing. Col. Jack French from Kansas State College at Pittsburg, led the inspecting team that also included S. G. M. Bebby J. Graham, also of KSC at Pittsburg, and Maj. Owen F. Devlin of Southwest Missouri State at Springfield, Mo. By questioning each member of the three companies inspected, the inspection team evaluated the entire KU Army ROTC program. Col. French asked individual members questions pertaining to military science in general and KU military science specifically. William Cipra, Overland Park senior, first received the annual award from the Association of the United States Army. Following this, four superior cadet awards were given for each classification. Recipients were Robert Houghawout, Wichita freshman; Paul Conderman, Iola sophomore; Larry Ford, Fort Gullick Canal junior; and Edward Murdock, Mission senior. At the conclusion of the inspection, awards were presented by Col. French to eight distinguished KU Army ROTC members. John Plump, Mission senior next received the Society of American Military Engineers award as a result of his compiling the highest engineering grades among ROTC students. Weather Fair and warmer with 5 to 15 miles per hour southwest winds today. Tonight increasing cloudiness and mild. Saturday partly cloudy and continued warm. Highs today 75 to 80. Lows tonight upper 40s to the lower 50s. Probability of measurable precipitation . . . near zero per cent today, 5 per cent tonight, 10 per cent Saturday. Apr. 10 1970 KANSAN 3 "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th Finally, rifle team awards were given to Weylinn Covey, Fort Leavenworth freshman, for being the top freshman member of the team, and to Richard Daly, St. Louis senior, for being the most outstanding team member. Miller evaluates election David Miller, recent candidate for student body president, said the referendum election Tuesday, was a "clear indication against the use of student fees for academic buildings." In his campaign, Miller had stressed the issue of a $7.50 increase in activity fees to help build Wescoe Hall, a proposed humanities building. The $8 million project failed by 1,058 votes in the election. The Student Senate voted in favor of the increase Feb. 15, but the question was brought to referendum vote by petitions turned in by Miller. Miller said he was disappointed in the low voter turnout, but "for a special election and the amount of publication it received, the turnout was better than I had anticipated." The new Senate Code required an all-student vote last year for the replacement of the All-Student Council by the Student Senate, and less people voted in that election than in Tuesday's, said Miller. "I think it would be a mistake to say that the election isn't meaningful. The decision reached becomes even more valid when you look at the hospital vote in comparison. This just wasn't a group that voted against every fee increase put before them. "It remains to be seen," he said, "whether or not we lose the federal money. We've had it more than a year. I hope the Kansas legislature comes through and supports the project like it should." "On the basis of the election results, I don't think anyone has any justification to ask us to finance an academic building with student fees." BOOKENDS SPECIAL SIMON & GARFUNKEL BONUS Including. Bookends Theme/Overs COLOR Fakin It / Old Friends POSTER A Hazy Shade of Winter INCLUDED Mrs. Robinson Simon & Gartjunkel Sounds of Silence FEATURING I Am a Rock LEAVES THAT ARE SHEEN IRCANDORY A MOST PECULIAN MAN WE'VE GOT A GROOVY THING DOWN SOMETHERE THEY CAN'T FIND ME THE SOUNDS OF SILENCE AND MORE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including The Tiger Baby Boy Bye Bye Keep The Customer Sack Bridge Over Troubled Water PETER AND LYNDA HARRISON On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. DO IT NOW Graduating Seniors. Candidates for Masters & Doctorate Degrees Faculty Orders for CAPS & GOWNS must be submitted by April 15 at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! KANSAN COMMENT Marshmallow day Wednesday was a bid day for revolutions. Wednesday was a big day for revolutions. At an outpost at the Fraser Hall entrance, five strikers sat, ready to plead with students and faculty going inside. Not for very long though, because, given a little backtalk, they lost interest. Repression, they said, was the evil of the hour. "Your professor's next," they said, "then you." The idea, the fruit, went dry quickly. Squeeze hard, there's no more substance in it. Get lost, fella, go on inside; I'm going to try this next guy and replenish this ephemeral but so beautiful matter that makes this strike what it is. In the afternoon, at Strong Hall, more than a thousand students watched the strike's leaders tell what it was all about, and not to get violent and watch yourselves all around, please. Wednesday night, Abbie Hoffman told of the day's "marshmallow revolution." At Potter Lake, the "pleasure fair" wound on throughout the afternoon; the hours went slowly. Hoffman first appeared there, students gathering around to hear; not hearing because of the blasting band, but sitting and watching. An official U.S. Navy parachute was passed over the heads of the group around Hoffman. The band played, rhythm contrapuntal to the undulations of the parachute. About 4 o'clock, the wind began to blow, the shadows lengthened and the air grew colder. On the side of the hill, above the rock group, sat a man in yellow golf shirt and faded blue jeans. He held a garden snake and stroked it intermittently. The band finished one song, applause rippled across the crowd, the snake-man looked up dazedly and yawned. People came, people left. Hoffman's speech at Allen Field House fell flat. Only in reference to the war in Vietnam could he receive any exuberant applause. The right wing was there, the center was there, so was the left and so was evangelistic fervor. Hoffman told of Abe Lincoln and Benjamin Franklin and angered the blacks. "We're gonna destroy capitalism and with it, the twin devil of the protestant ethic," he said. Asked outside the field house why ne had come, he replied "I'm here to rake up bread." "We're gonna raise 500,000 stoned people to see that Bobby Seale don't get convicted," he shouted. "This place is a drag," he said. "I'm going to Dallas, Tex." After his speech, he said the strike was "ineffectual." It appeared that Hoffman couldn't quite understand the strike leaders' quest to keep things non-violent. He was aware, of course, that revolution can't be made by the small percentage of the population that his cohorts and he comprised. But he seemed to be promoting an idea he had explained earlier: "We got to attack this country's authority, not its power. We can't attack America up in the sky, 'cause we ain't got no B-52's." That, he said, was what the Seven had done in Chicago. But at KU, even the attack against authority didn't come over. Students went to class, shunning the weak protestations of the sign carriers. Three thousand stood at Strong Hall, but most did so out of curiosity. They were bored by the "Pleasure Fair." They obviously weren't ready for revolution. For that matter, neither were the strike leaders and their fellow parlor revolutionaries. And, as this little marshmallow affair flunked Hoffman's test, so may the next. KU isn't ready for a revolution. Perhaps the country isn't either. Wednesday's strike only served to point out the radicals ineptness, both at finding an issue and in carrying through. KU is a lot safer than many here and in all the little Kansas towns suspect. The University isn't going to fly apart at the seams yet. Because Wednesday was a bad day for revolutions. —Monroe Dodd hearing voices— To the editor: Recently there appeared in the UDK, an article regarding student reaction to an all volunteer army. Some expressed negative sentiments, to a degree, but most reaction seemed to be favorable. This leads me to write in reaction to the possibility of such an army. We are all well aware of the inadequacies of our present draft system, the main one being the conscription of persons against their will. No doubt a volunteer army would remedy this problem, but what would be the effects of this action, or more significantly, what COULD be the effects? on an extended basis, to fit into the structural hierarchy, in this case, the military. Lines of power and support on an increased scale, would then be drawn vertically within the military structure, and allegiance would be entirely to the commanding officer or direct superior, rather than to the idea, or "ideal" of a democratic America. This could mean different generals, with different bases for power, vying with one another, and ultimately with the administration, for complete power (a la Catch 22). The situation might then become one familiar to many developing countries, that of civilian versus military government. The chance that this would happen is only a possibility of course, but it seems to me to be a The volunteers would be analogous to the Junior executive in a large corporation. They would no longer be temporary variables, required for short service, but would probably remain real possibility, and one that has not been examined by most students who have voiced opinions. Prudence has always been a virtue, one that we should not now forget. The present draft system is by no means perfect, and structural changes need to be made (perhaps even to the point of a professional army), but I am not one to jump out the window of a burning building without knowing first where I will land. I am one who would not like this nation to move, as James Lawson says it might move "towards her own latent final solution—a racist Fascist state which will make Hitter look like a Sunday school troublemaker." Dick Muther Kansas City, Mo., junior Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF THERE GOES MY PERMANENT... $ \textcircled{2} $David Sokoloff 1970 1600 PENN ST. U.S. OIL NEWS CONTINUED OIL IMPORT QUOTAS GARRETT THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL 'Yes sir, this is one of our most profitable oil rigs!' Washington window No blue-collar takers By ARNOLD SAWISLAK WASHINGTON (UPI)—"The average parent believes his offspring is infinitely better off making $95 a week with a white shirt on than he would be making $135 a week with coveralls and dirty fingernails. That observation comes from William Winpisinger, vicepresident of the Machinists Union, as one explanation of the shortage of automobile mechanics—variously estimated at 100,000 to 200,000 in the United States. It points up an attitude that may already have caused a national problem of major proportions. It is the feeling that it is demeaning for a man to spend his life working with his hands; that only "brain work" carries status and financial reward. National Need The problem is that despite the predictions of the automated society to come, the nation needs such workers—from hod carriers to telephone installers—and will be in trouble if no one will take such jobs. Of course, the first part of the problem is to provide the wage incentives that will make it possible for a man or woman, however unskilled, to maintain a decent standard of living and be able at least to see the way to a better existence. Some skilled hand work jobs now offer good pay, but frequently it is maintained at the cost of "protective" barriers that create artificial shortages of workers. It remains to be seen if electricians and plumbers, for example, will be able to maintain high pay scales if all the obstacles that now exist to free entry into those trades are removed. One Answer One answer for this would be for the economy to commit or require itself to pay a living wage for every full-time job from the bottom up. That is the underlying theory of minimum wage laws, but at present they are far from any such goal. Part of the problem is getting some recognition—if only of the "jawbone" variety—from men in high-status positions. President Nixon, announcing a program to expand construction worker training, said "one of our great national needs is the need to restore pride in a craft and to promote the dignity of skilled labor." It seems, however, that more than ringing oratory is needed before our society begins to have genuine respect for good work, whether done in white or blue collar. It may be that the law of supply and demand will do the job. 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 for examination periods. Main subscription area $6 a semester, $10 a year. Secondary subscription area $8 a semester, $14 a year. goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without discounts for enrollment. No fee necessary 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 Iliu News Editor Donna Shrader Editorial Editors Joe Nans, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rleke Shooter Annan, Steve Shriker Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkens Wire Editor Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Review Editors Genelle Richards Judy Garry Assistant Pages Editors Wendell Phillips, Nila Walker Assistant News Editors Cass Sessex, Robin Stewart Photographers Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Lefflingwell Ron Bishop, Bruce 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 Bassisson Classified Manager Shelley Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Lagos Member Associated Collegiate Press The Weekend Scene "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" (Granada)—A brutal and powerful drama of a thirties dance marathon, with great performances by Jane Fonda and Gig Young. "Falstaff" (Hillcrest 3)—Orson Welles's magnificent, poetic retelling of a Shakespearean history. "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" (Varsity) — Biting and hilarious look at modern sexual attitudes— in its second week. "The Lawyer" (Hillesterr 1 ) —Exciting courtroom drama based upon the Dr. Sam Sheppard case. "Cactus Flower" (Hillcrest 2) —An old-fashioned formula comedy with Goldie Hawn to brighten it. In its third week. "The Russians Are Coming!" The Russians Are Coming!" (Popular Film)—A cleaver comedy about a stray Russian submarine trapped on the coast of New England. Directed by Norman Jewison; 1966. (7 and 9:30 p.m. Fri. and Sat. in Woodruff Aud.) BOOKS EAST OF EDEN, by John Steinbeck (Viking Compass, $2.45) —Almost 17 years ago the Daily Kansan carried a review of the hardback edition of this book, which seems better, somehow, than it seemed then. "East of Eden" has never occupied a spot in the literary skies comparable to, say, "The Grapes of Wrath," and even though it does not always succeed it is an extremely enjoyable and sometimes beautiful book. The setting is Steinbeck's Long Valley, and the story, simply put, is that of a father, his faithless wife, and his two sons. In more complex terms it gets into the Adam and Eve business, the sons being comparable to Cain and Abel. The book works less well on the symbolic level; on the story level it is a work of great appeal. MONTE WALSH, by Jack Schaefer (Pocket Books, 95 cents) A well-written western by the author of "Shane." The hero is a drifting cowboy who gets mixed up with the men of the Slash Y. Readers of westerns may wonder why Schaefer requires more than 400 pages to tell a relatively simple story. (3) These University of Colorado students are members of the Black Dragon Residence Company which will present an original Peking Opera at the University of Kansas Sunday. The play, an exchange production in return for a KU show sent to Boulder last year, has been translated by the director, a member of the Colorado faculty. Apr. 10 1970 KANSAN 5 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN IN Walter Matthau & Goldie Hawn Invito Berman cactus flower TECHNICOLOR* Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 THE Hillcrest 2 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 8TH AND IOWA MORE THAN JUST A MOVIE ITS A SPECIAL EVENT HARRY SALZMAN PRESENTS AN ORSON WELLES FILM FALSTAFF (CHRICES AT MONOFT) STARRING: ORSON WELLES JEANNY MORGAN MARGARET RUTHERFORD JOHN GIELGUD MARINA VLADY Eve. 7:15 & 9:25 Adults $1.50 Children 75c THE Hillcrest Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 "Pather Pancali" (Interna- tional Series)—Satyajit Ray's classic about a poverty-streicken family in India; 1951. (7:30 Fri. in Hoch Aud.) "Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse" (KU Film Society)—German film about a master criminal and his gang of thugs; an attack upon Nazism. Directed by Fritz Lang; 1932. (7 and 9 p.m. Sun. in woodruff Aud.) "KYOGEN: COMIC THEATRE OF JAPAN"—This theatre presentation includes three plays with one being performed in Japanese. The plays are titled "Kamabara," "Busu," "Donadaro." (8:20 p.m. Fri. and Sat. in the Experimental Theatre). PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE—George Boberg, assistant director of band, will lead the ten member ensemble in several numbers including Song of Questecoatl by Harrison, Toccata for Percussion Instruments by Chavez and Song for Trombone and Percussion by McKensie. (8 p.m. Fri. in Swarthout Recital Hall) CONCERT CHORALE — The Concert Chorale will sing in this Spring concert at 3:30 p.m. Sun. in Swarthout Recital Hall. "BLACK DRAGON RESIDENCE" COMPANY— An original Peking opera will be performed one night only ending the Festival of Oriental Theatre. (8:20 p.m. Sun. in University Theatre) 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. Varsity 7:15 THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. Varsity 7-15 THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 7·1·5 9·A·0 Featuring 1970 Academy Award Winner Gig Young, Best Supporting Actor. MONTANA THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? "BEST ACTRESS JANE FONDA!" New York Film Cities "BEST ACTRESS-- JANE FONDA!" New York Film Critics Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5780 NOW! EVE. 7:20 - 9:30 ADULTS 1.50 CHILD. 75 Granada TREATME...telephone VI 3-7982 I NEVER CRY AT WEDDINGS OR FUNERALS . . I DON'T SEND OUT CHRISTMAS CARDS. AND I'D CHEAT ON MY WIFE . . if I had time IVE' GOT ONLY ONE SOFT SPOT: A MAN IS INNOCENT UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY! WITH THE UNINHIBITED SEVENTIES COMES THE LAWYER P WITH THE UNINHIBITED SEVENTIES COMES THE LAWYER Eve 7:00 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 THE Children 75c Hillcrest R Starring BARRY NEWMAN HAT D GOULD University of Kansas Theatre presents KYOGEN: Comic Theatre of Japan EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE Murphy Hall 8:20 p.m. April 2 thru 11 Tickets $1.50 Students $.75 Candidates speak at K-State MANHATTAN, Kan. (UPI) A trio of candidates for the Republican gubernatorial nomination called for new laws and programs to combat pollution, and one lamented the loss of a fight in the 1970 legislature Thursday. The hopefuls appeared in the Kansas Executive Forum on Environmental Issues, a part of "Enviro nal Awareness Week" sponsored by Kansas State University. Democratic Gov. Robert B. Docking was scheduled to be on the panel, but he declined because of previous speaking engagements. The three candidates for the Legislator charges air terminals 'unsafe' KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — State Rep. E. A. Brewer, R-Butler, charged Thursday that air terminals at St. Louis and Kansas City are being operated during the air traffic controllers strike "in hazardous and unsafe conditions by trainees" who normally would not be qualified but are now certified by the Federal Aviation Administration." Brewer said he made "extensive inquiries" after a near collision of a jet liner with 77 people aboard and a light twin-engine aircraft over St. Louis. He said what he learned was "appalling." Brewer charged the "FAA has definitely turned this situation into a brick - throwing contest" between itself and Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) in what he said was "a ruse perpetrated by the FAA." Brewer said the "true facts" in Missouri are that the state's two principal airports are being operated in a hazardous manner; that many of the services normally provided to general aviation have been abandoned completely; and that the situation "is having a very serious impact on the Missouri economy picture." He cited no sources of his "information," but concluded that "any agency who would be responsible for the death of one of my fellow Missourians because of the unsafe conditions now pre- ITHACA, N.Y. (UPI) — Cornell University early today obtained a temporary restraining order against any further violence on campus. Faculty group slaps curfew on Cornell U. The Cornell president said the restraining order applied "to every single person on campus" President Dale R. Corson, announcing the court action, said it was taken on the unanimous recommendation of the faculty council. "I want to make it crystal clear that the handling of violations is no longer in the hands of the university but in the hands of the court," Corson said. Corson also said the normal operations of the university would continue "without interruption." The curfew was clamped on after students set a bonfire on top of the campus store building, broke about 65 windows and overturned a car. 6 KANSAN Apr. 10 1970 We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th GOP nomination on the forum were: attorney general Kent Frizzell, Rick Harmon, of Fairway, the party's gubernatorial nominee in 1968, and Raymond Van Skiver, of Wichita. alent in our skies in our skies is as guilty as any murderer in our history." A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Agency, Joseph Fretz, public affairs officer for the Central Region, denied Brewer's allegations categorically. 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Harman unveiled a program he called Kansas Action Now (KAN) to combat environmental problems through the formation of task forces. He said communities and universities would work together and work teams from the state penal institutions could be used under the program in cleanup projects. "We are not and have not at any time used any person not qualified for the position in which he was operating." Fretz said. "I think it is important for Kansas to set up a model program for fighting pollution," he said. Harman said his idea for Kansas is similar to Interior Secretary Walter J. Hickel's program of an Environmental Control Organization (ECO), a so-called environmental peace corps of young Americans. Frizell reviewed his fight during the 1970 Legislature for new authority for the attorney general to combat pollution with legal action. The bill died in a house committee. 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 Floor Model Close Out Sale 1—only KLH Model 24 reg. $319.00 now $277.00 2 only KLH Model 24 reg. $319.00 now $277.00 only KLH Model 24 reg. $319.00 now $277.00 2—only KLH Model 11w reg. $199.00 now $166.00 1—only Motorola 8-track cart. player reg. $109.00 now $90.00 1—only Motorola 8-track cart, player reel. $79.95 new $66.00 1—only Ampex 95 Cassette stack record & play unit reg. $269.00 now $235.00 1—only Ampex 50 Cassette Deck 1—only Ampex 50 Cassette Deck reg. $129.00 now $95.00 1—only Ampex 85 Cassette record & play unit reg. $199.00 now $160.00 Special—Masterwork 4800 $139.95 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center What's Cooking Something is always cooking at the Hole in the Wall, and another delicious item has been included in our fine family of foods— Hole-in-the-Wall Special a hot juicy roast beef sandwich on a warm onion bun along with our special sauce. A delicious treat made right before your eyes, as are all of our delicious products. And don't forget that We Deliver HOLE IN THE WALL THE HOLE IN THE WALL 9th & III. Jayhawk Food Mart SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Films----April 16 1. Popular Films Chairman 2. Special Films Chairman 2. Special Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairman 4. Film Director 4. Film Society Chairman 5. Publicity Chairman Recreation—April 21 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements 2. Featured Speakers Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity 4. Quarterback Club Chairmen Chairman Forums----April 21 Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman Travel—April 16 1. World Travel Fair Chairman 2. Arrangements Chairman 3. Correspondence Chairman 4. Films 5. Hospitality Chairman 4. Films Chairman 6. Travel Advisors Public Relations—April 16 1. Activities Carnival Chairmen Chairman 2. Open House Chairman 3. Open House Publicity Chairman Fine Arts----April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Humanities Chairman 6: Art Forums Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970)—April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. Male reporter turns on with new styles By JIM CZUPOR Kansan Mild-Mannered Fashion Reporter Editor's note: Ladies and gentlemen, loyal and unloyal readers of the UDK, we are proud to announce another first in the historic annals of reporting campus events. Thursday afternoon, an unwilling male reporter was dispatched to cover the fast-breaking, details of a women's club fashion show and boy, was he enthusiastic. He was so enthusiastic, the staff could hardly contain him. He was tackled, and manhandled, (the staff is a little strange at times). He said he didn't want Apr. 10 1970 KANSAN 7 to do it. "After all," he wailed, "what will the guys at the weightlifting room think when they see my name on a fashion show study?" But he went. The show was sponsored by the University Women's Club and the theme was "Shake 'em and Show 'em." Like to know what they had there. Never before have my eyes been so dazzled with such a display of female forms and attire — one of the models had an especially big tire, you see. Actually, the theme of the show was "Spring and Summer." It was suddenly changed from the "Fall and Winter" theme due to unseasonably high temperatures. The theme illustrated the latest in fashions and the latest in hemline lengths. BARBARA ROSE Sunday, April 12th 7:00 p.m. Woodruff Aud. Tickets for the Festival of the Arts will be honored for this re-scheduled lecture, or $1.00 at the door. "Hemlines are a do-your-own- thing this year," the commentator cooed. As the models went through their positions, the audience buzzed with questions. One of the members was over- heard to ask, "What's coming off here?" While hemlines are fluctuating up and down this season, bodies are remaining constant. Ponches and Fants, a new Vaudeville team, were the highlight of the show, demonstrating their versatility. "The short look is still prevalent," she said, as two midget models appeared in maxis. The thrill of seven models parading around with plastic smiles and elastic bodies was almost more than I could take. It never ceases to amaze me that normal everyday women would even think of wearing some of the gaudy, expensive outfits displayed at the show. Whatever happened to mukluks, long homemade dresses with gussets and whalebone? And the poor emaciated girls wearing those obnoxious flower fashions should be placed on some sort of organized meal program so they can get some meat on their bones, or wherever else necessary. All in all, the Kansas Union Watkins Room, filled with exciting piped in music, was the setting for an exciting afternoon. Cookies and coffee were served, and a good time was had by all. Except the reporter that is, he just had coffee and cookies. Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts Fri. April 17 – 8 p.m. WHERE ELSE? – Always the finest in entertainment – [Picture of seven men in formal attire standing in a row, facing the camera. The man in the center is elevated slightly on a pedestal. To his left, the second man is positioned slightly forward. To his right, the third man is slightly forward. The fourth man is positioned slightly backward. The fifth man is slightly forward. The sixth man is slightly backward. The seventh man is slightly forward. To the far left, the eighth man is slightly forward. To the far right, the ninth man is slightly forward.'] Be Diggin' Live in the Manner in which Everyone Should Be Accustomed! Live in the ALL NEW PARK 25 APARTMENTS. 1 BEDROOM 1 BATH 2 BEDROOM 1 BATH 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH TOWNHOUSES NOW LEASING For More Information Phone Mrs. Sadler,842-1455 Stop by and talk to her. 2530 W.25th #2 CENTRAL AIR DISHWASHER CAR PORTS POOL IOWA 25th Street N W E S OKLAHOMA Scott Harrington-Sooner double threat Oklahoma's all Big Eight second baseman Scott Harrington will pose a double threat to KU when the Jayhawks visit Norman this weekend. A solid hitter who finished with a .315 average last year, the Sooner co-captain is also noted by Oklahoma coach Enos Semore as being a superb second baseman. KU baseball team travels to Norman The Kansas Baseball team, which is off to one of its better starts, faces its first big test this weekend in Norman, Okla., where they play the Oklahoma Sooners. Coach Floyd Temple hopes that the addition of Dave Robisch to the pitching staff will enable the Hawks to win two or may be three games from Oklahoma. "Our winning percentage goes from less than 50% when Robisch isn't pitching to almost 80% when he's in there," said Temple. "He throws hard and has plenty of Big Eight experience under his belt." The importance of this series can be seen by the conditioning Temple has put his club through. He said that if the Jayhawks lose all three games to Oklahoma that they will be at a definite disadvantage in the race. He added that if KU could win two out of three then "we would have a pretty good chance to move up in the conference." Temple pointed out that in order to have a first division club, the defensive unit has to play flawlessly. So far this season the infield has been the strong point of the team, not only defensively but offensively. The three top hitters on the team are infielders. Skip James is currently leading 8 KANSAN Apr.10 1970 Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa the Hawks with a .529 average. Paul Womble and Keith Lieppman are close behind with 471 and 450 respectively. Another encouraging note to the squad's success this year is the fast recovery of injured center fielder Biff Temple. "If all goes well he'll be ready for action in two to three weeks," said Temple. HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 'Worlds fastest human will compete in KU Relays The KU Relays, to take place April 16-18 in Memorial Stadium, received added prestige this week when KU track coach and director of the Relays, Bob Timmons, announced that John Carlos will compete in a special 100-yard dash. Carlos, who graduated last year from NCAA outdoor track champion San Jose State, is generally regarded as the current "world's fastest human." Carlos, the controversial spinner-ter who was kicked off the 1968 U.S. Olympic team for his black power demonstration at the victory stand, ranked number one in the world last year in the 100 and 220-yard dashes. Timmons, continuing his everlasting search for outstanding talent to enhance the Relays, is now in the process of lining up a competitive field for Carlos. He KANSAN Sports is hopeful of landing ex-Nebraska star Charlie Green, who has won the open 100-yard dash here each of the past two years. The Relays director pointed out that three of the world's best sprinters are already entered in the collegiate portion of the meet and hopes their coaches will allow them to run in the special 100 as well as the university and college 100. Timmons was referring to Mel Gray of Missouri, winner of last week's 100 at the Texas Relays; Earl Harris of Oklahoma State, the world's most consistent spinner during the past indoor season; and Ivory Crockett, the National AAU sprint king from Southern Illinois. Timmons said that the open 100 would be run on Saturday (April 18) beginning at 2:15 p.m. The sole mineral of value in the Arabian peninsula is petroleum. AEROPORT Convenience Begins With US - Located Close To Campus - 3 Drive-In Windows - All Full-Service Banking Facilities University State Bank 955 Iowa Telephone 843-4700 Convenience Begins With Us - Located Close To Campus - 3 Drive-In Windows - All Full-Service Banking Facilities University State Bank 955 Iowa Telephone 843-4700 FRIDAY SATURDAY $100 PER PITCHER THE FACTORY THE FACTORY GOOD SOUNDS TONIGHT TOMORROW NIGHT All Full-Service Banking Facilities University State Bank 955 Iowa Telephone 843-4700 The DRAUGHT HOUSE $100 ADMISSION The DRAUGHT HOUSE 8-12 The DRAUGHT HOUSE DRAUGHT HOUSE FRIDAY SATURDAY $100 ADMISSION $100 PER PITCHER DRAUGHT HOUSE THE FACTORY THE FACTORY 8-12 GOOD SOUNDS DRAUGHT HOUSE TONIGHT TOMORROW NIGHT The DRAUGHT HOUSE SATURDAY $100 PER PITCHER The DRAUGHT HOUSE THE FACTORY GOOD SOUNDS The DRAUGHT HOUSE TOMORROW NIGHT SATURDAY The DRAUGHT HOUSE THE FACTORY The DRAUGHT HOUSE TOMORROW NIGHT Salb and Kathol return KU cindermen travel to Hoosierland By JIM RYUN Kansan Sports Writer The University of Kansas track team will scatter this weekend to compete in three different meets with the majority of the team to compete against the Indiana Hoosiers in a dual meet. It will be the first dual competition since the Jayhawks' crushing 99-55 defeat to UCLA on March 28. A 26-man team is scheduled for a Friday afternoon flight to Bloomington with the remaining track members traveling to the Wichita State Relays and Emporia Relays. The Saturday dual meet will mark the return of distance running captain Roger Kathol, who has recovered from a severe case of poison oak, and shot putter Karl Salb, who remained home from the Texas Relays to study. But the Hawks will still be ailing from injuries. Sprinter Frank Johnson suffered a pulled hamstring Wednesday evening in practice and will not compete Saturday. Johnson was scheduled to run in the 100 yard dash and to carry the baton for a leg on the 440 relay. "The 440 yard relay team was looking darn good until Johnson became injured," assistant track coach Harvey Greer said, but fortunately his injury is not as serious as we first thought it to be." Steve Wilhelm, the only wristwatch winner at the Texas Relays, will resume competition against teammates Salb and Doug Knop. Decathlon man Sam Goldberg, record setter in his event at the Kentucky Relays last week-end, will be entered in four events. Hammer thrower Bill Penny, who joined Goldberg at Kentucky, will throw at the Emporia Relays. The Wichita contingence will be led by freshman distance runner Dave Anderson who will run the steeplechase. SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS 1704 West 24th 842-1160 Beautiful one and two bedroom units NOW renting for summer and fall all units include: drapes . . . carpeting . . . air conditioning . . all electric kitchen with disposal . . pool . . laundry storage . . furnished or unfurnished. K. C. Royals trip Oakland; set team pitching record Convenient location on bus route See them today KANSAS CITY (UPI) — Ed Kirkpatrick doubled in a first inning run and scored on a wild pitch Thursday night to give the Kansas City Royals a 3-1 victory over the Oakland A's behind the five-hit pitching of Bill Butler and Dave Morehead. Butler and Morehead pitched shutout ball for eight innings to extend the Royals' streak of consecutive scoreless innings to a club record of 21, dating from the fifth inning of Tuesday's opener. The previous club record was 18 against Minnesota last September. But in the ninth inning, Felipe Alou drove in an unearned run with a two-out single after Bert Campaneris reached first on Bob Oliver's error and went to second on a groundout. After Reggie Jackson walked, Sal Bando fouled out on a 3-1 pitch to end the game. Kansas City scored twice in the first inning when Pat Kelly singled and Kirkpatrick doubled off starter Chuck Dobson's first two Apr. 10 1970 KANSAN 9 pitches. Kelly, running on the second pitch, scored the two base hit and Kirkpatrick later scored on a wild pitch. The Royals added their other run in the fifth inning when Jim Campanis homed for Kansas City's first of the season. Jayhawk golfers travel to Columbia The KU golf team will travel to Columbia, Mo., this weekend to take part in a 36-hole invitational. Four other Big Eight schools — Oklahoma, Nebraska, Iowa State and host Missouri will compete. The first round will be played Friday and the final 18 holes Saturday. KU coach Wilbur Norton will take the same five players who competed in the Oklahoma Intercollegiate last week. They are David Ross, Arkansas City senior; Jack Rogers, Keokun, Ia senior; Warren Wood, Independence senior; Jim Dennerline, Paola-freshman; and Craig DeLongy, Derby sophomore. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE SUA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. BOOKENDS SPECIAL SIMON & GARFUNKEL BONUS including: Bookends Theme/Overs FULL Fakin It/Old Friends COLOR A Hasty Shade of POSTER Winter INCLUDED Mrs. Robinson Simon & Garfunkel Sounds of Silence FEATURING I Am a Rock LEAVES THAT ARE GREEN WOMAN'S DAY A MOST PECULIAR MAN WE'VE GOT A GROOVEY THING ON ME SOMEWHERE THEY CANT FIND ME THE SOUNDS OF SILENCE AND MORE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including: The Baby Driver Baby Driver Bye Love Keep The Computer Satisfied Budge Over The Water A. K. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. M Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... a classic and a kick Two styles to A bold new in brass. ( kick. A san- honest-to-g rubber sole it's a cool, con- choice. Make m'Cox shoes McCoy shoes Two styles to choose. A bold new classic trimmed in brass. Or the new style kick. A sandal with real, honest-to-goodness tiretread rubber soles. Either way, it's a cool, comfortable choice. Make it soon. ROBLEE. $8.95 813 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-2091 Bentley Well, that's the brakes Mrs. Michael Sedlak, 1603 W. 22nd St. Terr., the driver of the car, lost control when she applied the brakes. The brakes locked, tearing the rear axle and wheels from the frame. The accident backed up traffic on Iowa Street for approximately 45 minutes. No injuries in traffic stopper A one car non-injury accident backed up traffic on Iowa Street Thursday afternoon for approximately 45 minutes. Mrs. Michael Sedlak, 1603 W. 22nd Terr., the driver of the car, lost control when she applied the brakes. The brakes locked, tearing the rear axle and wheels from the frame. The southbound car then left the outside lane and stopped in the grass, near the 15th Street intersection. The car left the road, rupturing the gas tank. A firetruck was called to the scene but was not needed. The rest of the incident reads like a "Would you believe . . ." story. Michael Sedlak, the owner of the car, is a Lawrence policeman, while Ted Crady, the officer from the Department of Safety working the accident, said he was the original owner of Sedlak's car. No tickets were written. Motor trucks make up 15 per cent of the vehicles registered in California. Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said Thursday the effects of the student strike Wednesday would become apparent in two weeks when the Board of Regents meets. Awbrey says effects of strike unknown The actions of the Regents then, he said, and next week if Sen. Reynolds Shultz (R-Lawrence) announces his candidacy for Governor, will show the effectiveness. Awbrey said there were pluses and minuses with regard to the strike. A plus was that a lot of students became aware of things that were going on in the University because they got involved, he said. "The strike showed a clear distinction between activist students here and Hoffman activists," he said. "The activists here didn't dig Hoffman from my reaction. His mystique was shattered." Awbrey said it really bothered him that only a small minority of students, around 5,000 were actively concerned and turned out "It came off well,"Awbrey said, "because it was a beautiful day,it was a pleasure fair and it forced some people to get together." He added that the other 13,000 could have cared less. "The reaction I've gotten is relief," he said. "The news is playing down the rhetoric. The strike can't be used effectively against the University." Awbrey joked when he said that he believed when spring came there had to be some sort of demonstration. $200 cars predicted The 1939 New York World's Fair predicted for the year 1960 that automobiles with rear engines and improved diesel engines would sell for as little as $200. The fair also predicted a cure for cancer, and that a woman's skin would still be smooth at the age of 75. SAVE YOURSELF AFINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 Griff's Offers You A Warm Weather Special CREAMY, THICK SHAKES ONLY 19c EACH Friday, Saturday, Sunday Come In Today. 19¢ SPECIAL Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W. 23rd FRI. NITE Pitchers 1c Buy one pitcher at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only Adm. 1c Buy one ticket at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only featuring COLLECTIONS FRI. & SAT. NITE 8 p.m. SAT. Only—Dollar adm., Dollar pitch. Dollar NITE RED DOG INN —Always the finest Entertainment— Griff's Offers You A Warm Weather Special CREAMY, THICK SHAKES ONLY 19c EACH Friday, Saturday, Sunday Come In Today. 19¢ SPECIAL Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W. 23rd FRI. NITE Pitchers 1c Buy one pitcher at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only Adm. 1c Buy one ticket at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only featuring COLLECTIONS FRI. & SAT. NITE 8 p.m. SAT. Only—Dollar adm., Dollar pitch. Dollar NITE RED DOG INN —Always the finest Entertainment— Pitchers 1c Buy one pitcher at regular price, get next one for only 1c Fri. Only Dairy Dog LLC COLLECTIONS WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University newspaper offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. V FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes—How on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization." 4th Edit. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. 31% octane portable xylophone for Excellent condition. Phone 843-2767 Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynacon, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Attention Floodcinaencinhlimpilificators! For Sale: Lite-Gem hl-intensity lamp; Norelco electric shaver; 8 silver mats for cups; Coop chafing dish set; Silver case; Glass decanter with a key case; Wine decanter with a matching glasses; Tray table; 2 speed electric room heater; Wicker basket desk; Taylor desk; Taylor temp-humidity gauge; Japanese tea set; British flag; AM-FM Short Wear radio. Call 843-1400. 4-10 250 Yamaha. Best offer over $300. Call Ellsworth Dorm. Speak to or leave message for Mike McComb. 4-10 Four silver-sprinkle drums. 3 Zildjian cymbals owned by a little old lady who dug Bach. Call Jeff at 843-1711. 1-10 Norelco tape recorder cassettes, register $2.95, sale price now $1.99. The fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 1968 Zenith top-of-line portable stereo phonograph. 5 speakers. Cost in cost $200. Call 843-2191 for price offer and additional information. 4-10 Cycle—new Yamaha 100cc, 1,000 cubic inch, 4 speed, oil injected, good shape. Great for campus. Call John-422 or Larry-443. Tensions 842-1200. 62 VW. Like new. New engine—less than 10,000 miles. Priced to sell. Ask for Steve. 843-8085. 4-1* 1965 600cc Triumph cycle, must sell, consider any offer Call Bob at 842- 367-5242 4-13 Faithful Old Blue. 1960 blue Chevy cyl., radio, good tires. Must sell. $175 or best offer. Call Ken. 843-6536. 4-13 1969 Honda CL350 Scramble, blue- white. 1400 miles, 4 months old, hel- lth and insurance. $625. Cars. Larry, 842-7268. 4-13 1969 Comet, good condition; also, Chevy mags, excellent condition. Cars. 842-5261. 4-13 Northwestern golf clubs for sale—4 woods, 9 irons, putter, bag and um- brella. Cars. 842-5578. 4-14 1966 Flat fondier —5 speed, white with black interior. $1,000. 842-2191. of year. Call 842-4770. 4-10 1966 Honda S-90, good condition, fixed for trial, engine rebuilt 500 miles ago. Also 1963 Corvair, new starter and tires, best offer. Call at 1311 West 6th Lot A-25, after 5 p.m. 4-10 Harley Spencer HLF Perfect condition, bags, windshield, $1100. See Ron, App. 1, 1726 Kentucky, between 6:30-8:00 evenings. All day weekdays 4-14 One man's Naismith contract for rest of year. Call 842-4770. 4x10 4-14 Office furniture--desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable paper tapes; dissertations; collating includ- ing no extra charge. Lawrence Typewriter class, 843-3644. tf 1966 GTO Converter yellow with black top and interior—4-pack dheel covers. Motorola speakers and stereo tape hook-up $1500, 842-2191. 1967 WV Super Bug—silver mist paint with black interior. 76 hp., racing suspension, stereo speakers and back up. good tires. $1500. 842-2191. 4-14 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRS, beautiful British racing green, wire wheels, equipped, Michelinix tires. $1800. 842-2191. 1959 Triumph TR-3, metallic blue with white top, bug eyes, good tires, wire wheels, needs interior work. 842-2191. 1967 Austin Healey 300 Mark III, white with black top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition. -6-14 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark II, white with black top, black interiors, wire wheels, excellent condition, $2300, 842-219. 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white top, fully equipped, good tires, $1400. 842-2191. 4-14 Raney Drug Stores 1965 MGB, British racing green, ex- 1965 MBG, overhaired transmitter 4-144 842-1291 842-1291 1962 Austin-Healey Sprite, white with red interior, new tires. $800. #824-219-121 1964 Triumph TR-4, British racing green, deluxe interior, excellent shape. $1200, 842-2191. 4-14 3 locations to serve your every need 1960 tan VW, Excellent condition, low mil age, radio, new front suspension. Call 842-7696. 4-10 5 locations to serve your every need Plaza,1800 Mass. Hillcrest,925 Iowa Downtown,921 Mass. Custom designed, multi-purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. All in one equipment economical purchase for individual apartment gang or fraternity (Design approved Wyk Barbell Co. 577.5 lb). Weighted weights. Call J.B. at 843-2103. 4-15 1969 Builtace 200cc, 1800 miles Trail or street bike. 842-5492, 5:00-7:00 p.m. '63 Rambler 660—Classic V-8 wagon, Cran, runs good, good gas mileage, new tires and spare. Must sell-all- bids considered! Inquire: Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. After 600 p.m., KI 2-2382. 4-20 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. if $125.00! 1964 Corvair. Must sell to highest bidder soon. Engine and general mechanics good. Bad seat covers mufflers; off color floor. Call 842-5267 NOTICE Silverton 60 watt piggyback guitar or amplifier, like new, $60. Also excellent solid black folk guitar, $20 See at 713 W. 25th, No. D or call 4-15 Gold clubs, 3 Palmer woods, 8 Hogan trons, wedge, putter, bag, cart. Good condition, call 843-6900 1-12 Yamaha Classic guitar w/case. Excellent condition, $60. Contact Mary Beth, 842-7450 4-15 Delicious steaks, Russian Stegonnoff prepared in a way to satisfy even the hungriest! Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Garage Sale—1206 W. 29th Ct. April 10th and 11th—10 to 5. Little bit of everything. Army dress blues. Clothes of authentic 1800's. Perfect for the "Now" generation. Sear pre-constructed "tree-house." Stands 8 feet from the ground. Great for small-fry adventures. 4-10 Sale! Indian Saris, human hair fall, art supplies, antique chest of drawers, new tool box, fan, stereo tapes, leather luggage, leather purse, a few clothes and books, other goods. 1645 Mass. Sat., April 11, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Complete prescription departments and fountain service. Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity; for more information, call Max Laptad. V1 3-4032. 5-14 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want to swim in the Michigan St. Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket our speciality. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone V1 3-4032. Closed Sunday, Tuesday Tf Leave the cherry plum with emerge with spring Flutter into the brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations. 19 W. 9th. 4-10 Wanted—unattached swimmers interested in joining team being formed at natural swimming meet. Call 843-6776 or p.m. 4-10 Lepidoptera creations, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous, fickle, etc. Lepidoptera Creations. 19 W. 9th. 4-10 LA PETITE GALERIE—fashions for bold the beautiful for your group, in red and white on Thursday, April 2, please call 842-7254. 4-13 It's that time of the year again (formal time, that is), so get your shoes and accessories at Arensburg's Shoes 819 Mason. Students of Objectivism—meets every Sunday, 7.30, Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand. If desire more information, call 842-6210. 5:30. 4-17 University of Nebraska challenges both KU and KSU to canoe races for the University Trophy Cup. Races are held at Marysville, Kan., 60 miles north of Manhattan. The race is a mile course, Sunday, April 12, 1970. A open for everyone: Four classes, 1. fiberglass, 2. aluminum and wood, 3. couples, 4. under 16. 4. trophies after each class. Entry fee $5.00 for each canoe. Entry fee after 4:00 p.m. Entry fee includes chance on $200.00 canoe to be given away. 4-10 Will the person who found my wallet please contact me again at 843-0723. Ask for Dick or leave a message 4-10 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the CAPTAIN'S TABLE and the STABLES them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfasts, lunches, and dinner. The Stable stands for Bud, fun, and ... See you! Now, at enlightened prices, custom-made sandals, leather clothes, etc.—THE LEATHER WORKS—1309 Ohio-grand opening Sat., April 11 hours daily, daily, except Sunday. *4-13* New Sunday eating spot —The Captain's Table —open Sunday 11 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Come on or Sunday evening for great food-pried for the student. Check out our menu! *4-13* Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom apartment-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom ant one block from campus, furnished $120 unfurnished $120 Call 843-2116. Suntee Apts. ff Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. open space atmosphere unique to adjoined live interior wowers, adjacent to and overlooking Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly indoor rates. Available to families and mature adults. $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedroom rooms. $25. To view these luxury nurseries at all town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGreeft A ncy: 843-2655. Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, wall-to-wall carpeting, alt conditioning, sound conditioning, all conditionning, air-dried kitchen including dishwasher, gas grills, fireplaces. Additional benefit is laundry, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive rates. See apartments after afternoons weekdays and inexperienced days at MAILOLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE. 2411 Louisiana. 843-555-324. 4-13 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and furnished with drapes, carpetting, air conditioning, latelight disposal, laundry, storage, pool On bus route. See them today at 1704 W. 24th, 842-1160. 4-13 For summer rent—June 1-August 25. Bedroom in warehouse on 3rd fairway of Alvamay. Completely furnished. 3 bedrooms, $2½ baths. Call 842-8844. 4-14 Modern 1 bedroom apartment for summer or longer, air conditioned, on campus, from campus, 100 month. 842-0002. 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease till Dec. 1. 1611 W. 8th Terr. $149/mo. 842-0002 before 4 p.m. except holidays. Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Tony's 66 Service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Be Prepared! tune-ups For rent June 1-2-bedroom furnished apartment, air conditioned, pool, reasonable rent; ideal location -5727 Call 842-7527 Modern furnished or unfurnished 1 bedroom apartment—l² block from Urban private parking, great for summer vacations and next year. 842-5752 evenings 4-16 TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and plen type available. Desire generic typing, and term papers—plus stencil cutting and duplication. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 4-296 6562. Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. pens. Have electric typewriter with ten type. Competent service. Mrs. Wright Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist with KU B.S. (English-language cation). Office-size electric. For appointment phone 843-2873. 4-10 Typing done in my home. Term papers, reports, etc. Call 842-5261. 4-13 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate WANTED Interested in Jazz? I em looking for a pianist and other interested musician to form group with experienced saxophonist. Call Allen Trovel, 842-1400. Are you leaving KU this year? Grad. student would like reference to a clean utility or one room apartment close to campus with rent less than $100 / mo. Call 842-1568 or UN 4-4220 for Aktion Merton. 4-13 Want to buy used Ludwig or Rogers good condition 843-7438 evening 4-1M Want to live in Chicago suburb after graduation? Will share roomy furnished house near city lake with a 4 seasonable. Call Jo. Rm 302, 842-1340. Urgent!! 3 girls need a roommate for April and May. $60 per month plus utilities. Immediate occupancy. Call 842-6949. 4-10 Traveling companion for the summer touring western U.S. U.S. 842-6599 LOST Class ring in front of Union. Call 842-6600, ask for Paul, room 313. Re- ward. 4-16 Bracelet of sterling silver rings with hook clasp. Lost in Hoch Auditorium, night of July Collins concert. Reward. Call 842-9938 after 5 p.m. 4-10 Black billfold, April 1 snowstorm. If found, please drop in my mailbox at 1601 Tenn. I need my ID cards. Reward offered. Mike Hein. 4-13 HLE THE HTE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill. THE CONCORD SHOP - Stretcher frames, - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - ready-made and parts - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lurie 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Checkbook, western scene printed on checks, brown cover. If found Kathy in 914, 842-6600. Reward 4-14 Black-framed glasses in Yuk Down Friday night. Reward Call George at 842-9174. 4-14 Pair of black acetate gloves with zippers. Reward. Call 842-5752 ve- nings. Ladier' yellow gold Tissot watch. April 8th between Strong Hall and Potters Lake. Reward. Call collect Overland Park at UD1-1835. 4-16 PERSONAL Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 8011 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up ff Whoever liberated my blue leather wrapper bag in the Union lobby Thunderbird Theater, and goodies, but please return the asked cards and glasses! No questions asked — just leave them at Nalshim Hall ditch with a note for Linda, Rust 616 SERVICES OFFERED Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. iff Prescription sunglasses with brown frame in a black case. Vienna of Blake Hall Contact David, room 765 McCollum Hall, 842-600-6. Reward. Your KU LD. is worth $1.00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Group Tax, $801.52 Mass, $4.00 and up, tf T-shirt dressing and summer wardrobe ready. Add a strap. Alterations and dressmaking 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-10 Man's black bilfoil. Keep money. Man's black bilfoil. Large reward. Call +1-732 at 842-1157 HELP WANTED Married couple, grad or teaching for Minnesota girls camp. Each exp. in one area, tennis, rifley, theatre canoeing. 842-0587. 4-14 Student to work in mail dept. of UDK, MWF for approximately 1½ hours each day. $2.50 per day. Prefer someone who can continue next call. Call Todd Smith, 842-8200 after 5 p.m. tf Used paperback books. Playboy magazine, and comics: Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store. 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf TEXACO TEXACO ★ Student specials W. 9th TEXACC New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 a.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 henrys For Top Quality Head For Henry's For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. VI 13-2139 AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 Portraits Passports Applications "Please call for appointment" HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Table Tops Bob P 926 Mass. New York Cleaners For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving VI 3-0501 Sirloin Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Sirling steaks and fresh salty seafoods await you when you dine at the Sirloin place ... greater the selection. The chef. Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Stirling steaks and fresh select seafoods awaken you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest, allowing the delightment of your live boar with all the dinner plimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for intransmrable dining pressure. U.S. Choice Select Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1421 DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 宝宝爱唱歌 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 K COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 TAXI MAN ON PENCH Let PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour Malls Shopping Center TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 Mrs. John Mitchell blasts Fulbright WASHINGTON (UPI) — The wife of Attorney General John N. Mitchell telephoned the Arkansas Gazette at 2 a.m. Thursday and urged the newspaper to "crucify" Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., for his vote against the Carswell Supreme Court nomination. The Little Rock paper, largest in Arkansas, quoted Martha Mitchell as saying: "It makes me so damn mad I can't stand it. He (Fulbright) could have done a great deal for the whole vote . . . I want you to crucify Fulbright and that's it." Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made a rare break with his Southern colleagues Wednesday when he voted against confirmation of Judge G. Harrold Carswell for the high court. Carswell was rejected on a 51-45 roll call vote. When informed of Mrs. Mitchell's phone call to the paper, Fulbright smiled and said, "Mrs. Mitchell has become a kind of character around here." The attorney general's wife who is a native of Pine Bluff, Ark., was quoted as informing the paper she had talked to three or four "very influential" people from Arkansas who said they would "disown" Fulbright because of his vote. "He is not representing the people of Arkansas," she said. "I love Arkansas, and I want everything possible for my state. I am from Arkansas. It is my home state. Fulbright doesn't represent the state." To this, Fulbright retorted: "I don't believe she's in touch with the people of Arkansas. She was born in Pine Bluff, but she's been away from there for 20 or 30 years. She's a New Yorker." Mrs. Mitchell confirmed to the Senators comment- (Continued from page 1) "The people of the South deserve to be represented," Nixon said. (Continued from page 1) But more important than geographical representation, Nixon said, was philosophical attitude. Nixon said he had instructed Mitchell to search the federal and state court systems outside of the South for a nominee who reflects the President's own views on rigid constitutional interpretation. "I believe a judge from the North who shares my views will be confirmed." "I have concluded that the next nominee cannot come from the South since this Senate will not confirm him," Nixon said. Nixon made his brief statement before newsmen after conferring with Mitchell in his oval office. He said he had talked with Mitchell about the court appointment both Wednesday night and earlier Thursday. Earlier in the day, the White House conceded it incorrectly told some senators before the vote that Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, R-Maine, would vote for confirmation. A Baldwin High School senior, Gene Vaughn, 17, of Route 5, Lawrence, was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wednesday night with Douglas County's first case of meningitis. Thursday afternoon Vaughn's condition was listed as poor. Meningitis case at Baldwin 12 KANSAN Apr. 10 1970 Leonard Steinle, superintendent of Baldwin schools, said the Baldwin schools will be closed for two days as a precautionary measure. Steinle said Baker University, located in Baldwin, would remain open. Washington Star later Thursday that she had called the Gazette "really upset" about Carswell's rejection. Gas leak reported in my heart, I wonder, am I out of step?" But, she said, "If I don't have the right to ask the people of Arkansas what they think, its just too bad." The Gazette has strongly supported Fulbright, whose term does not expire until 1974, and editorially opposed the Carswell nomination. For a snack or a meal, it's Burger Chef. Stop in soon for a Super Shef. — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF OSAKA, Japan (UPI) — City police said Thursday a gas leak was reported three days ago in a subway construction site where a gas main exploded Wednesday, killing 73 persons and injuring 282 others. Both Carswell and Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., who was President Nixon's first choice for the court and also was rejected by the Senate, were recommended to the President by Mrs. Mitchell's husband. Fulbright voted for Haynsworth. A police report on the accident said employees of the Osaka Gas Co. went to the subway construction site Sunday to investigate reports of a gas leak. Mrs. Mitchell told the Star she had a perfect right to voice her objections. "... I'm just little Martha Mitchell, just in the city of Washington, period. No right, no rhyme or reason why I have to withhold my thoughts or wishes or anything else." The Star said that near the close of the 30-minute interview, Mrs. Mitchell said, "Deep down BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS "I asked them to put in a letter to the editor for me to ask the people of Arkansas if Mr. Fulbright really represented them," she replied: "Look, you can say anything. Even the Arkansas Gazette is crazy." BOOKENDS SPECIAL SIMON & GARFUNKEL BONUS including: FULL Bookends Theme/Overs COLOR Fakin It / Old Friends POSTER A Hazy Shade of Winter INCLUDED Mrs. Robinson Simon & Garfunkel Sounds of Silence FEATURING I Am a Rock LEAVES THAT ARE GREEN RUHANNA HORY A MOST PECULIAN MAN WE'VE GOT A GROOVEY WHOOZOO SOMEWHERE THEY CANT FIND ME THE SOUNDS OF SILENCE AND MORE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including: The Baboer Baby Box Bye Bye Bye Bye Bye Keep the Customer Shelter Bridge Over Troubled Water Bridge Over 12 On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Walk In Cool White When the occasion calls for white, try this good-looking style by Freeman. There’s a lot of masculine appeal in the sporty strap and metal buckle. Team it up with a Madras sport jacket and white slacks. Walk in cool white grained leather. by Freeman HALIFAX DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE McCall's by Freeman HALIFAX ? McCall's Fire damages Kappa Sigma house A Photo by Jim Ryun Surveying the damage . . . Surveying the fire damage to the Kappa Sigma fraternity house Saturday is Charles Brandt, KU alumnus from Prairie Village. Members of Kappa Sigma fraternity, 1045 Emery Rd., were suddenly awakened early Saturday morning as a blaze swept through the top floor of the house causing major smoke and water damage to the bottom floors. No injuries were reported in the fire which began before 5 a.m. Saturday. All 55 men in the house escaped as firemen arrived with three pumpers, an aerial and snorkle. The fire was discovered by Andy Budka, Amsterdam,N.Y., freshman, who set the alarm in the house. Dave Steen, house president and Wichita junior, and Budka along with several other men fought the fire with extinguishers but were driven out by heavy smoke. Fire Chief F.C. Sanders said the house received "pretty heavy damage," and speculated that the fire began in the attic. He said it was too early to estimate the cost of the damage. Most of the damage from the fire was confined to the attic and the third floor but the east section of roofing was ripped open by flames where the fire was speculated to have started. Faulty wiring could have been the cause, Sanders said, but unless someone is willing to tear out all the wiring upstairs "We probably never will know." Sanders said there is no reason to suspect arson but since the cause is unknown, arson still cannot absolutely be ruled out. Lawrence firemen in an interview later said they wished to express their thanks to the Kappa Sigma students and nearby students for their help at the fire. Several firemen said that the men stayed out of the way during the actual fire fighting and only after they were through did students ask if they could go into the house. One fireman, acting as spokesman for the rest said, "We think most of the students at KU are real fine kids and we think we saw a good example of that today." Robert Miller, Salina freshman, said all 55 men were out of the house in five minutes. However as soon as they realized where the fire was, they all rushed back in to save what items they could, he said. Nearly 15 to 20 of the men lost everything in the fire. One of (Continued to page 16) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.112 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, April 13, 1970 Apollo 13 'A-OK, outrunning IRS SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Rookie astronaut John L. Swigert, who recalled halfway to the moon he had failed to file his income tax return, expertly lined up the Apollo 13 spaceship Sunday night for a pinpoint landing in the unexplored lunar highland foothills. A 3.5 second rocket blast which Swigert triggered on the space-ship's main engine proved right on the money and put Apollo 13 on the desired course, but it also robbed Swigert and his companions, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr., 42, and Fred W. Haise, 36, of their free roundtrip home. The astronauts used their color television camera to show earthlings what was happening aboard the spacecraft during the vital rocket burn. "That wasn't too much of a push there, man," Haise said following the rocket firing, which came at 8:54 p.m. (EST). "We didn't see the accelerometer do too much." Lovell had rigged a pencil on a string to show the change in acceleration the spacecraft encountered frim the rocket firing. When the rocket fired, the pencil swung gently backward. The telecast, the third the Apollo 13 crew has beamed back from space, lasted 50 minutes 41 seconds, the longest to date. Viewers were also treated to a spectacular show of ice crystals—caused by the freezing of dumped waste water—floating by outside the spacecraft with the crescent moon in the background. The crystals looked like large snow flakes strangely floating in the air. "You know that new fad with long hair?" he asked. "It doesn't work too well in space. You can't comb your hair up here." "Looks like your beards haven't come along to the point where you had to use the razor at all," ground control noted. "Well we debated that," Lovell At one point the camera zoomed in on Lovell, who was trying to comb his hair. said, "we'll probably take care of our beards tomorrow and make that a part of the routine." Swigert drew gales of laughter from his fellow crewmen and ground controllers Sunday when he suddenly recalled that he had forgotten to file his tax return. He asked space officials to try and get him an extension and later was told that a 60-day grace was automatically granted anyone out of the country. "That's good news," Swigert said. "I guess I qualify." "Yes, we were just looking at the map and you're south of Florida, so you're not in the country now," ground control joked. Before Swigert fired the rocket engine that changed Apollo's course, the astronauts were on a path that would have looped them around the moon and returned them to earth even if something had happened to the rocket engine on their command shin. Odyssey But that course did not bring (Continued to page 16) Threats spark reaction One alleged bombing attempt, and several threatening phone calls have prompted John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and president of the Black Students Union (BSU), to urge all Blacks on the university campus to arm themselves. Spearman said in a Friday news conference the BSU is taking the responsibility for insuring the safety of all the Blacks on the KU campus. The KU policy concerning arms on campus is outlined in a statement made by James Surface, former University provost on Feb. 7, 1969: "Only persons authorized to do so by the Chancellor or his representative shall carry firearms on the University of Kansas campus. Violation of this rule will result in immediate dismissal from the University." Spearman said numerous threats have been made on his life, and he had knowledge of threats on the well-being of BSU members. Spearman said no actual physical confrontations have resulted, but he knew of several "near-attacks" on members of the BSU. A White man was apprehended by BSU members, (Continued to page 16) By United Press International UDK News Roundup House probes My Lai WASHINGTON—A special House subcommittee investigating the alleged My Lai massacre will open five to seven days of closed hearings this Wednesday, and plans to go to Vietnam next month to gather additional information. Rep. F. Edward Herbert, D-La., the panel's chairman, said "this is no witch-hunt, nor is it a whitewash. It is a sincere effort to develop those facts which will permit a fair and objective evaluation of the so-called My Lai incident." SST coverup charged WASHINGTON—Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis., has accused the White House of hiding a report which he says shows the supersonic transport SST plane "is economically wasteful and environmentally harmful. Kirk backs down Reuss claimed the report was prepared at the administration's request. Dr. Lee A. Dubridge, President Nixon's science adviser, told Reuss the report is "not finalized and was used as part of direct input to the president." BRADENTON, Fla.—Despite the hue and cry, 2,700 elementary school children and 107 teachers will shift Tuesday to thoroughly mix the races in Manatee County schools. Hundreds will be bused long distances. Gov. Claude Kirk, in his highly-publicized showdown with the federal government, over desegregation of the schools, decided Sunday it would serve no good purpose for him to go to jail or pay a heavy fine. Soviets offer arms freeze LONDON—The Soviet Union has prepared a package plan for the strategic arms limitation (SALT) conference calling for a freeze on Russian and American nuclear rockets, Communist diplomats said today. The plan broadly proceeds from a proposal that the superpowers "freeze" both offensive and defensive nuclear missiles as the first step toward possible subsequent wider strategic arms limitation measures, the sources said. K Photo by Mike Radeneich Engineering students build emblem Engineering students work on the new Sigma Tau emblem in front of Learned Hall, Sigma Tau is an engineering honors society and the University of Kansas chapter designed and is building the national society emblem. The structure itself consists of the base, where students can sit, and a small patio. On top of the stand will be the emblem itself, a pyramid with a piece of railroad iron through it. N.Y. papers face union strike First, the traditional All-University Commencement Supper will be replaced by an All-Class Luncheon on Sunday, May 31. Chancellor E Laurence Chalmers Jr. is the guest for the luncon. Two major changes are being planned for the annual University of Kansas Commencement May 30-June 1. The changes are being made in an effort to streamline the weekend activities. For the second year, the University will be holding separate Commencement ceremonies. The format was adopted last year so that proper recognition could be given to the 3,000 graduates. As a result, Sunday night became graduate night for the post-baccalaureate degree candidates and the traditional Monday evening ceremony is reserved for undergraduate degree candidates. The second change will occur when seniors come together for the last time at a Senior-Parent Luncheon on Monday, June 1. In the past the seniors have held a private breakfast on that morning. Two changes planned to speed graduation NEW YORK (UPI) — One of the city's daily newspapers limped into publication of its Sunday edition, hampered by a union work slowdown Saturday, while a second faced a strike threat that could shut down all four major dailies. The New York Times announced it would publish its Sunday edition despite the work stoppages by union printers and a warning Friday by the publisher, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, that the Times was "rapidly approaching" suspension of operations because of the slowdown. At the New York Post, meanwhile, a New York Newspaper Guild official expressed pessimism that a guild strike there Monday could be averted. "Unless they (the Post) do something tomorrow it looks pretty bleak," said Thomas Murphy, Guild executive vice president. "It looks more likely than not our meditative session will fail tomorrow." A negotiating session under the auspices of a federal mediator is scheduled Sunday between the Post and the Guild which represents news, clerical and other employees. Murphy said that if the newspaper did not make a satisfactory offer a walkout could begin as early as Sunday evening. The Guild negotiates separately with the four dailies—the Times, Post, Daily News and Long Island Daily Press—while the nine craft unions bargain on a citywide basis. Some 13,000 employees are involved. The publishers offered a 16.5 per cent pay raise increase over three years but this was rejected by the unions and no new offer has been made. The contract expired March 30 but negotiations have continued on a day-to-day basis. If past practice is followed, a strike by one union would be honored by the other nine unions and similarly, any shutdown of one newspaper caused by a strike would be followed by the closing Eisenhower made the remarks in an address to the Governor's Youth Council meeting at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller introduced Eisenhower, 22, a spring graduate from Amherst, and Mrs. Eisenhower, who will graduate this year from Smith College. At a news conference following the speech Eisenhower said he would skip the Amherst graduation ceremony because of possible trouble some students might make. "I'm glad I kept Julie off the phone that night," said Eisenhower referring to his wife and the President's daughter. 2 KANSAN Mrs. Mitchell, wife of Attorney General John N. Mitchell, called the Arkansas Gazette at Little Rock about 2 a.m. Thursday and told the newspaper to "crucify" Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ak., for his vote against the nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell as a Supreme Court associate justice. Apr.13 1970 Eisenhower leaves issue unmentioned LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI)—David Eisenhower, President Nixon's son-in-law, skipped the Carswell rejection issue in a speech Saturday, noting anything he might say would be "a pale imitation of Martha Mitchell." of the remaining newspapers, all members of the Publishers Association of New York City. House 'okay' expected for welfare,voting bills The House will also put the final touch to a federal worker pay raise bill and consider an education money measure that is WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House heads for almost certain approval this week of President Nixon's sweeping welfare reform bill, while the Senate takes up a controversial housing bill to aid the home loan market. higher than President Nixon asked, but lower than liberals want. The measure also carries a provision to blunt government school desegregation efforts. Air controllers begin to improve truant numbers The Senate turns its attention to a bill creating machinery to pump $3 billion into the private home loan market to sumulate the letting of mortgages. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The government report "a continuing improvement" Sunday in the "sickout" of the nation's air traffic controllers, ordered by a federal judge to return to work or produce evidence that they are really ill. "Reports from all the 21 continental air route centers show a continuing improvement," the Federal Aviation Administration said in a mid-affternoon statement. U. S. District Judge George S. Hart issued the back-to-work order Saturday, but refused the government's request to fine those controllers falsely reporting they are sick—a factor that observers said could persuade many controllers to return to work. Attorney F. Lee Bailey, executive director of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), said after the court hearing he expected to see "some controllers begin checking in." The FAA said Sunday, "the number of absentees continued downward after reaching the peak of 1,847 on March 30 . . yesterday 1,014 were absent throughout the system, compared with 1,076 on Friday." The classes of 1920, 1930, and 1945 will hold their 25-, 40-, and 50-year reunion in this spring. The Gold Medal Club, whose membership consists of all alumni who have passed their 50th anniversary, will also have its annual reunion. Campaign for cleanup concludes Students from the University of Kansas participating in the Spring Cleanup Campaign filled 30 to 40 four-bushel bags with litter, Jon Woodward, geography instructor, said Sunday. "Only 12 of the 40 students who signed up to help came out Sunday," Woodward said. "I think the wet weather is what kept most of the students from coming," he said. The Lawrence Spring Cleanup Campaign came to an official end Sunday April 12. The 12-day campaign was sponsored by the Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce. Projects for the campaign varied from picking up litter on roadways to planting flowers in South Park. Local businessmen, in conjunction with the Cleanup Campaign, distributed large litter bags with purchases. The City Sanitation Dept. okayed the pickup of items larger than usual for the week of April 6 to the 10. City Sanitation officials said Saturday they were considering the special pickup schedules into next week to cope with large amounts of trash and debris resulting from the cleanup efforts. Yell leader clinic precedes tryouts Bob Hartman, Mission, senior and head yell leader, announced plans for a yell leader clinic, Tuesday, April 14, at 7 p.m. in Allen Field House. The clinic, he said, would prelude the tryouts scheduled for April 21, at 7 p.m. in Allen Field House. "Gymnastic skills are important," Hartman said, "but so are enthusiasm and a liking for people." Anybody wanting to try out for the Jayhawk, Hartman said, should attend the April 21 try-out. ENGINEERING EXPOSITION 1970 profiles of tomorrow learned hall university of kansas lawrence, kansas 66044 april 17, 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m. april 18, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. april 19, awards banquet 6:00 p.m. Campus briefs KU to host engineering society More than 150 persons from five states will attend the meeting of the Midwest Section of the American Society for Engineering Education this Thursday and Friday at the University of Kansas, James Maloney, KU professor of chemical and petroleum engineering and chairman of the section, and Russell Mesler, KU professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, is program chairman. Two KU students will speak Thursday afternoon. They are Richard von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student, and Robert Coswell, fifth year student in aerospace engineering from Whiting, Ind. On Friday, James Dumas, an engineer at the Western Electric plant in Lee's Summit, Mo., will speak on "Engineering Standards for Blacks." Also on Friday, the $500 Western Electric Company award to an outstanding teacher will be announced. Watson Library will stay open one hour later starting today until the end of the semester, announced Terrence Williams, assistant director of the Library, Friday. Watson announces new hours The new policy was made possible by funds given to the library last week by the Student Senate specifically for this purpose. The basement and first floor of Watson will be the only floors to remain open the extra hour. The top two floors will remain closed. The new Watson Library hours are: 8 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. to midnight Sunday. The slate of officer candidites for the 1970-71 Commission on the Status of Women has been announced. The Commission was formerly the Associated Womens Students. AWS selects candidates The candidates are Suzy Bocell Kansas City junior, and Kathy Newcomer, Omaha, Neb., junior for president; Jeff Goudie, Dallas, Tex., junior, and Suzy Kelly, Prairie Village sophomore, for Vice-president; Casey Eike, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Colette Kocour, Kenilworth, Ill., sophomore, and Gayle Maurin, Kansas City sophomore, for secretary; Anne Boydston, Des Maines, Iowa junior, and Medeline Loftus, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, for treasurer. "The type of work and research will be such that a commission will be more appropriate," she said. "The name is changing because of a changing need," said Miss Bocell. She said, it would be a program without required representation. Candidates for president and vice-president gave their views on how the organization would change now that the name is different. "The organization needs to become a source for the current trend of thought about women's liberation and a woman's role in society," Miss Newcomer said. She said the Commission can be an interest group and channel "Women are becoming increasingly aware of their plight in a society which is rigidly structured concerning sex roles," Miss Goudie said. She said that every option open for a woman should be a meaningful one, which means women should have totally equal opportunities. of awareness for both men and women of their changing roles in society. "The Commission has the potential of being integral in making more opportunities accessible for women," she said. because women's rights is one of the most pressing issues," Miss Kelly said. The University of Kansas needs some organization to work specifically with this issue, she said. "The change will be important Elections are being held today until 5 p.m. in each of the women's living groups on campus. Students will also be voting for the Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1970, the outstanding woman of their living group and the Outstanding Senior Woman of 1970. All results will be announced at the Commission's Honor's Night. Strike reactions vary among administrators Several University officials said Friday evening that the student strike Wednesday did not hurt the University's standing, in either enrollments or donations. Richard Wintermote, executive director of the Alumni Association, said, "It was a lot of students having a lot of fun." Carl Lavery, assistant treasurer of the Endowment Association, said the failure of the strike showed, "the students won't go for this foolishness." He said the incident proved the "intellectual abilities of the students." Wintermote said in reference to the violence Tuesday night, "I don't think it was students, but even if it is, you can expect one or two students like this out of 17,000." Larry Heeb, director of Differed Giving, said his job was to sell the University and that he is in a stronger position now because the "students showed just how they stand." John Myers, assistant director of Admissions, said, "I doubt seriously if it will affect admissions, but if it does it probably will be positively." Landscape architect to speak Stuart O. Dawson, a landscape architect in Boston, Mass., will speak on "Design Space" at 8 p.m. April 14 in the Kansas Union Forum room. Dawson has been visiting critic and lecturer at nearly a dozen architectural schools and earned the baccalaureate degree with honors in landscape architecture from the University of Illinois in 1967 and the master's degree from Harvard a year later. He is a member of the firm of Sasaki, Dawson and DeMay Associates. Senate to meet for last time The last regular meeting of the present Student Senate will be 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Two pieces of legislation will be discussed during that meeting. One proposed amendment, submitted by Dennis Embry, Great Bend junior, is a clarification of election procedures. The other amendment is on the term of office and vacancy of office in the Student Senate, submitted by Frank Zilm, St. Louis senior and student body vice-president. He succeeds Theodore Klumpp, 66, who has been president and chief executive of Winthrop for 28 years. Wescoe named to new position Former KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has been named president of the Winthrop Labs division of Sterling Drug, Inc. Wesscoe was chancellor from 1960 to 1969. Since leaving the University last July, he has been medical affairs vice president and a director of Sterling. He will continue in this position in addition to his new one at Winthrop. Sources in the drug field say they believed Wescoe's identification with Winthrop indicated that he was being groomed to succeed J. Mark Hiebert, 66, when he retired as chairman of Sterling. Wescoe is 49. Hiebert graduated from KU in 1932. Both he and Wescoe have received the University's Distinguished Service citation. Summer jobs to be discussed Summer jobs in Estes Park is the topic of a group presentation at 7:30 p.m. April 20 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, Students interested in a program that offers a variety of jobs, including wranglers, maids, waitresses, busboys, dish washers, cooks, sales clerks, desk clerks, activity leaders and entertainers are urged to attend. Estes Park is located in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. Other activities include seminars, workshops, musical events, panel discussions and dances. Jobs in Estes Park begin about June 1 and continue until midSeptember, but individual jobs can be geared to the student's available time. KU professor receives grant Applications for next year's AWS Fashion Board are due in the Dean of Women's Office Tuesday, the president of this year's fashion board, Pam Russel, Wichita senior, announced. Applications are available in the Dean of Women's office and from AWS representatives in organized living groups. Fashion board applications due Charles D. Reese, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Kansas, has been given a research grant from the National Science Foundation. The $15,000 grant will be used to study the buckling of composite sandwich cylinders and cones. Also provided in the 18-month grant is support for a graduate student. Reese said that the student will be named at a later date. Apr. 13 1970 KANSAN 3 Reese said this type of research is helpful in predicting when buckling will occur in aircraft and space vehicles. A good cry cleanses the soul After all is shed and done, your soul may be saved ... but your contacts need help. They need Lensine. Lensine is the one contact lens solution for complete contact care ... preparing, cleansing, and soaking. A woman in a suit sneezes into a tissue while looking at another person. In the background, there are other people watching. There was a time when you needed two or more different lens solutions to properly prepare and maintain your contacts. No more Lensine, from The Murine Company, makes caring for contact lenses as convenient as wearing them. Just a drop or two of Lensine coats and lubricates your lens. This allows the lens to float more freely in the eye, reducing tearful irritation. Why? Because Lensine is a compatible, "isotonic" solution. very much like your eye's natural fluids Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the build-up of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearing periods assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking-storage case with individual lens compartments on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine. It has been demonstrated the improper storage between wear- rings permits the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and in some cases can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lennie he- cause it's sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic. Lensine . the solution for complete contact lens care. Made by the Murine Company, Inc. CONTACT LENS LENSINE by N.Y.C. ARTIST not your contacts KANSAN COMMENT Everybody talks about the cops Cop, flatfoot, fuzz, pig—they all mean policeman. A policeman is the one man we see almost every day who represents the "establishment." Day and night he is on a stake-out to catch those who break the "establishment's" laws. A policeman has power. As he walks his beat or drives his patrol car, he must interpret the laws and bring in those people who defy his interpretation. He carries a gun on his hip and more guns in his car. He can use these deadly weapons to enforce the law. A policeman has the power to represent those in power. In spite of these responsibilities, almost anyone can become a policeman. With no more than a high school education, he will interpret laws written by lawyers. He may have strong prejudices, but he will shoot to kill when he thinks it is necessary. Any police force can stand vast improvement and police administrators will be the first to admit it. There was a time when police work attracted its share of college graduates. That is not the case today. Policemen are overworked and underpaid. Often the ones who take the job are the ones who can find nothing else. When you have little to offer, you get little in return. Few people will go through 16 or more years of education to walk a beat. Recently someone has been trying to convince college graduates that they should. David Durk is a graduate of Amherst and a candidate for Ph.D. in public administration and sociology at New York University. He is also a sergeant in the New York City Police Department. He is on leave from the Department to recruit on college campuses. His department has given him no official backing, he is working on a grant from the National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice, a branch of the Justice Department. So far 200 college men have agreed to take tests for the New York police force. Durk does not try to fool his listeners. He tells them exactly what it will be like. It won't be luxury and good times but it will be a chance to become involved. There won't be changes overnight but a recruit might feel he is personally doing some good and that changes will come. The New Left has much to say about "pigs" but its members have not done much to change the situation. They talk change but they do not make it happen. Durk is a man of action not talk. He saw something that needed to be changed and now he is working to change it. Durk may not get to KU with his recruiting, but there are few people here that do not know of a police force that could be improved by the addition of a few college graduates. You can march, carry signs and yell "Pig!" You can throw bottles and bricks. You can read horrifying accounts of police brutality. You can snicker at a fat, red-necked cop. But until you are willing to work within the system, until you are willing to take the responsibility and authority of a policeman, it will be just talk—empty talk. —Mike Rieke Sorel's News Service WELL NO MY WON'T GO WAR NOW ALL YOU REALLY NEED IS SHOVE MORE AIR AND LOVE THEN FOR ME ME FOR THEU WE SHALL OVERKILL Tyrant for a Democratic Society CAN THO, VIETNAM—President Nguyen van Thieu said his fondest wish is to take part in an anti-war demonstration in the United States. "I'm anti-war, too," said Thieu. "The thing the demonstrators seem to miss, however, is knowing the difference between who is waging the war and who is trying to defend democracy and freedom." I'll just stick to the original image. The text is not clearly visible in the provided image. Let me re-examine the image carefully. The background appears to be a grassy outdoor area with a blurred fence or gate in the foreground. Two children are walking and interacting closely. One child is holding the other's head. They appear to be sharing a moment of affection. The children are wearing jackets and hats, suggesting a cool weather setting. If I were to transcribe the text from this image, it would be: "two children walking and interacting closely" and "one child holding the other's head" with no clear text visible in the original image. Hunger "Lord, when did we see you hungry?"—Matt, 25:37 I was hungry and you circled the moon. I was hungry and you told me to wait. I was hungry and you set up a commission. I was hungry and you talked about bootstraps. I was hungry and you told me I shouldn't be. I was hungry and you had napalm bills to pay. I was hungry and you said, "Machines do that kind of work now." I was hungry and you said, "The poor will always be with us." I was hungry and you said, "Law and order first." I was hungry and you blamed it on the Communists. I was hungry and you said, "We don't hire over 35." I was hungry and you said, "So were my ancestors." I was hungry and you said, "God bless those . . ." I was hungry and you said, "Sorry, try again tomorrow." I am hungry. Courtesy of National Register Co. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson Campus Editor ... Ted Iliff News Editor ... Donna Shrader Editorial Editors ... Joc Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Riele Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shaver Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkens Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Sciences Editors ... Genelelle Richards, Rich Geary Assistant Campus Editors ... Wendy Wilkers, Nila Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffellwang 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 Shelley Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Lastox Member Associated Collegiate Press H REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. '360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 } KWSAN REVIEWS OPERA: long, tedious By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan staff writer As the final offering in the 1970 KU Festival of Oriental Theater, "Black Dragon Residence," a Peking Opera production, presented by a troupe from the University of Colorado, proved to be long, tedious, and, in a limited way, amusing. As an art form it could be appreciated, but unless one could remain fascinated by the unusual production techniques used, the opera was not often enjoyable. The drama, which moved much too slowly, was based on a group of chapters from a 16th century Chinese novel which translates as "All Men Are Brothers." It concerns a group of bandits who are fighting corrupt government, and are aided by sung Chiang, a court scribe. Chiang's mistress decides to marry her young lover, and plots against Chiang so that he will permit the marriage. Her convinquisces eventually result in her murder. Credit must be given to the director, Daniel S. P. Yang, for his attempt to preserve the authenticity of original Peking opera, and to the actors who performed well in a difficult medium. The costumes were breathtaking and characterization was maintained remarkably well. The opera fell down in its mechanics only. Operatic numbers, which grated on Occidental ears, were dubbed. Most of the libretto was spoken. Arias were translated into English on slides which were projected as the actors tried to lip-sync the Chinese lyrics. A live percussion ensemble punctuated key scenes with dissident but rhythmic blendings of cymbals, gong and woodblock which were reminiscent of the musical accompaniment of Tup-Tim's rendition of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" in "The King and I." Yang said in his program notes that only the second, third and sixth scenes of "Black Dragon Residence" are performed on the Chinese stage. Perhaps the production would have been more enjoyable if the first, fourth and fifth scenes had not been added for this American production. Concert unusual By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer The KU Brass Choir concert, scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight, holds promise of a fine program which, in the words of Kenneth G. Bloomquist, director of KU bands, "covers the full gambit of brass music." Conducting the concert will be Bloomquist and Frank Brown, instructor in low brass. The choir, said Bloomquist, will be divided into two or three sections placed around University Theatre. Bloomquist added he hoped the audience would be able to occupy the balcony only to fully benefit from the unusual musical effects made possible by unique staging. Opening the program will be three pieces by Giovanni Gabrieli, a 16th century composer. Bloomquist described Gabrieli's compositions as works from the Golden Age of Brass. Following the Gabrieli pieces will be "Fanfare for the Common Man" by the contemporary American composer, Aaron Copland. "A Requiem in Our Time," by Eino Ratavaara, will complete "Sinfonia No. 3," written by the American composer Walter S. Hartley in 1963, will be followed by "Angels for Muted Brass," by Carl Rugges. Apr. 13 1970 KANSAN 5 the first half of the program. The piece comprises four movements. "Music for Eight Brass Instruments," by David R. Hoslinger, will be the fifth contemporary offering. The program will close with "Fanfare," by Hugo Montengro. The work has been recorded by jazz artist Stan Kenton. "The program will embrace brass music in Baroque, contemporary and jazz styles," Bloomquist said. Weather Strong wind warning. Slowly decreasing cloudiness and colder today. Chance of scattered drizzle or light rain. West to northwest winds 25 to 40 mph and higher in gusts diminishing this afternoon. High temperature upper 40s. Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Not so cold Tuesday. Low tonight lower 30s. Precipitation probability today 20 per cent, tonight and Tuesday 10 per cent. TAU SIGMA presents its Spring Dance Concert Sat., April 18, 8:20 Sun., April 19, 3:30 at The Experimental Theatre in Murphy Guest Artist Marsha Baludan tickets $1.50 adults .50 children free with student I.D. BRASS CHOIR—see story this page. tickets available in Dance Office, Robinson or at the door Tuesday On campus this week Monday "LA STRADA" (KU Film Society) - Federico Fellini's gentle masterpiece, starring Giulietta Masina and Anthony Quinn; 1954. (7 and 9 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium.) KATHERINE PIRTLE — Performing on the organ, she will give her student recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Wednesday "CHILDREN OF PARADISE" (Classical Film)- Stylistic French comedy-drama of backstage life, directed by Marcel Carne. Made in 1944, during the German occupation. (8 p.m., in Woodruff Aud.) DAVID BUSHOUSE—He will play the French horn in a faculty recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. "THE GENERAL" (Special Films)—Buster Keaton's amazing comedy taken from a true Civil Thursday RE-OPENS AFTER FORTY YEARS . . . See The Greatest Comedy Genius of All Time . . . Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" United Artists STARTS Wed. War story; 1926. (7 p.m. in Woodruff Aud.) CHARLIE CHAPLIN SHORTS (Special Films)-Three of his best: "The Rink," "Easy Street," and "The Pawnbshop." (9 p.m. in Woodruff Aud.) BALLET WEST — This company of 50 will perform as part of the KU Concert Course at 8:20 p.m. in Hoch Aud. LONG LIST STARTS Wed. Limited Engagement CAIRO (UPI) — Travelers now know why a passenger arriving at Cairo Airport needs lots of patience. Hillcrest3 The influential newspaper Al Ahram has revealed that one reason it takes so long to go through airport red tape is that the names of many arrivals are checked against a list of "unwelcome" visitors. The list contains 70,000 names. 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. Varsity 7:15 THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 9:20 TO EXIST — IS THE GREATEST AGONY THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? NOW SHOWING Evening 7:20-9:30 Adults 1.50, Child .75 ENDS TUESDAY "BEST ACTRESS- JANE FONDA!" New York Film Critics Granada THEATRE...Telephone 713-3780 presenting... ↑ THE ESTES PARK EXPERIENCE A program designed to put MEANING, FUN & MONEY into a student's summer job - WORK - DISCOVER - PARTICIPATE - MORE THAN JUST A JOB It is a UNIQUE PROGRAM designed in cooperation with the Estes Park business community. This student-oriented summer employment program offers a kaleidoscope of activities . . . seminars . . . workshops . . . dances . . in Estes Park, Colorado. The activities program is designed to appeal to TODAY'S STUDENT . . . the student who seeks more from summer employment than mere money. Plan to attend the film presentation. Recruiting will be available. ● Date: April 20 ● Time: 7:30 p.m. ● Place, Forum Room, Kansas Union Estes Park Summer Employment c/o Trimarc Corporation First National Bank, Estes Park, Colo. 80521 11th "I get my fresh hamburger from Harwood's everyday." "I get my buns from Alexander Bros. Bakery." HILARY MURPHY TODAY IS APRIL 14, 1959 AT Sandy's Sandy's BECAUSE IT'S OUR BIRTHDAY AND OUR PRICES ARE 11 YEARS OLD FOR 2 DAYS ONLY TRY THESE NEW ADDITIONS HAMBURGERS 15c MILKSHAKE 20c CHEESEBURGERS 20c HI-LO 43c FRENCH FRIES 10c BIG SCOT 49c FISH 25c TENDERLOIN 49c PEPSI 10-15-25c COME TO OUR 11th BIRTHDAY PARTY! AT Sandy's 9th & Iowa Sports "I get my fresh Idaho potatoes from the Garett Market every day." "I get my milk from Meyer's Dairy." PARKSIDE PLAID HAT Tight economy blamed Job opportunities hard to find As the climax of four grueling years of college education rapidly draws to a close, graduating seniors are discovering that opportunities for the more highly specialized jobs are harder to find. The age of the specialist may not be so all-encompassing after all as revealed by several job applicant interviewers while on the University of Kansas campus scouting for prospective employees. "Some of the people we have talked to are possibly overspecialized," said Richard Marshall, vice-president of Buzzi and Associates, Inc., a Lawrence financial programming agency. According to an Associated Press survey conducted in the Kansas-Missouri area, on campus interviews by recruiters are down sharply this year, possibly because of growing trends toward tax revolts, higher salary demands and a tightening job market. "We're looking more for personality qualities and a general desire to work in an applicant," said Robert Joyce, agency manager for Buzzi and Associates, Inc. "Grade point averages aren't necessarily major considerations anymore." While the demand for specialists by some companies has decreased, other companies have intensified their search for applicants with backgrounds in marketing, finance and sales. Armour-Dial, Inc. of Kansas City recruits regularly throughout the country without much deviation in their program. R. A. Bloskey, zone sales manager for Armour-Dial, said he didn't feel there was a surplus of college-educated labor. "We're not to the point where we're turning down qualified applicants." Bloskey said. "We have an extensive on-the-job training program where a new member of our sales staff is supervised for his first year of employment, so we're looking for the more broadly educated individual," he said. While the demand for specialists in business and industry has dropped, so has the demand for teachers. Roger Wendel of the department of personnel of the Kansas City, Missouri Public School system acknowledged the over-supply of qualified teaching applicants. "We still have some opportunities left in science, math and the industrial arts," Wendel said, "but we have practically no need for primary school teachers. The trend is slow." "We'll hire approximately 340 primary teachers for the next school year which is a slight drop from last year's total." Wendel said. "We've had a lot of applicants Apr. 13 1970 KANSAN 7 NASHVILLE SKYLINE ROB DYLAN but we're a large system and a normal turnover is expected," Wendel said. "The general tightening of funds has eliminated some jobs, and in order to meet the -demand for higher salaries under the present tax levies, we've had to increase the student-teacher ratio. This year there are about two pupils per teacher more than there were last year," he said. When asked about what qualities were looked for in an applicant, Wendel said, "We want to be sure they are sincerely interested in helping the youth of today. Dedication is the key word, dedication toward the young and the profession." including: I Threw It All Away Nashville Skyline Rag Girl From the North Country Lay Lady Lay Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You All of the interviewers cited the increased importance of the personal interview and university placement bureaus in evaluating the qualifications of job applicants. The interviewers look for personality qualities, sincerity, philosophy, professional attitudes and the desire to succeed. NASHVILLE SKYLINE BOB DYLAN including: I Threw It All Away Nashville Skylines Rag Girl From the North Country Lay Lady Lay Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr Joyce said, "We're looking for a man with good common sense, a self-made individual, so to speak. A man entering our business has to be able to manage his own time and he must be willing to sacrifice." Among many college graduates, especially those in the more specialized fields, higher salary expectations are assumed from a starting job. "The big salary brackets today are in law, medicine and insurance," Joyce said. "But it takes a man one to three years to get established in insurance. There is a lot of extensive on-the-job training. For a new man the first year is usually pretty black, but if he can sacrifice and struggle through it, once he gets established, the sky is the limit," he said. "Jobs are plentiful, if a young man is qualified," Bloskey said, "but the applicants may not get exactly the jobs they were looking for. College grads don't necessarily write their own tickets today." Bloskey termed sales supervision as another area with good potential. "This is an area that has been abused by industry. We need more supervisors with more training." Bloskey said. "One of the questions we ask a man who is considering entering sales is 'will he be willing to relocate.' He must be willing to transfer himself and his family should the need arise." Both companies interviewed agreed that a college education was not absolutely necessary, but both stressed they preferred college graduates. THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? BERNARDO "Cannes," a sandal that's right for the Riviera and everywhere else your feet may take you. Crafted by Bernardo in supple leather. Small, medium or large. Brown, Blue and White MCA'S shoes V13-2091 813 Mass. St. Tiny Tim puffed up LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) — Tiny Tim was still in a snit Sunday. The long-haired entertainer was sore because he broke his megaphone and his manager tried to cut off his malted milks. Tiny and his bride of four months, Miss Vicki, stayed behind a locked door in their suite in the Fremont Hotel and took the phone off the hook. Tiny appeared Saturday night for his two shows but other than that he was incommunicado. Jeff Wald, a partner in the firm which manages the falsetto-voiced singer with the square monicker of Herbert B. Khaury, confirmed that his company had severed relations with Tiny. Wald said the trouble started the day of Tiny's first appearance when he had room service send up 27 ice cream sundaes, nine chop suey dinners and 35 malted milks. Wald said his client tipped $40 and $50 and that he told the hotel to cut Tiny off before they all went bankrupt. Grand Opening Tonight Let's get acquainted Special Free Beer. 7:30-9:00 Under the Bierstube - 14th and Tenn. The CELLAR Door KU Concert Course presents BALLET WEST Company of 50 BALLET HOCH AUDITORIUM Thursday, April 16, at 8:20 p.m. Main Floor $3.50 - 1st Bal. $3.00 - 2nd Bal. $2.50 Tickets at Murphy Boxoffice (KU Students Admitted Free with !.D.'s) Clean water discussed Engineering seminar meets Victor A. Koelzer, head of the Engineering and Environmental Sciences staff for the National Water Commission, spoke Friday on the problem of cleaning up our water environment. He said that much of the temperament of the population against the engineer was because projects that tended to have a damaging effect on our water resources were designed and built by engineers. He said he basically disagreed with this idea, saying that most engineers did not fall into this category. Koelzer said we had to develop a "national awareness" of the problem. One way to do this is to use any excess of money in future years for the problem of water pollution. Some say we can control the problem of pollution by controlling population, he said, while others say it cannot be done in a short time. As the population grows we will need more and more clean water and we will want more water development programs to be made. Along with this general demand for water, he said, the huge power companies will need more water for cooling purposes. All this depends on the quality of the environment and will cause conflicts in environmental and developmental interests. The most pressing problem in the area of pollution control, Koelzer said, is that the rate of growth of facilities is greater than the growth of the population; as the population increases, the number of sewage disposal plants Reflectors ordered for British horses MELTON, England (UPI)—The Melton and Belvoir Road Safety Council has asked huntsmen to fit red reflectors to the tails of their horses. A spokesman said motorists had complained they could not see returning huntsmen clearly at dusk. Apr.13 1970 and water purification plants will need to increase. really a "dead lake." In fact, the lake could be cleared up now if more money were appropriated from the government. One of the major problems in trying to control pollution is the lack of good management to obtain necessary funds. 8 KANSAN Even bathing every day can't stop it. Feminine odor starts internally, and no amount of bathing can remove it. Soap and water simply can't reach the area where the odor starts. That's the reason you need Norriform$^{®}$ .the second deodorant! These tiny internal suppositionites kill germs—stop odor effectively yet safely. In fact, gentle, doctor-tested Norriforms are so safe and easy to use, you can use them as often as necessary The other odor Also, some people even said that pollution does not have as high a priority as other U.S. problems, such as poverty and crime, although they do recognize pollution to be a real problem. No bath or shower can give you Norforms' protection. Get Norforms, and you'll feel secure and odorfree for hours. Also, New England's Lake Washington was nearly cleared of pollution when engineers and ecologists worked to clean it up. All the policy decisions that are needed to get pollution control started are not being made, and engineers and ecologists are helpful to do anything because of this lack of money. Most of the areas of the country that have been greatly affected by water pollution, such as the Chicago River and Lake Erie, have been known for a long time, he said. In fact, some of the problem areas have been somewhat helped by methods of pollution control. An example of this, he said, is in how sewage was diverted away from Lake Michigan in an effort to curtail increasing pollution there. The second deodorant. Many engineers, Koelzer said, contend that Lake Erie is not Norforms Antarctic · Dendrital FREE NORFORMS MINI-PACK plus informative booklet! Write: Norwich Pharmacal Co, Dept. CN, Norwich, N.Y., 13815. (Enclose 25¢ mailing, handling.) Name___ Street___ City___ State___Zip___ Don't forget your zip code. 22-04B AN INVITATION GRAND PRIZE WINNER of AL's Restaurant Contest is ?$ ALLEN LEVINE$? AL's Restaurant is located in the heart of Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway A1 Enjoy the Stars under the Stars TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TO VISIT US AT OUR NEW LAWRENCE OFFICES 925 IOWA STREET, In Hillcrest Shopping Center COMPETENT, COURTEOUS SERVICE PRESCRIPTION GLASSES AND SUNGLASSES MODEST OR MOD We Have The Frames To Suit Your Good Taste wens optical 925 Iowa St. Lawrence Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE WEST wens optical 925 Iowa St. Lawrence KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF OPTICAL DESIGNERS Use Kansan Classified Our Far East policy brings people together. The Jade East manifesto. Its aim: to bring men and women all over the world closer together. Our policy would allow for all sorts JADE EAST AFTER SHAVE 6 FL. OZ. of skirmishes, territorial gains and conquests. And still keep the peace. Just put some Jade East on your face and neck. And anywhere else. If you've got a girlfriend, take her out as planned. If you're seeing a few girls, do whatever it is you're doing. Now comes the best part. Since all girls are different, all reactions will be different. Some will be aggressive. Others, submissive. But whether our policy leads to final agreement or not, one thing's for sure. The negotiations alone will be worth the price. Jade East Make love,not war. Jade East After Shave and Cologne. Existence remarkably dull Haworth served 60 years By JOHN RABE Kansan staff writer From the time Haworth Hall was raised in 1909 until it was razed this year, Haworth had a remarkably dull existence. Haworth was created with $57-500 left over from a $200,000 legislative appropriation which also funded the building of Marvin Hall. From these rude beginnings as the University of Kansas home of geology, mining engineering, and the state department of geology, young Haworth was christened and dedicated in February 1910. The hall's spiritual father and namesake was Erasmus Haworth, longtime KU professor of geology and state geologist. Haworth, the man, published the first work on the geology and mineral resources of Kansas in 1896. In 1911, campus geologists realized they had no geology lab in their geology building, so Haworth received $7500 to correct this problem. From 1911 until 1944, Haworth's only claim to even a modicum of fame was its collection of objects d' rock. Campus warts around 1920 referred to this collection as the Hall of Invertebrate Fossils. In 1943, the occasion of the incineration of the Anatomy building gave middle-aged Haworth a chance to demonstrate its latent versatility. Geology, mining, and friends moved out to make room for anatomy and physiology. Old geologist Erasmus Haworth turned over in his grave. To make the change, $84,000 was appropriated for permanent facilities in anatomy. Part of these facilities housed the cadavers that were a famous part of Haworth's history. For a few seconds in 1944, the ill-fated anatomy department threatened to lose another home. A careless smoker started a fire in Haworth, but the flames were quelled with only $20 damage resulting. In 1952, a one-story cement block addition to Haworth was completed for a blood-testing laboratory. In 1963, with the dooming of Haworth already in the works, Keith Lawton, then director of physical plant operations and now vice-chancellor of operations, called Haworth a "bum building." Haworth's heating, plumbing, and electricity were poor. It was occupying valuable campus space, and the need for more classroom space overrode whatever unrecorded public outcry there may have been to keep the aged edifice. Haworth's inauspicity was carried to its logically absurd extreme last week when an arsonist made an attempt to destroy the already dismantled remains of the building. Holiday Inn INNKEEPER THE NATIONAL INNKEEPER Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn® THE NATIONS INNKEEPER® Holiday Inn® 23rd & Iowa Gary Porteout, Innkeeper Rita Skages, Asst. Innkeeper KU greenhouse damaged in peculiar auto mishap A peculiar auto mishap last Friday has caused an estimated $800-900 damage to a University of Kansas greenhouse. the hill and smashed into the greenhouse. The car, owned by W. C. Ridge Sr. of Topeka, rolled from a parking lot in back of Flint Hall, proceeded unchauffeured down Apr. 13 1970 KANSAN 9 Ridge was not in the auto when the incident happened. There were no other passengers. Ridge told authorities that he thought he had left the vehicle in parking gear. Buchholz also estimated the damage to the building. Harry Buchholz, superintendent of physical plant at KU, said that there was extensive damage to Ridge's car. MARCUS M. HUNTINGTON, S. HOWARD & CO. Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts Fri. April 17 – 8 p.m. WHERE ELSE? – Always the finest in entertainment – Bad Dog HN kroger Clip 'n' Save $$$ Clip Kroger Family Center Clip These Coupons and Come to Kroger's and Save On These Specials VALUABLE COUPON 0000 Alberto Vo5 Creme Rinse 7 oz. $ .44 Our Reg. $.87 Limit 2 Good Through April 18 00000000000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON 00000 0000 Aqua Velva Shave Cream Regular or Menthol Our Regular $.77 Limit 2 $.43 Good Through April 18 00000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON 20000 Pacquin Hand Cream Medicated Anti-detergent $.50 Super moisturized 00000000000000000000000000000000 $.50 a can Good Through April 18 Super moisturized Good Through April 18 Our Regular $1.19 Limit 2 Regularly $1.00 Limit 2 cans VALUABLE COUPON 00000000000000000000000000000000 Alberto Vo5 Hair Spray 20000 000 VALUABLE COUPON Head and Shoulders Shampoo Family Size Good Through April 18 Our Regular $1.24 Limit 2 $.84 00000000000000000000000000000000 20000 VALUABLE COUPON Limit 2 000 Alberto Vo5 Light Touch All-Over Body Deodorant Our Regular $.87 $.44 Line 2: Unit 1 Good Through April 18 a can VALUABLE COUPON Plus Iron One A Day Multiple Vitamins Plus Iron 20000 Regularly $3.29 Limit 2 $1.88 00000 VALUABLE COUPON Good Through April 18 Limiter 2 Twin Bath Magic In One Bottle Both Oil Our Regular $.88 Limit 2 .$.50 Good Through April 18 VALUABLE COUPON Our Regular $.62 Crest Toothpaste—Extra Large Regular or Mint Our Regular $.62 Limit 2 $.44 Good Through April 18 Relays lose outside competition; Southwest Conference to miss By United Press International The University of Kansas spent €125,000 putting in a new synthetic track for its annual Kansas Relays. Now it's having trouble finding runners to run on it. The Southwest Conference dealt a crippling blow to the Sunflower extravaganza when it 1976 Photo by Jim Hoffman Ha, ha . . . what's the punchline? Although the Kansas track team may not have gotten the photographer's joke, they had plenty to smile about. Warm and sunny weather all last week helped facilitate workouts for the KU Relays this weekend. In the foreground is KU's new all-weather Tartan track surface. chose this weekend as one of five to run intra-conference meets. Three years ago SWC faculty representatives voted that its schools must set aside five weekends on the on-campus track meets. That put teams wanting to compete on the Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays circuit in a bind. SWC teams bypassed the 1968 Kansas Relays, but returned last year when the schedule was worked out so that none of the big relays carnivals had to be shunted. But the way the calendar fell this year, one had to be avoided again. The Kansas circuit was the choice. The Southwest Conference meet is scheduled May 1-2 in Houston and most coaches wanted a big relay meet the week before. The Drake Relavs is April 24-25 So, this week's Kansas Relays will be without Texas A&M, winner of the 440, 880, and mile relays at the Texas Relays a few weeks ago. In fact, the Kansas meet will be confined pretty much to Big Eight teams. Only Abilene Christian, North Texas, Southern Illinois, Wichita State and Drake have entered athletes besides Big Eight schools in the university division. Texas-El Paso, winner of the four-mile and distance medley relays at Austin, also is not entered. The only university team with a shot at doubling in the relays is Kansas State. The Wildcats, anchored by Ken Swenson, won both the two-mile and sprint medley relays at Texas. They'll go for the same two at Kansas. The college division field is somewhat better, although perennial powers like Southern La. and Texas Southern are not in the field. Prairie View, noted the outstanding college team at the Texas Relays, will attempt to double in the 880 and mile relays with Thurman Boggess running the anchor leg. Prairie View won the two relays in 1:23.0 and 3:-10.2 at Austin. Fort Hays State, which set a distance medley record of 9:46.6 at Texas, also will compete here. Another favorite who has inicated he'll run here is Eastern New Mexico's Rex Maddaford. He won the mile and three-mile runs at Texas. Sooners sweep KU NORMAN, Okla. (UPI)—The Oklahoma University Sooners completed a three-game sweep of Kansas by nipping the Jayhawks 2-1 Saturday in a Big Eight baseball contest. The Sooners' Dennis Ranzau gave up only seven hits and struck out eight batters to even his record at 2-2 and up the Sooners overall mark to 8-7. Mike Swenton paced the OU attack with two triples, driving 10 KANSAN Apr. 13 1970 in one run and scoring the other himself. Corky Ullom, 2-1 took the loss for the Jayhawks and Keith Lieppman homered for their only run of the game. Their record is now 5-4. The three-game series opend Big Eight play for both teams. The Sooners scored 4-3, 2-0 and 2-1 victories over Kansas. Oklahoma received route-going pitching performances from David Weaver, Ron Hall and Dennis Ranzau, an indication coach Enos Semore's team was correctly favored to win the championship. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE CKEYS ON SALI SUA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND KIEF'S BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. PEOPLE TO PEOPLE For Birds of a Different Feather! Both American and Foreign Students Can Take Advantage of Our Discussion Groups and English Tutoring Programs. Call or Leave a Message with the PEOPLE TO PEOPLE Call or Leave a Message with the PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE office in the basement of the Union Building. UN 4-3853 Squad split three ways Hawks tune up for Relays The University of Kansas Track team built a strong lead early in the meet from its depth in the field events and then allowed the Indiana Hoosiers to play catchup, but won in a 78-75 dual meet at Bloomington. The Hawk's weightmen led the barrage of points with a 1-2-3 sweep in the discus and 1-2 finish in the shotput. The pole vault contributed a 1-2 finish and the long jump added another first. Assistant track coach Harvey Greer, who took the team to Indiana while head coach Bob Timmons remained home to help prepare for the KU Relays, said, "The victory was not a very exciting one. We did not win in a very glamorous way, but our team is beginning to come together," he said. He said he was pleased with Jon Callen's victory in the steeplechase. "Callen ran a good race," Greer said, "particularly since he is a freshman in an event which requires experience." Greer also noted that Larry Reineke's performance was good. He said Reineke had just competed in the high hurdles finals and had to quickly double back to the high jump. On his first two tries at $6^{\prime}-2^{\prime}$ he missed. Then on his third try he cleared that height and continued on to clear $6^{\prime}-4^{\prime}$ and $6^{\prime}-6^{\prime}$ on his first attempts. Because of fewer misses he was awarded second place although he had the same height as the third place jumper. KANSAS TRACE Burning up the track . . . Doug Smith, Sioux City, Ia. sophomore, won the mile at the KU-Indiana dual Saturday with a 4:10.5 clocking. Smith is shown here working out on KU's new Tartan track in preparation for the 45th edition of the Kansas Relays, and is expected to be one of KU's top threats in the mile. Defense draws Rodgers' praise KU football coach Pepper Rodgers had high praise for the Jayhawk defense following Saturday afternoon's scrimmage in Memorial Stadium. The blue-clad defenders picked off three passes and recovered two fumbles. Heck had the best day Saturday with eight completions in 17 attempts for 107 yards. Basler hit on seven of 18 attempts for 63 yards and one touchdown. Saturday's skirmish did little for clearing up the quarterback situation. Junior college transfer Dan Heck and Phil Basler, sophomore from Independence, Mo., are still running neck and neck for the number one position. Rodgers said that the Jayhawks have better personnel in the defensive secondary this year but inexperience is still a problem. James Bowman, 175-pound freshman from Kansas City, Mo., picked off two passes while Dale Holt, 185-pound junior from Enid, Okla., grabbed the third interception. Offensively, Jerome Nellons, freshman from Atlanta, Ga., led all ball carriers with 108 yards in 16 carries. The 196-pound right halfback scored one of three touchdowns for the white clad offense with a 30-yard run. Apr. 13 1970 KANSAN 11 Currently on the list are defensive backs Lee Hawkins and Mike Burton, defensive end Bob Tyus, linebacker Mike Douglas and defensive tackle Carl Searcy. The KU injury list continues to grow keeping Rodgers from looking at all prospects for positions. The Jayhawks resume the head knocking today with a 3:30 session. COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI) — Missouri won its own invitation golf tournament Saturday by four strokes over its nearest competitor, Nebraska. KU golfer takes first The Tigers clubbed a 591 while the Cornhuskers had to settle for 595. Kansas finished in third place with 600, followed by archrival Kansas State, 609, and Iowa State, 621. While the Hawks battled the Hoosiers in Bloomington, Bill Penny was tossing the hammer in exhibition competition at his home town of Emporia. Although the poor weather conditions hampered most of the other competitors at the Emporia Relays, it did not seem to affect Penny as he threw the hammer 190 feet. Jim Dennerline of Kansas captured medalist honors with rounds of 68 and 75 for a 143 total. Ben Thomas of Missouri was second with a 75 and 71 for a 146—three strokes off the pace. The remainder of the team competed at the Wichita State Relays. KU competitors there also suffered from the wind as KANSAN Sports Dave Andersen finished second in the steeplechase and Joff Wray finished third in the three mile. Results of the KU-Indiana dual: 440 Relay—1, Indiana, 40.5. 2, Kansas, 40.9 Shotput-1, Salb, KU, 66-11$\frac{3}{4}$. 2, Wilhelm, KU, 62-7$\frac{1}{4}$, 3, Winchell, I, 56-4. Javelin—1, Colson, KU, 210-8. 2, Holm, KU, 203-0. 3, Korhel, I, 163-0. 3,000 Steeplechase-1, Callen, KU, 9:08.6. 2, Kelley, I, 9:14.6. 2, Mattingly, KU, 9:18.0 Pole Vault—1, Johnson, KU, 16-0. 2, Hatcher, KU, 14-6. 3, Updike, I, 14-0. Mile—1, Smith, KU, 4:10.5. 2, Hiles, I, 4:10.7 3, Neihouse, KU, 4:10.7. Long Jump—1, Reaves, KU, 24-4¾. 2, Highbaugh, I, 22-2½. 3, Miller, I, 21-4½. High Hurdles—1, Keeler, I, 14.7. 2, Bates, KU, 15.4. 3, Reineke, KU, 15.6. 440—1, Musika I, 47.0.2, Meade, KU, 47.6.3, Florence, I, 48.5. 100—1, Goodrich, I. 9.7, 2. High- bough, I. 9.8, 3. Reaves, KU. 9.9 Discus—1, Knop, KU, 178-10.2. 'Cats fall; Cyclones stop MU MANHATTAN (UPI) — Nebraska pounded six Kansas State pitchers for 20 hits to earn a 21-4 Big Eight Conference baseball victory in Manhattan Saturday, after dropping a continued game from Friday. Salb, KU, 173-6. 3, Wilhelm, KU, 168-0. In a contest stopped after five innings Friday, Kansas State, Saturday, rode the clutch hitting of Forry Wells to record a 6-1 win over the Cornhuskers. Wells clubbed a bases-loaded double in the Wildcats' five-run fifth inning. COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI) — Sophomore Larry Corrigan did it all Saturday as Iowa State stunned Missouri 5-1 and 16-9 for a Big Eight Conference doubleheader victory and a sweep of their three-game series. 880—1, McElroy, KU, 1:52.3. 2, Rehmer, I, 1:52.7. 3, Kathol, KU, 1:52.7. Corrigan fired a 5-hitter in the opener, striking out five and walking two while his teammates put together eight hits for the win. The sophomore then pitched in relief in the nightcap to gain his second victory of the day and stretch his season record to 3-0. High Jump—1, Haupert, I, 6-8. 2, Reineke, KU, 6- 3. 2, Taylor, I, 6-6. Triple Jump—1, Grimsley, I. 43-1/4. 2, Williams, KU, 40-3/4. 43-1¼, 2, Williams, KU, 40-3¼, 440 Intermediate Hurdles—1, Keller, I, 53.8, 2, Goldberg, KU, 56.1, 3, Biltz, I, 56.2, 220-1, Goodrich, I, 21.2, 2 Highbaugh, I, 21.3. Miller, I, 21.5 Highburgh, 1, 21.3, Miller, 1, 21.5 Three Mile—1, Mason, KU. 14:01. 2, Legge, I, 14:14. 2, Hiles, I, 14:14. 3 ® BACK TO FRONT Fashion has returned to the great front. Here, widely lappelled, 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! The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 POLARIZED CARE FOR YOUR GARMENTS POLARIZED CARE FOR YOUR GARMENTS Now's the time... STORE YOUR FURS AND CLOTHES FOR SUMMER Don't bother taking your winter clothes home this summer have them cleaned with free moth-proofing and stored all summer ready for you when fall comes. Repairs, Alterations and Reweaving Fur Cleaning Coat Linings Pick-up and Delivery Service NewYork Cleaners NewYork Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Serving Students for 58 years 4. Absolute Growth Philosophy→Environment Photo by Mike Radencich Professors speak at annual debate Robert E. Nunley, left, and Robert W. McColl, right, professors of geography, talk on overpopulation problems facing the human race. Nunley took a "conservationist" point of view while McColl upheld more of a "human conquest" point of view. Los Angeles school officials made plans Sunday to conduct huge open-air classes today in the face of a strike promised by teachers in the nation's second largest school system. by United Press International Teacher walkouts continue In Minneapolis, Minn., students will have the day off Monday while administrators and non-striking teachers regroup after two days of teacher walkouts which closed half of the city's schools last week. School board lawyers in Butte, Mont., prepared petitions for an injunction Sunday in efforts to halt a teachers strike that began Friday morning, idling more than 9,000 students. Los Angeles' 616 schools will be open for business Monday, and even teachers who planned to picket urged students to report for classes as required by state law. Members of the United Teachers of Los Angeles voted 11,899 to 5,752 to go on strike. School Supt. Robert Kelly sent instructions to principals to consolidate classes and have students meet in auditoriums and outdoors where administrative aides and non-striking teachers would instruct them. Beginning teachers in Los Angeles make $7,200 a year. The union rejected a proposed 5 per cent raise. Negotiators representing the 3,435 public school teachers in Minneapolis met during the weekend in efforts to reach an agreement on salary. Teachers, seeking 20 per cent raises on their current pay scale that ranges from $7,500 to $16,765, began vacating their classrooms Thursday. At least 70 of the city's 99 schools had either closed or curtailed classes by Friday. Minneapolis school officials offered a $2.5 million package calling for 10 per cent raises but it was rejected. The decision to close Butte schools came after negotiations broke down Friday. Administrators said there will be no more Overpopulation discussed at debate By MIKE RADENCICH Kansan Staff Writer talks until teachers return to their classrooms. What are the problems of overpopulation facing the human race, and how can they be solved? Butte teachers, whose current salaries range from $6,366 to $10,845, rejected an offer for a 7.9 per cent raise. Nunley said he took a "conservationist" point of view, saying man could live with his environment by adapting to it instead of conquering it. Those were only two or one questions discussed in an annual debate on population between two KU professors of geography, Robert E. Nunley and Robert W. McColl. McColl took more of a "human conquest" point of view, saying that man could control his environment to make it work for him while keeping it intact. - A philosophical point of view, taking into account the environment. - There were three major points discussed by both professors: - Absolute numbers of people and the problems involved with the already great numbers of people. - Rate of growth; how fast the population is increasing and the problems involved. The amount of land space never changes but the population increases, so the ratio of people to land area is growing into alarming proportions, Nunley said. "How much of this land will be used for technology?" Nunley asked. He said we talked too much about what we could do with the land and not what we were actually doing with our present technology. When we look at our present situation, we could not provide enough food and shelter for today's needs with our present technology. Nunley said that the problems involved with the first point, the absolute numbers of people, were many. The total population of the earth is now about 3.5 billion people, living on a total land area of 57 million square miles. McColl took up the argument by saying that the basic question was "How can we supply the growing numbers of people?" Muskogee, Okla. teachers served notice Friday they would withhold services until the school board comes up with an integration plan acceptable to the federal courts. Pupils from 22 schools will have the day off Monday. The only problem involved here, McColl said, is distributing the food, a problem that is manmade, not environmental. Presently we cannot actually get the food to the people that really need it, but if we concentrated the people into the big cities, we could solve this problem, he said. The population of the earth, McColl said, is not distributed evenly across the face of the earth. The great cities demonstrate this, he said. 12 KANSAN Apr. 13 1970 If, he said, we could continue this concentration of the population and open up the western lands for food growth,we could feed the population. Discussing the second point- the rate of growth-Nunley said the problem of population was becoming progressively worse. From the year 1650 to 1850, the total population on the earth approximately doubled. It doubled again between 1850 to 1950. By 1975, the population will almost have doubled again. This, Nunley said, shows that the time for the population to double itself is becoming rapidly shorter. The growth rate in the under-developed countries, he said, is staggering. In Costa Rica, for example, the population doubles every 17 years, so the number of schools has to double, the number of hospitals has to double, the food output has to double and so on, he said. Nunley said these underdeveloped countries could not keep up with this staggering growth rate, and they become progressively backward. He said that the only way to stop this tremendous growth rate would be to curtail it by using technology to find better methods of birth control. Given varying categories of jokes, 72 per cent of the soldiers and firemen preferred the sex joke, a type teachers tended to react to with a tired smile, Victoroff reports in Atlas magazine. About 58 per cent of the teachers preferred the more sophisticated absurd joke, while most students revealed a penchant for grotesque satire. McColl said that eventually the total population of the earth would actually level off, following the "S-curve" idea of technological growth in relation to population growth. He said that the population tends to level off after times of great technological growth and that we could expect the same to happen in our case The professors agreed on the third topic of the debate, the philosophical point of view. Parent numbers grow birth boom reflected The National Industrial Conference Board estimates that between now and 1880, the parent population will increase by 23 percent. The pace is faster than during any comparable period since World War II. By 1980, nearly three out of every five families, totalling 35.5 million, will have a child living at home. NEW YORK (UPI) — Numbers of parents are on the rise, reflecting the birth boom of the 1950's. HE WHO LAUGHS ETC, NEW YORK (UFI)--You are what you laugh at, according to French psychiatrist David Victoroff, who made tests on the laughing habits of 700 soldiers, firemen, teachers and students. HE WHO LAUGHS ETC. McColl said man would have to conquer the environment to make it work for him. This is especially true in his idea of concentrating the population into the cities and using the remaining land for food production. High school teachers in Santa Maria, Calif., seeking a 15 per cent raise, went on strike Friday and voted to continue their walk-out through today. Maria voters have rejected three efforts to generate school revenue in the past year. Nunley said we were fighting a losing battle in this conquest because the environment could not take it any longer. We must adapt to and live with our environment, he said. This annual debate was used as a learning experience for students in geography, said Nunley. By presenting two basic points of view, he said, the students can make up their own minds about how to approach the problem. Nunley outlined this idea by saying that as we see these staggering facts about population growth, we can see that without proper methods of control we run the risk of damaging the environment. Nunley said this was the fourth year that he and McColl engaged in the population debate. This brought up the basic point that the professors disagreed on: how can we approach the problem of living with our environment? NASHVILLE SKYLINE BOB DYLAN including: I Trew it All Away Nashville Skyline Rag Girl From the North Country Lay Lady Lay Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Molls Shopping Ct including: I Threw It All Away Nashville Skyline Rag Girl From the North Country Lay Lady Lay Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Films—April 16 1. Popular Films Chairman 2. Special Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairman 4. Film Society Chairman Forums----April 21 5. Publicity Chairman Recreation—April 21 Director 1. Minority Opinions Chairmen 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman Travel-April 16 Chairman 1. World Travel Fair Chairmen 2. Arrangements Chairman 3. Correspondence Chairman 3. Correspondence Chairman 4. Films Chairman 5. Hospitality Chairman Public Relations—April 16 6. Travel Advisors 2. Open House Chairman 1. Activities Carnival Chairman 2. Outdoor Games 3. Open House Publicity Chairman Fine Arts----April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 6. Art Forums Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970) April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. Photo by Harve Hasler Accident Saturday morning in X zone Michael Allmon, Lawrence freshman, awaits the ambulance with an inflatable cast on his leg. Officer Kampschroeder talks with the witness, Richard Turner, Lawrence, to determine exactly what happened in X zone. WASHINGTON (UPI) — An expert in voting behavior predicted Sunday that lowering the voting age to 18 would have virtually no effect on the outcome of elections. Younger voters to have no effect Richard M. Scammon, former director of the Census Bureau and now head of a research organization, believes lowering the voting age probably would not mean a swing to the left in the nation's politics but, if anything, might nudge politics a little to the right. But more probably, he said, the effect would be almost unnoticeable. Scammon, head of the Washington-based Governmental Affairs Institute, a research organization specializing in voting behavior, told UPI that the 10 or 11 million 18 to 20-year-olds that the law would enfranchise could be expected to vote no farther left than the 21 to 29 age group. "They may well be expected to vote more conservatively," he said, "because they are closer to home. For example, studies have shown college freshmen are more conservative than seniors." Although the issue of lowering the voting age has been kicking around Congress for years and the house is likely to send President Nixon such a bill this week, little testimony has been given to it political impact. Scammon said that besides the tendency to vote in familiar family patterns, the impact of the new voters would be minimized further because "kids don't vote that often." Only about 30 per cent of the 18 to 20 age group voted in 1968 in the four states where they have the vote, he said, and in non-presidential election years the percentage is lower. Scammon said neither major party expects to be hurt significantly by the Senate-passed proposal to make 18 the voting age for all local, state and national elections. "If either party thought this would be to their major disadvantage, you could be damn sure they'd be up there screaming and Nixon would be threatening to veto it," he said. Nixon has shown no enthusiasm for the Senate proposal to lower the voting age by the statute, but he has endorsed the suggestion that 18-year-olds be given the vote by constitutional amendment. Study made of protests The only bullfight in the United States in which the bull was killed by the toadorate was in Dodge City on July 4, 1884. By ANN MORITZ By ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer The University of Kansas may be attempting to inch its way into the stock image of campus unrest. It will soon become a part of the figures, like those listed in a report made by the Urban Research Corporation of Chicago and centered on the last spring semester. The report was made of student protests and holds a mirror up to the campus scene to present an image of what is happening. In this nationwide examination by Urban Research, 232 campuses, representing 2.2 million students or one-third of the campus population, were studied. The findings were based on extensive research and include: - Only one out of five protests (22 per cent) involved Vietnam war issues. - Only one out of ten students directly participated in protests. - Black students were involved in more than half of the 292 major student protests on the campuses surveyed in the report. - Violence of any kind occurred in less than one-fourth of the protests, injuries in seven per cent of them. - Non-negotiable demands were made in only six per cent of the protests. The chairman of the Black Liberation Front at Cornell University, Ed Whitfield, recounted a relevant tale in reference to last spring's protest by black students at Cornell. He told about the old mule that always moved if you just talked to him. But first you had to hit him on the nose to get his attention. Whitfield added: A whack on the nose seems to get schools to move. Urban Research found that the longer and more forcible the protests, the more likely the chance of winning demands. "Now we know we have the university's attention. It has been sufficiently whacked across the nose . . . It is time the university as a whole should stop and take a look at itself and its role in society." One-day strikes, disruptions or building seizures succeeded in winning at least one demand 28 per cent of the time. When such tactics lasted two to five days, they succeeded 56 per cent of the time. Campus protests invariably involved several demands so that various issues figured in at the same time. Accordingly, the Urban Research report lists these leading issues and the percentage of protests in which they figured: Going a week or more brought success seven out of ten times for at least one demand. Apr.13 1970 KANSAN 13 Black recognition, 49 per cent; student power, 44 per cent; quality of student life, 28 per cent; war-related, 22 per cent; university and the community, 18 per cent. Student power 'topped the list of demands among white students. Such demands made up 44 per cent of student protests and in these protests the students did not want to take over, but they did want a voice in what was happening. In only four per cent of protests did students ask for control. A role in faculty hiring and firing and a voice in decision-making committees were the most dominant demands for student power. From there demands drop sharply in number to ending restrictions on student publications or organizations and revision of disciplinary rules. A change in the grading systems and courses was the high demand when it came to conditions of student life. Other demands were for lower tuition, better facilities, revised dorm rules and better food services. With reference to the Vietnam war and the military, which accounted for about one in five protests, ROTC was the main target. But this only figured in 12 percent of all 292 protests. Less than one in ten protests were aimed at military and war-related recruiting on campus. Throughout the country, some schools were more likely candidates for students protesting than others. Four-year liberal arts colleges had three-fifths of the protests. In 39 per cent of the protests, students were disciplined by their schools and/or arrested by police. But at least one demand was granted in about half of the protests for black recognition, in two-fifths of student-power protests, in 45 per cent of demands for changes in student life and in one-fourth of war-related protests. The higher the scholastic aptitude of the students, the more likely they were to protest (pinpointed by comparing Scholastic Aptitude Test scores of incoming freshmen in protesting and non-protesting schools). The bigger the school was, the more likely were the chances for protests. More than half of the schools enrolling more than 10,000 had protests, only 12 per cent of the schools under 5,000. About half the time, blacks won at least one demand by using forceful tactics, compared with 39 per cent for milder black protests. Whites succeeded 33 per cent of the time with forceful tactics, compared with 23 per cent for milder protests. All the figures seem to show somewhat of a gap between the public image and the campus reality. WEDNESDAY NIGHT $100 ADMISSION 8:00-12:00 THE DRAUGHT HOUSE $100 PER PITCHER 804 W. 24th The DRAUGHT HOUSE Peace Corps GRADUATES Make your first step towards the future with the Peace Corps. Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries. In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry. 100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-6917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong. FRANK Photo by Ron Bishop Legionnaires on Mass. The Second District Convention of the American Legion began Saturday morning with a parade down Massachusetts Street. The parade was composed of about 25 units. The convention was held Saturday and Sunday at the Ramada Inn. Agriculturalists battle pesticides WASHINGTON (UPI)—Agriculture Department experts will try to decide this week how to virtually end the use of DDT, the long-lasting pesticide that is leaving residues in the bodies of men and animals. The panel meeting, scheduled Tuesday and Wednesday part of the seconding phase of a government drive to cancel federation registration of all but "essential" uses of DDT by the end of this year. In the first phase, officials last December announced cancellation of federal registration for DDT uses on shade trees, aquatic areas, house and garden pests—uses which together account for about 35 per cent of the DDT then used in the U.S. Manufacturers of most of the DDT involved in the December action accepted the cancellations without protest. Several producers filed appeals, however, and their products have been allowed to remain on the market pending disposition of the appeals. NASHVILLE SKYLINE BOB DYLAN including: I Threw It All Away Nashville Skyline Rag Girl From the North Country Lay Lady Lay Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You NASHVILLE SKYLINE BOB DYLAN including: I Threw It All Away Nashville Skyline Rag Girl From the North Country Lay Lady Lay Tonight I'll Be Staging Here With You On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Molls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified Greeks seek new identity By JIM ROTHGEB By JIM KOTHGEB Kansan Staff Writer Today's fraternities at the University of Kansas are faced with a variety of problems. In most cases, these problems extend from the fact that each fraternity is merely a group of individuals seeking a new identity. The fraternity's purpose is to offer a unique situation to freshmen and new students to KU. That is the opportunity to achieve academic excellence, fulfill an active social life, and to work to make one's living organization well thought of throughout the college community. This situation must be a group project. But today's college student tends to evaluate himself individually. Here then, is where the problems lie. They can not just be pinpointed to the fraternities, he said, those problems exist around the individual concept. Jay Strayer, assistant to the dean of men and adviser to KU's fraternities, said the problems facing KU fraternities were the problems that existed almost everywhere on the KU campus. To better illustrate the individual concept and how it relates to the fraternities, an existent problem in the house should be examined. 14 KANSAN Apr. 13 1970 In more and more houses, an alarming number or fraternity members have dropped out of their fraternity surroundings. Fraternity men, as well as people living in dorms, have taken up apartment living. The reasons for a man dropping out of a fraternity vary. Some claim financial reasons. Fraternities do cost more than any other organized living at KU. Costs range anywhere from $100 to $125 a month. This includes room, board and chapter dues The fraternity operates just opposite of the apartment situation. You contribute your efforts to further benefit a group and not just yourself. In a sense, the fraternity provides a similar setting to that of the University, only on a smaller scale. Strayer said there was something about apartment living that appeals to the student. The idea that he is on his own, living with only two or three people, paying his rent and then simply doing as he pleases. This paints an attractive picture to the individual. Others say they moved out because they sought academic privacy. They felt their low grade points were the fault of not concentrating on their studies or being constantly interrupted by fraternity affairs. Over the past five years, however, the all—fraternity grade point average is 1.46, while the average for all men is 1.38. One fraternity dropout said that he had gotten everything out of the fraternity that he expected and there was nothing more to obtain. He said that he had enjoyed meeting new people, been given both equal academic and social opportunities, and tried to benefit the house the best way he knew how. It has been common knowledge in most fraternities that its members lose interest in the fraternity, usually sometime during his junior year. In most cases, "senior slumps" cut down the number of activities in which the upper-classmen might participate. Often the seniors make up the highest number of dropouts. Strayer said the lack of interest occurring in the last two years was quite similar to any business in which employees become tired of their job after their first two years and seek something new. What, then, are fraternities doing to solve this situation? Some houses have taken up sensitivity training. T-groups exist within the houses so that its members might better understand each other, thus creating a better atmosphere. Fraternities bring men together of different backgrounds and sensitivity training helps to shed new light on why an individual acts the way he does. In light of all the internal problems that exist within the fraternities at KU, houses continue to expand. A few years ago houses averaged around 50 members. Now 22 out of the 28 fraternities at KU have more than 50 members. Two houses have between 90-100 members. Seven chapters constructed new chapter houses; another eight made major physical designs and five purchased new housing. Russians celebrate anniversary of flight MOSCOW (UPP)—Nine years ago Sunday an obscure Soviet air force major became the first man to orbit the earth in space. Yuri Gagarin was small and stocky but his shoulders were broad enough to carry mankind's dreams into space for 108 breathtaking minutes on April 12, 1981 The United States forged ahead only in the last years of the 1960's when the mighty thrust of the Saturn 5 launcher was coupled to sophisticated, miniaturized computers and other on-board systems the Soviets have been unable to match. This Sunday three more Americans were on a flight to the moon while the Soviets were talking about putting 24 men on six-month tours of duty on an orbiting space platform. Gagarin was an unknown 21- year-old air force officer when he rode into history in the small jammed Vostok 1 spacecraft that carried a man into orbit around his earth for the first time. The single orbit, at heights ranging from 109 to 187 miles, gave the Soviets a head-start in space, leading to such significant firsts as twin flights by manned craft, a mass flight by three men, and the original space walk. It was this power that, to the nationwide disappointment of the Soviets, enabled an American to take mankind's first "giant step" on the moon last summer. Gagarin was not alive to witness the American triumph, which the Soviets showed on television. The pioneer spaceman was killed in the crash of a jet trainer in March 1968 at the age of 34. Fresh flowers were placed Sunday by the plaque in the redbrick wall of the Kremlin where his ashes are interred. The Soviets remembered Gagarin in speeches and newspaper articles marking cosmonautics day. The press also briefly reporten, without comment, the launching of Apollo 13 on the new moon voyage. Beatle beat still goes on without Paul LONDON (UPI) — Ringo Starr and George Harrison said Saturday "the Beatles are alive and well and full of hope" despite Paul McCartney's announced departure from their group. "The beat goes on," Starr and Harrison said in a statement issued on their behalf by Apple Enterprises, the Beatles management firm, after they had discussed McCartney's walkout at the Saville Row headquarters late Friday. Every diamond tells you he loves you Truly a bouquet of fiery diamonds in this bridal duo. $269 14 Karat white or yellow gold Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Times" VI 3-5432 18K 19K Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass "Special College Drama" VI 3-5432 Christian's Have you tried a Super Shef? It's a heap big sandwich. Buy one today! — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the job posting will be credited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analy- zation of Western Civilization" 4th edition. Campus and House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount—your A.R., Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Norelle tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. Cycle—new Yamaha 100cc, 1,000 miles, warranty, 4 speed, oil injected, shape Great for campus Car- John 202 or Larry-443, Tennin- 842-1200 '62 VW. Like new, New engine—less than 10,000 miles. Priced to sell. Ask for Steve, 843-8085. 4-13 1965 650cc Triumph cycle, must sell, consider any offer. Call Bob at 842- 1157. 4-13 Faithful Old Blue. 1960 blue Chev., 6 cyl., radio, good tires. Must sell. $175 or best offer. Call Ken. 843-6536. 4-13 1969 Honda CL450 Serramaker, blue-hue, 1400 miles, 4 months old, helmet, cover, and insurance. $625. Call Larry, 842-7260. 4-13 1962 Comet, good condition; also four Chevy mags, excellent condition. Call 842-5261. 4-13 Northwestern golf clubs for sale—4 woods, 9 irons, putter, bag and umbrella-$70. Call 842-5578. 4-14 1966 Fiat Roadster—5 speed, white with black interior, $1,000. 842-2191. 4-14 Harley Sportster—XLH. Perfect condition, bags. windsheld. $1100. See Ron. Apt. 1, 1726 Kentucky, between 6:30-8:00 evenings. All day weekends. 4-14 Office furniture—desks, chairs, files, server service, impeccable copies, cables for computer collaiti included at no extra charge. Employed Typewriter=700 Mass. 843-3644. tf 1966 GTO Convertible—yellow with black top and interior—4 spd., deluxe wheel covers, Motorola speakers and stereo tape hook-up. $1500 842-2191. 1967 VW Super Bug-silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., racing suspension, stereo speakers and hook- 1959 Triumph TR-3, metallic blue with white top, bug eyes, good tires, wire wheels, needs interior work. 842-2191. 4-14 1967 Triumph TR-44—IRS, beautiful British racing green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelinix tires. $1800. 842-2191. 4-14 1965 MCB, British racing green, ex- cellent. British erhalten transmitted $1400, 842-219-4344 1967 Austin-Healy 3000 Mark III white with black top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition. $2300. 842-2191. 4-14 1962 Austin-Healey Sprite, white wif- red interior, new tires. $800. 842-219-1 970-873-6000. 1964 Triumph TR-4. British racing shape. $1200, 824-2191. execution shape. $1200, 824-2191. Custom designed, multi-purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. May be used in 8' x 8' space. Ideal, economical purchase for individual, family or friendly sign approved by York Barbell Co. Inc.) Also 577.5 lbs. of assorted weights. Call J.B. at 843-2103. 4-15 '63 RamBurrell 600—Classic V·wagon. Clean. runs good, good gas mileage, bids considered. Inquire; Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. After 6:00 p.m., KI. 2-2382. 4-20 TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO ★ Student specials ★ New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, gradu- ation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tt Try One Today 1969 Bulkato 200cc 1800 miles Trail or street bike. 842-5492. 5:00-7:00 pm. $125.00! 1964 Corvair. Must sell to highest bidder soon. Engine and general mechanics good. Bad seat coversuffler; off-color four-door. 5267. 4-15 814 Iowa Silverton 60 watt piggyback guitar or amplifier, like new. $60. Also excellent solid black folk guitar or 33 W. 25th. No. D or 4-15 843 -7939 Gold clubs. 3 Palmer woods. 8 Hogan Icons, wood pattier, bag cart. God icons, wood cartier. Yamaha Classie guitar w/case. Excel- tion card. $80 Contact Michael Bauer, 842-749-6120 Delicious steaks, Russian Stroganoff pr parred in a way to satisfy even the hungriest! Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 1964 red Valiant convertible. Call 843-7017. 4-15 1965 GTO 389+ cubic inch 3/4 cam, blue, white interior, 4 speed, 1500 miles on a rebuilt engine. $1500.00 Doug Pierce. 843-7863. 4-17 The wholesale used car market is down. You can save between $50 and $100 by buying now. '68 Corvair, 44-room, automatic, air, TS/TB, Ride and drive this one. $795. '63 Corvair, automatic. See it, $295. '64 Fairlane, automatic. Clean, $295. Thompson Motors, DX Station, at 6th and Michigan. Framus 12-string guitar. Like new. Case included. $135. Call John Brown. 843-6455. 4-17 Come by the Community Building. 115 W. 11th St., April 17, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 18th, 8-12 p.m., for delicious baked goods and interesting rummage. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 4-17 Stereo tape deck, 2 sets of speakers, tapes; $40.00 each, all the latest 2 band new 775-14 wide tracks, ww. TV, $15.84-893.93 4-17 Sacrifice: 869 Datson 2000 Spt. Conv. OHC-135hp engine, 5-speed, mag- wheels w/radial tires, many extras. Call 842-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-17 '63 VW—rebuilt engine just installed, good tires, excelent performer all its little blue car. $450. Call 843-5353. 845 NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot, soo. roosts and Hayrack, heat mail Boxes or information, call Max Laptop, VI 3-4033. 515 Michigan Laptop, Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-gooodness Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some food. Call our specialty. Open 11 a.m., ask for 11 a.m. 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday t Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-17 Epipoptera—a person, especially a moth that lays eggs in being brightly dressed, frivolous, fickle, etc. Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-17 Anyone seeing an accident in O-Zone involving a '65 Rambler American (red and white) on Thursday, April 2, please call 842-7254. 4-13 Students of Objectivism—meets every Sunday, 7:00. Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayatollah Khomeini; more information, call 842-6210 after 5:30. 4-17 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the CAPTAIN'S TABLE and the STABLES in them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfasts, lunches, and dinner. The Stables stands for Bud, fun, and . . . See you! if ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT KENTUCKY APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S MAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA Patrick J. Norris THE HTE in the WALL MEN'S HAIR STYLIST Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11l Kenneth "Roger" Evers DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP HAROLD'S PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers PHILLIPS 66 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS V phone 843-3557 Now, at enlightened prices, custom made sandals, leather clothes, etc. for your grandchildren. Grand opening Sat., April 11, hours 2-6 p.m. daily, except Sunday 4-13 New Sunday catch spot—The Captain's Table. Now open Sunday 11 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Come in after church or Sunday evening for great food—pried for the student. Check out our menu! 4-13 Rallye: Strip Tease Rallye, Mallis Shopping Center, April 17, 1970. Check in at 6 p.m. for instructions 7:15. Check information call John Himmel-Mike Bower, UNW 4-4281 LA PETITE GALEERI. Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring, Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer. tf Attention married students and faculty. Interested in Social Nudism? For details write P.O. Box 5212. Topeka, Kansas 66005. 4-17 Find your Date-Mate computer. 5 dates $6.00. 810. GRI-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N. Kansas City, Mo. 64116 obligation. Fill form in prior to inva. FOR RENT Want some Action!!!! There will be plenty the week of April 19-24. That's Spring Fling Week—picnics, undressing contest, pie eating contest, greased pig catching contest, and lots of ice, so join in the fun. 4-17 There's a new bar in town. Look for the bright door—Door—under the Bierstet-14th and 15th. Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom with dual-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown Phone 843-7576. Available now, two bedroom ant one- block from campus, furnished $135, unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tff Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kassog Drive. Open space, atmosphere unique to the town; live in elegant jacent and overloading Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly indented location; families and mature singles; studio units $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms; live these luxury apartments and town houses on David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 843-2055. Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Plaza, 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring a draped ceiling, air conditioning, sound conditioning all electric Frigidaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces. Additional benefits include laundry, storage room, recreation room, outdoor space, wall mail carports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive rates. See these luxury apartments afternoons weekdays and weekends at MALLS Louisiana, 845-5532, VILLAGE, 441 Louisiana, 845-5532, 4-13 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished with drapes, carpeting, air conditioning, all electric kitchen, storage pool, bus route. See them today at W. 24th, 842-1160, 4-13 For summer rent—June 1-August 25 Beautiful 3-level townhouse on 3rd fairway of Alvamar Golf Course. Completely furnished. 3 bedrooms. Classes: 842-8484, 4-14 Modern bedroom apartment summer or longer, air conditioned, furnished. 4 blocks from campus, 100/month, 842-0022, 4-14 2-bedroom apt. to sub-tel. Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs till Dec. 1611 W. 8th Terr., $149/day, 842-5544 before 4 p.m. except Wed and Thurs. We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To We Care About 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E.8th Closed Sat. at Noon For Top Quality Head For Henry's 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. henrys For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. V13-2139 Modern furnished or unfurnished 1 bedroom apartment—$1 block from the school parking next year summer, school and next year B42-7552 evenings. 4-16 For rent June 1—2-bedroom furnished apartment; air conditioned; pool; reasonable rent; ideal location—one block from (un)Call 842-5727 4-16 One bedroom furnished apt., newly remodeled, carpeted. all the bath and shower, near campus. Lease summer or longer ($115.00). Call 842-8024. 4-15 One bedroom furnished apartment at University Terrace. Call 843-1433 or 842-1105. 4-15 TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and plipec type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil and duplicate. Plek up an delivery offered. Bake 842-3597 or 82-6562 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc typ- er, coursework, copywriter with Plex captain. Competent service. Mits Wright. Phone 843-9554. Mits Wright. Phone 843-9554. Typing done in my home. Term papers, reports, etc. Call 842-5236 1-13 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. WANTED Are you leaving KU this year? Grad- student would like reference to a clean utility or one room apartment close to campus with rent less than $100 /mo. Call 842-1568 or U-4-4220. Ask for Mention. 4-13 Want to buy used Ludwig or Rogers snare drum in good condition. Call 843-7438 evening. 4-13 Traveling companion for the summer. Will be touring western U.S. Call 842-6599. 4-16 Want to live in Chicago suburb after graduation? Will share roomy furnished house near city/lake with reasonable. Call Jo, Rm 842-1340 4-13 4th girl to share house. $60 a month. utilities paid. 917. Maine. 842-578-563 Female roommate for summer to share 2 bedroom mobile home. Aircon and bathroom pool. $70.00. all bills paid. Call Bonnett. UA4- 5389. After 8:00 p.m.-842-5469. People who enjoy light and dark beer on tap, peanuts, and a friendly atmosphere. The Cellar Door—under the Bierstube, 14th and Tenn. 4-17 LOST Class ring in front of Union. Call 842-6600, ask for Paul, room 313. Re- ward. 4-16 Black billfold. April I snowstorm. If found, please drop in my mailbox at 1601 Tenn. I need my ID cards. Reward offered. Mike Hein. 4-13 66 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" 摄影 HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Guards - Badges - Recognitions • Paddles • Loyalists • Station - Recoanitions Mugs - Sportswear - Favors - Paddles - Gifts Plaques - Stationery 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Accessed on: 08/14/2016 Rings - Crested - Letters VI 3-1571 Al Lauter Across from the Red Dog Man's black bilbuffold K ep (tonney Large reward Large demand at 842-1157 Prescription sunglasses with brown frame in a black ease. Vicinity of Blake Hall. Contact David, room 765 McCollum Hall. 842-6600. Reward. Checkbook, western scene printed on checks, brown cover. If found, call Kathy in 914, 842-6600. Reward. 4-14 Pair of black acetate gloves with zippers. Reward. Call 842-5752 evenings. 4-14 Black-framed glasses in Yuk Down Friday night. Reward. Call George at 842-9174. 4-14 Ladies' yellow gold Tissot watch. April 8th, between Strong Hall and Potters Lake. Reward, Call collect Overland Park at DU1-1835. 4-16 PERSONAL Uncle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Troup Tax, 801 $1 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up . . . tt Lost April 9. Medium large 5-month-old puppy. Black with white under-sides and forepaws. Danny Rees, 1614 Kentucky. No phone. 4-17 Large brown purse stolen from a parked car in O Zone, April 9, between 10:30-11:30 a.m. Nancy Jameson will pay a high reward for valuable because it contained a lot of robberies. It calls for the phone Call 843-7711, Rm 304 South Corbin Hall, 420 W. 11th St. No questions asked. 4-15 Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fess, 843-8074. ff SERVICES OFFERED Whoever liberated my blue leather shoulder bag in the Union lobby Thursday, April 2; keep the money and goodies, but please return the ID cards and glasses! No questions asked—just leave them at NaiSMith Hall desk with a note for Linda, Room 616. 4-17 Your KU I.D. is worth $1,00 off on preparing your tax return. Bring it to Group Tax, 8011$'s Mass, $4,00 and up. If you want to be in good dressware ready, Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking, 20 years experience. 834-2767, 8-5. 4-17 HELP WANTED BUY, SELL OR TRADE Married couple, grad, or teaching for Minnesota girls camp. Each exp. in one area, tennis, rifley, theatre cane-ning. 842-0587. 4-14 "MOORE"BURGER Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W.6th THE CONCORD SHOP - Stretcher frames, ready-made and parts - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E.13th VI 3-3877 "Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining watching stalks and fresh fish infuses awet snails when you die at the Salon. You only await the final preparation of the salation as you like them with all the techniques available at the Salon for comfortable d pleasure. U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and a half miles north of the Kow River Bridge 843-1431 THE BEATLES Photo by Ron Bishop 'Cover me, guys' With only the clothes on their backs (from left) Mike Helbert, Salina sophomore; John Turcotte, Chattanooga, Tenn. freshman, and Stan Plummer, Lakin sophomore, look for someone with more suitable clothes for class. All the men from the Kappa Sigma fraternity house which burned Saturday found some clothes and a place to stay. Impeachment action to begin WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congressional critics of Supreme Court Justice William A. Douglas, weighing the possibility of initiating impeachment proceedings against him, plan to make their first move this week. Rep. William O. Scott, R-Va, said Sunday some legislation will be introduced and other sources said foes of Douglas will decide at meetings Monday whether to propose an impeachment resolution or a special bipartisan investigation of the judge's off-the-bench activities. Both Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan said Saturday they favored some inquiry into Douglas's past but stopped short of endorsing impeachment proceedings. Douglas' critics have attacked his private writings on youth and revolution, his views on obscurity and his ties until last year with a charitable foundation that drew financial support from Las Vegas gambling interests. Some persons close to the anti-Douglas group said it is leaning toward introduction of a bill to create a special five-man congressional investigating committee that would report back to Congress within 90 days. Depending on the panel's findings, such a move could be the first step toward impeachment. Under the Constitution, the House votes to indict and the Senate tries the charges. No Supreme Court justice has been tried by the Senate in 12 cases of impeachment although the Senate has ordered four federal judges removed from office, the last in 1936. Douglas, who has served on the court since 1939 and is second in seniority only to Justice Hugo L. Black, survived an impeachment move in 1953 when the House Judiciary Committee buried a resolution after a swift one-day subcommittee hearing. All opponents of the 71-year-old justice, whose writings and involvement in conservation have brought him additional fame, deny that their assault is personally motivated or connected with the Senate's rejection of Supreme Court nominees G. Harrold Carswell and Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. Agnew, interviewed on television, said "at the present time all I am advocating is that the justice's record be thoroughly examined, including his writings and verbal opinions, to see whether they're compatible with the position he holds." The vice president proposed that "we should take a good look at what the justice is saying and what he thinks," particularly "a statement that rebellion is justified in cases where the establishment has acted the way it is acting at the present time." This was an apparent reference to Douglas' newest book, entitled "Points of Rebellion," and a statement in it that "violence may be the only effective response in dealing with the so-called establishment." Ford, whose staff has been studying a case for impeachment since last November, told a GOP rally in Ottawa, Ill., Saturday that there will be "some action in the House in the very near future" but declined to reveal his own plans in the matter. Egeberg wants liberalized laws NEW YORK (UPI) — Dr. Robert O. Egeberg, the nation's top medical official, said Sunday he favored liberalized abortion laws but added he felt abortion is still only a "back up" measure for the birth control pill. Egeberg, assistant secretary of health, education and welfare, conceded that the pills kill three out of every 100,000 women who take them. The risk of death for a pregnant woman, however, "is 13 times greater than the risk of death from taking the pill," Egeberg said. He said the governmental warning to be put on birth control packages should also include one that the chance of death in pregnancy is 13 times greater. Fire- those men was John Turcotte, Chattanooga, Tenn., freshman. "I was in room 20, the 'disaster area'," he said, "I lost everything except a bottle of Jack Daniels. I'm wearing some DU jeans, Jayhawk Tower sandals, and the T-shirt I was sleeping in. I lost books, money, clothes—just everything." Mattingly distressed over staying behind SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) — A bitterly disappointed Thomas K. Mattingly watched moon bound Apollo 13 blast off Saturday with a measles-free substitute in his place and said, "What can you say? What can you say?" Mattingly, 34-year-old bachelor who showed the stress of the past couple of days in deep circles under his eyes, told a brief news conference he still doesn't "concede I'm going to get sick." Paine, who ordered the crew change, said earlier in the day that if Mattingly failed to come down with the measles as doctors predicted, "someone is going to hold Chuck Berry by the arm while we let Mattingly punch him in the nose." Although Mattingly acknowledged he was very disappointed at missing the flight, he said of Dr. Thomas O. Paine, NASA administrator: "I hope, had I been a manager, I would have made that decision . . . We made the only decision." Mattingly had trained since last August to be command module pilot on Apollo 13. He lost his place to John W. Swigert the day before blastoff because he had been exposed to astronaut Charles Duke's measles and medical tests showed he had no immunity. But Dr. Charles A. Berry, chief astronaut physician, said he had to ground Mattingly because he couldn't take a chance that he would break out with the German measles during the crucial moon landing next week. Mattingly said if he doesn't get sick, Berry better be ready for "a lot of ribbing, obviously." "If any of you know Charlie, you know I'm the only guy that feels worse than he does. I may not even feel worse than he does," Mattingly said. At one point in the day, Matt- ingly seemed angry enough to do 16 KANSAN Apr. 13 1970 that. Asked by a photographer to pose as he entered mission control, where he watched the launch of Apollo 13, Mattingly snapped: "You really want blood, don't you." Astronaut forgets- A meeting of the fraternity alumni corporation has been called for next week to determine future action for the house. Plans had been made earlier to begin remodeling of the house this summer. (Continued from page 1) them close enough to the moon to attain the lunar orbit they desired, and thus the course correction was necessary. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. stopped at the house Saturday morning to chat with the men. He told them if there was anything he could do to help, he would. Most of the men, however, will move to Templin Hall or to apartments for the rest of the semester. Swigert expressed concern when he first recalled he'd forgotten his tax return. "I may be spending time in another quarantine besides the one Threats spark- (Continued from page 1) outside one of the members apartments, with an explosive device. Spearman added the alleged bomber escaped before the police could be called. The origin of the threats is unknown, Spearman said, but he said he believed they were made by whites. Spearman said he is not sure as to whether the threats came from within the University community, but he suspects they did, because of the number of threats he received immediately after his appearance at the Hoffman speech. Spearman said in addition to arming themselves, the BSU would take other precautionary measures to insure the safety of the BSU members. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. commenting on the new BSU policy directive said, carrying of firearms on campus is "contrary to policy of the University." The carrying of arms on campus by students, and thus turning the University into an armed camp, "approached the height of absurdity," the chancellor said. Spearman said the incident involving the explosive device was reported to Lawrence police, but he did not express confidence in the police. Spearman said that requested police protection in the past has failed to materialize. Chalmers said he knew of threats on both white and black members of the student body. He labeled these threats as "cheap immature acts." Chalmers said he hoped both whites and blacks on campus would "keep its cool" concerning the threats and any situation that may arise from them. He has not contacted the administration concerning the threats, he said, and the BSU does not plan to speak to anyone in the administration in the future. Dean of Student Affairs, William Balfour, said he has not been contacted by the BSU, but he "hoped to talk to members of the BSU" regarding the situation. Spearman himself was not armed, and he declined to say if any BSU members were, in fact, carrying weapons. the space officials are planning for me," Swigert said, invoking gales of laughter from his flying companions and ground controllers. Justice advocates prison revision Swigert, won't get back to earth until six days past the filing deadline. CHICAGO (UPI)—Chief Justice Warren E. Burger has called on lawyers and judges to take up the cause of prison reform or leave the obligations of our system of justice unfinished. In an article in the April issue of the American Bar Association Journal, Burger said, "the administration of criminal justice in any civilized country must embrace the idea of rehabilitation and training of the guilty person as well as the protection of society. "A visit to most prisons will make one a zealot for reform." Burger said. "The range of needs is staggering. They rival, if they do not exceed those of our great cities. But we are suffering and must pay the high price of accumulated and deferred maintenance." There are two basic purposes to a system of justice, Burger said: "The first to protect society; the second to correct the wrong-doer." An Internal Revenue spokesman explained that U.S. citizens outside the country automatically get extensions until June 15. "Outside the U.S." the spokesman said, is usually considered to be somewhere on earth, but he added he presumed the definition could be stretched to include Swigert. Hydro-electric power production in Norway has almost doubled since 1966. A Classic for Moderns! ZODIAC JEWELRY styled by Anson It's part of your heritage—your Zodiac sign. Now Anson makes it a bright part of your "now" look. Magnificently simple Bracelet Ring or light, airy Necklace—either one is a rich, meaningful adornment. In long-lasting Karatclad.* Necklace $4.95 Bracelet $3.95 * Reg. TM. Sel-Rex 24K heavy gold electroplate Christian's "The COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 MAGIC WATCH Crew 'OK' after space abort SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Apollo 13's astronauts aborted their moon landing mission today after an explosion, possibly caused by a meteoroid, jolted their command ship 205,000 miles from earth. They were ordered back immediately, using their lunar module as a lifeboat. With their lives depending on their skill, James A. Lovell, 42, John L. Swigert, 38, and Fred W. Haise, 36, fired the lander's big descent engine for 31 seconds at 3:43 a.m. (EST) to get a course designed to bring them home safely. "Apollo shutdown," reported Lovell coolly when the big engine cut off on schedule. If it had not worked, the astronauts would have been marooned in space with no hope of returning home. "It looks like a good burn and now our only concern is to get those guys home," said Frank Borman, the commander of the Apollo 8 moon orbit flight. The failure hit Monday night and the pilots struggled three hours to control their tumbling spacecraft and take the steps necessary to conserve the vital oxygen and electrical power necessary for the emergency run home. "This is as serious a situation as we have ever had in manned spaceflight," Christopher C. Kraft, deputy director of the Manned Spaceflight Center confirmed. But Kraft said chances were excellent for their safe return if nothing else happens. The astronauts' plan is to loop the moon, as they swing out on the other side, fire Aquarius' big landing engine to speed their return to earth. This maneuver was scheduled for 9:39 p.m. (EST). Many aspects of the emergency were still unsettled this morning, however. Ground controllers said the astronauts would splash down about 12:13 p.m. (EST) Friday, but did not know whether it would be in the Pacific or Atlantic. Depending upon last minute details, a foreign ship of convenience" may be called upon to pick up the astronauts. The government began an immediate survey of shipping in the South Atlantic to see if any vessels were in the potential landing area should an Atlantic splashdown be deemed necessary. The U.S. Navy had no recovery ships in the Atlantic, but such vessels are on hand in the Pacific. However, a landing there would have to be scheduled Friday, nine hours later than an Atlantic splash. Once the astronauts approach earth's atmosphere, they will return to the cone-shaped command module, jettison the lunar module "lifeboat" and the crippled service module and use the command module's own batteries and small oxygen supply to return to earth. The lunar module, with no hea shield, will be incinerated when it hits the earth's atmosphere. The problem struck like a thunderbolt shortly after 10 p.m. (EST) Monday, just after the three pilots had staged a lengthy, good-humored telecast that showed the insides of the lunar module that soon was to be their saviour. The pilots reported hearing a "bang" and feeling a jolt when the emergency warning lights flashed on. A few minutes later, Lovell reported an oxygen gauge was reading zero. Officials said they had no idea what happened to the service module, but Dr. Harvey Nininger of Sedona, Ariz., one of the world's foremost meteorite experts, said the ship may have been hit by a meteoroid. "In my opinion that's what happened," Nininger said. James McDivitt, Apollo spacecraft program manager and a former Apollo astronaut, added weight to Nininger's theory. "It was something that appeared to be quite violent that occurred in bay four. And if it were struck by a meteorite, that would be quite violent. I wouldn't say that's what happened, but won't rule it out." Four hours after the "bang" which knocked out the spaceship's power, Kraft reported: "It appears that everything is under control and we have a safe situation at the moment." Ground controllers at first tried frantically to save the hard-luck mission. (Continued to page 16) See Inside *Kansas City terrorist bombings ... page 2 *Merriman Smith obituary ... page 2 *Associate Justice William O. Douglas speaks ... page 6 *Kappa Sig relocation almost complete ... page 10 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.113 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Weiss said that last September he had a savings account and mortgage with Capital Federal and that Bubb mailed "right Letter by Regent irks KU professor In the letter Bubb questioned Weiss by asking, "What would By DAN OSBORNE Kansan Staff Writer Henry Bubb, the member of the Board of Regents who March 21 wanted to deny promotions to University of Kansas professors Lawrence Velvet and Frederic Litto, has been implicated in a possible conflict of interest case. The implication is a result of a letter written by Bubb, president of Capital Federal Savings and Loan Association, to Thomas Weiss, assistant professor of economics at KU. The letter, dated Oct. 3, 1969, was written on Regents stationery and concerned Weiss' account with Capital Federal. "I was very distressed to learn that we had members of the faculty at the University," the letter said, "that are so narrow minded that when they don't agree with somebody else's opinion on a matter, they would refuse to do business with them." wing" newsletters to all Capital Federal customers. Weiss said he took offense at a particular newsletter and withdrew the money in his savings account. At the time of the withdrawal the teller inquired about the reason and was told, Weiss said. On October 3, Weiss received the letter from Bubb which stated, "I would suggest that if you feel as you do, you should also pay off your loan with Capital Federal. you think if I, as a member of the Board of Regents, would keep you from progressing at the University if I did not agree with you?" Bubb's letter further stated, "I think we have to be broad minded enough, particularly when teaching students, to discuss all sides of an issue and not limit our places of business to only those who agree with us." Contacted by the Kansan this morning, Bubb said, "It was a mistake to put the letter on Regents stationery." "If there was a mistake, that was the only mistake," he said. Bubb said that neither Governor Docking nor the State Attorney General believed that Weiss had a case. He said the (Continued to page 16) Awbrey, Miller found in contempt Student Body President David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior, and Student Elections Committee Co-Chairman David R. Miller, Hays senior, were found guilty of contempt of the student court Monday night and sentenced to suspension with disciplinary probation. Disciplinary probation means both Awbrey and Miller will still be given student privileges but must answer to a probationary officer. Should any more action be taken against either of them, they will be suspended from KU. The court decision said Abwrey will be suspended with disciplinary probation from now until June 1, 1971. Awbrey was also fined $25. Miller will be suspended on disciplinary probation through the fall semester of next year. Awbrey and Miller were charged with not complying to a court order, issued March 17, directing them to include a student referendum on the election ballot. Both defendants made a plea of nolo contendre, no contest, because of extenuating circumstances. Because of these circumstances, Awbrey, acting as student body president, directed Miller not to conform to the court's decision. Both defendants agreed it was possible to print the ballots but quite difficult since adequate manpower was not available at the late hour to do the actual work. Other people were at the immediate disposal to do the work but none became involved in printing any ballots. Awbrey and Miller had contested the order in March because of the time element involved to print the required 12,000 referendum ballots, Awbrey said. The court order was issued the night before the election. In a brief statement after the trial, Awbrey said he planned to appeal the decision. By United Press International Doctors study meningitis UDK News Roundup WASHINGTON—Army officials and congressmen anxiously await a report from a team of epidemiologists from Kansas City, Kan., who have gone to meningitis-plagued Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., to study the outbreak. "We have heard from the politicians and military; it is already past time for us to hear from the professional medical men," Rep. Larry Winn Jr., R-Kan., said Monday in Washington. Lawful protest supported TOPEKA—Attorney General Kent Frizzell, a GOP gubernatorial candidate, Monday supported protest within the law but said "those who protest outside the law must accept the penalty imposed on their conduct by the law." "Protests made within the framework of the law and the American tradition by the black man, the poor, the underprivileged, the underpaid, awaken the nation's conscience to intolerable situations," Frizzell told a YMCA club meeting in Topeka. Life charges refuted BATON ROUGE, La—Branding Life Magazine allegations of flourishing organized crime in Louisiana unmitigated lies, Gov. John McKeithen Monday said he would clear up the accusations made by the magazine. At the same time, McKeithen said he would take sworn affidavits from everyone mentioned in the Life article. The governor also said that he would make an announcement later this week on other steps aimed at refuting the allegations. Education bill faces fight WASHINGTON—Civil rights groups and education lobbyists geared today for a familiar fight on an appropriations bill they claim would blunt school desegregation efforts and vastly underfund school needs from kindergarten through college. Death apparent suicide Correspondent Merriman Smith dies WASHINGTON (UPI)—Merriman Smith, distinguished White House correspondent for United Press International, was found dead in his home late Monday, apparently of a self-inflicted gunshot. He was 57. He had covered six Presidents over a span of more than 28 years. As "dean" of White House correspondents, he was the one who usually ended presidential news conferences with "Thank you, Mr. President." He was an aggressive reporter, facile writer, talented speaker, and friend not only of presidents but of legions of figures high and low in the realms of politics, business and entertainment. Smith won the Pulitzer Prize, American journalism's highest award, for his reporting of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963. He sent the first bulletin of the shooting in Dallas from a radiotelephone in a car speeding toward the hospital and stayed with the story until Kennedy's body was returned to Washington, where Smith wrote a moving recapitulation of the day's events. He was at Warm Springs, Ga., when Roosevelt died in 1945, and won the national Headliners Award for his coverage of that story. In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson awarded him the Freedom Medal, the nation's highest civilian medal, for meritorious achievement. His competitive spirit was demonstrated in 1945 when President Harry S. Truman announced the end of the war in Europe. In the stampede to the press room, Smith fell and broke his collarbone, but got to the telephone and dictated his story before getting medical aid. News of his death brought warm tributes. United Press International President Mims Thomason said "Smitty was a great newspaperman guided by the highest ethics of his profession." Robert J. Donovan, chief Washington correspondent for the Los Angeles Times, said Smith "was the last of the authentic straight news reporters." Smith was born Feb. 18, 1913, in Savannah, Ga. He was a student at Oglethorpe University and entered the news field as a sports writer. After working for newspapers in Atlanta and Athens, Ga., he joined United Press Associations, working in Georgia and Florida. He was transferred to Washington in 1940 and was assigned to the White House a year later. He was married to Eleanor Doyle Brill in 1937. They had three children, Merriman Jr., an Army captain who died in a Vietnam helicopter crash in 1967; Timothy and Allison, both students. His first marriage ended in divorce and in 1966 he married Galley L. Johnson. They had one child, Gillean. Late Monday afternoon, Mrs. Smith discovered Smith's body in a bathroom after he did not answer her calls. A. 357 Magnum revolver—he was an avid gun collector—was on the floor. He left no note. Kansas City bombings minor KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Dynamite was exploded at a racially troubled high school, a church, and a police building, all on the city's East Side, in a span of eight minutes early today. No injuries were reported, there was no fire, and police said there was little if any structural damage to the target buildings. However, windows were shattered in those structures and in neighboring buildings. At 12:06 a.m. an explosion caused what was described as "minor damage" at a police academy building which is in the process of being vacated. Windows were broken and the front door was damaged at the academy building and there was glass damage at a plumbing company and a dress shop across the street. The first explosion occurred at 12:01 a.m., when dynamite was detonated at the school's library door. Only the door was damaged. At 12:09 a.m. a dynamite explosion at the Linwood Methodist Church blew out all the windows in the church and broke "seven or eight" windows in the First Baptist Church, located across the street. Investigating officers said the explosives "apparently weren't very well planted." "It's as if someone in a hurry tossed a stick of dynamite against a building or into shrubbery," a detective said. Timing of the blasts and the distance between locations indicated the explosives were planned by different persons working under a joint plan, he said. "I don't think you could get from East High to the Academy in five minutes." A woman living near East High School, which has been the scene of demonstrations as recently as last week when 73 students were suspended, told police she saw several Negro men run between nearby houses to a waiting car in which they fled. Black militants had appeared at the Linwood Methodist Church TONIGHT Vanessa Collins, speaking for the black group said, "We have been trying to get our demands met and he (Medley) said he has been giving us consideration for three years, but the time has come for liberation and an end to consideration." Medley said, "We give consideration to anything that comes through normal channels." He said Monday's action did not represent normal channels. fellini la strada Among the demands of the BSU group were "fair elections," a black spring homecoming queen, one black cheerleader, black literature for all grades and an "all-black Black Students Union." Medley said, "We had some disturbance today involving our students and outsiders and we're trying to decide now what action we want to take." THE MONKEY LHS blacks interrupt classes,ask liberation Tues., 7 & 9 p.m. Dyche Aud. Non-Members $1 2 KANSAN Other office personnel were in the room at the same time but there was no violence. The door was unlocked and normal traffic resumed nearly half an hour later. Nearly 50 students locked themselves in the main Lawrence High office shortly after 2 p.m. One student said the action prompted an announcement from Medley to all teachers to close and lock their classroom doors and not to let anybody in. Signs were posted in the cafeteria and the halls Monday morning saying, "boycott queen elections," and "elections are unfair." Classes were temporarily interrupted at Lawrence High School Monday by the LHS Black Students Union in an effort to draw attention to their demands made to principal William Medley. Apr.14 1970 on successive Sundays, March 25 and April 6, and read a "manifesto" demanding an end of hypocracy in the church and contribution of 30 per cent of the church's income for black service organizations. KU FILM SOCIETY The LIBERATED LOOK!! Hampshire House by VAN HEUSEN Hampshire House The LIBERATED LOOK! Hampshire House by VAN HEUSEN® Unchain your brain! Unbind the old bean! Now you're ready for the fashion freedom of Van Heusen Hampshire House shirts. They're the ones with big bold action stripes, deep and daring solid colors, and new wider spread Bradley collar, plus permanently pressed Vanopress to end ironing hang-ups forever. Join the freed breed, man, and come on over to Hampshire House. p d MILES DAYS BUTCHES BREW ON COLUMBIA 2-record set $4.99 at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Center (Warning: Do not listen to this alone) Campus briefs Applications for membership into Owl Society, honorary organization for junior men, are being accepted now in the Dean of Men's Office. Owl Society seeks sophomores Jay Mason, Hobbs, New Mexico junior and president of the organization, said all sophomore men interested in joining who had at least a 1.8 grade point average were eligible to apply. The organization, he said, honors students who not only have excelled in grades but also those who have been active in extra-curricular activities. The deadline for turning in applications is April 24. Headstart program topic of meeting The Student Education Association will hold a meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in room 303 of the Kansas Union. The featured speaker will be Miss Biliye Gatin, who works with the Head Start follow-up program in Topeka. She will explain the program itself, her work in Topeka and how the program relates to the Topeka public school system. Flouridation experts to speak Two experts in the controversy over floridation will speak at KU tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Simon Katz, Indiana University, and Fredrick B. Exner, Seattle Wash., will speak on "Flouridation—Pros and Cons." The meeting is sponsored by Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity. Earl B. Shurtz, KU professor of law, will be moderator. Both Katz and Exner have done extensive background work on the question of flouridation and have expressed contrasting views to the effectiveness of flouridation of public water supplies. Schwegler to discuss venereal disease Raymond Schwegler Jr., director of Watkins Hospital, will talk about birth control, veneer disease and the general health situation at KU tonight on "University Night Beat," the talk show sponsored by KUOK, said Tom Gleason, Ottawa senior and director of the talk show. Glason said the show would last from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. and would be an open forum program. He said any student who wished to do so could call the station and question Schwegler or contribute his or her opinion. KSU hosts soccer tourney The Big Eight Soccer Tournament will be held at Kansas State University May 2 and 3. Preliminary games will be held May 2 on two fields. The University of Kansas soccer team will play the K-State team at 10 a.m. in Memorial Stadium at Manhattan. In the first round, Missouri will play Oklahoma State, Colorado will play Iowa State and Oklahoma will play Nebraska. Humanist to give Series lecture A humanist and scholar in French literature who will be making her second visit to the University of Kansas will give the Humanities Series lecture April 21, in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Germaine Bree, professor at the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin, will speak at 8 p.m. on "Beckett's Strange Voyages: Fiction and the Modern Consciousness." During her three-day visit to KU, she will also meet with French literature classes, with the instructors in Western Civilization and will give a public lecture at 7:45 p.m., Monday in the Kansas Union, following the Pi Delta Phi honors banquet. Scholarship applications due Applications for the SMOP scholarships are due in the Dean of Women's Office by 5 p.m. on Wednesday, said Kathy Nemeth, Oberlin sophomore and chairman of the AWS Scholarship committee. The AWS Memorial Scholarship Fund was started on December 3, 1948, when two organized living groups donated money to a scholarship fund instead of exchanging Christmas gifts. The fund was established in memory of two University of Kansas women who died in an automobile accident. The scholarships are now given in honor of these two women and other women students whose university careers have been tragically ended. The scholarship winners will be announced at the AWS Honors Night. Okinawa subject of forum meeting Hideo Hashimoto, professor of religion at Lewis and Clark College, will speak on "Okinawa—Show Piece of American Imperialism," 3 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The talk is sponsored by the Hashimoto has just returned from four months in Japan where he was special Quaker Inter- "I thought it was a spring frolic" he said. The Tower of London served until the 17th century as an arsenal. James Basham of Fort Scott said he was glad the strike was peaceful but expressed displeasure at the bombings on April 7, the day before the strike. Apr. 14 1970 KANSAN 3 Regents reluctant to give views on Velvel-Litto promotion issue SUA Minority Opinions Forum and the Lawrence Peace Center national Affairs representative. "I think there are ways to settle issues other than rioting and destroying property," Basham said. In Kansan interviews this past weekend most members of the Board of Regents were reluctant to discuss the outcome of the Velvel-Litto promotion vote scheduled for the next regents meeting April 24. SUA to interview for committees The only regent willing to discuss the issue, Jess Stewart of Wamego, indicated that Velvel and Litto would receive their promotions. Henry Bubb and Paul Wunsch, the two regents who wanted to deny promotions to Velvel and Litto on March 21, were unwilling to discuss the issue. "Personally, I feel that the problem will be resolved and promotions will be recommended," he said. The Student Union Activities association will be holding interviews for committee chairmen starting Thursday evening and scheduled for evenings through next week. Applications are due in the SUA office by 5:00 p.m. the day of the interview. Each interview is five minutes long. For further information, contact SUA board members or call the SUA office, UN4-3477. The promotions for Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama, have been delayed since March 21 pending the regents evaluation of additional information concerning their academic qualifications. The delay was prompted by political controversies concerning the two men. Stewart, like most of the regents contacted, felt the April 8 student strike was "very calm." "It looks like they had fun," said William Danenbarger of Concordia. "I thought the students handled themselves real well and I'm pleased at the way things went," he pointed out. "I'm pleased at the way the students handled themselves," Stewart said. "I think the least you (the Daily Kansan) say about it, the better," Wunsch said. Elmer Jackson of Kansas City, Kan., said he felt that it wasn't really a strike. REWARD of good food and a roaring time will be given to any substantial citizen... man woman or child for eating at KRAZY KARL'S Grand Opening April 15 & 16 VI 3-3333 1811 West 6th groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" KANSAN COMMENT Photo by John Brown "It's A Grand Old Rag" Others on issues- This column is made available periodically for campus leaders to discus current issues. Ed. note—diZerega is a former student senator, active in campus politics. The opinions in this column are diZerega's and not necessarily those of the Kansan staff. By GUS diZEREGA The Strike of April 8 has exposed the bankruptcy of traditional campus leadership, especially that of the dynamic duo of Peter George and Rick von Ende. Last year in a column I pointed out that self-styled "moderate" student leaders had never initiated anything of importance at the University. Events which occurred during the strike prompt me to say that the leading "moderate" leaders increased the potential violence and actual misunderstandings of the strike and that the campus would have been better off if they had done nothing. On April 7 the majority of Student SenEx members published a leaflet written by Peter George attempting to stop the strike. Since the four who signed it, Peter George, Rick von Ende, Bill Ebert, and Phil Weiss, control the most powerful student government organization it is revealing to examine its arguments. The Student SenEx paper argued that the reasons behind the Strike were either an attempt to secure Velvel's and Litto's promotion or a desire for publicity and notoriety on the part of the Strike's organizers. Since Velvel and Litto were sure of promotion there was obviously no honorable reason to strike. George, von Ende, Ebert, and Weiss were apparently unable to understand the Strike Committee's simple English when it said that the issue was academic freedom. The Committee continued that the precedent set by Regents Bubb and Wunsch of using political criteria to decide upon promotion were particularly dangerous, especially in conjunction with Shultz's opportunistic attacks upon university autonomy. To let the interference ride because the professors would probably be promoted anyway was to give tacit approval to the correctness of these Regents' interference. "Political interference, or EVEN THE THREAT of it can cast a pall over a campus." Presumably having no quarrel with the Regents on this score, our "leaders" refused even to consider academic freedom an issue. While these men speak of making the system work, they not surprisingly neglect to point out that they control the system if any students do. They comprise its heart. If it hasn't worked it is because they have done nothing effective to real with the issues. Indeed, it seems as if they weren't even interested in the issue until real campus leadership threatened to displace them. None of these people bothered to go to the Thursday meeting that planned the Strike. Nor did they attend any subsequent meetings. Most were not even in evidence on campus Wednesday—usually to be found lounging around the Senate office, they were nowhere to be seen. (An encouraging exception here was Ebert.) Knowing nothing about the Strike they presumed to tell us everything—and consequently spread fear and dissension. The sad truth is that none of these "leaders" understand the students they are supposed to represent. They fear the student body, always worrying that we might repudiate their nonexistent leadership. Seeing themselves as honest brokers between the barbarism of the students and the civilization of the administration, they naturally fear any spontaneous student activity. Our "moderate" student leadership consists of little George Romneys in flair pants. Their Politics of Predictability is as out of style as Calvin Coolidge. For the sake of the university these people should be defeated if they attempt to set themselves up as leaders next year (except, maybe for Ebert for whom there is a smidgen of hope—he's not as set in his ways)—their political place is the garbage cans of history—may they rest quietly. Griff & the Unicorn HERE COMES THAT GUY LOADING THE LAST TWO ANIMALS! MAYBE IF WE IMPRESS HIM, WE CAN GET ABOARD THAT BOAT... BY SOKOLOFF HERE COMES THAT GUY LOADING THE LAST TWO ANIMALS! MAYBE IF WE IMPRESS HIM, WE CAN GET ABOARD THAT BOAT... BOY! WHAT A LOUSY JUDGE OF CHARACTER! WHEEW: THIS WASN'T EASY... BOY! WHAT A LOUSY JUDGE OF CHARACTER! SWEEN! THAT WASN'T EASY... $ \textcircled{2} $David Sokoloff 1970 hearing voices— To the editor: It has become apparent from my classes that at least one underlying premise of any requirement is fallacious. It is assumed that foreign language requirements can and do provide a minimum proficiency in the language required. However, neither effective nor minimum learning can be required. As much as we might try, neither motivation to learn nor the assimilation of academic material can be forced on an unwilling student. In the final analysis, the only things that can be required are things like, attendance, participation in the bankrupt but omnipresent grade game, and blind tribute to the wisdom of the Educational Policies Committee—none of which are particularly valuable commodities. With the current review of graduation requirements of the College (Math 25, English I, II, III, Speech I, Western Civilization, and foreign language), I feel obliged to offer my opinions to the dialogue. As an assistant instructor of a required foreign language course, I believe I have gained some insights that may be beneficial to the discussion, and it is my hope that some of my observations can serve as the basis for a rational and meaningful reform. I believe the foreign language requirement should be abandoned. It should be obvious that it is impossible to have an effective learning situation when the students are motivated by nothing more than obtaining high grades or at least avoiding low grades. Worse, now through pass/no credit options it is possible to remove the liability of low grades, which has the direct result of promoting mediocrity. Indeed, in order that students get any benefits from a course, they must be motivated to learn the material. It is futile to expect them to learn material in which they perceive (rightly or wrongly) no relevance. But even accepting the dubious proposition that an acceptable level of learning can be required in the first place, it is senseless to assume that the student's unwanted knowledge will be retained, thereby allowing its useful application. Another unhappy aspect of language requirements peculiar to Kansas University is that the effectiveness of achieving minimum proficiency (or whatever the specific function that prompted their initiation) is simply assumed. Given the above arguments, such a proposition of assumed effectiveness is highly vulnerable. Why should sixteen hours of perfunctory completion of a foreign language course assure minimum proficiency? Is an inept public speaker any better after making a few oral presentations to his uninterested classmates in Speech I? Do English I, II, and III actually provide written communication skills, or are those skills a natural concomitant of an intellectually centered environment? Except for Western Civilization, we have a system re-enforced by self-fulfilling prophesies with no proof whatsoever that any requirement is actually effective in achieving the desired learning experience. As a student and instructor, I would estimate that no more than $25\%$ of those with 16 hours of Spanish could pass the language proficiency test immediately after finishing the courses, and that percentage would drop drastically if we waited until the final semester of the senior year in order to ascertain how many could actually use (or have retained) the knowledge. Involuntary (required) education is an anachronism whose demise would tremendously vitalize the Liberal Arts and Sciences program. I have proposed to the Educational Policies Committee a viable alternative which would include minimum distributional requirements calling for 16 hours from each of the Humanities, Sciences, and Social Science areas with 8 hours of foreign language study counting toward partial fulfillment of the humanities distribution. The 8 hours credit for foreign language is in order not to penalize or unfairly discourage anyone studying a foreign language, which, I might add for the benefit of my myopic undergraduate colleagues, can be overwhelmingly relevant. I further agree that students should be able to demonstrate a minimum proficiency in written English communication, but it should be left to the individual student to determine the mode of acquiring minimum skills, if indeed they do not possess them already. The present requirements are a snare and a delusion. The foreign language requirement is ill-conceived and counter-productive, but no more so than any other undergraduate requirement. I hope other faculty members will evaluate requirements in terms of their own classes and admit that other requirements fall miserably short of the desired goals. What could be worse for a faculty member than a class of 25 uninterested students, half of which are on the pass/no credit option, forced into class against their will? Senior faculty must already know because they have delegated such classroom situations (usually in required courses) to the assistant instructors. William Miller William Miller Overland Park, assistant instructor THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except 2015. Subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postpaid mail at Lawton for goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior payment. Class fees are necessary those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services NATIONAL ADVERT A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 T KANSAN REVIEWS Films: ringing the chime By JOHN TIBBETTS Kansan Reviewer Imagine an edifice, built partly of rude oaken beams, steel, and vaulted stone and you have a conception of England during the time of the Iron Men. This film by Orson Welles is also such an edifice; it is literally built out of the bare bones of several plays by William Shakespeare dealing with such an England; and it rears up for us massive stone walls, flings aloft trumpeters into high towers, spurs horses across clouded meadows, and lifts flagons of fireside wine to our health. Fleshing out those bare bones forms the chief glory of the film. Although there are problems in its construction (the first half is a swift, finely-drawn line of motion exploding into the ferocity of the battle marking Harry Percy's defeat; the second half subsides from that pulse and limps to a bitter but effective end), "Falstaff" should be dealt with as a succession of images and its evocation of the simplicity and chivalry of Merrie Olde England, an England Sir John Falstaff seems to represent. We see Henry IV and Prince Hal imprisoned within the rigid, tall shafts of castle towers and soldiers' spears; Harry Percy wheeling about to the wars with glittering sword; and great, gigantic, mammoth Sir John Falstaff muttering of Merrie Olde England while wheezing and lumbering his way through the taverns and inns of the land. Orson Welles has mounted his camera very low so the figures and castles move above us like true giants. With colossal audacity he has created a dream of taverns and Iron Men that, mythic or not, is of properly heroic proportions, wholly fitting Falstaff's vast bulk. It is a fitting lament for the death of an oversized dream. BOOKS: extremely disappointing By WILLIAM MORISSEY Kansan Staff Writer TITLE OF REBELLION, by William O. Douglas (Vintage, $1.95) At a time when social unrest, racial fear, sectional bitterness and a widening generation gap are at a height it was extremely disappointing to read William O. Douglas's "Points of Rebellion." Douglas, Supreme Court liberal in residence, at the end of his 97 page book (which reads at times like one of his extended Supreme Court opinions) suggests that unless the "Establishment" restructures itself, revolution may be the only alternative The pitch is struck when Douglas refers to the American Establishment as a modern day George III. "George III was the symbol against which our Founders made a revolution now considered grand and glorious. We must realize that today's Establishment is the new George III. Whether it will continue to adhere to his tactics, we do not know. If it does, the redress, honored in tradition, is also revolution." What makes this analogy especially distressing is the fatalistic position to which Douglas seems to have succumbed. Dr. John Spiegel, head of the Lembrey Center for the Study of Violence, says, "There is an increase in violent ideology by radical young people in response to the despair that the goals the radical movement has pursued vigorously over the last eight years have not met with any apparent success. Hopelessness and despair give rise to more extreme measures." Douglas states that "At the international level we have become virtually paranoid The world is filled with dangerous people. Every troublemaker across the globe is a communist." The reader wonders, however, if Douglas is not a victim of paranoia in the guise of the "Establishment." Nobody can argue that there are many problems in American society that need correction. But to point your finger at everything wrong in this country and label it the "Establishment" is not going to solve the problem. And yet Douglas adds to the confusion when he writes, "But where grievances pile high and most of the elected spokesmen represent the Establishment, violence may be the only effective weapon." Instead of offering constructive courses of action for the young Douglas labels the establishment as corrupt and raises the ominous specter of revolution. This comes as an extreme disappointment from an associate justice of the Supreme Court. A Distinguished Company Breathes Life Into Shakespeare's Lusty Age FALSTAFF "CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT" HARRY SALTZMAN PRESENTS AN ORSON WELLES FILM Orson Welles Sir John Gilgud Margaret Rutherford Eve. 7:15 & 9:25 THE HILLCREST It disdains hard rock, acid rock, even thundering jive popular among young people to create a "new sound" that Larry Meredith, a former Marine who is the leader of the group, said "we hope will be acceptable to all ages—effectively bridging the generation gap. By MYRAM BORDERS In fact, the 10—five young men and five young women—have adopted the name, "The Establishment," for their singing and dancing act that critics say is the hottest entertainment attraction since the Fifth Dimension. Appearing on Las Vegas' glittering Strip, the Establishment underscored its versatility and range by introducing their interpretation of "Aquarius" and "People Got to Be Free," then breaking into "Born Free" and moving on to "Cry," the song that Johnny Ray made famous, and finally resurrecting a World War I song, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again," and giving it a modern sound. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)—Ten young men and women, who say "we don't agree with everything the Establishment does but we'll never be caught marching around a courthouse," have added a new dimension to that much-abused aspect of political life. 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 Varsity EVE. 7:15 THEATRE ... Telephone VI-1065 9:20 Group's aim 'to entertain' BOOKS THE "F" CERTIFICATE, by David Gurney (Pocket Books, 95 cents)—A gamy but well-written shocker about what happens when, in Britain, young people appear naked on the beaches and parade there openly, and when young men, high on drugs, race through the streets on their scooters and create chaos, and when a moviemaker decides to exploit all this and get his picture an "F" certificate, for showing things that would make "I Am Curious (Yellow)" look tame. Violence marks this one much more than erotic, and in some ways it's a serious comment. ESTRICTED MAT. DAILY 2:30 Varsity EVE. THEATRE ... Telephone V3-1065 9:20 A MURDER OF QUALITY, by John Le Carre (Pocket Books, 75 cents); CALL FOR THE DEAD, by John Le Carre (Pocket Books, 75 cents)—Two older ones by Le Carre, dating back to 1964 and 1963, respectively. The first is a murder mystery dealing with a killing at a British public school, and the efforts of a former secret service agent to solve the crime. The second is a suspense story with the same hero, George Smiley, it being an episode in international espionage, more like the better known Le Carre novels, "The Spy Who Came In from the Cold" and "The Looking Glass "The Establishment may mean different things to different people." Meredith said, "but to us it is just a name for the group. We admit we first used it as an attention-getter and it stuck. "However, we don't agree with those young people who contend that everything people over 30 think and say is wrong. "We may not agree with everything but, gosh, that doesn't mean anything. There are ways to disagree without tearing things apart. We're not hippies or speed freaks and we're too busy doing our own thing the best way we can to join some of these misguided factions." Meredith, 6 feet 3,180 pounds, attended junior college in his home town of Bakersfield, Calif., then the University of California at Riverside, Calif., where he majored in music with a pre-med minor. He intended to study medicine when music caught his interest. had made a daring promise to provide a singing group for Andy Griffith who then was readying a show for Las Vegas. The Establishment was organized in 1968 by Leonard Grant, an artists' manager, choreographer Howard Parker and musical director D'Arneil Pershing, who They had two weeks to put the group together and they did—welding 10 musical individualists, soloists, into a choral whole. To this they added dancing to make a singing-dancing act that has scored in West Coast niteries and now is turning to records. The members of the Establishment span the continent: Bill Bowersock hails from Kansas City; Suzy Cadham was born and raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba; Michael Cody is native of Chicago; Ron Dexter is from Ohio; Lois LaBonte was born in Montana; Jean Lyons is from California; Phyllis Mitchell hails from Baltimore, Matt Vernon is from Atlanta, Ga., and Marilou Mundy from California. "We are not trying to entertain any specific age group—we are just trying to entertain," Meredith said. "We are interested in appealing to young people, of course, but an appeal to all ages is more universal." "In a nutshell, we have only one goal—just to entertain." WITH THE UNINHIBITED SEVENTIES COMES THE LAWYER Eve 7:00 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 Children 75c Hillcrest R Starring BARRY NEWMAN HAROLD GOULD WITH THE UNINHIBITED SEVENTIES COMES THE LAWYER Eve 7:00 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 Children 75c Hillcrest R Starting BARRY NEWMAN HAROLD GOULD TO LIVE YOU MUST BE ALLOWED TO EXIST THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!" National Board of Review Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5784 ENDS TONIGHT Eve. 7:20 - 9:30 Adults 1.50, Child .75 THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!" National Board of Review THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP Granada TELATRE ... Telephone VI 9-5784 HALF A TON AND TEN FEET TALL WALT DISNEY productions performance KING of the GRIZZLIES performed by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO. INC. *1030 Walt Disney Productions* TECHNICOLOR* STARTS WED. Granada THEATRE...Telephone N 3-5788 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN GOLDIE HAWN ...that Kooky Star of "LAFF-IN"! "Why don't we stay in bedlight - and screamble something?" walter ingrip mannau Bergman cactus flower produced by goldie hawn JACK WESTON RICK LENT WITH SCOTT BRENE HEWEY MH Impressed for METALS Autumn • TECHNICOLOR® Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 Adults $1.50 THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER WITH AND LOOM Children 75c Justice Douglas speaks on ecology By STEVE FRITZ Kansan Staff Writer Associate Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas implied Monday that the recent Massachusetts law which states men cannot be required to fight on foreign soil in an undeclared war would be held constitutional. Douglas' comment on the law's constitutionality came during the question and answer session after his speech on ecology at the University of Missouri in Kansas City (UMKC). "When Truman was President, we (the Supreme Court) ruled that the seizure of steel mills was PETER G. ROGERS Associate Justice William Douglas unconstitutional," Douglas said. "If they can't seize steel mills, how can they seize you?" Douglas spoke to approximately 700 people on the danger of man becoming extinct. "Experts," Douglas said, "only give man two more decades if pollution is not stopped." Pollution is not a capitalistic product, Douglas said, it is found wherever there is man. The answer to pollution, he said, is conservation. Conservation is both a local and an international problem, Douglas said. "Iin Hawaii," he explained, "there is radioactive air pollution from the United States, Russia, and Red China. "The end of the ocean's usefulness for everything except a highway will come about in 10 years if things are not changed." put in concrete containers and dumped into the ocean, Douglas said. Radioactive waste material is "These materials have a half life of 500 years," he said. "How long will the concrete containers last?" Disappearing fish resources, oil spills and radioactive waste dumping are all factors in why countries like Peru and Ecuador are claiming 200 mile territorial ocean limits. Douglas said. "We are exploiting the natural resources of the United States as countries once exploited their colonies," Douglas said. "The question is do we need to destroy regions of our country to make other people rich?" 6 KANSAN Apr.14 1970 "Thethey should,rather,look at the net national product and include the irreplaceable loss of our natural resources,"he said. The error of those who exploit the machine and destroy natural resources is to brag of the gross national product, Douglas said. Many laws have been passed to curb pollution, Douglas said, but often local pollutors have an alliance with local law enforcement agencies. Official Bulletin Jayhawk Joggers Club: East Door, Robinson Gymnasium, 4:30 p.m. Theatre Research Colloquium, "Ky- andrew Taukali, 341 Murphy, 3:30 p.m. MANA University Symphony Orchestra 7 a.m. KU Synchro Club: Robinson Gunz nasium Natatorium, 7-9 p.m. Christian Science Organization: Davis Memorial Jayhawk Rodeo Club: Room 2A, Kansas Union, 7:30 a.m. African Studies: "African Films III and West Africa."3 Bailley, 7:30 p.m. KU Synchro Club: Robinson Gymnasium Natatorium, 7-9 p.m. International Club: Election of officers, Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. Alpha Iota Sigma Program:“Fluoridation-Pros and Cons.” Dr. Simon Katz, Indiana University; Dr. Fred. Dryden, Seattle, Wash., Kansas Union, 7:30 p.m. organist. Swarathout Rectal Hall, 8 p.m. Lecture; "Design Space," Stuart Dawson, landscape architect. Forum Room, Kansas Upton, 8 p.m. Theatre: L'e Tretau de Paris. Ionesco戏本: "Les Chales" & "La Lance" (Johnson) Banquet of Nations: April 26, 6 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom—food and entertainment, and queen contest. Tickets available at Uton ticket counter. GET TICKEE, SAY WHERE LONDON (UPI)—The railroad station at Stratford in East London has put up a sign reading—in Chinese—"Please State Your Destination." A British Rail official explained: "There's rather a large Chinese population and many don't speak English. Sometimes ticket clerks asked them where they were going and couldn't be understood. On one occasion, tempers flared and a clerk got punched in the eye." "Free flowing rivers are gone forever," Douglas said. "Detergents and other waste materials are polluting our water to both sight and smell." Thus, Douglas said, not much progress is made to stop the polluting. Detergents which contain phosphorous present the largest danger to the crystal blue water in this country, Douglas said. "Twenty years ago, when I was in India," he said. "eight out of ten babies died before they reached one year of age." Over-population is another problem pushing man toward extinction, Douglas said. The increase in public health has changed the picture, he said. Most children born today will survive. "Because of the decrease in infant mortality, all efforts must be redoubled to curb over-population," Douglas said. Many animals native to North America are close to becoming extinct because of pesticides, bounties, and destruction of natural habitats, he said. "What was a nightmare 10 years ago is now a reality," Douglas said. World Campus Afloat is a college that does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them and beyond. Again in the 1970-71 academic year, the accredited World Campus Afloat program of Chapman College and its associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory. Chapman College currently is accepting applications for both the fall and spring semesters. Preliminary applications also may be made for all future semesters. Fall semesters depart New York aboard the s.s. Ryndam for port stops in the Mediterranean and Latin America, ending in Los Angeles. Spring semesters circle the world from Los Angeles, stopping in Asia and Africa and ending at New York. For a catalog and other information, complete and mail the coupon below. I You'll be able to talk to a World Campus Afloat representative and former students: - Saturday, May 2, 2 p.m. - Plaza Inn Art student Leana Leach of Long Beach sketches ruins of once-buried city during World Campus Afloat visit to Pompeii. - 45th & Main, Kansas City, Missouri VENICE s. s. Ryndam is of Netherlands registry. WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT Director of Student Selection Services Chapman College, Orange. Calif. 92666 Please send your catalog and any other facts I need to know SCHOOL INFORMATION HOME INFORMATION Last Name First Initial Name of School Campus Address Street Home Address Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale Area Code Campus Phone ( ) Area Code City Home Phone Area Code Until ___ info should be sent to campus ☐ home ☐ approx. date I am interested in □ Fall Spring 19___ □ I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD CAMPUS AFLOFT WICA 4/6 $1.00 ADMISSION $1.00 PER PITCHER MOTHER LIKES THESE BEST! "FRYER TUCK & the MONKS" 8:00 to 12:00 Wednesday The DRAUGHT HOUSE 804 W. 24th Rocking Chair THE DRAUGHT HOUSE 11th I "I get my fresh hamburger from Harwood's everyday." "I get my buns from Alexander Bros. Bakery." 10 TODAY IS APRIL 14, 1959 AT Sandy's BECAUSE IT'S OUR BIRTHDAY AND OUR PRICES ARE 11 YEARS OLD FOR 2 DAYS ONLY TRY THESE NEW ADDITION HAMBURGERS 15c MILKSHAKE 20c CHEESEBURGERS 20c HI-LO 43c FRENCH FRIES 10c BIG SCOT 49c FISH 25c TENDERLOIN 49c PEPSI 10-15-25c COME TO OUR 11th BIRTHDAY PARTY! AT Sandy's 9th & Iowa PINNACLE "I get my fresh Idaho potatoes from the Garrett Market everyday." "I get my milk from Meyer's Dairy." SHORT SHOTS Neal Steinhauer, world indoor shot put recordholder, has informed KU Relays director Bob Timmons that he will not be able to compete in the Relays' special shot put event. The invitational shot put, slated for 3 p.m. Saturday, still sports a talented field that includes outdoor record-holder Randy Matson, KU acres Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm and Emporia State's Al Feuerbach. Rex Maddaford, Eastern New Mexico distance ace from New Zealand, was excused from competing in a triangular meet this past weekend to rest up for the KU Relaws. Maddaford will be aiming at the Relays' three-mile record of 13:50.6 after winning by a "country mile" at the Texas Relays in 13-23.3. Maddaford also captured the mille title at Texas to be the meet's only double winner and was voted the outstanding performer of his division. - * * * * A total of 138 teams filed entries for the 45th Kansas Relays to be staged this Thursday, Friday and Saturday (April 16-18) on KU's new eight-lane Tartan track. 5555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555 The entry tally announced by Bob Timmons, Relays director, included teams from 17 states with the following break-down by divisions: university division 18, College division 41, junior college division 15, Kansas high schools 36, Missouri high schools 8, men's track clubs 9 and women's track clubs 11. Southwest Conference teams had to pass up the Relays this year in order to meet a league requirement of a certain number of meets on the home tracks of conference members. But Arkansas coach Ed Renfrow has filed an entry for Kevin Danaher of his squad to compete in both the long jump and triple jump, an event not included in SWC meets. Abilene Christian, a perennial track power from the west Texas plains, returns to the Kansas Relays this week to end a five-year absence from the Jayhawk carnival. 8 KANSAN Apr.14 1970 THE ORIGINAL SQUARE TRACK RECORDS FUNNY GIRL BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF Featuring Don't Rain on My Parade People You Are Woman. I Am Man The Swan Roller Skate Rag Funny Girl I'd Rather Be Blue Over You My Man THE ORIGINAL SINGING TRACK WITH MUSIC FUNNY GIRL BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHAREF Featuring Don't Rain on My Parade People You Are Woman I Am Man The Swan Roller Skate Rag Funny Girl It Rather Be Blue Over You My Man On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. 100 Seeking second straight title Jan Johnson, Jayhawk pole vaulter, will be looking for his second consecutive title in his specialty at the 45th Kansas Relays. Johnson topped the field last year with a hoist of 16-4. Cyclones, OU top Big Eight standings By United Press International 2. United Press International Larry Corrigan was the third-best hitter in the Big Eight Conference last year as a freshman. He was a 380 hitter. He also was a catcher. Normally, a .380-hitting catcher is left alone. But Iowa State coach Cap Timm, analyzing his team, said, "We've got to fill our pitching void." And Corrigan was elected. The 6-3, Mendota, Ill., product delivered in spectacular fashion Saturday. He went the distance and pitched a five-hitter, winning the first game of a doubleheader against Missouri, 5-1. In the nightcap he caught until the third inning, when he returned to the hill in relief, Again, he was the winning pitcher as the Cyclones scored a 16-9 victory Corrigan also did his share with the bat, lashing a single, double and grand-slam home run in the second game. The victories gave Iowa State a weekend sweep of Missouri—the Cyclones captured a 1-0 decision Friday and vaulted Timm's team to the top of the conference standings, along with Oklahoma, which also swept KU. Both have 3-0 conference records. Key series this week will be Oklahoma at Nebraska and Colorado at Iowa State. 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Tennis team sweeps three The KU tennis team swept three straight matches last week defeating Emporia State, 8-1, Thursday, Missouri, 4-3, Friday and whipping Arkansas, 5-4, in Saturday's match-up. KU's number two man, Dan Oram, Shawnee Mission senior, was the Jayhawk standout as he won all three singles matches and combined with Jim Ballinger, Shawnee Mission junior, to capture the doubles titles against all three foes. It's Ladies Night Every Tuesday at THE SHOEBOX on The Malls Game postponed MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (UPI) - Yesterdays Kansas City Royals—Minnesota Twins baseball game was postponed because of snow. There was one inch of snow on the field at Metropolitan Stadium. SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Films----April 16 1. Popular Films Chairman 2. Special Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairma 4. Film Stories Chairma 4. Film Society Chairman 5. Publicity Chairman RecreationApril 21 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements 2. Featured Speakers 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Choiceism Chairman Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman Forums—April 21 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman Travel—April 16 1. World Travel Fair 2. Arrangements Chairman 3. Correspondence Chairman 4. Films Chairman 5. Hospitality Chairman 6. Travel Advisors Public Relations—April 16 1. Activities Carnival Chairman 2. Open House Chairman 3. Open House Publicity Chairmen Chairman Fine Arts—April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Humanities Chairman 6: Art Forums Chairman Summer Board Summer Board (Summer 1970)—April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. TEXAS A&M Relays draw record-holder Randy Matson, world record-holder in the shot put, will compete in a special invitational shot put event at the 45th Kansas Relays. Other performers include KU aces Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm and Emporia State's Al Feuerbach. Former Jayhawk star gains coaching position SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—San Francisco State College has announced the appointment of former University of Kansas star Jerry Waugh as its new head basketball coach. Waugh is currently head coach at Chico State, where his teams have compiled a 30-20 record for two seasons and had a 15-11 record in the 1969-70 season. He succeeds Paul Rundell, who retired from coaching this year o become full-time athletic director. Waugh was captain of the 1950 Kansas basketball team and spent four years as a KU assistant during the Wilt Chamberlain era. He coached for five years at Maryvale High School in Phoenix, Ariz., and moved to Chico State in 1968. San Francisco State had a disastrous 5-20 record in the 1969-70 season after a successful campaign the previous year. FOOTBALL And the beating goes on . . . The aches and pains of spring football practice continue for Jayhawk hopefuls. Coach Pepper Rodgers promises an exciting and unusual team as the Jayhawks have switched to a pro offensive set in hopes of rebounding from last year's 1-9 slump. Royals' trade looking good Otis off to hot start KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) The ballyhoo Amos Otis received last winter put him in an impossible position. he played in. The 22-year-old centerfielder came to the Kansas City Royals in a trade that sent third baseman Joe Foy to the New York Mets. Otis was billed by the local press as a potential superstar. So he was under quite a bit of pressure from the time he joined the Royals in spring training. "I don't know about that super-star stuff," he grins. "The only stars I know are in the sky. Really, the only pressure I felt was to do good." Well, Amos Otis is not a superstar. Not yet, anyway. But he's doing quite nicely, all the same. Through the Royals' first six-game homestand, which ended Sunday, Otis hit safely in all but two games. He reached base in all but one. He also was a base-runner in all 15 exhibition games year. I don't want to set a .300 batting average as a goal, but that's the dream of every hitter." "I don't set any goals," he says, "but I like to have a balanced EUROPE FORUM April 16 at 7:00 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room A representative from Maupintour will answer your questions. Does it hurt to chill beer twice? Not that you'd want to. Sometimes it just happens...like after a picnic, or when you bring home a couple of cold 6-paks and forget to put 'em in the refrigerator. Does rechilling goof up the taste or flatten the flavor? Relax. You don't have to worry. A really Yes? good beer like Budweiser is just twice. We're mighty glad about that. We'd hate to think of all our effort going down the drain Burdweiser Burdweiser Burdweiser just because the temperature has its ups and downs. You can understand why when you consider all the extra trouble and extra expense that go into brewing Bud $ ^{\circ} $ . For instance, Budweiser is the only beer in America that's Beechwood Aardvark. wood Aged. So...it's absolutely okay to chill beer twice. No? Enough said. (Of course, we have a lot more to say about Budweiser. But we'll keep it on ice for now.) Budweiser is the King of Beers. (But you know that.) ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. * ST. LOUIS * NEWARK * LOS ANGELES * TAMPA * HOUSTON * COLUMBUS * JACKSONVILLE NEVER LOST NEW YORK (UPI)—The late Rocky Marciano is the only heavyweight in the history of professional boxing to compile a perfect record. The Rock won all of his 49 pro bouts. Apr. 14 1970 KANSAN 9 SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS The Carriage Lamp Private Club invites you to dine and dance to the sound of the ✩ Paul Dahlstrom Trio ✩ Friday & Saturday The aftermath of fire . . . This unpleasant scene was one of many to be found in the wake of a fire that swept through the Kappa Sigma fraternity house early Saturday morning. The fire is thought to have been caused by faulty wiring. Most of the fraternity members have since relocated to other fraternities and apartments. Anti-war march starts week-long activities The Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) met Saturday to discuss plans concerning National Anti-War Week April 13-18 and the march rally April 15 in Kansas City, Missouri. SMC has asked KU students who plan to attend the Kansas City rally to meet at 11:30 a.m. in front of Fraser Hall. From there, the students will march to "O" Zone where cars and buses will leave for Kansas City at noon. Bus tickets can be purchased at the SMC office in the Kansas Union for $2.50. On campus anti-war activities will include anti-war movies shown today at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union and at 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the Union's Big Eight room. Movies will also 10 KANSAN Apr. 14 1970 A panel discussion will also be held today entitled, "Vietnam: U.S. Imperialism?" at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union. Panelists will include: Bruce Molholt, assistant professor of microbiology, and Gus diZerega, Wichita special student. be shown Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. in the Union's Forum room and at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Templin Hall's cafeteria. The march in Kansas City will begin at 1:30 p.m. at Washington Square Park, at Pershing Road and Grant Avenue, and will proceed through the downtown area to Parade Park. The main speaker a the 3 p.m. rally will be Lee Weiner of the Chicago Seven. Other speakers will include SMC, Kansas City War Tax Resistance, Kansas City High School Coalition, National Welfare Rights organization and Vietnam veterans. For Students on the Go, We're TOP5 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 The relocation of 55 Kappa Sigma members from the charred and soaked remains of their house to the Theta Kappa Epsilon and Sigma Nu fraternities is nearly completed. Kappa Sig relocation almost completed The fire that emptied the sleeping members from the house was first noticed by Andy Budka, Amsterdam, N.Y. freshman, sometime before 5 a.m. Saturday morning. Since that early dawn hour, when the 55 men evacuated the burning, smoke-filled fraternity house, the Interfraternity Council has gone into high gear arranging for housing and clothing and providing for book and note replacements. Presently nearly one-third of the Kappa Sigmas are housed at the Theta Kappa Epsilon house and another third are at the Sigma Nu fraternity house. The remaining one-third of the members had previously signed apartment contracts but are currently in the process of dissolving those contracts in order for them to move into the fraternities. Officials of the Kansas Union Bookstore have arranged to loan used text books at no charge for the remaining of the semester, at which time the Union would reclaim the books. Andersen said new books would be leased to the Kappa Sigs at nominal prices. Along with the book offers, offers of class notes have poured in. Both of the fraternities housing the Kappa Sigs have offered them all of their notes, as have numerous other fraternities. Meanwhile, the Dean of Men's office said they would help in any way they could and offered their assistance in informing faculty members of their situation. Dave Andersen, Wichita junior and Interfraternity Council president, said that the Kappa Sigs had decided to stay together as much as possible. "They were separated at Templin and felt that they would rather retain their identity as a fraternity by living together." Andersen said Twenty of the 55 men lost everything in the blaze. Of those 20, seven men had no insurance at all. Because of that, Andersen is writing letters to all 28 presidents of KU Fraternities. reminding them to check their house insurance to make sure they are up to date. Individual members are being reminded to check with their parents for house insurance "rider" policies which would cover personal belongings while they are away from home. The future of the structure however remains nebulous until the house's insurance company estimates damages. ATTENTION SENIORS AND GRAD STUDENTS Union Central Life Insurance Company Offers Opportunities In Sales and Management Training. Salary Plus Commission Basi For Any Degree. Interviews Wednesday, April 15. Sign up 202 Summerfield Norelco can shave you closer than a blade, and count how many times it does it. 18 shave counter 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18 shaves. On a single charge. The Norecto Rechargeable Tripleheader Shaver was made to do two things: To shave you as close or closer than a stainless steel razor blade. And to give you up to twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable shaver. Here's how it works. 1. 2. B The Rechargeable Tripleheader has 18 self-sharpening rotary blades, inside of 3 Microgroove $ ^{ \ast} $ shaving heads. They go in where your face curves in, and out where your face curves out. And because the blades are rotary, they shave your beard in every direction at once. (If you don't think that means anything, feel your face. Feel how your beard grows in different directions on different parts of your face?) The heads actually float, to follow the curves of your face. The Norelco Tripleheader also has a pop-up trimmer, so you can see exactly what 一、用牙签挖出硬质食物,放入嘴里。 you're trimming. It has a Charge Indicator that lights up when it's charging. It has a Shave Counter to count your shaves And it gives you nearly twice as many shaves per charge as any other unit. So if you're shaving with a blade, feel around your chin and neck and upper lip. If it feels like you could use a closer If it feels like you could use a closer shave, get yourself a Noregon Rechargeable yourself a Noreico Rechargeable. And give yourself what you need. And shave your whole face for a change Norelco Norelco you can't get any closer 1970 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York. N.Y. 10017 GRADUATING SENIORS - CANDIDATES FOR MASTERS & DOCTORATE DEGREES - FACULTY 2 DAYS Tuesday-April 14 Wednesday-April 15 Left To Order Your Caps & Gowns Your Order For A Cap & Gown Must Be Submitted On Or Before April 15th At The Information Counter In The Kansas Union From 10:00 a.m. To 4:00 p.m. County reports no additional cases Condition of meningitis victim unchanged Gene Vaughn, 17-year-old Baldwin High School senior, was still listed in poor condition Monday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he has been hospitalized since Wednesday with spinal meningitis. Dale Clinton, Douglas County health director, said no new evidence of meningitis in Douglas county had emerged as of Monday. Baldwin area schools which were ordered closed Thursday and Friday as a preventative The KU Latin American Festival staged by students from 18 different countries will be held Friday, April 17, in Westminster Center. The festival is being sponsored by the Latin American Club. Robert Ortiz, Pemberton, N.J., freshman and chairman of the social committee, said that the festival will begin at 6 p.m. with an exhibit of handcrafts from Latin American countries. A parade of the flags, in which students wearing their native costumes will carry their national flags, will open the program. measure were reopened Monday. Students from Trinidad and Guyana will present musical themes from their land, and Mariachis from Mexico will be Latin American club to sponsor festivities Clinton said there were still no clues as to where Vaughn contracted the disease. included in the program. Dances from the Dominican Republic, Peru, Bolivia and Colombia will be performed by students from these countries. A pageant contest to select Miss Latin KU will follow the musical skits. Candidates are Livia Mendez from Venezuela, Silvia Diaz from Panama, Lily Chan from Venezuela and Ana Maria Lopez from Peru. Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, will crown the elected queen. A Latin American night, including music from all the Latin American countries and the United States is scheduled for after the festival. The admission fee is $1.50. Members of the Latin American and International Clubs will be admitted free. Vaughn attended a 4-H Club Days event at Eudora April 4 along with about 125 youngsters. Those who had close contact with him were sent home from Lawrence schools until Monday. Clinton explained the disease as an inflammation of the spinal cord coverings. It is contagious and can be spread through the air, such as by coughing or drinking after an infected person. The incubation period is 4 to 5 days. He said there were three types of meningitis—meningococcal or spinal meningitis, which affects the spinal cord; encephalitis, sometimes referred to as sleeping sickness, which affects the brain; and pneumococcus, a generalized infection affecting the spinal cord and brain. The symptoms are described as sore throat, headache behind the eyes, fever, stiff neck and sometimes vomiting. Bacterial types of meningitis usually can be treated with antibiotics. Clinton said Vaughn had the bacterial type. A congressional investigation held last month looked into charges that recruits there were overworked and susceptible to the disease. Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., has reported 38 cases of meningitis and four deaths attributed to the disease since last October. The subcommittee, headed by Rep. Richard Ichord, D-Mo., toured the base and reported that the Army was doing everything possible to curb infection and care for the ill. Rep. Durward Hall, a physician and a member of the committee, said meningitis was a recurring problem of close-quarter living, about which there was insufficient knowledge and no effective total prevention. McCluer High School in St. Louis had a meningitis scare early last month when one of its teachers, Mrs. Burman Dyer, contracted meningitis. Archimedes was a noted Greek mathematician and inventor. GET TOGETHER WITH FRIENDS AT THE ROCK CHALK CAFE SOUP & LUNCH SPECIAL SANDWICH 50c Home of the world famous TRUCK STOP. Santee seeks funds for portrait A group of former track athletes from the University of Kansas are trying to solicit funds to buy a painting of Bill Easton, former KU track coach, said former KU track star Wes Santee Monday. The painting will be presented to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. during Kansas Relays Weekend. Santee said he and his group would present the painting to the chancellor at 3:30 p.m. Friday, April 17, in Chalmer's office. "Chalmers said he would see that a painting of Easton would Students oppose troop withdrawal PITTSBURG (UPI) — Students at Kansas State College Monday voted 671 to 598 against an immediate withdrawal of troops from Vietnam. The poll was taken as part of a nationwide referendum and was sponsored at Pittsburg by the Campus Committee for Peace. Members of the group plan to participate in an anti-war march and rally Wednesday in Kansas City. 12 KANSAN Apr. 14 1970 THE WORLD'S TODAY SHOW RECORDING BARBRA STREISAND FUNNY GIRL OMAR SHAIRF Featuring Don't Blame on My Parasite People You Are Woman I Am Man The Swan Roller Skate Rag Funny Girl L'd Rather Be Blue Over You My Man THE ORIGINAL SOUND FANCE RECORDS BARBRA STREISAND FUNNY GIRL OMAR SHARIF Featuring Don't Rain on My Parade People You Are Woman I Am Man The Swan Roller Skate Rag Funny Girl I'd Rather Be Blue Over You My Man On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ch hang in a very prominent place to pay tribute to Easton for his years of service to KU," said Santee. "We are asking for contributions of $5 and $10 to cover the cost and will make a detailed report of contributions for those who participate," said Santee. Dwight Boring* says... I. M. BURRINGTON "Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you in on THE BENE-FACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men." 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 *Dwight Boring representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA the only Company selling exclusively to College Men PEOPLE TO PEOPLE For Birds of a Different Feather! Both American and Foreign Students Can Take Advantage of Our Discussion Groups and English Tutoring Programs. Call or Leave a Message with the PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE office in the basement of the Union Building. UN 4-3853 Lawrence labor tieups continue The present unsettled labor situation in Lawrence has resulted in the delay of construction and construction bids in Lawrence and at the University of Kansas. The labor tieups are now entering their second week. A spokesman for the Association of General Contractors of Northeast Kansas (AGC), said that negotiations are progressing. Reasons for the dispute were unobtainable from the AGC, although there is a known pay increase being asked from the striking unions. In Lawrence, the Carpenters Union, Local No. 2270, and the Laborers Union, Local No. 1290, are still arguing their demands. A meeting was scheduled Monday with the Carpenters Union to negotiate demands and a meeting is slated for Wednesday with the Laborers Union for the same purpose. There is no indication, according to the AGC, when settlements with these two unions could be reached. In Lawrence, construction bids for the West County plant building have been postponed until a settlement can be reached. Bids for the West Company, involving the construction of a 110,000 square-foot plant, were supposed to be received by architects on April 14. Don Robertson, Lawrence architect, said he had notified potential bidders that because of an "unresolved labor situation," there would be a delay in the calling for the bids. Last year, the West Company made plans to build facilities in Lawrence for the manufacture of disposable plastic devices used in medical related fields. The single-story structure will be located Ecology issues related in anti-war week talk The relationship between ecology and the Vietnam war were discussed Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union as a part of National Anti-War week. Only 25 students attended the discussion. James Koevenig, associate professor of botany and biology, and Philip Wells, associate professor of botany, spoke to the small group of students before the discussion was opened to debate and questions. Koevening said it was important to relate issues such as ecology, population control, race relations and the war so that they could be combatted. These issues, he said, are intertwined and stem from each other. Koevening said that Japan and the United States were the only countries that had not signed an agreement outlawing defoliants, nerve gas and tear gas. He warned of the effects of the defoliation campaign in Vietnam. Some of the chemicals being used, he said, could cause birth deformities, as well as other damage. Koevenig said the United States has a supply of anthrax, a devastating chemical. Anthrax was spilled on an island near Scotland during World War II and the island is still unsafe. The same thing has happened in Utah, he said. Wells spoke of his experience in Camp Dietrich, where United States chemists were growing rust that could kill wheat. "Doctor Strangelove isn't so strange. There are lots of scientists working on fiendish projects," Wells said. Apr. 14 1970 KANSAN 13 THE ORIGINAL SOUND TRACK RECORDS FUNNY GIRL BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF Featuring Don't Rain on My Parade People You Are Woman, I Am Man The Swan Roller Skate Rag Funny Girl Id Rather Be Blue Over You My Man THE ORIGINAL SOUND TRACK RECORDS FUNNY GIRL BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF Featuring Don't Rain on My Parade People You Are Woman I Am Man The Swan Roller Skate Rag Funny Girl Id Rather Be Blue Over You My Man On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Mall's Shopping Ctr Lawton said that he had no idea when agreements would be reached in the dispute. Negotiations are going on now, he said, and it is hoped they would be settled. But, he said, KU is not a part of the negotiations. Koevenig said that population control was important because a stable population would lessen the chance of war. Robertson has not stated how long construction may be delayed because of the dispute or when the bids may be called for. R. Keith Lawton, vice chan- north of the Santa Fe industrial area, northwest of the city. Wells said that our economy of boom and bust was breeding inflation because there has not been a bust since the depression. We need to reach an economic equilibrium rather than this steady growth, he said. cellor for operations at KU, said the labor tieup has resulted in the picketing of present construction work at the University. Principally involved is the construction of the space technology building. WANT A PLACE TO DO YOUR SPRING THING? TRY the Lounge THE LOUNGE THE LOUGE AT HILLCREST BILLIARDS S.W. CORNER OF HILLCREST BOWL 9TH AND IOWA BUDWEISER ON TAP OF COURSE Our Famous 30,000 mile Sandals Tire Tread Soles Are Guaranteed For 30,000 Miles REAL BRASS HANDMADE REAL BRASS HANDMADE Top Grain Leather Long Lasting Sole $8.95 Sizes 7 - 12 McCoy shoes 813 Mass. St. V13-2091 Top Grain Leather Long Lasting Sole $8.95 Sizes 7 - 12 McCoy shoes Panhellenic to revamp system By ANN MORITZ Kansan Staff Writer An overhaul of the sorority rush system is one of the primary items on the agenda for the Panhellenic Council in the future, said Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and Council president. The sorority rush chairmen met this week to discuss the first steps in this revamping process. They will be connected with the house presidents and a committee of those interested in bringing about needed change in the rush system at KU. A meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. KANSAN Women Since the rush system next fall will be on a smaller scale than this spring, it will be a good time to experiment with new ideas, Miss Hoefer said. Panhellenic is now working with two additions which will continue operating next fall. Miss Hoefer said. They are the Council for Cultural Affairs and the Philanthropic Committee. The first group consists of the cultural affairs chairmen from each house which will sponsor speakers and 14 KANSAN Apr. 14 1970 other events to create a cultural intellectual atmosphere in the sororities along with the expanding campus, she said. The philanthropic committee will coordinate the money set aside from projects in sororites for humanitarian purposes. The idea of a senior annex to the houses' membership has been discussed because most University women eligible for rush during the school year will be living in dormitories under a new year long contract, Miss Hoefer said. She said it will be more difficult for the houses to fill their quotas and keep them filled. There has been discussion about senior women living outside the sorority houses. Because of financial difficulties under the present system, it may be some time before seniors may live out of their houses for any reason but academic or personal financing, she said. Panhellenic Council may reach Theater group presents plays The Treteau de Paris, a touring theater group, will present two plays by Ionesco, "Les Chaises" and "La Leçon" today at 8:20 p.m. in the University Theatre. Three professors of French, Kenneth White, Anne Lacombe and Brigitte Desrues, will conduct an introductory colloquium to the plays today at 4:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union. Tickets, which are priced at $2.80,$2 and $1.40,are available in the Theatre Box Office. 1896-1970 The girls girl watchers watch dig our watchworks .. Country House Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown VL3-5755 a standstill in its liberalizing attitudes, Miss Hoefer said. The extent to which it can effect its ideas is bound by the national organization of each sorority. "There is a strong Panhellenic spirit at KU," she said. "We're more progressive than most and are nationally recognized as one of the finer Panhellenic Councils," she said. But she said the council is somewhat restricted in its activity in the individual houses. Collegiate representation in the national governing bodies of the sororities is virtually non-existent, Miss Moefer said. The National Panhellenic Council has remedied the situation somewhat by starting an organization for college age members of Panhellenic, but it began two weeks after the national convention last year, she said. Any recommendations of the organization will be held over until the next National Panhellenic Conference. GET TOGETHER WITH FRIENDS AT THE COOL CAPER GARLAND, Tex. (UPI)—There are times during a hot summer when money is not the most important thing. Officials of the First National Bank in Garland reported a robbery in which the thieves took only a half-ton window air conditioner. ROCK CHALK CAFE LUNCH SPECIAL SOUP & SANDWICH 50c Home of the world famous TRUCK STOP BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES MAJORS! Undergraduate Teaching Assistantships are available for next fall in the new Biology Dept. and certain undergraduate lab courses in biology. - Salaries start at $500.00 per semester. - Approx, ten hrs./week and enrollment in Bio. 83 (Laboratory instruction, 2 hrs.) is required. - Obtain application forms in Biology Office, 249 Snow. - Deadline for application: April 24,1970 Loch Lomond Bridge IN EUROPE, THE COST OF TRAIN TRAVEL IS STRICTLY ACADEMIC. First, we have a variety of low-cost plans that are available only in North America. The last paragraph tells you about these. Then you can save both time and money by using the trains as your overnight accommodations for far less than your train ticket plus overnight hotel accommodation costs. We're not trying to tell you that it's free. Simply that train travel is geared to your needs. The European railroads cover Europe like a vast intercontinental urban transportation system. There's virtually no where that isn't on our map. Europe's railroads are clean, and very comfortable indeed. And they are fast, frequent and punctual. If your interest in touring Europe is more than academic, your Travel Agent has all the details of the money-saving plans offered to Americans: Eurailpass, Eurailtariff, Eurailgroup, British BritRail Pass and ThriftRail coupons. For further information on rail travel, write to: European Railroads, Dept. 3, Box 54, Madison Square Station, New York,N.Y.10010. COLLEZIONE DI ARTE CIVILA WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the mandatory Kansas are offered to all students; Kansan is accorded to color, creed, or national origin. Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Edition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 140 St. FOR SALE Audio Discount—your A.R., Dynaco, and Revco dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Norelco tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 4-24 Northwestern golf clubs for sale—4- 12, $159.00 bag for sale—3 breares—7 Call 842-5378, 4-14 1966 Flat Roadster-5 - speed, white with black interior. $1,000. 842-219-1910 Harley Sportster—XLH, Perfect condition, bags, windshelf $1100. See Ron, Apt. 1, 1726 Kentucky, between 6:30-8:00 evenings. All day weekend Office furniture - desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, desk tissue, collating included, dual extra chairs Typewriter - 700 Mass, 843-3644, tf 1966 GTO Convertible—yellow with black top and interior—4 spd., deluxe wheel covers, Motorola speakers and stereo tape hook-up $1500. 842-2191. 1967 VW Super Bug--silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., racing suspension, stereo speakers and hook-up, good tires $1500 842-219. 4-14 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRS, beautiful British racing green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelinix tires. $1800. 842-2191. 4-14 1959 Triumph TR-3, metallic blue with white top, bug eyes, good tires, wire wheels, needs interior work. 842-2191. 4-14 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III, white with black top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition, $2300. 842-2191. 4-14 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white top, fully equipped, good tires, $1400, 842-2191. 4-14 1965 MGB. British racing green, ex- tained overhaulied transcreen. $1400. 824-3219. 4-14 1962 Austin-Healey Sprite, white with interior, new tires. $800, 42-43, 4-14 1964 Trilump TR-4, British racing green horse $120 842-2191 excelled 842-2191 Custom designed, multi-purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. Economic purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design approve) or bureau (Inl).袋 577.5 lbs. assorted weights. Call J.B. at 843-2103. 4-15 63 Rambler 660—Classic V-8 wagon. Clean, runs good, good gas mileage, new tires and spare. Must sell-all- bids considered! Inquire: Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. At 6:00 p.m., KI 2-2382. 4-20 1969 Bultaco 200ce, 1.800 miles, Trail or street bike 842-5492, 5:00-7:00 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tf $125.00! 1964 Corvair. Must sell to higher bidder soon. Engine and general mechanics good. Bad seat covers shufflers; off color four-corall 5267 5267 Silverstone 60 watt piggyback guitar or amplifier, like new. $60. Also excellent solid black folk guitar. 713 W-25th. N, O or call 843-7939. Yamaha Classic guitar w/case. Excel- cet keyboard. $60. Contact Mary B, 842-7458. 1965 GTO, 389 + cubic inch, 3/4 cam, blue, white interior, 4 speed, 1500 miles on a rebuilt engine. $1500.00 Doug Pierce. 843-7863. 4-17 Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv. Galerie Bridal AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Delicious steaks, Russian Steganoff prepared in a way to satisfy even the hungriest! Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 1964 red Valant convertible. Call 843-7017. 4-15 The wholesale used car market is down. You can save between $50 and $100 by buying now. 68 Corvair, 73 Chevy, 92 Toyota, 4-door, automatic, air, TS/TB, Ride and drive this one. $795. '63 Corvair, automatic. See it. $255. '64 Fairlane Motors wagon, diem, $55 Thomas Motor, DX Station, 6th and Michigan. 4-17 Stircoe tape deck, 2 sets of speakers, tapes; tapes $40.00 each, all the latest, 2 band new 775-14 wide tracks, w.w. TV, $15.84 842-8933. 4-17 Come by the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St., April 17, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., 8th-12 p.m., for delicious baked goods and interesting rummage. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 4-17 Framus 12-string guitar Like new Framus 12-string $135 Call John Brown, 843-645-3938 843-645-3938 Sacrifice: 869 Dutton 2000 Spt. Conv. OHC-135hp engine, 5-speed, mag- wheels w/radial tires, many extras. Call 842-7613 after 6 p.m. 4-17 Bluepoint Slames kitten, 10 weeks old, trained, good with children. 1959 VW, new tires, good paint, 25 miles since complete overhaul. 842-192-9 '63 VW—rebuild engine just installed, good tires, excellent performer all its little blue life. $450. Call 843-5353. +4/15 TR-4' 64 original owner, Red-Black Top-Wire wheels. Excellent condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Aabarth. Bendix electric fuel pump, fog lights, detailed service history. Best offer over $1200. 843-6659. 4-20 Elegant white formal Worn once Size nine Call 842-0534 4-26 1965 GTO. Good condition, good tires. 1964 GTO. Good condition, good tires. 0254. 1733 West 24th. Apt. 24. 4-20 0254. 1733 West 24th. Apt. 24. 4-20 NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for winner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. LP 3-4032. 5-14 315 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you go there, you will be able to pick up this is the place to get some Ribs. Chicken, Brisket is our special treat. I went to Vicki's V-2 4510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday tt Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world, like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations. 19 W. 9th. 4-17 Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous. Lepidoptera Creations, W 9th, 4-17 Students of Objectivism—meets every Monday, 7.30; Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rask If desire information, call 842-6210 5.30. 4-17 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the following STABLES in them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfasts, lunches, and dinner. The Stables stands for Bud, fun, and See You Later. LA PETITE GALERIE Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring. Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer fun. tf Rallye: Strip Tease Rallye, Malls Shopping Center, April 17, 1970. For information, call John Himpel, Mike Bower, UN 4-4291. 4-17 Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00. 816: GRI-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N. Kansas City, M. 641164. Obligation. Fill form out in Date-Mate 4-242 New York Cleaners Raney Drug Stores 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 - Reweaving For the best in: - Dry Cleaning - Alterations Attention married students and faculty. Interested in Social Nudism? For details write P.O. Box 5212, Topeka, Kansas 66065. 4-17 Want some Action!!! There will be plenty the week of April 19-24. That's Spring Fling Week—pienics, undressing contest, pie eating contest, greased pig catching contest, and lots more, so join in the fun. 4-17 Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders near downtown. Phon 843-5767. FOR RENT 3 locations to serve your every need There's a new bar in town. Look for the bright red Cellar Door-under the Bierstur-14th and Tenn. 4-17 Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass. Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. For summer rent—June 1-August 25 Beautiful 3-level townhouse on 3rd Golf Course completely furnished, three bedrooms ²₂ baths. Call 842-884-84 Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to Alvamar. live in houses a jae-tent and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. valuable to famers. studios, rugs from $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms from $240; luxury apartments and town houses. David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGow Agency: 843-2055. tf Complete lines of cosmetics toiletries Modern 1 bedroom apartment for summer or longer, air conditioned, furnished. 4 blocks from campus, 100/month, 842-0002. 4-14 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let. Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs from July 8th. W 8th Terr. $49. 842-5446 before 4 p.m. except Wed. and Thurs. Complete prescription departments and fountain service. Modern furnished or unfurnished 1 bedroom apartment—2 block from private parking, great or otherwise suitable and next year. Car 842-7527 evenings. For rent June 1-2-bedroom furnished apartment; air conditioned, pool; reasonable rent; ideal location—one block from Call 842-5727. 4-16 One bedroom furnished apt, newly remodeled, carpeted, all tile bath and shower, near campus. Lease summer or longer ($115.00). Call 842-8024. 4-15 One bedroom furnished apartment at Bedroom Terrace. Call 843-1433-45 842-133-45 4-15 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. bedroom, bedrooms, furniture drapes, wiener carpeting, conditioning, sound conditioning, all electric Frigidaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces, laundry room, laundry room, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, area, location, surprisingly inexpensive, so these luxury apartments days and weeks at MALLS OLDE VILLAGE. LAUDON, 843-3552 4-20 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and equipped with air-conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage. Pool On-site. See them today at 10am 24th, 842-1260. 4-20 LOST Class ring in front of Union. Call 6009, ask for Paul, room 313. ward. 12 Prescription sunglasses with brown frame in a black case. Vicinity of Blake Hall. Contact David, room 765 McCollum Hall. 842-660-2500. Reward. Checkbook, westernScene printed on paper. In 914, 842-6600. Reward Kathy in 914, 842-6600. Reward 14 Black-framed glasses in Yuk Down night. Return Call George-4 842-974-1 Your headquarters Ladies' yellow gold Tissot watch, April 8th between Strong Hall and Potters Lake. Reward. Call collect Overland Park at DU1-1385. 4-16 Pair of black acetate gloves withzippers. Reward. Call 842-5752 evenings 4-14 SHAW AUTO SERVICE Large brown purse stolen from a parked car in O Zone, April 9, between 10:30-11:30 am. Nancy Jameson will pay a high reward for valuable and use it contained a lot of information. Call 843-7711, Rm. 304 South Corbin Hall. 420 W. 11th St. No questions asked. 4-15 WANTED Lost April 9. Medium large 5-month-old puppy. Black with white undersides and forepaws. Danny Rees, 1614 Kentucky. No phone. 4-17 $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license, No. T2T3PL No questions. Phone 846-3684 and ask for me. 4-16 Traveling companion for the summer: touring western U.S. 842-6599 4318 4th girl to share house $60 a month, utilities paid 917 Maine 842-5758 Female roommate for summer to share 2 bedroom mobile home Air-conditioned Swimming pool $400 After 8:00 p.m. UN4-2563 After 8:00 p.m. U4-2442 -4-17 People who enjoy light and dark beer on tap, peanuts, and a friendly atmosphere. The Cellar Door—under the Bierstur, 14th and Tenn. 4-17 PERSONAL Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. ff Uunle Sam is alive and unhappy with the money we've saved our clients. Group Tax, 8011 Mass., Returns $4.00 and up tt Whoever liberated my blue leather shoulder bag in the Union lobby should know where I am and goodies, but please return the ID cards and glasses! No questions asked—just leave them at Naimuth Hall with a note for Linda. 616 4-17 Baha'i—the promise of all religions. TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and picatype available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil drawings and duplication with delivery offered. Call 842-3591 or 842-6562 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typers, programmers, paperwriter Plea ee. Competent. Mrs Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service: 5-15 for 66 Be Prepared! tune-ups Tony's 66 Service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 miDAS° Lawrence, Kansas 66044 mufflers and THE HITE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time Phone Order Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We'll戒九& III. Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 845-3281. Mrs. Ruckman HELP WANTED Married couple, grad, or teaching for Minnesota girls camp. Each exp, in one area, tennis, rifley, theatre cane-wading. 842-0587 4-14 Cook wanted. Apply in person at Krazy Karl's, 1811 West 6th. 4-20 Need part-time help at Royal College Shop. Experience and references necessary Apply in person. 837 Mass. 4.90 SERVICES OFFERED BUY, SELL OR TRADE Your KU LD. is worth $1,00 off on the Group Tax. 801.9 Mass $4,00 and up Group Tax. 801.9 Mass $4,00 and up SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Nationwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate. Current. In-house office address. Sr. Socio- cioccon. Box 101. Harvard University. P.O. Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Time to get your spring and summer wardrobe ready. Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-17 Moving To Kansas City? Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf SEE SEE CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS Studios $145 1. Bdrm $160 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm. 2 Bdth. $185 2 Barm., 2 Baths $185 3 Barm., 2 Baths $230 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN CLUBHOUSE POOL Open Daily 9 Till Dark S.E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. E Lenexa, Kansas Phy. 913-888-6599 S. E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit CHARTER HOUSE Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN AND COOP OP 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 K COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 BUTTERFLY RIDE Let Maupintour PLANNING A TRIP?? TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center Early With Us VI 3-1211 Crew 'OK' after space abort (Continued to page 16) (Continued to page 16) But it soon became apparent the Odyssey's supporting service module had been severely damaged by the mysterious failure. In three hours it was dead. Lovell and Haise quickly turned their attention to the lunar module and fought to control the ship's tumble so they could use its lunar landing guidance equipment to steer the pilots back home. "Why the hell are we maneuvering," barked Haise when the big tandem spacecraft rolled and bucked as it continued to speed toward the moon. "I can't take that doggone roll out," replied Lovell. Later the pilots managed to activate the lunar lander's control rockets and settle the ship down. They owed their lives to the hundreds of quick-reacting controllers and the spindly landing craft that fortunately still was latched to the nose of the command ship Odyssey. Had it not been there, the pilots would have died. The explosion apparently ruptured one of the ship's fuel cell power generators and an oxygen tank, rapidly spewing oxygen into space. Without that oxygen, the generators could not run and the command ship was powerless except for batteries that will be used for the re-entry into the atmosphere. Water is a minor problem for the Apollo 13 crew, which had only a 44-hour supply in the lunar module fuel cells with 77 hours remaining in the mission, a NASA spokesman said. The crew still has a 48-hour supply of water in its survival kits in the command service module, the spokesman said. This totals to 92 hours of water for drinking and food preparation if the flight can be brought down Fridav as planned. Food is no problem, the spokesman said, except that the crew may change its menu to use food which does not require water in preparation. There is no problem with oxygen. "We have 48 pounds of oxygen in the LM descent tanks which is more than adequate to do the mission," said James A. McDivitt, Apollo spacecraft program manager. Aquarius also had six batteries designed to support men on the "I think we'll have to be very frugal on how we use it," Kraft added. moon and in lunar orbit for two days—and McDivitt said this too was enough "to do the whole mission." Neil A. Armstrong, the first man on the moon, and Alan L. Bean, the latest man on the moon, conceded today the electrical failure on Apollo 13 "happened at a very good time if it had to happen." "Their concensus is that it gives the astronauts time to research the problem and do something about it as opposed to another part of the mission when they wouldn't have the time available to them," said a NASA official who talked to Armstrong and Bean. According to the latest figuring Lovell, Swigert and Haise will loop the moon tonight, fire the big landing engine again and speed back to a Pacific Ocean splashdown at 1 p.m. EST Friday. As soon as they were back on a good trajectory, the astronauts found time to worry about sleep. Controllers told Haise to sleep for six hours while Lovell and Swigert maintained a watch. Besides periling the three moon pilots, the failure wrecked expensive plans to carry out man's most ambitious exploration of the lunar surface. It was the nation's third moon landing mission and cost American taxpayers $375 million. It was America's fifth flight to the moon and the third landing expedition. The next mission, Apollo 14, is scheduled for launch Oct. 1. At their homes near the Manned Spacecraft Center, the wives of Lovell and Haise were worried but calm and confident their husbands would be safe. Swigert is a bachelor. Contract reached with union strike TOPEKA (UPI) — A new contract settlement was reached Monday with one of six striking construction unions that have almost entirely shutdown major building in the capital city area for the past two weeks. ABA's returned clearance sought Regent's letter- (Continued from page 1) newsletter to which Weiss took offense was not politically oriented. "There wasn't a damn thing political about it." Bubb said. "I'm not accusing him of anything." Bubb said referring to tc Weiss, "but I don't want to dignify him by starting a running argument with him." "I thought he was pretty damned narrow minded," Bubb said of Weiss. "I am not opposed to a professor teaching liberal or conservative thoughts. I think students should have both sides of the picture. Otherwise, a professor shouldn't be teaching students," Bubb emphasized. Wilson said he later received a telephone call from Bubb in which Bubb apologized for the incident and used the use of Regents stationery was a mistake. Governor Docking and the Kansas Attorney General were both aware of Bubb's letter. Wilson said. Weiss told the Kansan that following receipt of the letter, Paul Wilson, then president of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), wrote a letter to the Chairman of the Board of Regents. Weiss was contacted this morning by the Kansan but declined to comment on the issue. 16 KANSAN Apr.14 1970 WASHINGTON (UPI)—Shortly after President Nixon nominated Warren E. Burger as chief justice he abandoned the usual practice of clearing Supreme Court nominations with an American Bar Association (ABA) committee. In the aftermath of the Senate rejections of Nixon's next two nominees, ABA President Bernard G. Segal is seeking a meeting with Nixon to try to convince him to return to the method of his predecessors, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Segal testified Monday before the Senate subcommittee on improvements in judicial machinery that Nixon retained the old system of advance clearance with the ABA's committee on the federal judiciary for district and circuit court judges. But, he testified, Nixon specifically ruled it out for Supreme Court nominations. fied by the ABA committee even though they enjoyed "the strongest kind of political backing." If Nixon declines to return to the old system, Segal said, he will urge the ABA committee to change its method of rating Supreme Court nominees. Because Nixon kept advance clearance for the lower courts they have "been spared several judges" who were rated unquali- Carswell's was the first nomination to be considered under a new ABA system which allowed only two ratings—"qualified" or "not qualified." The old system admitted a third, "well qualified." "The Senate and the American people are entitled to more than a single world of classification," Segal said. Its rating, he said, should answer these questions: "Is he a man just barely qualified? Is he a man who makes your spirits soar?" The committee was severely criticized in rating G. Harrold Carswell of Florida "qualified" a few days after Nixon made the nomination Jan. 19 and before Carswell's 1948 white supremacy speech came to light. Tuesday Is Girl's Night Out 75c pitchers to all girls and their dates 7:30-9:00 The CELLAR Door Under the Bierstube - 14th and Tenn. IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE SUA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND KIEF'S BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. Style 3212 Style 4087 TEST WALK A PLYMOUTH. Try a 1970 model with all the fashion extras. Two shoes that really make it: the slip-on with side strap, handsewn vamp and V-8 style; the sports coup with brass studs and hinges, clog and tire sole. Make tracks now to your nearest Plymouth dealer. Or write Plymouth Shoe Company, Inc., Middleboro, Mass. ROBINSON SHOE CO., KANSAS CITY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.114 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, April 15, 1970 UDK News Roundup By United Press International Direct election opposed WASHINGTON—The Senate Judiciary Committee summoned presidential campaign chronicler Theodore H. White and Yale Law School Professor Alexander M. Bickel to testify today in opposition to direct popular election of the president. The committee is under an April 24 deadline to vote on sending to the Senate floor a proposed constitutional amendment eliminating the Electoral Collage. House subpoenas Medina WASHINGTON—A House armed services investigating subcommittee has subpoenaed Capt. Ernest L. Medina and five other men to testify today on the alleged My Lai massacre. The subcommittee, headed by Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La., reportedly issued the subpoenas over Army objections. It plans to question the three officers and three enlisted men about the alleged massacre of Vietnamese civilians in 1968. Five to seven days of hearings are scheduled. U.S. cautious in talks VIENNA—Diplomatic sources said today President Nixon has ordered a flexible but cautious line in the strategic arms limitation talks (SALT) with the Soviets opening Thursday. Apollo path set SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Apollo 13's indomitable astronauts successfully lined themselves up for a Friday splashdown in the Pacific Ocean Tuesday night, using a rocket engine that was never designed for the job. "That was a good burn," ground control told the space fliers moments after they fired the rocket blast that set their crippled moonship on its pinpoint path home. The estimated splashdown time for the pilots-James A. Lovell, John L. Swigert, and Fred W. Haise is 12:54 p.m. EST Friday The landing area will be about 600 miles southeast of Pago Pago in the South Pacific. Tension knotted the flight control room at Houston just before the burn. Flight Director Gene Kranz made the rounds of the crowded room, checking each control panel to determine whether all was "go" for the maneuver. The 4 minute 24 second blast was triggered at 9:12 p.m., and during the tense moments, ground control continued to assure the crew: "You're looking good!" The pilots used the descent engine of their Aquarius moon lander to maneuver themselves into position for their return to earth. Under normal circumstances, the Aquarius would have been jettisoned before they headed back to earth. Had it not been for the Aquarius on this trip, however, the Astronauts would have died. They used the little lunar lander as a sort of a lifeboat, utilizing it's oxygen and power, after a mysterious explosion knocked out the electrical current aboard their command ship, Odyssey, and spilled part of their life-giving oxygen. Before firing the rocket blast to line themselves up for the Pacific Ocean splashdown, the space pilots whipped around the back side of the moon and were slung back toward earth by the pull of lunar gravity. The pilots were their old, calm collected selves when they appeared from behind the moon no emotional statements, just more additional checkout of engineering figures. In an effort to save every bit of electrical power, the astronauts—now firmly in the grip of lunar gravity—are flying their harrowing mission in almost total silence, communicating with the ground only when necessary. But when they do come up on the radio network, their voices are steady and their statements matter-of-fact, reflecting none of the tenseness of the mission. (Continued to page 24) No state violation in Bubb's letter Richard Seaton, head of the Kansas Attorney General's Criminal Division, told the Kansan Tuesday that Henry Bubb's letter to a University of Kansas professor does not represent a conflict of interest. Bubb's letter to Tom Weiss, assistant professor of economics, concerned Weiss' account at Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association of which Bubb is president. The letter was written on Board of Regents stationery. "It was a letter that should not have been printed on Regents stationery, but it is not a violation of any state statute," Seaton said. Seaton said Weiss brought the letter to his office shortly after it was written last fall. "We discussed it," Seaton said, "and decided that there was no violation." "The letter is a matter of judgement and policy." Seaton explained. He added that the State Attorney General's Office plans no investigation. Experts debate fluoridation effects By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Two experts discussing the pros and cons of fluoridation of water supplies concurred Tuesday night that there was no resolution to the controversy which has prompted heated arguments for more than 40 years. Simon Katz, assistant professor of preventative dentistry at Indiana University, and Frederick B. Exner, a radiologist from Seattle, Washington, debated the merits and harmful effects of fluoridation before nearly 100 persons in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium. The debate was sponsored by Alpha Chi Sigma, a professional chemistry fraternity. Neither speaker was able to prove the points he attempted to make to support his argument. Each speaker accused the other of citing cases in which results had been falsified. Katz, a fluoridation proponent, said the National Research Council has conducted studies which show fluoride is necessary for proper development of bones and teeth. Proper brushing methods had never been proven as a means of preventing tooth decay, he added. He gave three basic reasons why fluoridation should be introduced into American water supplies. Using statistical evidence from the early 1960's, he said only half the population has ever seen a dentist, that the dental health of the nation is generally poor. There will be a shortage of 25,000 dentists by 1975, he added. Fluoridation, he said, will reduce the need for dental treatment, and will reduce the amount of money the American public will have to spend on dental care. He then cited several cases in which the number of cavaties have been reduced in communities where fluoridation had been introduced. Exner presented a case against fluoridation. There has not been sufficient study of the harmful effects of fluorine ingestion in the human body, he said. "Fluorine is more serious and difficult to control than any other becomes, by definition, he said, a drug. The air pollutant," he added. Water used for the prevention of tooth decay effects of fluorine ingestion on the human body were governed by total consumption, and there was no place to put warnings against misuse on drinking water, as there was on other drugs, Exner said. He showed slides of persons suffering from fluorosis, a disease in which the enamelproducing cells of the teeth are poisoned before the teeth are formed. Brown mottling of tooth surfaces results. He asserted if fluoride could poison cells, it might poison other cells which would not be detected. "Fluoride is a cumulative poison," he said. "It may take 40 years for damage to the body to show up." The burden should rest with the proponents of fluoridation to prove that no harmful effects would result, he added. Fluorine is usually added to water supplies in a ratio of one part per million. Exner said while most people drink a liter or two of (Continued to pane 24) (Continued to page 24) Fred G. Bardin Photo by Bruce Bernstein Frederick B. Exner The Seattle, Wash. radiologist, Frederick B. Exner, debated Simon Katz, Indiana University assistant professor of dentistry on the merits and harmful effects of fluoridation Tuesday evening in the Kansas Union Woodruff Audiiorium. KANSAS GELATS KANSAS I Photo by Randy Leffingwell The calm before the storm Memorial Stadium was cold and empty Monday and the hurdles were, of all places, in the stands. The scene will vastly change by Wednesday when spectators and competitors will converge on Lawrence for the 45th edition of the Kansas Relays. Fun in the Sun' week boasts many activities Mix several greased pigs, an undressing contest and a "bod passing" contest and what will you have? Simple, the offspring of Greek Week and Spring Fling which is now called "Fun in the Sun." Participants in the festivities, which take place from Sunday to April 25, will be independent organized living groups, social sororities and individual members of fraternities. The climax of the action will probably be at Potter Lake on April 25 when the games get under way. Some of these events are: the undressing contest (those taking part are urged to wear bathing suits beneath their clothing and undress only to their bathing suits); a race around the area on blocks of ice; the "bod passing" contest, in which guys will pass gals over their heads; a tug of war across the lake; pie eating competition and a greased pig catching contest. On April 19 there will be a picnic from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at Templin Hall. The highlight of the picnic should be a demonstration of the undressing contest. On April 22 there will be an ice cream social from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Joseph R. Pearson Hall. The time and place have not been arranged, but there will be a Spring Sing the evening of April 23. 2 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 ANDY WILLIAMS'GREATEST HITS Happy Heart Moon River The Hawaiian Wedding Song Born Free Days Of Wine And Roses and more ANDY WILLIAMS' GREATEST HITS Happy Heart Moon River The Hawaiian Wedding Song Born Free Days Of Wine And Roses and more On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. April 24 will be aluminum can collection day. Cans collected will be sold and the money collected will be used to provide scholarship funds. The events of April 25 will begin at 8 a.m. with a gymkhana in the Lewis Hall parking lot. At 10 a.m., a carnival and art sale will start on the deck of Spencer Library. These events will last until 5 p.m. Individual living units will sponsor the carnival booths. Because of the new class scheduling next year, the SUA plans to expand its travel help facilities at the University of Kansas, said Tony Mosiman, SUA travel chairman yesterday. SUA travel center expands Mosiman said the 1970-71 SUA Travel Center will be enlarged in order to bring travel information to the entire University. Along with this expansion, the SUA hopes to staff the center in the Kansas Union with student travel advisers who have had some travel experience. These advisers will have the opportunity to share their experience with other students and thus help them form their own travel plans, he said. Maupintour will maintain two direct telephone lines to their office from the Union in order to further assist students with completing their plans. Also, Mosiman said, the SUA will sponsor the second annual World Travel Fair in the fall in order to introduce the university New SUA board chosen for 70-71 The new Student Union Activities Board has been chosen and they are currently making arrangements to interview for the committee chairmen. The new board president is Jeffrey D. Lough, Salina junior; vice-president is Irv Robinson, Prairie Village junior; secretary is Sandie Eyman, Wichita sophomore, and treasurer is John Robinson, Prairie Village sophomore. The board members are Mike D. Miller, Pittsburg junior, festival; Ward Kiester, Basehor sophomore, films; Robert James Plehal, Hanover junior, fine arts; Kathy Nelson, Prairie Village freshman, forums; Richard Matzeder, Leavenworth sophomore, public relations; Norman Calvin Bos II, Hutchinson junior, recreation; Tony Mosiman, Sedgwick junior, travel, and Bob Johnson, Prairie Village junior, special events. The officers were chosen by the Union Operating Committee. The eight board members were chosen by a committee comprised of the new officers, the graduating seniors of the old board and several representatives of the Union Operating Committee. to the various travel opportunities available. Last fall's fair, which featured Bill Isler of Eurailpass, Dr. Leo Salovarro of Finland and Igor Damaskin of the U.S.S.R. Tourist Office; was well received by the University, he said. Job positions on the World Travel Fair staff and positions for Travel Advisors will be interviewed April 16th. All interested students should contact the SUA office or Tony Mosiman. Gardeners, Put down your hoe and attend KU's greatest annual event, The Relays Later, visit the Gardenland for lawn and garden Specialty Products. Gardenland 914 W. 23rd 842-1596 CollegeMaster No.1 in College Sales Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI 2-4650 FULICO CollegeMaster No.1 in College Sales Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI 2-4650 The Chili Bowl "Not the only Chili — Just the best" 1528 W. 23rd 842-8861 Homemade Chili Mexican Food Pure Choice Chuck Steak and California Pink Beans Mild and Dry style-mild, dry meat over beans Western Style-spicy meat and beans mixed wet Tamale Spread-Western chili over iumbo tamales Spaghetti Red-Western chili over spaghetti Chili-no beans-Mild and dry or Western meat Chili Dog-Western chili over frank Chili Burger-Mild meat on a bun FULL CARRY OUT Tacos Tostados Jumbo Tamales Burritos-cheese and onion Combination burritos-beans and chili meat Meat burritos-chili meat Frijoles-refried beans Drinks Soft drinks light or dark beer in chilled glasses Open 11 a.m. Blackmun selected from list of six Minnesota judge latest court nominee WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Nixon Tuesday nominated Harry A. Blackmun, a federal appeals judge from Minnesota, for the Supreme Court seat he has twice been unable to fill with Southern nominees. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the President "has a great respect for Judge Blackmun's legal ability and his judicial skill and his judicial temperament. "He considers Judge Blackmun a strict constructionist," Ziegler said. Ziegler said Blackmun was selected from a list of six candidates, all judges. The President met Friday for about 45 minutes with Blackmun and Attorney General John N. Mitchell. Ziegler said Blackmun had been under consideration earlier when Nixon selected Judges Clement Haynsworth and G. Harrold Carswell for the Supreme Court seat left vacant by the resignation of former Justice Abe Fortas. One of the Indians who led the invasion of Alcatraz prison will speak at the University of Kansas Thursday night. Adam Nordwall, a Chippewa Indian, will speak on "The Causation Factor of the Alcatraz Invasion" at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union ballroom. Leader of Alcatraz invasion to speak on Indian plight mun has been viewed as a moderate on civil rights and rather tough on criminal cases involving law and order. Nordwall was born at the Redlake Indian reservation in Minnesota. He attended Haskell Institute from 1945 until 1950. He also attended Pipestone Boarding School in Minnesota. Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 3 His active involvement in the plight of his people has given him the opportunity to testify before the U.S. Senate Committee and subcommittees. He has also made numerous appearances on television and radio. Nordwall is presently the chairman of the United Bay Area Council of American Indian Affairs, Inc. and he also chairs the United Council Scholarship Fund. On a leave of absence from a teaching position at San Quentin prison, where he was spokesman for the American Indian Cultural Group, he lectured at California State College at Haward. dent Hubert H. Humphrey. The Senate rejected the earlier nominations. "The President made his final decision regarding Judge Blackmun at about 10 a.m. following a review by phone with the Attorney General of relevant data," Ziegler said. Blackmun, a native of Nashville, Ill., grew up in St. Paul, Minn., and has been a friend since boyhood of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and was best man at Burger's wedding in 1933. He helped put himself through Harvard as an undergraduate and then through Harvard law school by tutoring in mathematics, as well as working as a milk truck driver and janitor. Later in his career he taught at the University of Minnesota law school. Blackmun, a Republican and a Methodist, was named as a federal judge by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1959 with the endorsement of former Vice-Presi- As a member of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals with headquarters in St. Paul, Black- Paul Ehrlich to speak at KU on dangers of overpopulation Paul Ehrlich, a University of Kansas graduate who has been involved in research aimed at saving the environment by population control, will speak at 8 p.m. April 28 in Allen Field House. The talk had originally been scheduled for Hoch Auditorium, but the anticipation of a crowd from 4,000 to 6,000 forced a change in plans, said Donald Crook, Wichita senior who is in charge of arrangements. In 1959, Ehrlich was a research associate in entomology at KU. Presently, he is a professor of biology and director of graduate study for the Department of Biological Sciences at Stanford University. There is a catastrophe, Ehrlich believes, in the near future if the world's rising birth rate continues on a collision course with its food supply. To avoid the calamity of such a disaster, Ehrlich would offer a subsidy of $500 a year to every woman of child-bearing age who does not give birth, eliminate income tax exemptions for children and impose "luxury" taxes on diapers, baby bottles and baby foods. His research conducted at Stanford with support from a $500,000 Ford Foundation grant sought to learn more about the physiological and psychological stresses that overcrowding imposes on people. Ehrlich himself, after becoming the father of one child, underwent a sterilization operation. His book, The Population Bomb is a standard text on ecology. He has written over 70 other scientific papers on the subject. WE'RE SUPPORTING YOU ALL THE WAY 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 KANSAN COMMENT From other campuses Gov. Kirk's schools From The FLORIDA ALLIGATOR University of Florida Gov. Claude Kirk is well on his way to becoming Florida's version of Pontius Pilate. When Kirk started his pursuit of the fear-hate vote, he was merely amusing. With the sword of state sovereignty in one hand and the shield of executive immunity in the other, we were entertained as Mighty Claudius salled forth against desegregation. Indeed, at one point he said he was teaching Florida children respect for the Supreme Court as he ostensibly defied it. But the tune changed early last week when Kirk suspended the Manatee County school board after that board attempted to implement court-ordered desegregation guidelines. Claude Kirk is no longer funny, he is dangerous. Kirk is dangerous for this reason: his actions are adding to the growing alienation of the black and white communities. The day is gone, furthermore, when the black community can be expected to be passive in the face of calculated insults. In addition, irrational members of the white community can be certain to take Kirk's actions as a cue to sound the war tocsin. His irresponsible actions could easily be greeted with riders in the night, cross burnings, mob action and other violent expressions endemic to the South Of course, Kirk has no expectations of over- ruling the U.S. District Court of Judge Ben Krentzman. Hopefully, no one can ascend to Krentzman's position without understanding the principles of American Federalism. He is, to be sure, fully aware that even a Justice Department led by John Mitchell could not allow Kirk's blatant disregard for legal process. Instead, Kirk hopes a federal marshall will be forced to order him from the schoolhouse door, in the most grandiose George Wallace tradition. His efforts are a simple ploy, designed for simple minds, that will garner him enough votes to insure his reelection. If, in the process, he is elevated from flamboyant politician to folk hero, he will not object. We hope Kirk can deliver a rational desegregation policy to Florida, and soon. If not, he should be prepared to take responsibility for any tragic results of his actions. He will not be allowed to shrug his shoulders and plead innocence during a racial war. As Pontius found, blood stains hands—indelibly. (Editor's note: Kirk said in a televised statement Sunday that he would allow Manatee County school officials to implement the desegregation plan. Kirk's action came after Krentzman threatened to fine him $10,000 a day for blocking the integration plan.) hearing voices— To the editor: I have written you because I have nowhere else to turn. They say the power of the press can work wonders. I am 21 years old. I was a student at KU in 1967. While there I received traffic tickets because I couldn't move my car out of a now restricted zone. I couldn't move it because I was laid up in the campus hospital due to an injury. I received $94 worth of traffic tickets. I didn't know anyone at the campus so I couldn't get anyone to move it. My dormitory counselor told me I wouldn't have to pay the tickets and not to worry about it. I didn't. I should have. Later that year after I had to leave the campus, a notice came for me to appear in campus court. Campus court doesn't use a jury. Three students sit on the bench, similar to the tribunals used in Eastern Europe. I could not appear as again I was hospitalized. They held the trial without me and decided I was guilty. I was mad. I respectfully refused to pay the fine. I have been barred from the University for over two years. Last year, I applied again for admission, was accepted and then about two weeks before classes started they again banned me until the tickets would be paid. They said they will also withhold my records from any potential employer. I wrote to my Congressman but he said he was a federal representative and could not be involved in a local matter. I am also drafting a letter to Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. The Kennedys have always tried to help my generation. I believe it would be not only unjust to pay these tickets but also immoral. It would be like paying blackmail. I have been pressured about the tickets. I have been told that principles are not that important. That it is only important to get an education and that I should pay. But I believe principles ARE important, and education should preserve principles, not destroy them. Have we not sacrificed 40,000 lives in Vietnam for principles? They wonder why students riot. I feel like rioting and I don't even wear long hair or a beard. Thomas Shadoin 806 Edgemere, Olathe $$ \* \* \* $$ To the editor: I offer my heartiest congratulations to the Student Union Activities Minorities Opinion Forum for hiring Abbie Hoffman to speak at KU. What a wonderful job of pimping! They succeeded in screwing 7,000 people for more than an hour and fifteen minutes. Think of it, more than an hour of verbal intercourse for less than 22 cents per person. Suzy Leary Stockton senior Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address. Letters policy Griff & the Unicorn SOKOLOFF IF THIS KEEPS UP, WE'LL HAVE TO MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND IF THIS KEEPS UP, WE'LL HAVE TO MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND I DON'T THINK THAT'LL DO IT... I DON'T THINK THAT'LL DO IT... $ \textcircled{C} $ David Sokoloff 1970 FEDERAL COURT SCHOOL INTEGRATION ORDER BOY KIRK ELORIDA ROSS BARNETT THE QUINCKE JOURNAL 'Atta boy, Claude. They never really get a governor for contempt of court.' Washington window Hope for returnees By GEORGE J. MARDER WASHINGTON (UPI)—The government is about to start a new program aimed at breaking a chain of ignorance which returns poorly educated veterans to ghettos they left for service in Vietnam. Studies find that unless the veterans from hard-core ghettos go back to school, they will end up just about where they started, with little or no prospects for better jobs than before their military service. Studies by the Senate Labor Committee also turned up what was described as disappointingly low use of educational provisions of the GI Bill of Rights. A much lower proportion of Vietnam veterans has been applying for college benefits than veterans of the Korean War or World War II. One reason was presumed to have been the level of educational benefits paid by the government during a time of soaring college costs. A single veteran going to college got an allowance of only $130 a month to pay for tuition, books and living costs. President Nixon proposed increasing the monthly allowance from the basic $130 a month to $147 a month. The House figured that wasn't enough and boosted it to $165, later to $170. The Senate, however, felt the same level of help should be given to Vietnam veterans that Korean and World War II veterans received and voted for a basic allowance of $190. The ensuing stalemate was finally broken in a House-Senate conference committee, which compromised on a $175 figure. Caught up in the stalemate—and part of it—was the program aimed at school dropouts. The Senate adopted three amendments, sponsored by Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., which created considerable opposition in the House. They provided: - That the Veterans Administration seek out school dropouts and encourage and counsel them to resume their education. - That pre-discharge refresher or remedial courses be offered such servicemen, with the government paying as much as $175 a month special tuition costs. - That special $50-a-month tutoring allowances be provided veterans in college who might be on the point of failing because of poor preparation, or who need special courses to graduate. The three amendments survived House opposition and were included—in only slightly altered form—in the final bill passed by Congress and signed into law by the President. 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 Adviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson Campus Editor ... Ted Iliff News Editor ... Donna Shraider Editorial Editors ... Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Reke Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnaham, Skye Swerver Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkens Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Sciences Editors ... Gena Richards, Natalie Geary Assistant Campus Editors ... Vicki Phillips, Nila Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffingwell 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 Shailah Bryan Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Lagos Member Associated Collegiate Press * FILMS: dance of life, dance of death ★★ By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Auto & Revision K Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" is an attractive title, and the movie itself is very attractive. It is about a dance marathon in the nineteen thirties, a human circus where the performers compete for cash—in this case fifteen hundred dollars to momentarily alleviate the depression. The action takes place entirely in the old Aragon Ballroom in Los Angeles. There, a grand procession of human misery is paraded before us, headed by the five main characters whose lives we follow during the course of the film: a rock-hard, emotionless young woman (Jane Fonda), an innocent, tosse-haired country boy (Michael Sarazin); a young British actress hoping to catch the eye of a Hollywood producer (Susanna York); and an aging sailor, the veteran of dozens of such marathons (Red Buttons). The spectacle is presided over by Gig Young as a fast-talking, world-heavy promoter, whose hollow "Yowsa, yowsa" perfectly sets the tone for the proceedings. To director Sidney Pollack must go the credit for the film's awesomely compelling quality; no American movie has ever been so physically manipulative of its audience. With just one set to work with, Pollack choreographs the drama remarkably well, sparing no effect to make us feel the punishment that the characters are taking. The story is put together like a piece of music, the quickening and slackening of pace, the raising and lowering of dramatic tension expertly timed. Each performance, too, is magnetic and powerful, especially those of Jane Fonda and Gig Young, as two very similar people, clawing to maintain a shred of human dignity in a brutal, chaotic world—of which the dance floor is a microcosm. Minor characters, such as Bruce Dern and Bonnie Bedeila as a southern redneck and his pregnant wife, and the dozens of nameless faces in the crowd provide superb vignettes and atmospheric details. But one cannot ignore the many irritations the picture gives, most of which can be attributed also to the director. The production is sometimes much too clever for its own good. Pollack takes evident pleasure in pummeling us with one emotional shock after another, and in serving up such a luscious platter of thirties physical detail. The costumes, the hairstyles, the advertisements along the rim of the dance floor are recreated with obvious care and relish—and they all shout, "Pay attention to me!" into the viewer's ear. There are many attempts at European artiness with clumsy flashbacks to the hero's boyhood on the farm, and a string of totally useless flash-forwards to the conclusion of the story. A mistake also is the final scene: aside from the strain it puts on the credibility of Miss Fonda's character (until then she never appears suicidal), it is wrong because it takes place outside the ballroom. After two hours of numbing claustrophobia, the Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 5 Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" Be entertained by United Artists Charles Chaplin "The CIRCUS" Be released through United Artists Plus segments of "FURTHER PERILS OF LAUREL & HARDY" Eve. 7:15 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:15 Adult 1.50, Child .75 THE HILLcrest scene seems tacked-on and the characters look out-of-place (An earlier moment, when Sarazin opens a door and looks at the sea, uses the outdoors more effectively; we can almost feel the fresh air rushing in). Objections like these pale in the face of the intense human conflict at the heart of the film. The participants struggle not against one another but against the absurd meaninglessness of their surroundings. "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" is not a happy movie; there is little laughter and no soothing sentiment; nothing to offset the gloom but the sharp-edged wit of the dialogue. "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" AIR What's wrong with that? HELD OVER . . . MOVED OVER Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:10 THE Hillcrest WINCHESTER SHOPPING CENTER & GARDEN HALF A TON AND TEN FEET TALL... ruler of the rockies! WALT DISNEY productions presents KING of the GRIZZLIES TECHNICOLOR Released by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. 1970 Walt Disney Productions Granada THEATRE ... telephone VI S-3788 STARTS TONIGHT! Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Adults 1.50, Child .75 JANE FONDA BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR GIG YOUNG THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GIG YOUNG, BONNIE REDELIA AND RED BUTTONS PRODUCED BY IRWIN WINNER AND ROBERT CHARTOFF DIRECTED BY SYDNEY POLLACK COLOR PAMVISION* Matinee Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15 - 9:35 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045 GP IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE SUA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND KIEF'S BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. KU Concert Course presents BALLET WEST Company of 50 1968 HOCH AUDITORIUM Thursday, April 16, at 8:20 p.m. Main Floor $3.50 - 1st Bal. $3.00 - 2nd Bal. $2.50 Tickets at Murphy Boxoffice (KU Students Admitted Free with I.D.'s) Teach-in to observe national 'Earth day' Earth Day, a nation-wide effort to draw attention to the increasing problems generated by pollution of the environment, will be observed at the University of Kansas with an environmental teach-in in the Kansas Union ballroom on April 22. The teach-in will be an open forum titled, "The Politics of Ecology." Robert Aangeenbrug, professor of geography, will moderate a discussion on the question, "The Ghetto and the War: Is the Ecology Movement a Diversionary Tactic?" Other activities scheduled for Earth Day, according to Mrs. Barbara Day, spokesman for the Ecology Action office of the Wesley Foundation, include continuous films and discussions on problems created by pollution. Speaking Wednesday night will be William La Mont, city planner from Boulder, Colo. His talk is being sponsored by the Douglas County Improvement Association, a group working with Ecology Action to sponsor Earth week events. The teach-in will continue on the 23rd with lectures in Hoch Auditorium by several KU professors including Keith Armitage, biology; Ross McKinney, engineering and James Koevenig, biology. Other events of Earth Week will include a canoe trip on the 25th from Perry Dam to Lawrence; a community workshop on environmental quality on the 26th; a panel on air quality in Lawrence on the 27th and a speech by Paul Erlich, author of "The Population Bomb" on the 28th. Mrs. Day said the Ecology Action group was mostly concerned with local problems of pollution in Lawrence rather than with the nationwide demonstrations on April 22 when events will take place on more than 1,000 campuses and 6,000 schools across the United States. The chief mobilizer for the national observance of Earth Day is Environmental Action, Inc., a non-profit youth group, formed three months ago in Washington. D.C. In New York, Fifth Avenue will be turned into a pedestrian mall for two hours, with activities for Census taking requires skill To be an enumerator for the 1970 census you have to be able to do more than count; patience and diligence are of key importance. children and others who want to enjoy a leisurely stroll without having to dodge automobiles. Mrs. Joe Wilson, a crew leader, is helping to train one of three groups of enumerators who are preparing the census returns for Douglas county. Her group of 17 persons will cover the greater part of Lawrence proper, or about 7,000 units. These groups are faced with checking and editing all the forms and checking to see if any questions have been answered falsely. swered iokingly, Mrs. Wilson said. But like KU, most campuses will restrict their participation to teach-ins and discussions aimed at calling public attention to the problems of all types of pollution. One of the problems the groups will face is trying to get answers from returns that were not answered correctly or were an- Some of the questionnaires were not taken seriously she said. Some forms were sent in from non-existent addresses. One person listed herself as a concubine, which is a mistress or secondary wife of less stature in certain polygamous societies. Another person wrote on his questionnaire, "Free Charles Manson." To some questions occasional answers of "none of your damn business!" were given. The enumerator trainee is sworn to secrecy and is subject to federal imprisonment if any classified information is released. Trainees are taught to edit the census long and short forms, to check for mistakes and errors, to back-check addresses and names and to call those people with defective forms and try to attain the needed information. 6 KANSAN Apr.14 1970 The Kansan erred in printing the name of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity as Theta Kappa Epsilon in Monday's issue of the paper. The mistake appeared in a story about the relocation of members of Kappa Sigma fraternity, whose house was severely damaged by fire. Members of Kappa Sigma have relocated to the Tau Kappa Epsilon and the Sigma Nu fraternity houses and apartments. Kansan makes error; story misnames frat "Most are doing a beautiful job," said Mrs. Wilson. "About three in a hundred at the most are the ones responsible for the 'messed-up' forms." Now the enumerators' jobs are to code the data and when the data is complete, send it to Jeffersonville, Ind., where all the information from all over the United States will be run through computers and compiled. There are more than 100,000 clubs or associations registered in Finland. ANDY WILLIAMS' GREATEST HITS Happy Heart Moon River The Hawaiian Wedding Song Born Free Days Of Wine And Roses and more ANDY WILLIAMS' GREATEST HITS Happy Heart Moon River The Hawaiian Wedding Song Born Free Days Of Wine And Roses and more On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ct The information that will be released first will be population counts. Some of the more vital statistics probably will not be released for almost a year, Mrs. Wilson said. We Serve You Faster at Burger Chef! 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THE Taylor-Made SHOE Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts KANSAS to ENGLAND in 10 minutes via Maine ALFIE'S RELAYS the only 5 block event everyone can win the course Maine 11th Street 9th Street ALFIE'S 6th Street Set your own record. Walk, run, jump, drive down Maine Street to 6th Street and treat yourself to a bit of Britain from Alfie's Fish & Chips. Quench your thirst with Budweiser on tap. The Finish Line Alfie's AUTHENTIC ENGLISH Fish & chips HILLCREST RANEY DOWNTOWN 921 MASS. VI 3-3521 HILLCREST IOWA AT 9th VI 3-9012 PLAZA 1800 MASS. VI 3-0684 PLAZA CENTER DRUG STORES FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY DOWNTOWN Raney Drugs Would Like To RELAY This Message To You - We have complete fountain service at our downtown and plaza locations. - Try on a pair of our Cool-Ray Poloroid tm sunglasses. - Girls. Come in and look over the largest cosmetic department in Lawrence. Sun-tan lotion...Raney has it. Raney's three convenient stores wish to satisfy any needs you (Alumni, students and faculty) may have. Drop in before or after the KU Relays. POLICY CENTER HILLCREST WAXLEY MUSEUM PASEN CLUB RANELEI DOWNTOWN PLAZA CENTER --- FOLLOWING GIRLS IN SCHOOL Photo by Randy Leffingwell To study a woman's changing role . . . These newly elected officers will head the 1970-71 Commission on the Status of Women. They are from left: Suzy Kelly, Prairie Village sophomore, vice-president; Colette Kocour, Kenilworth, Ill. freshman, secretary; Anne Boydston, Des Moines, Iowa junior, treasurer and Suzy Bocell, Kansas City junior, president. Unique zoology field course to be available this summer A course offered at no other American university will be made available this summer at the University of Kansas. The department of systematics and ecology and the Museum of Natural History will sponsor a field course in vertebrate zoology. The course will be taught by J. Knox Jones and Robert Hoffmann, professors in the department. The course will focus on the Long Pine Hills of southeastern Montana, Jones said. Students will be instructed in the methods of collecting and preparing vertebrae of animals for subsequent use and study, Jones said. The class will also be studying blood and chromosome make-up, he said. The course topics will include methods of preservation of vertebrates, proper methods of Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 9 The program has been partly financed by the National Science Foundation in the last few years, Jones said. The Foundation is awarding ten fellowships to students in the course to cover the cost of tuition and some of the equipment used, he said. labeling, preparation of notebooks, mapping and collecting of environmental and habitat data, methods of censusing and marketing vertebrates and the gathering of specialized data. This year's course continues KU tradition of such offerings begun by E. Raymond Hall, professor of systematics and ecology and director of the museum for 23 years. The course was first offered more than 20 years ago, Jones said. A select number of about 10 students, mostly on the graduate level and from KU and other institutions, will participate in the course, Jones said. He said they must apply directly to him. 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. University Shop A KU senior majoring in biology using mouse eggs arrived at a method of test-tube fertilization which is an improvement over anything used in the past. The test tube mating of eggs and sperms is a problem with which several researchers have dealt, but which has never been solved satisfactorily. KU endowment funds have more donations Edgar Beahm explained that there have been successful testtube fertilization of several species. However the technique in common practice with the mouse was to dissect the female mouse to take out part of the fallopian 1420 Crescent Dr. On the Hill VI 3-4633 Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary of the University of Kansas Endowment Association, said Monday that the number of contributors in the May 1, 1969 to April 30, 1970 fiscal year was greater than in any previous year. Biology major improves process of test-tube fertilization using mice Despite this, Youngberg said he had received quite a few letters from people who refused to contribute to the University because of the increasing number of student riots. Youngberg said, however, he did not think this unique for KU, but that other institutions of higher learning were probably facing the same situation. Some of the letters, Youngberg said, expressed dissatisfaction with the way the administration was handling outbreaks. tube into which the male sperm were injected. But with this method, he said, the egg couldn't be observed during fertilization, and the fertilized egg had to be flushed out of the tube. By taking a method developed for hamster and rabbit eggs a few years ago, and making some changes in technique, Beahm has arrived at a method for obtaining fertilization of mouse eggs in nothing more than a culture medium in a glass test tube. The eggs, he said, are fertile only for a short time, but with the use of hormones the timing can be controlled so that they will be fertile when they are exposed to the sperm. moving a segment of the reproductive system. From six mice there will be about 35 eggs. Beahm said he dissects six or 12 female mice at one time, re- Beahm has gotten 75 per cent fertilization by putting the eggs in a medium of salt solution with albumin, adding sperm and stirring with a glass rod. "I was reading in the area of fertilization," he said, "and I came on the papers on 'in vitro' fertilization. They had a sort of fascination since it raises images of Brave New World and all that," referring to the Huxley novel that forecast controlled test tube human birth. When he began his experimenting, Beahm bad planned only to repeat earlier work, which he felt would have been a respectable senior project. Holiday Inn IN NATION'S INNKEEPERS Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn THE INTERESSE INNKEEPER® Holiday Inn M-15-26 23rd & Iowa Gary Porteous, Innkeeper Rita Skaggs, Asst. 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Wheeler, 62, who has held the office since July, 1964, plans to retire when the change becomes effective July 2, subject to Senate confirmation of Moorer. Nixon at the same time designated Vice Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr., now commander of naval forces in Vietnam, to succeed Moorer as Navy chief. Moorer, 58, will be he second Navy man to hold the position of chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Adm. Arthur Radford held the post from 1953-57. Moorer, a native of Mount Willing, Ala., was named chief of naval operations June 3,1967,and was re-appointed by President Nixon last July 12. Zumwalt, 49, a native of San Francisco, has been serving since September, 1968, in the dual role of commander of naval forces in Vietnam and chief of the U.S. Naval Advisory Group. Wheeler has been chairman of the Joint Chiefs two years longer than the normal four-year term and his retirement was expected. His full term expired in July, 1968, but was extended for a year by President Lyndon B. Johnson. Last July, Wheeler agreed to a request by Nixon to stay on for an additional year. The other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are Air Force Gen. John D. Ryan, the Marine Corps, commandant, Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., and Army Gen. William C. Westmoreland. KU Museum of Paleontology receives collection of fossils The Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology at the University of Kansas received a collection of fossils from the Humble Oil Company on March 19. This collection, containing some 1500 thin sections of the new species of foraminifera, is the result of the published work of John W. Skinner, a geological scientist for Humble Oil, and Garner L. Wilde, professional geologist also from Humble, said Alan Kamb, assistant curator at the KU paleontological museum. Kamb said that this collection is one of the largest and most complete collections of fossils obtained from outside sources. He said the collection is valuable in that it contains specimens that existed in a very limited time period thus representing certain aspects of the geological structure of Kansas. 10 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 The animals themselves, called fusulinids, are football shaped and highly complex in structure. These fusulinid fossils are used by oil companies to determine what geological stratum they have drilled through to give them an idea of the structure beneath their rigs, he said. From 1865 until June, 1969, 67,096 people have received degrees from the University of Kansas. henrys Come to Henry's after the Relays, check our fine menu: HAMBURGERS CHICKEN SHRIMP FISH SANDWICHES FRIES MALTS SOFT DRINKS You'll like our location-only five blocks from the stadium! Henry's-6th and Missouri Enjoy Coca-Cola Trade-mark ® Compliments of Coca-Cola Bottling Company, Kansas City PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER says "GO BIG BLUE" in the 45th annual KANSAS RELAYS and for all your one-stop shopping these Plaza stores are at your convenience: Raney's 1800 Mass. - the widest selection of cosmetics anywhere in town Calhoun's Revlon Love Almay Bonne Bell Coty Max Factor Helene Rubenstein Fabrege and many more 1744 Mass. Hagger Arrow McGregor Levi Bobbie Brooks Cobs Corner White Stag Aileen McCrory-Otasco Coast to Coast Stores Authorized Sales & Service for LawnBoy Lawn Mowers Brunswick Tires Fenton Wheels Corning Ware Philco TV's & Radios Motorola TV's Radios, Stereos □ McGregor Sporting Goods □ Kelvinator Appliances Plaza Barber Shop Dillon's Dillon's Discount Plus means BIG SAVINGS for you. Blane & Jesse's Salon - Everyday Low Low Prices Plus Services, Cleanliness, & Variety The Town Shop 839 Mass. VI 3-5755 The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 STREET DANCE terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS DOWNTOWN BRIMAN'S leading jewelers Expert Jewelry & Watch Repair 743 Mass. Ph.VI 3-4366 Your I.D. Card Is Your Pass To Instant Credit. ICE CREAM SOCIAL AT JRP Wed., 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. LAWRENCE SURPLUS "A Friendly Place to Shop" 740 Mass. Featuring "The T.i.d.e." Sat., 8:00 p.m. to Midnight Oliver parking lot CARNIVAL Sat., 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Deck of Spencer Library SOCIAL AT JRP o 9:00 p.m. ART SALE Sat., 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Deck of Spencer Library FOR-SCHOLARSHIPS" Lers project. LITTLE WOMEN Girls - Infant - 14 Infant Boys 823 Mass. — VI 3-7288 McCoy's shoes 813 Mass. St. V1 3-2091 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen ECOLOGY PRO "Gathering of beer cans for scholars to attend classes in biology & en by Prof. Philip Hump --- AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASS (913) 843-8500 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 PICNIC Sun., 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. TOWN CRIER 919 Mass. — 842-2348 INDIVIDUAL PAIRINGS ACTIVITIES (Mon., Tues., Thurs.) MISTER GUY Clothing Consultants 920 MASSACHUSETTS RADIO SHACK 1000 Mass. — 842-1566 GYMKANA Sat., 8:00 a.m. (Open to all members of organized living groups) RANEY DOWNTOWN HILLCREST PLAZA 921 Mass. VI 3-3521 Iowa AT 9th VI 3-9012 1800 Mass. VI 3-0684 TGIF and BEER DRINKING CONTEST (Friday) POUND'S 925 Mass. — 842-6198 DOORES 927 Mass. — 843-1833 GAMES 12:00 Noon Sat. VI 3-1171 806 Mass. STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS MISTER GUY Clothing Consultants 920 MASSACHUSETTS GUY RANEY DRUG STORES POUND'S 925 Mass — 842-6198 DOORES 927 Mass. — 843-1833 $ \varepsilon_ {s} ^ {2} + \varepsilon_ {s} ^ {3} $ Spring Week Committee Salb, Wilhelm and Knop have varied By JIM RYUN Kansan Sports Writer The future of the 45th annual Kansas Relays may have been guaranteed by a new Tartan track, but there are some events which will not use the new synthetic surface. In fact, one of them will not take place in the stadium, but on the slopes of the Campanile. Its competitors are a bit loud and large. They have even been referred to as "pachyderms" and "dancing elephants." More exactly, they are called shotutters and discus throwers. shotputters and discus throwers. These large specimens of muscle and personality began performing in their events for varied reasons. In fact, one of them, Steve Wilhelm, Los Altos, Calif., junior, has parents who preferred academics to athletics. At first Wilhelm's parents discouraged participation in athletics and encouraged only scholastic efforts. Now they back his interest in sports and enjoy watching him throw. KANSAN Sports His father also discouraged him from playing contact sports. "He figured," Wilhelm said, "as long as he was paying the bills, why should I be in contact sports." Since that time he has been successful as a football lineman at KU. But his present interest is in the shotput, partly because his 14 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 "brother was in it" and partly because of his size. "I knew I would never be a sprinter or a long distance runner." Wilhelm said, "so I thought being a weight man would be best." Karl Salb, Crossett, Ark., junior, also disagreed with his parents about playing football at first. They reasoned that it was a dangerous sport. But they attended a ninth grade football game in which Salb played, and since then they have been a source of encouragement. They even built a weight room in their home so he could train there. Doug Knop, Olathe senior and the other third of KU's big three, also had an excursion into football. "I was a quarterback in high school," Knop said, "and I came SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Films-April 16 1. Popular Films Chairman 2. Special Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairman 3. Classified Pins Chairman 4. Film Society Chairman 5. Publicity Chairman Recreation—April 21 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Featured Speakers 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman Forums—April 21 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Travel—April 16 1. World Travel Fair Chairman 2. Arrangements Chairman 3. Correspondence Chairman 4. Films Chairman 5. Hospitality Chairman 6. Travel Advisors Public Relations—April 16 1. Activities Carnival Chairman 2. Open House Chairman 1. Open House Chairman 3. Open House Publicity Chairman Fine Arts----April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 6: Art Forums Chairman 5. Humanities Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970)—April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. STANDARD Come to your Lawrence Standard dealers-your car's home away from home Ramada Inn Standard 2216 W. 6th Bridge Standard 6th and Mass. Leonard's 706 W. 9th Shield's Standard 9th and Vermont Stadium Ray Polk, local distributor Grimes' Standard 23rd and Louisiana Come to your Standard dealers with confidence! reasons for sports competition up here to be a quarterback. They 'red shirted' me my first year and I knew I had no future in football so I decided I was going to go into track. "In the eighth grade I was too slow to be a runner and I couldn't jump," he said, "so there was only one thing left for me to be and that was a weightman. "When I first started out I threw the discus for an hour to an hour and a half each day and I finally got on to it." Knop said. "I have always been able to throw it since then, so I just stayed with it." Wilhelm and Salb will be batting in a world class shotput field which includes world record holder Randy Matson, but Knop will be throwing the discus with more in mind than just winning. His fancee, Debbie Blattner, St. Louis sophomore, will be one of three Relay's queens and Knop thinks this might add a little pressure to his competition. "I want to win this more than any other meet with the exception of the Nationals this year," Knop said, "because Debbie is the queen and I want to be up on the stage with her." Knop wants to perform well and realizes that the competition will precede the wrist watch presentation. "I will jog a little and stretch my muscles a little bit," he said. "Before competition I will take one or two throws from the front without going through a full turn. Then I will throw one or two more and if my sail and form is not right, I will throw a few more. "Iin competition," Knop said, "I will go for a mark on my first throw and on my next two throws I will bomb them out." He said that his frame of mind in competition sometimes bothers people. He remains quiet. "I do not care about anybody but myself and my distance," he explained, "and I do not talk to anybody and do not watch anybody else throw." "Thirty minutes before competition," Salb said, "I will start fooling around with the shot and take a few throws to get my hands used to it. Once in awhile I will set it down to loosen up and may even jog a bit. "Ten or 15 minutes before I start from the front, I will see how much snap I have," he said. "If it appears that I do not have very much snap I will push a little harder." Salb said that if he did not have much snap in the release of the shotput it bothered him slightly psychologically and he would pressure himself more in an attempt to get some adrenalin flowing. His preparation for Saturday's open shotput began three to four weeks ago. He said he thought that this would be one of his most difficult competitions. "This is one meet in the whole year that I am really going to have to come through in," Salb said, "because I can not expect to beat Matson unless I am perfect." He said that Matson would be tough to beat "because you can throw one 67-68 feet and he will The smallest of the three KU weightmen is Wilhelm. He is 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighs 280 pounds. He will have three preliminary and three final tosses in the shotput and will need a "life time best to be in the competition." come across the ring and throw one five or 10 inches further just because he is a great competitor." "I will throw as far as I can," he said, "and concentrate on relaxing and exploding." BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES MAJORS! Undergraduate Teaching Assistantships are available for next fall in the new Biology Dept. and certain undergraduate lab courses in biology. - Salaries start at $500.00 per semester. - Approx, ten hrs./week and enrollment in Bio. 83 (Laboratory instruction, 2 hrs.) is required. - Obtain application forms in Biology Office, 249 Snow. - Deadline for application: April 24,1970 Earrings for the beautiful people 14-kt. gold pierced earrings 30% off thru April 18 at Daniels Jewelry 914 Mass. Use Kansan Classified Relays attract 17 to Masters Mile A field of 17 runners, age 35 and over, have entered the Masters Mile to be run for the first time at the Kansas Relays. The race is scheduled at 2:20 p.m. Saturday just ahead of the famed Glenn Cunningham Mile. Bob Timmons, relays director, said two awards will be made—one for the winner and one to the runner who comes closest to his predicted time. Prominent among the entries is Jim Hershberger, Wichita oil man who donated $125,000 last summer for installation of KU's new Tartan track which will be used in competition for the first time this week. Another former Kansas Relays winner in the field is Jan Howell, who led off Kansas' winning four-mile team in the 1956 carnival. Howell, who now lives at Georgetown, Colo., runs with the Denver Track Club. Also in the field is Hal Higdon, long - time cross - country competitor with the Chicago Track Club and a free lance magazine writer. Last time he was in Lawrence was to write a magazine feature about Jim Ryun three years ago. Apr.15 1970 KANSAN 15 ANDY WILLIAMS GREATEST HITS Happy Heart Moon River The Hawaiian Wedding Song Born Free Days Of Wine And Roses and more ANDY WILLIAMS'GREATEST HITS Happy Heart Moon River The Hawaiian Wedding Song Born Free Days Of Wine And Roses and more On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The CPA a quiet revolutionary. C. P. H. In the last few years business has changed as much as skirt lengths. So has the work of the CPA. Today the CPA helps solve a host of problems rising from new technology (including the computer) and the changing social scene. He must be able to develop and interpret a wide range of economic data as a basis for decision-making and corporate planning. If you are a creative thinker, with a strong analytical ability, accountancy may be the profession for you. You might join an independent accounting firm,serving a varied list of clients, perhaps becoming a partner eventually. Or you might start your own practice. Or you might become a key man on the management team of a business, or join a non-profit enterprise, or work in education or government. You can select college courses that can lead to your CPA certificate soon after you graduate. Or you can go on to graduate school. Ask your faculty advisor about it. What other profession offers so many choices? If you'd like to learn more about the work of a CPA, we'll send you a booklet with the whole CPA story. Just drop a card or noteto: KSCPA, 517 Capitol Federal Bldg., 700 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kansas 66603 Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants Lakers beat Hawks; take two game lead The Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Atlanta Hawks, 105-94, Tuesday night in Atlanta to take a 2-0 lead in the best of seven series for the western division championship in the National Basketball Association. The series now moves to Los Angeles beginning Thursday night where the Lakers will be heavy favorites to wrap up the series. In the eastern division, the New York Knickerbock lead the Milwaukee Bucks two games to none in their best of seven series. The Knicks took the two game lead on the strength of a 112-111 victory in New York Monday night. The winners of the two divisions will meet in a best of seven series to determine the NBA champion. The loss by the Hawks only added to Atlanta coach Richie Guerin's woes. Guerin was fired $1,000 Monday by league com- missoner Walter Kennedy for remarks he made following Sunday's game in which Los Angeles won, 119-115. bench and between the floor and the dressing room. Guerin said, "There'll be a lot of blood spilt on that floor." The remarks were reportedly the result of Guerin's displeasure of sible for the action of his players the officiating in the initial western division playoff game. Kennedy later said that it was inconceivable to him that any coach, under even the most severe emotional strain, would make such a threat and as a result was holding Guerin respon- "You never know after a statement like that what some fans will do," Schaus said. There were no reported incidents during the game, however. Laker General Manager Fred Schaus refused to "digigny" Guerin's charges with a reply, but said he would request increased security at the coliseum in Atlanta around the players 16 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 Iba will coach Olympic team STILLWATER, Okla. (UPI) — Retiring Oklahoma State University basketball coach Henry P. Iba indicated Tuesday he would be willing to coach the U.S. Olympic basketball team for an unprecedented third time. Iba coached the Olympics in Tokyo in 1964 and in Mexico City in 1968. The 1972 games will be in Munich. Better preparations will be the key to the 1972 Olympics, Iba said Tuesday. "We're going to have to make better preparations for conditioning of the Olympic team or they're going to have trouble he said. Tuesday's edition of the Indianapolis Star said Iba would be named soon as the 1972 coach, but Iba said an official announcement would have to come from Olympic officials in New York. "Anything pertaining to the Olympics as being official must come from the Olympic house," he said. Iba, who is now serving as chairman of the U.S. Player Selection Committee for the Olympics, said he expected an announcement to "come out in the near future." Special Summer Rates at College Hill Manor Now leasing for summer and fall. Airconditioned, private pool. Shown afternoons or by appointment. Located across from Stouffer Place at 1741 West 19th VI 3-8220 W. G. HARRIS Pound's Fabrics, Inc. 925 Mass. Sew up Spring in bouncy burlaps and krispy kettle cloths then finish it off with trims in many colors, widths and styles styles Welcome-KU Relays participants, parents, and alumni! We would like to welcome KU Relays participants, parents, alumni and all the rain the sky can provide. This year we're ready, and no amount of rain will stop the show. Thanks go to Jim Hershberger of Wichita for the donation which made possible KU's new track. We hope that the 45th annual KU Relays will be the best ever. Remember that as the afternoon wears on, there are plenty of refreshing drinks, as well as appetizing food and candy just a few steps from your seat. KU Concessions is happy to be serving you this weekend. We hope you have a pleasant stay in Lawrence. KU CONCESSIONS GOOD LUCK, JAYHAWKS! Mary McLean House Acacia—1100 Indiana CHRIST CHURCH Alpha Kappa Lambda—2021 Stewart THE OLD SCHOOL Alpha Epsilon Pi—2000 Stewart Alpha Tau Omega—1537 Tennessee HOLLYWOOD Delta Chi----1245 W. Campus The Inn at Eagle Rock Delta Tau Delta—1111 West 11th --- Kappa Sigma—1045 Emery Road EAGLE THE HOTEL Lambda Chi Alpha—1918 Stewart 1621 Edgehill Road UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1932 FRATERNITIES Pi Kappa Alpha—1145 Louisiana Phi Kappa Psi—1602 West 15th Phi Kappa Psi----1602 West 15th 10 Phi Kappa Tau—1120 West 11th FIRST MEMORIAL HOTEL Phi Kappa Theta—1941 Stewart Sigma Nu----501 Sigma Nu Place Mansion at 1205 W. Third St. in Nebraska City, Kansas. Built in 1893 and still owned by the city, it has a large wraparound porch with staircases leading up to its upper floor. The building is characterized by its brick exterior and elaborate architectural details. It serves as a historic landmark in the city. EAGLE --- Thata Chi 1329 West 8th Theta Chi—1329 West 9th FLOWERS Triangle—1116 Indiana SHELL Tau Kappa Epsilon—1911 Stewart Tau Kappa Epsilon—1911 Stewart Sigma Phi Epsilon—1645 Tennessee MIDDLEBURY Sigma Chi----1439 Tennessee EAGLE --- LHS disturbance prompts arrest One University of Kansas student was arrested Tuesday and a warrant was issued for another in connection with Monday's disturbance at Lawrence High School. John Spearman Jr., Lawrence freshman, president of the KU Black Student Union and son of a member of the Lawrence school board, was arrested Tuesday morning by police on charges of disturbing the peace. He is free on $100 bond. Police issued a warrant for another student, Jerry Mumford, Lawrence freshman, along with Mark Dowdell, 778 Locust and a 17-year-old juvenile, all on the same charges. The incident began Monday afternoon when Lawrence High School Black Student Union members interrupted classes to draw attention to their demands made to principal William Medley. Medley said, "The incident probably began in protest when students failed to elect a black girl to the cheerleading squad. Another factor might have been that the 'outsiders' had some invested interest." Officals indicated that approximately 10 students were suspended from the high school. Medley indicated Tuesday morning that school officials were still investigating the demonstration and that more suspensions and charges might result. "We preferred charges of disturbing the peace against the 'outsiders'," Medley said, "and we are working individually with our students, treating them as individual cases with conferences with their parents." Vanessa Collins, president of LHS Black Student Union said that several of the black students had received telephone threats and warnings during the night. She said, "The white people were preparing for us. They said they were getting boards with nails and rubber hoses and things like that." Miss Collins said that many of the black students indicated to her that they were going to stay away from classes Tuesday. Medley said more than half of the nearly 100 blacks enrolled were absent from classes Tuesday. Medley and James W. Paddock, president of the unified district board, both indicated that the students suspended were those who either caused disruption or took part in any vandalism. Paddock said that any damage would be paid for by guilty parties if identification could be made. Media, finance topics of Vietnam discussion About 15 students were present last night when the topic "Vietnam: U.S. Imperialism?" was discussed in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union as part of the National Anti-War week. Panelists were Gus diZerega, Wichita special student, Bruce Moholt, assistant professor of microbiology, and Jack Krebs, Wichita senior. Krebs opened the discussion by explaining U.S. foreign policy. He said that the United States discouraged elections in Vietnam, and that Buddhist groups who were fighting to end the war were being repressed by the United States. Krebs defined imperialism as "use of power over other countries regardless of the desire of those countries." DiZerega said statistics showed that more money was going to Vietnam than to New York City. Zerega said. "If you wonder where the money is going, it goes to Westinghouse and other forms of big business and not to poor 'niggers'," he said. "The enemy is not the officials in Washington, but the way the U.S. economy is right now,"di- The mass media is brainwashing the American people, diZerega stated, because the media is dependent on private industry for advertising. He also said that students learned from their history books that "Americans have almost always been right and the other guys have almost always been wrong." Moholt said that if the U.S. withdrew from Vietnam, which it should, and free elections were held, this would show that the National Liberation Front (NLF) was backed by "at least 20-30 per cent" of the people. Another part of the population, Moholt said, is loyal to Saigon in the daytime, "but at night, the NFL has no trouble getting to work." Neff freed on parole; Schall given 10 days David M. Neff, of 1225 Oread, was released from the Douglas County jail April 10 on a two- year parole. Neff, who was sentenced to a six-month jail sentence for painting the Jimmy Green statue and the Douglas County Court-house, was released on $1,000 bond and two-year parole. He also faces charges in St. Louis for attempting to avoid the draft. The conditions of Neff's parole read as such: (1) to finish the removal of paint stains from the Douglas County Courthouse (2) conduct himself with decorum and dignity (3) to gain and maintain continual employment (4) to obey all laws, local, state and federal and (5) to have no dangerous weapons of any description in his possession or under his control. 20 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 Robert Schall, 1837 Ky., was convicted Monday and sentenced to the Lawrence municipal jail for 10 days and fined $85 as a result of a disturbance which occurred on Feburary 17, the same day as the "Chicago Seven" incident at the courthouse. Schall was one of five persons arrested as a result of the disturbance but the only one who was charged in both city and county courts. He was arrested by Lawrence police on February 17 when he interfered with their questioning of another individual about a minor theft. Fines for Schall included, $25 charges of resisting arrest; $25 on a charge of profane language; $25 on a charge of drinking beer on a public street, $10 on a charge of littering. A peace disturbance charge was dismissed. WANT THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY? "MOOREBURGER" HAS BY FAR THE BEST HAMBURGER IN TOWN. COME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF! Call In Your Order! MOORE BURGER MALTS SHAKES 1414 W. 6th VI 3-9588 ARENSBERG'S SHOES presents... PATRICIA WILSON Think that's a silly name for a shoe? No, indeed it isn't. It's an out-of-the-ordinary name for an out-of-this-world shoe! DISCOVER for yourself the style breakthrough of the century! Discover a revolutionary concept of beauty and comfort. Venture beyond the ordinary, beyond the different, to the ultimate . . . the MOON SHOE. Footwear for Heavenly Bodies Come in to Arensberg's today and discover the look of tomorrow—discover the MOON SHOE (with a down-to-earth price). Then take that heavenly body of yours for a stroll and cause a little excitement. Arensberg's = Shoes Arensberg's = Shoes Where Styles Happen 819 Mass. 843-3470 --- Your Kansas Union Bookstore welcomes you to the 45th annual KU Relays! Stop by the bookstore and browse at the many unique souvenirs that will remind you of this Relays weekend. One of the more useful souvenirs you could choose — a bronze Jayhawk paperweight. COLLECTION OF WORLD FOUNDATIONS, NEW YORK, N.Y. --kansas union BOOKSTORE 512 KANSAS 513 KANSAS KU KU KU KU pennants and felt Jayhawks make great gifts for future Jayhawkers. 优乐园 All-time favorites are these stuffed Jayhawks, fuzzy and friendly companions for children of all ages. The bookstore has many different styles of sweatshirts and T-shirts at moderate prices. KU --- Inflatable airborne works to be on display Unique artist conference coming to KU Hundreds of sculptors, artists and art lovers from the United States, Mexico, Canada and Europe are expected to converge on the University of Kansas campus April 23-25. They will be here for the sixth National Sculpture Conference. This biennial conference is unique in that it is the only one in its field in the United States. The purpose of the conference is for artists and art industries to exchange ideas, information and research on the technology of today's sculpture. Its format includes discussing related areas 22 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 of sculpturing and providing demonstrations requested by participating members. A. Bret Waller, director of KU's Museum of Art, said the sculpture exhibits would be divided into three categories. They are small indoor pieces, large outdoor pieces and inflatable airborne pieces. Inflatable airborne pieces are also known as atmospheric art because this type of sculpture can be filled with helium to ascend hundreds of feet. Atmospheric art, said Waller, is a new development in the world of sculpturing, and it is hoped that this category will arouse discussion. The large outdoor category will be displayed near Memorial Stadium, while the small indoor pieces will be shown in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. The KU Museum of Art will not be used "because of a lack of space and inadequate facilities," said Waller. Waller said no one artist or his work would be featured at the conference. Artists are encouraged to bring only one piece of their work. One exhibit of particular interest to sculptors will be a flaming torch. Granite, which once took years to carve by hand, can be eaten away in a matter of hours with this instrument. The flaming torch makes a dream such as Stonehenge a reality in our generation. flatable art, topics include light magnetics, computers and new uses of traditional methods and holography, which involves the use of three-dimensional images by means of lasers. These will be displayed by Gaertner Scientific Corp., International Holographics, IBM, Honeywell and General Electric. Besides the non-traditional in- With the inventions of the laser beam and holography, "instant disposable sculpture" is now feasible. Demonstrations of room-sized illusions and tremendous three-dimensional objects will also be exhibited. The uses of metal objects for environments as different as outer space and the world beneath the seas is one subject that will be discussed. Engineering and metal fabrication, which have made these feats possible, are essential to the sculptor for environmental work. Speaking of artists and the art industry, Elden Tefft, KU professor of design and conference chairman, said the industry had greatly helped the artist in the use and availability of materials. The artist and the industry are working closer together, he said. This, he said, has resulted in a more proficient artist and extended support for the artist from industries. Teft said the idea for the biennial conference came from the suggestions of sculptors who attended the seminar here two years ago. F F Malls Olde English Village Apartments 2411 Louisiana Street Lawrence Kansas 843-5552 unique design . . interior roominess . . wall to wall carpeting . . air conditioning . . sound conditioning . . all electric Frigidaire kitchen . . dishwasher . . disposal . . fireplace. . saunas. Come see these surprisingly inexpensive luxury apartments afternoons weekdays and weekends. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the weekly bulletin are referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Clv. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization," 4th Edition. Campus Med House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount-your A.R., Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Office furniture - desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, easier to access, less expensive. Not extra charge. Lawrence Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3643. tf Norelco tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. Custom designed, multi-purpose weight - lifting - training apparatus. Educational equipment for economical purchase for individual, apartment gang or fraternity (Design approve Barrel Barbell 577.5 lbs assorted weights). Call B.A. at 843-1203 4-15 63 Rambler 660—Classic V-8. wagon, Clean, runs good, good gas mileage, new tires and spare. Must sell-all- bids considered! Inquire: Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. After 6:00 p.m., KI 2-2382. 4-20 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts. 826 Iowa. 842-1320. **tf** $125.00! 1964 Corvair. Must sell to higher bidder soon. Engine and general mechanics good. Bad seat covers mufflers, off color foot. Call 5267. 4-15 1969 Bultaco 200cc, 1,800 miles. Trail or street bike. 842-5492, 5:00-7:00 p.m. 4-15 Silverton 60 watt piggyback guitar or amplifier, like new. $60. Also cx-4 solid black folk guitar. See at W 3. W 25th. No. D 4-158 843-7939. call or call 843-7939 Yamaha Classic guitar w/case. Excel- tel B42, 842-745-9160. $60. Contact M. Baird, 842-745-9160. 1965 GTO, 389+ cubic inch, 3/4 eam, blue, white interior, 4 speed, 1500 miles on a rebuilt engine, $1500.00 Doug Pierce, 843-783.3 4-17 Delicious steaks, Russian Stregon汗 prepared in a way to satisfy even the hungrief! Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrenz. 1964 red Vallant convertible. Call 843-7017. 4-15 The wholesale used car market is down. You can save between $50 and $100 if you buy a new car over the-floor, $795. '64 Chevrolet Impala, 4-door, automatic, air, TS/TB, Ride and drive this one, $795. '63 Corvair, automatic. See it, $295. '63 Fairlane Thompson Motors, DX Station at 6th and Michigan. Framus 12-string string. Like net- included. $135 Call John Brohawk. 843-645-385 4-17 Stereo tape deck, 2 sets of speakers, tape; tapes $4.00, all the latest. 2 brand new 775-14 wide tracks, w.w: TV, $15. 842-8933. 4-17 Come by the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St., April 17, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., 18th, 8-12 p.m., for delicious baked goods and interesting rummage. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 4-17 Sacrifice: 869 Diatom 2000 Spt. Conv. OHC-135hp engine, 5-speed, mag- wheels w/radial tires, many extras. Call 842-7613 after 6 p.m. 4-17 '63 VW-rebuilt engine installed, good tires, excellent performer all its little blue life. $450. Call 843-5333. -45 Bluepoint Siamese kitten, 10 weeks old, trained, good with children. 1959 VW, new tires, good paint, 25 mins since complete overhaul. 842-492 8-420 Powerful Tuner/Amp with 2 large speakers and stereo cassette player, changer, was $315.00, now only $229.00. At Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. Galvin Pardal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 KY. HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 TR-4 '64 original owner, Red-Black Top-Wire wheels. Excellent condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Abarth, Bendix electric fuel pump, fog lights, detailed service history. Best offer over $1200. 843-6659 4-20 Elegant white formal. Worn once. Size nine Call 842-0534 after 5:00. 1965 GTO. Good condition, good treads, excellent straightness. 1732 West 56th. Apt. 24. 4-20 New famous brand portable stereo demonstrator, was $69.90. Reduced to only $5.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 New famous brand 8 track stereo cartridge player, adaptable to any Stereo Multiplex System, only $69.90 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers Component Set—receiver, stereo cassette changer and speakers. Was $315.00, now $259.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 (969) TR-6 motorcycle Perfect, 1500 miles, stock $795, 842-2620, 4-21 Stereo—some floor model portable stereos cut to 1/2 price . . . others with large reductions. Hurry to Ray Stone-back's. 929 Mass. 4-21 Male German Shepherd—8 mo. Rod. 842-5769. 4-21 Gibson B-25 12-string Guitar and dual-pick-up electric 842-7260 4-21 4-21 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1969 Toyota Corolla—grey with red interior —4 spd., gets great gas mileage—like new inside and gas, $1500, 842-219-1 1966 GTO Convertible—yellow with black top GT4 speed, deluxe wheel cov- ment, Motorola motor in stereo speaker, and hook-up, good tires, $1500 842-2191 842-1 1967 Triumph TR-4A-IRS, beautiful British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelin X tires, $1800. 842-219-1 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III white with black convertible top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition, $2300. 843-2191. 4-21 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white cloth and equipped,Equipped, equipped,21 gifts,$140,842-721-912 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, ex- 1400. $840. 824-219. 4-21 1967 WV Super Bug—silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., heavy duty suspension, stereo tape speaker, good cook-up,好锅,$1500 842-2191. phone 843-3557 1968 VW Fastback—near perfect white paint exterior, radial tires, excellent shape throughout. $1500, 842, 2191, 4-21 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with interior, new tires. $800-4 421 1921 BMW, new tires. $250-4 Ceramics, stoneware. $2.00 and up. Please phone us 2789. Rosalie Wax. 4-21 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior. 383. Formula S. it is fitted G-70's, low milkiness. Perfect condition. Dick of K61. K-48 or B42-5225. NOTICE 615 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. If you are heading to the campus, Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Braket is our special treat, and I 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 Lapti. VA 3-4032. 5-14 Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-17 Want some Action!!! There will be plenty the week of April 19-24. That's Spring Week — picnics, undersizing contest, pie eating contest, greased pig catching contest, and lots more, so join in the fun. 4-17 Be Prepared! tune-ups Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Tony's 66 Service 66 tune-ups starting service Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous. W. 9th. Lepidoptera Creations. W. 9th. 4-17 Students of Objectivism-meets every Monday, 7.30; Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Raz. If desire information, call 842-6210 5:30: 4-17 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the following: THE ABE TABLES STABLES in them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfasts, desserts, and dinner. The Stables stands for Bud, fun, and you! LA PETTIE GALERIE. Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring. Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer. tf Rallye: Strip Tease Rallye, Malls Shopping Center, April 17, 1970. For information, call John Himpel, 843-1131. Mike Bower, 843-8822, 4-17 Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00, 816: GRI-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N. Kansas City, Mo. 64116 Mobilization. Fill form in contact 4-242 There's a new bar in town. Look for Bistro 14th and Ten, under- Bistrotable-14th and Ten 4-17 Attention married students and faculty. Interested in Social Nudism? For details write P.O. Box 5212, Topeka, Kansas 66065. 4-17 Class ring in front of Union. Call 4096 ask for Paul, room 31-18 ward. Fly for half in Otocap Flying Club free info free info Phone 4-21- 1124 after six. LOST Ladies' yellow gold Tissot watch. April 8th between Strong Hall and Potters Lake. Reward. Call collect Overland Park at UD1-1385. 4-16 Large brown purse stolen from a parked car in O Zone, April 9, between 10:30-11:30 a.m. Nancy Jameson will pay a high reward for return because it contained a lot of coins. Call 843-7711, Rm. 304 South Corbin Hall, 420 W. 11th St. No questions asked. 4-15 Lost April 9. Medium large 5-month-old puppy. Black with white under-sides and forepares. Danny Rees, 1614 Kentucky. No phone. 4-17 $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license, No. T2T3PL. No questions. Phone 846-3684 and ask for me. 4-16 Black poodle-like 5 mo. old puppy—14th and Tenn. Answers to name of "Ding." Call 843-5721, ask for Rick. 12 Men's gold Waltrim watch. Lost Saturday, April 11 below the Campanile. Call 843-7415. Ask for Bruce in Room 151. 4-17 Small flowered fan. Near Union. Great sentimental value. Call Janet. A large plant. Indoor or outdoor. WANTED Female roommate for summer to share 2 bedroom mobile home. Air-conditioned pool $743 bill bills paid. Columbia UA-UN63-4.17 After 8:00 p.m. -842-549-36 Traveling companion for the summer: touring western U.S. 842-6599 4-16 4th girl to share house. $60 a month, utilities paid. 917 Maine. 842-5768. www.maine.gov PERSONAL THE CONCORD SHOP People who enjoy light and dark beer on tap, peanuts, and a friendly atmosphere. The Cellar Door--under the Bierstube, 14th and Tenn. 4-17 Roommate Move in May 1 through summer. $90. Dave, 842-5786. 4-21 - Stretcher frames, Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fum, 843-8074. ff ready-made and parts SOCIQ-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Department of Education, comoc, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 An apt, for summer sublease. I am able to provide student. Call 8937 8937 after 5:30. HELP WANTED Found—at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM, 106 Radio, 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. 4-78 Baha'a' the promise of all religions. 4-20 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf BUY,SELL OR TRADE FOUND SERVICES OFFERED Need part-time help at Royal College Shop. Experience and references necessary. Apply in person, 837 Mass. - Artist's Canvasses $54'' - 72'' - 90''$ TYPING Time to get your spring and summer wardrobe ready. Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-17 Cook wanted Apply in person at Krazy Karl's, 1817 West 6th. 4-20 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers—plus stencil cutting and duplicating. Pick up and reserve offered. Call 842-3597 or 6562. 4-29 FOR RENT Hurry to Henry's For Top Quality Head For Henry's - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 McGconn Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- ing materials. Competent pewler. Plea type. Competent service. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman, 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kinasol Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to Alvamar. Accessible to a jacent to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. Available to families with children. One bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $225. To view these luxury rooms, visit town houses, call David Rhodus 842-2313 or McGreef Agency: 843-205-306. henrys - Applications - Portraits - Badges - Passports Exclusive Representative HIXON STUDIO "Please call for appointment" L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry of - Guards Paint Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. - Favors - Muas - Lavaliers - Gifts - Recognitions * Paddles - Paddles Al Lauter Sportswear - Stationery - Fluency VI 3-0330 Plaques Rings - Crested - Letters 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Arts from the Bed Rd. NB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog VI 3-1571 Home of the "Big Shef" One bedroom furnish-1d apartment at Burke Terrace. Call 845-143-155 842-1105. 4-15 842-1105. Try One Today 814 Iowa BURCER CHEF Available now, two bedroom ant, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let. Avan. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs Room. W 8th Terr. W 842. 842-5446 before 4 p.m. Wed, and Thurs. 4-22 For rent June 1-2-bedroom furnished apartment; air conditioned, swimming pool; reasonable rent; 入院 one-block from rent. Call 842-572-73 Modern furnished or unfurnished 1 bedroom apartment—½ block from local shopping park, great summer school and next year 842-5752 evenings. A-16 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, wall-to-wall carpeting, air-conditioning, sound conditioning, all electric Frigidaire kitchen including five places. Additional benefits include laundry, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive rates. See these luxury apartments afternoon slots for free at Malls Olde English VILLAGE. ENGLISH VILLAGE. 2411 Louisiana. 843-552-59 Southridge Plaza Apartments one renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and carpeted. A second air-conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool O. W. 24th; they them today at 170 W. 24th, 842-14-20 Summer sub-lease. 1 bedroom apartment. Furnished, $75 per month. Two blocks from campus. Call 842-6897 after 6 p.m. 4-17 Moving To Kansas City? 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Boths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Boths $230 CLUBHOUSE POOL SEE CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS CHARTER HOUSE Open Daily 9 Till Dark S. E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 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 "Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Stirling stalks and fresh salted steak sets your awake at the dining room as you sit at the Silos. You serve the only dinner—preparing the solutions as you like them with all of your ingredients, then serving the Silos at once per compartmental dressing pleasure. U. S. Choice Select Steaks Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and one mile half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1431 Apollo path- (Continued from page 1) Mostly, the radio contacts consist of readouts of numbers concerning the operation of the crippled spacecraft. The Friday afternoon landing near Pago Pago was decided upon by mission control after hours of agonizing appraisal. The pilots could have been brought in on a "super fast" return, landing at 1 p.m., Thursday, but that was ruled out as too risky. Had the "super fast" return option been taken, it would have meant the astronauts would have had to fire their spacecraft engine for about 10 minutes. They didn't do it because it would have used almost all the descent propulsion system fuel and if they'd had a bad burn they wouldn't have had enough fuel left to correct it a Space Agency spokesman said. The Apollo 13 astronauts have at least 20 hours of extra oxygen for their flight home despite the breakdown in their electrical system. Space Agency officials said Tuesday they were also confident enough water was aboard 24 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 the disabled spaceship for the astronauts ride home. The astronauts faced some potential problems back on earth. Officials in the splashdown area kept a worried watch on tropical storm Helen, now 247 miles southwest of Pago Pago, near the spot the astronauts are to land. Once back on earth, the astronauts will be flown from the recovery carrier Iwo Jima to American Samoa, and from there nonstop to Houston, where their families await them. Swigert, who joined the Apollo 13 mission as a last-minute standin for prime crewman Thomas K. Mattingly, whom officials feared was coming down with measles, is a bachelor. Lovell and Haise are married and their families live near the Houston Space Center. Marilyn Lovell and Mary Haise spent the day alternately praying and speaking confidently of the safe return of their husbands. At the urging of Sen. George Murphy of California, Americans were called upon to pause en masse at 9 p.m. Tuesday to join the families in prayer for the space fliers. President Nixon cancelled a state dinner in honor of Danish Prime Minister Hilmar Bauns- gaard and drove to the Goddard Space Flight Center, at Greenbelt, Md., to be briefed on the emergency and keep track of the flight. The world waited and prayed for the safe return of the astronauts—a prospect which seemed to be brightening with each passing hour despite the seriousness of the trouble. The Soviet news agency Tass carried its first report on the Apollo 13 troubles Tuesday in a brief, factual dispatch from New York. Tass said the "three astronauts are in grave danger" but "flight officials are taking all measures to ensure their safe return to earth." Fire damages apartments in dawn blaze Fire broke out around midnight last night in a rooming house at 1225 Indiana. The fire was restricted to the basement with extensive smoke damage throughout the house. The rooming house is owned by Daniel S. Ling, associate professor of physics at the University of Kansas. Experts debate effects— (Continued from page 1) water each day, some diabetics might drink 20 to 30 liters per day, thus ingesting 20 to 30 times more fluorine. He added sensitive persons could be harmed by very small amounts of any toxic substance. Over—or under-mineralization of bones has been linked to fluorine, and to heart disease in animals, and higher incidences of Mongoloidism in one Illinois study. Exner said. In his rebuttal, Katz said Exner had no scientific support for most of his examples. He said experiments are being conducted to determine how much fluoride is retained in soft tissues, and said it is almost impossible to increase retention unless there was calcification. "Teeth," Katz said, referring to mottling from fluorosis, "are the best witness to over-ingestion." In a study conducted in North Dakota, fluorine is credited with preventing osteoporosis, a disease in which the mass of a bone is decreased, Katz said. Exner called the case "phony," and said there was no standardization of water supplies used in the experiment. He said the Public Health Department considers fluoridation a closed case, and will not recognize studies which show fluoridation to be harmful. Nineteen of 20 communities which vote on the fluoridation issue vote down the proposal, he said. In answering questions after the debate, the speakers disagreed on statistical validity of several of each others' examples. They discussed the possibility of fluoride pills, which Katz said would be expensive. Exner said they could be purchased by a community for 20 cents per thousand, and water fluoridation usually costs more than 20 cents a year per person. PRESENTED BY THE MUSEUM OF ART, INC. THE BEST SCHOOL FOR BOOKWELLING IS THE ONE WHERE YOU MAY READ A LOT OF HISTORY, ENGLISH AND FASHION. IT'S A WONDERFUL PLACE TO EAT A LUNCH, READ A BOOK, OR WALK AROUND. IT'S A SMOOTH PLACE TO READ A BOOK, AND IT'S A WONDERFUL PLACE TO WALK AROUND. The man is talking on a phone. He is standing on a dock with several boats. The water is flowing around the boats. NAISMITH HALL IS... MAPPING THE MATERIALS OF THE LAND A A GOOD PLACE TO STUDY . . each individual student's private study area includes a large desk-dresser with lots of room for books and a convenient tack board to put everything on it that you can't get into the nine storage drawers. Plus . . . each room is completely carpeted which makes them soundproof. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT...20 fantastic meals are served to 500 hungry students each week. Nobody leaves the Naismith Hall cafeteria undernourished because the policy is ALL YOU CAN EAT or as many seconds as your stomach will desire. A GOOD PLACE TO PLAY... although students at KU only have a limited amount of time for rest and relaxation,Naismith Hall provides several alternatives when the time comes...a comfortable lounge on each floor equipped with television sets, a large recreation room and snack bar,and a heated swimming pool, just to mention a few. WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE FROM THE CAMPUS... even if you are on crutches you can sleep till 7:15 and still make it to your 7:30 class on time it's so close to campus. NAISMITH HALL IS . . . for men and women students at Kansas University and is a Kansas University Approved privately owned and operated residence hall. There are only 500 spaces available and many have been taken already, so make your reservation now before it's too late!!! NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Drive 913-843-8559 Bob Bird, Manager THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Section Two Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, April 15, 1970 Kansas Relays '70 Jayhawks host 45th track classic on new Tartan surface KANSAS KANSAS RELAYS Photo by Jim Ryun Expo 70 still has a few bugs OSAKA, Japan (UPI) — There are a lot of things right about Asia's first world fair, Expo 70, but there are a lot of things wrong with it, too. There are, for example, the moving sidewalks which do not move. The last time they did 42 persons were injured when they toppled and piled up at the end of one of them. That was a week ago and the moving sidewalks were halted for several days while Expo officials tried to figure out what went wrong. Meanwhile, congestion on the walkways worsened. The monorail which encircles the 815-acre grounds is hopelessly inadequate and most people who come to the fair are not able to get near it, much less on it. Lines at the pavilions are dishearteningly long. People have waited for as much as four hours to get into the American Pavilion, which displays a moon rock. Several dozen people have been laid low by food poisoning. Fair officials have closed the restaurant responsible but the danger persists in a nation where people eat raw fish even in the hot summer months. The main problem of Expo 70 is simply too many people. The "Lost Children Center" has been swamped, not so much with straying youngsters as lost adults who get separated from their tour groups in the surging crowds. In the fair's first two weeks the center handled about 6,000 cases, but 60 per cent of those helped were adults, many of whom Apr.15 1970 2 KANSAN showed up at the center looking a little sheepish. The center has asked the Expo Association for more help. What saves the fair from being a disaster is that about 90 per cent of the people who see it are Japanese, a people renowned for their patience and tractability. There is remarkably little grumbling about the line-standing and the usually inadvertent toe-treading, shin-kicking and elbowing. One Japanese family proudly told a Tokyo newspaper they had visited 27 pavilions, including the American exhibition, in a single bone-weary day. That probably wasn't a record but it was an excellent day's work. An American woman complained that she had to line up behind 40 other women to use a restroom. Such a synthesis of work and play may babble a Westerner, but to a Japanese, hard work like queueing up, pushing, shoving and hiking all day on concrete, is all in a day's play. Church history livened with modern headlines By LOUIS CASSELS UPI Religion Writer Assign a newspaper editor to teach a Sunday School class in church history, and what do you get? If the editor is David Stolberg, you get a catchy collection of tabloid headlines which make great events of Christian history sound remarkably contemporary Stolber is managing editor of the Washington Daily News. His class consisted of 25 high school students, and they approached the subject of church history with an unwavering conviction that it would be deadly dull. He enlisted the help of his newspaper colleagues, including regular headline writers and print shop workers, who produced one hand-set headline each week. The first headline dealt with the "birthday of the church"—the day of Pentecost on which the Apostles of Christ were filled with the holy spirit. It read: "12 Apostles Hit by Fire, Talk in Foreign Tongues." A classroom discussion of the persecution of Christians in Nero's Rome was enlivened by a headline with a strikingly contemporary sound: "Christians Defy Govt., Refuse Loyalty Pledge." A certain sauciness is expected of a good tabloid headline, and Stolberg's treatment of Martin Luther's break with the Catholic Church meets the requirement: "Monk Luther Defies Rome's Heaven Sales." The idea isn't copyrighted, Stolberg says, and any Sunday school teacher who wants to borrow it has his blessing. What's Cooking Something is always cooking at the Hole in the Wall, and another delicious item has been included in our fine family of foods — Hole-in-the-Wall Special a hot juicy roast beef sandwich on a warm onion bun along with our special sauce. A delicious treat made right before your eyes, as are all of our delicious products. And don't forget that We Deliver THE HOLE IN THE WALL IN THE 9th & III. Jayhawk Food Mart Use Kansan Classifieds Lawrence's Most Modern Bank Salutes KU On Its 45th Annual Kansas Relays BANK DOUGLAS COUNTY State Bank 9th & Kentucky "The Bank of Friendly Service" Member FDIC VI3-7474 --- The Lawrence APARTMENT COMPLEXES Back the KANSAS JAYHAWKS 10.5' W X 10.5' D These Lawrence apartment complexes represent the finest in off-campus luxury living in the university community. College Hill Manor Meadowbrook Jayhawker Towers Ridglea Crescent Apartments Southridge Plaza and Malls Olde English Village University Terrace and Old Mill Apartments The unexpected is always exciting Rodgers promises no ordinary team By DON BAKER Kansan Sports Writer In the surrounds of his spacious and plush office, Pepper Rodgers leisurely sat in his large swivel-chair, smoking his pipe and listening to his AM-FM radio, and analyzed KU football hopes for the coming season. "I expect a real exciting team," he said. "Right now I would say we would have to be classified as being an unexpected team—and the unexpected is always exciting." Rodgers said that two years ago he had no idea the Jayhawks would win nine games and go to the Orange Bowl, and likewise last year he had no idea the team would win only one game. "I'll tell you one thing for sure," Rodgers said, "we're not shooting to be ordinary." How do the Jayhawks compare to this time a year ago? Rodgers was unusually optimistic in his forecast. "We definitely are better than last year," he said. "The thing of it is we have two very important ingredients we didn't have last 4 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 year—one, we have good seniors and two, we have excellent sophomores" With that statement the subject of conversation naturally turned KU "You want me to be honest, don't you?" Pepper Rodgers to recruiting and upon being questioned of this year's recruiting efforts the KU head mentor immediately grinned and said: Upon receiving an affirmative answer Rodgers beamingly announced that this year's recruiting has been excellent. "With the addition of Jaynes our recruiting program can be said to be excellent," Rodgers observed. He was, of course, referring to David Jaynes, the 6-1, 190 pound quarterback from Bonner Springs. Jaynes had been one of the most highly sought prep football players in the nation and had first signed a letter-of-intent with Alabama before changing his mind and deciding on KU. "I'll tell you right now," Rodgers said, "the signing of David Jaynes was a great shot in the arm for KU football." Becoming more specific about this year's recruiting, Rodgers conceded that Missouri did the best job in the Kansas City area. "Don't get me wrong." Rodgers insisted. "We got some excellent football players from Kansas City, but of all the schools who depend on the Kansas City area for recruiting, I think Missouri did the best job." "In Kansas we had a good year," he noted, "but not as good as last year." Rodgers added that Kansas State signed some athletes that the Jayhawks very definitely wanted but that the Wildcats also lost some to KU that they wanted. (Continued to page 10) Attention Seniors FULFICO CollegeMaster FULICIO CollegeMaster A CollegeMaster Representative will be in touch with you. Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI2-4650 enjoy sun sand and summer in sandals called Cobbies® McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" Awbrey reviews Senate's first year By TINA BORAK Kansan Staff Writer A new philosophy of government at the University of Kansas, the Student Senate, was born last spring. Its predecessor, the All-Student Council (ASC), had been a disappointment in University government, and the new Student Senate was part of the entire restructuring of campus governing bodies. Its goal was increased participation of students in the University. The struggle for election to the new governing body ended April 24. The Independent Student Party won by a slim margin, and David S. Awbrey, Hutchinson junior, became student body president and Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior, became its vicepresident. The Student Senate succeeded the ASC April 29, and immediately factions arose within the Senate. Awbrey called for a unification of the Student Senate and urged members to forget individual aims. The first step of the Senate was organizational in accordance with the 1969 Senate Code. Committees were set up and legislation was directed to them. The committee members were given the responsibility of finding where the power in the University lies and who the people in control are. Precedents had to be set; one such was Nonviolence club begins at KSU A class entitled "Nonviolence in a Violent Society," offered by the University for Man at K-State, has resulted in the beginning of an Institute for the Study of Nonviolence chapter on the Manhattan campus. The Institute was founded in California by Joan Baez and Ira Sandpearl. Its purpose is to "study nonviolence, organize for nonviolent change, reach other people and to live and be free." A branch of the Institute was founded at Golden, Colo., last winter. A representative from the Golden branch will serve as a consultant to the Manhattan chapter. Sally Wisely, K-State sophomore, heads the chapter. She said it would be very unstructured, but that a balance of reading, discussion, meditation and fun would be sought. The chapter is planning a retreat in Manhattan April 17-19. Information on the organization can be obtained through the University for Man. Cable car caused sex claims California lady SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — A 1964 cable car accident caused a former dance instructor and straitlaced churchgoer to become unduly amorous because she "reverted to the age of five when she craves to be close to another body." That was the testimony given by Dr. Andrew Watson, clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan, in the trial of Gloria Sykes. Miss Sykes, 29, is suing the city and county of San Francisco for $500,000 claiming the injuries she suffered in the cable car crash gave her an insatiable desire for sex. Watson, the first psychiatric expert witness for the defense, said the only way Miss Sykes could be close to another body was through sexual intercourse. He further testified that the accident made Miss Sykes frigid "because she is getting no pleasure out of her numerous sexual relationships." Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 5 the position of the Student Senate president in relation to the governing body. Awbrey's role became one of a coordinator. "The problem was one of building trust," said Awbrey. "The Student Senate didn't trust the committees and wanted to take care of matters on its own. A lot of energy was wasted in Senate meetings this way." The Senate began its task of a legislative body, and soon was faced with the problems of the disciplinary hearings involving three students charged with disruption of a seminar for Kansas law enforcement officials and interference with student elections, Another problem the young Senate faced was the impeachment of Miss Bowman for her participation in the Chancellor's ROTC Review demonstration, May 9. The Student Bill of Rights was written, partially because of these discussions, later in the year. In reference to that document Awbrey said it was "the only document specifically stating the rights and responses of students in an academic community which was written by students without approval or direction by administrators." The school year became marked with controversy. Relations between the state of Kansas and the Board of Regents and the University were strained for the first time in years. Resolutions were passed protesting actions by these bodies. There seemed to be an endless hassle with the state legislature and the Regents, said Awbrey. Regents had done every other meeting." "We seemed to be concerned with what Sen. Shultz or the Awbrey said he hoped next year there would be less outside interference with the University, however, "we hopefully adopted a more understanding attitude in Topeka." The Senate was concerned with broad theory questions, such as the war in Vietnam and the military draft, and thus the campus was directed outward. A resolution was passed in support of the moratorium Oct. 15, and these national issues were submitted to the student body for referendum The body was also oriented towards the University's problems. Policy making committees of the Senate dealt with all areas of the University. "The Senate proved, in effect, that student and administrators can work together in harmonious relationships for the benefit of all." The Student Senate introduced a bill that later became policy: requiring 20 per cent student representation on all committees in the University. On the whole this year, said Awbrey, the Student Senate was in the strict sense a legislative branch, but it was also an opinion forum for what the students felt. "Opinions of students were somewhat mirrored through our discussion on the floor." But it did not do enough, he said. Many of the personal student problems, particularly those concerning undergraduates, were left unsolved. Issues left for next year include the freeing of freshman women from living is residence halls and the passing of legislation that would more easily enable halls to take care of their own policies. However, Awbrey was optimistic for next year's Senate. "For me personally, the most rewarding accomplishment of the year was having Bill Ebert elected as my successor. Bill has many of the same opinions on University affairs as myself. A continuum has been created. What we started this year won't be impaired by his election," said Awbrey. As for this year: "The Student Senate as a whole has provided better government than we've ever had before. We'll have to wait a time to see how many programs carry through, but all in all I have no regrets of what we did. I'm very proud of it." Awbrey said. After the Relays . . . meet at the RAMADA INN RESTAURANT AMERICAN AND CHINESE DISHES RAMADA INN RESTAURANT 6th & IOWA GOOD STAR --- WELCOME! ALUMNI & GUESTS It's always a thrill to come back to KU, and the KU Relays! Alumni and friends travel from afar to gather once again to bring back old memories and begin new ones. Let the Kansas Union be your host this week. Come in and see our new facilities. KANSAS UNION Former cadet relates experience Air Force Academy discipline rigid By JOHN B. HALL Kansan Writer (The facts of this story are true, only the name has been changed to protect the innocent from low-level Air Force surveillance flights.) The Air Force Academy near Colorado Springs, Colorado, is one of three government-sponsored military institutions of higher learning. The Academy has always maintained high standards for admittance and for conduct after acceptance. It has a reputation for enrolling only the very best young men, offering superior educational opportunities and developing outstanding military personnel. These facts, coupled with a phenomenal degree of espirit de corps, account for the Academy's prestigious position in the ranks of American institutions of higher learning. "That's a farce!" says one ex-Academy cadet currently attending the University of Kansas. "Out there you do what you do because you have to do it. There is little place for self-motivation." Bob Smith, as the student will be called in this interview, graduated in the top one per cent of his high school class and was an exceptional athlete. A late application to the Academy was responsible for Smith spending his first college year at KU. But he was invited to the Academy for the fall 1969 semester. This was a long-awaited chance for Bob, since one of his goals was to become a pilot. Was this Bob's only motivation? "Oh no. I thought I could get a good education. I also thought this was the opportunity to really work and make something for myself . . . a meaningful direction for the future," he said. Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 7 Smith mentioned that most cadets are attracted by the Academy's educational offerings and its prestige. However a large number of cadets applied for financial reasons since Uncle Sam picks up the tab for four years education plus $220 every month for each cadet. Of course, there are some cadets who want a career in the military. I asked Bob how large a factor the Academy prestige and spirit was in the cadets' daily lives. "That's where the real farce occurs. The single most discouraging element I encountered there was Apathy!" he said. The educations system at the Academy is organized around 22 different majors. Most of these are math, science and engineering oriented studies. During the four years every cadet must take 188 credit hours while maintaining a 2.00 overall grade point average on a 3-point scale. "Well, we actually had only two to three hours a night to study." (Classes and physical activities last from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. for everyone.) I asked Bob how he managed to survive under such large semester loads. "The only reason most everyone makes it, is the distorted curve the instructors employ in grading. The majority of cadets get 'B's,'" he said. "Before long I found myself skimming a lot and learning little." According to Bob, though, the weakest aspect of the institution's education is the instructors. "Most of the instructors are Academy graduates themselves, and the epitomy of the professional soldier," he said. "They tend to be biased in the presentations and generally are not open to questions other than the very elementary." As may be expected the Academy maintains an atmosphere of rigid military procedure. "There is a constant undercurrent of military indoctrination felt by everyone there," Smith said. As freshmen, the cadets are known as "doolies" and are fair game in the open harassment season sponsored by the upper-class cadets. burger chef "Doolies may never lift their eyes from the ground except when spoken to and then they may not break eye contact until the conversation is completed," said Smith. For fast service come to Burger Chef this Relays weekend. Try our Super Shef, or the Big Shef, or the Roast Beef Sandwich, or all three. after graduation. How then was Smith able to return to KU? "Well, I damaged the cartilage in my left knee and was no longer flight qualified, which was the main reason I was willing to 'stick it out' at the Academy." - 100% Pure Beef- 9th & Iowa BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF Upon request, Bob Smith was officially released from his obligation. He was happy about that. There are daily room inspections and more detailed personal inspections on the weekends. "I never felt as though I was using my full potential as an individual when I spent one to one and a half hours eating each meal," he said. "Here at KU you do what you do because you want to do it. I get a great deal more satisfaction from self-discipline." BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS The social life of the cadets is almost non-existent. "As freshmen, we got two nights off the base each semester. Seniors get one night each week until 11 p.m." he said. "I guess social life is replaced by the intramural activities." such as the correct placement of socks in drawers or the proper display of underwear," Smith said. "That's really not so bad though. It's just a matter of getting a routine established." "It takes about one and a half to two hours a day to prepare your room and uniform for the next day. And of course there is a prescribed method for everything, Every cadet must spend two to three hours each day involved in intramural athletics or varsity sports. Having experienced both types of education, Bob commented, "It really makes you appreciate college." The cadets are contracted by the Air Force to serve a minimum of four years active duty Made in Italy Bandolino's Bandolino BANDOLINO, CON BRIO! Spectator in white with navy, black patent and tan. Buckle oxford in white, bone or red. Sandal in navy, white, tan. Only three of more to choose from. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street - Annual KU Relays draws track's 'best' By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor If the recent sunshine and warm weather of spring continues (a rarity for the Kansas Relays), the second leg of the famed Texas-KU-Drake relays circuit shapes up to be an excitement-packed weekend carnival full of possible record-shattering performances. A sparkling sprint field, featuring John Carlos, generally acclaimed the "world's fastest human," an outstanding shot put assemblage, and three of the world's top milers will be featured in the 45th Kansas Relays, April 16-18, on the Jayhawks' new all-weather Tartan track. Top-flight century cluster Carlos, who paced San Jose to the NCAA outdoor championship by three points over KU last year, was ranked number one in the world in the 100-yard dash and the 220 distance last year. Last summer Carlos clocked the only 9 flat 100 ever recorded, although it was wind aided and couldn't be recognized as a new world mark. The Olympic sprint ace, who shares the world 100-yard dash mark at 9.1, will compete in a special invitational century dash. Possibly joining Carlos in the invitational feature, will be Charlie Green, the ex-Nebraska flash. The former Cornhusker trackster is one of four who share the 100-yard dash record with Carlos. Green won the open 100 here the past two years. Bob Timmons, KU track coach and Relays director, has also pointed out that three of the world's premier sprinters are already entered in the collegiate 100-yard dash and may also participate in the special race. Timmons of course is referring to Ivory Crockett, the National AAU sprint king from Southern Illinois, and two Big Eight sprinters—Mel Gray of Missouri and Earl Harris of Oklahoma State. Crockett nipped Carlos at 100-yards in the National AAU last year with a 9.3 recording. Gray, winner of the Texas Relays' 100 two weeks ago, has also logged a 9.3 time. Harris, the world's most consistent sprinter during the recent indoor season, turned in a world record-equaling 5.9 in the 60-yard dash during the indoor campaign. The open 100 event is scheduled for 2:15 Saturday afternoon and the collegiate century dash begins with preliminaries starting at 8:50 Friday morning. A dream shot put field The "dream" shot put field will feature outdoor world record-holder Randy Matson, former Texas A & M great. Matson's world mark is 71-51½. Although unbeaten in six indoor meets with a best toss of 66-6 at the Los Angeles Times Games, Matson will be making his first outdoor appearance of the year at the KU Relays. "I'm in better shape now than I was last year," Matson assured meet director Timmons, "but I don't have as much time to train 8 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 Sign up for fall classes in Tole and Decorative Painting, and Decoupage. The Concord Shop Div. of McConnell Lumber Co., Inc. 844 East 13th VI 3-3877 now as I did when I was in college." Opposing Matson will be the Jayhawks' duo of Karl Salb and TEXAS A&M Randy Matson Steve Wilhelm, who are currently the ten two collegiate shot putters Wilmel, who are currently the top two collegiate shot putters. Salb has won three NCAA championships (two indoor and one outdoor) and Wilhelm finished second to the 'Hawk giant in all three championships. Salb's all-time best is 67-5% indoors and he owns a 67-0% outdoor mark. Wilhelm has heaved the 16-pound shot 65-3 indoors and 63-6/4 outdoors. Also joining the elite group is Emporia State's Al Feuerbach, Feuerbach, NAIA king, owns a personal best of 62-111/4 which he threw during the past indoor campaign. Indoor record-holder Neal Steinhauer and KU's third member of the Jayhawk weight trio—Doug Knop—will not compete in the event. Steinhauer, who has posted a 67-10 indoor toss, informed Timmons last week that he will not make the competition. Knop will pass up the shot in order to throw in his speciality—the discuss. Excentional mile field Exceptional mile field Three of the country's best middle distance runners have accepted invitations to compete in the Glenn Cunningham Mile. John Lawson, Tom Von Ruden and John Mason, all representing the strong Pacific Coast Club contingent that will be present at the Relays, will run in the mile competition. Lawson, a former KU great, has a best time of 3:59.3. He turned in one of the top indoor performances during the recent indoor campaign when he upset Kip Keino, Olympic 1,500 meter champ, at Los Angeles with a 4:00.6 time, the fastest of the 1970 indoor season. Mason, ex-Fort Hays State standout, finished third nationally behind Lawson and Keino who posted identical clockings in the LA meet with a fine 4:00.8 recording he hit at Vancouver during the indoor campaign. Von Ruden, one-time Oklahoma State distance ace, owns the best mile of the trio with his 3:56.9 recording in 1967. Von Ruden, a member of the U.S. 1,500 meter triate at the 1968 Olympic (Continued to page 10) MEYER'S DAIRY Meyers MILK MEYERS Meyers MILK LAKE & ALPINE MINNESOTA VARIETY E MILK welcomes relays weekend guests. Meyer's delivers to all apartments as well as to your favorite store. Your local home-owned dairy. 710 W.6th Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS 333 WELCOMES YOU TO THE 45th ANNUAL KU RELAYS Enjoy fine food and warm hospitality during your stay in Lawrence by dining in one of Carriage Lamp's tastefully decorated dining rooms. Featuring a complete menu to serve all tastes and budgets. Steaks Sea Foods Chicken Lasagne Spaghetti Sandwiches Dining Rooms Open 11:30-9:30 Sandwiches Available Until Midnight Open Sunday 11:30-8:00 We invite you to visit the Carriage Lamp Private Club. es Located in The Malls Shopping Center s --- Make Church a Part of Your Relays Weekend... MARK WASHINGTON Worship this Sunday at one of these Lawrence churches: CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1501 Massachusetts Elton Garrison, pastor Church School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship, 10:30 a.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 10th and Vermont Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye, pastor Rev. Stuart W. Herrick, assoc. pastor Sunday Worship, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Church School, 9:20 a.m. FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1942 Massachusetts Rev. Samuel Pickenpaugh Worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Church School, 9:45 a.m. Special Services, April 21-26 With Dr. John Knight PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL A UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 925 Vermont Dr. John E. Felible, minister Dr. James Moesier, musical director Worship Service, 10:00 a.m. Fellowship, 11:00 a.m. GRANDVIEW PARK BAPTIST TEMPLF 1549 E. 23rd Rev. V. William Bailey Worship, 11:00 a.m. Sunday School, 10:00 a.m. Youth Services, 6:30 p.m. Preaching Service, 7:30 p.m. LUTHERAN CHURCH LCA TRINITY 1245 New Hampshire Rev. Harold Hamilton, pastor Rev. James D. Little, assistant pastor Sunday Services at 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER 15th and Iowa Co-pastors, Norman Steffen, Mo-Synod Donald Conrad, ALC-LCA Morning Worship Services, 9 and 11 a.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 801 Kentucky Rev. M. C. Allen Rev. V. C. Patten, Minister of Christian Education Worship Service, 11:00 a.m. Church School, 9:45 a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2415 W. 23rd Rev. Harold Mallett, pastor Rev. Forest Link, assistant pastor Worship Services, 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Church School, 9:45 a.m. Coffee Fellowship after each service Free bus service to and from church Bus leaves Haskell at 10:20, stops at 9th and Mass., Corbin, Chi Omega Fountain, Daisy Hill, Oliver Hall and Stewart Drive. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1105 W. 25th Wilburn C, Hill Owen Mitchell, preachers Sunday Services, 9:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. ST. LAWRENCE STUDENT PARISH 1915 Stratford Road Rev. Brendan Downey, O.S.B. Rev. Donald Redmond, O.S.B. Masses: St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford, at 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; Hoch Auditorium, 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Weekday mass at Chapel 7:15 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH 13th and Massachusetts 3 blocks east of the Kansas Union Darrel D. Madsen, pastor Collegiate Bible Study at 9:45 a.m. in the Castle Tea Room, 1301 Mass. Worship Services, 11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. --- KANSAS Looking for a Relays' title Doug Knop, KU discus and shot put ace, will be one of many top track and field performers shooting for a championship at the 45th Kansas Relays, April 6-18, on KU's new all-weather Tartan track. Rodgers-football (Continued from page 4) Turning to this year's spring football Rodgers noted that team attitude is excellent and that progress to date has been very good. "In spring football we are trying to find out who might have a chance to play with us this fall," he said. "That's why we've been scrimmaging so much." It has been no secret, however. 10 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 that one of the prime objectives this spring is to find a quarterback. "You can't have a good football team without a good quarterback," Rodgers said. The Jayhawk mentor, who has developed a nationally recognized reputation for developing great quarterbacks, further added that a good quarterback can make a good team or a bad quarterback can make a bad team. "However," Rodgers quickly added, "you have to concentrate on having a complete team." Top performers at Relays (Continued from page 8) Games with KU's Jim Ryun and Villanova's Marty Liquori, posted a 4:02.4 this past winter when he also smashed the world mark in the 1,000 meters. The Glenn Cunningham Mile is scheduled for 2:30 in the Saturday afternoon session of the Relays. Texas champs compete Texas champions compete Seven champions at the recent Texas Relays have also entered the Relays' competition. Topping the kings is Rex Maddaford of Eastern New Mexico, a double winner in the mile and three-mile at Austin. Maddafond posted a 4:02.6 in the mile and his winning effort of 13:23.3 in the three-mile is well under the Relays' current mark of 13:50.6. Other Texas winners include Bill Schmidt, North Texas State's javelin king (257-10½), Lujack Lawrence, Dallas Baptist, who took the long jump crown with a leap of 24-8. Big Eight standouts who swept Texas honors are Gray (9.4 in the 100-dash), Mike Wedman, Colorado pole vaulter who cleared 16-6 at Austin, and KU's Wilhelm, shot put king with a $64-11² heave. New Events Three new events, the decathlon—absent since 1966—a 26 mile marathon and a 35 year old and over mile event, have been added to the Kansas Relays' format. Sam Goldberg, KU's decathlon entrant who recently broke the Kentucky Relays record with 6,-710 points will be present. Running in the "old timers" mile is Jim Herschberger, a former KU 440 and 220 distance ace in 1951. Herschberger, who last summer donated $125,000 for the installation of the all-weather track in Memorial Stadium, will be honored at the Relays festivities for his part in the KU athletic program. Engineering expo plan The 1970 engineering exposition will be held April 17 and 18 in Learned Hall. This years theme will be "Profiles to Tomorrow." As of April 10,14 schools—including all Big 8 member schools have indicated they will participate in the university division competition. The college division has received 35 entries and 15 junior colleges will participate. An astounding 30 Kansas high schools will be present and six track clubs—including the strong Pacific Coast Club and the California Striders' entries, will make appearances in the three day affair on KU's new synthetic track. GET TOGETHER WITH FRIENDS AT THE AT THE ROCK CHALK CAFE SANDY MORRIS Lunch Special SOUP & SANDWICH...50c Home of the world famous TRUCK STOP SHIRT SPECIALISTS We offer the finest in selection and quality. It's the way we do it that makes it right—more emphatic in the stripe, pared down in the body, bravura in the color. From Gant & Holbrook. The Town Shop 839 Mass. VI 3-5755 The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 Monday Eve. Dear Mom and Malt , Just a note to tell you how glad I am that you're coming in for the Relays ! It 's going to be a tremendous weekend ! I just know the Jayhawks will win every event ! — Go Hawks! Also, wanted so let you know Dad, that this year you won't have to fight , tug - pull , break your back , sweat or sweat - as you load my winter clothes into the car I 've decided to store them with Acme Cleaners - FREE - no less - The only cost is $ 3.95 for $ 300 . * worth of insurance ( 27 . Extra for additional valuation ) and , of course , the regular cleaning charge when I pick them up in the Rd. Acme Cleans the Clothes ( 25-30 garments ) and then Stores them in Refrigerated Boxes - and I Receive FREE Minor Repairs - and - FREE Moth, Odor and Mildew Proofing ! Pretty good Deal, Right ? And I Don't have to pay for the Cleaning until I pick it up - all freshly pressed-in the Hall! - No sweat at all - See , Dad , I'm thinking of you all the time ! Knew your back would break from carrying all my clothes out and then riding all the way home in that cramped car . Everyone should store their clothes with -> Acme Cleaners - Downtown - 1111 Mass. or Hillcrest-925 Iowa or at The Malls-711 34.23 V13-5/55 . SEE You Soon , LOVE, Your Clutchy little Daughter G. S. Oh, by the way, Dal, since Aenea and I saved your back - how about saving my legs ? - a new baby blue sports car would Really help! I just know you agree ! ❽ AUGUST 1970 BARRY BOWMAN AND CHEMISTRY MALLS THE MALLS shopping center 111 TEAMO 111 KU WELCOMES YOU to the KANSAS Photos by Randy Leffingwell center SAFEWAY ACRES of Free PARKING - OPEN - 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. nd Louisiana - Topsy's Popcorn & Ice Cream - Kief's Records & Stereo - Malls Barber Shop - Lost Gallery of Art - T. G. and Y. - George's Hobby House - Carriage Lamp Restaurant - Acme Cleaners - Malls Laundromat to the 45th ANNUAL S RELAYS KU 一 No room for failure at Achievement Place Pre-delinquent boys get second chance by CHERYL BOWMAN Kansan Staff Writer Each year about 250 youths are removed from their homes by Kansas juvenile courts. In most cases they are then sent to the Boy's Industrial School to live for periods of nine months to three years. Working on the principle that these youths should be given second chances without going to jail, the University of Kansas' Bureau of Child Research has organized a program called Achievement Place to save these boys from jail and to rehabilitate them so they can become useful citizens. Through a program of behavioral management pre-delinquent boys are given the opportunity to stay in the community while on the road to achievement. Achievement Place Inc., located at 1340 Haskell, was established three years ago by Montrose Wolf, associate professor of human development and family life, and the University of Kansas Bureau of Child Research. The home is supported by various local agencies and receives evaluation grants from the National Institute of Mental Health The boys who come to live at Achievement Place are Lawrence residents who come from such places as broken homes, deprived homes or jail. At Achievement Place these boys are given reprieves from jail. Lonny Phillips, Lawrence graduate student, and his wife, Elaine, are the house parents of Achievement Place. They receive custody of a boy after Juvenile Court has removed him from his home. Achievement Place can house six boys at one time. Since its establishment, 15 boys between the ages of 12 and 16 have lived at Achievement Place. The length of their stays has ranged from five months to a year and a half. "The primary purpose of the Achievement Place program is to help children who are having difficulty," said Phillips. "Its goal is to help the youth to become a secure, well adjusted and useful citizen. "This is achieved by providing a home style, family environment in which sincere love and understanding is combined with fair and consistent discipline," Phillips said. During their stay at Achievement Place, the boys live on a token economy or the "point system" as they know it. Each boy 14 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 is required to carry a score card in his pocket. He receives points for good behavior and loses points for undesirable behavior. The points the boys make are exchanged for privileges. The points the boys make are exchanged for such things as allowance, bicycle, TVs, snacks, permission to go downtown and permission to spend time at their own homes. Access to privileges are at first obtained on a weekly basis. At the end of the week they can trade the points they have earned that week for privileges during the next week. Heavy emphasis is placed on grades and school. The boys attend the Lawrence public schools. The point system and the Achievement Place Education program seek to make success in school irresistible. Phillips said the key problem appeared to be motivation. He said the boys just didn't care about school or getting an education and saw no connection between doing well in school and being a successful citizen later on in life. Achievement Place tries to bring the consequences for a good education closer in time to the actual learning. "When most boys come to Achievement Place they are in academic trouble," said Phillips. "Unless some steps are taken these boys will be likely to become school 'drop outs.' We take the attitude that most who can't make it in school, can't make it in life." To do this the boys take daily report cards to school. Their teachers are required to check whether or not the boys studied and obeyed the rules, whether they completed home work assignments on time and the grades they earned on exams. According to a study, while taking the cards the boys' study behavior increased almost 90 per cent and in most cases their grades improved one letter grade. "The boys who come here are on the fringes of serious trouble," said Phillips. "They come here to take a look at themselves and to understand their problems. They are taught self control while systematically decreasing dependence on the point system and increasing dependence on natural reinforcements." Once a boy demonstrates his ability to exercise self control, to take responsibility for his own behavior and to work productively in the home and in school, he is ready to be returned to his own home or to a permanent foster family. When a boy is ready to go home he enters the Homeward Bound program. It seeks to maintain the social, academic, and self-help skills he has learned by providing for a two- to six-month transition period in which personnel from the Achievement Place maintain close contact with the parents of a homeward bound boy. Initially the boy goes home for week-ends and continues to live at Achievement Place during the week. The boy learns to avoid the problems that caused him to be placed in Achievement Place and his parents learn to use the techniques employed at Achievement Place so that they can maintain their son's newly learned skills. During the next phase of the program, the boys lives at home full time while Achievement Moscow long distance to call for small talk about weather Many students think of faculty as "dry, square people who have buried themselves in books so long that they don't have any idea of what's going on in the world." But some of them, believe it or not, have done a lot of things besides academic work. radio station KWFT in Wichita Falls, Tex. The staff thought an interview with Khrushchev to get his comment on the Sputnik launch would make good publicity for the station. David Dary, teaching assistant in the radio department of the School of Journalism, for instance, has tried to talk with Nikita S. Khrushchev on the phone. That was in 1957 after the Russians had launched Sputnik 1, and Khrushchev was Russian premier. Dary was working for They did not get to talk to Krushhrie, however. Darya said "The call was transferred to the English department of Radio Moscow which is the propaganda department, and I talked with one Mr. Boristov," said Dary. Place personnel still maintain close contact with the boy and his parents. Eventually, the parents assume full responsibility for their son's behavior. "I asked for comments on the launch, but he wouldn't tell me anything. Finally, the only question I could come up with was about the Moscow weather." In the event of a reoccurrence of some delinquent behavior the boy could be placed back into Achievement Place for further training. Griff's Griff's KU Relays Special The GIANT Hamburger Only 44c This Saturday and Sunday Griff's is offering all of the many people who have come to enjoy the KU Relays the opportunity to enjoy Griff's GIANT Hamburger for only 44¢ (With Cheese Only 49¢). Griff's put a giant hunk of ground beef, fresh lettuce, tomato, and onion on a toasted bun to create the giant of a meal, the GiANT Hamburger. Come in for a GiANT meal this weekend. "THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS" CAPITOL MILK Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W. 23rd Buzzi and Associates, Inc. Insurance Agency Tony Croman "For the Professional Approach to Your Insurance Needs" Bob Joyce - Arden Gray - Mike Reeves Ray Terrell Ray Terrell - Janice Peterson Bill Hill Ralph Light PILLI LAN - Steve Gibson Lloyd Buzzi CARLOS GARCINO - Gene Hadl Let us help you with: Auto Insurance Renters Insurance Life Insurance Computer Programs Health Insurance Group Insurance Disability Insurance Mortgage Insurance Tax Sheltered Programs Buzzi and Associates 2323 Ridge Court V1 2-7771 Gary Garrett Ric Marshall Lee Salisbury Lee Sells Doug Powell Awareness of black needs urged "Teachers in college and especially on the highschool level must become more aware of the problems and needs of black students," said a black engineer from Western Electric, Jim Dumas. He emphasized this point in a speech, "Engineering Education for Blacks: Lower Standards," addressed to a meeting of the American Society of Engineering Educators (ASEE). Dumas stressed the importance of not worrying about losing academic accreditation and lowering academic standards while improving methods of black student education. He said a major problem confronting the educational system now was the fact that the present quality of education in predominantly black schools was still poor. This, he said, is the result of lack of encouragement shown by instructors toward black students, something that is also true of black students in predominantly white schools. Another problem confronting black students in high school preparing for college is that in the integrated schools cultural differences between blacks and whites cause a gap in communication, preventing white teachers from understanding the real problems black students face, he said. Even if blacks do make the grade, Dumas said, there still exists this lack of communication because what is culturally common to blacks may be completely foreign to whites. But one of the most important problems to be found in the educational system, he said, is a lack of good counseling, especially in high schools. There are just not enough counselors, Dumas said. The schools should be supplied with enough counselors to provide for a balanced system of guidance. There should be more black counselors, also; so that this "communication gap" can be filled in. Pollution then, too HOLLAND, Mich. (UPI) -- You think air pollution is bad now? In 1889 in Chicago, one of America's soootest cities, there was darkness at noon. In the words of an eyewitness, the late President E. D. Dimnent of Hope College in Holland: "The sun, as is its wont on a summer morning in August, rose early in all its magnificence and for two or three hours shone with all its splendor. At about 9 o'clock, one noticed that it shone no more but seemed but a dying ember. Rapidly it darkened and at 1:00 o'clock a darkness rivaling in density the blackness of a starless sky at midnight enshrouded the city." Dinnent wrote the description in an essay when he was a preparatory school student. He noted that the development of a smoke burner that would reduce air pollution was helping somewhat in clearing up the atmosphere, adding, "We hope that before long this great problem will be fully solved." LAS founded in 1891 The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has been in practical existence since the founding of the University, but was not established as a school until the reorganization of the University in 1891. It was first called the School of Arts and in 1904 its name was changed to the present one. Apr.15 1970 KANSAN 15 Many white counselors tend to stereotype black students into a particular category, using a set of "cultural traits" and applying them to all black students, preventing a true evaluation of the students' abilities. There is also a lack of vocational exposure in counselors, he said. Counselors should be given a chance to help blacks on their own levels so that a better understanding of black student problems can be seen, he said. Why do blacks avoid the chance for a higher-level career such as engineering? The answer to this, Dumas said, lies in the "fear of failure" experienced by many pre-college black students. He said that many times black students who had received college degrees return home to find they cannot get a job in their major area of study. This, he said, is the result of continued discrimination and prevents bright young black students from wanting to continue. Another way of helping black students enrolled in colleges is to improve the existing methods of guidance and counseling. Guidance personnel, Dumas said, should be trained to discover efficiencies in the curriculum of black students in high school so that they will be better prepared to attend college. He said that the University of Kansas was now working on a program that would help black students make up for deficiencies in English, mathematics, and other subjects. The teaching system itself, he said, can be improved to help black students in a number of ways. Teachers must find better techniques to get normal material across to blacks in the worst ghetto schools. He said that teachers in these schools could not use middle-class suburban school techniques because the students just would not accept it. Teachers need to be exposed to sensitivity awareness programs so that they can become more involved with the needs of black students, Dumas said. High school teachers should help by encouraging black students to do the things they are most interested in, he said. Most important of all, the teachers need to expect more from the black students, he said. This can be done by recognizing students' abilities and then encouraging them to utilize their abilities by showing them that they are expected to excel, he said. Dumas is a 1964 graduate of KU in electrical engineering and was a three-year letterman in basketball here. The speech was addressed to delegates of the fifth annual meeting of the ASEE in the Kansas Union ballroom. When You Need Help In Lawrence... Dial 911 for: • Police • Fire • Ambulance Write It Down—911 This number could save your life. DIAL: 911 Southwestern Bell DIAL: 911 Woodstock in Review T. B. Rowe 10 (1) Joan Baez By TED ILIFF Campus Editor "Woodstock," an epic feature documentary on the rock festival last August, has been graciously rated "R." Once again Jack Valenti has demonstrated that he has no talent at judging the worth of a film. Everyone should be able, yea, required to see the film. Produced by Michael Wadleigh and released by Warner Bros., "Woodstock" deserves all the trite phrases used for praise in film reviews. You walk out of the theater with ears ringing from music and a desire to see it again. The film (as screened for the press in Dallas) is three hours of splendor. A description of the filming process is enough to boggle the mind. Forty crew members manning six camera positions and several sound systems accumulated 315,000 feet of film and 81 hours of sound, and from all that had to create a concise film of three remarkable days. "Woodstock" is really two films wrapped into one. Oddly enough, the public relations literature from Warner Bros. heavily emphasizes the musical groups who performed at the festival. Richie Havens, Joan Baez, Joe Cocker, Santana, The Who, Ten Years After, Crosby Stills, Nash, and Young (in only their second public appearance together), Shauna-na, John Sebastian, Country Joe and the Fish, Alilo Guthrie, Sly and the Family Stone, and Jimi Hendrix all perform at least one familiar song in the film. 16 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 Crosby and Stills Highlights were Sly and the Family Stone, who did a rendition of "I Want To Take You Higher" that had everyone in the theater clapping and grooving with the music, Country Joe's "I feel like I'm Fixin' To Die Reg," which included the amusingly vulgar "Fish cheer," and Sha-na-na's frantic, raucous revival of "At The Hop" which is one of the funniest acts I have ever seen. As impressive as the music was, it was far overshadowed by the second facet of the film, "Woodstock" is a monumental documentary on the social phenomenon that occurred there. Performances by the Who and Ten Years After were both sub par. They had similar problems—too long, too repetitious, and frankly, too boring. If the producers decide to cut the film (and I hope they do) these segments should be the first to go. The interviews with everyone Arlo Guthrie from the organizer to the portable outhouse operator, the scenes of the endless lines of traffic, the cops standing around just watching, the pushers, the kids skinny-dipping (there is plenty of skin in the movie for voyeurs, but if that is your only reason for seeing "Woodstock," you're sick) and the comments, praises, and laments of the local natives are mostly well done and interesting. The most notable sections of the film are the scenes of the storm and the resulting activities of the crowd. The storm scene reminded me of an old buccaneer flick, but was much more powerful. The stage crew hustling to cover the instruments and equipment, the public address system blaring warnings to stay away from the light towers, the crowd trying to cover themselves with blankets, papers, and so on, then the blue-gray hell of the thunderstorm—all was captured on film and tape and edited into one of the most remarkable scenes I have ever seen. The coverage of the crowd after the storm was equally awesome. The kids playing in the mud, the Hog Farm for kids sick or on bad trips, the cold, the misery mixed with carefree cavorting was all there, and one must see it to really understand the significance of Woodstock. music on a four-track sound system that surrounds the audience in sound. $5,000 gift starts KU The promoters of Woodstock lost their shirts when the huge crowd forced them to make it a free concert, but the film should help them recover their losses. "Woodstock" is a classic film in terms of cinematic art and content—it should not be missed. Come see us...We're new Lawrence Travel Lodge ✩ 70 Rooms ✩ Meeting Room ✩ Pool ✩ Color TV ✩ Exec. Suite Lawrence Travel Lodge 9th & Iowa Amos Lawrence, whose gift of $5,000 plus $4,400 accumulated interest, made possible the raising of the first $15,000 endowment. "Woodstock" is by no means just a cavalcade of popular music. The musical groups in the film must be considered as appendices to a monumental documentary on the capabilities and attitudes of our generation. Older generations should see "Woodstock" to see tomorrow's leaders at their best; youngsters should see it to see how "big kids" really are; those who were at Woodstock can now see what they missed (for no one could have possibly taken in all that happened there) and everyone else should see it to appreciate the magnitude of this event and to hear some good 1905 Before or after the Relays, stop in at Burger Chef for a Super Shef. - 100% Pure Beef - 9th & Iowa St. LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE CAPTAIN'S TABLE THE CAPTAIN'S THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE TABLE Ship Wheel Ship Wheel THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE Ship Wheel THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE PLEASED TO MEET YOU THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU* Ship Wheel THE MOST DELICIOUS FOOD IN TOWN... From the Newest Restaurant in Town The Menu Dinners Filet Mignon ... 8 oz. — $3.25 Top Sirloin ... 8 oz. — 2.50 K.C. 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Roast Beef ... 6 oz. — $1.30 Baked Ham ... 6 oz. — 1.75 Breaded Veal Cutlet ... .80 Pepsi Cola, Dr. Pepper, Teem ... .10 Milk, Iced Tea ... .15 Hot Chocolate, Hot Tea ... .15 Coffee ... .10 Sandwiches Charbroiled Hamburger ... $ .45 Charbroiled Cheeseburger ... .50 Charbroiled Hamburger Deluxe ... .70 Charbroiled Cheeseburger Deluxe ... .75 Charbroiled Cheese Steak ... .80 Reuben Sandwich ... 1.15 Roast Beef Sandwich ... .65 Baked Ham Sandwich ... .70 Combination Salad ... .30 Wedged Tomato & Cottage Cheese ... .30 Cottage Cheese ... .12 Mashed Potatoes & Gravy (till 8 p.m.) ... .10 Suzy-Q Fries (our own specialty) ... .15 Vegetables ... .10 Pie ... .30 Rolls & Butter (Rye & White Dinner) ... .14 HOURS: 7:00 a.m. - 2:30 a.m. Mon.- Sat. - 11:00 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. Sunday LOCATION: On Campus - West of Chi Omega Fountain - 1420 Crescent Road THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE *Welcome Alumni and Relay Fans 船 船 THE THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE THE CAPTAIN'S L THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE THE CAPTAIN'S TABL 'Someday School' teaches 'how to learn' Education correction Chittenden's 'thing' by JOHN B. HALL Kansan Writer LeRoy Chittenden is no ordinary sounding name, But then neither is LeRoy Chittenden an ordinary person. He belongs to the new generation; the hip culture; the what's happening environment. He has long hair and he has a beard. He wears dirty blue jeans, t-shirts and sneakers. He speaks good of pot and bad of society. His philosophy is "do your own thing." LeRoy Chittenden is different, different even from his peers because he advocates doing your own thing and then he does it. LeRoy's thing is education. "I really dig it." After four years of college preparation, LeRoy envisioned philosophy might be his bag. He didn't realize that man had invented such a stagnate, dead method of looking at living. He "copped" out. He returned to school to be certified as a teacher. He began teaching in high schools. It was a challenge. He was charged. He walked away disillusioned. Then the revelation. The LeRoy Chittenden experience. "The teacher's role in education is helping the students learn how to learn, not what to learn." This is his thing now. Reasoning that a complete abortion of the American education baby was impossible, LeRoy sought to alter its growth another way. Someday School day care center happened. Hoping to start with young children not yet clamped in the mold, LeRoy and his assistants began operation in the basement of the Centenary United Methodist Church. "Kids have such fantastic, magnetic minds. Where is it that they become demagnitized?" he said. "Why is it that children gradually become so fact oriented they quit wondering?" Probably because teachers tell us what to learn. The facts they designate must be more important then anything else. Besides, if we don't memorize this stuff we fall victim to the "grade ax." "By high school, students are dependent on their teachers to tell them where it's at," he said. "Someday School" is happening because LeRoy Chittendon wants his students to always retain their youthful minds. There is no reason why children have to forfeit imagination or curiosity in exchange for increased age. There are many reasons why they should not. Other people are aware of the American educational blunder. They have children. They send them to "Someday School." "Kids have the right to have fun," says LeRoy. They also have the right to grow. "Someday School" stresses three areas of development. They study natural things—the world around them. Why is the sky? Who drives the street sweeper? They invent vocabulary. "They need to talk about what they see, don't they?" he said. LeRoy Chittenden is restless. He wants to work with more than nursery age children. Next year he plans to start working with first graders. The year after he may start another school somewhere. "Someday School" will grow because it is groovin' on an idea, an educational conception: not just LeRoy. LeRoy Chittenden is a revolutionary. There are educational rebels all across America searching for the same dream LeRoy has. He doesn't stand alone —just tall. Religious attitudes revealed by survey By LOUIS CASSELS UPI Religion Writer God isn't dead on college campuses. But the church, as an institution, enjoys very little favor among students. That is the finding of James and Robert Foley, two enterprising undergraduates who polled 3,000 students at 100 colleges on their attitudes toward everything from religion to race relations and the draft. In reply to the question, "Do you believe in God or a supreme being?" 73 per cent answered yes, 19 per cent said no, and 8 per cent registered indecision. Responses to other questions indicated that most students draw a sharp distinction between believing in God as a necessary hypothesis to explain the existence and order of the universe, and being actively "religious." Being religious was generally understood to mean, or at least to include, going to church. In Beethoven lives in spirit of works after 200 years Ludwig van Beethoven, born in 1770 in Bonn, Germany, is still very much alive in 1970 all over the world. At 12 the child prodigy Beethoven played the organ in the court orchestra in Bonn, Germany. At 13 his first work appeared in print. The prominence Beethoven gained through his talents secured him the recognition of the greatest talents of his time, including Haydn and Mozart. In 1810 Beethoven became deaf while working on his seventh symphony. Conductors, including Josef Crips, conductor of the Buffalo Philharmonic orchestra, have noticed problems because of his deafness in rythms and tempo in the seventh symphony. In 1808 he received an invitation to become the music director of Kassel. In response to this, three of Beethoven's strongest patrons, Archduke Rudolf of Austria, Prince Josef Max Lobkowitz and Prince Ferdinand Kinsky, offered Beethoven a yearly stipend to stay in Vienna. This enabled him to devote almost all of his time to composition. Yet, Beethoven continued composing and wrote two more symphonies. His ninth symphony is considered his greatest work. Beethoven died in Vienna on March 26, 1827. Though, Crips said, "the finale does not take place here on earth." 18 KANSAN Apr. 15 1970 reply to the question, "Have you been to church services of any kind in the last seven days?" only 36 per cent answered yes, and 64 per cent said no. Many of the latter indicated they never went to church. In volunteered comments and in response to follow-up questions, the non-churchgoers said that traditional patterns of corporate worship strike them as being dull and pointless. Many said they'd be attracted to the church if they felt that its primary purpose was serving mankind. But they made clear it is here-and-now service, combatting social ills, that they want to see the church involved in, not preparing people for a future life. Although most of the students said they believed in a life hereafter, relatively few seemed to think it would involve rewards or punishments for things done or left undone in this life. The Foley findings are corroborated, in the main, by the observations of college chaplains and religion teachers. The Rev, Dr. Robert McAfee Brown, professor of religion at Stanford, says he encounters "a remarkable degree of what I must call religious commitment on the campus," even among students who do not profess belief in any conventional concept of God. "Jesus is 'in' with students," Dr. Brown says, because He met the fundamental campus test of sincerity by "putting His body where His words were." The Exclusive... RUBAYAT Open Every Night Except Sunday RAMADA INN 6th & Iowa ENGINEERING EXPOSITION 1970 profiles of tomorrow learned hall university of kansas lawrence, kansas 66044 april 17, 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m. april 18, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. april 19, awards banquet 6:00 p.m. 100 Photo by Judy Gerling All this heat just kilns me Dick Luster, Wichita graduate student, removes a piece of pottery from a kiln behind Flint Hall. This was the first time this type of kiln had been used at KU. Population control group advocates limiting families NEW YORK (UPI) — There's apprehension growing today that, if we don't stabilize the world's population within the next few decades, there won't be any of us around to say "I told you so." Americans comprise only six per cent of the world's population, yet consume 30 per cent of the world's available resources annually, according to Paul R. Ehrlich, professor of biology at Stanford University, whose book "The Population Bomb" has sold 1.2 million copies. Ehrlich, 37, heads the most radical population control group in the United States—Zero Population Growth (ZPG) with headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif. Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 19 more than 70 chapters based around the country and 8,000 members whose numbers are doubling every two months. Organized 17 months ago in the interest of "changing society for the better by bringing about a balance between births and deaths," ZPG advocates limiting families to two children. Statistics show that if couples have no more than two children, the population of the United States would level off a 248.2 million by the year 2000. At the present rate of births versus deaths, the population will increase to 307.8 million during the next 30 years. VINGAAKER, Sweden (UPI)—Someone stole a ton of dung bought by the Vingaaker community for the public flower beds. Wastes are no.1 problem Group studies KU pollution Pollution problems at KU and those caused in Lawrence by KU's presence are the subjects of a study by a committee set up by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers "The University adds to the water and air load simply by the increased numbers it provides," said Ross E. McKinney, KU professor of civil engineering and head of the committee, "but nothing that could be called a problem." "The University, however, does not have a lot of waste in paper and so on that must be taken care of by the city. We're going to see if we are helping as efficiently as we can. In short, we'll be looking at the internal environment to see if it falls short of the optimum," he said. "The biggest addition to the problem that KU now makes is in solid wastes," McKinney said. McKinney is also the head of environmental health engineering at KU and the Parker Professor of Civil Engineering, an endowment award made to a distinguished professor in civil engineering. McKinney's belief that the University should be helping to correct any problems with pollution it creates is partly the reason for forming the student-faculty committee. Other members of the committee are James Koevnig, professor of biology; Robert Smith, professor of civil engineering; Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations; Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for finance; Debra Mitchell, Lawrence junior and Peter George, Tuchahoe, N.Y., law student. McKinney is also working on the control of pollution in the state of Kansas. He is chairman of the environmental health committee of the Kansas Coordinating Council for Health Planning. Kansas pollution problems are not as severe as in some parts of the country according to McKinney. "Kansas should pray that no one discovers the state is here in the next few years because it is one of the states that is in a good position on its pollution problems," McKinney said. "Pizza from the r must, before or after the g. ORDER BY PHONE— FASTER SERVICE (Allow Approximately 20 Minutes) Open Seven Days a Week at 11 a.m. Daily IN LAWRENCE: VI 3-3516 1606 W 23rd VI 2-1667 804 IOWA IN TOPEKA: 5 LOCATIONS ASK ABOUT THE HUT ROOM FOR PRIVATE PARTIES "'Where Quality Reigns Supreme'" "What problems there are can easily be controlled, but that could change if the state experiences an upswing in population such as the coasts have had." If each person would be responsible for doing his share, in other words paying a service charge or user fee, funds would not be needed from property taxes," McKinney said. "Pizza from the Pizza Hut is a must, before or after the game." ORDER BY PHONE—FASTER SERVICE (Allow Approximately 20 Minutes) Open Seven Days a Week at 11 a.m. Daily IN LAWRENCE: VI 3-3516 1606 W 23rd VI 2-1667 804 IOWA IN TOPEKA: 5 LOCATIONS ASK ABOUT THE HUT ROOM FOR PRIVATE PARTIES "Where Quality Reigns Supreme" at home Summer Fashions terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Massachusetts "This industry has shown itself very willing to work with the state to cut down seepage into water systems," McKinney said. The most pressing problem is that of pollution by the feed lot industry, he said. But this is well on its way to being controlled. "Why send our money to Washington and then wait for them to send part of it back for our needs?" McKinney said further. "If everyone paid five to ten cents a day to care for the mess they create," he said, "Kansas wouldn't have any future problems." tion," he said. "The major concern here is in places like Wichita and Kansas City where there is heavy industry." "With few exceptions, open dumps are the rule in the state. These are both unsightly and health hazards. Without treatment, those dumps simply fill up and more have to be opened. What the state needs is an effective way of returning these wastes to the environment for useful purposes." McKinney said The most ignored problem in Kansas is that of solid wastes, McKinney said. The committee McKinney heads for the study of Kansas pollution consists of representatives from state and private agencies, universities and the interested public. It is currently examining the organization and methods of dealing with Kansas problems in water and air pollution, solid wastes, vector control and housing. A report is expected from them in the next few months. It will become the basis for further work by state agencies. "Kansas has little air pollu- McKinney holds national awards for his outstanding research work in pollution. He also has written numerous articles and a book on the subject and has been a consultant to more than 50 firms throughout the world on pollution. FRESH-AS-A- DAISY FABRICS Vogue - Simplicity - McCall at home Summer Fashions terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Massachusetts Joggers club welcomes all With the arrival of spring weather, wouldn't you like to be more alert and possess more get-up-and-go? If so, the Jayhawk Joggers can help you get back into the swing of things. The Jayhawk Joggers club, member Bill Easton, assistant professor of physical education said, is a program of group jogging. The ultimate goal is to get people to find out the worth of the program to them individually and then continue to jog on their own. Members of the club, whose ages and sexes vary, run about every other day, Easton said. An individual schedule is posted and then each member jogs as long and as hard according to his own judgment. There is no pressure, he said. "We make it available; all you have to do is have the desire, discipline and minimum equipment to do a good job for yourself," he said. "It is not a push program; you work to your own capacity." Running is a basic requirement to all physical fitness, Easton said. Fitness is not a frame of mind or just a sound body. It is a "sound mind in a sound body." "Fitness is the ability to meet situations with an open mind, critically evaluate and be creative in a solution," he said. "Jogging, which is simply having both feet off the ground at one time," Easton said, "activates the circulatory and respiratory system." He said jogging was very important and that it was one of the finest things that could be done. Some end results he listed were improvement of over-all general health, extension of life, a stronger musculature system, redistribution of weight and improvement of general appearance and mental attitude. 20 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 Jogging originated in New Zealand where a physical fitness program was established by Arthur Lydiard. It appeared in the United States at the University of Oregon when coach Bill Bowerman set up a similar program. Of recent date a book, "Aerobics" by Kenneth Cooper, has come out. He is a top man in the milli- tary field who has run thousands of fitness tests on military men. Easton said jogging had not caught on at KU like it should because people felt that they were too busy. "We are anxious to have new people," he said. "Anybody can come down. It is important to remember, though, that nobody should do this without first being medically fit," he said. Kansas revenue increase no match for income tax bite Kansas residents have a heavier tax burden than those in most neighboring states, according to a study published in the current Kansas Business Review published by the University of Kansas School of Business. Kansas exceeded the national growth rate in population, but per capita income did not equal the national mean. Kansas was above the national average in per capita property tax collections, but it's growth rate fell below the national figure for per capita state and local government revenues from their own sources. In addition to Kansas, residents of Iowa have a heavier tax burden than their neighbors in Arkansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma or Texas. The study was an analysis of revenue flows for state and local governments in the mid-western states. The authors, Eugene Drzyciamski, a former KU faculty member, and James Bell, of Northern Illinois University, studied population and income trends, per capita revenues, revenues relative to personal income and priorities of revenue allocation during the three-year period 1965-1968. In addition, Kansas was the only state in which the money received by state and local governments from the federal government did not increase. Nation's jobless exceeds average WASHINGTON (UPI) — The nation's unemployment rate rose in March to its highest level in nearly five years-4.4 per cent—and exceeded the 1970 average predicted by President Nixon's chief economic adviser, government spokesmen said. The report also noted that one million more workers are out of jobs now than when Nixon took office nearly 15 months ago, an increase of 36 per cent. The number of jobholders rose by only 2.4 per cent during the same period. The jobless rate last month rose by 0.2 per cent and edged past the 4.3 per cent which Paul W. McCracken, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, said in February would be the average for all of this year. Administration spokesmen have said some rise in unemployment is inevitable because of Nixon's anti-inflation campaign. Now renting for summer and fall SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS one and two bedroom units furnished and unfurnished air conditioned pool all electric kitchen disposal laundry room storage Inquire today: 1704 W.24th 842-1160 RELAYS Burger Kut SPECIAL Free Giant Soft Drink of Your Choice with Purchase of our Giant Tenderloin Sandwich and Fries. Where Good Taste Never Quits! 1404 W.23rd Burger Hut --and fries. COUPON FREE GIANT SOFT DRINK with tenderloin sandwich Patronize Kansan Advertisers 1400 After you've paid for it, it starts paying for itself. We didn't want our bug to be a hog. That's why we made it go about 27 miles to a gallon of gas. And why we persuaded it to take pints of oil instead of quarts. And why we gave it an air-cooled engine. (Air is free. Antifreeze isn't.) And why we put the engine in the back so you get more push from the rear wheels. (And less pull from tow trucks.) And that's why at trade-in time if things are still the same as they have been, you can count on getting back more of your initial investment of $1979.00 than practically every other car owner gets of theirs. After all, why shouldn't the car that's been saving you money while you own it do the same when you sell it? JERRY ALLEN MOTORS, Inc. SALES—SERVICE—PARTS 2522 Iowa VI 3-2200 W AUTHORIZED DEALER World War II memories return Professor led Polish underground group By BOB WOMACK Kansas Staff Writer The image of the political fanatic may seem alien and even sinister to many Americans, but to Professor Jaroslaw A. Piekalkiewicz of the University of Kansas political science department, it is a reality from his own past. For this is his description of himself and his comrades in the Polish underground during World War II. Born in Poznan, Poland in 1926, Piekalkiewicz was 13 when the war broke out. At 15, he organized other students in his high school, and they formed their own underground organization, the purpose being to train militarily to fight the Germans, who had invaded their country in September of 1939. Eventually his group grew in strength to about 100 people of all ages. Because of the size of the group, and because some groups had been organized by the Germans to infiltrate the official underground, the leaders of the official underground forced Piekalkiewicz to disband his organization and become part of the official underground. OF THE GROUP which he created and led in secrecy, Piekalkiewicz said, "It's a funny comment on how secret an organization can operate. I was 15 years old and was the leader of the group; the oldest fellow was 35 years old. I was the youngest member, but also the leader. But since everything was done in secrecy, nobody knew who was the leader of the group and they didn't know their orders came from me." Because he was so young, Piekalkiewicz was given the job of leading a group of five boys his age in delivering messages within the underground. At the age of 16, he was transferred to the police force of the underground, which operated like a government in exile. The police force was meant to show that the underground was the legal government of Poland; it also investigated thefts and murders and punished those who did not obey the laws of the underground government. AT THIS TIME, Piekalkiewicz was still living in a small town outside of Warsaw, but because of arrests of members of his underground group, he had to flee to Warsaw in order to avoid being caught by the Germans. Piekalkiewicz's entire family had become involved in the underground and the Germans had become aware that his uncle was an important leader of the underground. Before the war, Piekalkiewicz's uncle had been a leader of the Peasant Party, which was one of the important factions in the underground coalition. Eventually he rose to the top of the entire underground movement in Poland. Secrecy was so strict that Piekalkiewicz himself was unaware that his uncle held such an important position in the movement. Apr.15 1970 KANSAN 21 HIS UNCLE'S activities were finally uncovered by the Germans, and he was arrested. Piekalkiewicz's brother was sent to a concentration camp which he miraculously survived. Piekalkiewicz's mother became head of the underground hospital. As the Germans stepped up their reign of terror in Poland, the hospital was attacked by German soldiers, and everyone, including his mother, was killed. Such action was not unusual during the occupation. Often German soldiers would suddenly close off a section of a street, and everyone who happened to be in the closed off area was sent to the concentration camps. "It was a very brutal occupation," Piekakiewicz said. "The Germans couldn't really get any support from the Poles." AFTER ARRIVING in Warsaw, Pielkiewicz became an instructor in German weaponry for the underground and later undertook his most dangerous job, disarming German soldiers. "We needed arms very badly and the only way we could get them, apart from those sent from the British in Italy, was to take them from our best source—the German army." For three months in 1944, before the ill-fated Warsaw uprising, Piekalkiewicz was in charge of a squad of young men who walked the streets of Warsaw with concealed arms. "If we spotted a single German soldier, we took him into a doorway and relieved him of his gun," he said. ONLY ONCE did Piekalkiewicz meet any resistance in disarming the Germans. "The German soldiers didn't expect a young fellow of 18 to march up to them with a gun demanding their weapon. It always surpriseed me," he said, "they didn't offer any resistance." Veterans participate in job training program A group of 5,400 veterans are participating in the Veteran's on-the-job-training programs for policemen and firemen, said George B. Lappin, Director of the VA Center in Wichita. Donald E. Johnson, administrator of veterans affairs, said that last July only 4,300 veterans were in VA approved programs of this type. Lappin said that of the 5,400 veterans enrolled nationally in the programs,11 policemen and 27 firemen are in training in Kansas. Lawrence Ice Company for all your party needs Case lot beer, Picnic supplies Keg beer, Ice 843-0350 The arms which Ptiekalkiewicz helped to obtain went to the underground guerrilla units fighting all across the Polish nation. Transportation was disrupted by blowing up railway tracks, diverting trains and switching the destinations of trains so as to disrupt shipments of arms to the German invaders. Open to 10 p.m. The underground also helped to disseminate propaganda, not only among the Polish people, but also among the German soldiers. "THE ORGANIZATION was very large. It was nearly impossible to destroy," Piekalkiewicz said. "I think we have the same problem today in Viet Nam. How do you tell foe from friend? Everybody looks alike." exploits in the underground that he was very lucky. His cover during his service in the underground was membership in the Warsaw fire brigade. As a member, he was entitled to a uniform. For some reason the Germans respected his uniform, and it saved him in his closest brush with death. Piekalkiewicz said of his own 616 Vt. Returning home one night, armed, although Polish citizens were forbidden to have weapons, Piekalkiewicz turned a corner and found three German soldiers pointing a machine gun at his chest. One of them flashed a light at him, and they saw his fireman's uniform. Convinced by his uniform that he was harmless, they let him go, with his gun still tucked safely in his belt. AFTER FIGHTING in the Warsaw uprising, which lasted from July through September of 1944, Piekalkiewicz was sent to German prisoner of war camps. He escaped several times, only to be caught and sent back. After being freed in 1945, he went on to fight with the British Army in Italy. After the war, he studied in Scotland and Ireland. He came to the United States in 1959 and received his Ph.D. from Indiana University. He came to KU in 1963. In speaking of his years of daring and courageous service in the underground, Plekalkiewicz said, "We had no regard for our own safety. We didn't care if we died or not, but this is the way the fanatic is." BassTacks TM-8 Trooper Bail INTELLIGENT, WITTY, Bass STIMULATING . . . that's you in your wonderful, colorful Bass Tacks, $^{\mathrm{TM}}$ the soft new casuals that brighten your world. See all the new styles, new colors, today. Navys, reds, tans, blue or red with white. Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 MASS VL 3-4251 837 MASS. VI 3-4255 BEST OF THE YEAR 1978 Huck Finn revisited? Homeless cats, dogs protected at shelter By BARRY LEE BARNHART Is man dog's best friend? An answer to this question is readily provided when one has taken a brief trip through an overcrowded animal shelter. In Lawrence, this organization is known as the Charles Ise Memorial Animal Shelter. It was chartered on March 26, 1951. Operating as a non-profit corporation, the federal government has ruled that all donations to it are tax deductible. The shelter is handled by employed managers. The current managers are Mr. and Mrs. Victor Melton who managed the shelter from 1959 to 1968. After a leave of one year, they returned to Lawrence again in the summer of 1969. The shelter derives its rules from a board of directors who are Lawrence citizens volunteering their help. Mr. and Mrs. Melton told of the problems of dog and cat populations and what the shelter does to try to solve the situations that occur as a direct result. The problem is that in the United States there are about 35 million puppies and 50 million kittens born each year. According to the latest census, there are only 55 million families in the United States. The obvious conclusion is that there is a staggering difference in the number of homes as compared with the birth rates of puppies and kittens. As a result of being homeless, many animals face a cruel existence. Many of the dogs and cats are done away with almost as soon as they are born. In many cases the slaughter is done with lead pipes, clubs, poison, shotguns or gas chambers. It was because of those reasons that the animal shelter came into existence. Local citizens began the shelter with the hope of giving the animals humane treatment as well as trying to find the animals homes rather than have them mercilessly destroyed. The shelter managers attempt to cater to the individual needs of the animals they maintain. The shelter accepts all animals. As a general rule, unadoptable and diseased animals are put to sleep only with the authority of a human officer or shelter manager. The shelter does not give or sell animals to laboratories for research. The shelter attempts to reunite any animal that has an owner. Until the owner comes to claim his animal he can rest assured his animal is receiving the best of care. 22 KANSAN Apr.15 1970 The creation, by man, of a shelter designed to provide for animals who are not able to care for themselves is indeed a humane thing to do. Maybe man isn't so bad after all . . . just maybe. Prof's farm becomes camp by CHARLENE MULLER Kansan Staff Writer Retarded children in Lawrence and the Douglas County area have the opportunity to attend a summer camp owned and operated by Ellis R. Kerley, KU professor of anthropology, and his wife. The camp, Crescent Hill Camp for Exceptional Children, is located near Lone Star Lake. Kerley said the camping site was on a 30-acre farm he and his wife bought four years ago. Normal children, ranging in age from 5 to 13, attend the camp from June 8 through July 1, Kerley said. Their fees, he said, go to help cover fees for the handicapped children, ranging in age from 6 to 15, who attend the camp free of charge from the first week in July until the middle of August. The campers, Kerley said, enjoy a full day of activities from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Their activities include canoeing, hiking, arts and crafts, horseback riding, swimming and athletic games. Kerley said Douglas County provided the campers with exclusive use of Lone Star Lake and its sandy beach on the weekdays for swimming and boating. It takes about $6,000 to run the camp for one summer, Kerley said. In the past, he said, the camp received financial aid from the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation. The foundation grants money to such camps for a period of two years. After this they should be sustained by the community. Kerley said he did not know if the foundation would be giving money to the camp this year because it had done so for the past two years. 1970 Look what we're hatching for the chic... at the... Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown V1 3-5755 This year, Kerley said, the Lawrence Charity Horse Show, June 18-21, will be donating its proceeds to the camp. Kerley said that because the camp was a non-profit organization, there were a limited number of paid counselors. Volunteers, he said, from the University, town and county help every year. He and his wife became interested in such a camp when they observed a similar one at Lawrence's Centennial Park four summers ago, Kerley said. They invited children from the park to come out to their farm to horseback ride. It worked out so well, Kerley said, that the Douglas County Parks and Recreation Department asked them to use their farm for a camp. The Kerley both have experience in working with retarded children. Kerley worked with the orthopedically handicapped at a hospital for crippled children in North Carolina. Mrs. Kerley worked with handicapped children in Washington, D.C. The camp has proven successful so far, said Kerley. "We've seen gratifying results," Kerley said, "when handicapped children play in a relaxed environment. Such a camp provides continuity between school sessions." Museum acquires new art The University of Kansas Museum of Art has acquired two new paintings and a lithograph depicting the Chrysler "Airflow" sedan of the 1940's. The two paintings, "Ulysses in the Cave of Polyphemus" by Jacob Jordaens, and one by the French artist Jean-Leon Gerome, will not be exhibited for several weeks, said Bret Waller, Art Museum director. The lithograph, by Claas Oldenburg, will be exhibited first at the Hays art festival. The paintings were purchased with funds provided by Museum benefactors and funds from the 1969 benefit ball. The lithograph was donated by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ward of Kansas City. Trash can asks to stay What is the harried student's reaction to the word "lost"? A sign on a trash can in the Kansas Union plea, "Under no circumstances, remove me, or I shall be lost!" On the sign one student scrawled, "This trash can is not with it. It is modern to be lost." And, more wistfully, another added, "We are all of us lost." No matter the decor of any great restaurant (ours is comfortable and relaxed), no matter the service (ours is polite and helpful) no matter the atmosphere (ours is always pleasurable and quiet) — we think the real test of a great restaurant is in the food it prepares. How can you describe our food ... "excellent," "quality," "delicious" ... in our case probably not ... you can't really describe our steaks and seafoods. Dining at the Sirloin is an experience that you must try. Let us just assure you, though, that no better food — especially our steaks—can be found anywhere in the country. A big statement ... no, just a modest claim based on our customers delight. Dine with us soon. U.S. Choice Finest Steaks • Seafood THE Sirloin One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1431 Open Daily 4:30 p.m. Closed Mondays the Sirloin THE Sirloin One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1431 Open Daily 4:30 p.m. Closed Mondays C Kilo Klippers support Navy ROTC in service There is something about a military uniform that attracts the girls, they say, and the Navy ROTC battalion has attracted 17 of them this year. A women's auxiliary to the NROTC, named the Kilo Klippers, has been formed, marking the first time that NROTC at KU has had a women's auxiliary group. The president of the new organization, Cheryl McElhose, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said the unit was meant to be primarily a service and social organization with the purpose of helping midshipmen with their service functions and Hawkwatch. The women have also pledged to support NROTC, become familiar with Navy codes and serve the campus and community. Kilo Klippers was started at KU in December after several months planning. It is not a national organization, although many NROTC units at other universities have women's auxiliaries. "We want to be primarily a service organization, to do something around Lawrence as well as the University." Miss McElhose said. The name Kilo Klippers was chosen by the members. Kilo is the phoenetic representation of the letter "K" in Navy signal code, Miss McElhose said, and Klipper is another name for a ship. The group is working through the Community Clearinghouse in activities related to the community, and hopes to work on individual projects such as painting the Navy plane in Centennial Park. Although there are only 17 Apr. 15 1970 KANSAN 23 members this year, it is hoped the unit will grow next year, said Miss McElhose. This year women that were interested in the organization attended meetings to plan the structure of the organization. Next year there will be two rush periods for new members, one before the sixth week of the fall semester and another during the third week of the spring semester. Membership is open to women in all classes. A one point overall grade average is necessary for pleiding. There are no ranks in the unit, and members are not required to salute men of NROTC because the auxiliary is not militarily oriented. Miss McElhose said. Other officers for the year are Jan Mons, Lake Forest, Ill., junior, vice president; Frances Platz, Osawatomie sophomore, social chairman; Sandra Clem, Leawood sophomore, secretary; Pam Wright, Lakin sophomore, treasurer; JoAnn Jones, Prairie Village senior, public relations chairman; Pam McCan, Albuquerque sophomore, activities chairman; Deborah Trissel, mission sophomore, historian; and Betsy Cummings, Wichita sophomore, AWS-sports chairman. The sponsor of the unit is Lt. P. F. Mahoney, serves as liaison officer Bob Shifman serves as communication link with the NROTC battalion. KUOK, the university owned radio station geared to the students which it serves, began broadcasting in 1956. The format of the station has changed many times. The changes have evolved because of changes in student musical taste. presenting... THE ESTES PARK A program designed to put MEANING, FUN & MONEY into a student's summer job WORK DISCOVER PARTICIPATE THE ESTES PARK EXPERIMENT A program designed to put MEANING, FUN & MONEY into a student's summer job WORK DISCOVER PARTICIPATE MORE THAN JUST A JOB... It is a UNIQUE PROGRAM designed in cooperation with the Estes Park business community. This student-oriented summer employment program offers a kaleidoscope of activities . . . seminars . . . workshops . . . dances . . . in Estes Park, Colorado. The activities program is designed to appeal to TODAY'S STUDENT . . . the student who seeks more from summer employment than mere money. - WORK - DISCOVER - PARTICIPATE Plan to attend the film presentation. Recruiting will be available. . Date: April 20 Time: 7:30 p.m. Place, Forum Room, Kansas Union Estes Park Summer Employment c/o Trimarc Corporation First National Bank, Estes Park, Colo. 80521 --- Patronize Kansan Advertisers --- --- GO BIG BLUE AND THE BEST OF LUCK FROM US DURING THE 45th K.U. RELAYS. THE FULL STORE University State Bank 955 IOWA TELEPHONE TELEPHONE 843-4700 f HOTEL SPA WELCOME to NSAS UNIVERSITY While you are here you can enjoy the fine food at the Kansas University Student Union, only a short walk from the Memorial Stadium. THURSDAY & FRIDAY CAFETERIA Breakfast 7:00 a.m.-8:30 a.m. Lunch 11:00 a.m.-1:20 p.m. Dinner 5:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. SATURDAY CAFETERIA HAWKS NEST 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. PRAIRIE ROOM 11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Breakfast 7:00 a.m.-8:30 a.m. Lunch 11:00 a.m.-1:20 p.m. No Dinner served on Saturday Snacks available from 6:00 a.m. to 1:30 a.m.at the Hawklet in Summerfield Hall TRAIL ROOM 6:00 a.m.-12:00 midnight HAVE A WONDERFUL WEEKEND! HAWKS NEST 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. TRAIL ROOM 6:00 a.m.-12:00 midnight PRAIRIE ROOM Closed on Saturday MARINA DE LOS PACIFICOS Gambles Gambles BEAN BREAKFAST Photo by Jan Bishop Fire guts store By DAN OSBORNE Kansan Staff Writer The Gambles Store at 930 Massachusetts Street was gutted by a fire Wednesday night about 10:15 p.m. that shot flames at least 50 feet into the air. Assistant Fire Chief John Kasberger told the Kansan this morning that total damage to the Gambles store amounted to about $50,000.00. Both stores adjacent to Gambles, Audiotronics and H and H Furniture sustained smoke and water damage. Kasberger said a final report on the cause of the fire would not be issued until late this afternoon. Efforts to control the two hour blaze were hindered when a Lawrence Fire Department snorkel truck had to be towed from the downtown fire station to the scene of the fire because of power train trouble. Because of this fire fighting equipment being out of action, a snorkel truck from the Ottawa fire department was called in to aid the Lawrence Fire Department and arrived at the scene of the blaze at 11:15 p.m. Another setback occurred midway through the fire when a supporting brace on a hook-and-ladder truck collapsed, causing firemen on the ladder to lose control of the hose. Three firemen were treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital for sprains and strains, a hospital spokesman said, but were released. The two-hour fire required one aerial and four pumper trucks which used eight streams of water to control the blaze, Kasberger said. This marks the second major fire in Lawrence in five days. Weather Clear to partly cloudy today through Friday. Locally dense fog extreme cast this forenoon. Variable mostly light easterly winds today. High upper 60s. Low tonight generally around 40. Precipitation probability today and tonight near zero per cent, Friday 10 per cent. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.115 Thursday, April 16, 1970 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Violence erupts at LHS Violence erupted at Lawrence High School Wednesday morning. Angry shouting and fighting broke out between black and white students, and Lawrence Police and Public Safety officers were called to the scene. Twenty-eight students were injured, five seriously enough to require hospital treatment, before calm was restored around noon. School officials gave no reason for the fights. Witnesses said clubs, chains and chemical mace were used in the various brawls in the cafeteria, the main hall in front of the office, and outside a classroom. William Medley, principal, said eight students had been suspended and more suspensions were likely after an investigation of the disturbance. Max Rife, assistant principal, said the trouble started at about 8:40 a.m., shortly before classes were to begin. Rife said about 70 whites gathered in the parking lot and about the same number of blacks grouped in the Veterans' Park across the street from the school. While school officials tried to disperse the two groups, the blacks walked into the cafeteria, with the white group following shortly after. A fight broke out between a black and white youth, and several scuffles followed. Later, after milling around in front of the school office, a group of blacks tried to force their way into a classroom. A policeman tried to block their way, and another fight ensued. Medley said classes would be conducted as usual today, with law enforcement officers present to prevent further trouble. In an address over the school intercom system, Medley encouraged students who wanted an education to attend classes today. Only those students who felt they would face physical or verbal confrontations should not come, he said. Course correction made SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI)—The Apollo 13 astronauts fired a precision rocket blast Wednesday night that successfully set them on a path for a Friday afternoon splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. Officials discovered Wednesday the crippled Apollo 13 spaceship was slightly off course and would have missed earth—dooming the pilots to death in space. The new crisis hit just as the fates seemed to be smiling on the beleaguered crew. A tropical storm which threatened their See inside... BSU paper rejected ... page 2 Anti-Douglas movement gains support ... page 3 Blackmun wins Kennedy endorsement ... page 6 Moratorium March in Kansas City ... page 18 The fateful moment came at 10:32 p.m. CST when spacecraft commander James A. Lovell reached out and punched a yellow button on a control panel. This fired up the engine of the lunar lander, Aquarius, which Apollo has used for three emergency maneuvers since an explosion crippled the command ship Monday. splashdown area in the Pacific Ocean appeared to be taking another route, and the oxygen, water and electrical supplies aboard their spacecraft were holding up well. Before the correction; the course Apollo 13 was following would have spun the astronauts out into space—past the earth—where they would have been doomed. Lovell's companion Fred W. Haise stood at his own control panel in Aquarius during the crucial maneuver and John L. Swigert sat behind him on a make-shift jump seat. "Thrust looks good," ground control confirmed just before the firing was completed. "Nice work," controllers told the astronauts. "Let's hope it was." Haise shot back. Although the firing appeared right on target, considerable tracking and other checks were necessary before the exact new trajectory could be determined. Christopher C. Kraft, deputy director of the manned spacecraft center, said an additional correction maneuver could be made if there was any need to true up the course of Apollo 13. Ground controllers confirmed that the vital rocket burn slowed Apollo by 7.6 feet per second-or 5.032 m.p.h. This was exactly what controllers wanted to drop the spacecraft down to make sure it would hit the earth's atmosphere and (Continued on page 20) UDK News Roundup By United Press International Court approves bikinis MADRID—A Spanish civil court ruled Wednesday the publication of pictures in a magazine of women wearing bikinis is not cause to seize a magazine. According to the court the magazine "El Pito" The Whistle was ordered seized March 20,1968, by the Information Ministry because it published several pictures of women wearing bikinis. The editor of The Whistle was fined $243. Slide crushes sanitarium PASSY, France—An avalanche roared down a mountainside in the French Alps today and crushed the boys' ward of a tuberculosis sanitarium, burying 77 persons beneath hundreds of tons of snow. Henry Courey, prefect of the department state of Haute Savoie, said five bodies had been dug from the snow and wreckage of the smashed sanitarium. He said five other persons were rescued but there was little hope for the 54 boys and 13 nurses buried by the snowslide. Violence mars strikes The last of 60,000 striking Detroit truck drivers returned to their rigs today but 75,000 other Teamsters across the nation carried on their wildcat strikes. Violence marked some of the strikes. One trucker reported he was kidnapped near Cleveland, Ohio, Wednesday and released with a warning not to return to his truck. Four shooting incidents were reported in Ohio and Michigan police investigated two more reports of sniping at trucks. There were no reports of injuries. THE MILLION DAYS CENTER FOR HER STUDENTS Photo by Greg Sorber Blacks reenter Lawrence High after melee A few black students reentered Lawrence High School after they left the building and moved to a parking lot north of the School. Fighting erupted between white and black students earlier Wednesday morning, resulting in the injury of 28 students. A message from school authorities urged students who wished to return to class to do so. Terrorists strike in KC KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)— Terrorists operating under a cover of heavy fog bombed four buildings late Wednesday night and early today in their second assault on this city in three days. fused comment on the issue when contacted by the Kansan. No serious injuries were reported although one bomb exploded on the roof of a popular cocktail lounge, the End Zone, where a hole was blasted in the ceiling and debris rained down on an estimated 200 patrons. One man was treated for minor cuts. Several hours later bombs were detonated in quick succession at two downtown office buildings and at the Plaza III, a restaurant and cocktail lounge on the fashionable Country Club Plaza, a shopping area occupying nearly a square mile about five miles south of the downtown district. William Balfour, dean of student affairs, said Frizzell notified him Wednesday morning that the paper was not to be printed, and that no charge would be filed against members of the BSU. Monte Beckwith, Chicago freshman and editor of Harambee, said Smith told him the paper would not be printed. Beckwith said Smith gave no reason for refusing to print the paper. The Hawaiian bill calls for an "achievement place, home-style, community-based, semi self-governing rehabilitation setting or settings for pre-delinquent boys and girls. ." When asked what specific parts of the paper the printers objected to, Beckwith said they balked at three poems, which were taken from three books currently on sale in the Kansas Union. California has also introduced similar legislation for the development of a correction center. The purpose of the bill is "to establish and implement the programs presented at the American Psychological Association Convention in Washington, D.C., in 1969 by the University of Kansas department of human development, it being the intention of the Legislature that such achievement places be emulative of that now in existence in Lawrence, Kansas." The Hawaiian legislature has introduced a bill that would set up a juvenile correction center similar to the Lawrence Achievement Place for boys. Trucks carry 54 per cent of all motor vehicles from the assembly line to dealers and customers. A film relating the operations of the Lawrence Achievement Place was developed by KU's Montrose Wolf, human development and family life associate professor. Wolf describes the film as a "missionary" in communicating information about how well the achievement place works. The place was started several years ago as a civic project under strong support by the Lawrence Jaycees. Apr.16 1970 2 KANSAN Hawaii proposes pre-delinquent juvenile center Frizzell vetoes printing of 3rd Harambee issue Young said the paper contained allegedly obscene and seditious material. He said the paper was brought to the attention of his office by an unidentified lawyer representing the printers at the printing service. Harold Fox, spokesman for the printers, re- The decision was made by Attorney General Kent Frizzell after a copy of the paper was submitted to Frizzell's office by Douglas County Attorney Dan Young. Three dynamite explosions early Monday were at a school, a church, and a police department building, all on the city's East Side, which has been the focal point of poverty and racial problems. The third issue of the Black Students Union (BSU) newspaper, Harambee, will apparently not be printed by the University of Kansas Printing Service. The band kept playing. "That's what you do to avoid a panic," said Nick Nicholson, drummer with the Show Boat band. Police said dynamite apparently was the explosive used in the latest blasts. They added that there were indications in at least one instance that the explosive was contained in a metal pipe. No evidence of a timing mechanism was found at any of the bombing sites. Damage was not determined immediately but police described it as "much heavier" than in Monday's explosions. At the Argyle Building, on once-famous 12th Street, police said there was damage to the first and second floors and to an adjacent building. There was damage on several floors of the ADT Building, also downtown. TAU SIGMA At the End Zone, patrons screamed and dancers froze momentarily in their positions on the floor, then formed a circle beneath the hole in the ceiling. Use Kansan Classified TAU SIGMA SPRING DANCE CONCERT Sat., April 18, 8:20 Sun., April 19, 3:30 The Experimental Theatre Murphy $1.50 Adults .50 Children Students Free BOOKENDS SPECIAL SIMON & GARFUNKEL BONUS including: Bookends Theme/Overs FULL Fakin It /Old Friends COLOR A Hazy Shade of INCLUDED Winter Mrs. Robinson Simon & Garfunkel Sounds of Silence FEATURING I Am a Rock LEAVES THAT ARE GREEN THRUSTS SHOW A MOST PECULIAR MAN WE'VE GOT A GROOVEY THINK OUT SOMEWHERE THEY CANT FRO ME THE SOUNDS OF BELANCE AND MORE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including: The Baby Driver Bye Love Love Keep The Customer Satisfied Bridge Over The Water 1 $399 On Columbia Records Available at $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. PRESENTED BY MARY BLAKE, THE CULTURE OF BELAWARE Patricia Palmer wears a see through blouse and long skirt from Lovely as a Warm Spring Day Our adorable fashions make You as exciting as Spring! the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Campus briefs Documentary films to be shown The Student Union Activities association's International Relations Forum and the Center of Latin American Studies at the University of Kansas is sponsoring a series of films this spring. The first group will be shown today at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Four films will be shown documenting Columbia's land reform programs. Later films in the series will document land and social reform programs in Chile and Bolivia. For further information, students may call the Center of Latin American Studies, 864-3254. Editor, Soviet expert to lecture Jack Miller, a lecturer at the Institute of Soviet and East European Studies at the University of Glasgow, will speak today at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Miller is a long time editor of a publication named "Soviet Studies." The title of his speech is "Soviet Rural Social Structure." The speech is sponsored by the department of Slavic and Soviet area studies. Chief psychiatrist to speak on LSD Stanislav Grof, chief of psychiatric research of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, will present a lecture with slides entitled "Psychotherapy with LSD: An Illustrated Case History of the Development of a Creative Talent" at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. His lecture is sponsored by the KU departments of clinical psychology and anthropology and by the Free University. Ballet West to show tonight Graduates of the first American university to grant degrees in ballet will be among the principal dancers of the Ballet West, appearing on the University of Kansas concert course at 8:20 tonight in Hoch Auditorium. William F. Christensen, artistic director, heads the School of Ballet at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. The program will offer "Serenade," with music by Tschaikovsky and choreography by Balanchine; "Symphony in C" with music of Bizet and the choreography of Balanchine; and "Distrato," with the music of Haydn and the choreography of Lew Christinsen. Tau Sigma to stage dance concert Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, will stage its annual dance concert Saturday at 8:30 p.m., and Sunday at 3:30 p.m. in the Experimental Theatre. Admission price for adults is $1,50 and 50 cents for children. 'Okinawa' talk set for today "Okinawa—Showpiece of American Imperialism" is the topic of a talk to be given by Hideo Hashimoto at 3 p.m. today in the Room of the Kansas Union. WASHINGTON (UPD)—House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford, with support of dozens of House members of both parties, Wednesday started an impeachment move against Supreme Court Justice W. O. Douglas. The Michigan lawmaker charged that the controversial 71-year-old jurist has for almost a decade associated with and taken money from the "international gambling fraternity" and the pornographic publishing trade, sometimes in specific violation of law. In addition, he said Douglas had lent aid and comfort to New Left revolutionaries. He cited the most recent example in a book called "Points of Rebellion" in which Douglas said "violence may be the only effective response" in some grievances against oppressive governments. "Mr. Justice Douglas does not find himself in this company suddenly or accidentally or unknow- Draft calls may be upped for Kansas Junior Elder, state Selective Service director, said that Kansas has 1,008 men classified 1-A, who have numbers of 215 or lower. Unless the monthly draft call for the state of Kansas is reduced, draft calls probably won't be restricted to numbers one through 215, as federal officials have asked the state to do. If the monthly quotas for Kansas remain at one per cent of the national draft call, about 1,500 will have to be called in the remaining eight months of this year. Elder said that the number of 1-A classifications will increase as the new group of college graduates lose their 2-A (occupational deferment) and 2-S deferments. Local draft boards will have no idea of how many college graduates will be affected until board meetings are held to consider their reclassifications. The first message sent by telegraph was "What hath God wrought." IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records Anti-Douglas move begins Allen Field House April 18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 Hashimota, professor of religion at Lewis and Clark College, returned recently from a four month stay in Japan where he was special Quaker International Affairs representative for the American Friends Service Committee. should be removed." Ford said. "I would vote to impeach him right now." Ford said that to avoid an appearance of partisanship he will support—but will not co-sponsor—the study resolution, for which dozens of co-sponsors were claimed Wednesday with additional signatures being sought on both sides of the aisle. TICKETS ON SALE Jurisdiction of the United States over Okinawa has been a political issue in 1969-70. It has also been a crucial year in Japan-U.S. relations and in the setting of U.S. foreign policy toward all of East Asia. - Recognitions Ford's speech, climaxing an investigation of Douglas' activities which he started last fall, was the signal for introduction Thursday of a bipartisan resolution to set up "a prompt and thoroughgoing investigation" of Douglas' behavior, possibly resulting in an impeachment vote in the House. - Gifts - Lavaliers SUA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND KIEF'S BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. - Guards "I believe, . . . he is unfit and The talk is sponsored by the SUA Minority Opinions Forum and the Lawrence Peace Center. Apr. 16 KANSAN 3 1970 Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry Rep. Louis C. Wyman, R-N.H., one of the principal sponsors, said about 50 members had already joined in the move and he expected the number might rise to 100 by Thursday. ingly," Ford said in a speech prepared for the House. "He has been working at it for years, profiting from it for years, and flouting it in the faces of decent Americans for years." - Plaques - Badges - Favors - Sportswear Stationer Mugs Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog - Stationery SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Films-April 16 1. Popular Films Chairman 2. Special Films Chairman 3. Classical Films Chairman 4. Film Society Chairman 5. Publicity Chairman Recreation—April 21 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Christian 3. Coffeehouse Publicity 4. Quarterback Club Chairman Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Forums—April 21 Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Chairman Travel—April 16 1. World Travel Fair Chairman 2. Arrangements Chairman 3. Correspondence Chairman 4. Films Chairman 5. Hospitality Chairman 6. Travel Advisors Public Relations—April 16 1. Activities Carnival Chairman 2. Open House Chairman 3. Open House Publicity Chairman Fine Arts----April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Humanities Chairman 6: Art Forums Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970) - April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. KANSAN COMMENT Killing the grass While more important matters go untended, Governor Docking and the Kansas Legislature are zealously doing their bit to eliminate the sore throat. Docking recently signed a bill aimed at eradicating the growth of wild marijuana in Kansas. The new law will set up a pilot program in one county that has yet to be chosen. The legislature considered this new action urgent, and understandably so, since police reports indicated that this vegetation was creating a huge illicit business. The police said 9,300 pounds of harvested grass were confiscated last year. They estimated the value of the confiscated grass at $4 million. I don't usually doubt the word of the police, but by my math these figures set the price of a lid at about $26. Who is going to buy a lid of Kansas grass for $26? Every student knows he can get Gold for $15. And if he keeps Kansas grass around at all, it's to pass out to visitors he doesn't like. Maybe some enterprising dealers have been selling to middle aged legislators who don't know the difference. But more likely, the police have simply overestimated the importance of their catch. No heads, of course, objected to this new legislation. As long as the Great Mexican Supply Line remains open, it's kind of entertaining to think of all the people out in the fields spraying that hated Kansas weed. The only people that did object to the new law were the conservationists. They felt that the chemicals used to eliminate marijuana might damage other plants and also birds and animals. But what are a few birds and animals when the legislature can prevent some kid from giving himself a sore throat? When members of government become afraid of something they don't understand they frequently are willing to do anything to combat the object of this fear. Like poisoning the whole prairie to get rid of the pot. Or like sending a kid found with grass to the county jail for one year (the maximum sentence under the new "liberal" pot law). Or like giving one to seven years to somebody for selling grass (another stipulation of the new "merciful" law). Spraying the grass is idiocy. Spraying the legislature would be more beneficial. Reducing the sentence for possession of pot is senseless. The Kansas Legislature just doesn't have the courage to admit that possession of pot shouldn't be a crime, or that they don't know if it should be a crime. They just ease their conscience by reducing the sentence. Poison the land and cage the kids. All over a weed. Thank you, Governor. Thank you, legislature. Others on issues This column is made available periodically for campus leaders to discuss current issues. Ed. note—diZerega is a former student senator, active in campus politics. The opinions in this column are diZerega's and not necessarily those of the Kansan staff. Bv GUS diZEREGA To the surprise of Senator Shultz, a disappointed news media, and some embarrassed student leaders the April 8 Strike and Rally passed without incident. In what may have been the largest rally in KU's history Dave Awbrey, John Narramore, and Walker Hendrix explained the reasons behind the demonstration and the letter being sent to the Regents. Oh yes, Bill Ebert was also there. A number of positive benefits arose from the Strike. Many classes became forums for discussion of the issues surrounding the strike. All students were given the opportunity to participate peaceably in defense of their university. Radical student leadership proved incomparably more capable to organize and maintain order than the traditional student politicos. The Regents may well agree to sign the letter they were sent. The Strike Committee made some mistakes to be sure. We did not initially clarify the function of the picket line sufficiently and perhaps we assumed too much that the real issue of the Strike, academic freedom, was obvious to every one. These shortcomings were cleared up but not before Student SenEx and the Left Handed Students Union had convinced many that violence was likely and besides there were no reasons to strike anyway. By injecting the issue of violence, and in the LHSU document the implication that the Strike Committee would attack students attending class, these organizations did great damage to the cause of the strike. Hopefully in the long run the damage they have done to their reputation will be comparable. The chief reasons, then, that the Strike was not larger was that while misleading attacks on the Strike Committee were given front page coverage Tuesday, zero news was printed concerning what the Committee was really doing. The Strike and Rally have achieved many of their goals. The real issue was brought home to the Regents—that we are united against their interference for political purposes in our university. The spontaneous organizing power of concerned students proved superior to everything but the fear of violence. Since no violence occurred we trust that perhaps our opportunist student leadership might stand WITH student interests in the future. But we will not hold our breaths. Speaking of Regents, can you dig Henry Bubb's trip in the UDK last Tuesday? Imagine, the great "free enterpriser" getting rich off the federal government, talking as if we consumers have some moral obligation to do business with him. Is tolerance supposed to mean that we should help him get richer? So that the hypocrite can spread his drive further? The only tolerance Bubb has demonstrated of late seems to be his tolerant acceptance of anybody's money. I wonder whether his tolerance extends to trade with Red China? We know how far it extends to professors. The fat cats that run this country like to preach tolerance when their interests are at stake, but let them be effectively challenged and suddenly their devotion to civil liberties becomes as real as Elmer Gantry's priestly virtue. Henry Bubb is where a lot of our rulers are at, except that a lot of them are more cautious about admitting it. Fortunate we are that Bubb is with us—every time he opens his mouth another radical is made. Griff & the Unicorn SOKOLOFF DON'T YOU LOVE THE GENTLE PITTER-PAT OF RAIN ON THE WILL YOU SHUT UP? DON'T YOU LOVE THE GENTLE PITTER-PAT OF RAIN ON THE WILL YOU SHUT UP? David Sokoloff 1970 hearing voices— To the editor; Serving in the capacity as President of the University of Kansas Men's Interfraternity Council, and in representation of approximately 1,800 fraternity men on the KU campus, I see the position taken by the IFC in connection with activities pertaining to the estranged "Spring Week." The IFC, and the fraternity man in general, is an unfortunate victim of circumstance with reference to said event, due to a lack of communication among various living groups. Reports that the IFC pulled out, or rejected "Spring Week" are not true, due to the fact that the IFC actually never was committed, or involved. Should this "happening" take place in the Fall, relationships that hopefully would develop would have more than the remaining three weeks of classes prior to final exams (if held in the Spring) to grow and prove to qualify the original objective. It is worthy to note that the idea of "Spring Week" originated with a former officer of the IFC with the objective of joining the campus together in a week of fun events. It was not, however, to serve as a substitute for the traditional "Greek Week" of the past, whose sole objective was healthy competition among the 28 fraternities represented on campus in various athletic and cultural events. The decision to not participate in "Spring Week" activities merely means that no funds will be allocated towards said event by the IFC. It does not speak for the average fraternity man on this campus who may choose and is urged to participate. The loss of traditions to the KU campus due to this lack or communication is unfortunate. I do feel, however, that we, the various living groups, will grow and moreover prosper by what has happened, and that the communications between said living groups will definitely improve. David C. Andersen Wilmette, Ill., sophomore $$ * * * $$ To the editor: "Merker's attitude, however, was hardly indicative of a joke as he used worn-out cliches to express his feelings toward ROTC on campus." After reading the April 6 Daily Kansan I see that yet another blow has been struck against objective reporting. In the article titled "No Chance For Male Color Girl Nominee Eliminates Himself," we are told that what seemed at first a simple prank on the part of male student Randy Merker in being nominated for NROTC color girl was actually his way of protesting ROTC on campus. Then the article goes on to say: This is very interesting. Are we to assume that Merker wears a sign letting everyone know that he speaks only in "worn-out clichés"? Or does the unnamed author of this supposedly objective article feel constrained to let us all in on his or her personal opinions? Whichever is the case, such obvious editorializing has no place in a straight news story, a fact that someone on the Daily Kansan staff has apparently not yet learned. Stuart Cleland Wilmette, sophomore $$ * * * $$ To the editor: After reading the editorial by Mike Rieke about recruiting college graduates for police officers I felt I should write and show my support. Upon receiving my degree I immediately applied for a position as an active agent in society—a policeman. I'm thankful that someone is at last recruiting more of us. I saw through my schooling the great system that America has built. The great system that takes care of all of its people whether rich or poor, whether conservative or radical. It was then that I decided I would like to take care of them, too. I thought also of how great it would be for more college grades to be policemen, and even further, how great it would be for everybody to be policemen! Knowing, however, that it is rather idealistic—someone would have to be the criminals. Ha, ha. So let's be realistic. Everybody, come on, let's do something. Go out and show that you are willing to take the authority and responsibility of a policeman. Frank Carey Ottawa, junior THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3644 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for special events. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without charge. The university is not responsible for necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Reserves. Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 H Peter, Paul, Mary say what they feel-in music By JAN MAXWELL BLACK and PAT McLAUGHLIN Kansan staff writers Despite what some people believe, a folk song is not like a bottle of wine—it doesn't have to be old to be any good. Peter, Paul and Mary, the nation's leading folk-singing trio, prove this statement by performing many just-composed folk songs, for example, the new songs, "Apologize," "Moments of the Soft Persuasion," "Yesterday's Tomorrow," "Love City" and "She Dreams," which are included in the trio's newest recording, "Late Again." The famous folk trio who have recorded five Gold Record winning albums, will perform in concert at 8 p.m. Sat. in Hoch Auditorium. Their late 1969 hit, "Leavin' On A Jet Plane," also was awarded a Gold Record for sales over $1,000,000. Other hit singles sung by Peter, Paul and Mary include "Puff (The Magic Dragon," "Blowin' In the Wind," "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right," "The Times They Are A Changing," and "I Dig Rock and Roll Music." Composed of Peter Yarrow, Paul Stookey, and Mary Travers, the trio first met in Mary's Greenwich Village apartment one evening in May, 1961. Although at the time they shared only a knowledge of the same lyrics and melody of "Mary Had a Little Lamb," one evening they discovered they also had an enthusiasm for folk singing that stemmed from the special place folk music held in each of their lives since they had been teenagers. Single hits from the album, including "Lemon Tree" and "If I Had A Hammer," assured their success. When the trio went on their first major tour playing six concerts a week for six consecutive months, they broke attendance records in almost every major concert hall in the United States. As a trio they began at The Bitter End in Greenwich Village. Their first recording, titled simply, "Peter, Paul and Mary," was issued in the spring of 1962. Within three months it soared to the top of the charts. The trio appears each season on nationwide network shows and has performed concerts in Europe, the Far East, New Zealand and Australia. Peter, Paul and Mary are known for their interest in social and political movements. They appeared at the White House during both the Kennedy and Johnson administrations and participated in the second anniversary celebration of the inauguration of the late president John F. Kennedy. Company to present double bill of one-acts The Mt. Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company will present "Trial by Jury" and "Cox and Box" at 5:30 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Described by John Bush Jones, co-founder of the company as a "tour show," the double feature of one-acts supplements the two larger productions staged by the troupe this year. The first was "Iolanthe." "The Grand Duke" will be presented May 6-9. By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Because it is not a full-scale production, only piano accompaniment will be used for Sunday's performance. "Trial by Jury" will be staged in modern dress, except for the bride and her bridesmaids, who wear costumes. "Cox and Box" which is being staged and directed by Sandra Carson Jones, was a collaborative effort of Sullivan and Burnand before Gilbert and Sullivan formed their celebrated partnership. Mrs. Jones said that Gilbert reviewed the first performance of "Cox and Box," and wrote that the music was too operatic for a musical farce. They were active in their aid to Senator Eugene McCarthy in his bid for nomination as the 1968 Democratic Party presidential candidate. They have been present at major peace marches held in Washington and New York and have been active in the moratoriums against the Vietnam war. Although the voices of the trio blend to form one, three distinctive people compose the group. It tells the story of a landlord who rents the same room to two men, one who sleeps during the day, and the other who uses the room at night. One day they meet. Enough said. Peter Yarrow is perhaps the most freewheeling of the trio. Intensely interested in a wide range of subjects—painting, architecture, physics, and psychology as well as music—Peter recently coproduced his first film, "You Are What You Eat." A multimedia "happening," the movie was highly praised as a colorful and penetrating document of the current youth scene. "Trial by Jury" tells the story of a jilted bride who sues her suitor for breach of promise. He loses the case, but not until the entire court exposes itself as completely corrupt. Apr. 16 1970 KANSAN 5 "Trial by Jury" will be presented before the Kansas Bar Association May 14. "We don't preach or sermonize, but we say what we feel—in music," said Peter. "I think if people ever stop writing folk songs, it will mean they just don't care. And that would be the worst of all." 300 POSTERS "It is a satire on courts of law and corruption," said Jones. Black lite personality Day Glo Psychology today Zodiac $1-5 & high intensity Black Lights Paul Stookey recalls vividly his "discovery" of singing when he was an 8-year-old singing along with his father one day while riding along in a convertible. A native of Baltimore, Paul formed his own rock and roll combo, the "Bird of Paradise," when he was fourteen. Peter, a native New Yorker, began playing the guitar as a student at the High School of Music and Art in New York. As a freshman at Cornell University, he majored in psychology. Peter was an active solo performer in the Greenwich Village coffee houses when he met Mary Travers and Paul Stookey. During his college years, Peter became involved in folk music and was president of Cornell's folk music club. By the time he graduated, he was thinking seriously of a career in music and began playing clubs such as the Gate of Horn in Chicago and the Ash Grove in Los Angeles. TOWN CRIER 919 Massachusetts Tickets for Sunday's production may be obtained at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. Paul worked as a production manager for a chemical supply company in New York but he couldn't stay away from music. A tall willowy blonde with a tall, willowy voice, Mary Travers has been singing folk songs since kindergarten days. She grew up in Greenwich Village. Singers, writers, artists and creative people have always been a part of her life. He revitalized this interest by frequent visits to Greenwich Village coffee houses and clubs. He quit his white-collar job for an open-collared career in folk music. To the trio, he brings not only a steadying influence, but also a boundless and keenly satiric wit. After listening to Mary sing, it is almost impossible to believe that she has had only a few weeks of music lessons in her life. Mary's seemingly inborn poise, has, from the beginning, been the rock of the trio's professionalism. THE GREATEST COMEDY GENIUS AT HIS BEST IN A FILM NOT SEEN IN 40 YEARS . . Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" G Suggested For GENERAL Audiences Written, Directed and Produced Miss Travers sang in her high school chorus and also with a chorus that played Carnegie Hall twice. She cut three records as a member of the "Songswapper." In 1957, she got a job in the chorus of Mort Sahl's Broadway musical, "The Next President." Peter, Paul and Mary often sing about their own feelings, but most often they sing of the feelings of others. Their songs reflect individual response to the condition of man—his problems, After the show closed she held jobs at literary and advertising agencies where she applied her writing and artistic abilities. Her musical career really began when she met Paul Stookey in 1961 in a Greenwich Village club where Peter Yarrow joined the two for an informal try-out. Written, Directed and Produced by CHARLES CHAPLIN Re-released thru United Artists PLUS SELECTED SEGMENTS FROM "FURTHER PERILS OF LAUREL & HARDY" THE Hillcrest E successes and challenges. With spontaneity, warmth and commitment, they have extended the boundaries of musical communication through joining hands with their audience. Mary sums up the group's success with the statement, "There is a vision we share with you in our music. If it has proved successful it is not, I believe, because it is our vision, but because it has been everybody's all along." Eve, 7:15 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:15 Adult 1.50, Child. 75 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "A VERY BRILLIANT FILM!" GANNETT NEWS SERVICE A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE ESTRICTED Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 THE Hillcrest1 THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP JANE FONDA BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR GIG YOUNG SUSANNAN YORK NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS Matinee Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15 - 9:35 Varsity THEATRE ... telephone W 9-1065 THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP Matinee Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15 - 9:35 JANE FONDA BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR GIG YOUNG SUSANNAH YORK NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS Varsity TREATHE ... Telephone VI 5-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone M 9-1065 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN GOLDIE HAWN ...that Kooky Star of "LAFF-IN" "Why don't we stay in tonight — and screamble everywhere?" watters ingrid matthew bergman cactus flower introducing GOLDIE HAWN by JACK WESTON jack leng - WYO SCOOT - MENE HENEY Supported by GLASLOAN ASSOCIATES SCROLL - TECHNICOLOR 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat.-Sun. 2:30 THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 914 AND IOWA Adult 1.50 Child .75 WALT DISNEY productions KING of the GRIZZLIES TECHNICOLOR* Released by BOGEA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. 1970 Walt Disney Productions Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5782 NOW SHOWING Evening 7:15 - 9:15 Matinee Sot. Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50, Child .75 Blackmun wins endorsement WASHINGTON (UPI) — Supreme Court nominee Harry A. Blackmun won a cautious and tentative endorsement Wednesday from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., who was instrumental in defeating President Nixon's first two choices for the long-vacant ninth seat. But a small black cloud appeared on the horizon. Publicly and privately, a number of senators conceded that a Republican-backed effort in the House to initiate impeachment proceedings against Justice William O. Douglas would "complicate" Senate consideration of Blackmun. Sen. Richard S. Schweiker, a freshman Republican from Pennsylvania, told a news conference the two events could affect each other. "There could be some interaction," he said. Schweiker said action against Douglas "could be" non-political but, "the climate is inductive to the opposite attitude." He withheld judgment on the Blackmun nomination. House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford has called for creation of a committee to consider formal impeachment proceedings against Douglas, whose outspoken views on revolution and his relationship with a foundation drawing funds from a Las Vegas gambling casino have kept him in controversy. Shultz denies offer of funds from Hunt Sen. Reynolds Shultz, R-Lawrence, has denied that Texas billionaire H. L. Hunt offered him $100,000 to fund his campaign for governor. Shultz said the first he heard of the rumor was when he was contacted by the press to comment on it. "I have never had any contact with H. L. Hunt." Shultz said. Hunt is known as a supporter, financially and otherwise, of right-wing political campaigns and movements throughout the country. The source of the rumor regarding Shultz as his beneficiary is unknown. Shultz was expected to announce his gubernatorial candidacy April 15, but has since said he will announce his decision next week. Shultz has said that $100,000 would be needed to finance his primary race, but he said Tuesday, "I still don't have the kind of money I need to make the race. I'm not sure I would accept $100,-000 from one man anyway. There might be strings attached, and it might be that I wouldn't want to accept such an offer." Moratorium activities urge income tax protest Thousands of antiwar demonstrators protesting the use of tax dollars to finance the war in Vietnam rallied and marched in cities from coast to coast Wednesday on the deadline day for filing income tax returns. The protests were noisy but peaceful, smacking of spring outings, in most cities. But student radicals threw bottles and paint-filled balloons at police on the University of California campus in Berkeley and police twice used tear gas to scatter the militants. Five demonstrators were arrested at the Cleveland, Ohio Convention Center-four for disorderly conduct and one 16-year-old girl for desecration of the American flag—when a crowd of 500 demonstrated against the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. for aiding the war effort. Speakers at "April Moratorium" rallies exhorted protesters to stage income tax rebellions and advised them not to pay federal telephone taxes. Demonstrators staged symbolic "Boston Tea Parties" on the bank of the East River in New York City and on a bridge across the Des Moines River in Des Moines, Iowa. The Iowa protesters tossed tea into the water. The New Yorkers dumped tax forms. Actress Jane Fonda climbed aboard a flatbed truck in front of the federal building in Denver, Colo., and shouted to 400 cheering protesters to resist the draft and "stop giving your bodies for cannon fodder." In Washington, about 400 demonstrators gathered outside the locked Internal Revenue Service headquarters, beneath an engraved inscription that said "Taxes are what we pay for a civilized society." Exile leader from Cuba claims troops not loyal 6 KANSAN Apr.16 1970 MIAMI (UPI) — Exile leader Jose De La Torriente, who said he is trying to organize a new invasion of Cuba, stated Wednesday that not more than 5,000 of Fidel Castro's troops will remain loyal. He said he would "guess" that the Cuban premier "should be out" by the end of the year. De La Torriente, a 66-year-old retired Cuban executive and now a U.S. citizen, said recruiting of a new Cuban exile army will begin soon but he declined to say exactly when. Kennedy withheld a full endorsement of the 61-year-old U.S. appeals court judge from Rochester, Minn., known as a moderate on civil rights and a conservative on criminal law and described by the White House as a "strict constructionist." FROM BERTRAND RUSSELL'S LAST MESSAGE: SILENT COMEDY April 16 7:00and9:00pm woodruff aud 75¢ "What Israel is doing today can not be condoned, and to invoke the horrors of the past to justify terrors of the present is gross hypocrisy." (Reuters) "We have learned from our experience with other nominees to reserve our final judgment," Kennedy said. The O. A. S. Y. S. A Y. S.A. Present: A Panel Discussion on the Palestinian Liberation Movement Speakers: Kim Allen—Y. S. A. Dr. Fawaz Uloby-O.A.S. Dr. Favaz Ulaby - O. A.S. Place: McCollum Hall (Dining Room) Time: Thursday, April 16, 1970 at 7:00 p.m. Use Kansan Classified Spring Week Gymkana Ice Cream Social Carnival Street Dance Picnic Games Art Sale "FUN" Spring Week Committee Spring Week Gymkana Carnival Picnic FUN IN THE SUN Ice Cream Social Street Dance Games "FUN" Art Sale Spring Week Committee Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... a classic and a kick Two styles to choose. A bold new classic trimmed in brass. Or the new style kick. A sandal with real, honest-to-goodness tiretread rubber soles. Either way, it's a cool, comfortable choice. Make it soon. ROBLEE. $8.95 Sizes 7-12 McCoys shoes 813 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-2091 FUN IN THE SUN + Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... a classic and a kick Two styles to choose. A bold new classic trimmed in brass. Or the new style kick. A sandal with real, honest-to-goodness tiretread rubber soles. Either way, it's a cool, comfortable choice. Make it soon. ROBLEE. $8.95 Sizes 7-12 McCoys shoes 813 Mars St Phone VI. 3-2091 McCoy's shoes School stresses creativity Free University supplement to education By CHARLENE MULLER Kansan Stafff Writer The Free University of Lawrence is the place people go have the desire to pursue an interest or a hobby. There is no fee to enroll in the Free University and courses are open to students and non-students regardless of age. The coordinators of the Free University said the university was a "non-profit non-polished, non-sectarian" organization. Alice Engelken, Goff sophomore and a coordinator, said the Free University believed the present structure of the American educational system did not meet the needs of our society. Students, she said, contently exist within ivory walls, shunning responsibility for making decisions. "Instead of promoting life," Miss Engelken said, "the present educational system postpones it." Miss Engelken said the Free University believed each individual had particular interests and possibilities and therefore needed to ask his own questions and direct his own education. Education, she said, involves the total environment and should lead to personal growth and social action. One of the Free University's advantages, Miss Engelken said, is that it views education as self-directed which means that each person should have the right and ability to choose what he wants and feels he needs to know. Courses on any subject may be suggested by any person at any time, Miss Engelken said. Success, she said, depends on the participants. A class lasts only so long as there is interest in it, she said. Coordination, Chuck Hand, Lawrence junior, said the Free University was the ideal educational system. When education is free of grades and compelling requirements, he said, constructive creativity is promoted. Some of the courses presently meeting are: radical education, sunsets, beer making, loving worthless people, fanatics and fanaticism, creative writing, sculpture, the concept of love, martyrts and martyr makers, the female predicament, and languages (Russian, German, Spanish, Japanese). Classes which have been suggested but that have not yet been formed because there is no instructor are: classical guitar, Bob Dylan., metal work, jazz, international foods, graffiti, survival, leather work, law and legal aid, auto mechanics for women, ceramics, wines and liquors, wine-making, consumer education, and flamenco guitar. Anyone interested in suggesting a course or in signing up for a current class may call the Free University at 843-8202 or go by its office at Canterbury House. Chalmers comments on Bubb's letter, strike Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Wednesday it was unfortunate that Henry Bubb's letter to professor Tom Weiss was printed on Regent's stationery. Chalmers also said that he thought Bubb was operating on a double standard when he sent his letter. In his letter to Weiss, Bubb said that he would hate to let his personal feelings towards Weiss hold up his progress at the University. In the recent controversy over the promotions of professors Velvel and Litto, that is exactly what Bubb did, Chalmers said. When asked about his reaction to the student strike last Wednesday, Chancellor Chalmers said that he was extremely proud of the manner in which the students conducted themselves. "As far as I'm concerned," he said, "the score read 17,500 students for peaceable assembly and free speech against 3 or 4 possible nonstudents for violence." Fire in rooming house 'was possibly arson' The fire broke out around midnight at a rooming house at 1225 Indiana. The fire was restricted to the basement with extensive smoke damage throughout the house. Fire Chief F.C. Sanders speculated Wednesday that the cause for Tuesday night's rooming-house fire was "possibly arson." Sanders said, "It is a possibility that it was caused by arson, but we have no proof yet. The electricity and gas had been shut off which leads me to believe that arson may have started it. However, it could also have been an accident — maybe someone just dropped a cigarette in the basement." Apr. 16 1970 KANSAN 7 The rooming house is owned by Daniel S. Ling, associate professor of physics at the University of Kansas. In an interview at the scene of the fire, Ling said that he ordered the tenants out of the house last Thursday morning for delay in payment of their rent. "It could be arson for the reason that the renters were huffed at Ling." Sanders said, "but I haven't talked to them yet. I do have their names however." 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H Campbell's MEN'S WEAR 843 Massachusetts VI 3-0454 Reality session popular Women's liberation calls for involvement A reality session concerning approaches to student involvement in the women's liberation movement was the largest crowd gathered at the annual convention of the National Association of Women Deans and Counselors (NAWDC) recently held in Los Angeles, said Emily Taylor, dean of women. Students representing the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students (AWS), the National Organization for Women (NOW) and the Women's Liberation Front attended the convention. The student representatives from the organizations expressed their thoughts about the movement and about their individual organizations' approaches to existing problems concerning women, Miss Taylor said. The convention did not try to present well-known individuals but presented those with a concern for issues that involve women in higher education, she said. Two of the students representing NOW and WLF were from California colleges, the other was the president of AWS from the University of Montana. The program of the convention dealt in general with the field of professional personnel work and the developing concerns of women students, Miss Taylor said. "Evolution over Revolution" was the main theme of the convention. session," was the title of a speech given by Elspeth Rostow, associate professor of government at the University of Texas who spoke about education today. "Get off the log, Mr. Hopkins, you're late for your sensitivity Other speakers included Rosemary Park, vice-chancellor of the University of California at Los Angeles, Whitney Young Jr., executive director of the National Urban League and Edward E. Sampson, associate professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley. Preliminary discussion concerning the joining of three student personnel organizations was also held at the convention, Miss Taylor said. Members discussed the possibility of merging the American College Personnel Association, the National Association of Student Personnel Administration and the National Association of Women Deans and Counselors. Miss Taylor said the NAWDC is the only college personnel association that concerns itself with the needs and the changing role of students. Language prof chosen to receive fellowship award PRETTY Andrew Debicki, professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Kansas, has been selected as one of 286 scholars, scientists and artists chosen nationwide to receive a Guggenheim fellowship. NEW DELHI (UPI) — India's foodgrains production in 1968 reached a record level of 95.6 million tons, an increase of 20 million tons over 1967. Nearly a fifth of it, however, was lost to rodents, pests and insects. The fellowship, $10,000, will allow Debicki to take time off next year to complete a book on the critical study of Jorge Guillen, a contemporary Spanish poet. The book, planned about a year ago and started last summer, now has four chapters. Debicki plans the completed work to include about ten chapters. INDIAN FOODGRAINS 8 KANSAN Apr. 16 1970 Steele was at KU from 1956 until 1964. He later taught at Stanford University and has since been general manager of the New York office of the Xerox Education Group. Former KU professor becomes Texas dean Jack D. Steele, former professor of business at the University of Kansas, has been named Dean of the College of Business Administration at Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Tex. He has previously been awarded a Yale College Fellowship for graduate work, a Danforth Research Award, an American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship and a Fulbright Travel Grant. Bicyclist Those receiving awards were selected from among 2,313 applicants in the 46th annual competition of the foundation. The Guggenheim fellowships, totaling $2,605,000, were granted on the basis of past achievement and future promise of the applicants. PLANNING A TRIP?? Debicki's writing career includes two books on Spanish poetry, one on Jose Gorostiza, another concerns a study of Spanish poetry in the 1920's and 1930's, and the third, a book on Damaso Alonso, is scheduled for publication. He has also written for humorous journals. in shape-up sandals by Scholl Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center Debicki, a summa cum laude graduate of Yale University in 1955, came to KU in 1968. He had received a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1960 and had been head of the Spanish department at Grinnell College for eight years before coming to KU. VI 3-1211 with. acti legs sculpte raised The shape-up Sandals with the exclusive toe-grip action that turns on your legs when you walk. Made of smooth, sculpted wood in flat or raised heel. Bone or red straps. $1295 PATTI'S SHOE SERVICE 1017 Mass. DROP ANCHOR AT OUR RESTAURANT Another rousing weekend will soon be upon us. What are you going to do? How about this idea. Take the little woman (or big woman, what ever your personal preference may be) to the Captain's Table for dinner. Girls grub up a guy that takes them to dinner. And boys, the food is priced to fit your monetary means. Just think of the benefits you may receive by showing your date how much you think of her stomach . . . and legs and arms and waist and... Don't pass up the chance to impress that favorite girl. (Maybe she isn't your favorite girl but she will think so. Isn't that what counts?) Going to the Peter, Paul, and Mary Concert Saturday? The Captain's Table is the logical place to come to afterwards. Make a complete night of it. Come in for a delicious dinner. You will be glad you did. Open From 7:00 a.m.to 2:30 a.m. y? The Captain's Table Across the Street From Lindley Hall Optics advances with new glass Photography, or photochromic lenses are the newest development of the glass industry. These new lenses, which became available for general optical use recently, change color according to the amount of light and changes in air temperature around them. When used in eyeglasses, they make the transition from outdoors to indoors easier for the person who needs tinted glasses. Although when exposed to strong sunlight they do not turn dark gray, the materials used in the lenses can serve a variety of functions. Within a minute, 75 per cent of the lens will darken when exposed to strong light. The lenses can change from a fairly dark gray in the sunlight to virtually clear in normal, incandescent light. Chemicals used in the composition of the glass that cause the changes in lens color are extremely sensitive to solar energy. In addition, temperature extremes of heat and cold will also cause the lenses to become darker. According to one local optical dealer, flourescent light will cause the lenses to become pink, rather than varying their normal gray tones. Physiology pupil to receive award Apr. 16 1970 KANSAN 9 Michele Barg, Tueson, Ariz. senior, will receive the William King Candlin award in physiology and cell biology at 4 p.m. April 20, during the second annual William King Candlin lecture in Haworth Hall. The $300 award was established in 1968 by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Candlin in memory of their son, who was killed in an automobile accident. It is given to a junior, senior or graduate student in physiology or cell biology. Mrs. Barg will use the award for graduate studies in physiology and electron-microscopy under the direction of Paul R. Burton, professor of cell biology. The dealer also said that the life of the material used in the glass is permanent. The lenses, however, cannot be considered useful as sunglasses because, according to the dealer, they do not darken enough to protect the eyes in extreme solar light. A brochure from the manufacturer said that because of the usually insufficient output of ultraviolet light by incandescent lamps the lenses remain colorless indoors. According to the brochure, the lenses could help athletes in some sports. Sunglasses are often too dark for wearing in golf, skiing, hunting and other otdoor sports whereas the new photogray lens, because of its neutral gray color changes, does not affect visual acuity. A Lawrence optical dealer said that the photogray glass had been perfected for quite some time, but because the glass was so difficult to make it has not been readily available. Because the glass is hard to make, involving slow lens-grinding, machinery is often burnt out. The original manufacturer, Corning Glass Co., has had difficulty keeping up with orders for the special glass. Often, said the optical dealer, their orders and inquiries were far ahead of the amount of lens glass which their wholesaler had available. Photogray lenses are the first big innovation in lens glass making since the development of tinting about 400 years ago. The lenses are available to the public now in both single vision and bifocal lenses. FREE PRIZE DRAWINGS Win a trip for 2 to the 1970 Indianapolis 500 as the personal guest of Mario Andretti—A pair of new Firestone "500" tires! "Come in and register for the big prize drawing contest...no cost or obligation. You may win a free trip to the 1970 Indianapolis 500 race as the guest of Mario Andretti...a pair of new, wide Firestone "500" tires. You owe it to yourself to see the new Firestone "500" today!" Mario Andretti Void where prohibited by law Firestone THE MILEAGE SPECIALIST FRITZ CO. "Firestone Corner" 8th and New Hamp. 843-4321 Ladies' and Children's LEATHER sandals • Hand-crafted in Italy • Dozens of marvelous styles in mahogany, white and beige. • All have fully cushioned insole. Ladies' 4½-10; Children's 8½-3. 2 $5 pairs for Pick Any 2 Pairs Marked $2.97! sandals for men and big boys 4 99 pair little boy's Sizes 8½ - 3 3 97 Pay-Less FAMILY SHOES WOMEN & CHILDREN 2 PAIRS $5 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Mon. - Sat. 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Sun. 1300 W. 23rd UNIVERSITY PARKING ZONE X PERMIT HOLDERS GAIN ENTRANCE BY PASS CARD 7:00 A.M.TO 5:30 P.M.WEEKDAYS UNTIL 12:00 P.M.SATURDAYS PUBLIC PARKING 10¢ DIME OR 2 NICKLES ALL HOURS Photo by Marilyn McMullen Better than money? Visitors to the KU campus are faced with the problem of paying parking lot fees with a medium of exchange used nowhere else in the world. Or maybe 'nickles' are the Building and Grounds Department's answer to sandwich coins. Dean leaves ditch for hole Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, returned Wednesday to Wescoe hole from the "Big Ditch" dean's meeting at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. It is called the "Big Ditch" meeting because it is attended by deans of colleges of liberal arts and sciences from the major universities which have waters that drain into the Mississippi River, Shankel said Wednesday. Shankel said around 25 deans of liberal arts and sciences attended the conference, with representatives from most of the Big 10 schools attending. The conference was a morale booster, said Shankel, in that KU's problems were common to most of the universities there. Shankel said that in many cases KU was ahead in plans to increase student involvement in University affairs. The conference discussions centered on five categories, said Shankel. The categories were: administration, budget, curriculum, academic promotions, teaching and student affairs. 10 KANSAN Apr. 16 1970 Many of the questions asked were relevant to KU's current situation, said Shankel. A question submitted by Shankel for discussion was, "Are general requirements for graduation, e.g. foreign languages, mathematics, English and speech, basically liberal or illiberal by their very nature?" Shankel mentioned that the University of Alabama had done away with its language requirement and the University of Michigan had established a bachelor degree in general studies. He said that many at the conference suggested that the reason for possible irrelevance of the language requirement was that language departments did not require the use of the language after the student has taken the elementary courses. The dean from the University of Texas at Austin, said Shankel, suggested that political science, history and culture aspects be stressed in foreign language study. AURH board to interview next year's new members The Association of University Residence Hall's Board of Appeals will meet soon to conduct interviews for next year's members. The Board of Appeals is a committee which hears appeals for refunds from persons cancelling their residence hall contracts after the cancellation date. The board also hears damage fine appeals. The board consists of five students plus representatives from the Dean of Men, the Dean of Women, and the Housing Office. Since the residence halls have formed new contracts, the board needs representatives from all types of residence halls who are willing to accept the responsibilities of the new system. Interviews will be conducted April 26 beginning at 7:00 p.m. in KU debaters take honors The KU debate team finished third out of a 26 team field. Teams were invited on the basis of previous performances in major tournaments. Bob McCulloh, Shawnee Mission senior, placed first in the tournament, and Dan Beck, Mission junior, was the second-ranked speaker out of 52 debaters. Two University of Kansas debaters were selected as the best two speakers at the Illinois State Portable Tourney of Champions at Bloomington, Ill. last week. Thursday through Saturday the teams of Beck-Prentice and McCulloh-Jeans will be in Houston competing in the National Debate tournament. The two teams qualified in the district tournament at Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo. during spring break. Joseph R. Pearson and Lewis Halls for persons who plan to be residents next year of JRP, Templin, Lewis or Hashinger Halls. Interviews will be held April 27 beginning at 7:00 p.m. in McColum and Ellsworth Halls. Interviews will be held next year for a position from Oliver, Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin Halls. For further information contact Michael Hall, Room 706, Templin Hall. 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Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries.In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry.100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-6917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong. THE FOUNTAIN Photo by Tom Slaughter Who said the B & G couldn't walk on water? Next to the ground hog, the filling of KU's Chi Omega fountain is probably the best indication of the approaching spring. Building and grounds workmen filled the fountain Wednesday in one and a half hours. Pollution legislation asked for Great Lakes by Nixon WASHINGTON (UP)—In a special message to the House and Senate, President Nixon asked Wednesday for legislation to prohibit dumping of polluted dredge waste into the Great Lakes, one of the nation's worst trouble spots. The dumping ban will apply to four of the five Great Lakes Apr. 16 KANSAN 11 1970 -Erie, Ontario, Huron, and Michigan. States which would participate in the program are Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. Nixon's Great Lakes program would concentrate on the most polluted harbors in the initial stages. Building containment areas for polluted materials would cost about $70 million The federal government would pay half and the state and local governments the rest. KC air control 'trouble spot' WASHINGTON-(UPI) — The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reported more air traffic controllers returned to work Wednesday, with Kansas City, Mo., and Minneapolis, Minn., the only remaining trouble spots. The FAA said 610 controllers were absent Tuesday at 21 major control centers compared with a high of 1,847 on March 30 and 911 on Monday "It looks good," an FAA spokesman said. The Kansas City Control Center appeared to be the major holdout in the national back-to-work trend, with 38 per cent of its controllers reported absent on the day shift today. In Minneapolis, 25 per cent of the day shift controllers were absent. Chicago was the only other control center with more than Smith shooting officially termed death by suicide WASHINGTON (UPI)—Dr. Alfred Abramson, medical examiner of Alexandria, Va., filed an official verdict of suicide Wednesday in the death of UPI reporter Merriman Smith. Smith was found dead of a gunshot wound late Monday afternoon. A memorial tribute will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the National Presbyterian Church The Rev. Dr. Edward L. R. Elson, pastor of the church, will officiate. Fr. Gilbert Hartke, head of Catholic University's drama department, will read the scripture. The total length of the Mexican boundary of the United States is 2,013 miles. 10 per cent absenteeism. Fifteen per cent of its controllers were still out. But in New York, which had been the worst trouble spot of the 22-day-old walkout, only 9 per cent were absent. Normal absenteeism at control centers is about 4 per cent. Most of the controllers are returning to work under a compromise worked out by a Cleveland judge, which is being copied by other judges across the country. Under the plan, an independent panel of doctors is set up to examine controllers who claim to be sick. VENTURA DARIEN CIRCLET For that "special" occasion A truly brilliant gift is a diamond ring. Beautiful styling is yours along with a written guarantee of flawless quality. CIRCLET $500 ALSO 150 TO 1975 DARIEN $300 WEDDING RING 87.50 VENTURA $300 ALSO $150 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 50 Wondersburg Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 BANQUET of NATIONS & SCHEHERAZADE NIGHT Sunday, April 26, 6 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Tickets: $2.00 — Raney's & Union Info. Desk Sponsored by International Club o. Desk Graduation ceremony to be streamlined The University of Kansas will introduce a few changes in this year's commencement weekend in an attempt to make the traditionally long weekend a little more streamlined. Innovations this year are two luncheons which will replace a traditional supper and breakfast. An All-Class Reunion Luncheon is scheduled for 1 p.m. May 31 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Representatives of the reunion classes, the Gold Medal Club and Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. are scheduled to speak at the luncheon. The luncheon replaces separate luncheons the classes have had in the past and will be the only gathering for all alumni. There will be no all-University commencement supper as there has been in the past. The second new luncheon is for seniors and their parents and replaces the senior breakfast which has been a tradition. Chalmers and the senior officers are the speakers at the luncheon, which will be at 1 p.m., May 31, in the Union Ballroom. The change was adopted in conjunction with the two-ceremony graduation plan. The two-ceremony graduation change is viewed as a necessary adaptation to the format adopted last year which called for two separate ceremonies to award graduation degrees. That change was adopted because the commencement committee felt it could not give proper recognition to more than 3,000 graduates in a single ceremony. This year advanced degrees will be awarded the evening of May 31 and undergraduate degrees will be awarded June 1. Graduation ceremonies will begin at 8 p.m., May 31 and June 1. Graduates will again assemble in also be meetings of the Endowment Association trustees and the Alumni Associations directors. Engineering Exposition to celebrate 50th year Visitors at this week's Kansas Relays will be given a glimpse of future technology as the University of Kansas School of Engineering presents its 50th annual Engineering Exposition. More than 30 displays, created by engineering students, societies and industries, will be exhibited in Learned Hall. These displays will cover such diverse areas of engineering as environmental The theme of the exposition is "Profiles of Tommorrow." The show will look at the future and the effects of technology on human lives. There will be the usual round of festivities on the hill to honor the new graduates—concerts, receptions and special exhibitions in the Museum of Art. There will control, electrical engineering in artificial hearts and other organs and detailed information on the Apollo moonship and its systems. 12 KANSAN Apr. 16 1970 The opening ceremony and crowning of the 1970 Engineering Expo queen will begin at noon Friday. Visitors may tour the display area from noon to 9 p.m. Friday and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. Career and general information about engineering and technology will be available. The first rear-loaded cannons were built by the Krupp firm. Students will attend the Engineering Banquet on Sunday at which time the outstanding senior from each department will be announced and one senior will be named the outstanding student engineer of 1969-1970. Chalmers is to speak at the commencement ceremonies. Recipients of KU's Distinguished Service Citations will be honored at both events. AGS Marks Jewelers 100 Meet Del Eisele Marks diamonds, carefully graded for cutting, color, clarity and weight, are selected with the highest of professional judgment. Stop in soon and see our fine selection of gems she will be proud to wear. 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. Marks Jewelers DEL EISELE Certified Gemologist American Gem Society Authorized Member 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 front of Strong Hall at 7:30 and will be handed an aerial photograph of the campus as they cross the platform. Diplomas will be mailed to graduates during the summer. Marks Jewelers GG NATIONAL SPORTS BASINAL SEVENING BOOKENDS SPECIAL SIMON & GARFUNKEL BONUS including: Bookends Theme/Overs FULL Fakin It/Old Friends COLOR A Hazy Shade of Winter POSTER Mrs. Robinson INCLUDED BOOKENDS SIMON & GARFUNKEL including: Bookends Theme/Overs Fakin' It / Old Friends A Heavy Shade of Winter Mrs. Robinson SPECIAL BONUS FULL COLOR POSTER INCLUDED Simon & Garfunkel Sounds of Silence FEATURING I Am a Rock LEAVES THAT ARE GREEN BROUGHT DRY A MOIST PERIULAR MAN WE EVE GOT A GROOVEY THING LOOP SOMEWHERE THEY CAN'T FIND ME THE SOUNDS OF SILENCE AND MORE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including: The Boxer Baby Driver Bye Bye Love Keep The Customer Satisfied Bridge Over Troubled Water On Columbia Records Available at $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. 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Pant-tops shown are from our sportswear collections . . . . . . . . . . $4 to $6 Severe problem of over population confronts world A United States senator warmeo today that the spiraling population growth is the most serious problem facing the world in this generation. If the U.S. population continues to escalate at its present rate, "we might as well forget about finding solutions to any of our other social and environmental problems," said Sen. Gaylord Nelson, democrat of Wisconsin. Nelson, while making a 17 stop Earth Day teach-in tour, spoke at Southern Connecticut State College in New Haven. Nelson said the population problem is more critical in America than in Asia because the average American is more destructive to his environment than the average non-American. He added that Americans have consumed more minerals and fuels in the last ten years than the entire population of the earth in recorded history. Nelson said Americans comprise only 6 per cent of the world's population, but are responsible for almost one half of the world's pollution and consume 60 per cent of the world's resources. Olathe air station to be industry site WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., said Wednesday Johnson County officials plan to develop the Olathe Naval Air Station into an industrial site and use present structures for a school, storage and office purposes. Pearson, who met earlier this week with Navy officials and representatives of the Johnson County Airort Commission, said the transfer of the base to the county would take about 90 days. Arizona has a total area of 113,909 square miles. Apr. 16 1970 KANSAN 13 May 10th A Mother's Day gift that says "married"? Very funny. Uh, uh. Very serious and very loving. You see, while ring fashions don't change every season, they do change. And your wife knows it. In fact, she'd probably tell you a new wedding ring wouldn't be a bad idea. If she wasn't afraid you'd say "Very funny." This could be a great opportunity to convince her you really are a mind reader. And to see some happy bride-like tears again. ArtCarved WEDDING RINGS ArtCarved WEDDING RINGS BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mess. Ph.VI 3-4366 BRIMAN'S leading jewelers FRI At The Red Dog Inn 8 P.M. Doug Clark and the HOT NUTS MERCANTILLO BAYEIRO - Always the finest in entertainment- SAT SAT At The Red Dog Inn 8 P.M. TOGETHER THE HAYDONS Advance tickets on sale at Red Dog Office 9 A.M.-5 P.M. - WTF-Tickets Also at the Door. Johnson out to break own mark Hawk vaulter aims for second Relays title By DAVID SCHWARTZ Kansas Sports Writer On the bulletin board in Jan Johnson's room is his slogan, "Don't compete—attack, dammit!" As the KU pole vaulter prepares for this weekend's KU Relays that is exactly what he plans to do. Johnson, a sophomore from Chicago Heights, Ill., is the defending champion in the pole vault and he doesn't expect to be dethroned. He expects to win. His best effort is a school record $16-6\frac{1}{2}$ in the Big Eight Indoor, and he wants to do better than that in the relays. The biggest thrill in Jan's track career was winning the relays last year as a freshman. "I was really surprised," he commented, "because I had been vaulting poorly. It was a real thrill not only to win the relays but also KANSAN Sports because it was the first time I had cleared 16 feet." Jan's winning hoist was 16-4. He expects his stiffest competition from Mike Wedman of Colorado. In the two times they have faced each other each has won one. While they are arch rivals they are also good friends. Jan also expects KU teammate Bill Hatcher to be tough to beat. "I like to have fun in track. I like pole vaulting but I work hard. I enjoy the competition and the satisfaction of winning. I'm very serious and competitive in meets, but I have fun vaulting everyday," said the 5-10, 165 pounder. "A pole vaulter must have every athletic quality," Johnson pointed out, "he has to be an all-around athlete." The necessary attributes include speed, coordination, strength, stamina, timing rhythm and most importantly, courage." To overcome fear he tries to change pre-meet nervousness into fury, to direct extra nervous energy into vaulting. "I'm not scared of anything," he proclaims, "I'm holding my pole higher now than anyone in the world. No one else holds it that high because they're scared. I'm not scared." Jan's pole vaulting has been consistent this year. He has been 16 feet or over in every meet this year. He credits this to getting psyched up. Like he says, he doesn't compete—he attacks. His goal is always to win. "Winning means much more to me than records. I would rather win every meet than win one meet and set a record." He cites assistant coach Harvey Greer for helping him keep a winning attitude. At 5-10, 165 pounds Jan isn't large for an athlete. He feels size is important to an extent, but he feels that he can overcome his lack of size. Jan defeated former world-record holder Bob Seagren in the Oklahoma City Invitational on January 31. He did it by going 16-6$\frac{1}{4}$, then a KU school record which he later broke at 16-6$\frac{1}{2}$. That night he didn't miss 17 feet by much, barely missing it twice. "I was over," he explained, "but I hit the bar on my way down." Johnson's three long-range goals in track are to go to the 1972 Olympics, to win the KU relays, four years in a row, and to pole vault 18 feet. This year's goal is 17-4, one foot better than last year's best effort. The current world's record is 17-10 by John Pennel, and someday he hopes to top that. How about a 17 foot vault on Saturday? "If Wedman of Colorado pushes me I might get 17—it's just around the corner," he says. "Seventeen feet is a combination of everything—good weather, tough competition, and campus. He wants to do well for many reasons. It might be a good idea to keep your eye on the pole vault Saturday afternoon—Jan Johnson might surprise you. psyched up, if he can transfer his nervous energy into an excellent vault, he might do just that. The relays will be the first time his parents have been to the KU maybe a little bit of luck." Jan Johnson is confident of his abilities. He not only wants to successfully defend his crown but he wants 17 feet. If he gets Graduate of Haskell Institute and San Francisco Bay Area Chairman of Indian Affairs will speak on "Causative Factors In The Repossession of Alcatraz" Thursday, April 16, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Sponsored by SUA Minority Opinions Forum THE HOLF in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11th. Adam Nordwall 14 KANSAN Apr. 16 1970 ALL STAR DAIRY The group is composed of Jeff Bennett (7,551), the NAIA champion from Oklahoma Christian College; Norm Johnston (7,438), former Iowa State ace who tied Bennett for the Drake Relays Decathlon draws top class entries Four others in the field have scored over 7,200 points and could be threats to Mulkey's record. Hodge, who competes for the Los Angeles Striders, is a former UCLA star. He set the decathlon record in 1966 with 8,230 points. Bill Toomey now holds the world standard of 8,417. The decathlon is scheduled Friday and Saturday mornings in conjunction with the 45th Kansas Relays. First decathlon event begins at 9 a.m. Russ Hodge, former world record-holder from Los Angeles heads an 11-man field lined up for the Kansas Relays decathlon that is returning to the Jayhawk carnival this weekend after an absence of four years. The last time the 10-event test was staged at the Relays was in 1966 when Phil Mulkey won the taxing competition for his eighth title at the KU meet. He set the record with 7,480 points in 1962. ALL STAR mufflers and for Your headquarters SHAW AUTO SERVICE shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 miDAS Decathlon events on the Friday program are the 100 meters, long jump, shot put, high jump and 400 meters. On the agenda for Saturday's final five tests are the 110-meter high hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and the 1,500 meters. title last spring; Rory Kenward (7,299), Colorado sophomore who finished third at Drake a year ago, and Sam Goldberg (7,276), Kansas, recent champion and record-setter at the Kentucky Relays. The 1969-70 Quality Control Award Winning Dairy. ALL STAR All Star Dairy. Serving the University, its students and Lawrence residents for the last fifty years. ALL STAR ALL New location 2nd and West Turnpike Road. VI 3-5511. STAR ALL STAR Best of Luck to the entire KU track squad and to Coaches Timmons and Greer in the annual KU Relays! And, if you want to win a medal in apartment living-move to Meadowbrook. For married students and students who desire to live alone. Now is the time to reserve a unit for June 1. Meadowbrook Apartments 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 No run-of-the-mill millionaire 45th Relays dedicated to Hershberger BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL A new event has been added to the Kansas Relays this year. It's the 35-and-over mile run, and one entry is the man who donated the money to build the track the race will be run on Jim Hershberger, Wichita millionaire oilman, gave the University of Kansas $125,000 last year for a new synthetic track and expansion of the old one from six to eight lanes. This 45th Kansas Relays has been dedicated to him Hershberger, 38, is a former member of the Kansas track squad. He was a sprinter in his college days. But few would bet against him in Saturday's mile for the middle-aged set. Most everyone in Kansas knows the story of how Jim Hershberger set Wichita a-buzz one May day in 1958. Seems Jim used to run out to play nine holes during his lunch break. He started telling everyone he could play nine holes in 45 minutes. Some of his friends expanded his boast to 36 holes in three hours and bet he couldn't do it. That turned out to be a piddling effort; Hershberger went the distance in two hours, 21 minutes and averaged 78 strokes for the two rounds. Wild Bet Naturally, Jim didn't keep quiet about it. That set the stage for one of the wildest bets made in the annals of sport. On May 12, 1958, at Wichita Country Club, Hershberger was bet he couldn't play 10 rounds, or 180 holes, in less than 15 hours. Preparing for the effort, Jim ran 60 miles, the distance he figured 180 holes to be, in rehearsal for the big event. When the big day came, the course at Wichita County Club was cleared. Hershberger pulled his own cart and ran. He played the first 96 holes in four hours, 56 minutes and averaged 79.5 strokes per 18 holes. A crowd estimated at 6,000 filtered onto the course. No one knows how much money was on the line, but estimates of wagers among the affluent spectators ranged up to $50,000. Knee Injury On the 97th hole, Hershberger fell and wrenched his knee trying to jump over a creek. That hole took 45 minutes to finish. But a spectator went for a doctor, who came and froze Hersberger's knee with a chemical spray. The knee had to be frozen 10 times in the succeeding holes Hershberger completed the 180 holes in 12 hours 56 minutes, avi- eraging 87 strokes a round. Jim, who claims he started with "14 cents in the bank and a lot of mortgages," has always been a physical fitness nut. Three times a week, he runs four miles as soon as he gets out of bed in the morning. The other four days, he runs seven miles. Preparing All Winter For lunch, he plays basketball and follows that with paddleball or tennis in the evening. As expected, Hersberger has been preparing all winter. It's been reported he's been clocked in 4:35 in practice. "The snow didn't interfere with my training too much," he says. "Training is coming along as well as a 14-hour business schedule will allow and if I'm defeated it will be because someone else is a better distance runner than I at this age. Wilt sparks Lakers bid for NBA throne "But I'm in shape and they're going to know that I was in the race." As you can see, Jim Hersnberger is not the run-of-the-mill millionaire. "Our backs certainly couldn't be further up the wall," said the Hawks' player-coach. "We shot very poorly." during and after the sloppily- played contest. STORE BOUGHT - STORE THOUGHT/TRUTH THE FLOCK INCLUDING: CLOUNN/I AM THE BALL TREE/TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT–STORE THOUGHT/TRUTH By RABUN MATTHEWS THE FLOCK INCLUDING: CLOWN//I AM THE BALL TREE/TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT--STORE I THOUGHT/TRUTH CS 9911 A violin playing lead in front of a driving rock band? The most exciting new music group today lays all its cards on the table in the first LP—and comes up with a full house. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. ATLANTA (UPI) — Wilt Chamberlain, a "controversy back home," according to Los Angeles Coach Joe Mullaney, is the difference in the National Basket- coach who was so outraged by the officiating in Sunday's opening game loss that he called a press conference and threatened to turn the second game into a blood-letting, was almost docile Rugby club continues league play ball Association Western Division playoff finals. The KU rugby club takes it's undefeated record to Atchison Saturday to play St. Benedicts, a team it beat earlier this year. The rugby "A" team carries a seven win, no loss record into the contest. The "B" team also undefeated, will play a "B" game against St. Benedicts in the second game Saturday. The "A" team is fresh from a 10-3 victory over Missouri last Saturday. In it's seven wins it has piled up 110 points to 17 for the opposition. Kim Ewonus, Wichita junior, is the leading scorer with 49 points. Jim Thurman, Overland Park junior, is second with 18 points. On April 25 KU travels to Columbia, Mo. for a rematch against the Tigers. The KU team has been pointing all year for a tournament in Chicago May 2-3 sanctioned by the United States Rugby Union. Other teams entered are the defending champion the St. Louis Falcons, Notre Dame and all the Big Ten schools. Co-captain Bob Marquis, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, said "We have a good chance to go all the way this year in Chicago. We have the best team we've had in years." In 1698 the KU rugby club placed third in Chicago The other co-captain is Phil Conner, Detroit, Mich. senior. The president of the rugby club is Shorty Lawrence, Scott City junior. Chamberlain was the offensive spark when the Lakers needed it and a bulky intimidator all night long who kept Atlanta players unnerved in a ho-hum, 105-94 win Tuesday over the Hawks in what had been billed as a possible blood-letting by Atlanta Coach Richie Guerin. Apr. 16 1970 KANSAN 15 700 500 april 12 aud lemonade ice The victory was the second in two playoff games for Los Angeles. The two teams go to Los Angeles for games three and four, to be played Friday and Sunday. The New York Knickerbocker also hold a 2-0 edge on Milwaukee in the Eastern Division playoff finals, with game three Friday in Milwaukee. A Lot of Controversy A Lot of Controversy "There's been a lot of controversy back home about Chamberblain," Mullaney said. "A lot of folks thought we were a better team — quicker and more exciting — without Chamberblain." Chamberlain hurt his knee early in the season and sat out most of the year while the Lakers finished second to Atlanta in the Western Division race. "It's Incredible" "He played well in the fourth and fifth games at Phoenix and has been a really key man for us since," Mullaney said. Chamberlain had 10 points during the Lakers' 32-18 scoring spurt in the third quarter against Atlanta that was the difference in the game. He finished the night with 24 points and as many rebounds. West said, "It's incredible that we could come in here and win two straight games. Just unbelievable." West's words were echoed by Mullaney. Richie Guerin, the Atlanta For Complete Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. St. VI 3-3012 TRIAL BY JURY AND COX AND BOX (TWO ONE-ACT MUSICALS) presented by the Mt. Oread Gilbert & Sullivan Company SUNDAY, APRIL 19 Twilight Matinee 5:30 p.m. Evening,8:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium All tickets $1 at SUA Office Kansas Union and at the door Ashe calls for boycott of S. African sports By IVAN ZVERINA UNITED NATIONS (UPI) American Negro tennis ace Arthur Ashe has proposed a "complete athletic isolation" of South Africa in international sports. The General Assembly's Special Committee on Apartheid—South Africa's official policy of separate development of races—before which Ashe testified Tuesday, endorsed his proposal by calling on all nations to "boycott all South African racist sport organizations." Mile lures seventeen A field of 17 runners 35 and over have entered the Masters Mile to be run for the first time at the KU Relays. The race is scheduled at 2:20 p.m. Saturday just ahead of the famed Glenn Cunningham Mile. Bob Timmons, relays director, said two awards will be made—one for the winner and one to the runner who comes closest to his predicted time. Prominent among the entries is Jim Hershberger, Wichita oil man who donated the $125,000 last summer for the installation of KU's new Tartan track which will be used in competition for the first time this week. Another former Kansas Relays winner in the field is Jan Howell, who led off KU's winning four-mile team in the 1956 carnival. Also in the field is Hal Higdon, long-time cross-country competitor with the Chicago Track Club and a free lance magazine writer. The last time he was in Lawrence was to write a magazine feature about Jim Ryan three years ago. 16 KANSAN Apr. 16 1970 The committee, in a communique, "calls for strict implementation" of a General Assembly resolution passed in December 1968, "requesting all states and organizations to suspend sporting exchanges with the racist regime and with organizations or institutions in South Africa which practice apartheid." The committee particularly criticized Great Britain and New Zealand because, in spite of the 1968 resolution, sports teams from South Africa have still been able to visit those countries. Ashe said, specifically, the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF) at its meeting in the near future, should expel South Africa's Lawn Tennis Union—which he described as representing only the white minority—from its membership. But Ashe also said "the only course left is complete isolation of South Africa politically, athletically, diplomatically." The apartheid committee endorsed Ashe's proposal on the ILTF action. It said it "strongly feels that the International Lawn Tennis Federation should sever all ties with the South African Lawn Tennis Union, as long as South Africa refuses to agree to multiracial sport in the country and to allow white and non-white South African sportsmen to compete against each other in local South African games." South Africa was kicked out of the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico and last month the Davis Cup International Committee meeting in London voted to exclude South African tennis players from cup competition. 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 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 POLARIZED CARE FOR YOUR GARMENTS Now's the time... STORE YOUR FURS AND CLOTHES FOR SUMMER Don't bother taking your winter clothes home this summer have them cleaned with free moth-proofing and stored all summer ready for you when fall comes. Repairs, Alterations and Reweaving Fur Cleaning Coat Linings Pick-up and Delivery Service New York Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Serving Students for 58 years Use Kansan Classifieds LATIN AMERICA NIGHT This Friday Exhibitions at 7 p.m. Program at 7:30 p.m. Latin American Band with dancing-9:30 p.m. at Westminister Center Free - except dance admission is $1.50 girls admitted free sponsored by - Latin American & International Clubs PETE NICOLAS Former Cornhusker great absent Charlie Green, ex-Nebraska sprinter and winner of the past two KU Relays 100-yard dash will not return this year to defend his title. But a strong group has been fielded for the event including John Carlos, Ivory Crockett and Earl Harris. Chiefs sellout season tickets KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) It took less than two hours today to sell 9,500 remaining season tickets for the World Champion Kansas City Chiefs' 1971 season. Long lines still stood at more than a score of ticket locations scattered over the city when the last of the 70,000 tickets was sold. The Chiefs had announced Tuesday that fans who held 1960 season tickets had taken 60,469 tickets for the Chiefs' first season in the new Harry S Truman 1970 KANSAN 17 Apr. 16 Sports Complex. The figure was the largest number of season ticket sales in the history of professional sports, according to Chiefs vice president and general manager Jack Steadman. Steadman said the Chiefs will now begin accepting non-confirmed orders only, for what amounts to a waiting list. Each non-confirmed order will receive a priority account number. When cancellations are received orders will be confirmed in priority number sequence. About 5,000 tickets for each game will be held back, for sale on a single game basis. NEW YORK (UPI)—Commissioner Jack Dolph of the American Basketball Association is "quite confident" the league will merge with the National Basketball Association after the next three seasons. ABA boss confident Dolph said Tuesday that the ABA has agreed to the general terms of the merger outlined by the merger committees of the two leagues. The general agreements call Baltimore, Cards picked as favorites LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)—The Baltimore Orioles at 7-5 and the St. Louis Cardinals at 4-1 are major league baseball's 1970 pennant favorites in the latest odds issued from Las Vegas. The Orioles also are 3-5 to win the Eastern Division championship in the American League with Minnesota 6-5 to score in the West. The Cardinals were listed at 2-1 to win the National League's Eastern Division while Atlanta, Los Angeles and San Francisco all were 1-5 in the West. American League — Baltimore 7-5, Minnesota 3-1, Oakland 5-1, Detroit 12-1. Boston 12-1, California 25-1, Cleveland 30-1, Chicago 30-1, Washington 50-1, New York 50-1, Seattle 250-1, Kansas City 250-1. League races: National League—St Louis 4-1, Atlanta 5-1, New York 5-1, Chicago 7-1, Los Angeles 7-1, San Francisco 7-1, Pittsburgh 8-1, Cincinnati 10-1, Houston 30-1, Philadelphia 50-1, Montreal 500-1, San Diego 500-1. for the ABA to pay $11 million to have all 11 of its teams included in a merged league. The terms also call for mixed exhibition games next season as well as a championship series and an All-Star Game between the two leagues. However, the leagues would remain separate for the next three seasons and retain separate negotiating rights for national television. There would also be a common draft, beginning next year. "I'm quite optimistic that the merger can be worked out," Dolph said. "If we don't merge both leagues will have made a serious mistake." Franklin Mieli, president of the San Francisco Warriors of the NBA, threw up a roadblock in the path of the merger, however, by saying he needs only one more vote from NBA owners for a veto. "Ive got three votes to block this merger and I hope to have a fourth which would guarantee defeat." Miouli said. He added that the admission of all 11 ABA franchises would bring the NBA "to its knees." THE FLOCK INCLUDING: CLOWN // I AM THE TALL TREE / TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT // STORE THOUGHT / TRUTH THE FLOCK INCLUDING: CLOWN! I AM THE TALL TREE! TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT—STORE THOUGHT! TRUTH CS 9911 A violin playing lead in front of a driving rock band? The most exciting new music group today lays all its cards on the table in the first LP— and comes up with a full house. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES MAJORS! Undergraduate Teaching Assistantships are available for next fall in the new Biology Dept. and certain undergraduate lab courses in biology. - Salaries start at $500.00 per semester. - Approx, ten hrs./week and enrollment in Bio. 83 (Laboratory instruction, 2 hrs.) is required. - Obtain application forms in Biology Office, 249 Snow. - Deadline for application: April 24, 1970 groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" EXTRA Hollywood Star Gazette BRING GIS HOME TO VISIT BOB HOPE GEN WASTEMORLAND. Photo by Ron Bishon Name, rank and draft number, please This decorated demonstrator was one of about 350 people who braved scattered showers in Kansas City, Mo., Wednesday to march in protest of the Vietnam war. The march and a Parade Park rally was intended to emphasize the cost of the war. Negro commissioner named Wichita mayor A. Price Woodard, the first Negro Wichita city commissioner, was named mayor of that city Monday. The largest city in Kansas, with a population of 285,000, Wichita has suffered several outbursts of racial violence in recent years. Woodard, 51, was elected to the city commission in April, 1967, and will be starting his last year in office. The mayor is selected each year in April by the five fellow commissioners who are elected at large. He chairs commission meetings, but otherwise the job is largely ceremonial, with the daily operation in the hands of a city manager. 18 KANSAN Apr.16 1970 An attorney and native Wichitan, Woodard has been accused by some Negro leaders of not carrying the torch for the black community, in which Woodard and his family reside. Woodard said during his election campaign that he would work for a fair housing ordinance. Spring Time is for SANDALS 1 Handmade Just For You At Primarily Leather 812 MASS. - DOWNTOWN WATCHBANDS • BELTS • BAGS VESTS • FRYE BOOTS • MOCS Lee Weiner of the Chicago Seven was the principal speaker at the Parade Park rally. He spoke on revolution and his experiences in Chicago. Vietnam prompts KC march Familiar choruses of "Hell no, we won't go," and "Peace Now!" were chanted along the parade route. At Parade Park the sun came out for a while and the crowd swelled to about 500. KANSAS CITY — A group of about 350 protesters proved themselves to be more than fair-weather demonstrators Wednesday by ignoring scattered showers while marching through downtown Kansas City, Mo., in protest of the Vietnam war. Flanked by policemen and student mobilization marshals, the group marched three-a-breast from Union Station, through downtown Kansas City and past the Federal and State Buildings to Parade Park. Weiner said, "I am not the revolution; you are, and if you don't know it, you have to learn it." There were several other HURRICANE GLADYS NEW YORK—Only one hurricane--Gladys--hit the United States in 1968, says the Insurance Information Institute. The storm, which hit Florida in October, caused $2.58 million insured damage. speakers at the rally, including Pete O'Neil, chairman of the Kansas City Black Panther's and representatives from the Welfare Rights Organization, Women's Liberation Front and Chicano, a brown power group. The main thrust of the demonstration was intended to emphasize the cost of the war, said Lewis Wolfe, director of the Lawrence Peace Center. At times, however, speakers at the rally also emphasized racial discrimination and other current issues. The march and rally were organized by the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) as the highlight of the Kansas-Missouri area activities in connection with National Anti-War week. SMC leaders expressed disappointment with the small number of people who joined in the demonstration. At KU a handful of students, some from South Junior High School, gathered in front of Fraser Hall at 11:30 a.m. to march to O-Zone where cars were waiting to take them to Kansas City for the march and rally there. EUROPE FORUM April 16 at 7:00 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room A representative from Maupintour will answer your questions. Penneys ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 68th anniversary TOWNCRAFT SLACKS SALE! PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY REG. 7.98, NOW 6.99 Our Towncraft slacks' rack is stocked with the newest, handsomest styles around! Choose from great looking, slim fitting Grad cut styles fashioned of 50% Fortret® polyester/50% cotton and Dacron® polyester Orlon® acrylic Avril® rayon. Penn-Prest® so they need no ironing. Full range of fashion colors and patterns. 4 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Department 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 Edition. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. tf Audio Discount—your A.R. Dynasco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Norelce tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St., L-24 Office furniture - desks, chairs, files, cerox service, impeccable copies, their equipment, etc. be aded at no extra charge. Lawnice Typewriter- 700 Mass. 843-3644. tf **61** Rambler 660—Classic V-8 wagon. Clean, runs good, good gas mileage; new tires and spare. Must sell—all bids considered! Inquire: Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. After 6:00 p.m., KI 2-2382. 4-20 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wild selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tf 1965 GTO, 389 + cubic inch, 3/4 cup, blue, white interior, 4 speed, 1500 miles on a rebuilt engine, $1500.00 Doug Pierce. 843-783-683. 4-17 The wholesale used car market is down. You can save between $50 and now you can buy a new $64 Corvair, 4-on-the-floor, $795, 64 Corvair, 4-door, automatic, air, TS/TB, Ride, and drive this one, $795, '63 Corvair, automatic. See it, $295, '64 Fairlane, wheel wagon, clear, $525 Thompson Motors, DX Station at 4th and Michigan. Framus 12-string guitar. Like new. Case included. $135. Call John Brown. 843-6455. 4-17 Stereo tape deck, 2 sets of speakers, tape; $4.00 each, all the latest. 2 brand new 775-14 wide tracks, ww. TV, $15.84-893.35 4-17 Come by the Community Building. 115 W. 11th St., April 17, 8 am-5 p.m., 8-12 p.m., for delicious baked goods and interesting rummage. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 4-17 Bluepoint Slames kitten, 10 weeks old, trained, good with children 1959 VW, new tires, good paint, 25 mats since complete overhaul. 842-129-4000 Sacrifice: 869 Daton 2000 Spt. Conv. OHC-135hp engine, s-speed, mag- wheels w/radial tires, many extras. Call 842-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-17 Powerful Tuner/Amp with 2 large speakers and stereo cassette player, changer was $315.00, now only $229.00. At Ray Stonebank's, 929 Mason. TR-4 '64 original owner, Red-Black Top-Wire wheels. Excellent condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Aarbath. Bendix electric fuel pump, fog lights, detailed service history. Best offer over $1200 .843-6599 barium Bendix electric fuel pump, barilion Best offer over $1200, 843-6659, 4-20 Best offer over $1200, 843-6659, 4-20 Elegant white formal. Worn once. Size nine. Call 842-0534 after 5:00. 4-20 1965 GTO. Good condition, good tires, mag wheels, 4 speed. Call Bill, 842- 0254. 1733 West 24th. Apt. 24. New famous brand 8 track stereo cartridge player, adaptable to any Stereo Multiplie System, only $69.90 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 4-21 New famous brand- portable stereo demonstrator, was $69.90. Reduced to only $35.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Stereo—some floor model portable stereos cut to $ \frac{1}{2} $ price . . . others with large reductions. Hurry to Ray Stone-back's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Component Sct--receiver, stereo cassette changer and speakers. Was $13.150, now $259.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 1969 TR-6 motorcycle Perfect, 1500 miles, stock $795, 842-320. 4-21 Gibson B-25 12-string Guitar and Baldwin dual-pick-up electric. Call 842-7569. 4-21 Male German Shepherd—8 mo. Rod. 842-5769. 4-21 1969 Toyota Corolla—grey with red interior—4 spd., gets great gas mileage—like new inside and out, $1500. 842-2191. 4-21 1967 Triumph TR-4A-IRS, beautiful British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelin X tires. $1800. 842-219-11 1966 GTQ Convertible—yellow with black top T-4 speed, deluxe wheel cover. Motorola motorized in-stereo speaker. Up-cup, good tires. $1500, 4-21 2191 "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, $1400, 842-2191 4-21 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III white with black convertible top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition, $2300, 843-2191 4-21 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, excellent body, overhauled transmission, $1400, 842-2191. 4-21 VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th 1967 VW Super Bug—silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., heavy duty suspension, stereo tape speakers up, good-looking, good prices, $1500, 4-21 2191 1968 VW Fastback - near perfect white paint exterior radial jacket, excellent shap throughout $1600 842-2191 4-21 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800, 842-2191 4-21 C-ramies, stoneware, $2.00 and up. 1612 Louisiana. Please phone 843- 2789. Rosalie Wax. 4-21 1967 Fastback Barrarecua, burgundy with black interior, 383. Formula S.4-speed, b-hit G-70's, low mileage in addition. Dick at 61 KK and 82-8225. Help a Bird Today! Precaut birdhouse kits and bird feeding stations now available at Natural Harbor Gift Shop. Open daily 8:30 to 4:22 Sundays 1:30 to 4:30 Framus 12-string guitar. $120.00. Norelco Cassette Carry-Corder (battery or A.C.). $45.00. German made 6-string guitar. $45.00. Martin D-35-6 string, guitar, 6 months old. $450.00 with hard-shell case. Call 842-2-429. Need money to pay tax. Must sell two-year-old Masterworks stereo and '59 six cyl. Chev. Call 842-8534 4-22 Professional 5-piece drum set. Double Tom-Tams, Zildjian cymbals. Best offer. Call 842-5796. 4-20 One 40 watt tape deck with BSR turntable. Will accept highest reasonable offer. Old RCA console works,耗钱. $5. Call Su, 1869 4-22 6-string Gibson guitar in perfect condition, steel strings; Guitar, capo, and hard shell case, $75. 842-10020. 4-22 1962 Rambler 4-door in excellent condition. Call Darrell, 843-1768, 4-20 Horses Teeth Necklaces . . . The Brazilian answer to warding off social discours! An eye-catching novelty item from the Museum of Natural History Gift. Weekdays 8:30 to days 1:30 to 4:30, Weekdays 8:30 to 4:30. 4-22 Walk pretty in shape-up sandals by Scholl. Mads of smooth, sculpted wood. Excellent stitching and draps. Available now at PATTIS SHOE SERVICE, 1017 Mass. 4-16 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. St. B-Que, if you want some honest-to-god Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone I 2-0510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-17 Want some Action!!" There will be plenty the week of April 19-24. That's Spring Week — picnics, underscoring contest, pie eating contest, greased pig catching contest, and lots more, so join in the fun. 4-17 Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous. Lepidoptera Creations, W. 9th. 4-17 Students of Objectivism—meets every Monday. 7.30. Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand *4* desire information, call 842-621-0500 5.30. 842-621-0500 4.17 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the CAPTAIN'S TABLE and the STABLES in them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfasts, lunches, and dinner. The Stables stands for Bud, fun, and ... See you! **tf** Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00 816: GRI-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N Kansas City, Mo. 64116. Diligence. Fill form in private. Rallye: Strip Tease Rallye. Malls Shopping Center, April 17. 1970. For information call John Himpel. 843-1131. Mike Bower. 843-8882. 4-17 TEXACO W. 9th TEXAC1 ★ Student specials New, experienced management ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 Galvin Bradel Bridal Apparel Formal Wear Beautiful 910 Ky. LA PETITE GALERIE. Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring, Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer. tf Attention married students and faculty. Interested in Social Nudity For details write P.O. Box 5212, Topeka, Kansas 66065 4-17 There's a new bar in town. Look for the bright red Cellar Door—under the Bierstube—14th and Teen. 4-17 Going to the Peter, Paul and Mary Concert—come for dinner before after it's over. Make a complete night out of it. Impress the girl friend. The Captain's Table. Open from 7:00 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. Fly for half in Optocap Flying Club modern planes, free info Phone 842- 4-21 1124 after six The Castle Tea Room is ideal for lunchtops, dinner parties, or even receptionals. Call Libuse Kriz. 843-115-1 Most unique restaurant LAWRENCE Let that sunshine in with sandals from ARENSBERS'G SHOES, 819 Massachusetts. We have just the style for you, babe. Come in today! 4-20 Going to the KU Relays? End up at the STABLES a great place for fun, conversation and a beer (of course you know that!). 4-20 The Captain's Table. Try it out this weekend. Great food. Reasonably prized. Open from 7:00 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE. 4-20 Class ring in front of Union. Call 842-6000, ask for Paul, room 313. Reward. 4-16 LOST Ladies' yellow gold Tissot watch. April 8th between Storm Hall and Potters Lake. Reward. Call collect Overland Park at DU1-1385. 4-16 Lost April 9. Medium large 5-month-old puppy. Black with white undersides and forepaws. Danny Rees. 1614 Kentucky. No phone. 4-17 Black poodle-like 5 mo. old puppy—14th and Tenn. Answers to name of "Ding." Call 843-5721, ask for Riek. 4-17 $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license. No. T2T3PL. No questions. Phone 846-384-784 and ask for me. 4-16 Small flowered fan. Near Union. Great sentimental value. Call Janet Ross, 843-8505. 4-17 Men's gold Waltham watch. Lost Saturday, April 11 below the Campanile. Call 843-7415. Ask for Bruce in Room 151. 4-17 Tortoise shell sunglasses, lost Monday between Y-Zone and Flint. Reward Call Jeff, 842-9133. 4-20 Ladies' Omega gold and steel watch Lost between Jayhawker Towers and Watson Library. Sunday, April 12. Call Louise. 843-8142. 4-20 Will the party who found my orange billfold in the ladies' restroom in the Union please keep the money and return the billfold to 621 Illinois or call 843-1411. Reward offered. No questions asked. 4-22 WANTED Traveling companion for the summer. Will be touring western U.S.Call 842-6599. 4-16 Female roommate for summer to share 2 bedroom mobile home. Air-conditioned. Swimming pool. $70.00. all bills paid Call Bonnie. UN4-3633. After 8:00 p.m. -842-5469. 4-17 4th girl to share house. $60 a month, utilities paid. 917 Maine. 842-3768. 4-17 People who enjoy light and dark beer on tap, peanuts, and a friendly atmosphere. The Cellar Door—under the Bierstube, 14th and Tenn. 4-17 An apt for summer sublease. I am a foreign graduate student. Call 843- 8937 after 5:30. 4-21 Roommate Move in May 1 through summer $90 $Dave 842-5766 4-21 Desperately needed—ride or rider to and from Lawrence and Kansas City, Kansas. Kansas City number—MA1-3463. 4-20 Roommate wanted: Mature female graduate student or teacher, wanted to share two-bedroom apartment, $10/month. Call 842-3893 after 5 p.m. Home of the "Big Shef" BURCER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa PERSONAL Baba'i—the promise of all religions. 4:20 Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts. call DeWayne Roth- fuss. 843-8074. ff Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Special summer rates at College Hill Histor. Located across from Stouffler Park. Pool and air conditioning Shown in Photo 4-422. 1741 W 19th VI 3-8230 4-22 TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, and term papers-plus stencil cutting and displaying up and delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 4-296 6562 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc typ- genics, paperwriters and poultier. Pica tape. Competent service. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt accurate work. Call 453-3281, Mrs Ruckman HELP WANTED Cook wanted. Apply in person at Krazy Karr's,1811 West 6th 4-20 Need part-time help at Royal College Shop. Experience and references necessary. Apply in person. 837 Mass. Earn extra money. Sell American eagle-license plates. Retail to dealers. Send 50e for sample and calls. George Mack, Carmara Co. 8 Donna lass Lane, Kirkwood, Missouri 61322 4-22 Leaving town soon? Want a good job to face with you for security? Part or full-time job with Top Meds, Fashions, Inc. See us at the Student Union, Room 101, Wed., April 22, all day. 4-22 Time to get your spring and summer wardrobe ready. Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-17 SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Nationwide directories of positions. Inexpensive fields. Accurate Current. Inexpensive fields. cloom, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store. 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf BUY,SELL OR TRADE FOUND Found - at last The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM. 106 Radio. 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose. 4-78 Found the best drinking establishment in town. When you're out on the town--remember the Stables has beer, pool, food and . . . 4-16 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom ant one block from campus, furnished $135- unfurnished $120 Call 843-2116 Santee Apts. tff Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Raney Drug Stores 3 locations to serve your every need Plaza,1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa 921 Mass Downtown, 921 Mass. Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Complete prescription departments and fountain service ments and fountain service. SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Alvamaran's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to town; live within buildings adjacent to and overlooking Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates available to families and mature singles. $130; one bedroom units from $130; two bedrooms from $180; three beds from $252. New luxury apartments and town houses on David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 843-2055 T. I.R.E.co. For rent June 1-2-bedroom furnished apartment; air conditioned; pool; reasonable rent; idle location—one block from Call 842-572-78 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let. Avail. June 15 Must leave town, lease runs on June 24, 8th Terr. $149/ 842-5446 for p. exam. Wed. and Thurs. 6-22 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, wall-to-wall carpeting, air conditioning, sound conditioning, all kitchen Fridaire kitchen including dishwashers and fireplaces. Additional benefits include laundry, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, ear ports, convenient location and easy access to rates. See these luxury apartments rates. See these luxury apartments at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE, 2411 Louisiana, 843-555-3 Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 Modern furnished or unfurnished 1 bedroom apartment—$2, block from private parking, great or summer stay and next year. Call 842-5752 evenings Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and a half baths, with drapes, carpeting, air-conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry storage, pool. On September 24th, them today at 1708 242nd, 842-1160. 4-20 Summer sub-lease, 1 bedroom apartment. Furnished, $75 per month. Two blocks from campus. Call 842-6897 after 6 p.m. 4-17 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus, will sublet for summer. Call 842- 4899 4-22 Apartment to sublet for Summer School, or from June 1-Aug. 24. 2 bedrooms and study, furnished, TV radiogram, dishwasher, use of swimming pool. About 4 miles from campground. Calls in/out $160.00 per month, plus electricity and telephone. Call 842-5025. Tues., Thurs. mornings, and any evening. 4-22 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor New leasing for summer and in-condition private pool Show 1741 W. 19th, VI 3-8220 4-22 1741 W. 19th, VI 3-8220 4-22 Moving To Kansas City? SEE Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Baths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Baths $230 CLUBHOUSE SEE CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN CLUBHOUSE POOL Open Daily 9 Till Dark CHARTER HOUSE S.E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 New York Cleaners For the best in: or the best in: ● Dry Cleaning ● Alterations ● Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 Ebert presides in Senate Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and new student body president, presided for the first time at the Student Senate meeting held Wednesday night in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium. A proposed resolution limiting the jurisdiction of the Student Court was considered at the meeting, which, if passed, in a future meeting, the statute would limit the Student Court's jurisdiction to that authorized by the Senate Code, statutes of the University government and jurisdiction directed to it by the University Judiciary. The statute also clarifies the Court's membership selection, terms of office, procedural guarantees, appeals and rule-making powers. Correction made- (Continued from page 1) slow to a safe landing in the Pacific Ocean. After the burn, the spacemen used their reaction control rockets—small steering thrusters—to slow their speed a bit more—just over one-tenth of a mile an hour. While getting ready for the maneuver, the astronauts reported temperatures in their spacecraft had dropped to about 35 or 40 degrees. One official said cabin temperatures could drop to freezing by re-entry time. If all continues to go well, the astronauts will splash down at 1:04 p.m. EST Friday, about 600 miles southeast of Pago Pago in the South Pacific. It got cold because the astronauts powered-down so many of their instruments since disaster struck man's third try for a moon landing. Normally the instruments throw VIENNA (UPI) — President Nixon has sent a message to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) urging a determined effort to curb the nuclear missile race, diplomatic sources said today. The crucial conference between the two super powers was scheduled to open at 6 a.m. (EST) today. Nixon urges limiting race for weapons Gerard C. Smith, director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, heads the American negotiating team and Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. Semenov the Soviet delegation. cedures. Nixon's call reportedly urged a determined cooperative effort to limit the strategic arms race in a world of multiplying nuclear weapons for the sake of peace and security. The SALT conference stems from exploratory consultations between the United States and Russia in Helsinki last November, which recommended that substantive negotiations on possible strategic arms limitations open in the Austrian capital today. Nixon was understood to have instructed his team to follow a flexible but cautious negotiating line in the coming months of tough discussions with the Russians. The Russians, on past experience, were not likely to make easy concessions following a warning from Soviet party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev that the United States must not expect to gain military superiority. Connecticut is known as the Nutmeg State or the Constitution State. 20 KANSAN Apr.16 1970 "I don't know whether we'll be able to sleep up here in the command ship tonight," Swigert radioed astronaut boss Donald K. "Deke" Slavton. off so much heat the spaceship needs to be cooled, but in the powered-down condition, the chill settled in. Meanwhile, grounded Apollo 13 astronaut Thomas K. Mattingly was showing the first signs he may be coming down with the German measles, the space agency reported early today. THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED SAVVIE MAIRATSTYLING TECH. IQUE IN AMERICA Patrick J. Norris Kenneth "Roger" Corss MEN'S HAIR STYLIST APPROVALIST/DELIVERY ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIAGE COURT AVAILABLE PHONE 811-3699 K UNITED KINGDOM A spokesman said Mattingly's count of lymph cells has risen. He said this is common at the onset of virus diseases and although it may not be a definite indication of the measles, the astronaut appears to be coming down with something. A petition to be filed with the Regents calls for the undertaking of a study on the value of selling University residence halls to private concerns. It was submitted by Dennis Embrey, Great Bend junior, and Brad Smoot, Sterling sophomore. Mattingly was kept off the Apollo 13 lunar landing mission when it took off Saturday because he lacked immunity to measles, to which he was exposed through backup astronaut Charles Duke. His place was taken on Apollo 13 by Swigert. The Senate also passed a resolution opposing the action taken by the Kansas State Board of Regents which postponed the promotions of Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Frederic Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama. An American flag flew through the night and into the day's gray drizzle Wednesday, indicating that as far as Marilyn Lovell was concerned, everything still was all right. Mrs. Lovell, normally vivacious wife of Apollo 13 commander James A. Lovell Jr., ran the flag up over her home Saturday and vowed to keep it there as iong as mission control had a "go" for a safe return to earth of the three pilots. stroys the faculty's will and ability to perform its expected duty of encouraging, and participating in, the free exchange of ideas between its members and their students." Mary Haise, wife of Lovell's lunar module pilot, Fred, also left her home Wednesday for the first time since the explosion when Apollo 13 was 205,000 miles from the earth. It was submitted by Willis H Jacob, Lake Charles, La., graduate student. She was solemn when photographers caught her Wednesday, but managed a smile for them when she left her home to visit Lovell's aged mother in a nearby rest home and reassure her about the flight. In the resolution, the Senate asked the Regents to immediately reconsider its action and recommended that the Regents adopt the policy that scholarly accomplishments and faculty judgment would be the only criteria upon which faculty promotions would be based. She was tightlipped when she went to the home of Sue Bean, the wife of one of the Apollo 12 moonwalkers, for lunch. A spokesman for the Space Agency said that Mrs. Haise was "more relaxed than she has been the last two days" because she had gotten some sleep and was heartened by reports of improving conditions from the spacecraft. The resolution stated, "The Regents' action creates an atmosphere of fear among the faculty which vivitates the academic purposes of the University and de- The validity of the old Senate's legislative powers was questioned by John Vratil, Larned law student. He quoted a Senate code article which limits the terms of office to the time of the election; of a new senate and until joint meeting of both University and Student Senates in April. THE FLOCK INCLUDING: CLOWN // I AM THE TALL TREE / TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT - STORE THOUGHT / TRUTH THE FLOCK INCLUDING: CLOWN/I AM THE TALL TREE/TIRED OF WAITING STORE BOUGHT—STORE THOUGHT/TRUTH CS 9911 A violin playing lead in front of a driving rock band? The most exciting new music group today lays all its cards on the table in the first LP— and comes up with a full house. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Steroo Malls Shopping Ct. STORE BOUGHT = STORE THOUGHT // TRUTH Also passed was a resolution urging the Regents to initiate a bill at the next session of the Kansas Legislature which would permit reclassification of physicians at student health facilities The proposed bill would include provisions for raising physicians' salary limits, thus making KU more competitive in the medical market. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ct KIEF'S Two amendments to the Senate Code were passed that will clarify the terms of office and vacancy in the Senate, and election pro- David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student, said the section of the Senate Code was vague, but was clarified by the Senate's by-laws. Bandolino Bandolino VIA Italy—Today's newest look in sandals for every occasion. Pictured style is only one of many to choose from in a wide range of colors. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Police disperse blacks at LHS POLICE Photo by Steve Fritz Confrontation occurs again Police formed a line when nearly 100 black students attempted to enter Lawrence High School Thursday morning. The blacks dispersed and moved to Veterans Park across the street from the school. Thursdays incident was the third disturbance in three days at the high school. Trouble began Thursday morning at Lawrence High School when nearly 100 black students, some of them armed with tire tools, were dispersed by police who threatened to use tear gas. Police said the group attempted to enter the high school from a corner of the school grounds. The blacks then retreated to Veterans Park, across the street from the high school, and broke up. Meanwhile a bomb hoax evacuated students from Central Junior High School. Some students were taken home by their parents and classes resumed after no evidence of a bomb was found. Superintendent of Lawrence schools, Carl Knox said all staff and faculty members would be on duty Friday but students should stay home. A meeting in the afternoon between the student council and black representatives was held in another attempt to view differences. Andy Benton, student council president said, "The atmosphere of the meeting was electric. The discussion was heated and the blacks walked out in disgust with the council." Highway Patrol, police and sheriff's deputies were called in for security measures at the blacks once again, dispersed to Veteran's Park. Later in the afternoon, a list of demands were printed for distribution to all students at Lawrence High School. The blacks demanded fair elections of cheerleaders and queens, including a separate black queen and attendants. They also demanded three teachers and three (Continued on page 20) UDK News Roundup By United Press International Senators attack baseball WASHINGTON—Sens. Warren Magnuson and Henry M. Jackson, both D-Wash., have introduced legislation to abolish organized baseball's exemption from antitrust laws The legislation was an outgrowth of the American League's moving of the Seattle franchise to Milwaukee. No similar exemption from antitrust laws is enjoyed by other professional sports such as football, hockey or basketball. Bomb defused in K.C. KANSAS CITY, Mo.-A live bomb, the 10th planted in the Kansas City area in the last eight days, was safely disarmed early today after hundreds of apartment residents in a four-block section of the fashionable Country Club Plaza were evacuated. The bomb, set to go off at midnight, had failed to detonate but its clock still was ticking hours later at a police laboratory. Soviet pilots, jets enter war LONDON—The Soviet Union has introduced both Soviet pilots and the latest Supersonic MIG23 jets into the Middle East struggle, authoritative diplomatic reports reaching London said today. Output down,prices up The reports said the Soviets began introducing the MIG23s, probably the most sophisticated aircraft in use in the area, into Egypt at the same time they began delivering SAM3 missiles to the government of President Gamal Abdel Nasser. WASHINGTON—The nation's economy slipped during the first three months of this year into the worst slump since the 1960 recession. But the most troublesome inflation since the Korean War continued unabated. The Commerce Department said Thursday the nation's total output of goods and services declined at an annual rate of 1.5 per cent in the first quarter of the year but prices increased at a rate of 5 per cent. New slide routs rescuers PLATEU d'ASSY, France-A new avalanche roared down Roc des Fiz peak today, routing rescue workers digging for bodies of victim's of Thursday's disaster that killed 72 persons in a children's tuberculosis sanatorium. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.116 The University of KansasLawrence, Kansas Friday, April 17, 1970 Emergency landing scheduled today SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The crew of America's crippled Apollo 13 spaceship was given final instructions for an emergency landing today, and flight director Jerry Griffin said, "From here on it's men and equipment performing. I think we'll make it." Officials said the spacecraft, carrying James A. Lovell, John L. Swigert and Fred W. Haise, was coming in at slightly too steep an angle, and would require another course correction about five hours before reentry. The pilots aimed for a spot in the Pacific Ocean about 620 miles southeast of Pago Pago in the American Samoas. They are due to plop down at 1:08 p.m. (EST) today. If they come in on target, and if there is a last minute break in the weather, the world may be able to watch via color television. A cloud blanket and possible thundershowers were forecast for the recovery area. The late Thursday night prediction was an abrupt change from earlier forecasts, when officials said the weather would be "very good." The steepest allowable angle for a safe re-entry was 5.9 degrees. Apollo 13 was on a course headed in at 6.05 degrees, but Griffin said it would be better if the spacecraft re-entered at between 6.25 and 6.75 degrees, and thus an additional course correction was planned. The proper re-entry angle is needed to keep the heat shield on the command ship from overheating and consuming the spaceship in flames. The friction of the space craft moving through the atmosphere heats gases in front of the heat shield to 5,000 degrees. Griffin said if there was no additional course correction, "The entry would be a little bit hotter (Continued to page 20) Stamp price hike sought WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon announced government and union agreement Thursday on overhaul of the postal system to make it self-supporting by 1978 and asked Congress to help finance it by raising the cost of a first class postage stamp to 8 cents. Tied to the compromise reorganization plan for an independent postal authority was the 8 per cent pay increase for postal workers that the administration had promised in return for its acceptance. The raise would be in addition to the 6 per cent pay boost for postal and most other federal workers that Nixon signed Wednesday, retroactive to the first of the year. The postal overhaul plan, long generally opposed by the unions, resulted from three weeks of negotiations between Postmaster General Winton M. Blount and officials of seven postal unions following illegal protest walkouts by letter carriers late last month. Because it would permit the 750,000 postal employees to bargain for better wages, hours and working conditions, AFL-CIO President George Meany called it "one of the most significant events in the history of collective bargaining." If Congress goes along with the agreement, which was viewed as likely now that it has the backing of organized labor, letter carriers would start at $7,070 a year and reach a maximum wage of $9,584 in eight years. They now receive starting pay of $6,176 a year, which reaches a ton of $8,442 after 21 years. The administration dropped the idea of creating a government-owned and chartered corporation for private operation of the postal system, first advanced by the Johnson administration and reaffirmed last May by Nixon. Instead, it proposed creating an independent, "United States Postal Service" within the executive branch which could set postal rates subject to congressional veto, set pay scales for employees and operate the service free of partisan political pressures. Campus briefs Colloquium speakers announced L. Brown, a professor at Northwestern University, will speak Monday as part of the graduate physics colloquium. Brown's speech is entitled "Photons and Pions." Dr. H. Jaffe of the Clevite Corporation will speak Wednesday, also as part of the graduate physics colloquium. The title of his speech will be "Piezoelectricity and Piezoelectric Transducers." Both speeches will be given in room 238 Malott. Book authors to speak in Kansas City The University Women's Club's sixth annual Book and Author Dinner is scheduled for 6 p.m. Saturday at the Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas City, Mo. Featured authors will be Eric Segal, Webster Schott, Thomas McAfee and Joan Kahn. Tickets are $7 per person and can be obtained by sending a self- addressed stamped envelope with checks payable to: University Women's Club, Book and Author Dinner, 4618 Warwick Blvd., Kansas City, Mo. 64112. Class chairmen to be chosen Senior class committee chairman interviews will be April 22-23 at the Student Senate Office in the Kansas Union, said Jim Nichols, Senior Class President. Nichols said ten chairman positions are available. Applications may be obtained from living group presidents and the Dean of Women's Office, 220 Strong Hall. Pi Delta Phi initiation scheduled Pi Delta Phi, the national French Honors Society, will have its annual initiation rites 6 p.m. Monday. After the initiation, the annual honors dinner for the department will be held in the Kansas Union. At this dinner outstanding undergraduates at all levels will be presented with book and monetary awards. The speaker at the dinner will be Germaine Bree, professor of French at the University of Wisconsin. Miss Bree is an internationally recognized authority who specializes in contemporary French literature. Visiting students tour Expo The Petroleum Engineering Club at the University of Kansas has invited high school students from various parts of Kansas to tour the engineering school this weekend, said Floyd Preston, professor of petroleum engineering. The Great Bend Local section of the Society of Petroleum Engineers is sponsoring students from Great Bend, Russell, and Hays, Preston said. The students will attend a number of lectures and will be present for the Engineering Exposition and the Kansas Relays. KU-Y cabinet announced Members of the KU-Y cabinet have been announced, said Gary Gardiner, McPherson sophomore and KU-Y co-president, Monday. The new cabinet members are: Jean Crain, Fort Scott sophomore, and Bob Meyers, Wichita junior, youth friendship chairmen; Cindy Powell, Overland Park sophomore, children's hour chairman; Joan Griffen, Topeka junior, publicity chairman; Jan Comstock, Overland Park sophomore, special activities chairman; Marianne Olish, St. Louis, Mo., senior, international gift fair chairman; Marni Shramek, Prairie Village sophomore, faculty fireside chairman; Judy Jackson, Kansas City, Mo., junior, finance chairman; Mickey Shramek, Prairie Village sophomore, tutor match chairman; Fritz Arko, Overland Park sophomore, Rock Chalk business manager; Gardiner Rapelye, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Rock Chalk producer and Rick Marsh, Sioux City, Iowa, freshman and Jan Svoboda, Chapman freshman, freshman camp chairmen. Nearly 150 engineers from across the nation art expected to attend the 21st annual Highway Geology Symposium April 23-24 at KU. A field trip by him will be held on Wednesday, April 28. Geologists plan forum, field trip A field trip by bus to the Bonner Springs and Kansas City area is scheduled the first day. The engineers will view such things as backslopes along the Kansas Turnpike, slope design, limestone mine, underdrains and mine cave-in and fillings. April 24, will be spent in technical sessions discussing topics of highway geology. "The double-jointed legs extend out about two and a half to three feet to help stabilize the truck," he said. When not in use, the legs fold up along the side of the truck. Captain Donald Knight of LFD Station No. 1 told the Kansan that it was not caused by breakage of the equipment. He said that on either side of the ladder trucks are "outriggers" or collapsible legs that are extended out from the body of the truck when the ladder is raised. Because of the excess weight and movement to one side in the ladder, more pressure than normal was applied to the outrigger on the left side of the The Lawrence Fire Department clarified Wednesday what exactly happened to the ladder truck that collapsed during the Gambles store fire Wednesday night. As the ladder dropped and hit the building on the second floor level, the permanently-attached hose nozzle was jarred loose and it went out of control, nearly causing the men to fall from the ladder. The entire truck was tilted up on its side because it could not support the weight of the ladder, he said. The men who were on the ladder regained their balance, he said, and scooted down to safety. Once the excess weight was taken off the ladder, the truck righted itself, Knight said. French author visits for humanities lecture He said here was no damage to the truck except to the water nozzle, which was broken from the top of the ladder. Fire truck mishap clarified The event is co-sponsored by the State Highway Commission of Kansas and the State Geological Survey with assistance from University Extension. A distinguished author, critic and scholar in French literature will give the Humanities Series Lecture April 21. Germaine Bree, a professor at the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin, will speak on "Beckett's Strange Voyagers: Fiction and the Modern Consciousness" at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Charles Tillinghast, chairman of the board of Trans World Airlines, will be the featured speaker at KU's annual Business Day April 24. Tillinghast's address, "Management in the 70's," will be at 10 a.m. in the Kansas Union. truck (which was facing the street). The leg could not take the extra stress and folded up, causing the ladder to drop, he said. Dr. Bree was born in southern France in 1907 and went to school in France and England, receiving a degree with honors from the University of Paris in 1932. After teaching in Algeria for four years, she taught at Bryn Mawr and Middlebury from 1936 to 1953. She became an American citizen in 1952 and was appointed to the faculty of New York University the following year. She remained on the faculty there until her appointment at the University of Wisconsin in 1960. Business Day to feature TWA head Speaker for the Business Day luncheon will be R. J. Peterson, vicepresident and general manager of the John Deere Company, Kansas City. Mo. Advance registration for Business Day can be made with the School of Business. Barbara Day, an Ecology Action's coordinator, said the trip will begin at Perry Dam and proceed to Lawrence. Although 15 canoes have been obtained for the trip, 20 to 25 are needed, she said. The Ecology Action group is planning a float trip down the Kansas River an April 25 to view water pollution areas. Ecology Action to view pollution in Kansas River Persons who would like to participate in the trip or volunteer canoes may contact Bob Lominska, Leland McCleery or the Ecology Action office, she said. Apr.17 1970 The group will discuss summer projects in addition to viewing the river itself, she said. Lt. Jerry Stevenson of the Ottawa Fire Department said they brought in their own snorkel truck to aid Lawrence firemen because of a mutual-aid agreement. 2 KANSAN Other equipment that was damaged during the fire was the LFD snorkel truck, in which the drive shaft broke as it was being moved from the station house. During World War II, Dr. Bree received the Bronze Star, Order of the Division, and Legion of Honor for her service as an ambulance driver and liaison worker in the French army. She has written book reviews and criticisms for the New York Times and the Saturday Review. She has authored books about Camus, Gide, and Proust; and her other works include books about French poetry and fiction and contemporary French culture. We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th WICHITA (UPI) — A fight broke out Thursday between white and Negro students at Wichita South High School, bringing at least 20 law enforcement officers to the campus to quiet the disturbance. Racial strife breaks out in Wichita At least two students, both girls, were taken to hospitals for injuries not believed to be serious. No official statement was immediately issued as to the cause of the disturbance, but one school official said the trouble began when a boy and girl started fighting. 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon A reporter at the scene said he saw police forcibly take "about four Negro boys" away in a paddy wagon. 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Name Address Zip AN INVITATION TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS TO VISIT US AT OUR NEW LAWRENCE OFFICES 925 IOWA STREET, In Hillcrest Shopping Center COMPETENT, COURTEOUS SERVICE PRESCRIPTION GLASSES AND SUNGLASSES MODEST OR MOD We Have The Frames To Suit Your Good Taste We Have The Frames To Suit Your Good Taste wens optical ASSOCIATION OF OPTICAL DEPARTMENTS 925 Iowa St. Lawrence ASSOCIATION OF OPTICAL ORTHOPAEDICS STRENGTHS IN AFFECTING THE MORTAL ARTERIES Douglas charged with 'fomenting rebellion' Coalition asks impeachment committee WASHINGTON (UPI) — A bi-partisan conservative coalition of 105 House members Thursday proposed creation of a special committee to consider impeaching Associate Justice William O. Douglas on charges ranging from "fomenting rebellion" to "writing for a lewd magazine." Rep. Emanuel Celler, chairman of the House Judiary Committee, sought to head off the impeachment move in advance by announcing his committee would meet privately next Tuesday to consider a simple impeachment motion submitted by Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind. Apr. 17 1970 KANSAN 3 Jacobs, a committee member and a liberal like Celler, claimed no bias for or against Douglas. Celler's announcement was viewed as an attempt to take over the impeachment drive that key House members agreed privately was likely to succeed The conservatives' call for a special committee would mean bypassing Celler's committee and going to the House Rules Committee, which has jurisdiction over creation of special committees. Celler's legal views are similar to those expressed by Douglas in his frequent defense—often in minority opinions—of the rights of individuals over those of the state. The conservatives believe any inquiry headed by Celler would be a whitewash. If voted by the House, an impeachment — the parliamentary equivalent of an idictment—would be tried by the Senate, with a two-thirds majority required for conviction. Even House sponsors of the impeachment drive doubted the Senate would vote to convict and thus remove Douglas from the Supreme Court. But the pro-impeachment forces believe that under the chairmanship of Rep. William M. Colmer, D-Miss., the Rules Committee would at least provide a forum for thorough airing of their charges against Douglas. The impeachment campaign was begun by House GOP leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan during the controversy over Judge Clement F. Haynsworth's nomination to the Supreme Court and reached a high point Wednesday, after Judge G. Harrold Carswell's defeat for the same court vacancy, when Ford made his charges against Douglas. Subsequently, an impeachment resolution was introduced by 53 Democrats, mostly Southerners, and 52 Republicans. Among its charges were that Douglas had performed legal services in violation of law for a charitable foundation from which he took a $12,000 annual salary as president. Another charge was that Douglas had accepted a $350 fee for an article in a magazine whose publisher later came before the high court in an appeal from a libel judgment against another of his publications. Douglas did not disqualify himself in this ruling. Damage estimate for Gambles set Fire Chief F. C. Sanders of the Lawrence Fire Department said Thursday that damage estimates of the Gambles store that was gutted by fire Wednesday night were set at $200,000. He said no exact cause for the blaze has been found, but further information is expected by the end of the week. TONIGHT and SATURDAY NIGHT FRIAR TUCK and The MONKS $100 ADMISSION $100 PER PITCHER Don’t Forget — April 29 — Strawberry Alarm Clock 8:00 to 12:00 804 WEST 24th (Behind Lums) The DRAUGHT HOUSE KANSAN COMMENT Time to move ahead on court nominee President Nixon's nomination of Harry A. Blackmun to the U.S. Supreme Court hopefully will signal the end of the tempest that has surrounded the court for more than a decade. Blackmun, described by some as a "law and order" man and a moderate on civil rights, is the best candidate that can be expected from Nixon, who has repeatedly promised to place a strict constructionist on the high court. And the judge may bear the only kind of philosophical temperament that could pass the Senate anyway. The present controversy over the court's members began with the "Impeach Earl Warren" campaigns of the '50's and '60's, continued through President Johnson's disastrous nomination of Abe Fortas as Chief Justice, and mounted in furor when both Clement Haynsworth and G. Harrold Carswell were rejected by the Senate. The battle was a catharsis of sorts. Conservatives couldn't get the Southernner they wanted. Liberals couldn't get the judicial activist they wanted. So both sides in Congress and President Nixon are faced with a compromise. Johnson, had he known in 1968 what we know today about the extent of Senatorial emotions concerning court nominees, would have been smart to have selected a compromise, too. But Johnson couldn't see past his longtime political friendship with Fortas, just as Nixon couldn't see past the debt he owed Strom Thurmond. The result was a persistent digging by unhappy Senators into the backgrounds of the nominees, which led to revelations of illicit feetaking that forced Fortas to resign, conflict-of-interest cases that greatly damaged Haynsworth's chances and career-long mediocrity coupled with inadequately denied racism that brought down Carswell. The spectacle of the Supreme Court continuing almost a year with only eight members evinces its recent role as a political plaything. As a branch of government equal under the constitution to the executive and the legislative, and especially as one whose prestige must be maintained for it to be effective, the last year has been nearly catastrophic for it. The Senate properly exercised its authority in condemning the last three nominees; Blackmun, however appears to be acceptable to all sides, so the Senate's duty is to move quickly to fill the Court's ninth chair. Only one matter—conservative cries to impeach Justice William O. Douglas—remains before the court can move ahead unhampered. If the charges against Douglas are proved, then he should be impeached. But the timing of the conservative attack on him smacks of a ridiculous little game of tit-for-tat. Claims that Douglas has been connected with gambling and underworld figures were made during the Forcas controversy last year, yet his detractors waited until after the Carswell vote to push their case, thus casting doubt on the validity and the viability of their cause. Impeachment proceedings probably will never get past the House of Representatives. The Supreme Court issue has embroiled the United States in a time-consuming and basically needless debate, caused mainly by Nixon's and Johnson's failure to fully investigate their nominees. Now that there is a qualified and apparently upright candidate for the court, it is time for the Senate to get on with the business of the Senate. Then the court can finally proceed with the business of the court. —Monroe Dodd Washington window Black headway in the South By LOUIS CASSELS UPI Senior Editor WASHINGTON (UPI)—In some parts of the South, the Negro's drive for equality seems to be making more headway, with less friction, than it is in the urban communities of the North. South Carolina still has rural backwaters in which white hostility toward integration can find expression in such acts as overturning school buses. But it no longer is a predominantly agricultural state. And in its thriving industrial cities, such as Columbia, Greenville, Spartanburg, and Aiken, black people today enjoy a degree of economic opportunity and social acceptance that is astounding to one who remembers what things were like a few years ago. The big industrial corporations such as DuPont, Allied Chemical, Owens-Corning and Kimberly-Clark, which are building new plants in South Carolina at a rate of nearly $1 billion a year, hire and promote Negroes on a basis of full equality. And the state has an extensive network of vocational schools to prepare Negroes as well as whites for skilled technological employment. The result has been a dramatic upgrading of Negro economic status and the emergence of a rapidly growing Negro middle class. In cities visited by this reporter, public Negroes comprise more than a third of the state's registered voters and their growing political power is clearly reflected in public affairs. The South Carolina Democratic party, at its state convention last month, elected a Negro as its vice-chairman and rejected a platform plank which Negro delegates regarded as an indirect endorsement of separate school systems. school integration has been accomplished with little trouble, and seems to be accepted matter-of-factly by most whites. And it is real, not token, integration. Columbia has a much more representative racial balance in its public schools than many northern cities where de facto segregation prevails. A black couple now can go to any of Columbia's top restaurants without fear of being rebuffed or seated behind a pillar. Negro debutantes have their pictures published on the society page. A Negro boy was named winner of a DAR Citizenship Award. The millenium hasn't arrived in South Carolina. Racism still exists there, as it does everywhere else in America. But even those Negro leaders who are most impatient for more rapid progress will acknowledge, in private conversation, that the past few years have brought remarkable changes. Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF YOU ALL RIGHT? I GUESS SO, BUT I CAN'T KEEP THIS UP FOREVER... WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF WE DROWN? SOKOLOOFF WILL PROBABLY GO COMMERCIAL ART YOU ALL RIGHT? $ \textcircled{C} $ David Sokoloff 1970 hearing voices— (Editor's note: Joe Naas' Feb. 17 editorial, "Trigger Fingers," drew a number of heated letters from Jews and Arabs alike over his discussion of the Mideast War. As the semester progressed the letters became ever longer and ever narrower in their importance to the rest of the students. Lately, the letters have been reduced to attacks on previous letters. Therefore, the editorial editors of the Kansan request that no more letters of this type be submitted. If the disputants wish, they can hold a public debate which the Kansan will cover.-Monroe Dodd) * * The U.S. aid in grants and loans during the period 1946-68 is officially listed as follows in millions of dollars: Egypt (901), Israel (785), Morocco (588), Jordan (575), Tunisia (545), other Arab countries (800). In the above numbers repayment of loans has been taken into account. Thus, the U.S. aid to the Arab countries has been 4.4 times larger than that to Israel. In addition, until June 1969, the U.S. government put up 456 million dollars of the 667 million which UNRWA has raised to care for the Arab refugees. The aid statistics do not reflect the immense investments by the West to help the Arabs produce and market their oil. To the editor: The letter by M. J. Haddadin in the March 13 Daily Kansan presenting the Arab views was full of fiction and half-truths, a repetitive echo of the official propaganda line of the Arab Palestine Liberation Organization's (PLO) head office in New York. An industrial state like Israel does not require vast expanses of land to accommodate its labor force. Besides, the southern arid half of Israel is practically empty, and could be used for future industrial expansion and settlement of the new immigrants. The officially announced Arab States' policy of "NO peace with Israel and NO recognition of Israel," and a major war every ten years or so since the creation of Israel are hardly the ingredients to be used by the Arabs to tull the apprehensions of the Israelis about the security of their own state. If the Arabs had accepted the 1947 UN resolution for the partition of Palestine, as the Jews did, there would not have been a single Arab refugee and the borders would be the same as originally planned. However, the Arabs refused to accept the UN resolution, and during 1947-49 Israeli cities, settlements and highways were under attack by Arab irregulars, volunteers, and the military forces of Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon. At times it seemed as if the fate of Israel would be like the recent fate of Biafra. During the 1947-49 war close to 600,000 Arab refugees left Israel and went to the Arab countries. About 500,000 Jewish immigrants left the Arab and Moslem countries and came to Israel and were resettled there. Thus, one could consider it as an unplanned exchange of population and all efforts should be directed towards the resettlement of the Arab refugees among their own people. There are several examples of such exchanges of population, like between Greece (1,150,000) and Turkey (350,000) after the First World War. In all of the fifteen odd Arab States (except Lebanon) Islam is the state religion, and in most of them Islamic law is the basis for their laws. None of them is a secular state and none of them is a democracy. With this kind of batting average among the Arabs, it is highly unlikely that the citizens of the democracy of Israel would like to participate in the experiment suggested by Mr. Haddadin and become yet another Arab state with a Jewish minority. Besides, the terrible experience of the minorities among the Arabs, like the Kurds in Iraq, the Greeks and the Copts in Egypt, and the Negroes in Sudan is far from encouraging in this direction. The Arabs in Israel enjoy full rights of Israeli citizens. They have the privilege of voting and there are seven Arab members in the Israeli parliament, and one of them is the Deputy Speaker. They have freedom of religion, get free education, join labor unions, go to universities, have welfare and legal rights, pay income taxes, and have one of the highest standards of living among the Arabs in the Middle East. When traveling abroad, the Arab citizen's Israeli passport does not have any indication whatsoever regarding the religion or the nationality of the owner, and it is just stated that he is an Israeli citizen. However, because of security reasons the nationality and religion of the owner are stated on the Israeli I.D., and because of moral reasons, the Arabs in Israel are not required to serve three years in the Army like all the other citizens, although some of them volunteer to do so. In the "National Palestinian Covenant" which was revised by the Palestinian Council in Cairo during July 1968, it is indicated that in the future State of Palestine, only the Jews who had been in Palestine before 1917 would be recognized as citizens. The members of the Palestinian Council who approved this covenant included representatives of PLO, Al Fatah, and all the other major Palestinian Groups. Thus the "National Palestinian Covenant" excludes 2.4 million Jews (most of the citizens of Israel) from Mr. Haddadin's Palestinian state. It shows that his "solution" is nothing more than a misleading, empty propaganda shell, which is in contradiction with the basic covenant of Al Fatah and the other major Palestinian groups. H. Unz Professor of electrical engineering THE UNIVERSITY DAILY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for holidays. Publication in the school newsletter a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to financial circumstances. No responsibility is necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. The Weekend Scene "THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY" V(arsity) Powerful and exhausting drama of a thirties dance marathon. In its second week. "BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE" (Hillcrest 1)—One of the best American comedies in quite a while. In its third week. "The CIRCUS" (Hillcrest 3)—One of Charles Chaplin's classic comedies, re-released recently after 40 years, "The tramp" makes good in the center ring. "CACTUS FLOWER" (Hillcrest 2)—A witty script by I.A.L. Concert set for Sunday By KAREN KLINKENBERG Kansan Staff Writer Exciting music that ranges from a Kodaly version of the high Mass to 20th century Norman Dello Joio's traveling invitation in the "Song of the Open Road" are on the program for Sunday's Concert Choir performance. Duncan Couch, assistant instructor of choral music, directs the 3:30 p.m. concert in the University Theatre. The 75 member group of select voices includes students in music as well as students in other fields that auditioned at the semester for membership. The program for the afternoon includes three motes by Anton Becker. The selections are "Christus factus est," "Os justi" and his version of the beautiful "Ave Maria." A beautifully exciting version of the Mass by the Hungarian composer Zoltan Kodaly include all the standard high mass anthems from the "Kyrie" to the final "Agnus Dei." Kodaly, who was born in 1882 and died in 1967, has written vocal works that, according to Couch," constitute a unique repertoire for both soloist and chorister." The choir will be accompanied on the organ by Marlene Brewbaker in this liturgical selection Howard Hansen is the third composer featured with his musical versions of Psalm 121 and Psalm 150. The first Psalmical versions of Psalm 121 and Austin, junior. Norman Dello Joio is a twentieth century composer whose "Song of the Open Road" has been chosen as the final number. This rousing number includes a trumpet solo by Mark Schubert, Hutchinson sophomore. He appeared at KU in 1967 as a guest conductor at the Symposium of Contemporary American Music. The choir will be accompanied on the piano by Leann Hillmer, Hutchinson graduate student. STARTS WED. "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times RICHARD BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days A UNIVERSAL PICTURE GP Diamond and an excellent comic performance by Goldie Hawn makes this a pleasant little movie. "LEMONADE JOE" (Popular Film)—A Czech spoof of American westerns. This is a very specialized type of comedy that will appeal only to certain people: You'll either die of laughter or die of boredom. (7 and 9:30, Fri. and Sat. in Woodruff Auditorium) NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS (KU Film Society)—A program of three great Fairbanks films. Two early comedies: "The Nut" and "The Mollycoddle" and one later costume epic: "Don Q." (6:30 Sun. in woodruff Auditorium) Granada THLATAL • Telephone VI3-5724 HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Producer-director Robert Wise signed James Olson and Canadian actress Kate Reid for his new thriller, "The Andromeda Strain." "TRIAL BY JURY" and "COX AND BOX"-Two Gilbert and Sullivan one-acts should provide the audience with entertainment different from the other productions of the company this year. (5:30 and 8:30 p.m. Sun. in Woodruff Auditorium) 'Oliver' clicks CONCERT CHOIR—see story this page. PETER, PAUL AND MARY These popular folk singers will appear in person one night only (8 p.m. Sat. in Allen Field House) Sign for 'Andromeda' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) England tabulated the most tickets sold for a single motion picture during 1969 and came up with the Academy Award winner, "Oliver." BOOKS ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN IN watter MANHAU goldie HAWN inorio beranati cactus flower TECHNICOLOR* live. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHIPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA "A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS" AND SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF ★ PLUS The Magnificent Seven EASTWOOD GARNER BRYNNER THINK OF THE POSSIBILITIES Local Anaesthetic, by Gunter Grass NOW SHOWING Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE (Harcourt, Brace & World, $6.95) "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" I'll do it. What's wrong with that? HELD OVER . . . MOVED OVER Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Mat. Sat. - Sun. 2:10 THE Hillcrest By PEGGY POLK United Press International pace largely in a dentist's chair. On a television screen provided by the pompous, philosophy-quoting dentist to distract the patient, narrator Eberhard Starusch projects scenes from his past which merge almost indistinguishably with fantasies about what might have happened. They involve his days as an industrial engineer and a former fiancee and her father, a general, who refight World War II battles in a sandbox. Ever since Gunter Grass emerged upon the international literary scene in the early 1960s with The Tin Drum, he has written about German war guilt. This new novel satirizes that very preoccupation. It is savagely funny, lacking none of Grass' characteristic black and bitter humor. Example: the book—about pain as the most enduring human condition—takes Apr.17 1970 KANSAN 5 THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP Matinee Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15 - 9:35 JANE FONDA BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR GIG YOUNG SUSANNAH YORK NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS Varsity TREATHE ··· Telephone W-3-1055 HALF A TON AND TEN FEET TALL... ruler of the rockies! WALT DISNEY productions presents KING of the GRIZZLIES TECHNICOLOR® Released by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. 1970 Walt Disney Productions Granada TREATHE ...telephone V13-5783 NOW SHOWING Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Adults 1.50, Child. 75 THE GREATEST COMEDY GENIUS AT HIS BEST IN A FILM NOT SEEN IN 40 YEARS . . . Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" G Suggested For GENERAL Audiences Written, Directed and Produced CRA ABRL FOR CHA AUDIENCE Written, Directed and Produced by CHARLES CHAPLIN Re-released thru United Artists PLUS SELECTED SEGMENTS FROM "FURTHER PERILS OF LAUREL & HARDY" THE Hillcrest3 Eve. 7:15 & 9:15 Mat. Sat.- Sun. 2:15 Adult 1.50, Child. 75 Detailed file released on Blackmun WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Justice Department made public Thursday a detailed dossier on Supreme Court nominee Harry A. Blackmun showing his net worth at $125,000 and his participation in three cases involving companies in which he owned stock. Deputy Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst said he was releasing the information at Blackmun's request "in the light of the extended debate over confirmation" of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., the first man President Nixon nominated to fill the current court vacancy. Haynsworth was rejected by the Senate late last year after critics charged him with conflict of interest. ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) — Judge Harry A. Blackmun last month ordered the school district of El Dorado, Ark., to desegregate its schools and "eliminate the last vestiges of racial identification." Blackmun order provides insight into nomination The order to "desegregate with great speed" includes six detailed paragraphs which exclude certain concepts of achieving desegregation from being within the scope of the decision. These exclusions — all beginning with the words "we do not"—provide an insight into the manner in which President Nixon's latest nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court has made his decisions on the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis. Blackmun ruled that desegregation must come within reasonable time. He did not believe that the court should spell out the method of achieving this. Motor Co. stock, acquired in 1957 at a price of $2,500 before he went on the bench, and 22 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph stock purchased for $1,350 in 1963 and 1964. and civil liberties since 1959 when he took his seat on the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In a letter to Sen. James O. Eastland, chairman of the Judici- ty. ary Committee that will begin hearings April 29 on the nomination, Kleindienst said Blackmun reported holding $75,000 worth of stocks, bonds and bank assets plus $50,000 equity in his Rochester, Minn., home. "We do not direct that this specific step or any other specific step be taken to resolve the problem," Blackmun said. 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Among the opinions chosen by the Justice Department was a major civil rights case in which the Supreme Court overruled Blackmun on the scope of a century-old open housing law, a key capital punishment case now pending before the high court in which Blackmun refused to set aside the death penalty for a Negro convicted of ransing a white woman Kleindienst, in the letter delivered Wednesday to Eastland, D-Miss., also provided a brief summary of selected opinions Blackmun had written in the fields of criminal law, civil rights Kleindienst advised Eastland that Blackmun had ruled in two cases involving Ford and one concerning AT&T. One ruling reinstated a jury verdict in the amount of $24,500 against Ford, another reversed a jury award of $12,500 against the automaker and the third upheld a lower court's dismissal of a $35,000 complaint against an AT&T affiliate, the Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. Critic cites film success discusses rating system Bosley Crowther, for more than 25 years the film critic of the New York Times, visited KU Wednesday and discussed with film students his views on film-making in America. Crowther was in Lawrence to arrange for the Midwest premier of "Rivereun," a new film by John Korty, a young American film-maker. He is currently employed by Columbia pictures in an advisory capacity. Crowther visited an American film history class taught by Richard McCann, professor of journalism, where he told students the future emphasis will be low-budget, independently created films. He cited the recent success of such inexpensive films as "Easy Rider" and the flops of such expensive blockbusters as "Paint Your Wagon" as the cause of the trend. "I don't think this means an immediate end to such expensive LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI) $ \rangle $ Ever wonder what the value of the nickel is today? Purchasing power project demonstrates nickel's value True enough, the nickel is like the old gray mare—ain't what it used to be. But, as teacher Tanner hoped, the students were able to use their imagination and come up with several values of the small coin. In these days of rising living cost almost everyone has begun to worry about the purchase power of a dollar. It caused a Texas Tech University journalism professor to wonder just what the nickel would buy. He assigned a feature writing class the project of investing a nickel to purchase something—then to write about it. But the deputy attorney general said Blackmun's financial interests were so small that the Justice Department could find no fault in his actions. A nickel can get earmuffs, chopsticks, napkin rings, spoons, bubble gum, old phonograph records, nails, a cigar and a live turtle. Possibly the most valuable things from a nickel today are happiness and experience. 6 KANSAN One student used a nickel to purchase an ice cream cone for a little, ragged boy. She turned in a slip, "One Ice Cream Cone—One Happy Boy." Apr.17 1970 Another offered a nickel for a thought, and learned that no longer could you get a person's thoughts for a penny—today they are a nickel. Another reported a lecture from a merchant about inflation and the dollar being worth only 67 cents. But at a foreign students' dinner, she picked up a pair of chopsticks for only five cents. films as "2001," he said. "As long as expensive films make money they'll be in production. But backers think twice before investing in costly production." Crowther said he was more insulted than worried about the current film rating system. "Midnight Cowboy," he said, won the Best Picture award even though it was rated "K." But the winning purchase and the "A" for the day went to the student who invested. From the inflation-dominated world of the 1970's came one coed with a live turtle and a box of food, rented for one day. It turned into' the larger investment, as the renting merchant hoped it would, when she decided not to part with the pet and went ahead and purchased it. "It was simply one of the year's best pictures. That fact couldn't be ignored. I do think the GMRX system does offend the intelligence of some people," he said. "Parents who care what films their children see don't really need it because they are intelligent enough to know about the films without any rating." Crowther said his work in New York was as a journalistic critic, one who sees a film and writes an objective report. This kind of criticism he said, writes primarily to inform the public whether a reasonably intelligent person would enjoy a film. A second kind of critic, Crowther said, writes more personally and without a deadline, and is able to judge a film on a more artistic level and place it in historical perspective. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House passed Thursday President Nixon's $4.4 billion welfare program of cash for the working poor, job registration for welfare adults and higher payments to the aged, blind and crippled. Welfare program passed by House Nixon hailed the House passage and urged the Senate "to act with the same responsiveness" because "the poor and the helpless—and the taxpayers—need welfare reform now." Supporters praised the key feature—annual payments for up to 13 million people in poor working families—as a breakthrough to end the poverty-welfare cycle. Critics, however, condemned annual stipends as a "guaranteed annual income" which could destroy the will to work. SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS 1. Coffeehouse Director Recreation—April 21 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman Forums—April 21 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Chairmen 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Widely held doubts about Judge G. Harrold Carswell's racial attitudes and handling of civil rights cases were instrumental in the defeat last week of his Supreme Court nomination. Fine Arts—April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Art Forums Chairman Among the securities Blackmun listed were 50 shares of Ford Summer Board (Summer 1970)—April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALE Over-stock of Short-dated Contact & Enlarging Paper AZO Kodabromide Medalist Velox 4x5 through 20x24 1/3 OFF --camera shop, inc. 116 West Eight Phone 235-1386 TOPEKA Wolf Wolfe's IN PERSON Peter, Paul and Mary EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records Allen Field House April18, 8:00 p.m. Tickets $4.50,4.00,3.50 TICKETS ON SALE SUA OFFICE SUA OFFICE INFORMATION BOOTH THE SOUND KIEF'S BELL MUSIC RICHARDSON MUSIC CO 75 1970-71 pom pon squad selected Pom pon girls for 1970-71 were selected Thursday night. They are: (back row left to right) Jane Phelps, Lawrence junior; Mary Williams, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Connie Cerne, Lawrence junior; Pam Price, Des Moines, Iowa freshman; Rosemary Sicks, Independence junior; Gloria John, Leavenworth sophomore and Windy Patton, Kansas City junior. Front row left to right: Marilyn Marshall, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Marye Ish, Rockford Ill. junior and Sue Tagg, Sioux City, Iowa sophomore. Pom pon girls selected The results of the annual tryouts for the pom pon squad was announced Thursday night when the field was finally narrowed from the 66 original coeds who began the tryouts to a 10 member team. They are: Connie Cerne, Lawrence junior; Marye Ish, Rockford, ill, junior; Marilyn Marshall, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Windy Patton, Kansas City junior; Jane Phelps, Lawrence junior; Pam Price, Des Moines, Iowa, freshman; Rosemary Sicks, Independence junior; Mary Williams, Kansas City, Mo., junior; and alternates, Gloria Jahn, Leavenworth sophomore; Sue Tagg, Sioux City, Iowa, sophomore. The squad was limited from 10 girls to eight this year, with only two alternates instead of four, said Mrs. Carl Dorris, assistant dean of women and one of the sponsors of the squad. This was the choice of the girls. Mrs. Dorris said. The squad will be of better quality with eight girls, Miss Williams said. With this amount it will be more likely to include the alternates with the regular squad at some games, she said. The two alternates will have Apr. 17 1970 KANSAN 7 more of an opportunity to participate and it now becomes more of an honor to be on the squad, Miss Williams said. The smaller group of girls won't have such difficulty getting together to practice, Mrs. Dorris said, and they will be easier to work with. Along with Mrs. Dorris, the sponsors of the squad are John Novotny, assistant athletic director and business manager, and Mrs. W. Gale Catlett, instructor in physical education. Arms reduction pledge opens SALT sessions VIENNA (UPI) — The United States and the Soviet Union began Strategic Arms Limitations Talks Thursday with mutual pledges to try to curb their massive nuclear armories. Officials from both sides said privately, however, they felt the other adopted harder positions in opening statements at the SALT talks. President Nixon, in a special message, declared his "firm commitment to the search for an earl, equitable and verifiable agreement." Relays celebrate 45th year By GREG SORBER Kenyon et fierrites Kansan staff writer A banner headline announced the first annual Kansas Relays in the University Daily Kansan in 1923. In that first contest 23 Universities, 19 colleges, 4 military schools and 32 high schools competed in a "steady rain." Forming a Kansas Relays was the idea of John Outland, a former KU student who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. Outland was impressed by the Penn Relays and dreamed of a comparable event for KU. He told F. C. "Phog" Allen, athletic director for KU, of his plan in 1920. When Outland's plan became a reality in 1923 the KU trackmen dominated the first Relays, winning the 440 and 880 yard relays, taking second in the mile relay, third in the two mile relay and first in two individual events. And perhaps a little pompous in its lauding the first meet an editorial in the Kansan said, "the first Kansas Relays have gone down in University history as an epoc in athletic progress at the University of Kansas and for the Midwest. The 1925 meet was insured for $4,000 against the possibility of rain. It did not rain. In the Relays that year 20 records were "smashed" before an attendance of 6,000-7,000 persons. Knute Rockne, coach of Notre Dame was the head referee of the third annual Kansas Relays and was one of the many football coaches who referenced the meets during the beginning years. School cases denounced WASHINGTON (UPI) — Recent Nixon administration moves in school desegregation cases in Florida and North Carolina are both pitiful and unprecedented, according to an official of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. Howard A. Glickstein, staff director for the commission, indicated that the panel probably will make a specific denunciation of those two cases—on top of the broadside it released last weekend against overall Nixon desegregation policy. Glickstein criticized the Justice Department's recent intervention in court cases involving school desegregation in Charlotte, N.C., and Bradenton, Fla. The intervention, aimed at modifying court decrees requiring extensive busing of pupils to achieve integration, has been viewed as an implementation of the new Nixon policy. WANT A PLACE TO DO YOUR SPRING THING? TRY the Lounge THE LOUNGE AT HILLCREST BOWLANDS S.W. CORNER OF HILLCREST BOWL 9TH AND IOWA BUDWEISER ON TAP OF COURSE Described as a balmy spring day, the 1935 Relays was to feature a special mile event in which Cunningham, with an undefeated record that year of 11 victories, was to race a four-man University of Kansas relay team. The special event might have soured a bit since Cunningham finished second to an Oklahomaan in the regular mile race. A special race between Glenn Cunningham and Gene Venkze in the mile race highlighted the 1934 Relays. Cunningham won with a 4:12.7 effort. The two preceding years he had won the 1500 meter event. Cunningham was also beaten in 1937 by Emporia State distance runner, Archie San Romani, but bounced back and in 1939 won a special mile before a crowd of 12,000 persons. The 1940 Kansas Relays had "perfect track weather" and was named after Glenn Cunningham, who would have a disappointing last race that year. He finished behind Blaine Rideout of North Texas State College. The hero of the 1940 relays was Beefus Bryan, a Texan who reached the height of 13'3" in the pole vaulting competition. World War II interrupted the Relays in 1943, '44, and '45, but high school teams still came to KU during the interim. "The four main entries of rain, wind, cold and mud got a jump on the other teams with a special practice late Friday night and went on to swamp all events," a story in the Kansan said of the 1947 Relays. A world relay mark of 40.1 was set in the 440 yard relay by the University of Texas in the 1956 competition while Kansas received five firsts, and a seven In 1951 the Kansas Relay results were broadcast by a group of campus amateur "ham" radio operators who positioned themselves in a booth above the Memorial Stadium press box. In 1965, Jim Ryun ran a record-breaking 404.8 mile as a senior for Wichita East High School. Shot put master Randy Matson from Texas A&M heaved the shot for a Relays record of 65'10 3/4". During the next four years crowd attention focused on Ryum. In 1966 he anchored KU's team in the freshman-junior college distance medley, running a 3:59 mile and in the individual event he ran a 3:55 mile. Ryum posted a meet record of 3:54.7 in 1967 and set another Relays record in the 1500 meter event in 1968. Last year he anchored the distance medley team which set a world record of 9:33. He also ran a 3:57.6 mile. Rain and water soaked tracks have marred the Relays in the last few years, but a new synthetic track was installed during the summer of 1969 for $125,000. The track was a gift of KU alumnus and former KU trackman Jim Hershberger. The 45th annual Kansas Relays is dedicated to him. OVER-65S IN FINLAND KU's Al Oerter, gold medal winner in the 1956 and 1960 Olympics, too three consecutive Relays crowns for the discus in 1956, 1957 and 1958. foot freshman named Witt Chamberlain, wearing the colors of a plaid golfers cap, performed unattached and placed fourth in the hop, step, and jump event. HELSINKI (UPI) — Every eighth Finn, or 605,000 out of a total population of 4.8 million, was over 65 years of age in 1969 and received an old age pension, according to the National Pensions Department. Oklahoma led an exciting sprint medley race in 1958, setting a pace which resulted with even the three following teams breaking the intercollegiate record. Bass Tacks Blue and White, Red and White, Blue, Red. Bass' Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Housing authority organizes project Individuals may be building the future slums of Lawrence with some of the mobile trailer homes that exist here, said Bill Barr, assistant dean of faculties. He spoke before the Faculty Forum in a luncheon meeting Thursday at Westminster Center. A professor of mechanical en- A professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Kansas, Barr is a member of the Local Housing Authority of Law- rence. The five member board is appointed by the mayor and city council, Barr said. There is no such thing as really low-cost housing, Barr said. The authority is presently organizing a plan for low-rent public housing to be located at 19th and Haskell, he said. Construction allowances will range from about $10,000-19,500 and the monthly rates for occupants from about $42-64, based on past figures from a Topeka housing project. To determine who will live in the housing projects, the type of income through welfare or salaries will be considered along with the type of housing the people live in now. Some houses in Lawrence are condemned, Barr said, but people are still living in them because they have no place else to go. Hutchinson and Poplar Bluff, Mo. The housing authority interviewed 16 architects before choosing one, Barr said. The housing authority has taken the responsibility of improving the community and among other things providing the needed living conditions in locations appropriate to the neighborhood and the city. It will also make a study of the persons who will be living in the developments, Barr said. Barr commented that the housing authority has received extremely good cooperation from the city. Rep. Winn to appear Larry Winn, Republican congressman from Kansas' fifth district, will put up a trophy and present it personally to the winner of the oen three-mile run at the Kansas Relays Saturday. Charles Oldfather, associate dean of the law school, reported on the Senate Executive Committee. Council hears reports from its committees The University Council heard reports from its committees Thursday afternoon in 108 Blake at the council's last meeting of the year. Mail ballots which will elect the new council will be counted Monday. Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and vice chairman of the Academic US aid asked by Cambodia PHNOM PENH (UPI) — Cambodia appealed directly to the United States Thursday for arms and assistance as the government's effort to drive Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops out of the country moved toward the crisis point. A pound of bacon contains about 3,000 calories. An American embassy spokesman said Friday the appeal was received Thursday and passed on directly to the State Department in Washington. Other Western nations were understood to have received similar appeals of aid. The Cambodian call for help came as Communist troops attacked Takeo town early Thursday in the first reported Communist assault on a Cambodian provincial capital. Informed sources said Cambodian troops killed 15 Vietnamese prisoners during the assault. The embassy spokesman said the appeal for American arms aid was not "a shopping list." Kansan makes mistake regarding who presided There was an error in Thursday's Kansan concerning Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and new student body president, presiding over the Student Senate meeting Wednesday night. Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior, and not Ebert presided over the meeting. Winn, from Leawood, Kan, was co-chairman of the student relays committee in 1940 while an undergraduate at KU. 8 KANSAN Apr. 17 1970 Laura Nyro Die and the Thirteenth Compassion including Sweet Blindness Stoned Soul Picnic Laura Myra Elie and the Thirteenth Confession including Sweet Blindness Stolen Soul Piece On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Barr showed slides of many homes in Lawrence, along with pictures of low-housing developments in Lee's Summit, Mo., Procedures and Policies committee, reported the year's work of his committee, which dealt mostly with hearing petitions from students for the elimination of various graduation requirements. Ebert said next year this committee would make a thorough study of the present grading system. The council will hold a reorganizational meeting on April 30. At this meeting the council will elect its chairman for next year. Newly elected members, both student and faculty, will be grouped into committees for the next year at this meeting. William Lucas, associate professor of architecture and chairman of the Planning and Resources committee, said his committee had appointed subcommittees and was waiting for their data to come in. CYD to host issues seminar The statewide CYD Issues Seminar hosted by the University of Kansas chapter of Collegiate Young Democrats will be held in Lawrence Saturday in the Kansas Union. Mike Dickeson, president of the KU-CYD, announced the keynote speaker as Bob Brock, Topeka lawyer and businessman and former Kansas campaign manager for Robert F. Kennedy, who will initiate the day's agenda with a 9:30 speech. The seminar will end at 4 p.m. Topics of discussion include sessions on tax reform, race relations, prison reform, party reform and consumer protection. Regents, Faculty to retreat A retreat for the Kansas Board of Regents and faculty, plus student and administrative representatives from the six state schools is scheduled for this weekend in Rock Springs, said Jess Seward, Wamego regent. Stewart said the purpose of the retreat is to "discuss issues in an informal setting." Charles Oldfather, professor of law, said KU faculty representatives are Ronald Calgaard, associate professor of economics, and Russell Bradt, professor of mathematics. A third faculty representative will be chosen later this week. Student representatives from KU are Bill Ebert, Student Senate president-elect, Greg Thomas and Dave Awbrey, Student Senate president. Awbrey said issues concerning "the whole range of the university" will be discussed by panels. Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 快乐的男孩 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. James Logan, former dean of the KU law school and 1968 democratic candidate for nomination of U.S. Senator, will speak at the noon luncheon. DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 The seminar will be conducted with an alternating session plan. Registration fee will be $1.50 and will include the luncheon. The schedule of the discussion sessions and speakers is as follows: Tax reform: (10 a.m.) Frank Gaines, Governor Docking's assistant and Harold Herd, minority leader of the Senate. Race relations. (11 p.m.) Dave Brown, KU law student. Prison reform: (1 p.m.) Paul E. Wilson, KU law school. Party reform. (2 p.m.) John Wright, professor of human development at KU and Louis Douglas, professor of political science at Kansas State University. Consumer protection. (3 p.m.) Richard Morris, professor of home economics at K-State, William Fasse from K-State, and Art Travers, KU professor of law. Reservations can be made in advance by sending a check or money order to Debbie Herron, 1630 Oxford Road, Lawrence, Kansas. AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 STUDENTS AND FACULTY MAKE MONEY SAVE BUY - LP RECORDS * AUDIO EQUIPMENT - PRE-RECORDED and BLANK TAPES - MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AT OUR WHOLESALE PRICES EARN COMPETE WITH ANYONE - MONEY for YOURSELF on EVERY SALE YOU MAKE FOR FULL DETAILS CONTACT MR. JACK COHEN - SAVE MONEY for YOUR FELLOW STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS Mr.JACK COHEN SMG DISTRIBUTORS, INC. 46-35 54th ROAD MASPETH, N.Y. 11378 (212) 361-3088 A SUBSIDIARY OF SAM GOODY, INC. Graduation Announcements may be picked up Tuesday, April 21 & Wednesday, April 22 at the kansas UNION BOOKSTORE 320 Photo by T. L. Simmons 'Track wonder' of century in action... This elaborate machinery of the 3M Company was used to lay the artificial track surface in Memorial Stadium last fall. Total cost was somewhere above the $125,000 donated for the all-weather Tartan surface by Jim Hershberger. Women's 100-yard dash shapes up The women's 100-yard dash field for the 45th Kansas Relays shapes up as the finest ever at the Jayhawk carnival. Dr. John Davis Jr. of Topeka, AAU official and prime mover in the women's track program, points out that all eight sprinters invited for the 100 have run in the national championships the past two years and all competed during the past indoor campaign. Pacing the field will be Pam Greene of Denver, a 16-year-old newcomer at the national level who made the U.S. women's team last summer and ran a surprise second behind American ace Barbara Ferrell in the Russia-British Commonwealth-U.S.A. meet to provide the turning point for the first victory in history over the Russian women. Mollie Hence and Amanda Hornesburger, both of Alcorn A&M, Lorman, Miss., turned in successful indoor seasons and opened the outdoor season with times of 10.9 and 11.0 at the Texas Southern Relays in Houston. Diane Knight of the Texas Track Club and Rebecca Davis, who formerly ran with the Topeka Cosmo Club and now competes for Southwest College, are four year veterans of high level track competition. Apr. 17 1970 KANSAN 9 lette Smith of the Topeka Cosmo Club and Miss Greene's teammate, Debra Wedgeworth of Denver, all ran 11.0 or better last year. Jill Thomas of St. Louis, Pau- Chicken goes with Relays Kentucky Fried Chicken Visit the Colonel You can pick up Col. Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken in Lawrence at West 23rd and Alabama Streets Malls Olde English Village Beautiful New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing at - interior roominess * wall to wall carpeting * air conditioning * sound conditioning conditioning • sound conditioning • all electric Frigidaire kitchens • dishwasher Come see 2 and 3 bedroom units afternoon weekdays and weekends - disposal replaces • sauna baths • recreation rooms 2411 Louisiana 843-5552 Hawks square off against Wildcats Kansas seeks its first Big Eight baseball victory of the season as the Jayhawks take on arch-rival Kansas State in Lawrence this weekend. Pitching, the questionable aspect of KU's game at the season's start, continues to shine. The Jayhawks gave up only eight runs against the powerful Sooners. Kansas takes a 5-4 overall and 0-3 league record into the Wildcat series after dropping three close decisions to Big Eight favorite Oklahoma. Kansas State is 13-9 overall and 3-3 in the conference. The three-game series opens to KU's Quigley Field with a doubleheader Friday at 1:30 p.m. Saturday's single game has been moved up to 11 a.m. to allow fans to attend the baseball game ahead of the afternoon session of the Kansas Relays. KU coach Floyd Temple was pleased with the play of Ken Carpio, junior from Kansas City, who saw a lot of action in centerfield. Although outhitting OU, 14-13, Kansas found it tough to score on the experienced Sooner hurlers, getting only four tallies for the series. For the K-State series, Temple was undecided about his pitching rotation. "I was real pleased with the entire staff," Temple said. "I'll have to decide what order to throw them." KSU has the experience to make a run at the league title. Coach Bob Brasher has 16 lettermen back from the 1969 outfit that had a 17-15 mark and a fourth place Big Eight finish. New York Cleaners Seven veteran pitchers are back, led by Nick Horner, all-conference selection in 1968. Top regular returning is all-Big Eight second baseman Bill Huisman, who hit .386 last spring. For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Wards young junior shop NOW SAVE $2 ON JUNIOR COTTON SCOOTER SETS Hurry in for this exceptional value! Zippy striped cotton knit top with flip-pleated pant-skirt in solid color cotton duck. Juniors' sizes 5-13. SALE-PRICED $8 swinging juniors shop MONTGOMERY WARD "CHARGE IT!" ON WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN Open Every Night Till 9:00 Sat. Till 6:00 Sun.12 to 5 1721 W. 23rd VI 3-4596 MILLE Familiar sight on KU cinder For the first time in seven years Jim Ryum, world-record holder in the mile, 1,500 meters and half-mile, will not perform in the KU Relays. Marathon to test runners stamina A field of 32 hardy souls have entered the first Kansas Relays marathon to be run Saturday morning over country roads southwest of Lawrence. The marathon course measures 26 miles and 385 yards and is laid out in the general area of Lone Star Lake. The finish line 10 KANSAN Apr. 17 1970 will be in front of Wakarusa School which is about seven miles south and west of the Lawrence Holiday Inn. Bob Timmons, Kansas track coach and director of the relays, said the entire course is over asphalt road and every intersection is marked with an arrow to keep the runners headed in the right direction. be on hand at each three-mile interval to call out "split" times. Each mile will be marked with a large number and timers will Timmons said that aid stations will be set up at the nine-mile mark and every three miles thereafter with cool water and sugared tea available. The winner will be awarded a Kansas Relays watch and the next four finishers receive silver medals. Bronze medals will go to those placing from sixth through 10th, and all other finishers get gold shoes with a "K." Talented field ready for mile A 12-man field, including four sub-4-minute milers and three others who have dipped under 4:02, is set for the Glenn Cunningham Mile, one of Saturday's spotlighted races at the 45th Kansas Relays. Heading the field for the Cunningham Mile are three members of the Pacific Coast Club—Tom Von Ruden (3:56.9), former Oklahoma State standout; John Mason (3:39.4 for 1,500 meters), ex-Fort Hays State ace, and John Lawson (3:59.3), one-time Kansas NCAA cross-country king. Rounding out the 12-man lineup are: Lowell Paul (4:03.4), former Kansas star now running with the Chicago' Track Club; Dave Wottle (4:06.5), Bowling Green, fourth in the 1970 NCAA Indoor; Bill Blowett (4:07.2) Returning to defend his title is Jim Crawford, who finished collegiate competition at Harding College of Arkansas last season. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa BURCER CHEF formerly of Oklahoma, and fifth in the Astrodome championships last winter; Ken Swenson (4:09.3), Kansas State's Big Eight Indoor mile king, and Dickie Morgan, McNeese (La.) State, who ran a 4:04 relay leg at the recent Texas Relays. The Cunningham Mile, named in honor of Kansas' mile record-holder of the 1930's, goes to the post at 2:30 p.m. Saturday. you the church the world need a better tomorrow. Help us — in lifting man . . . even high enough to touch God. The Trinitarians Garrison, Maryland 21055 I bu I b I an I sought my Soul, but my soul I couldn't see I sought my God but my God eluded me. I sought my Brother and I found ALL THREE. Now Leasing Don't Be too Late! Live in the Manner in which Everyone Should Be Accustomed! Live in the ALL NEW Now Leasing PARK 25 APARTMENTS. 1 BEDROOM 1 BATH 2 BEDROOM 1 BATH 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH TOWNHOUSES For More Information Phone Mrs. Sadler, 842-1455. Stop by and talk to her. 2530 W.25th #2 CENTRAL AIR DISHWASHER CAR PORTS POOL IOWA 25th Street N W E S N W E S HA Flashina the winner's smile... Larbi Oukada, Fort Hays State distance ace, is all smiles as he is presented with a Relays watch. He shattered the six-mile record by more than a minute with a 28:45.4 clocking. By CHARLIE SMITH UPI Sports Writer Carlos, Matson bolster KU Relays' prestige A meager relay field will be bolstered by world-class performers John Carlos and Randy Matson this weekend as the 45th annual Kansas Relays gets under way. Carlos, C—holder of the world record of 9.1 in the 100-yard dash, will run in Saturday's open 100. Matson, only man ever to surpass 70 feet with the 16-pound shot, will compete in an invitational event also Saturday. Best of the bunch is Kansas State, which swept the two-mile and sprint medley at the recent Texas Relays. Host Kansas, however, should push the Wildcats in the two-mile. The Jayhawks bypassed that event at Texas due to illness to one of its half-milers. The relays, usually the highlight of the meet, have dwindled to an essentially Big Eight Conference field. With no Southwest Conference teams participating, because of a league rule requiring five home meets with other league members, the university relays have drawn only five schools outside the Big Eight. If Kansas can stay close through the first three legs, the Jayhawks' Brian McElroy and Kansas State's Ken Swenson could wage a great finish. Kansas State swept the two-mile relay on the Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays circuit last year. Carlos may face a stiff challenge in the 100 from Missouri's Mel Gray. The Tiger ace will run in the university 100, however, and whether he chooses to come back against Carlos in the open event is debatable. Gray ran a wind-aided 9.3 in the prelims at Texas and came back to win the finals in 9.4 against the wind. Others to run against Carlos, the Olympian and ex-San Jose State star, include Earl Harris of Oklahoma State, Ivory Crockett of Southern Illinois and Andrew Hopkins of S.F. Austin, Tex. Matson also will face stiff opposition, mainly from Kansas. The University of Kansas will send its fine duo of Karl Salb, the resigning NCAA champion, and Steve Wilham against the former Texas A&M hefty. Emporia State's Al Feuerbach, the NAIA champ, also is in the event. KU hosts shootout The KU rifle team hosts the 12th annual Big Eight Gallery Smallbore Rifle Tournament today through Sunday at the rifle range in the basement of the Military Science Building. Five-man teams from the conference schools will fire a full international course consisting of four targets each of proine, kneeling and standing with a time limit of 200 minutes and 1,200 points possible. Oklahoma State University was the 1969 winner with a score of 5,375 points out of 6,000. The top two shooters last year were Don Pate of OSU and Chris Stark of KU with scores of 1,107. Today Kansas State will fire two teams at 2 p.m. and KU and another K-State team will fire at 5:30 p.m. Saturday's lineup includes the Missouri and Colorado firing at 7 a.m., ISU and MU shooting at 11:30 a.m., Oklahoma and Nebraska firing at 3 p.m., and Nebraska's second team firing at 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma State will close out the shooting by firing at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. Firing for Kansas will be Mike Jenkins, Salina sophomore, Mary Arnold, Holton junior, Carol Waltz, Orange, Tex., junior, Linn Covey, Ft. Leavenworth freshman, and Mark Bernstein, Overland Park senior. Golfers to Nebraska, Iowa The KU golf team will be busy Friday and Saturday as it plays tournaments in Lincoln, Neb, and Ames. Ia. Two Big Eight teams, Nebraska and Iowa State will host the round-robin play. Coach Wilbur Norton expects his Jayhawks to show continued improvement in this weekend's action. Last week KU finished third in a five-team round-robin at Columbia, Mo., nine strokes behind Missouri. The five Jayhawk golfers took 600 strokes to complete the 36 holes. Leading the way at Missouri was Paola freshman Jim Dennerline. He was meet medalist with a 143, including a four-under-par 68. Teammate Craig Delongy, Derby sophomore, finished with 147. Apr. 17 1970 KANSAN 11 In addition to KU, Nebraska and Iowa State, other teams playing this weekend will be Missouri and Kansas State. Five shatter six-mile The 45th edition of the Kansas Relays got off with a bang Thursday afternoon as records were set in the only two open events of the day. Five men in the 6-mile run bettered the Relays record with Larbi Oukada of Fort Hays State taking the first position. Oukada raced home 28:45.4 after the starting gun sounded. His time bettered the previous record, set by Craig Runyan of Colorado in 1969, by nearly a minute. Runyan, competing for the Colorado track club, took third although he improved on his last year's time of 29:44.3 by 39 seconds. Three other runners bettered the previous record. Oscar Moore of the Southern Illinois track club, took second with a time of 28:52.6 Dennis McQuire of Iowa State grabbed the fourth spot with a 29:12.2 clocking. Alvin Penka of Fort Hays was fifth with a 29:21.0. Oukada said after the race that he could possibly have done better but he wanted to save himself for the steeplechase. The other event the women's TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO Student specials ★ New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 At Honors Night this year, an Outstanding Woman Teacher and an Outstanding Senior Woman of the University of Kansas will be announced. If you would like to nominate women for this award and have not previously done so through a living group, please fill out the ballot below and bring it to the AWS office, 220 Strong Hall by Wednesday, April 22,1970. 1. How many women teachers have you had while at the University of Kansas? ___ If you wish to do so, please nominate one of these women for the Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1970. Nominee 2. Every SENIOR woman may nominate 3 students on the basis of their leadership, scholarship, and contribution to the University. --open 880, had two women slip under the existing Relays record. Your Student ID # ___ School ___ Classification ___ Barbara Lawson, running for the Colorado Pacers, broke the 2:20.7 mark she set last year with a 2:12.1 clocking. She was followed home by her teammate Donna TenEyck who was also under the previous record with a 2:17.7. The Glenn Cunningham mile run, an invitational event, also has lured a fine field. Heading the cast will be three Pacific Coast Club members, Tom Von Ruden, John Lawson and John Mason. Ten of last year's individual champions will return to defend their titles, including Jim Crawford in the Cunningham mile. For the first time, the meet will be run on a synthetic track. The old track, plagued in recent years by wet weather, has been replaced by a Tartan surface and expanded from six to eight lanes. SHAW AUTO SERVICE for Your headquarters shocks miDAS mufflers and miDAS® 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 PLANNING A TRIP?? PENNY BICYCLE Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 Malls Shopping Center College Republicans Annual Elections will be held Wednesday, April 22 8:00 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union Letters of intent must be turned in to Larry Huffman, 1735 W. 19, 11-D, by 10:00 p.m., Friday, April 17. Officers to be elected are Chairman and Executive Vice-chairman (on one ticket), Secretary, Treasurer, and Member-at-Large. Crockett is last to beat him World's fastest human' gets rematch John Carlos, co-holder of the world 100-yard dash record at 9.1 gets a rematch at the Kansas Relays Saturday with the last man to beat him in a sprint race. Carlos, the controversial former San Jose State swiffie, was edged by Ivory Crockett of Southern Illinois in the National AAU 100 at Miami, Fla., last June. Both were clocked in 9.3. Those two, along with two other speedsters who have run legitimate 9.2 centuries, headline the field for the open 100 to be run at 2:15 p.m. on Saturday's closing session of the 45th Kansas Relays. Earl Harris of Oklahoma State and Andrew Hopkins of Stephen F. Austin, both with 9.2 clocking to their credit, figure to furnish the top competition for Carlos and Crockett. Also in the field are Al Hughes (9.4), Wichita State; Stan Whitley (9.5), ex-Kansas star, and Carl Lowe (9.5), Northeastern Oklahoma A&M freshman and one of the country's leading high school sprinters last year at North Little Rock, Ark. The eighth position will go to the top finisher, not already invited, in the university and college 100 to be run at 1:20 p.m. Saturday. This spot could go to Mel Gray, the Missouri rocket who set the Kansas Relays 100 record at 9.3 last year and won the Texas Relays 100 two weeks ago. Gray would have been extended an automatic invitation to the open 100, except that he was not entered. He is entered in the collegiate 100 but it is not known whether his coach, Tom Botts, would want him to run the additional race since he's listed to anchor the 440 and 880 relay teams and long jump in addition to running the 100. Bob Timmons, relays director, said the first alternate for the open 100 will be Mike Chavis. KANSAN Sports freshman from Great Bend Junior College. The former Kansas City Southeast spinner ran 9.5 in last year's Mexico, Mo., prep meet. Heading the 30-man Jayhawk squad will be four individual defending champions, including two record-holders. Shooting for repeat honors are Jan Johnson, pole vault; Karl Salb, shot put; Doug Knop, discus, and Bill Penny, hammer. Knop has won the Kansas Re- Tennis squad goes after 4th straight The KU tennis team will play here today against Wichita State, and Saturday they take on Nebraska at Lincoln. The Jayhawks pushed their record to 7 wins, 6 losses by sweeping past Emporia State, Missouri, and Arkansas last week. Against Wichita State the KU team will play four singles and two matches. At Nebraska they will play five singles and two doubles. iams, Hong Kong, Japan junior. Tennis coach Jim Burns has said that Tom Carlson, Overland Park freshman, will replace Ken Dickson, Topeka senior, as the no. 5 man. The top four are Jim Ballinger, Overland Park junior, Dan Oram, Overland Park senior, Cal Simmons, Overland Park sophomore, and Tim Will- Ballinger and Oram will play in the no.1 doubles, and Simmons and Williams will play no.2. The Big Eight conference tennis title will be decided in Lawrence May 15-16. 12 KANSAN Apr. 17 1970 700 mm x 900 mm april12 JIMICA aud lemonade jes seeing spots? If you see spots before your eyes . . . the pimple kind .. better get Fostex. It's the super spot checker. Wash with Fostex and you see yourself smooth and clear. It helps remove blackheads, dry up pimples and oil, and fight germs. For the clear look . . . get Fostex Cake. Sold in drugstores. Postex FOSTEX FOSTEX lays discus each of the last two years with a record throw, including a peg of 189-8 last spring. Penny set the hammer mark at 166-0 a year ago. Johnson won the vault at 16-4 and Salb the shot put at $63-5\frac{1}{4}$. Here is the Kansas entry announced by coach Bob Timmons: 440-Phil Reaves, Marvin Foster, Mickey Mathews, Julian Wende. RELAYS 880—Reaves, Randy Julian, Mathews, Meade. Two-Mile—Dennis Stewart, Jim Neilhouse, Roger Kathol, Brian Me Four-Mile—Mike Solomon, Nei- house, Jay Mason, Dough Smith **Sprint** Medley—Mathews (220) Mabee (220), Jullan (440), McElroy (McElroy) Distance Medley-Paul Mattingly (sonline) (440), Smith (1,320), Solomon (mile) INDIVIDUAL EVENTS 100—Reaves, Mathews, Meade. 120 High Hurdles—Mike Bates. 140 Intermediate Hurdles—Debe. BLUES: 440 Intermediate Hurdles - Bates 7,900 Meter, Starlight 3. 000 Meter Steeplechase—Jon Callen, Dave Anderson, Mattingly. n, Dave Anderson, Matting! Three-Mile, Mason Three-Mile—Mason Six-Mile—Jeff Wrav High Jump-Larry Reineke, Gary Johnson. Pole Vault—Jan Johnson. Bill Hatcher Long Jump—Reaves. Shot Put—Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm (both collegiate and open). Discus—Doug Knop, Saib, Wilhelm, Colson, Steve Holm, Charlie Flahy Hammer—Bill Penny, Dick Young, Mike Wendland. Defending champions will be on hand in 10 individual events, five of them in the university-college division and five in open events. Here are the returning kings with last year's winning marks: University College 100—Mel Gray, Missouri, 9.3 (Record) University College Javellin-Roger Collins, Kansas State, 323-4. Kansas, 83-5-14. Discus—Doug Knop, Kansas, 189-8 (Round). Shot—Karl Salb, Kansas, 63-51% Pole Vault—Jan Johnson, Kansas. 16-4. Open Mile - Jim Crawford. Harding. 4:05.7. Six-Mile-Craig Runyan, Colorado. 29:44.3. (Record) Steeplebase—Conrad Nightingale. ex-Kansas State. 9:06. 6 440 Hurdles—Dennis Cotner, Oklahoma, 52.1. (Record) Hammer-Bill Penny, Kansas, 166- 0. (Record). A change in the time schedule published in the Kansas Relays booklet involves the college shot put. This event has been moved from Saturday afternoon to 1:30 p.m. Friday. The invitation shot put involving world record-holder Randy Matson, Kansas aces Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm and Emporia State's Al Feuerbach is slated for 3 p.m. Saturday. Neal Steinhauer scratched himself out of the special shot put with a note to relays director Bob Timmons. The world indoor record-holder (67-10½%) said his parents are planning to be in Eugene, Ore., (where Steinhauer lives) the weekend of the Kansas Relays and he felt it was more important that he remain there to visit with them. . . The Cunningham Mile will include runners who posted the first, second and fourth best miles of the past indoor season. John Lawson's 4:00.6 was the second best and John Mason's 4:00.8 was fourth. Rex Maddaford, Eastern New Mexico distance ace from New Zealand, was excused from competing in a triangular meet this weekend to rest up for the Kansas Relays. He's aiming at the Kansas three-mile record of 13.50.6 after winning by a "country mile" at the Texas Relays in 13.23.3. Since the mile and three-mile are only 25 minutes apart on Saturday afternoon schedule Maddaford will not run in the Glenn Cunningham Mile. He is undefeated at both those distances this season, winning the mile at Texas in 4.02.6. Maddaford was the meet's only double individual winner and was voted the outstanding performer of his division. For Top Quality Head For Henry's henrys For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken. Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's th & Mo. VI 3-213 Spring brings forth the best of Italy. It's ultra-chic sandals with wide open toes and heels and detailing that just won't stop. Join the sandal set...it's a smash season! Jacqueline as seen in GLAMOUR Arensberg's = Shoes Where Styles Happen 819 Mass. 843-3470 Bando Tau Sigma combines movement, music Students express mood through dance By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Performing an interpretative dance is a form of free expression. One dancer referred to it as the freedom to fly. Every Wednesday night a limber campus group meets in Robinson Gymnasium to practice and to perfect a well-known expressive art. The group, Tau Sigma dance fraternity, will present a dance concert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday and 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. Eight modern interpretative dances will be performed, Mrs. Marsha Paludan, who has performed for the National Dance Association in New York, will be the featured guest artist. Kathy Forney, Plano, Tex. sophomore and president of Tau Sigma, said it was not a professional fraternity and membership was open to anyone who passed tryouts held twice a year. Tau Sigma members emphasize potentiality rather than actual ability when they select new members. The AWS Fashion Board is not just a frivolous, glamorous organization. Board explains aim, ideas "We want to be a significant contribution to the University and the community, Pam Russell, Iola senior and Board president said in a recent evaluation of the organization. Community projects such as car washes, aid in the Head Start program and a sewing fashion show for Lawrence High School were sponsored this year by the Board. Members gained experience in public speaking through commentaries in fashion shows, she said. They also organized the "Miss Best Dressed KU Coed Contest" for Glamour magazine, a spring bridal show and fashion shows for women's living groups. Apr. 17 1970 KANSAN 13 The original board began in 1960 under the name of the Mademoiselle Fashion Board, after several people expressed interest in the fashion world, modeling, speaking and writing commentary and organizing fashion shows. It became the AWS Fashion Board in 1962. THE MIRRORED DANCER Perfecting a story with grace Cecilia Eldridge, Mexico City intensive English student looks for perfect form in body movement and expression while practicing for the Tau Sigma dance recital Saturday and Sunday in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. Members of the dance fraternity will try to convey individual feelings to the audience through original dances. Techniques other than music are sometimes added to help the dancer tell a story. SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS 1704 West 24th 842-1160 Beautiful one and two bedroom units NOW renting for summer and fall all units include: drapes . . . carpeting . . . air conditioning . . . all electric kitchen with disposal . . pool . . laundry . storage . . furnished or unfurnished. Convenient location on bus route See them today Spring Week Gymkana Ice Cream Social Carnival Street Dance Picnic Games Art Sale "FUN" Spring Week Committee FUN IN THE SUM Art Sale ※ "We're trying very hard to expand membership," said Miss Forney. "We have far too few men for the number of women in the organization. You don't have to take any dancing classes to join. You just have to enjoy dancing." The 27 members of Tau Sigma all participate in teaching new steps and routines. Elizabeth Sherbon, associate professor of physical education, is the group's adviser. Meetings are based on a lesson format in which new steps and choreographic techniques are KANSAN features taught, Miss Forney said. Members are taught to fill space with their moving bodies and to express their feelings through their choreography, she said. "A girl whose friend had died used the experience to choreograph a dance in which she expressed her feelings," said Miss Forney. "You could really understand what she was trying to say with her motions." Explaining the choreographic process, Miss Forney said the dancer must first find expressive music and then use the dance steps he knows which fit the music and to express his mood. "Sometimes music isn't used." Miss Forney said. "There is one dance in the concert in which slides are shown as the dance is performed." A dance production class will also participate in the concert and music will be tape recorded, Miss Forney said. 700 april aud lemonade ice We have a story to tell Our's is a simple story to tell. We feel that our first and most important work is to serve good food to you. We don't pretend to be a real fancy establishment but our home cooked meals are no pretention. One of our tenderloin or hamburger steak dinners is just the thing to fill the bill for your quest of a delicious home cooked meal. Try one of our Double-D Burgers after the relays. With a cheeseburger on top and a hamburger on bottom it will handle any size appetite. Double D Diner ACROSS THE STREET FROM HASKELL INSTITUTE COUPON COUPON This coupon good for one Double-D Burger Large Coke French Fries only 90c save 15c C Photo by Mike Radencich Flea heart prompts study Dale Pippitt, Twin Falls, Idaho senior, has developed a successful method for recording the electrocardiograms of fleas as a semester project for one of his engineering classes. He says the flea heart is similar to that of man. Pro-Israelites heckle group Two speakers talking in favor of the Palestinian commandos were heckled by comments and questions from pro-Israel students in a panel discussion and question period sponsored by the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) in McCollum Hall Thursday night. Depository auctioned in Dallas DALLAS (UPI) — The Texas school book depository, an obscure building until Lee Harvey Oswald chose a sixth floor window to assassinate President John F. Kennedy, was auctioned off for $650,000 Thursday night. The current owner, Col. D. Harold Byrd, has until Friday night to decide whether to accept the bid. He had said before the auction he had been offered $1.5 million for the building. The high bidder was Aubrey Mayhew, who said he was in the music business in Nashville, Tenn. He declined to say what he would do with the musty red brick building from which Oswald fired a cheap mailorder rifle Nov. 22, 1963, but he did say he would not tear it down and would never sell it. 14 KANSAN Apr.17 1970 Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Stainless steaks and fresh select seafood await you when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest, preparing the appetites any way you like them, with the dinner trimmings. Dine tonight at the Sirloin for uncomparable dining pleasure. U.S. Choice Select Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1431 The speakers were Fuwwaz Ulaby, electrical engineering professor at the University of Kansas and Kem Allen from the YSA headquarters in Chicago. Before the meeting Allan Blumenthal, managing editor of KU's Hillel newspaper, Sholom, got up in front of the group and expressed concern because no one representing the Israeli viewpoint was allowed to speak on the panel. Throughout the speakers' talks, Blumenthal shouted comments to the speakers. The panelists spoke about the Palestinian commandos who they said are separated from the Arab government. He said the commandos were fighting against the Zionists and not the people of Israel. The commandos are fighting for a socialist state, they said. After the speeches, there was some discrepancy raised on which was a more socialist state, that of the Israelis or the Arabs. After the speakers' presentation Ben Entine, vice-president of Hillel, Lexington, Missouri, freshman brought up several comments and questions to the speakers and audience. One question brought up concerned why the commandos, if they are in favor of socialism in both the Israeli and Arab states are fighting the Israelites and not also the Arabs. The response by the speakers was that most of the imperialism in either of the states was represented by the Zionist armies and that is why the commandos are fighting in Israel. Another question was brought up concerning the composition of the commando members. The speakers said although most of the commandos were ex-Palestinians they were now open even for Israelites wanting to free Palestine from Zionist oppression. The panelists insisted that Israel was controlled by the few rich and that there was open discrimination against the Arabs. After the panel discussion and questions, Blumenthal said Hillel would stage a protest to the McCollum Hall Senate in the way of a formal statement concerning the lack of panelists supporting the Israeli's viewpoint. A pupil studies flea heartbeats as engineering class project By MIKE RADENCICH Kansas Staff Writer Today, the word electrocardiogram or EKG has become common to anyone who has ever had his heartbeat recorded on paper. But, have you ever heard of anyone taking an EKG of the heart of a flea? By studying the EKG, he said, one could also learn about how the heart of an active animal is affected by oxygen consumption, temperature changes or acidity within the animal. This kind of information, he said, could be important in the control and design of artificial hearts and in helping man better understand how the living heart is controlled. It is being done and successfully by Dale Pippitt, a Twin Falls, Idaho senior in electrical engineering at the University of Kansas. Pippitt said that the daphnia or water flea has a two-chambered heart that is, in some ways, similar to that of higher animals, such as man's. He said that by studying the simple flea heart researchers might better understand the method by which any heart conducts an electrical charge that triggers contraction. Pippitt said that this unusual experiment, which is his semester project in one of his engineering classes, has been undertaken before by other researchers but with unsatisfactory results whereas he was able to develop a more simple and yet more exact method of carrying out the project. Next, he said, he had to consider and compensate for grave physiological problems that arise from using daphnia because of their relatively small size and fragility. But one might ask. "Why would anyone want to take an EKG of a flea's heart and what could be the benefits of such information?" In taking an EKG from a water flea's heart, Pippitt said, there were four important problems that had to be overcome. First, an effective means of amplifying the extremely tiny electrical charge within the heart had to be devised. Thirdly, he had to devise a means of effectively constructing miniature electrodes to be placed within the flea's body, he said. Finally, Pippit said that he had to find a way to screen out other LATIN AMERICA NIGHT TONIGHT Pippitt said he then used a write mesh cage to enclose the tube to screen out unwanted electrical noise. A special amplifier was used to boost the signal so that the EKG could be observed on an oscilloscope or TV-like device that displayed the EKG on a special picture tube. The actual apparatus used for the EKG, he said, basically consisted of a tube filled with distilled water in which a single flea was placed with a silver electrode at either end of the tube. Exhibitions at 7 p.m. Program 7:30 p.m. Latin American Band with Dancing-9:30 at Westminister Center electrical discharges caused by movement of the daphnia's limbs Pippitt said his paper had won awards in project contests over the last few months: at KU where he took first place in an Institute of Electrical Engineers sponsored contest and first-place awards in Kansas City and in St. Louis. Free-except dance admission is $1.50 girls admitted free He said he would enter his paper in a regional contest in Dallas on April 23. sponsored by Latin American & International Clubs Lindsay urges officials to walk on 'Earth Day' NEW YORK (UPI) — The office of Mayor John V. Lindsay Thursday urged city officials to leave their autos home and walk to work or use mass transit on "Earth Day" April 22 to dramatize the effect of auto exhaust on the atmosphere. As an added incentive to those officials with chauffeur-driven limousines, the mayor's office also announced that the City Hall parking area would be closed on Earth Day. Capt. Roald Amundsen, Norwegian explorer, reached the South Pole Dec. 14, 1911. 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 Guidelines. Write to: Vocation Director Paulist Fathers Room 400 415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 Eavesdropping legalized by legislature If you are suspected of having information relating to certain crimes, you could find a law enforcement officer listening to you under authority of a law which becomes effective in Kansas July 1. The 1970 legislature passed a 78-page code of criminal procedures, and one of these procedures legalized eavesdropping. or more correctly wire tapping, under certain conditions. If a law enforcement agency, either state or local, believes you have certain information pertaining to a certain crime, they may eavesdrop on your home or your office, or your telephone or telegraph line. The attorney general of Kansas, an assistant attorney general or any one of the 105 county attorneys in the state could apply for an eavesdropping order. The application can be made when the official believes the information to be obtained may provide evidence of the commission of any one of more than a dozen offenses. The eavesdropping order can be issued by any justice of the Kansas Supreme Court or by one of the 61 district judges in the state. To receive an eavesdropping order, the official applying for it must make an application in writing and under oath. The official considering the application is required to examine the applicant under oath and satisfy himself that there are reasonable grounds and probable cause and that there are no other means for obtaining the evidence. The evidence must be deemed essential to the solution or prevention of a crime. Officials in stew over pot PRAIRIE VILLAGE (UPI) — Nearly 10 per cent of the student body of the affluent Shawnee Mission junior-senior high school system has experimented with marijuana at least once, school authorities said Wednesday. The information, gleaned from a survey distributed in the district's school system, showed that more than 50 per cent of the students questioned had consumed alcoholic beverages one or more times. Reports from five senior high schools and 10 junior high schools in "bedroom" communities in the Kansas segment of the Kansas City metropolitan area, showed of terrorism as a means of accomplishing industrial or political ends. 154 of 11,650 who reported, used marijuana once or twice weekly and a total of 1,370 students said they had used marijuana more than once. Eighty-nine said they used it daily. Of 11,566 students who responded to a question about alcoholic beverages, 6,527 students said they had consumed them once or more. But among high school seniors the figure was 1,525 of 2,086 responding to the question. - Commercial gambling, racketeering, commercial bribery, sports bribery, tampering with a sports contest, bribery, or any violation of the uniform narcotic drug act or the laws regulating hypnotic, somnifacient or stimulating drugs. Of 11,574 students answering a question about LSD, 144 said they used it at least once a week. A total of 582 said they had used LSD at least once. The application for an eavesdropping order can be made when the information to be obtained may provide evidence of the commission of any one of these offences: - Any crime directly and immediately affecting the safety of a human life or of the national security. House committee approves Nixon's ABM site request The World War II Memorial campanile was begun Jan. 11, 1950 and was completed in 1951 at a cost of $172,500. Included in a $20.3 billion annual weapons authorization cleared by the committee today Rivers and Nixon met privately at he White House last week and the President reportedly assured Rivers that he would give favorable consideration to any additional shipbuilding funds provided by Congress. - Murder, kidnapping, treason or sedition. - Practicing criminal syndicalism, that is, the use of crime, malicious damage or injury to the property of an employer, violence or other unlawful methods Leading the support of Safeguard expansion was the committee chairman Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C. Rivers had threatened earlier to withhold attention unless the administration showed a willingness to spend more for Navy shipbuilding. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House armed Services Committee today overwhelmingly approved President Nixon's request to add a third site to the Safeguard antiballistic missile (ABM) system. Apr. 17 1970 KANSAN 15 The action virtually guaranteed passage by the House of the expansion plan. A much tougher fight, is expected in the Senate. —and including $330 million for an ABM site in Missouri—was an extra $345 million for procurement of Navy warships. The committee also approved $100 million for development of a new long-range manned bomber known as the B1. And in reversal of an earlier position, the committee voted to include $152 million sought by the Navy to begin construction of a $640 million nuclear powered aircraft carrier. SAVE YOURSELF AFINE WASHINGTON (UPI) — The chairman of the Senate's Special Committee on Aging said Wednesday that half of all retired persons receiving pensions or annuities may be paying more taxes than they should because of the complicated tax forms. Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 Opening a committee hearing on the matter, Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr., D-N.J., said there is "a virtual labyrinth of procedures, calculations and schedules, statements and forms to complete." Pensioners pay more Replying to questions about "hard" narcotics, 65 students said they had shot heroin into their veins one or more times. A total of 54 students said they had used morphine one or two times, 33 said they used it occasionally and 13 said they used it more frequently than once a week. In commenting on results of the survey, Dr. Arzell Ball, school superintendent, said it indicated "we need a drug education program whether 10 or 1,000 students are affected." T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 KU Students Cleaning Headquarters LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners KU daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities Phone 843-3711 1029 New Hampshire 猫 YA groove to the solid sounds of the "General Assemble" 熊貓 熊貓 瞑視 presenting... T THE ESTES PARK EXPERIENCE A program designed to put MEANING, FUN & MONEY into a student's summer job - WORK - DISCOVER - PARTICIPATE MORE THAN JUST A JOB It is a UNIQUE PROGRAM designed in cooperation with the Estes Park business community. This student-oriented summer employment program offers a kaleidoscope of activities . . seminars . . workshops . . dances .in Estes Park, Colorado. The activities program is designed to appeal to TODAY'S STUDENT . . the student who seeks more from summer employment than mere money. Plan to attend the film presentation. Recruiting will be available. - Date: April 20 Time: 7:30 p.m. Place, Forum Room, Kansas Union Estes Park Summer Employment c/o Trimarc Corporation First National Bank, Estes Park, Colo. 80521 Carrie Nation memorabilia included Spencer Library features rare collections By JAN BLACK Kansan Staff Writer Want to know something about Buddhism in Japan in 700 A.D.? Go to Spencer Library and you will find the original manuscript dated 700 A.D. concerning this subject; in fact, there are 125 manuscripts dating before 1500. The Spencer Library is filled with hundreds of fascinating collections covering many fields of interest. A collection of 18th century English literature housed in Spencer is said to be one of the best in the nation. According to Alexandra Mason, Librarian, the renaissance period is well represented with a great collection of books and manuscripts concerning the history of science, literature, law and linguistics during the period. by the Library of Congress as the third best in the country. The Slavic collection is rated Miss Mason said printing began sometime in the 1450's. The period from 1450 to 1501 is called the incunabula—"eradle period." These books are considered the experimental books. They had no title page and instead on the last page a paragraph containing the day, month and year and who the author was and who the printer was are printed. The criticisms Vice-President Agnew leveled at college admission policies Monday night in Des Moines do not apply to the University of Kansas, because there is no quota policy concerning minority groups. No admission quotas are enforced at KU Unqualified students, Agnew Teachers strike for more state aid LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Student absenteeism rose Thursday in Los Angeles, the nation's second largest school district, as about one-half of the system's 25,000 teachers stayed off the job for the fourth day. The board of education planned to go to court to seek contempt citations against the striking teachers, and pickets were served with copies of a restraining order directing them to return to work. Thirty-seven per cent of the district's 641,000 students stayed out of class Wednesday and the rate was expected to go up Thursday as substitute and non-striking personnel attempted to conduct classes. In many cases students were sent home early from the district's 616 schools and others were let out into playgrounds. No schools were technically closed because to do so would endanger the $150 million in aid the district gets from the state each year. The United Teachers of Los Angeles, which claims to represent 88 per cent of the teachers, called a strike with the avowed purpose of pressuring the state legislature to allocate more funds for schools. The teachers' union, which rejected a 5 per cent wage increase, said it would reject a 100 per cent raise if that meant cutting back on educational programs. The school board, trying to make up a $40 million projected deficit next year, said it will have to cut programs anyway. The original 13 colonies covered an area of 888,811 square miles. 16 KANSAN Apr. 17 1970 said, are being swept into American colleges "on the wave of new socialism" which can devalue education and create campus disorder. "Any attempt to subordinate the great universities of this country to social goals for which they are ill-designed and ill-equipped can only result in tragic losses to both these institutions and the nation," Agnew said. up less space because the shelves can be adjusted allowing more room for shelves on the shorter book shelving section. Michigan University was specifically criticised by the Vice-President for what he called a surrender to militant black students who demanded a 10 per cent Negro enrollment by 1973. Admission requirements at KU for in-state students are that any graduate of an accredited Kansas high school who has not previously attended a college is eligible for freshman enrollment. The Ellis collection ornithology is the best in the country. It is quite interesting how K.U. acquired this collection, said Miss Mason. According to a KU policy statement, out-of-state students who are well qualified graduates of accredited high schools are admitted each year. All other things being equal, preference goes to children of KU alumni KU has no quota policy, as referred to by Agnew, for enrollment of members of minority or disadvantaged groups. Officials say there is no evidence that there will be such a quota policy. Laura Nyra Elle with the Thirteenth Compassion including Sweet Blessness Stoned Soul Picnic Laura Nyra Elie and the Twentworth Compass including Sweet Blindness Stoned Soul Picnic On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ct On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S KIEF'S MAKE YOUR SUMMER COUNT! Living in the Topeka Area This Summer? Enroll in the Washburn Summer Sessions Day or Evening Classes - Graduate and Undergraduate Credit Classes begin June 8 An interesting collection, the Curll Collection, is made up of books printed by the "unspeakable Edmund Curll," said Miss Mason. He stole manuscripts from other authors and printed them. Of Curll's unwilling authors the best known is Jonathan Swift, whose Meditation upon a Broomstick (first printed by Curll in 1710 from a manuscript obtained by theft) is one of the most notable items in the collection. Choose from over 100 courses For details—write or call Director of Continuing Education Washburn University of Topeka Phone CE5-5341, extension 333 The books with leather bindings are oiled regularly to restore their beauty and keep them well preserved. The books are kept in the stacks which has a constant temperature of 70 degrees and a constant humidity of 50 per cent; Barbara Baccus, assistant librarian, said the books are arranged completely different from a normal library number system. They are placed on the shelves in the stacks according to their height. This is necessary for preservation of the books. A tall book standing next to a short book causes the taller book to bend over. The books when arranged by height will also take Hugh Ellis was a sickly boy and by the time he was 15 years old he had become a collector of bird skins, nests and eggs. His collection burned in a fire in California shortly after his fifteenth birthday and so he started collecting books concerning zoology. He lived to be 37 years old. The year he died he moved his collection from California to New York. However, on his way he received a telegram from a friend in Lawrence pledging him space and appreciation because Ellis was considered eccentric by most people. Ellis had the train stopped in Lawrence with the 65,000 volumes aboard. Ellis had been promised a three-year grant and office space in return, he promised that if he should die while he was here he would leave his collection to the University. He died six months later and KU became heir to the most significant collection of its kind. Miss Mason said the library also houses an excellent collection of material concerning voyages and maps. Most of the voyage manuscripts are concerned with travel in Europe in the 19th century and coastal travels of Africa during the same period. The maps are concerned with all parts of the world but mostly of maps of America ranging from an atlas map of 1650 to the important British maps of the Americas of the late 18th century. Griff's KU Relays Special The GIANT Hamburger Only 44c Housed in the Regional History section of Spencer Library is Quantrill's flag, Carrie Nation's hatchet and the Smasher's Mail, a paper by Carrie Nation and a cannon named Old Sacramento. Old Sacramento was used in the Battle of Hickory Point in Jefferson County, Kansas in 1856 This Saturday and Sunday Griff's is offering all of the many people who have come to enjoy the KU Relays the opportunity to enjoy Griff's GIANT Hamburger for only 44c (With Cheese Only 49c). Griff's put a giant hunk of ground beef, fresh lettuce, tomato, and onion on a toasted bun to create the giant of a meal, theGIANT Hamburger. Come in for a GIANT meal this weekend. "THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS" DUMP BEEF MILK Tours of the library are conducted daily at 4 p.m. Griff's Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W.23rd PRESENTED BY ALEXANDRA ROBBINS winner Action's her game. She's ready to go;to be a part of what makes life fantastic. And you can bet Tampax tampons are part of that life Internally worn Tampax tampons For comfort. For action. For the winner. NEW YORK CITY HOTEL & CONFERENCE TAMPAX Lampangs TAMPAX 10 Regular NORMAL PROTECTION WITH WATERMILLE TAMPAX 10 Regular DIGITAL MARKETING DEVELOPED BY: NEW YORK CITY HOTEL & CONFERENCE DEVELOPED BY MICHAEL O'DONNELL HOW MANY BUILT BY MILLIONS OF OWNERS TAMPAX TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY BY TAMPAX INCORPORATED, DALMER, NJ To bee or not to bee Douglas county spellers slip on'tapioca' By JIM CZUPOR Kansan staff writer Editor's note: The K an san mild-mannered fashion reporter was assigned this week to a more challenging story. We sent our illustrious cub to Vinland Grade School, for on-the-spot coverage of the annual Douglas County Spelling Bee. With all the drama occurring in Lawrence the last few days, the drama and emotional strain reached its highest point Thursday afternoon at the Douglas County Spelling Bee. About 50 noisy and excited kids ranging in age from ten to thirteen crammed into the Vinland Grade School gym to demonstrate their expertise in the Queen's language. As proud parents and underpaid teachers looked on, the poor little urchins were subjected to 80 minutes of excruciating written examination. As pencils and papers were passed out, two of the students did likewise. As the room filled with a tension-packed silence, broken only by the soft whisper of pencils rushing over paper, several parents were seen anxiously hovering over their children and whispering such reassuring phrases as "Go get 'em, Rocky, just remember da woids yuh been studying," and "Dis is the big one, kid, yuh win and yuh get a bicycle." squirts from the fifth (so to speak). The field was narrowed after several ties were broken, causing a mental derailment. The competitors for the finals turned out to be two hardy females from the sixth grade and three little The finalists, two of them repeaters from last year, then faced stout competition from the only male in the group. With words like "asparagus" and "tapioca" being hurled at the finalists by the placid interrogator, this reporter was constantly forced to thumb through his unabridged to ascertain the meaning of the words while waiting for the kids to spell them, so I could write it down. and forced the sixth grader out in a wave of embarrassment and failure. Shortly after, the eighth grader got hers on the word "restitution" again, so to speak. The final and most crucial test befall the fifth grade boy as silence fell over the crowd, injuring two, neither seriously. The pronouncer pulled out the final sheet of words and served up "tapioca," to which the boy replied with much hemming and hawing until the final letter oozed from his lips and he was declared the winner and new champion. The crowd went wild and has never been seen since. Genocide claimed by Indian A Chipewa Indian who helped lead the invasion of Alcatraz prison said Thursday night that the U.S. government had conducted 400 years of genocidal warfare against the American Indian. The young man will now progress to the state championships next week, providing his mother lets cross the street. "When there is bounty placed on Indians' heads and people are going out armed, then it's genocide," said Adam Nordwall, the Indian leader. The dramatic action reached a feverish pitch which forced the seventh grader to foul out on "sumptuous." Tension then mounted as the remaining three withstood a barrage of multisyllabic epigrams until the word "provincial" reared its ugly head Nordwall spoke also of a "cultural genocide" which was being attempted against the Indian. He said the whites took the Indians' country and replaced it with arid desert, took their religion of nature and replaced it with white "churchianity" and finally stripped the Indians of anything unique to the original Indian nature. Nordwell asserted that the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) was largely responsible for sustaining what Nordwall said was a governmental system filled with "glaring inequities." Apr. 17 KANSAN 17 1970 Nordwall spoke of the "relocation" programs enacted by the BIA as a form of individual termination of any services the government now gives to the Indian. He added to the Indians' credit the fact they remained silent so long. "I add to the credit of the Indian that we haven't been on the warpath very long," Nordwall said. He warned, however, that the days of the "silent, stoic" Indian stereotype were over. Nordwall released a steady stream of criticism at the educational programs for Indian youth. He suggested that schools implement Indian culture, history and language studies in their class structure. do away with the man," said Nordwall, "and for any man to have integrity he must have cultural and racial pride." He stressed the need for all Indian youth to be aware of their inheritance and culture so they may develop self pride. "When you extract pride you Nordwall described the invasion of Alcatraz with an air of amusement. "Alcatraz was more than suitable for the average reservation," said Nordwall. "It was isolated, had no fresh water, no oil or mineral rights, no educational facilities, no industry and no health facilities — everything necessary for establishing a reservation." When a member of the audience quizzed him concerning Haskell's alleged withholding of information from students concerning a recent KU symposium featuring a controversial Indian figure, he said he could only judge Haskell from his own contact and first-hand experience. At Haskell Institute, Nordwall said, he found the administration to be cooperative and on a seemingly friendly plane with the students. Kopechne file controversy continues through courts BOSTON (UPI) — More than three score copies of the Mary Jo Kopechne paper lay in a vault of the Suffolk Superior Court today, but the issue of when they would be released to an anxious public remained up in the air. The latest indication was that the 764-page transcript of testimony taken at an inquest into Miss Kopechne's death in a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy could not come before Friday at the earliest. Release of the transcript, a hefty document which contains the testimony of Kennedy and 26 other witnesses at the secret inquest, has been delayed by a series of complex legal maneuvers between four courts - two state and two federal The essence of the squabble is over who has the right to distribute and sell the transcript—the court or Sidney R. Lipman, a freelance Boston court stenographer who transcribed the inquest with the understanding he could sell copies of the testimony to the news media or others to recoup his expenses and make a profit. In his fight to win distribution rights, Lipman has gone to the Superior Court, the Massachusetts Supreme Court, the U.S. District Court and the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals - and an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court probably will follow, if necessary. ENGINEERING EXPOSITION 1970 profiles of tomorrow learned hall university of kansas lawrence, kansas 66044 april 17, 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m. april 18, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. april 19, awards banquet 6:00 p.m. Battle continues on Cal campus BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) Police fought pitched battles for the second straight day Thursday with radicals who hurled rocks, smashed windows and ripped down the American flag on the battered University of California campus. Police said at least 33 persons were arrested, bringing to more than 50 the number of arrests in two days of violence. Two policemen sustained minor injuries and one student suffered a broken leg in Thursday's outbursts. Alcoholic beverages subject to inspection ATLANTA (UPI)—Georgia Attorney General Arthur Bolton ruled Thursday that alcoholic beverages legally are "food." making them subject to inspection by the state agriculture department. The demonstrators broke dozens of windows. They laid siege to the campus Navy ROTC building and California Hall, where Chancellor Roger Heyns' offices are located. A group of about 20 smashed out the windows in the faculty club, where 50 professors were eating lunch. They dashed inside and turned over chairs and water coolers. Bolton said the Georgia Food Act describes food as "articles used for food or drink for human consumption." The opinion was issued at the request of Agriculture Commissioner Tommy Irvin. 18 KANSAN Apr. 17 1970 Police Thursday identified four of the 26 arrested in the first disorders as members of the SDS. At The RedDogIn 8 P.M. Doug Clar and the HOT NUTS At least 26 persons had been arrested in disturbances Wednesday in five hours of rioting which left the campus still acrid with tear gas when police moved back onto it Thursday. Police, sheriff's deputies and California highway patrolmen hurled tear gas again and again at bands of demonstrators who regrouped and regrouped after a noon rally in defiance of university orders. Being a Woman isn't always an advantage There are problems...like vaginal odor. At least it was a problem until MY OWN. Feminine Hygienic Deodorant cleansing towelettes. Also in a deodorant spray. One observer, a veteran of Pacific combat during World War II, said "the place looks like a battlefield." The radicals, several of them grade school and high school age, broke windows and smashed autos. A university truck was pushed 150 yards down a hill where it crashed into a building. Several police cars were dented and their windows broken. T MY OWN At The RedDog In 8 P.M. TOGETHER THE NIGHTMARE BOOKS Advance tickets on sale at Red Dog Office 9 A.M.-5 P.M. - WTF - Tickets Also at the Door. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the weekly newspaper are reserved 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. Audio Discount—your A.R., Dynaec, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Norelce tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. St. Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impacable copies, lesses, inserts, collating included, maxes with extra 720mm tape. Typewriter- 700 Mass. 843-3644. tff 63 'Rambler 660—Classic V-8. wagon, Clean, runs good, good gas mileage, new tires and spare. Must sell-all- bids considered! Inquire: Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. After 600 p.m., KI 2-2382. 4-20 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, grad. aluation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tt 1965 GTO, 389+ cubic inch 3/4 car, blue, white interior, 4 speed, 1500 miles on a rebuilt engine, $1500.00 Doug Pierce, 843-783.63 4-17 The wholesale used car market is down. You can save between $50 and $120. You now have 64 Carvair, 4-tower-floor, $795, 4 Chevy, 4-door, automatic, air, TS/TB, Ride and drive this one, $795, '63 Corvair, automatic. See it, $295, '64 Fairlane, automatic. See it, $295, Thompson Motors, DX Station at 6th and Michigan. Framus 12-string guitar. Like new. Included: $135. Call John Laird. 843-645-375 843-645-375 Stereo tape deck 2 sets of speakers, tape; $4.00 each, all the latest. 2 brand new 775-14 wide tracks, ww. TV, $15. 842-893. 4-17 Come by the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St., April 17, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., 8th-12 p.m., for delicious baked goods and interesting rummage. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 4-17 Sacrifice: 869 Datson 2000 Spt. Conv. OHC-135hp engine. 5-speed, mag- wheels w/radial tires, many extras. Call 842-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-17 Bluepoint Slamee kitten, 10 weeks old, trained, good with children. 1959 VW, new tires, good paint, 25, since complete overhaul. 842-1969 4-20 TR-4 '64 original owner, Red-Black Top-RW wire wheels. Excellent condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Aarbach, Bendix electric fuel pump, fog lights, detailed service history. Best offer over $1200. 843-6659. 4-20 Powerful Tuner/Amp with 2 large speakers and stereo cassette player, changer, was $115.00, now only $290.00. At Ray Stoneback's, $290.00 4-21 Elegant white formal. Worn once. Size nine. Call 842-0534 at 120 320 Rt. 16 St. 1965 GTO. Good condition, good tires, mag wheels, 4 speed. Call Bail. 842- 0254. 1733 West 24th, Apt. 24. 4-20 New famous brand portable stereo demonstrator, was $69.90. Reduced to only $35.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 New famous brand 8 track stereo cartridge player, adaptable to any Stereo Multipllex System, only $69.90 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Stereo—some floor model portable stereos cut to 1/2 price . . . others with large reductions. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Component Set--receiver, stereo cassette changer and speakers, Was $131.50, now $259.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 1969 TR-6 motorcycle Perfect, 1500 miles, stock $795, #842-2620, 4-21 Male German Shepherd-8 mo. Rod. 842-5769. 4-21 Gibson B-25 12-string Guitar and dual-pick-up electric 842-7569 4-21 842-7569 4-21 1969 Toyota Corolla—grey with red interior—4 spd, gets great gas mileage—like new inside and cost,$1500, 842-2191, 4-21 1966 GT0 Convertible—yellow with black top 4- speed, deluxe wheel covers, Motorola built-in stereo speakers, motor up-up, good tires, $1500, 2191, 4- 21 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRS, beautiful British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelin X tires, $1800, 842-2191. 4-21 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white convex tires, equipped, good 1400, $1892, 1000-2499 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III white with black convertible top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition. $2300. 843-2191. 4-21 1963 MGB, British Racing Green, ex- 1400. $842-2191 4-21 1400. $842-2191 4-21 1967 VW Super Bug-silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., heavy duty suspension, stereo tape speakers upoog, good-up, clothes $1800, 2191, 4-21 1968 VW Fastback—near perfect white paint exterior, radial tires, excellent shape throughout. $1600, 842-2191, 4-21 1926 Austin Healy Sprite, white with interior, interior, new tires. $800 4-21 1291 Ceramics, stoneware, $2.00 and up. Please phone 2789. Rosalie Wax. 4-21 2789. Rosalie Wax. 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383, Formula S. bolted G-70's, low mileage Perfect condition. Dick at 616 KC or 842-8252. 4-28 Help a Bird Today! Precaut birdhouse kits and bird feeding stations now available at Natural History Gift Shop. Open daily 8:30 to 5:25 Sundays 1:30 to 4:30. 4-22 Frames 12-string guitar, $120.00 Norelce Carassie Carb-Corder (battery or A.C.) $45.00. German made 6-string guitar, $45.00. Martin D-35-6 string guitar, 6 months old, $450.00 with hard-shell case. Call 842-7340 Need money to pay tax. Must sell 39, stk box, Chuy, China, Call, 842-8541, 4-22 Professional 5-piece drum set. Double cymbals. Cymbals. Cymbals. offer. Call 842-5796 4-20 One 40 watt home tape deck with BSR turntable. Will accept highest reasonable offer. Old RCA connector. TV needs work, $o Call Stu. 84-22 4-12 6-string Gibson guitar in perfect condition, steel strings; Guitar, capo, and hard shell case, $75. 842-0002. 4-22 1962 Rambler 4-door in excellent condition. Call Darlre, 843-1768. 4-20 Horse Teeth Necklaces . . . The Brazilian Answer to warding off social disasters! An eye-catching novelty now available at the Museum of Nat. History 1:30 history Gift Shop 8:30 Sundays 1:30 to 4:30. Weekdays 8:30 to 4:30. 4-22 Attention Floclinacuinacehilipliferafliers! For Sale: 1) Unused-8 silver drinking cups; copper chafing dish with stand and burner; calf wallet and key case; Lite-Gem hi-intensity oven trays; Taylor Humidity Gauge; tray-table combination; 2) Used-Noreco electric shave; wine decanter with four matching glasses; wicker desk or countertop storage; Short wave portable radio, batteries or AC; assorted kitchen items. Call 843-1400. 4-23 Three Vlutar Manual Lens: 85mm, 200mm. Excellent condition. 843-5180 12" walnut speaker system Perfect equipment. Must sell now! Call 4-30 4-30 Four 775-14 tires. Excellent condition. Original price $120. Am trading cars. $60 and 4 old tires. Call 843- 0493 after 9 p.m. 4-21 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. If you go to Michigan this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat! I V-2510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday t Borg-Warner 8 track car stereo. Call 914-7570 or come 12528 Emmery Road. Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. V1 3-4032. 5-14 NOTICE Leave the chrysalis and emerge with spring. Flutter into the world like a brightly colored butterfly in Lepidoptera Creations, 19 W. 9th. 4-17 Want some Action!!!! There will be plenty the week of April 19-24. That's Spring Week — plenies, undressing contest, pie eating contest, greased pig catching contest, and lots more, so join in the fun. 4-17 KING KY THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S MAESTRYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 342-3691 ESQUIRE BARRER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT Patrick J. Norris Kenneth "Roger" Evers MEN'S HAIR STYLIST "MOORE"BURGER APPOINTMENTS "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" Lepidoptera—a person, especially a woman, thought of as like a butterfly in being brightly dressed, frivolous. Lepidoptera Creations. W. 9th. 4-17 Students of Objectivism—meets every Monday, 7:30. Student Union, to discuss the ideas of Ayn Rand. If desire information, call 842-6210 5:30. 4-17 In Town' Attention married students and faculty. Interested in Social Nudism? For details write P.O. Box 5212, Topeka, Kansas 66050. 4-17 Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the Stables in the MIMA STABLES in them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfast, lunches, and dinner. The Stables sit for Bud, fun, and . . . See you! There's a new bar in town. Look for a bar on the ground—under a tree. Bistertus - 14th and 4, 17-3 14 LA PETITE GALERIE. Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring, Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer. tf Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $60.80, 816: Gri-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N. Kansas City, Mo. 64116. collegation. Fill form out in. 4-242 Rallye: Strip Tease Rallye, Malls Shopping Center, April 17, 1970. For information, call John Himpel, 843-1131, Mike Bower, 843-8882, 4-17 The Castle Tea Room is ideal for luncheons, dinner parties, or even wedding receptions Call Libuse Kruz. Most unique restaurant 4-22 Lawrence. Fly for half in Otocap Flying Club free info free phone 4-211 after aix. VI 3-9588 1414 W.6th Going to the KU Resals? End up at the STABLES . . . a great place for fun, conversation and beer (of course you know that!). 4-20 Let that sunshine in with sandals from ARENSBERSG'S SHOES, 819 Massachusetts. We have just the style for you, babe. Come in today! 4-20 The Captain's Table. Try it out this weekend. Great food. Reasonably priced. Open from 7:00 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE. 4-20 For a really great deal clip the coupon from Friday's UDK for the special on the Double D Burger at the Double D Diner. For 90c you get a big Double D Burger, Large Coke and French Fries. You save 15c. 4-21 The beginning and the end of World War II are coming. April 28-May 4 Do you want a part-time liquor store job May through August or later? Will be able to study on job. Call Bob, 842-8933. 4-21 LOST Lost April 9. Medium large 5-month-old puppy. Black with white under-sides and forepaws. Danny Rees. 1614 Kentucky. No phone. 4-17 Black poodle-like 5 mo. old puppy—14th and Tenn. Answers to name of "Ding." Call 843-5721, ask for Rick. 4-17 Ladies' Omega gold and steel watch. Lost between Jayhawyer Towers and Watson Library. Sunday, April 12. Call Louise, 843-8142. 4-20 Small flowered fan. Near Union. Emotional value. Call Jail. Ross. 843-250-1777 4-17 Will the party who found my orange bilfold in the ladies' restroom in the Union please keep the money and return the bilfold to 621 Illinois or call 843-1411. Reward offered. No questions asked. 4-22 Tortoise shell shell suglasses. lt Monday Made with Fint and Flint New Call Jeff. 842-913-93 4-20 $10.00 reward for black Prince Gardner wallet. Lost someplace between April 13 and Monday April 13. If found, contail Kip at 844-411-423 questions asked. Female roommate for summer to share 2 bedroom mobile home. Air-conditioned pool. $499 all bills paid. Call Bonn. UN4-3633. After 8:00 p.m. p.m.-842-3649. 4-17 WANTED 4th girl to share house. $60 a month. utilities paid. 917. Maine. 842-3-17 842-3-17 Traveling companion for the summer: touring western U.S. 842-6599 4-16 People who enjoy light and dark beer on tap, peanuts, and a friendly atmosphere. The Cellar Door—under the Bierstube, 14th and Tenn. 4-17 an apt, for summer sublease I am to educate student. Calif. T-42 8937 after 5:30. Roommate. Move in May 1 through summer $30. Dave 842-5786 4-21 Roommate wanted: Mature female graduate student or teacher, wanted to share two-bedroom apartment, $50/month. Call 842-5893 after 5 p.m. Desperately needed—ride or rider to and from Lawrence and Kansas City, Kansas. Kansas City number—MA1- 3463. 4-20 Male needs apartment from now un- til August 25. Call 842-288-1000, kitchen, clean Call 842-288-1000, 4-63 PERSONAL Baha'a'i the promise of all religions. 4-20 Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. ff Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Located across from Stouffler room. Do not conditioning. Shown afternoon or, 4-22. 1741 W 19th VI 3-8250 appointment --- Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers—plus stencil drawing and duplication. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-3897 or 4-29-6562 TYPING Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- ites, job duties. Resume for Plaa type. Competent service. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Rückman HELP WANTED Need part-time help at Royal College Shop Experience and references necessary. Apply in person, 837 Mass. Cook wanted. Apply in person at Krazy Karle's, 1811 West 6th. 4-20 Earn extra money. Sell American eagle license plates. Retail or to deal with a licensed dealer. George Mack, Cararner Co. 8. Douglass Lane, Kirkwood, Missouri 63125 Leaving town soon? Want a good job and a full-time job or full-time job with Top Notch Fashions, Inc. See us at the Student Union, Room 101, Wed. April 22, 4-22 Needed now: experienced female phone solicitor. Guarantee plus bonuses. Excellent opportunity for training. 843-6425 Don't call you're too timid. 4-24 Coeds to have wig parties. Earn extra spending money by showing this fine wig in a studio and symbolize wigs in your home. For information call 843-8766, ask for JIM. 4-17 SERVICES OFFERED Time to get your spring and summer wardrobe ready. Add something new. Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767, 8-5. 4-17 SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationwide directories of positions. Acquire fields. Accurate Current. Inexpedient location. icom坊, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books. Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. Phone 843-2736. **tt** THE HITE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & Same Time Phone Order Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685 — We Deliver! 9th & 11th. HAROLD'S PHILIP 66 SERVICE phone 843-3557 U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in a beautiful Sacramento home. Beautiful courtyard and pool, spacious sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished room, private baths, 842-3801 or 842-2348 or drop by and see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 FOUND SPRING YARD SALE Saturday & Sunday April 18 & 19 Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall Rentals of units in the popular neighborhoods (9th and Avalon), ARGO APARTMENTS (9th and Avalon), ARGO APARTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on the market soon. Come on, the residents on 842-2348, the resident managers, or come to rental office at 2107 Harvard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Found--at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM, 106 Radio, 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. 4-28 FOR RENT Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders ample and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus. furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space, atmosphere unique to adjacent to livable buildings, available for jacent and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly innertypical homes available to mature singles; studios from $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms from $240; apartments and town houses; call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew tf Agency: 843-2055. 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let. Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs weekly. 8th Terr. 8th Terr. 842-5446 before 4 p.m. except Wed. and Thurs. 4-22 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Now leasing for summer and winter classes in private room Shown afternoons or by appointment 1741 W. 19th, VI 3-8202 4-22 Apartment to sublet for Summer School, or from June 1-Aug. 24. 2 bedrooms and study, furnished, TV radiogram, dishwasher, use of swimwear, lunch bus, bus stop, bus off, 23rd Street, west of Iowa $160.00 per month, plus electricity and telephone. Call 842-5025, Tues., Thurs. mornings, and any evening. 4-22 Bob Blank, Owner - Applications Beautiful new luxury apartments now beating at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, wall-to-wall carpeting, air conditioning, sound conditioning, all kitchen are kitchens including dishwasher, dishwasher in five places. Additional benefits include laundry, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive rates. See weekly weekdays and weekends at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE. 2411 Louisiana, 843-5552 4-20 - Passports D. J. P Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and a half bedrooms, unfurnished with drapes, carpeting, air-conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool. On site, (them) day at 10am 24h, 842-1160. 4-40 Summer sub-lease. 1 bedroom apartment. Furnished. $75 per month. Two blocks from campus. Call 842-6897 after 6 p.m. 4-17 HIXON STUDIO "Please call for appointment" 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus will help for summer. Call 892-352-4222 4-22 721 Mass. 1242 & 1244 Louisiana Batiks Books Ceramics Clothing Many Misc. Items - Portraits - Stretcher frames, ready-made and parts THE CONCORD SHOP - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Bala Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lansing 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Landings scheduled for today (Continued from page 1) than normal." but added: It's in the corridor, it's shallow coming in slightly too steeply, but its re-entering." Ground controllers took the pilots through the entire routine they must follow to get home safely, beginning at the start of their 6:23 a.m. today work day, when they line up their navigation equipment and warm up their maneuvering jets. Thousands of specialists have worked day and night devising, and proofing out, the special procedures needed to get the stricken spaceship safely home. Engineers investigating events leading to Apollo 13's emergency in space believe "some sort of foreign matter" in an oxygen tank may have heated the gas until something burst, informed sources said today. The highly placed space agency sources said many members of a hand-picked group of investigators reached this conclusion while trying to determine the condition of the Apollo 13 service module where the explosion occurred Monday night. "We started looking right away at the probable condition of the service module—with no intention of using it again but to establish what its effect would be on conditions of recovery of the astronauts," he source said. Of the many possible theories as to the cause of the nation's worst spaceflight crisis, many member of the team believe some oxygen system component is the most likely source. They reached this conclusion while trying to determine the sequence of events. "Although a meteoroid impact can't be excluded as a possibility," one source said, "some of those engineers think a probable cause of the original event could have been a reaction between oxygen and some sort of foreign matter—the nature of which has not been determined—in the tank itself which heated the oxygen at a rate which led the pressure to rise faster than the relief valve could contain it. "They feel this caused the rupture of a yet-to-be identified component-tubing, a fitting, a valve or the oxygen tank itself—which carried away adjacent redundant systems, resulting in the loss of all three fuel cells systems." Before it can re-enter earth's atmosphere, Apollo 13 must first jettison the lunar lander, Aquarius, which has powered it home, and also get rid of the damaged service module. Special procedures are required in both cases, and it was a down to the wire race to see if the procedures could be worked out. Several times during the day Lovell reminded ground controllers he had to have the instructions so he and his crew could check them out. By late evening, a note of impatience had crept into his voice. "We've got to realize we've got to establish a worklist," Lovell told the Houston Space Center. "We can't just wait around up here. We've got to . . . get the people asleep. So take that into consideration. . . ." Shortly thereafter, they began the long readout of figures that could spell life or death to the space fliers. "I know, Jim, we're very conscious of that," said controller Vance Brand. "We should be ready to go in another five minutes, that's all I can say." Because of concern over whether Apollo 13 could get home safely, officials had held off announcing any welcoming plans for them. Arsonists strike high schools TOPEKA (UPI) — About two hours after an arsonist apparently caused heavy fire damage at the Highland Park High School auditorium Thursday, another fire set at Topeka High School was quickly snuffed out. "I'm not sure really what's Police dispersed- But with prospects for a safe landing growing brighter, the band aboard the prime recovery ship, the carrier Iwo Jima, disclosed Thursday night it would serenade the astronauts with a swinging version of "Aquarius," when they step aboard. No feminine spray can stop it. (Continued from page 1) teaching aides; one black director and one black counselor. The paper said, "This is the Declaration of the Black Students and parents of Lawrence, Kansas. Let this not be confused or read as any type of compromise or manifesto. This is our Declaration with no condition." Black literature, history and communications along with African history were also listed. A black KU student who gathered in Veterans Park said "None of this trouble would have ever happened if the school administration would have just let the black students have their cheerleader and queen." "It isn't too much to ask," he continued, "to have black students represented by a cheerleader and a queen." 20 KANSAN Apr.17 1970 Knox added that several school board members had been threatened. In addition to the black high school students and the several KU students gathered in the park with them, there was also a group of parents of black students present at the school throughout the day. The only reason, the KU student explained, there were any people from the University there was "to make sure nobody tries to beat on these kids." Later in the afternoon, a minor rock-throwing incident began across from Veteran's Park drawing nearly 30 helmeted policemen to the scene. No arrests were made and no one was reported injured. In an interview Knox said several bomb threats were reported throughout the school system in addition to the threat at Central. going on," said Fire Chief Floyd Dibbern following the second fire. Robert Jennings, Highland Park principal, said the fire occurred shortly after Black students disagreed with him over an assembly they wanted during "black awareness week" at the school. Dibbern said he didn't know yet how the fires were started, but he was sure they were set. The other odor The fire chief said a security officer snuffed the fire out at Topeka High. The fire there, the same as the one at Highland Park, started in the stage area of an auditorium. There was no damage at Topeka High School. Seven fire units were sent to the Highland Park fire which was quickly put out, although there was extensive smoke and fire damage to the floor, curtains, seats, and a piano. No damage estimates were available. Dibbern said several seats had been ripped by vandals, and there were reports of windows broken at the school. Joe Hays, a school security Police were called to the scene when fights broke out between black and white youths outside the school, but no one was injured. AMERICANA Haas 1029 mass. Help for the New Bride Come see our colorful selection. For a really appreciative shower gift, give kitchen accessories from . . . The new bride needs all the help she can get in the kitchen. Bright, exciting pots and pans make even inexperienced efforts look good. officer, was the only person injured in the fire. He suffered a slight case of smoke inhalation. He was in satisfactory condition at a Topeka hospital. Outlook dim for GOPs The "other" odor. It starts in the vaginal tract where no spray can work. You can't spray it away. And it's more offensive than external odor caused by perspiration. But to some, such as House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford, Mich., another reason for concern is equally and perhaps even more significant. WASHINGTON (UPI)—House Republican leaders are not happy about the forthcoming election. They admit privately that at best in November they'll make only "slight gains." And they may suffer losses if the economy, the war and domestic tensions take a turn for the worse. That's the reason you need Norforms*...the second deodorant." These tiny suppositories kill germs—stop odor in the vaginal tract for hours. Something no spray can do. And doctor-tested Norforms can be used as often as necessary. They insert easily, quickly. Get Norforms' protection for the "other" odor no spray can stop. The second deodorant. Norforms Atlantic Depot FREE NORFORMS MINI-PACK plus informative booklet! Write: Norwich Pharmacal Co., Depa- CN, Norwich, N.Y. 13815 (Enclose 25¢ for mailing, handling. Name___ Street___ City___ State___ Zip___ Don't forget your zip code. bos Relaxing is much more enjoyable when you've got a Big Shef. Try one soon and find out for yourself. — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS Rain dampens Relays despite track (See related pictures on pages 8 and 9) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.117 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, April 20, 1970 Hearty welcome greets astronauts SPACE CENTER HOUSTON (UPI) — Apollo 13 astronauts returned Sunday night to their loved ones in a cheery welcome home celebration of music, flags and firecrackers. James A. Lovell and Fred W. Haise and their wives, and John L. Sweigart and his parents flew to Houston aboard a Presidential backup plane as the nation honored them with a day of prayer and thanksgiving for their safe return. A crowd of 1,500 pressed around the astronauts after they landed at nearby Ellington Air Force Base at 9:57 p.m. (EST). Streets were lined with torch carrying neighbors at the homes of Lovell and Haise, where parties were held for the astronauts who survived a moon flight explosion 205,000 miles from earth Monday night. "Wheew, what a mission. Welcome home," said a banner waved at the astronauts at the airbase. Another read, "welcome home, Jim, Fred and John." The children of Lovell and Haise were in the crowd as was Lovell's aged mother, Blanche Lovell, who is confined to a wheelchair. Space agency administrators also were on hand including Thomas K. Mattingly, who lost his spot on the flight after exposure to German measles. His place was taken by Sweigert. Sweigert's two married sisters, Mrs. Virginia Spinelli, of Fort Collins, Colo., and Mrs. Betty Beerube of Lake Charles, La., also were at the airport. "Jim, Jack and Fred, welcome home," said Robert Girruth, director of the manned spacecraft center, as Americas' newest space heroes emerged from the plane. "We watched your landing on earth in the Pacific with considerable interest," he stated, "and we watched you in Hawaii when you were greeted by the (Continued to page 16) UDK News Roundup By United Press International U.S.charged with invasion MIAMI—Radio Havana says the remnants of a band of U.S.-equipped "hirelings" are being hunted in the mountains after an unsuccessful weekend invasion of Cuba. Quoting Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, the communique Sunday said two of the invaders were killed and three others captured after clashes Friday and Saturday with Cuban army and militia troops. Castro did not say Friday's invaders were Americans, but he maintained they were equipped with American-made weapons and had come from U.S. shores. Students disrupt trial SAIGON-A military court turned over the sedition trial of 21 students to the South Vietnamese Supreme Court today as defense attorneys and several hundred demonstrators had demanded. Fifteen of the youths, all medical and law students, are charged with treason for alleged pro-Communist activities earlier this year. Six are charged with activities harmful to the national interest. Laos involvement revealed WASHINGTON—Newly released congressional testimony Sunday revealed new aspects of U.S. involvement in Laos; the American ambassador there has been directing a secret military operation, and a clandestine U.S. group in Thailand has been training and equipping Laotian troops. The embassy-headquartered operation in Vientiane, called "project 404," involves part of the 2,000-man U.S. mission in Laos. The ambassador supervises more than 100 military attaches, some of whom fly with the Royal Laotian Air Force and directs its pilots to targets. In addition, the ambassador personally* reviews air strikes in Laos by U.S. planes sent in from Thailand and Vietnam. Cattle drive threatened ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.—Great Western Land and Cattle Co. officials today said they had "no doubts" of resolving a threat by the historically peace-loving Navajo tribe to bar a modern day cattle drive from Indian lands. --- KU faculty vote to be taken on team teaching of ROTC By DAN OSBORNE Kansan Staff Writer By September 1, 1971, ROTC at the University of Kansas might be team taught by ROTC instructors and instructors from the College of Liberal Arts. By April 21, nearly 500 KU faculty members will have returned ballots specifying a Yes or No vote in response to an ROTC team teaching proposal formulated by Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science, and the Temporary ROTC Committee. Lujan said the plan is designed to eliminate the overlap between ROTC courses and courses taught in the College of Liberal Arts. For example, ROTC students taking a course in military history are subjected to similar material in College history courses, Lujan said. But under the team teaching plan the ROTC course could be integrated into a history course taught in the College. The courses which could not be integrated, such as Naval Ship Systems, would require team teaching Lujan explained. This means the course would be taught by an ROTC instructor and an instructor from the College who is teaching a related course. (Continued to page 16) Photo by Marilyn McMullen Unsettling beauty . . . The light areas in this photo, taken at 4:30 a.m. Sunday, show the steam and other gasses emitted from the Cooperative Farmers Chemical Association plant southeast of Lawrence. The Co-op plant, said Jack Noon, director of Kansas City air pollution control, insufficiently controls the formulation of toxic nitric acid, which results from the oxidation of nitrogen released by the plant and the water vapor of the air. (See related Earth Day story on page 146.) - ALAN GRIFFITH & CYNTHIA WILLIAMS Photo by Randy Leffingwell Peter, Paul and Mary 'reaching out' Peter, Paul and Mary, who still know how to communicate to college crowds, "reached out" to an audience of 11,000 Saturday night in Allen Field House. The trio overcame the distance between themselves and the audience to present a warm, exciting and often humorous performance. Environment study begins Earth Week, a week of environmental study at KU, will begin today with a lecture by KU geologist Paul Hilpman beginning at 4:30 p.m. in Room 428 Lindley Hall. The title of Hilpman's lecture is "The Role of Geology in the Environmental Crisis." Tuesday, an open class will be held at 3:30 p.m. in 411 Summerfield. The class has been entitled "An Environmental Law Seminar on Industrial and Automobile Pollution." Among those who will be present are James Hughes, regional head of public relations for General Motors, and John Anderson, vice-president and general manager for Co-op farm chemicals. A 9:30 a.m. open forum in the Kansas Union Ballroom will highlight Wednesday's activities. The forum is entitled "The Politics of Ecology," or "Is the Eco-Movement a Diversionary Tactic?" or "Can Capitalism Get the Job Done?" A panel, lecture and seminar will make up Thursday's program. The day's activities will begin with a 9:30 a.m. panel in Hoch Auditorium followed by an 11 a.m. lecture, "Air, Water and 2 KANSAN Apr. 20 1970 The seminar, "The Energy Crisis," will also be held in Hoch and will begin at 2:30 p.m. Friday's schedule includes two open classes. The first will begin at 2:30 p.m. in Smith Hall and is entitled "Theological Perspective on the Ecological Crisis." The second open class will be a senior economics seminar on population which will begin at 3:30 p.m. in 306 Summerfield. Saturday's program will be conducted entirely outside the classroom. A canoe trip up the Kaw River from Perry to Lawrence will begin at dawn. Activities will continue throughout the day, highlighted by a 5 p.m. outing in South Park which will include a picnic with live music. Activity Sunday will be limited to a Community workshop on environmental quality. The session will be held at 2:30 p.m. at West Junior High School. Monday, April 27, will include Third parties favored The political history of Kansas shows that the state has been favorable toward third parties. One independent campaign which attracted nationwide attention was that of William Allen White, a 10:30 lecture in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union on "Ecological Effects of Man in History." After a 4:30 p.m. lecture in Lindley Hall by Edward Zeller, professor of physics and geology, on "Global Effects of Atmospheric Pollution," a panel discussion on air quality in Lawrence will be held at 8 p.m. in the Lawrence High School cafeteria. SHAPE UP Do it in a shaped blazer like this one. Hopsack that wrinkles less, keeps its shape through the longest cruises. Tailored with the 70 shape—lean and clean. Just about the perfect jacket for a traveling summer. The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 Tuesday, April 28, will conclude Earth Week. Paul Ehrlich, professor at Stanford University and author of "The Population Bomb," will speak at 8 p.m. in Allen Field House. explained, "is to promote interfaith relations." "The Hillel chapter," Worob said, "decided an open Seder would be an excellent way to allow interested people to learn about Passover." KU chapter of Hillel to sponsor a Seder "Seder is traditionally celebrated in the home," Worob said. "A ceremony in Lawrence would give Jewish students who can't go home an opportunity to celebrate the holiday." The University of Kansas chapter of Hillel, in cooperation with the KU Endowment Association, will sponsor a Seder (Passover dinner) Wednesday, April 22, at 6 p.m. in the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, Allen Worob, associate faculty adviser to Hillel, said Sunday. Representatives from all other religious organizations on the Hill have been invited to attend the Seder, Worob said. "The reason for having the Seder as an open ceremony." Worob Excellent current and long-range opportunity for man with Art history or Art background. Previous sales experience desirable but not necessary. Must be capable of dealing effectively with college students and faculty. Sales Representative Salary and commission plus benefits. Automobile provided. Extensive travel. Send confidential resume to: Ferdinand ROTEN GALLERIES 123 West Mulberry Street Baltimore, Maryland 21201 SUPERSHEFO S It's SUPER SHEF! Tastier than a regular burger— Faster than you can make it at home— Better than a three course meal— Super Shef! Super Shef. Made of ¼ pound pure beef hamburger, catsup, lettuce, tomato, pickle, onion rings and creamy dressing, all on a toasted bun. Next time you're in Burger Chef look up. It might be the mighty Super Shef. TELEPHONE Free Kite Get a free Super Shef Hi- Flier Kite with every Super Shef you order. Supply Limited This week only while supply lasts. BURGER CHEF Family Restaurants (c) NATIONAL PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS, INC. 1970 Campus briefs Plans being made for camp Plans are now being made for the 33rd session of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp which will be held on the University of Kansas campus from June 21 to July 26. For economic reasons, the camp will be five weeks in length instead of the usual six. Camp director Russell L. Wiley said the shortened session would in no way minimize the overall program of the camp, however. The base fee for the camp is $425 which includes room and board. A special fee for all campers living at home will be $100. The camp has grown from its original status as a band camp to a camp that now includes speech, journalism, science, French, German, Spanish and Latin as well as music and art. German prof will speak here A lecture in contemporary German literature will be delivered by Frederich-Wilhelm Wentzlaff-Eggebert professor at the University of Mainz in Germany, April 27. The lecture, entitled "Deutsche Gegenwaltsliterature, Ost und West" will be at 2 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. 'Grand Duke' needs costumers Positions are now open on the costume crew of the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Company for the production of "The Grand Duke," to be presented May 6-9. All supplies and equipment will be supplied by the Company. Interested persons may apply by calling VI2-9028 any evening before 7 p.m. ROTC society elects officers The University of Kansas chapter of Scabbard and Blade, a national Tri-Service ROTC honorary society, elected Wednesday night its officers for next year. Elected were: president-Captain, Greg Larson, Tulsa junior (NROTC); Vice-president-First Lieutenant, Donald Huggins, St. Louis senior (AROTC); Treasurer, Lee Chapin, Springfield, Mass. junior (NROTC); Secretary, Clinton Laing, Topeka junior (NROTC); and Pledge Trainer, Porter Johnston, Dallas junior (NROTC). Discussion on calcium set Dr. Harvey Drucker of the Battelle Northwest Laboratories in Richland, Wash., will speak in the KU department of biochemistry Thursday. He will discuss the roles of calcium in thermolysin. His speech is set for 11:30 a.m. in 233 Hayworth Hall. Lecturer to speak on novel Visiting humanities lecturer, Germaine Bree, will speak about the book, "The Stranger," at 2:30 p.m., April 22 in the Kansas Union Forum Room. "The Stranger" was written by the late Nobel Prize winner, Albert Camus. KU prof to head conference Three professors from the University of Kansas department of history have been invited to attend the Biennial Conference of Scholars sponsored by the Harry S. Truman Library Institute, April 10-11, in Independence, Mo. The professors are Grant K. Goodman, Donald R. McCoy and Theodore A. Wilson. McCoy will be the chairman of the conference, which will deal with the theme "The Administration of Occupied Areas: The American Experience, 1943-1955." Despite the past troubled week at Lawrence High School (LHS), no violence was reported at the Junior-Senior Prom Saturday night, April 18. LHS prom peaceful, quiet Superintendent of Lawrence Schools, Carl Knox, said that school would be held as normal today. The trouble, which erupted April 13 on the LHS campus, was a protest to the delay in action on demands presented by black students calling for fair elections of cheerleaders and queens, including a separate black queen and attendants. prevent a confrontation of black and white students and to break up fights. Lawrence police, highway patrol and sheriff's deputies were called to the campus April 15 to Tension was still present April 16 when about 100 black students, some of them armed with clubs and tire tools, were dispersed by police who threatened to use tear gas. Staff and faculty members were on duty Friday but students stayed home. Numerous bomb threats were received by the school system, Knox said, but none of the buildings were damaged. School administrators complained about outside agitators. Knox said the presence of people who were not LHS students aggravated the situation. A black KU student who was at the LHS campus Thursday said the only reason they (KU students) were there was "to make sure nobody tried to beat on the black students who were protesting." ACCIDENT TOLLS NEW YORK—Accidents of various kinds injured 13.4 million persons in the United States in 1968, says the Insurance Information Institute. The economic loss, including that from highway accidents and fires, was estimated at a record $25.98 billion. If you think you're getting a great shave with a razor blade feel your face. A razor blade can give you a good, close shave on the easy parts of your face. Like your cheeks. Because your cheeks are almost flat, like a razor blade. But what about the hard-to-shave parts of your face? Feel your neck To give you a close, comfortable shave on your neck, we designed the Norelco Tripleheader with 18 self-sharpening rotary blades that shave in every direction. Feel how your beard grows down on part of your neck? And up on another part? (Some beards even grow sideways.) Feel your chin The Noreleco Tripleheader has 3 Microgroove shaving heads that float to follow the curves of your chin. The heads go in where your chin goes in, and out where your chin goes out. To give you a really close shave, without irritating your skin. (In independent tests, the Tripleheader shaved as close or closer than a stainless steel blade in 2 out of 3 shaves.) Feel your upper lip The hard thing about shaving your upper lip with a razor blade is shaving close enough. Again, the unique Norelco design lets you maneuver around your nose and mouth, to shave your beard in every direction. Feel your sideburns The biggest problem with shaving sideburns is to get them straight, and even on both sides. The Norelco Tripleheader has a pop-up trimmer that lets you see exactly what you're trimming. So it's a lot harder to make a mistake. Now, run your hand over your whole face. If your beard feels uneven, maybe you should be shaving with a Norelco Tripleheader. It comes in two models. The Cord Model Tripleheader (with easy flip-top cleaning). And the new Rechargeable Tripleheader (the shaver that gives you up to twice as many shaves per charge as any other rechargeable). Either one will give your face a whole new feel. Norelco you can't get any closer $ \textcircled{1} $ 1970 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017. New Post Office gets flag from Washington A U.S. flag that flew over two Washington D.C. buildings was presented by Congressman Larry Winn Jr. at the dedication of the Jayhawk Post Office substation Friday afternoon. Winn presented the flag, which flew over the Capitol Building and the Post Office Department building, to Lawrence Postmaster John B. Harris. Donald Harrel, area postal service officer, told approximately 100 persons, including several Kansas postmasters, that the new facility would help process the 140,000 pieces of mail that pass through Lawrence every day. Apr. 20 1970 KANSAN 3 MORNINGSTAR WEDNESDAY NIGHT One Dollar Admission at One Dollar Per Pitcher The DRAUGHT HOUSE 8:00-12:00 804 W. 24th KANSAN COMMENT Paying the price for progress Progress. There was a time when, if you threw a pop bottle out your car window, someone would pick it up and cash it in for two cents. A lot of children used to earn candy money that way. Then there was progress. You would throw a steel pop can out the window and it would lay there for five or ten years then deteriorate. Then there was more progress. Today you can throw out an aluminum can and it will still be there in the year 2470-500 years from now. If Columbus had thrown aluminum cans out of the Nina, Pinta and the Santa Maria, they might still be lying in San Salvador today. There was a time when cities were surrounded by empty countryside. People had living space then and they would share it with five or six or seven or eight or more children. Progress. Then there was progress. Suburban housing developments grew where wheat and corn and tomatoes had once grown. The farms moved away and raised more housing developments. Progress. There was a time when the drive from Lawrence to Kansas City seemed to take forever even when traveling as fast as 45 miles per hour. Then there was progress and cars were swifter and easier to handle. The trip to Kansas City was shorter. Then there was more progress. Today cars travel easily at 70 miles per hour, steer true and stop quick. Everyone has one—or two—or three. The trip to Kansas City is quick now—once you escape the Lawrence traffic and until you run into the Sunflower traffic and the DeSoto traffic and the Olathe traffic and the Shawnee Mission traffic and the Kansas City traffic. Progress. There was a time when you could drive west to Denver. As you penetrated deeper into the Colorado foothills you would rise up over a hill and look expectantly for that first glimpse of Denver and the Rocky Mountains. Then there was progress. There were canned foods, bagged foods, boxed foods, frozen foods, paper mills, soap mills, steel mills, oil refineries, automobile factories. Now as you approach Denver and the Mighty Rockies you rise up to the summit of a hill and there—spread before you in all its majestic grandeur—hangs the smoke from Denver's progress blotting out the Rockies and the horizon. And over horizons hangs the evidence of Kansas City's progress and St. Louis' progress and Chicago's progress and Los Angeles' and San Francisco's and Dallas' and all the others. Progress. There was progress measured in dead fish, dead birds, dead animals. There was progress measured in asthma cases and highway fatalities. There was progress measured in overcrowded schools, overcrowded highways, overcrowded cities and overcrowded suburbs. Progress? A few cynics and cranks began to complain. Like most prophets of doom they were ignored. They were ignored until the doom they had prophesized became apparent, then everyone began to notice. The President espoused ecology. The magazines gave it the cover story treatment. New cars were buried, cans dumped on the lawns of canners and there were marches. Now everyone talks about ecology. Earth Week begins today. Maybe this awareness will bring more progress—a different kind of progress. Maybe it will bring—instead of a deadly progress—a livable progress. Then there will be progress. —Mike Rieke Earth Week April 20 to April 27 HURY Photo by Mike Rieke Smog The smog Comes from little car pipes. It sits—choking all in harbor and city in silent bunches—and won't move on. Mike Rieke hearing voices— To the editor: Please do not throw marshmallows at me. Just to make sure that this is a democratic university and that a difference of opinion does exist here, I propose that Professors Velvet and Litto be fired! David L. Brady Shawnee, freshman $$ \*\*\* $$ To the editor: I would like to comment on your "Pressing the Press" editorial. The Journal Company of Milwaukee owns a dynasty, the only major newspaper in the city. The company owns the morning Sentinel and the evening Journal. No other newspaper has been able to compete with it; therefore, the Journal had little to lose by suspending cartoonist Bill Sanders (Incidently, he is the best cartoonist they have ever had). The Kaleidoscope is an underground newspaper, similar to the Vortex, handled by high school and college students and local newswriters. The newspaper became notorious only when the high schools began confiscating papers from students who had them in their hands or in their lockers around the time of the "Milwaukee 14" incident. The Milwaukee Journal did not speak out against this confiscation but did speak out against the Kaleidoscope. It seems to me that the "liberal" Milwaukee Journal is hardly that. What does the Journal have to fear anyway? Joanne Lewis Milwaukee, sophomore THE UNIVERSITY DAILY An All-American college newspaper Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except for publication in The Kansas Daily and for a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without prior notice. Postmaster responsible for ensuring necessary those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Reserves. Member Associated Collegiate Press T REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10177 TABLE TOWER KANSAN REVIEWS CONCERTS: warm, exciting By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer Peter Yarrow, Paul Stookey and Mary Travers successfully overcame the distance between themselves and the audience Saturday night in monstrous Allen Field House to present a warm, exciting and often humorous performance. Peter, the more personable of the trio, gave the standout performance of the concert in his moments alone with the audience. He sarcastically commented on the distortion of the meaning of the lyrics of his songs, such as "Puff the Magic Dragon," and then enjoined the audience of 11,000 strong in the chorus of "Day is Done." Paul Stookey also had his brief moment alone with the audience but didn't come across as well as he has in the past. The concert gave a brief glimpse back into the recent history of folk music, and surprised many who had anticipated that the folk trio had lost its ability to communicate with a college audience. Peter, Paul and Mary were around when it all began eight years ago, asking the questions in Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind." They are still around today and still questioning the relevancy of old traditions and society in songs such as "The Great Mandella" and "Too Much of Nothing." But although much of the group's material is political in content they don't use their concerts as lecture podiums for their ideology. Instead, their ideas are wrapped up in some very good numbers, songs such as "There's a Man Goin' Round Takin' Names," a strong song performed by Peter through which the message comes across better than through a tongue lashing or through very poor material disguised by popular political comment. The trio also performed many tender ballads such as "Motherless Child" and "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face." The concert presented a panorama of the group's development and the recent surge in the development of folk music as they performed their most popular songs from "If I Had A Hammer" to the more recent "Leaving on a Jet Plane." But it was more than just a concert featuring the folk trio. It was a concert in which Peter, Paul and Mary reached out to the audience and encouraged their participation in the performance, too. RECORDS By WILLIAM D. LAFFLER By WILLIAM D. LAFFLER NEW YORK (UPI) — Record companies are able to get more mileage from hit songs that have disappeared from the charts by putting them in new packages. This technique has its good points. It enables the fellow who has just bought a stereo set the opportunity of buying several hits on a single LP. "The Sandpipers" Greatest Hits," is a good example of this kind of packaging. This trio has been consistently good over the years and those who have collected Best sellers Fiction THE FRENCH LIEUENANT'S WOMAN-John Fowles TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT—Graham Greene LOVE STORY—Erich Segal TUY SANG THE GODFATHER--Mario Puzo THE MAMLER'S PLANET--S aul I Bellow THE GANG THAT COULDNT SHOOT STRAIGHT-Jimmy Breslin THE ANDERSON T A P E S-Lawrence Sanders SANDERS THE HOUSE ON THE STRAND— Depth House A BEGGAR IN JERUSALEM—Elie Wiesel THE INHERITORS-Harold Robbins Newspaper Nonfiction EVERYTHING YOU HAVE AL- WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SKX-Y- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS—Antonia Fraser THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1904-1905, NO. 13 THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1968—joe McGinniss THE GRAHAM KERR COOKBOOK -Graham Kerr THE AMERICAN HERTAGE DIC TIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANG UAGE—William Morris, editor-in-chief THE PETER PRINCIPLE—Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull RUFFLES AND FLOURISHES—Liz Carpenter IN SOMEONE'S SHADOW—Rod McKuep PRESENT AT THE CREATION—Dean Acheson their albums probably don't want to part with them. But the newcomer may not want to buy more than one of The Sandpipers' albums so in this reprise they will find an excellent buy. "Guantanamera" was one of The Sandpipers' biggest hits and naturally it is a highlight of this collection which includes "Cuanido Sali de Cuba," "Yesterday," "Quando M'Tnamore" and others. Tanks were first used effectively by the British in World War I. "The ROAD"—An award-winning Chinese film, presented by the East Asian Studies Department. Directed by Li Hsing; 1968. (8 p.m., Dyche Auditorium) RE-OPENS AFTER FORTY YEARS . . See The Greatest Comedy Genius of All Time . . . Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" United Artists On campus this week **STUDENT RECITAL—Robert Waugh, violin. (8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall)** MONDAY TUESDAY "THINGS TO COME" (KU Film Society)—A British fantasy of life in the future, based upon H. G. Wells' novel The Shape of Things to Come. Directed by William Cameron Menzies; 1936. (7 p.m. only, Forum Room) "THE MAN WHO COULD WORK MIRACLES" (KU Film Society) - Another British fantasy from a Wells story. This one is about an obscure clerk with amazing powers. Directed by Alexander Korda; 1936. (9 p.m. only, Forum Room) "SAN FRANCISCO" (Special Films)-A magnificent piece of movie nostalgia: Clark Gable, Jeanette Macdonald, Spencer Tracy and a spectacular earthquake. Directed by W. S. Van Dyke with all the glamour and polish M-G-M could spare; 1936. (7 and 9, Dye Auditorium) THE Hillcrest Also segments from 'THE FURTHER PERILS OF LAUREL & HARDY" Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Adults 1.50, Children 75c ENDS TUESDAY THE Hillcrest3 HUMANITIES LECTURE — Germaine Bree, professor at the University of Wisconsin will speak on "Beckett's Strange Voyager: Fiction and the Modern Consciousness." (8 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) STUDENT RECITAL—A performance of original compositions by Tony Cius. (8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall) WEDNESDAY “THE MAN WHO HAD HIS HAIR CUT SHORT” (Classical COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION consider the possibilities NATALIE WOOD ROBERT CULP The first successful application of an artificial heart-lung machine was in 1953. BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON & TED & TED & TED CA OB CE T R E. A E I C ACE. BOB & TED. R University of Auckland Auckland Uni Place 4327 G University of Auckland Auckland Uni Place 4327 Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Adults $1.50 Hillcrest Apr. 20 1970 KANSAN 5 THE HOLL in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11l. **STUDENT RECITAL—Nancy Watson, piano. (8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall)** Film)—A Flemish picture about a teacher's slowly growing obsession with one of his students. Directed by Andre Delvaux; 1966. (7 and 9, Woodruff Auditorium) THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP THURSDAY "GOLD DIGGERS OF 1933" Matinee Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15 - 9:35 SPRING WEEK (Special Films)—A sumptuous musical with Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, Ginger Rogers, and, of course, choreography by Busy Berkely. Directed by Mervyn LeRoy. (7 and 9, Dyche Auditorium) THURSDAY STUDENT RECITAL—Steve Robinson, voice. (8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall) WINNER OF ACADEMY AWARD BEST PICTURE A JEROME HELLMAN-JOHN SCHLESINGER PRODUCTION DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" COLOR by DeLuxe Starts THE Hillcrest United Artists Wednesday JANE FONDA BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR GIG YOUNG SUSANNAH YORK NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN IN waterMANTRUO goldieHAWN Inario BERRAMI cactus FLOWER TECHNICOLOR Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 THE Hillcrest2 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 59TH AND IWAKA Adults $1.50 Children 75c ENDS TOMORROW! Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone W-5-1065 walter MATTRIAN goldie HAWN inario barronan cactus FLOWER TECHNICOLOR* Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 ENDS TOMORROW! NOMINATED FOR TEN ACADEMY AWARDS RICHARD BURTON as HENRY VIII GENEVIEVE BUJOLD as ANNE BOLEYN IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days GP "Epic battle of the sexes!" — Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times RICHARD BURTON as HENRY VIII GENEVIEVE BUJOLD as ANNE BOLEYN IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days GP ©2 A UNIVERSAL PICTURE STARTS WED. Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Adults 1.50, Child .75 SPRING WEEK Granada TREATURE ...Telephone VI 3-5788 KING AND QUEEN Granada THRATRE...Telephone V1 3-5780 Three marooned astronauts. And only 55 minutes left to rescue them. While the whole world watches and waits... MAROONED STARTS WEDNESDAY! SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-3-1945 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1965 Local bomb, arson attempts made Causative factors of violence examined By JEFF GOUDIE Kansan Staff Writer The wave of bomb and arson attempts which is sweeping the nation has not left Lawrence and Kansas City untouched. In view of predictions that this sort of activity could reach epidemic proportions, an examination of some of the possible causative factors could be helpful. According to U.S. News and World Report, the Federal Bureau of Investigations was known to have warned the White House six months ago that a wave of terrorist bombings was to be expected. Time magazine reported that the Revolutionary Action Movement, the Students for a Democratic Society and the Black Panthers have been sending out bomb making instructions to member groups since December. Across the nation reports indicated a rash of bombings. The trial of H. Rap Brown was moved as an indirect result of explosions. In Manhattan, a townhouse which served as a bomb factory for the Weatherman faction of the S.D.S. blew up and killed Diana Oughon, 28, and Ted Gold, both members of that militant faction. Gold, Black Panther Robert Collier and other members of the SDS Weatherman faction spent time last July in Cuba. There is a school of thought that links this fact and Fidel Castro with at least some of the recent bombings. Sen. James O. Eastland (D-Miss.) said that there is a "direct Resolution sent to board of directors Louis T. Hurt, president of the Missouri Federation of Teachers, said the disruptive and destructive acts that have been taking place in Kansas City schools for the past week must be confronted. In a resolution Hurt sent to the Acting Superintendent of the Board of Directors, he said such acts must be met with "firm actions by the Board of Directors." The resolution was presented to the Board of Directors in an executive session held April 16. the building to clear the building immediately so that the rest of the students who want an education can get an education so that the teachers can do the job that has been delegated to them and so that the administrators can also do their job." In the resolution, Hurt said, "The Kansas City Federation of Teachers Union, Local 691, hereby recommends to the Acting Superintendent of Schools that all principals be instructed, in cases where the students are congregating and attempting to disrupt, that the proper authorities be contacted and brought into BSU newspaper fate still being considered Discussion of art, music scheduled They will speak in a History 80 class at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Two faculty members from Lincoln University, Columbia, Mo., will visit the University of Kansas to discuss Afro-American Art and Music. Visitors are welcomed to the class. Robert Lee Mitchell will discuss Afro-American music and illustrate his lecture with selections on the piano. He is assistant professor of music and supervising teacher of music in the laboratory high school at Lincoln University. James Callas Parks, head of the department of art at Lincoln University, will show slides and discuss Afro-American Art as a part of the course giving emphasis to Afro-American culture. The course on Afro-American History and Culture has been organized by Lorenzo Greene, a professor at Lincoln University. Apr. 20 1970 6 KANSAN SHAW AUTO SERVICE John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and president of the BSU, said the paper is still under consideration by the Attorney General's office, and publication by the KU Printing Service would have to wait until Kent Frizzell, Attorney General, delivers an opinion on the paper. Your headquarters Spearman said the BSU is considering printing the paper elsewhere. The first issue of the paper was printed in Wichita, after the printers at the KU Printing Service refused to print the paper. The fate of the controversial Black Students Union (BSU) newspaper, Harambee, is still uncertain. for Spearman said the cost incurred in printing the paper elsewhere, was a factor in delaying the publication of the third issue of the BSU paper. When questioned concerning his arrest at Lawrence High School April 13, Spearman said he will enter a plea of not-guilty. Spearman is currently free on bail. MI DAS Spearman said he was at the high school at the request of blacks at the school. He said that earlier in the year the BSU had volunteered help, but was waiting for a call from the blacks at the high school. Spearman mufflers and shocks 612 N.2nd St. 843-8943 said the BSU had promised to help the blacks at the high school when they were ready to act Spearman made no comment concerning any future action by the BSU at the high school. CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MAN BLOOD SWEAT & TEARS INCLUDING I LOVE YOU MORE CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MAN BLOOD SWEAT & TEARS INCLUDING I LOVE YOU MORE THAN YOU'LL EVER KNOW I CAN'T QUIT HER SOMETHIN GOIN ON HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. and definite link" between Cuba and the bomb attempts. He accused Castro of "exporting revolution" in an attempt to overthrow the existing government. A conflicting opinion was reported in U.S. News and World Report: "Castro does spur violence but he does not create it." I am just a girl who loves to drink coffee. The girls girl watchers watch dig our watchworks Country House Country House at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown V1 3-5755 Graduation Announcements may be picked up Tuesday, April 21 & Wednesday, April 22 at the kansas union BOOKSTORE New all-weather track rescues success of the rain-drenched 45th Kansas Relays By BRUCE CARNAHAN Kansan Sports Editor Water puddles covered the infield area and colorful umbrellas, plastic bags, hats and whatever were the order of the day for faithful spectators at Memorial Stadium — but the rain-soaked 45th Kansas Relays went off as scheduled Saturday thanks to the Jayhawks' new Jim Hershberger Track and its all-weather Tartan surface. A crowd of 3,500, pelleted by over $1\frac{1}{2}$ inches of rainfall, braved gusty winds and tornado alerts to see the dedication ceremonies of the new track and take in the always-exciting KU track and field carnival. Despite the downpour and the miserable weather, it was otherwise a good meet as a top-notch field turned in many creditable performances, though only one record was shattered in Saturday afternoon's running events. New Zealander Rex Maddaford provided the only record-breaking performance when he clipped 12 seconds of the existing Relays record in the three-mile run by turning in an excellent 13:38.3 clocking. Carlos and Matson Win Olympians John Carlos and Randy Matson both turned in outstanding performances to outclass the field in their respective events. Matson heaved the 16-pound shot put 67-9/2 to defeat KU's dynamic duo of Karl Salb and Steve Wilhelm. Salb, NCAA outdoor and indoor king, captured second with a toss of 66-4. Em- KANSAN Sports poria State's Al Feuerbach jipped the shot 62-6 to nip Wilhelm for third place honors. Wilhelm's best was 62-3. The controversial Carlos had expressed hopes of running a 9.2 for the Relays earlier in the week—and the ex-San Jose sprint ace nearly achieved his desire while racing to a record-tying 9.3 time in the open 100-yard dash. Pacific Coast Club Sweeps Mile The famed Glenn Cunningham mile featured a 1-2-3 sweep by a strong Pacific Coast Club contingent of John Mason, Tom Von Ruden and John Lawson. Mason, former Fort Hays State distance king, nipped his two teammates with a 4.00.9 recording. Von Ruden broke the tape in 4:01.5 to finish second and Lawson, ex-Ku performer, was a close third in 4:01.8. The other mile event, the Masters Mile for men 35 years old and over, saw favorite Jim Hersh- berger slip to third place with a 4:54.0 finish. Hershberger, who donated $125,000 for the completion of the synthetic track which helped salvage the Relays during the steady drenching, was out-distanced by Jan Howell and Hal Higdon, Howell, like Hershberger an ex-Jayhawk competitor, won in 4:40.1, only a tenth of a second off his predicted time. Higdon, competing for the Chicago Track Club grabbed the runner-up position with a 4:49.8 mark. Gray Bests Reaves in Dash Missouri's Mel Gray and KU's Phil Reaves staged an exciting dual in the university-college 100-yard dash. Gray, clocked in 9.5 as was Reaves, grabbed another first place to go along with his Texas Relays crown and Reaves was forced to settle for a second place finish. KU swept the pole vault event with Jan Johnson and Bill Hatcher providing the winning efforts. Johnson defended last year's Relays crown with a winning hoist of 16-0 and Hatcher grabbed second with a 15-6 vault. NEBRASKA NESKY STATE Photo by Jim Hoffman Bringing home a Relays record Brian McElroy passes K-State's Bob Barratti and moves in on NU's Dan Morran in route to anchoring KU to a new Relays record of 3:18.3 in the sprint medley. The English long bow used during the 100 Years War had a range up to 400 yards. 'Hawks Capture Relay Win "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th Apr. 20 1970 KANSAN 7 "MOORE"BURGER Hawks Capture Kelay Win Paul Mattingly, Randy Julian, Mike Solomon, and Doug Smith carried the 'Hawks to a winning 9:59.2 time in the distance event, K-State's premier half-miler anchored the Wildcats to a 7:31.6 win in the two-mile. The Jayhawks turned in a 7:36.4—good enough for second in front of Nebraska and Drake. Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 小熊宝宝 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 K Jon Callen of KU ran away with the 3,000 meter steeplechase with a time of 9:10.8. Former Oklahoma State distance runner Tom Laubert was second in 9:13.5 and Larbi Oukada (Ft Hays), who won Thursday's six-mile event in record-shattering time, was third in 9:17.4. Jeff Bennett, of Oklahoma Christian, bested the field in the two-day decathlon competition with a Relays record-performance of 7.704 points. Russ Hodge, former world record-holder, led the field throughout the decathlon's first nine events but was forced to scratch from the final event, the 1,500 meter, in order to catch a plane back home to Los Angeles. Jayhawk Trio Provides Points Salb broke the Relays record in the college-university division shot put with a 66-3 throw. The distance eclipsed the old mark of $65-11_{2}$ set by Randy Matson in 1965 while competing for Texas A & M. A recap of Friday's events saw the Jayhawk's Salb, Wilhelm and Doug Knop provide the points for KU. Salb and Wilhelm joined Knop, the third member of the titanic 'Hawk trio, to pull off a 1-2-3 sweep of the discus. Knop's 182-5 heave was good for the top spot and Salb and Wilhelm finished second and third respectively with tosses of 177-2 and 174-5. 63 Photo by Jim Hoffman Rain drops keep falling . . . Perhaps the most spectacular moment for KU followers came Friday when freshman Brian McElroy's 1:48.2 half-mile anchor pushed the Jayhawks past K-State and Nebraska in the sprint medley relay. The Jayhawks' performance was a new Relays record and shoved Oklahoma's 1965 mark of 3:19.5 out of the Relays' record book. Six states border on Oklahoma Texas, New Mexico, Colorado Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas. 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 For Complete Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. St. VI 3-3012 SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Recreation—April 21 1. Coffeehouse Director Forums----April 21 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity 2. Featured Speakers Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Fine Arts—April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 6. Art Forums Chairman Summer Board Summer Board (Summer 1970)—April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc. Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. Relays '70 P Doug Knop strc Brian McElroy anchor's sprint medley relay team WICHITA WTC TRACK CLU Hershberger after running on his track [Image of a woman smiling at a desk with an open book]. Relay Queens enjoy rainy vie Photos By Ron Bishop, Jim Ry MICHIGAN John Carlos tying Relays reco P Doug Knop strains in winning discus 100M MARATHON MARIA LUNZONA enjoy rainy view from press box hop, Jim Ryun, Greg Sorber 8 ing Relays record in 100-yard dash 12th mile water stop for marathon runner Jeff Wray 10 Rain doesn't stop fans from watching 45th KU Relays NEBRASE Come on and give me that thing . . . KU's Jim Neilhouse waits for the baton exchange from teammate Mike Solomon. Neilhouse ran the second leg of the four-mile relay team which posted a second place time of 16:37.6 behind Bowling Green's winning mark of 16:35.6. Still seeking younger Kivisto Hawks land backline aces KU basketball coach Ted Wens announced last week the signing of Dave Taynor, a 6-31 sharp shooter from Bethalto High School, Bethalto, Ill., to a KU basketball letter-of-intent. Sought by more than 200 colleges and universities, Taylor was named to three all-state teams in Illinois after the past season. He averaged 27.8 points a game in his senior year and totaled 1,815 points in his high school career. Bethalto coach Jim Carey said Taynor was "the finest shooter he had ever seen." Another recent KU signee is Glen Russell, a 6-3 forward from Kansas 5-A champion Wyandotte. Russell, who is capable of playing guard, has been described by his coach as being the most valuable 10 to 12 point-per-game player he has ever seen. NU, Cyclones nip KU golfers In triangular match play, the KU golf team won only one of four matches against Nebraska and Iowa State Friday and Saturday. The Jayhawks lost to host Nebraska $10_{1/2}-4_{1/2}$ but defeated Iowa State 12-3. Low man for KU was INFLATED SAND SALEM, Ore. (UPI)—Sand and gravel is worth $1.25 a cubic yard at the gravel pit, according to the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries. By the time it leaves the pit its value has increased 10 times, and when the material is put in steel-reinforced concrete buildings, its value has increased more than 100 times the original cost. Craig DeLongy, Derby sophomore, with a 74 over 18 holes. He was followed by Jack Rogers, Keokuk, Iowa, senior and Jim Dennerline, Paola freshman, with 75. George Burgland, Galesburg, Ill., senior, shot a 77 and Bill Keck, Shawnee freshman, had a 78. In team match play at Ames, Iowa, KU lost to Iowa State 8-7 and Nebraska $10^{\frac{1}{2}}-4\frac{1}{2}$. Dennerline was low for the Jayhawks with a 78 despite poor weather. Other KU scorers were Rogers, 82, DeLongy, 83, Keck, 85 and Burgland, 91. "We played pretty well at Nebraska in decent weather but we just didn't do well in the poor conditions in Ames," Norton said. KU coach Wilbur Norton described his teams performance as "just fair." 10 KANSAN Apr. 20 1970 Next action for the Jayhawks is this Friday when they host all the Big Eight teams at Lawrence Country Club. Because the current Jayhawk roster includes an abundance of big men and a shortage of guards, Owens and assistants Sam Miranda and Gale-Catlett are taking a particularly close look at guards even though more big men are being sought. Holiday Inn INNKEEPER® Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn® THE NATIONS INNKEEPER® Holiday Inn® 19-14-96 23rd & Iowa The Jayhawk coaching staff used this weekend's KU Relays to show off the campus to three prospects. Among the hopeful signees was Tom Kivisto, younger brother of Bob Kivisto, KU's starting guard the past season. Young Kivisto, an East Aurora, Ill. product who broke many of Bob's high school records, is one of the most highly sought high school guards in the nation. Gary Porteous, Innkeeper The Jayhawks have now signed three to Big 8 letters-of-intent. The third is Randy Culbertson, a 6-3 guard from Raytown South High School, Raytown, Mo. It is hoped that Tom will follow brother Bob to Mount Oread but to date the younger Kivisto has said nothing definite. Kita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper The national letter-of-intent day is May 6. Only after signing on that day is a prospect bound to attend only the school he signs with. Strong pitching gains doubleheader sweep The KU Jayhawks used a supposedly weak pitching staff to completely handcuff Kansas State Friday afternoon and defeat the Wildcats in both ends of a doubleheader, 6-3 and 4-1. Dave Robish, Springfield, Ill. junior making his first start after reporting to the team late, pitched the first five innings of the opener before giving way to reliever and eventual winner Bob Wolf, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore. During his five-inning stint Robish gave up no earned runs and only two hits. Nick Horner, an all-Big 8 pitcher for the Wildcats two years ago, took the loss in the opener for K-Sate. The second game was all KU and Dave Steigemeier. Steigemeier, a sophomore southpaw, Tennis squad tops Shockers The KU tennis team won one meet and the other was called off in weekend action. The netters beat Wichita State, 5-2, in a dual match here Friday afternoon. Saturday's match against Nebraska was cancelled because of rain. The Jayhawks took four of five single events and one of two doubles against Wichita State. Cal Simmons, Overland Park sophomore, and Tim Williams, Hong Kong, junior, were double winners. The results: Singles—Marvin Webster, WSU, def. Jim Ballinger, 6-3, 6-4; Dan Oram, KU, def. Jeff Corbin, 6-0, 8-6; Cal Simmons, KU, def. Steve Jobst, 6-3, 6-4; Tim Williams, KU, def. Don Spies, 3-6, 6-2, 6-4; Tom Carlson, KU, def. Mike Dandurand, 6-1, 6-2. Doubles - Webster - Corbin, WSU, def. Ballinger-Oram, 6-3, 6-8, 6-1; Williams-Simmons, KU def. Jobst-Spies, 6-3, 6-1. evened his pitching record at 2-2 with a brilliant three-hit performance. Jayhawk coach Floyd Temple termed Steigemeier's performance as "tremendous." The big hitter for KU Friday was John Riggins. Dividing his time this spring between football and baseball, Riggins went into the game hitting only 185 but collected five hits in seven trips to the plate against the K-State pitching. Another bright spot offensively for KU was catcher Larry Matson. The Oklahoma City junior had a perfect day at the plate collecting three hits in three attempts during the two games. Matson had only one hit this season prior to Friday. Saturday's third game of the series was cancelled due to the downpour of rain. KU has now won seven and lost four overall with a record of 2-3 in conference play. CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MAN BLOOD SWEAT & TEARS CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MAN BLOOD SWEAT & TEARS INCLUDING I LOVE YOU MORE THAN YOU'LL EVER KNOW I CAN'T QUIT HER, SOMETHIN GON ON HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ct COORS NIGHT Tonight Bottles-25c, tall cans-30c The CELLAR Door 14th and Tenn. Ice Cream Social 15c for 2-dips of ice cream and 2-cookies FUN IN THE SUN at JRP April 19-24 * Parking Lot Wed., April 22 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Spring Week Committee Grade School Graduating Seniors, Candidates for Masters & Doctorate Degrees and Faculty The deadline for submitting your order for Caps and Gowns has been extended to April 30. But don't wait! Orders for Caps and Gowns will be taken at the Information Counter on the first floor of the Kansas Union from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday! Order your Cap and Gown Today. KU frisbee gets spring revival By ANN MORITZ Kansan staff writer One of the sports that receives its revival each spring at the University of Kansas involves the use of a small plastic disc, which gives the game its name—Frisbee. Frisbee is now a prominent part of, American leisure, ranking closely with any other spur-of-the-moment athletic endeavor. The disc can do amazing feats of flight when thrown by a skilled performer. The International Frisbee Association (IFA) now has 50,000 members. Fifty-eight of them have earned the status of "masters," having executed, before an accredited official, all the classic throws and catches described in the IFA manual. Despite frisbee's popularity, there is considerable argument among its followers about the birth of the sport. According to one legend, the game began in 1827 under the leadership of a Yale student, Elihe Frisbee. Young Elihe, rebelling against compulsory chapel attendance at the college, allegedly threw a collection plate during one service, and the plate sailed across the sanctuary. Other frisbee followers claim that the sport originated when employees of Mother Frisbee's Baking Company of Bridgeport, Teething ring lost Telephone cables in South Dakota had to be encased in steel to prevent being used by groundhogs as tooth files. Groundhog teeth grow at a rate of 42 inches per year which means a tooth could puncture the poor groundhog's brain unless kept filed down. 12 KANSAN Apr. 20 1970 Dwight Boring* says... Conn.. used tin pie plates for soaring contests during lunch hours. Hollywood technicians, however, say they were sailing empty film containers long before Mother Frisbee. (1) But the Wham-O Corporation, manufacturer of the frisbee disc, identifies the founder as Fred Morrison, a former Los Angeles building inspector who once worked part time as a country fair pitchman selling plate plates. "You'll find the best answer to your life insurance problems—both now and later—in College Life's famous college men's policy, The Benefactor. Let me tell you about it." Morrison's gimmick was not hawking the plates, but rather an "invisible string," supposedly extending from him to the customer. He would sail a plate through the air along the "invisible" string and sell the plate and the string to the customer. Morrison sold the idea to Wham-O in 1958 and has earned more than $500,000 in royalties. The world record for throwing a frisbee is 80 yards, according to one of the IFA news publications. John Schneider, Columbus, Neb., junior, is one of the individuals who holds the record. - Dwight Boring 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 With the air rotation and the difference in pressure on the different sides, a force is created which causes it to go in a circle, Andes said. When the frisbee is thrown up in the air, it sustains a forward and rotating velocity much like an airplane's wings. The difference in velocity causes a difference in pressure and the object can curve various ways, he said. in eagle Harbor, Mich., rivals them for color and drama. Prior to competition, the frisbee queen (by IFA rule, a woman 60 years or older) is driven around the field in the official pace car, a 1946 Studebaker. At precisely one minute after noon on opening day, Jim Boggio, the tournament founder, gives the long-awaited command, "Gentlemen, start your frisbees." representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA The KU Frisbee Club is now in the planning stages, Schneider said. He plans to activate the club next fall. Among his collection of frisbees are the Professional Olympic Frisbee and the Master Tournament Frisbee. Schneider said that Wham-O also made a larger, more expensive frisbee, one and one-half feet in diameter, soon to be on the market. ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men The heart of the competition is "Guts Frisbee," a non-stop firing match between two five-man teams lined up 15 yards apart. The event, accompanied by a great deal of shouting, swearing, laughing and beer drinking, continues until one team has dropped or missed 21 throws. No referees are allowed near the contest. The IFA Purple Heart award goes to the frisbee player with the worst injuries. The latest recipient was a young man who broke his leg trying to catch the flying object. The frisbee is an aerodynamic phenomenon, said Ammon S. Andes, professor of aeroautonautical engineering at KU. Because of the way the object spins it picks up air which rotates it, he said. Sales of frisbees in Lawrence range from fair to "real good" depending on weather conditions, said Charles Riggs, manager of Woolworths. Herb Mall, manager of Duckwalls, termed the frisbee a steady seller, with the students as his primary customers. Most frisbees in Lawrence range from 39 cents to $1.98 with the professional frisbees from $3 up. Although the Super Bowl and World Series unaccountably attract more attention, the International Frisbee Championship, held each fourth of July weekend Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) wanted! apartment managers reference necessary. Only intelligence are intelligence, aggressiveness, ambition and a friendly personality. Business and managerial training provided without charge. A rare opportunity for you to run a multi-million dollar business. Full-time position for both husband and wife. You receive salary, apartment, utilities and telephone. Join the Jack P. Aldoor 'Action Team', one of the fastest growing apartment development firms. Must be willing to relocate. Send a complete resume, with photos, to Steve Scholder. Administrative Assistant. Property Management Department. Jack P. DeBoer Associates, Inc. j Use Kansan Classified TEMPO Peter, Paul, & Mary John Coole and Narc ALBUM 1700 w R aprime Cottonmouth Late Again PARTICLE Dolor Paul and Mary IN THE WIND REG.498 STEREO LP'S NOW ONLY PETER, PAUL and Mary $2.97 THE WINNER IS JENNIE FERRARI. Photo by Mike Radencich Queen of Expo '70 Kaye Salminen, Kansas City sophomore representing Alpha Chi Omega sorority, was crowned queen of the Engineering Expo 70 Friday at noon. Engineering awards given at annual Exposition dinner At the annual Engineering Exposition dinner held Sunday in the Kansas Union, winner of the Henry E. Gould Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching in engineering was announced. Bogdon O. Kuzmanovic, professor of civil engineering at KU won the $500 grant. Requirements for winning the award were*based on teaching abilities in undergraduate courses and a necessary three-year span of teaching at KU. The selection was made by the Academic Advisory Board of the School of Engineering. Winners of the Phillips Professional Development Fund Award were also announced at the dinner. An award of $200 went to Robert A. Erwin, Lawrence, for being the outstanding graduating senior in engineering. Second prize of $100 went to Almost half of the asparagus grown in the United States is produced in California. Apr. 20 1970 KANSAN 13 Mafer E. Tunison, El Dorado, for being the freshman with the highest grade point average. Third prize of fifty dollars went to Robert B. Russell, Prairie Village, the outstanding senior in aerospace; Gregory L. Allemann, Hermann, Mo., outstanding architectural engineering senior; Harvey L. Goldberg, Kansas City, Mo., outstanding senior in petroleum engineering; Alan J. Geery, Salina, outstanding civil engineering senior; Carl F. Pieper, Tulsa, outstanding electrical engineering senior and Ralph E. Chatham, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, outstanding senior from the physics department. INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) April 22,23 Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong 220 Strong SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS 1704 West 24th 842-1160 Beautiful one and two bedroom units NOW renting for summer and fall all units include: drapes . . . carpeting . . . air conditioning . . . all electric kitchen with disposal . . pool . . laundry . . storage . . furnished or unfurnished. Convenient location on bus route See them today EXPO 70 Archway to 50th annual Engineering Expo Photo by Mike Radencich 'Tomorrow' featured at Engineering Expo The 50th annual University of Kansas Engineering Exposition opened Friday with the theme of "Profiles of Tomorrow" prevailing throughout the festivities. leum, Western Electric, Black and Veach and other companies, many from the Lawrence area, were aimed at giving prospective students a chance to be exposed to possible job opportunities. At noon on Friday the Expo '70 queen, Kaye Salminen, Kansas City sophomore representing Alpha Chi Omega sorority, opened the exposition by cutting the customary ribbon strung across the Expo archway. The industrial displays, including exhibits from Phillips Petro- The annual event was sponsored by the department of engineering at KU and featured exhibits by student groups in various fields of engineering, departmental exhibits, and exhibits from industries throughout the Midwest. The departmental displays were oriented to the prospective engineering students from high schools and gave them and their parents the chance to evaluate the school of engineering. Finally, the student displays were entered to compete for prizes in the final judging for Expo trophies. The powdered wig came into fashion in Europe in the 18th century. CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MAN BLOOD SWEAT & TEARS INCLUDING I LOVE YOU MORE THAN YOU EVER SAYED CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MAN BLOOD SWEAT & TEARS INCLUDING I LOVE YOU MORE THAN YOU'LL EVER KNOW I CAN'T QUITHER SOMETHIN GON ON HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Peace Corps GRADUATES Make your first step towards the future with the Peace Corps. Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries. In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry. 100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-6917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong. CYD told to find meaning, challenge James Logan, former dean of the KU law school and 1968 candidate for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator, Saturday urged members of the college generation to look for meaning and challenge in politics. Logan spoke to Collegiate Young Democrats (CYD) attending an Issues Seminar at the Kansas Union. "For the sake of change, I'm glad educated young people are interested in issues, but unfortunately most of the interest is intellectual. In practice, politics also requires common sense and practicality." Logan said. Bob Brock, 2nd Congressional District Chairman, joined Logan in urging young people to continue their work with politics and issues for the rest of their lives. "This generation is the best prepared of any in history." Brock said, "but it is tragic how many are interested and involved for a short time and then fall by the wayside." Cold war fears which perpetuate a need for absolute security undermine the United States' real source of greatness, Brock said. He said he foresaw a new United States with new leadership which would demand respect not from the end of a gun but from admiration and repect for a willingness to cooperate. A reordering of priorities is necessary, he said, to reduce the 85 per cent of American spending which is now appropriated for war and related military items. Frank Gaines, (D-Augusta) of the Kansas House of Representatives, and chairman of the 1968 Governor's Commission on Tax Reform, spoke and answered questions on tax reform. The Commission evaluated the tax structure, studied amounts the state had collected and found that per capita expenditures at the state and local levels were less than the national average, but that the amounts collected were more. He labeled tax reform as the number one issue in the state. Gaines said unnecessary or unfair exemptions, if collected, could raise Kansas revenue without increasing the percentage of state income taxes. Special interest groups, he charged, had kept their products exempt by making contributions to the political parties. 14 KANSAN Apr.20 1970 HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Sirloin ™ Sirloin Always Pleasurable Dining Stirling steaks and fresh select seafoods smell good when you dine at the Sirloin. We serve only the finest preparing the selections as you like them with no dinner fillings. Diners tonight at the Sirloin for uncompatable dining pleasure. U.S. Choice Select Seafoods Open Daily Except Monday 4:30 p.m. One and one half miles north of the Kaw River Bridge 843-1431 BULLDOG Logan's speech at the luncheon stressed the need for candidates and party workers willing to stand for principles instead of only seeking votes. He said candidates are paralyzed by the need to appeal to a broad spectrum of voters and react by speaking in platitudes, seeking agreeing audiences or by forming their views from results of polls. After the luncheon, Paul Wilson, KU professor of law, enumerated a few of the state's problems of prison reform. "It doesn't cost anything to pass laws," he said, "but many are not implemented because implementation does cost money. There is nothing wrong with the penal system that substantial investment would not cure." One of the most distressing problems, he said, was that penal institutions are understaffed as a result of lack of legislative funds. Highly trained social workers and psychiatrists are not hired because the money is not available. Two groups were formed after Wilson's speech. One discussion group centered on party reform and was led by John Wright, KU associate professor of human development, and Louis Douglas, professor of political science at Kansas State University. Wright emphasized that the party must carry out its own reforms to end abuses by party bosses. He suggested abolishment of the unit rule, encouragement of maximum participation and selection of delegates nearer to convention times. Douglas added representation of minorities and said Kansas was vulnerable on all four points. Discussion then turned to a criticism of the last Democratic convention which was held in Chicago. Both speakers agreed the 2600 delegates was much too large a group, especially because the number swelled to 6,000 due to alternate delegates and observers. Leadership in such a group is limited and too many delegates become unthinking followers. The last seminar concerned consumer protection and was lead by Richard Morse and William Fasse, both professors of home economics at Kansas State University, and Art Travers, KU professor of law. Morse said that consumer programs are like "motherhood and the flag, everyone is for it." Although the political parties should be lobbyists for consumers, political realities have never been tapped as a source of support by politicians, Morse said. At Honors Night this year, an Outstanding Woman Teacher and an Outstanding Senior Woman of the University of Kansas will be announced. If you would like to nominate women for this award and have not previously done so through a living group, please fill out the ballot below and bring it to the AWS office, 220 Strong Hall by Wednesday, April 22, 1970. 1. How many women teachers have you had while at the University of Kansas?___ If you wish to do so, please nominate one of these women for the Outstanding Woman Teacher of 1970. Nominee 2. Every SENIOR woman may nominate 3 students on the basis of their leadership, scholarship, and contribution to the University. 1. ___. 2. ___ Your Student ID # ___ School ___ Classification ___ diamonds from Christian's DIAMOND SALE SPECIAL IMPORTS FROM ANTWERP, BELGIUM YOUR CHOICE $295 (diamonds only) 2 DIAMOND SALE DIAMOND DIAMOND SALE DISTRIBUTION The image depicts a hand holding a tool, likely used for cutting or shaping materials. Surrounding the hand are several small circular objects that resemble particles or cells. This illustration could be related to the distribution of certain substances in a scientific context, such as in a laboratory setting where samples are sampled and analyzed. TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET SPECIAL IMPORTED LOT OF STONES USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY-A-WAY PLAN STORE HOURS 9:30 to 5:30 Except Thursdays Noon Till 8:30 ONE HALF CARAT Christian's has a special lot of 1/2 carat diamonds carefully selected especially for this sale by our resident Diamond Buyer in Antwerp, Belgium. Each diamond was chosen for maximum brilliancy and beauty. Make your selection while our stock is complete! Christian's 809 Massachusetts Kansas Jewelers esducation WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES One dav Three days 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the work directory served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Clv. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th Ed. Campus Pad House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount—your A.R. Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Norelle tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 4-24 Office furniture - desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, cases, notebooks, paper less than no extra charge. Lawrence Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3643. ff 63 Rambler 660—Classic V-8 wagon, clean, runs good, good gas mileage, new tires and spare. Must sell—all bids considered! Inquire: Todd's Skelly, 9th and Louisiana. After 6:00 p.m., KI 2-2382. 4-20 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. ff Bluepoint Slamese kitten, 10 weeks old, trained, good with children. 1959 VW, new tires, good paint, 25 miles since complete overhaul. 842-490 1-420 Powerful Tuner/Amp with 2 large speakers and stereo cassette player, changer. was $315.00, now $292.00. At Ray Stoneback's, only 98 TR-4 '64 original owner, Red-Black Top-Wire wheels. Excellent condition. New electrical system. Michelins, Aarbath, Bendix electric fuel pump, foog lights, detailed service history. Best offer over $1200. 843-6659. 4-20 Elegant white formal. Worn once. Size nine. Call 842-0534 after 5:00. 4-20 1965 GTO. Good condition, good tires, mag wheels, 4 speed. Call Bill. 842- 0254. 1733 West 24th, Apt. 4. 2-10 New famous brand portable stereo demonstrator, was $69.90. Reduced to only $55.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Stereo—some floor model portable stereos cut to 1/3 price... others with large reductions. Hurry to Ray Stone-back's, 929 Mass. 4-21 1969 TR-6 motorcycle Perfect. 1500 miles, stock $75. $425-2620. 4-21 New famous brand 8 track stereo cartridge player, adaptable to any Stereo Multiplex System, only $69.90 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass, 4-21 Component Set—receiver, stereo cassette changer and speakers. Was $135.00, now $259.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 592 Mass. 4-21 Male German Shepherd—8 mo. Rod, 842-5769. 4-21 Gibson B-25 12-string Guitar and dual-pick-up electric 842-7569 4-21 1969 Toyota Corolla—grey with red interior -4 spd., gets great gas mileage—like new inside and, $1500, 842-2191. 4-21 1966 GTO Convertible—yellow with black top 4-3 speed, deluxe wheel covers. Motownola motor in stereo speakers. Hook-up, good tires, $1500. 4-21 2191 1967 Triumph TR-4A-IRS, beautiful British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelin X tires, $1800. 842-2191. 4-21 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, $1400, 842-2191. 4-21 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III white with black convertible top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition, $2300, 843-2191. 4-21 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, excellent body, overhaired transmission, *1400*, 842-2191. 4-21 1967 VW Super Bug—silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., heavy duty suspension, stereo tape speaker, up-cook, good tire, $100.84-421.91 1968 VW Fastback—near perfect white body with a glossy black grille throughout. $1000, 142-419, 2-41 www.vwfastback.com 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800. 842-2191. 4-21 Ceramics, stoneware, $2.00 and up. 1612 Louisiana. Please phone 843- 2789. Rosalie Wax. 4-21 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383. Formula S.4-speed, belked G-70's low mileage. Division. Dick at 616 Kroger or 842-SZ25. Help a Bird Today! Prevent birdhouse kits and bird feeding stations now available at The Gift Shop. Open daily 8:30 to 4:30. Sundays 1:30 to 4:30. 4-22 Framus 12-string guitar, $120.00. Norelco Carry Carry-Corder (battery or A.C.). $45.00. German made 6-string guitar, $45.00. Martin D-35 6-string guitar, 6 months old, $450.00 with hard-shell case. Call 842-7342. Need money to pay tax. Mint sell two-year-old car. Chay. Call 842-855-2222 Professional 5-piece drum set, Double Tom-Tom Sets, Cymbals, Beat Drum Sets, 842-5796 4-22 One 40 watt home tape deck with BSR turntable. Will accept highest reasonable offer. Old RCA console needs work, needs $, Call Stu. 1869 4-22 6-string Gibson guitar in perfect con- formity, 10 strings, p. 422 hard sh-cell skins, p. 422 842-800-3977, www.gibson.com 1962 Rambler 4-door in excellent condition. Call Darrel, 843-1768. 4-20 Horse Teeth Necklaces . . . The Brazilian answer to warding off social disasters! An eye-catching novelty now available at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open Sun 1:30 to 1:30. Weekdays 4:30 to 8:22. 4:30 Attention Floecinaeinchiliplifillatories! For Sale: 1) Unused-8 silver drinking cups; copper chafing dish with stand and burner; calf wallet and key case; Lite-Gem hi-intensity Humidity Gauge; tray-table combination; 2) Used-Noreco electric shaver; wine decanter with four matching glasses; wicker desk or organizer and basket; portable radio, batteries or AC; assorted kitchen items. Call 843-1400. 4-23 Three Vivitar Manual Lens, 85mm, 200mm. Excellent condition. 843-5180 843-5180 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect position. Must sell now! Call 6707 4-30 4-30 Four 775-14 tires. Excellent condition. Original price $120. Am trading cars. $60 and 4 old tires. Call 843- 0493 after 9 p.m. 4-21 Borg-Warner 8 track car stereo, Call 1025 Emery Road. 1025 Emmery Road. 1966 Chevelle SS 396. Only 26,000 milest Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-24 1968 BSA BFA师, 441ce. dirt or road 1970 Lester C. Ask for John in 26: 4-24 1250 after 6. Ask for John in 26: 4-24 70 Datsun 2-litre, 5 speed, 120 m.p.h. 1800 miles, silver-black, 135 horsepower. Extras. Call Chip. 843-3310. 843-3214 $1.751 That's all it costs to place a 25-word classified ad for 5 days. There are you first such a bangalal In the Knares "For Sale A-4-24, of course." NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti. LP 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want to go good-bear Bar-B-Que this is the place. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket are our specialties. V-2 8510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if Nice weather and good times are coming up. Don't forget to include the following in your MEMORIES: STABLES in them. The Captain's Table stands for great breakfasts, lunches, and dinner. The Stables stand for Bud, fun, and . See you! LA PETITE GALERIE. Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring, Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer fun. tf Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00, 816: Bikr-GI-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N. Kansas City, Mo. 64116. Diligence. Fill form into desk. 4-24A The Castle Tea Room is ideal for luncheons, dinner parties, or even wedding receptions. Call Libuse KRIZ, Lawrence. Most unique restaurant LAWRENCE. Fly for half in Optocap Flying Club modern planes, free info. Phone 842-1124 after six. 4-21 The Captain's Table. Try it out this weekend. Great food. Reasonably priced. Open from 7:00 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE. 4-20 Let that sunshine in with sandals from ARENSBERG'S SHOES, 819 Massachusetts. We have just the style for you, babe. Come in today! 4-20 Be Prepared! tune-ups Tony's 66 Service Lawrence, Kansas 66044 2434 lowe VI 2-1008 starting service Lawrence Kansas 66044 The beginning and the end of World War III are coming. April 28-May 1, Do you want a part-time liquor store job May through August or later? Will be able to study on job. Call Bob. 842-8933. 4-21 For a really great deal clip the coupon from Friday's UDK for the special on the Double D Burger at the Double D Diner. For 90c you get a big Double D Burger, Large Coke and French Fries. You save 15c. 4-21 Rates for Kansan classified are the lowest anywhere around: $1.00 for three days, $2.00 for five days, with only pennies extra for more than 25 words. 4-24 LOST Tortoise shell anguaslanges, lost Monday between the Boulder and Flint Reform-420 842-913-193 **Oceanic fish** Ladies' Omega gold and steel watch. Lost between Jawhawk Towers and Watson Library. Sunday, April 12. Call Louse, 843-8142. 4-20 Will the party who found my orange bilfidlo in the ladies' restroom in the Union please keep the money and return the bilfidlo to 621 Illinois or call 843-1411. Reward offered. No questions asked. 4-22 $10.00 reward for black Prince Gardner wallet. Lost someplace between New York on Monday, April 13. If found, contact Kip at 843-421-02 No questions asked. Kip Traveling companion for the summer. Will be touring western U.S.Call 842-6599. 4-16 WANTED Roommate. Move in May 1 through summer. $50. Dave. 842-5786. 4-21 An apt, for summer sublease. I am student at student. Call 4-21 8937 after 5:30. Roommate wanted: Mature female graduate student or teacher, wanted to share two-bedroom apartment, $50/month. Call 842-5839 after 5 p.m. 222-7461 Desperately needed—ride or rider to and from Lawrence and Kansas City, Kansas. Kansas City number—MA1-3463. 4-20 Male needs apartment from now until new apartment is built in the kitchen, clean. Call 842-2396. 4-23 Summer traveling companion! Forget about school. Relax, see national library. Visit San Francisco, swim in the Pacific, visit San Francisco. Inspective call 842-659-989. 4-24 Live in convenient Jayawaker Towers next fall. If interested and a serious student, call Bruce at 842-7770 after 1:00 p.m. 4-24 PERSONAL Baha'i—the promise of all religions. Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. tf Agent 008—listen for your instuctions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Special summer rates at College Imm Manor. Located afross from Stouffer and in room 618 for conditioning. Shown afternoons or by appointment. 1741 W. 19th VI 3-8220 4-22 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil designs and dupl planting. Pick up delivery offered. Call 842-3971 or 842-6562. Want to send a unique birthday card? Personal "ad" card 4, 24-$1.00 for one day Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typetypes, forms of typed writing, paperwriter Pica tips. Competent service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554.服务 5-15 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. TYPING "Please call for appointment" - Applications Portraits - Passports BLP HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank. Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 HELP WANTED Need part-time help at Royal College Shop. Experience and references necessary. Apply in person, 837 Mass. Cook wanted. Apply in person at Krazy Karl's, 1811 West 6th. 4-20 Earn extra money. Sell American cage license plates. Retail or to deal with custom samples and sample and George Mack, Carmel, K. Douglass Lane, Kirkwood, Missouri 63122. Leaving town soon? Want a good job to take with you for security? Part or full-time job with Top Notch Fashions, Inc. See us at the Student Union, Room 101, Wed., April 22, all day. 4-22 Needed now: experienced female phone solicitor. Guarantee plus bonuses. Excellent opportunity for you. 843-6425. Don't call if you're tired. 4-24 SERVICES OFFERED BUY, SELL OR TRADE SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationwide directories of positions. relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Insight. Reasonable. clocem, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf FOUND Found: one easy way to sell what you don't want and find what you need. Amazon classifies: $1.00 for one day, $1.25 for two days, $1.75 for three days, 25 words or less. 4-24 Found—at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM. 106 Radio, 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. 4-28 Pair brown frame eyeglasses behind headphones in call 435-3698 or for this ad. Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to apartment living in Lawrence, ad- ditioned by the Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly in- expensive rates. Available to families with children. $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $225. To view these luxury rooms, visit town houses, call David Rhodus. 842-232 or McGregel Agency: 843-205-8. 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let. Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs from May 18th. 8th Terr. $49. 842-5446 for 4 p.m. except Wed. and Thurs. 4-22 THE CONCORD SHOP - Stretcher frames, - ready-made and parts - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges Favors - Guards Mugs - Recognitions • Paddles - Lavaliers Stationery - Gifts - Plaques - Sportswear 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, wall-to-wall carpeting, air conditioning, sound conditioning, all dishwasher, dishwasher in multiple places. Additional benefits include laundry, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive rates. See our apartment afternoons weekdays and weekends at MAILDE ENGLISH VILLAGE. 2411 Louisiana. 843-552-591 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and a half bathrooms, unfurnished with drapes, carpeting, air-conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool. On 28th, they then data to 174a 24th, 842-1180. 4-20 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus; will submit for summer. Call 842-4892. 4-22 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Now leasing for summer and factional-conditioned private pool cover 4-22. W141 W, 9th VI, 38-820 with appointment 741. W 19th VI, 38-820 Apartment to sublet for Summer School, or from June 1-Aug. 24. 2 bedrooms and study, furnished, TV radiogram, dishwasher, use of swimwear, free parking, on campus, off 23rd Street, west of $160.00 per month, plus electricity and telephone. Call 842-5025, Tues., Thurs. mornings, and any evening. 4-22 Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall. Rentals of units in the popular luxurious AVALON APARTMENTS (10th and 11th) or APARTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on come, first serve basis. Call 842-2348 or come to rental office at 2107 Harvard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in the beautiful MENS. Beautiful courtyard and pool, spacious sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished apartment, Mike Carpino at 842-3801 or 842-2348 to see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 W. 9th TEXACO Student specials TEXACO W. 9th ★ New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 Home of the "Big Shef" BURCER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa For Top Quality Head For Henry's henrys For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken. Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. V13-2139 National moratorium group disbands WASHINGTON (UPI) — Vietnam Moratorium Committee, the peace group that brought a national focus to antiwar sentiments, has disbanded as a national organization. "We felt we were becoming peace bureaucrats," Sam Brown, leader of the moratorium, told UPI Sunday. "The moratorium was conceived as a strategy and a tactic and it had its day and we feel the time has come for something new." The strategy was organizing local protests against the Vietnam War rather than holding one central mass protest. The moratorium sponsored the nationwide antiwar activity of last October 15. Although it has sponsored similar activities since, the latest on April 15, it has not been able to obtain the success of its initial protest. Brown emphasizes, however, that only the national office was closing. Local chapters may decide to carry on the moratorium's activities. "Most it appears are going to stay open," he said. He denied that the decision to disband Saturday was the result of any disillusionment with the peace movement. One moratorium leader did say that there was some discouragement within the organization. "We spent last November putting together the largest protest in Washington history and found the President making a big protest of watching television. "What is discouraging, is that we can do all this that is certainly significant and find it doesn't mean anything, but the leaders are insensitive. It means new tools, new approaches need to be found," the spokesman said. "Obviously we didn't accomplish the largest goal, to end the war, but we did stimulate new activity and brought new people into the peace movement," he said. "We had lost sight of our initial vision. We came together to generate new activity and not simply to be a new peace group." Brown said his colleagues felt that, "institutions too frequently outlive their usefulness," and that the national moratorium had out-lived its ability to serve the antiwar movement. Chancellor lauds Earth observance The following statement concerning Earth Week was released today by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr.: "I hope that every student, staff member and faculty member will find an opportunity to participate in the environmental teach-in that is occurring on over a thousand campuses across the country on April 22. The ecological crisis we face is extremely complex and cannot be solved without considering the entire fabric of our lives. It is to the credit of our students and faculty that they are turning their attention to ecology with zeal. "On our own campus planned events will span nine days, April 20-28, and a variety of experiences: lectures, open classes, games, excursions and workshops. It is significant that the University of Kansas is able to conduct an impressive educational program on the environment almost wholly from its own talents. Welcome- (Continued from page 1) President and Mrs. Nixon, but having you in here in Texas beats it all. We're tremendously proud of you and we're happy to have you back home with us." The astronauts then were told by Doctor O. Thomas Paine, NASA administrator that the President had "reiterated his strong, firm support, not only for the American space program, but particularly for the manned space flight program. There will be those, the president said, who will seize upon this accident as an opportunity for a slowdown. But, he said, "We're not that kind of people." "Jack, Fred and I are very proud and glad to be back here in Texas tonight," replied Lovell," because there were times when we really didn't think we'd make it back here. If it wasn't for the people on the ground, we wouldn't be here tonight. And I appreciate it very much." Sweigert said, "Of the welcome homes we've had this one means the most." Haise was the last to address the crowd at Ellington. "I guess our role was pretty much like anybody in a survival situation," he said, "We just had to do our best with what we had in hand." 16 KANSAN Apr.20 1970 "The City of Lawrence has notable resources for environmental study. We anticipate that the community workshop scheduled for April 26 will bring the University and the other institutions of the city together in a continuing program of environmental education and improvements. "I am convinced that the current concern about ecology, demonstrated in the nationwide teach-in, is not a fad; but the beginning of a new national consciousness. It will complement rather than replace our concerns about poverty and prejudice. I encourage all faculty, staff and students to take fullest possible advantage of this week's activities. I hope that many classes can be moved to the teach-in or rescheduled conveniently, and that the issues raised by Earth Week will become a part of our daily concern for a better future." ROTC- (Continued from page 1) Lujan said many ROTC students have difficulty fulfilling both ROTC and College requirements, he said. (Continued from page 1) The team teaching plan, Lujan said, could go into effect with either a Yes or No vote from faculty members. He explained that because the plan has the approval of the ROTC department, the faculty vote could not actually keep it from being implemented by Sept. 1971 as planned. The next step is to negotiate details with KU administrators, Lujan said. The administration must then formalize contracts with College instructors who would team teach ROTC courses and negotiate with the U.S. Defense Department. Lujan said that if the Defense Department rejects the team teaching plan, KU would no longer maintain an ROTC program. "I would prefer ROTC not to be on campus." Lujan said, "but I take the position that we should make it available to those who want it, but on a sound academic setup." The beginning and the end of World War 111 are coming, April 28-May 1. Painter on Ladder EARTH WEEK Gas turbine slows pollution "When I hear the iron horse make the hills echo with his snort like thunder, shaking the earth with his feet, and breathing fire and smoke from his nostrils, it seems as if the earth had got a race now worthy to inhabit it. If all were as it seems, and men made the elements their servants for noble ends." H. D. Thoreau Town Crier, Inc.: Ecology books - LONDON (UPI)—Robert Noel Penny, who may be biased, believes the long-heralded era of gas turbine power for trains, trucks and motor cars is about to open, bringing with it an antidote for one of the causes of air pollution. Penny is the leader of the Leyland-Rover gas turbine team which has been working for 25 years in one form or another towards the goal of cleaner, cheaper, quieter and yet more powerful transport which the principle promises. If he is right—and transportation circles have been deeply interested since the first gas turbine powered automobile was demonstrated almost exactly 20 years ago—a search of three centuries is almost over. Some 300 years ago an anonymous Chinese actually showed a working model of a gas turbine engine in Peking. In 1791 the first gas turbine patents were granted in Britain. But from then until our own era technical difficulties defeated all the experimenters. "The automotive gas turbine is about to start on its production career," Penny reported in Science Journal. "This is not wishful thinking on the part of one with an axe to grind but a sober statement of fact. At last we know how to make small gas turbines that are eminently suitable for use on road and rail." First, he said, the engines would be used in trucks and trains and then improved technology would reduce them to a size practical for automobiles. piston to turbine cannot be made overnight; it will be a very long and sometimes painful process. But it is about to start." "These will be engines far superior in every way to those in use today. They will be much simpler, be easier and cheaper to make and need fewer raw materials. They will be smaller and lighter for a given power. They will burn cheaper and more varied fuels, and burn less fuel for a given power. They will be sealed at the factory and thereafter need practically no maintenance for hundreds of thousands of kilometers. Penny said a number of other firms such as Boeing, General Motors, Chrysler, Fiat and Ford, also started work on the turbine car after a Rover touched 150 miles an hour in 1952. "Most important of all, they will be quiet and their clean exhaust will dramatically reduce atmospheric pollution and make our cities once again fit to live in. Nevertheless, the switch from INTERVIEWS (April 22,23) Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong. PLANNING A TRIP?? T Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With,Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 FRESHMAN CLASS PARTY Fri. - April 24 8:00 P.M.-12:00 P.M. at THE NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY The Peppermint Rainbow (direct from Las Vegas) The students favorite beverage is FREE for Freshmen with class dues cards. $2.50 per person without dues cards. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 30th Year, No. 118 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Union burns The Kansas Union was ravaged Monday night by a fire that caused extensive damage to 40,000 square feet in the south half of the building. The fire, confined to the upper half of the building, apparently started near the Fine Room and spread immediately to the roof, which was completely destroyed in the older section of the building. Bill Rowlands, information counter manager and night manager of the Union, discovered the Union fire. "I heard something pop," he said, "it sounded like a light bulb exploding and I ran upstairs. I think that everyone in the building noticed the smoke about the same time and evacuated the building." Firetrucks arrived 15 minutes after the fire was reported. Frank Burge, Union director, told firemen when they arrived the fire was confined to the center and western sections of the roof at that time. After an hour and a half of fighting the fire, flames of 20 to 30 feet shot off the roof and scorched the center tower of the Union. The intensity of the flames caved in the roof and leaped to the south addition of the building, caving in that section. The fire was finally brought under control around 2 a.m. today after flames had gutted the top two floors of the Union's main section. Lawrence Fire Chief Fred Sanders said the fire started near an elevator on the third floor near the Pine Room. "The man in the Union said there was a definite explosion," Sanders said. "It blew plaster off the ceiling and tore off the elevator door." Later this morning Sanders said it could possibly be three days before the official cause of the fire was known, but added, "In my opinion, it was set." University of Kansas Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers, who is in Washington D.C. attending (Continued to page 12) (Continued to page 12) Sanders said he reached his conclusion after talking to firemen and policemen at the scene. "The Kansas Union Building is closed — department managers and those key personnel identified by them will be ad- (Continued to page 12) "I am tremendously impressed and grateful to the students for their immediate concern and actions during the fire last night." Later in the morning Burge issued the following statement: Frank Burges says 'thanks' Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, issued this statement: early today after the fire at the Kansas Union building: "I want to express my gratitude to all the many students who helped to save the valuable oil paintings, art objects and furnishings from the fire and water last night. It was a tremendous display of efficiency and effectiveness. I estimate that approximately $50,000 worth of art were rescued by students." (Continued to page 12) "Many students helped to combat the fire by aiding firemen with hoses, some even working on the burning west roof of the building. Many students brought coffee and doughnuts for the firemen and volunteered to help the police keep the crowds from interfering with the work of the firemen. "The students were willing to do anything within their power to hold damage to the Union building to a minimum and aid the authorities in any way they could. P THE GROUP Photo by Ron Bishop All that remains . . . Lawrence firemen continued to pour water on the charred ruins of the Kansas Union Ballroom early this morning. A small fire broke out in the smouldering insulation of what was once the ceiling of the Ballroom and the roof of the Union. (1) $A = \begin{bmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{bmatrix}$ 32 FIRE DEPT. OF MIDLANDS, CALIFORNIA Theater Society of New York While firemen battled flames, students gave aid While firemen battled the flames at the Kansas Union fire last night, women from nearby sororities brought hot coffee, doughnuts and willing hands to help students aiding the firemen, policemen and reporters on the scene of the fire Monday night. The women in one sorority passed the hat to purchase about 11 dozen doughnuts and gallon upon gallon of coffee. Sororities, businesses provide coffee, food While Lawrence firemen fought Monday night's four and a half hour fire at the Kansas Union, they received some relief from sorority girls and several local business owners. Girls from Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Gamma Phi Beta and others who were unavailable for identification, passed out coffee and doughnuts among the tired, cold and hungry firemen, policemen and reporters. According to Judy Jarrell, Shawnee Mission senior and member of Kappa Alpha Theta, eleven dozen doughnuts were Kent Longnecker, Student Union Activities (SUA) president, said the SUA had everything covered to prevent further water damage but that all files were saved. As the sun began to rise, Longnecker viewed the remains and said, "We just had a new ceiling put in last week—guess that kind of takes care of it." Despite the threat of the roof caving in, students rushed into the building and emerged carrying an estimated $50,000 worth of art, as well as appliances and furniture. An original painting by Grandma Moses which hung in the south lounge was saved, as were the paintings by Kansas artist John Stuart Curry which hung in the Curry Room on the third floor of the Union. The damage to the Union building may well reach the million-dollar mark, but countless items of value as KU traditions, gifts of graduating classes, paintings and furnishings were spared. Were it not for the willing hands and quick action of KU students, a wealth of tradition and treasures priceless in monetary and sentimental value would have gone up in flames Monday night. The chime clock at the main east entrance, a gift of the class of 1926, was dampened, but intact. The large bronze Jayhawk statue, a gift of the class of 1956, also survived the blaze. bought with a collection taken by the girls. KANSAN KU students save art, furnishings in Kansas Union "We collected $7.50 for the doughnuts," Miss Jarrell said, and then went back to the house to start some coffee." Apr.21 1970 SenEx vice-chairman Rick von Ende said the Student Senate suffered little if any damage. Von Ende explained that the Senate offices are located in a place that escaped most of the damage. While girls walked around passing out doughnuts and coffee, Don Graham also nuts and busy. Graham owns the nearby Rock Chalk Cafe and shuttled a two gallon container of coffee back and forth from his cafe to a spot near the middle of the firetrucks. ROAMERS Jayhawker editor Richard Louv said his offices suffered water damage and that some copy and pictures suffered damage. He added, though, that they "got most of the important stuff out." Dave Andersen, Wichita junior and president of the Inter-Fraternity Council, said that all 1500 rush books were saved and that furniture was covered with tarps and ponchos. Andersen said the saving of the rush books was the important thing. Monday night's fire in the Kansas Union fortunately resulted in limited damage to offices housed within the building. A quick inventory in the early Tuesday morning hours revealed that most offices received only water and smoke damage. Nearly all of these offices are located on the ground floor from the east entrance. ALL Peter, Paul & Mary LP Albums $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. "We have to keep going back and forth," Graham said, "because we can't keep the coffee hot." Shortly after the death of William Allen White in 1944, the Kansas State Board of Regents voted to change the name of the school of journalism to the William Allen White School of Journalism. It was later amended to read the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. Miss Jarrell said that several restaurant owners were contributing sandwiches but she did not know who exactly was sending the supplies. Union offices sustain limited damages in fire SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The U.S. Forest Service reports there are about 1,500 bighorn sheep roaming the national forests in California. Senior class president Don Farrington, awakened in the early morning hours by the Kansan, said he had not gone to the Union and did not know how the senior class cap and gown records fared. He said he would know by early today. Other office representatives, including the Black Student Union, Cottonwood Review, People to People, Hillel and the Alumni Association, could not be reached by the Kansan for comment. BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS Including Rainy Day Women 12 & 35 Blown in the Wind Subterranean Homesick Blues Like a Rolling Stone Positively 4th Street On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Nicholas Copernicus evolved the theory that planets revolve around the sun. a ringing revival of fashion We reclaim the past to revitalize the present. Result? Fashion that's fresh. We put our best stripe forward to show the finest collection in dress shirts ever to be revived. Campbell's 843 Massachusetts Men's Wear 843-0454 Lecture begins 'Earth Week' Paul Hilman, geologist and professor at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, initiated KU's "Earth Week" Monday with a lecture titled "The Role of Geology in the Environmental Crisis." Hilman, who had just returned from giving similar lectures at Carlton College and University of Wisconsin, told an audience of approximately 75 that education is the key to taking advantage and not wasting our natural resources. "In order to use our resources to the best advantage, we must take inventory of what we have in this world and then plan for its use," Hilbman said. He cited several examples where planning was not used, including the drainage ditch along Naismith Drive where flooding has persisted in the past. "It is easy to look back and do post-mortems on our mistakes." Hilpman said. He added that it is important we learn by our mistakes. Retreat termed 'worthwhile' Both students and members of the Board of Regents today expressed favorable reactions to an informal meeting held April 17-18 in Rock Springs. Hilman said that pollution is not entirely an urban problem but rural as well. He said that waste from livestock is a greater problem than many people realize, as is evidenced by the fact that a cow alone will give off an average of 90 pounds of solid waste a day. The meeting consisted of members of the Board of Regents and student, faculty and administrative representatives from the six state schools. Five KU Regents attended. Jess Stewart, KU Regent from Wamego said the purpose of the meeting was to "discuss issues in an informal setting." Stewart, like others who attended the meeting, felt it was successful. "I thought it was great," Stewart said. "I enjoyed it and I think everyone else did." Other Regents in attendance expressed reactions similar to Stewart's. "I thought it was fine," said Lawrence Morgan of Goodland. "It was enlightening to me and I was impressed with the student's reactions," he said. "I think the students reacted favorably and I'm very proud of them." James Basham, Fort Scott Regent, described the meeting as "extremely worthwhile." "I think the communication was greatly enhanced by the informal setting," said William Danenbarger, Concordia Regent. Student representatives from KU were Bill Elbert, Student Senate president-elect, and Greg Thomas, Student Senate vicepresident-elect. Ebert said the best thing about the meeting was the opportunity to talk informally with the Regents. He said the problem with the Regents is not with the entire board. Proposal to Regents concerns promotions "Earth Week" continues today with an environmental law seminar on industrial and automobile pollution at 3:30 in 411 Summerfield. Hilpman said pollution is not restricted to water and air alone but land as well. He said we now produce 150 million tons of solid waste material per day and that 90 per cent of that is disposed of on land. "It showed me that there are people on the Board of Regents who are interested in making KU a better place." Ebert said. The Student Senate today sent three recommendations to Max Bickford, executive secretary of the Board of Regents, to be considered at the Regents meeting April 24 in Kansas City, said Bill Ebert, Student Senate president-elect. The promotions for Velvel and Litto were deferred at the March 20 Board of Regents meeting until April 24. Other guests will include James Hughes, regional head of public relations for General Motors John Anderson, vice-president and general manager for Co-op Farm Chemicals, and R.W. Davis, works engineer for Armco Steel. The recommendations concern salaries for doctors at Watkins Hospital, the possible sale of several residence halls and a recommendation that promotions be granted to Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama. The proposal concerning residence halls asks that the Regents consider the feasibility of selling some or all of KU's residence halls. The final recommendation requests that doctors at Watkins Hospital not be paid on the Civil Service salary schedule. Approval of this measure would enable increases in doctor's salaries and help alleviate the problem of filling doctor's positions at Watkins. Debate team wins top honors in annual national tourney A debate team composed or David Jeans, Independence, Mo., senior, and Robert McCullough, Overland Park senior, defeated a team from Canisius College Sunday to win the National Collegiate Debate Tournament. KU also took third place at the tournament with a team composed of Dan Beck, Mission junior, and Robert Prentice, Turon sophomore. The 24th annual tournament was held April 17-19 at the University of Houston. "There were a lot of good things about the meeting," Ebert said, but he added that problems were identified and not solved. Jeans and McCulloh argued the negative side of a resolution which ask that the federal government give part of the income tax revenues to the state governments. KU was one of nine schools to qualify two teams, and was the only school to have two teams debate in the semi-final rounds. Apr.21 KANSAN 3 1970 Faculty representatives to the meeting were Ronald Calgaard, associate professor of economics, and Russell Bradt, associate professor of mathematics. Both were unavailable for comment. This is the second time KU has won the tournament, KU has had teams entered for 20 of the tournament's 24-year history. Regents who did not attend the meeting were Elmer Jackson, Henry Bubb, T.C. Griffith, Paul Wunsch and Arthur Cromb. INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) Senior '71 Comm. 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THE DRAUGHT HOUSE Strawberry Alarm Clock April 29 KANSAN COMMENT Smoldering ashes They stood around the Kansas Union Monday night—the students, the townspeople, the faculty, the administration. Chuckling and glum, cynical and despondent, not-caring and blaming, they stood in the pall of smoke to watch the golden red flames sear the cool night air. They applauded the fireman who scaled the snorkel and directed an impotent stream of water on the Union's inflamed roof. They worried as firemen near the roof's edge silhouetted against the fire, chopped away at shingles, unmindful of the imminent danger. From the crowd in front, two persons talking: "You might say that students have passed the stage of . . ." Another: "They could cut down the draft a little bit, you know. ." And the flashing red and green lights, the fire hoses snaking in a front door, the cupola becoming a jet of flame, imprinted a scene in all the viewers' minds that would not soon be erased. How did it happen and why did it happen, everyone wondered. Most of all, who made it happen? No doubt there were a few there Monqay night who had the perpetrators already selected, indicted, convicted and punished. More of them probably had a reasonable idea who had set the fire that destroyed much of what had been a KU tradition since 1927. And all had a right to indulge in some righteous indignation, not only over the destruction of a KU landmark, but more importantly over the seeming end to a peaceful resolution of issues at KU. It might have been hoped that the administration's calm in the face of previous disruptive events—a calm that magnificently defied normal human emotions—could have prevented disasters like Monday night's. Perhaps the Union fire was the work of persons outside the University community, in which case the administration's most valiant efforts would have been to no avail anyway. But one way or another, from inside or outside the University community, the Union burned and hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of damage was caused. The quick result is a sense of fear, of reaction on the part of many. A deplorable crime was committed Monday night, but hours after the event is not the time to make hasty judgments about who holds the responsibility for it. There is a potential for witchhunting on this campus and off, and the groups on the prowl need not be large to have an ugly effect. Now is the true test of the University's ability to stand firmly for all human and legal rights, those of the accused (if ever any are) and those of the accusers. The former are more in jeopardy now than the latter; pressure from higher echelons in the state structure, pressure from angry students and pressure from worried non-University people may attempt to force the administration into a stand it would normally detest. The ashes of the Union building will cool. Now man's tempers must cool, too. Off the wire —Monroe Dodd By United Press International DALLAS—G. C. Walters, of G. C. Walters & Associates which is handling the auction sale of the Texas School Book Depository from which it was confirmed the late President Kennedy was shot: "We're not trying to sell the assassination, we are simply liquidating properties." \* \* \* SAIGON—A U.S. Army spokesman commenting on the American bombing of a Communist mortar position inside Cambodia: "The U.S. Command has previously stated that if fired upon from enemy positions outside the Republic of South Vietnam, U.S. forces are authorized to return the fire." SPACE CENTER, Houston — Apollo 13 skipper James A. Lovell, commenting on the planned re-entry into the earth's atmosphere; "It's going a lot better than we ever expected." $$ ★★ $$ WASHINGTON—Ralph Ginzburg, publisher of Evergreen, criticizing House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford's statements concerning a move to impeach Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas: "It was a national disgrace and I hope it will be met with the contempt it deserves." U.S. SENATE MRS. MITCHELL THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL TIM. ALL INHALER, November 1910 Publishers-Hall Syndicate 'Come on out, Fulbright! I know you're in there!' hearing voices— Such a program may not necessarily lead to a degree. What after all does an A.B. represent? Is it not a statement by the faculty of an institution that in their collective judgment the holder has been exposed to a liberal education? Mr. Miller used the expression, "Involuntary (required) education . . . "I believe the truth is that very few on the faculty are much interested in making anyone take any course which he thinks undesirable. If I were asked, however, if I believe that a person who for example has no exposure to a foreign language possesses the rudiments of a liberal education, I would answer, no. And in a very real sense the faculty is expressing its opinion in such matters when it grants degrees. To the editor: What is such an opinion worth? Perhaps not anything to a specific individual who believes that only he is qualified to plot his personal educational career. The degree is in fact important only to agencies outside the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. It then becomes the job of the individual to convince employers, professional schools, parents, etc., that his concept of a liberal education is more nearly valid than that of the faculty. He need not convince the faculty since we are already willing to let him pursue his concept. If more students had such faith in their own judgment, the consequences could be far reaching. What would be the result if, for example, $90\%$ of those leaving college after four years did not have a degree? At the very least it would force those agencies who mindlessly require a degree as a kind of union card for admittance to decide what they really expected and needed as a background for their particular function. That would be a truly revolutionary change in industry! Like many who are talking or writing about requirements, William Miller in Tuesday's Kansas confuses education with degree requirements. The truth is that there are literally no academic requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences which one need fulfill in order to pursue his concept of an education at the University of Kansas. Any student is free to design any curriculum, to pursue any combination of courses which seems educationally valid to him, and this fact is not generally appreciated by the student body at large. Indeed, one is able, through the LAS courses, to design in conjunction with two or three other students and a faculty member a course on any subject which has academic merit (a fact that gives KU all the advantages of the so-called "Free University" plus the added bonus of college credit). In the final analysis then the student himself may, if he wishes, be the sole judge of what is relevant, what constitutes a liberal education, what is necessary for his own development as an individual. Many students who talk about degree requirements are not being completely consistent. On the one hand, the individual wishes to have the total responsibility without faculty involvement to plot his education as he sees fit (a freedom which he already has), and on the other hand he then at the end wants the faculty to involve itself and to agree with him (by granting a degree) that his uniquely personal concept of a liberal education coincides with theirs. All of us, of course, would like to have our cake and eat it too. It may be argued that some universities of stature have changed some or all the requirements. But this is no more than saying that degrees from different institutions mean different things, that different goals have been present from the start, that different objectives have been fulfilled. Such differences have always been present: All of us recognize that a degree from KU means something quite distinct from a degree granted from Emporia State or the University of Minnesota. The prospective college student owes it to himself to choose if possible an educational institution whose stated goals and philosophy most nearly agree with his own. The student of course must be prepared to face the eventuality that in some instances the agency would decide that it had more faith in the collective opinion of the faculty than in the individual opinion of the student. Would it really be surprising if some chose to believe that a professional opinion as to what constitutes a liberal education is more likely to be near the truth than a novice opinion? One could debate endlessly the merits of particular degree requirements and I anticipate that the faculty will take a long hard look at its definition of a liberal education next year. But it must be emphasized that no student is forced to accept the faculty's opinion. No student is forced to take any course. And specifically to Mr. Miller I would add the following. The fact that particular courses do not meet pre-stated goals does not necessarily invalidate the goals but may in fact say something about the courses themselves. From personal experience I can attest that there are delightful ways to learn Spanish J. Eugene Fox Professor, and Associate Dean THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3466 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 semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Accepts goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press VII REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. $60 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 H Group discusses music By GENELLE RICHARDS Arts & Reviews Editor The Lettermen, popular singing trio, discussed college and music in an interview following a very good and lengthy concert Saturday night. Students today are "more aware and take part in society," said Tony Butala. "Kids are concerned more with politics today than when I went to college." On the subject of drugs Pike said, "Kids with drugs are searching for something. They are not getting what they want at home." "I think a lot of it is curiosity. Dope is the same thing now as smoking behind the barn was when I was young." Pike said. Concerning their music, the group feels they are trying to reach the masses. "We try to reach anyone that enjoys music and make them happy," said Butala. "That is anyone from six to 90. Everyone has love in their heart and we sing about love." "We don't put anyone down and with newness and radical ideas, we try to keep our minds open and examine why something is a success." Butala said. "We love our life and have no problems, I think we're the happiest group in the world," said Butala. The Dutch granted independence in Indonesia in 1949. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER GOLDIE HAWN IN warner matthau goldie hawn inmarie berroman cactus flower TECHNICOLOR Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 THE Hillcrest HILLOST SHOPPING CENTER • BILL AND IOWA Adults $1.50 Children 75c THE Hillcrest 21 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 911 and IOWA 1975 ENDS TONIGHT Apr. 21 1970 KANSAN 5 TED TED TED CARO BOB LET consider the possibilities NATALIE WOOD ROBERT CULP COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON Soundtrack Album Available on Best Records Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Adults $1.50 Hillcrest RE-OPENS AFTER FORTY YEARS . . . See The Greatest Comedy Genius of All Time . . . Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" United Artists Also segments from "THE FURTHER PERILS OF LAUREL & HARDY" Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Adults 1.50, Children 75c ENDS TUESDAY THE Hillcrest E Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" by Mr. and Mrs. United Artists Charles Chaplin "THE CIRCUS" BE MAUD AND TIMESLEY United Artists WORLD PREMIERE LAWRENCE & NEW YORK หมายเลขการสร้าง riverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrun Every generation has to run its course... COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY принятие вновь проекта во времена. riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY with tuerrain LOUISE OBER • JOHN McLIAM • MARK JENKINS • Color WEDNESDAY THE Hillcrest B HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "BEST PICTURE" THE JOHNSONS A JEROME HELLMAN-JOHN SCHLESINGER PRODUCTION DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" BRENDA VACCARO JOHN McGIVER BROTHER SYLVIA MILES BARNARD HUGHES Screenplay by WALDO SALT Based on the novel by JAMES LEG HEUJHU Produced by JEROME HELLMAN Directed by JOHN SCHLINGER Music Supervision by JOHN BARRY X PERSONS UNDER 12 NOT ADMISSED COLOR by DeLuxe SO United GO Artists tarts The Hillcrest Tomorrow Hillcrest United Artists THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? GP THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? JANE FONDA BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR GIG YOUNG SUSANNAH YORK NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS Matinee Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15 - 9:35 SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 9-1055 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone W3-1065 --- Three marooned astronauts. And only 55 minutes left to rescue them. While the whole world watches and waits.. MAROONED MAROONED STARTS WEDNESDAY! SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOMINATED FOR TEN ACADEMY AWARDS ... HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELIL'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET.' " —John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Magazine "AN INSTANT CLASSIC. IT HAS A HAMMER-LOCK ON HISTORY, PERFORMANCE, PATHOS AND ROOTING INTEREST!" —Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES."—Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times AIRBORNE RICHARD BURTON as HENRY VIII GENEVIEVE BUJOLD as ANNE BOLEYN IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days Concerting IRENE PAPAS ANTHONY QUAYLE • JOHN COLICOS JOHN HALT • BRIDGET ROLAND • ROCARDS SONS ORIGINAL • MARRIELL ANDERSON CHARLES JARROTT • MA & WALLS A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR • FRANKLIN • GP All Ages Appetited Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 STARTS WED. Eve. 7:15 & 9:45 Adults 1.50, Child .75 SPRING WEEK GRANADA THEATRE - Telephone W3 5728 Use Kansan Classifieds HERSHBERGER TRACK KANSAS Jim tests 'his' track . . . Jim Hershberger flashes past his name on KU's new all-weather Tartan surface dedicated to him in a fitting fashion—it was pouring. However, Jim finished third in the Master's Mile with a 4:54 clocking. Chiefs open against Vikings in rematch of Super Bowl KANSAS CITY (UPI) — The World Champion Kansas City Chiefs open the 1970 season, the first for the merged 26-team National Football League in a rematch of last season's Super Bowl against the Vikings at Minnesota on Sunday, Sept. 20. The Chiefs thrashed Minnesota 23-7 in the Super Bowl last January. The Chiefs-Vikings rematch is the feature of the opening weekend of the 1970 schedule announced Monday in New York by the NFL. The St. Louis Cardinals will meet the Rams in the opening game on Friday night, Sept. 18, in Los Angeles. The Chicago Bears will be in New York for a game with the Giants the following night. In Sunday's openers, Kansas City is at Minnesota, Atlanta at New Orleans, Baltimore at San Diego, Dallas at Philadelphia, Denver at Buffalo, Detroit at Green Bay, Houston at Pittsburgh, Miami at Boston, Oakland at Cincinnati and Washington at San Francisco. The New York Jets play the first of 13 nationally televised games on Monday night, Sept. 21, at Cleveland against the Brownins. Kansas City will face three National Conference teams and two of the three newcomers to the American Football Conference. The schedule also calls for the Chiefs to play four of their first five games on the road. The Chiefs' 1970 home opener will feature the Boston Patriots on Oct. 11 at the Municipal Stadium. The Dallas Cowboys open a three-game Chiefs' home stand on Oct. 25 and the Cardinals open another three-game home stand for Kansas City on Nov. 22. The Chiefs will close the regular 1970 season on the road at Oakland, Dec. 12, and at San Diego, Dec. 20. The Chiefs' 1970 Schedule Sept. 20—at Minnesota. Sept. 28—at Baltimore. Oct. 11—at Denver. Oct. 18—at Cincinnati. Oct. 25—Dallas. Nov. —Oakland. Nov. 8—Houston. Nov. 15—at Pittsburgh. Nov. 22—St. Louis. Nov. 29—San Diego. Dec. 4—Denver. Dec. 12—at Oakland. Dec. 20—at San Diego. HAPPY BIRTHDAY? MANILA (UPI)—The Philippine Bureau of Internal Revenue is studying a plan to stagger the payment of income taxes by Filipinos to eliminate the last-minute rush every April 15. The proposal under study calls for the filing and payment of the tax return within 30 days after a taxpayer's birthday. Kansas State, Prairie View and Fort Hays State will attempt to complete grand slams on the midlands relays tour this weekend when the final carnival unfolds at Drake. Kansas State's two-mile relay team will seek its sixth straight victory on the Texas-Kansas-Drake circuit over a two-year period. The Wildcats might have had a shot at the sprint medley, too, if anchorman Ken Swenson had not come up with a sprained ankle last Friday at the Kansas Relays. The Wildcats won five straight sprint medleys in 1968 and '69 before losing at Drake a year ago. They came back to win at Texas this spring, but finished third behind Kansas and Nebraska Friday when Swenson could not run. Prairie View has a chance for two triple crowns in the college division. The Panthers, with Turman Boggess anchoring, have won the 880 and mile relays at both the Texas and Kansas relays. Fort Hays States, too, has a chance for a college slam in the distance medley relay. The Tigers' anchorman, Larbi Oukada, was voted the outstanding performer at the Kansas relays. He set a record in the six-mile run Thursday and came back Saturday to anchor Fort Hays's winning distance medley team and place third in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. Only two individuals won their events at both Texas and Kansas. Both will go for sweeps at Des Moines. He came back Saturday, however, to keep the two-mile teams streak alive. Swenson was timed in 1:50.0 for his half-mile despite running in a driving rainstorm. By CHARLIE SMITH UPI Sports Writer Three schools shoot for slam at Drake ALL Peter, Paul & Mary LP Albums $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Jayhawks elect FB captains It will be the first time coach Pepper Rodgers has had cocaptains and the first time they were elected during spring practice. The University of Kansas football team elected co-captains Monday for the 1970 season and the Jayhawks picked tight end Larry Brown and defensive end Steve Carmichael. Brown is a 230-pounder from Starke, Fla., and Carmichael a 229-pounder from Mulvane, Kan. Both will be seniors next fall. KANSAN Apr. 21 1970 groove to the Court Sounds of the "Jesters" FREE TGIF with KU ID Eastern New Mexico's Rex Maddaford has slam possibilities in the three-mile run as does Missouri's Mel Gray in the 100-yard dash. Maddaford registered one of only six records set at Kansas when he won the 12-lap race in 13:38.4. That was 15.1 seconds slower than he ran at Texas. Gray won in 9.4 seconds at Texas and 9.5 at Kansas. He passed up a chance to run against John Carlos in the open 100 at Kansas which Carlos won in 9.3. An interesting phenomena on the tour has been Ray McGill. Kansas State's high jumper. McGill leaped seven feet, one inch at Texas, but lost on fewer misses to Brigham Young's Ken Lundmark. F R E S H M A N CLASS PARTY - The Peppermint Rainbow - NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY . - Fri., April 24 * 8 p.m. - 12: - - FREE beer for freshmen having class dues cards - $2.50 per person for non dues payers Compliments: ACE JOHNSON Drake Relays top off Midwest circuit By RANDY MINKOFF DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) — The Drake Relays, the third leg of America's April relays circuit, opens next weekend in Des Moines with five world records and a dozen American and relays marks in jeopardy. A record field is expected to cruise Drake's year-old tartan track, particularly since it also will be the site of the June NCAA Track and Field championships. Many coaches feel the relays will be an ideal time for a Spring tune-up to acquaint their runners with the track conditions. The Drake Relays will top off the April relays carnivals, which began with Texas two weeks ago and the Kansas Relays last weekend in Lawrence. The Drake spectacular also sets up the natural event comparison with the Penn Relays held next weekend. The five world records in jeopardy, which will be compared with the Penn marks, are the three and six mile runs, the 880 yard relay and sprint medley relay and the 100 yard dash. Relays officials are hoping for their first sub-four minute mile, even without Marty Lliquori of Villanova, a prime favorite to take the NCAA mile title in June. Lliquori will be at the Penn Relays. Leading the mile field at Drake will be Leonard Hilton, of Houston, and Rex Maddaford, of Eastern New Mexico. Maddaford, who ISU, OU to meet in showdown By United Press International Iowa State and Oklahoma, the front-runners in the Big Eight Conference baseball race, get a chance to slug it out with each other this weekend. The Cyclones, off to a 4-0 start in conference play, invade Norman, Okla., for a three-game series with the Sooners, 4-1, on Friday and Saturday. Oklahoma fell $ \frac{1}{2} $-game off the pace this weekend when it split a doubleheader with Nebraska. Iowa State, meanwhile remained unbeaten with a 6-5 victory over Colorado. Saturday's games were all rained out. Elsewhere Friday, Kansas was dumped Kansas State, 6-3 and 4-1, and Missouri edged Oklahoma State 7-5. Other games this weekend match Oklahoma State at Kansas State, Kansas at Colorado and Nebraska at Missouri. Apr. 21 1970 KANSAN 7 should challenge Liquori for the NCAA mile title in June, helped win the Texas relay mile two weeks ago. Jack Bacheler, the tall, 1ean long distance champion from the Florida Track Club, will be back to defend his double crown in the three and six mile events. Bacheler was named the most valuable performer at last year's relays, but he is expected to face stiff competition this year. Gerry Lindgren, American three mile record holder, is likely to make his first trip to Drake, and could give Bachelor his toughest competition in the three-mile. Another Florida Track Club entry is Frank Shorter, who also gets a nod in challenging Bachelere in the three mile competition. Shorter is the defending NCAA six mile champ. The Mills brothers, Curtis and Marvin, paced Texas A&M to a world record in the 880 at the Texas Relays, lead the Aggie contingent to Des Moines in an attempt to better their own world 880 relay mark. Hilton anchored the Cougars to a world record setting sprint medley in the Astrodome earlier this year, turning in a final mile run of 3:59.8. The Houston sprint medley team, anchored by Hilton, will pose the stiffest competition, particularly if Hilton can provide something near a sub-four minute mile. Mel Gray, the defending relays champion from Missouri, is coming back to defend his title. But record holder Mike Goodrich, of Indiana, will be here to challenge Gray. ALL Peter, Paul & Mary LP Albums $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Another world record possibility is the 100 yard dash, but no spinter is listed as a clear cut favorite. Top challengers in the sprint medley will include Rice and Kansas State. Gray, a quick tight end for Missouri's Big Eight Conference football champs, won in the rain last year after Goodrich set a relay record of 9.2 in the preliminaries the day before. The 'Bucs' to KC? NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Negotiations were underway today that could send the American Basketball Association's New Orleans Buccaneers to Salt Lake City, Kansas City, Memphis or leave them in New Orleans. The Bucs closed a dismal season Wednesday night at New Orleans with a 145-127 win over the Dallas Chaparralrs. world mark is 9.1 set by Bob Hayes a decade ago. wanted! apartment managers wanted! apartment managers No experience necessary. Only requirements are intelligence, aggressiveness, ambition and a friendly personality. Business and managerial training provided without charge. A rare opportunity for you to run a multi-million dollar business. Full-time position for both husband and wife. You receive salary, apartment, utilities and telephone. Join the lack P. DeBoor "Action Team" one of the nation's fastest growing apartments development firms. Must be willing to relocate. Send a complete resume, with photos, to Steve Scholer, Administrative Assistant, Property Management Department. Along with Gray and Goodrien will be Ivory Crockett of Southern Illinois, and Gerald Tinker of Memphis State and Goodrich's Indiana teammate, Larry Highbaugh. Crockett, a sophomore sensation, tied the world indoor mark in the 60 yard dash this winter, and could be a dark horse winner. In the field events the Kansas squad of Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop will be in Jack P. DeBoer Associates, Inc. town to dominate the field as they did last year. Salb is the defending Drake and national champ in the shot put, and his companions have helped Kansas dominate Big Eight track for the past two seasons. In the college division, Prairie View and Southern Universities, two schools with lightning quick sprinters, are expected to hold away again in the relays. Southern's 440 yard and 880 yard champs remain intact while Prairie View returns to defend its two mile, sprint and mile relay titles. INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong Use Kansan Classified Beautiful New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing at Malls Olde English Village - interior roominess - wall to wall carpeting - air conditioning - sound conditioning * all electric Frigidaire kitchens Come see 2. and 3 bedroom units afternoon weekdays and weekends fireplaces • sauna baths • recreation rooms 2411 Louisiana 843-5552 SUPERSHEFO S It's SUPER SHEF! Tastier than a regular burger— Faster than you can make it at home— Better than a three course meal— Super Shef! Super Shef. Made of ¼ pound pure beef hamburger, catsup, lettuce, tomato, pickle, onion rings and creamy dressing, all on a toasted bun. Next time you're in Burger Chef look up. It might be the mighty Super Shef. Free Kite Get a free Super Shef Hi- Flier Kite with every Super Shef you order. Supply Limited This week only while supply lasts. BURGER CHEF Family Restaurants (c) NATIONAL PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS, INC. 1910 THE DAYS OF ETERNITY Shades of a bucket brigade Many students helped firemen control the fire in the Kansas Union building Monday night by holding one of the hoses used to control the blaze. Other students helped by carrying out valuable art objects and furniture. Students in heroic efforts Several University of Kansas students helped firemen last night in the major fire at the Kansas Union. Among them was John Stratford, Pratt junior. Stratford left Watson Library about 11 p.m. and saw fire trucks at the Kansas Union. He said he went over to the Union out of curiosity and wound up helping to get the fire under control. Stratford said about 25 students were recruited as helpers to keep the crowd back. "One kid even tore up his shirt so that the guys who were helping could be identified with yellow armbands," he said. "I wish someone could find out his name." Stratford said that when he arrived, he stood on the east side of the Kansas Union building, but couldn't see any flames, so he went around to the back. He said five fire trucks were in front of the building, since the building was too high on the west side for the hoses to get water to the roof. Stratford said he helped move the crowd out of the way. He said about 25 students then went inside the building to help move furniture to the new part of the building, since the flames had not yet reached that part. After an hour a snorkel truck arrived, and the crowd cheered when firemen started pouring water on the flaming roof, Stratford said. Firemen asked for help in holding the firehoses. About 25 men students volunteered, including Stratford. "Up there, it was really wet and cold," he said. Stratford said the roof collapsed in pieces, the west side over the old section of the Union going first. "Then the east side over the north entrance caved in," he said. Some of the students went into the ballroom after the fire was under control. About six inches of water was on the floor, as well as plaster and burnt furniture, he said. "There was water everywhere," Stratford said. "I went down to the basement, and water was gushing down the stairs." The new part sustained mostly smoke and water damage and the furniture the students had moved was soaked with water, he said. 8 KANSAN Apr. 21 1970 "It was really a mess, all those hoses had to be rolled up," he said. "There were an awful lot of students helping, though, but Strafford left the fire about 2 a.m., when the firemen were starting to clean things up. John R. Fennimore, 48, estimated it would take him nine months and cost $2,000 to make the hike. He added, however, that he plans to fly from continent to continent. WILMINGTON, Del. (UPI)—A former U.S. Marine who harbors he has "the best feet in the world" plans to begin a walk around the world this fall to prove "American manhood is not lost." most of the huge crowd that was there just got in the way. "I sure wish we could find that guy who tore up his shirt." WORLD HIKE The bobcat is found in eastern North America, from Canada to Mexico. Tragedy recounted By KENNETH CUMMINS Wire_Editor The fire burned low, gasping for air through the constant torrents of water, and then suddenly burst into full blaze again and spread rapidly across the roof of the Kansas Union. Several students, including myself, angered by the cheers and jeers of the crowd that greeted the firefighters as they rushed to head off the dangerous blaze, decided to see what we could do to aid the firemen. Around in front of the Union someone had already had enough sense to begin organizing the students to clear out the Union when it appeared that the fire was going to rage out of control. Arm bands were issued to students to give them access to areas otherwise declared off limits because of the danger. We entered the Union through a steady downpour of water proceeding through the already burned-out holes in the roof. Several of us began removing the exhibits and furniture from the main floor, while others ran upstairs to save the oil paintings and the Curry collection. The Pine Room, we are told, was already beyond salvage. Those students who went upstairs were warned that they went at their own risks, and that the roof might fall in on their heads at any moment. Still they went. Nearly 150 students were involved in the salvage of the valuables of the Union. Everywhere there was a sense of urgency as paintings and furniture were rushed from the Union. No one spoke except to give short abrupt orders. I sensed that the people around me were steadily considering the danger of the building collapsing around them as they waded through the water to get their job completed. Suddenly someone said that he had felt a twinge through his wet shoes. "I think there's a hot wire around here," he yelled. "Clear the building fast," someone shouted from the stairway. I ran outside. A ladder was leaning against the side of the We constantly talked and joked with one another to keep our minds off the cold and the late hour. It was nearly 3:30 a.m. A steady stream of ham sandwiches, donuts, hot tea and coffee and popcorn passed into our hands and to the students and firemen on the roof. building and a group of students were hoisting fire hose up to waiting firemen on the roof. I grabbed the hose and assisted in holding it up to keep it from getting kinked. We continually pushed forward with the hose or took up slack as the order was given from above. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Several students were on the roof now amidst the blaze, assisting the firemen in handling the hoses. I can remember watching with envy the students on the roof near the warmth of the blaze as I stood below shivering in the cold for nearly two hours. And then suddenly it was over. I laid down the hose and walked into the Union. Several inches of water covered the main floor and water continued to rain down. I went to the second floor, stood amidst the rubble in the middle of the ballroom and stared unbelievingly at the stars through the gaping holes in the roof. An ugly, exposed steel structure glared down at me. On the roof I found my roomate, still holding a hose as firemen attacked the last remaining flames. Cold and wet, and realizing that there was no longer anything that I could do, I decided to go home. I walked from the blackened and dripping structure, recalling my earlier mistaken impressions about students. I now felt pleased and grateful for their heroic efforts. There are about 12,000 living species of birds. ALL Peter, Paul & Mary LP Albums $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS Including Rainy Day Women 24 & 31 Brown in the Wind Subterranean Homesick Blues Like a Rolling Stone Positively 4th Street On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Ice Cream Social Ice Cream Social 15c for 2-dips of ice cream and 2-cookies at JRP Parking Lot April 19-24 Wed., April 22 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Spring Week Committee C Photo by Ron Bishop Fire started in third floor hallway near Pine Room SALON DE BILTRE Photo by Ron Bishop Frank Burge and Dean Balfour discuss fire on flooded first floor of Union RIPP Students brought doughnuts and coffee for firefighters Photo by Steve Haynes 1947-05-21 Photo by Ron Carter Old English Room, above Ballroom, completely gutted Nixon orders troop withdrawal SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI) —President Nixon Monday night ordered a 150,000-man pullout of U.S. troops from South Vietnam in the next year and promised "with confidence" that all American troops would be withdrawn at an unspecified date. "We finally have in sight the just peace we are seeking." Nixon said in a nationwide report on Vietnam. "We can now say with confidence that pacification is succeeding. We can say with confidence that the South Vietnamese can develop the capability for their own defense. We can say with confidence that all American combat forces can and will be withdrawn," Nixon said. "I again remind the leaders of North Vietnam that while we are taking these risks for peace they will be taking grave risks should they attempt to use the occasion to jeopardize the security of our remaining forces in Vietnam by increased military action in Vietnam, in Cambodia or in Laos." The 150,000man reduction would reduce U.S. troop levels in South Vietnam to 284,000 by May, 1971. The timing of the additional withdrawals was purposefully left vague and will be determined by continual reassessments of the military and diplomatic situation. According to White House officials familiar with the President's thinking, the rate of U.S. troop withdrawals would remain virtually the same as it has been since last December—approximately 12,000 men per month. The officials said the advantage of announcing the larger withdrawal figure over a longer period of time was that it put the government of President Nguyen Van Thieu on notice of America's intentions. The officials said the American pullback possibly would be accompanied by minor reductions in the troop commitments of the five U.S. and South Vietnamese allies in Vietnam. This announcement means that by May, 1971, a total of 265,000 U.S. troops will have been pulled out of South Vietnam since President Nixon ordered the initial cutback on June 8, 1969, during his meeting with President Thieu on Midway Island. The charges were made April 10 by Spearman. Police officials and the department of public safety officials have completed a check of its records regarding the charges and have found nothing. Spearman says police failed to act At that time Spearman said he was urging all blacks in the University community to carry weapons. He cited increasing numbers of threats of violence and attempts at violence as the reason for the urging. Spearman declined any more comment on the charges and last week planned a BSU news conference for Monday. No conference took place, however. John Spearman Jr., Lawrence sophomore and president of the BSU, charged last week that the Lawrence Police Department failed to investigate a bombing attempt in Lawrence and that it failed to provide police protection after promising to do so for those who were threatened. 10 KANSAN Apr. 21 1970 Nixon said his decision to reduce the American commitment has been based entirely on the progress made by South Vietnamese armed forces in taking on a greater portion of the war which "has substantially exceeded our original expectations." He called on Hanoi to enter into meaningful negotiations that would produce fairly apportioned political power in South Vietnam. The President disclosed that he had sent letters April 7 to the 14 signatory powers of the 1962 Geneva Accords urging consultations to restore peace in Indochina. He also made mention of the recent statement by Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob Malik that hinted possible Soviet agreement to such a conference. INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong Nixon said he did not yet know the full implication of Malik's suggestion and White House sources said the President had decided to take this opportunity to make clear the U.S. desire for the conference. In March Nixon wrote Soviet Prime Minister Aleksei Kosygin suggesting a similar conference and was rebuffed. The Soviet Union, along with Britian, are co-chairman of the 1962 Geneva Accords. WORKER PROTECTION NEW YORK-Most American workers today are covered by workmen's compensation insurance, notes the Insurance Information Institute. Employers in 1968 paid $2.875 billion in premiums for this protection, designed to provide for the cost of medical care and weekly payments to injured employees or to dependents of persons killed in workconnected accidents. Nixon painted a grim picture of Communist aggression not only SMALL COLLEGE PICK NEW YORK (UPI) — Terry Bradshaw of Louisiana Tech is the only small college football player ever picked as the No.1 choice in the National Football League player draft. The beginning and the end of World War III are coming, April 28- May1. ALL Peter, Paul & Mary LP Albums $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. in South Vietnam but throughout Southeast Asia. About 40,000 Communist troops are now conducting open aggression against Cambodia, he said, and Hanoi has sent thousands more troops into Laos to launch new offensives. Despite the new enemy activity, he said, there has been an overall decline in Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troop levels in South Vietnam and a consequent reduction in American casualties. Patrick J. Morris Kenneth "Roger" Owens MEN'S HAIR STYLIST THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S NAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMÉRICA be eyes-wise with Suzie's K be eyes-wise with Suzie's COLLECTION of fabulous lashes APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 802-3699 --- ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2322 RIDGE COURT 100% TOP QUALITY HUMAN HAIR, HAND- TIED EYELASHES. A tremendous value HED EYELASHES. A tremendous value Only $6.00—5 pair upper—1 pair lower lashes. Assorted styles for night and day wear. Really do your thing find a more exciting you with Suzie's dreamy collection of sinfully flattering lashes. Specify black or brown Send $6.00 check or money order Allow two weeks for delivery Suzie's P.O. Box 629 • Glen Ellyn, Illinois 60137 Suzie's Use Kansan Classifieds SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Recreation—April 21 Forums----April 21 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Chairmen 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Fine Arts—April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Humanities Chairman 6 Art Forums Chairman 6. Art Forums Chairman 1. Chairman (Summer 1970) April 22 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. p! Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... a classic and a kick Two styles to c A bold new cla in brass. Or the kick. A sandal honest-to-good. rubber soles. Eit it's a cool, com. choice. Make it ROP SALVATORE FERRARI Two styles to choose. A bold new classic trimmed in brass. Or the new style kick. A sandal with real honest-to-goodness tiretread rubber soles. Either way, it's a cool, comfortable choice. Make it soon. ROBLEE. $8.95 Sixes 7-12 McCoy shoes 813 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-2091 --- WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES One day Three days free buys 25 words or less: $1.50 additional cost: $97 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the manual or 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. Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Norelco tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 4-24 Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, these machines to it not extra charge. Lawrence Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3644. tf Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tf Powerful Tuner/Amp with 2 large speakers and stereo cassette player, changer, was $151.00, now $229.00. At Ray Stoneback's, only 929 Mass. New famous brand portable stereo demonstrator, was $69.90. Reduced to only $35.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 New famous brand 8 track stereo cartridge player, adaptable to any Stereo Multiplex System, only $69.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Stereo—some floor model portable stereos cut to $ \frac{1}{2} $ price . . others with large reductions. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-21 1969 TR-6 motorcycle Perfect. 1500 miles, stock $975. 842-2620. 4-21 Male German Shepherd—8 mo. Rog. -842-5769. 4-21 Component Set-receiver, stereo cassette changer and speakers. Was $315.00, now $259.00 at Ray Stonebeek's, 929 Mass. 4-21 Gibson B-25 12-string Guitar and dual-pick-up耳机 4-21 842-7269 4-21 1969 Toyota Corolla—grey with red interior —4 spd., gets great gas mileage—like new inside and gas, $1500, 842-2191. 4-21 1967 Triumph TR-4A-IRS, beautiful British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelin X tires. $1800. 842-219-1 1965 Triumph TR-4, red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, $1400, 842-2191. 4-21 1966 GTO Convertible—yellow with covers top-4 cover, speed deluxe wheel covers, Motorola built in stereo speakers hook-up, good tires, $1500 2191 4-21 1967 Austin-Healey 3000 Mark III white with black convertible top, black interior, wire wheels, excellent condition, $2300, 843-2191. 4-21 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, excellent body, overhauled transmission, $1400. 842-2191. 4-21 1967 WV Super Bug -silver mist paint with black interior, 76 h.p., heavy duty suspension, stereo tape speaker, good up-die, look tired, $1500, 42-2191 1968 VW Fastback—near perfect white paint exhibit throughout. $1600, 443-2191, 4-21 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800. 842- 2191. 4-21 Ceramics, stoneware, $2.00 and up. 1612 Louisiana. Please phone 843- 2789. Rosalie Wax. 4-21 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383, Formula S. Speed, added G-70's, low mileage M. Speed, Dick at 616 K/84 or 842-5225. Help a Bird Today! Precaut birdhouse kits and bird feeding stations now available at Heritage History Gift Shop. Open daily 8:30 to 4:20 Sundays 1:30 to 4:30. Framus 12-string guitar, $120.00. Norelce Cassette Carry-Corder (battery or A.C.) $45.00. German made German made 45.00. Martin D-35-6 string guitar, 6 months old. $45.00 with hard-shell case. Call 675-7342 -4-22 Need money to pay tax. Must sell two-year-old Masterworks stereo and so six cyl. Chev. Call 842-8534. 4-22 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI12-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 One 40 watt home tape deck with BSR turntable. Will accept highest reasonable offer. Old RCA console needs work, $5. Call Stu. 1869 4-22 6-string Gibson guitar in perfect con- formity for serious players. Hard shell cus- tom $75, 842-000-4, 4-22 Horse Teeth Necklaces . . . The Brazilian answer to warding off social disasters! An eye-catching novelty item in the Museum of Natural History History. Weekdays. Open days 1:30 to 4:30. Weekdays 8:30 to 4:30. Weekdays 8:30 to 4:22 Attention Floecinauechilpimcupants! For Sale: 1) Unused -8 silver drinking cups; copper chafing dish with stand and burner; calf wallet and key case; Lite-Gem hi-intensity trompet timer; Humidity Gauge; tray-table combination; 2) Used-Norelco electric shaver; wine decanter with four matching glasses; wicker desk or oak table base; Short wave portable radio, batteries or AC; assorted kite items. Call 843-765-4233 4-23 Three Viator Manual Lens, 85mm, 200mm. Excellent condition. 843-518-380 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect condition. Must sell now! Call 843-6707. 4-30 Four 775-14 tires. Excellent condition. Original price $120. Am trading cars. $60 and 4 old tires. Call 843- 0493 after 9 p.m. 4-21 Borg-Warner 8 track car stereo. Call 917-532-2460 or 375-753-2460 or 1025 Emmery Road. 1966 Chevelle SS 396. Only 26,000 miles Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-24 1968 BSA Foster, 441ce, dirt or road 1969 BSA Foster, 432ce, dirt or road 1200 after 6. Ask for John in 26:2, 4-44 1200 after 7. Ask for John in 26:2, 4-44 70 Datsun 2-litre, 5 speed, 120 m.p.h, 1800 miles, silver-black, 135 horse- power. Extras. Call Chip, 843-3310. 4-24 $1.75! That’s all it costs to place a W-word classified ad for 5 days. What can you learn from this? again? In the main “For Sale,” course, of course. $1.75! That’s all it costs to place a W-word classified ad for 5 days. What can you learn from this? again? In the main “For Sale,” course, of Must sell diamond ring set-engagement band, wedding band, both with diamonds. 843-0152. First National Bank. 4-27 Repossessed 1969 Chevy II. Yeiow with black interior, bucket seats, V-8, 3-speed. See at the National Bank. 4-27 1960 TR-3, perfect mechanically new clutch transmission, 842-741-3050 4-423 Component stereo system with Fisher XP55b speaker and Nikko amp, warranty left on all components, plus folk record collection, $210. 848-47050. 1968 Suzuki; X-6-250ce. Excellent condition. Two helmets. 2,000 miles. Drafted, must sell immediately. 842-8884. 4-23 Magnavox stereo, console, contemporary magazine styling, diamonl. stylus, walnut grained, excellent condition, 5 mon- teau, leaving Lawrence. $100-27 842-5670 Mayfair 8 track stereo tapeplayer like new, plus 18 tapes--Doors, Collins, Dundrix, Dundrix, Electric Flag, BST, $c220 value, priced $249 Harris, B34-845-944 515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Que. if you want some honest-to-god Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI 2-6510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday f Find your Date-Mate by computer, or sdates $600. 816: GRI-0440 anytime. N. Kansas City. Mo. 6440. No obligation. Fill form into in- private. 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 NOTICE LA PETITE GALERIE. Follow Kentucky to 910 and see spring, Guys and gals fashions for spring and summer fun. tt Galerie Prudac Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. THE HOME in the WALL DELICATESEN & DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11l The Castle Tea Room is ideal for luncheonies dinner parties, or even reception meetings Call Lbuse Kritz, 843-1151 Most unique restaurant Lawrence. Fly for half in Optocap Flying Cun dates, free info Phone 4-21 1124 after The beginning and the end of World War II are coming. April 28-May 4 4-24 For a really great deal clip the coupon from Friday's UDK for the special on the Double D Burger at the Double D Diner. For 90c you get a big Double D Burger, Large Coke and French Fries. You save 15c 4-21 Do you want a part-time liquor store job May through August or later? Will be able to study on job Call Bob, 842-8933. 4-21 Rates for Kansan classifieds are the lowest anywhere around: $1.00 for three days, $1.75 for five days, with only pennies extra more than 25 words. 4-24 The Omnibus Shop has a new extum of contemporary art—paintings, serigraphs, lithographs and sculpture, of fine art and crafts. 9th and Indiana. 4-27 LOST $10.00 reward for black Prince Gardner wallet. Lost someplace between the airport and Monkey Monday, April 13. If found, contact Kip at 845-412-43 questions asked. Zippo Cigaret lighter with "Sgt. Jarvis" written on the front. Lost at the Hawks Nest. Reward. Call 843-3624. 4-27 $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license. No. T2T3PL. No questions. Phone 646-3844 and ask for me. 4-24 WANTED Roommate. Move in May 1 through summer. $90. Dave. 842-5786. 4-21 An apt, for summer sublease. I am able to teach student. Call 4-211 8937 after 5:30. Roommate wanted: Mature female graduate student or teacher, wanted to share two-bedroom apartment, $50/month. Call 842-5893 after 5 p.m. Male needs apartment from now until June. $70/mo. or less, roommates, kitchen, call. Call 842-2396. 4-23 Summer traveling companion! Forget about school. Relax, see national park reservations. Swim in the Pacific, visit San Francisco, Inspective call 842-659-14-24 Live in convenient Jayhawker Towers next fall. If interested and a serious student, call Bruce at 842-7770 after 1:00 p.m. Roommate for summer starting June 1 or earlier. Call 842-3539 or UN 4-3166, Tom. 4-27 PERSONAL Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fess, 843-8074. ff Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Located across from Stouffer floor. Pool and ice-b conditioning Shannon on磅房 or -4-22. 1741 W. 19th VI. 3-8220 4-22 Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stenil tech and dupliciating. Pick up delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 842-6562. Want to send a unique birthday card? Personal 'personal' aid Card: $1.00 for one day 4-24 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typerules, print writer, paperwriter Pica type. Competent service. 5-15. Wright. Phone 843-9554. Makes TYPING SAVE YOURSELF AFINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T. I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Work 483-231, Mrs. Ruucknan. HELP WANTED Earn extra money. Sell American eagle license plates. Retail or to deal with vehicles for sample and George Mack. 8 Doug-lass Lane, Kirkwood, Missouri 63122 Leaving town soon? Want a good job to take with you for security? Part or full-time job with Top Notch Fashions, Inc. See us at the Student Union, Room 101, Wed., April 22, all day. 4-22 Needed now: experienced female phone solicitor. Guarantee plus bonuses. Excellent opportunity or opportunity. 843-6425 Don't call 4-24 you are tired me. SERVICES OFFERED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Nationwide directories of positions. In relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Inplexcom, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767. 4-27 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. Phone 843-2736. tf FOUND Found—at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM, 108. Radio 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. 4-78 Found: one easy way to sell what you don't want and find what you need. Kansas classifieds: $1.00 for one day, $1.75 for three days, 25 hours or less. 4-24 Pair brown frame eyeglasses behind To claim call 443-3698 and pay for the glasses. FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. ff Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to the town. live in apartment jacent to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly expensive rates. Available to families of up to six children. $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $25. To view these luxury rooms, call David Rhodus: 842-213 or McGregel Agency: 843-205. 2-bedroom apt. to sub-let. Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs W 8th Terr. $149/ mon. 842-5446 for 4 p.m. 4:22 Wed. and Thurs. We Care About We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Apartment to subtel for Summer School, or from June 1-Aug. 24. 2 bedrooms and study, furnished, TV radiogram, dishwasher, use of swimming pool. About 4 miles from campgrounds. Call 842-5025 $160.00 per month, plus electricity and telephone. Call 842-5025, Tues. Thurs. mornings, and any evening. 4-22 2 bedroom apartment, close to cam- pus, will subtle for summer. Call 4892- 4-22 4892- Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Now leasing for summer and r-condition pool or private pool. Shown 1741 W, 191 M, 3I-82302 by appointment. Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall Rentals of units in the popular VALO APARTMENTS (9th and 10th) APARTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on first come, first serve basis. Call 843-7848 or visit www.harvard.com or come to rental office at 2107 East Vard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in HARD SQUARE APARTMENTS. beautiful, quiet and cozy, excellent sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished kitchen, large room. Mike Carpino at 842-3801 or 842-2348 see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 Would you believe . . . you can walk to classes from your home in the ARGO APARTMENTS, 11th and Missouli, and enjoy living in Lawrence's special summer rates during June and July!! Call 842-2348, or drop by the resident manager's apartment at 1130 Fifth Street, or come to our central rental office, 2197 W. Vard Road to get details with summer and fall leasing. 5-14 Summer sublet. May 15-Sept. 1 or part. Orland Park near 79th and 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C, pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, lots of closets, nicely furnished. $175/mo., utilities included. Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once. Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Boths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Boths $230 3 locations to serve your every need Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass. For summer sub-let; furnished three-bedroom house, carpets, paneling. See photos in back of room. Moving To Kansas City? 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN SEE CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS Open Daily 9 Till Dark CLUBHOUSE POOL CHARTER HOUSE Raney Drug Stores Complete prescription departments and fountain service. S.E. Corner I-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Complete lines of cosmetics, toiletries Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 New York Cleaners For the best in: or the best in: - Dry Cleaning - Alterations - Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Photo by Ron Bishop Remnants of a Molotov cocktail A Molotov cocktail was thrown through the window of the administration building at Lawrence High School Monday evening. The fire bomb was thrown through the window while in a paper sack which is shown still on the window. The bomb caused only minor damage. Union burns (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) a conference of University Presidents and administrators, said in a telephone statement early this morning, it now may become an obvious necessity to appeal to strengthen campus security to prevent further incidents from occurring at KU. Chalmers said he was first informed of the fire in the Kansas Union at his hotel in Washington. He said University Executive Secretary Ray Nichols called him about 1 a.m. (EST) and at that time little information was available concerning the fire. "It certainly seems," Chalmers said, "that the three attempts at arson on the KU campus on April 8 and the three actual fires in the community the last three weeks seems to suggest that it is a pyromaniae at work. I do think, however, that it is the work of one person or perhaps two or three people." Chalmers said he does not plan to return to Lawrence any earlier than scheduled unless he gets a report that there is something he can do. An estimated 2,000 people viewed the blazing building while several more aided firemen in any way they could. Many attempted to clear the building of furniture, help balance fire hoses, and provide coffee and doughnuts to the fire fighters. "The fire could have been a lot worse without student help," said Fire Chief Sanders. Director Burge said the building was adequately insured, but for all practical purposes the entire south half of the building is a total loss. The Union, Burge said, will definitely be closed to all students until further notification from him. Soviets to strengthen MOSCOW (UPI) — Communist party Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev announced plans today for strengthening the Soviet armed forces and initiating a long-range economic program to correct past "mistakes and failures." Frank Burge- (Continued from page 1) mitted for the purpose of assessing damage—performing necessary operations related to cleaning and drying the areas that are not ruined. Department heads will promptly begin with plans to perform the minimum essential operations related to student needs in areas or buildings elsewhere on the campus." Burge said he hoped the new wing of the Union could be opened in 72 hours. "That's still under speculation," he said, "because of the intensive water damage. When it is opened, students will have to use the Baumgartner Drive entrance to get in." 12 KANSAN Apr. 21 1970 Two firebombs exploded at Lawrence High School about 9 p.m. Monday night. The bombs exploded in two windows of the administration center, causing only minor damage. Two firetrucks were dispatched to the school, but the blaze was quickly extinguished with two fire extinguishers. At the time of the bombing, the Lawrence Board of Education was meeting in the nearby LHS auditorium. No members of the board were injured. BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS Including Rainy Day Women 12 & 35 Blown in the Wind Subterranean HomeSkies Blues Like a Rolling Stone Positively 4th Street The bombing followed a referendum Monday afternoon in which the student body overwhelmingly rejected demands of black students. "After the initial demands were rejected," Andy Benton, student council president said, "the student Council passed a resolution that met all of the demands the blacks made." Benton said the resolution allowed for the addition of two more white cheerleaders as well as two black cheerleaders. The vote was solely on the issue of cheerleader representation. A demand on the queen selection is to be taken up "as soon as we can get another meeting," Benton said. BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS Including Rainy Day Women 12 & 35 Blown in the Wind Subterranean Homewick Blues Like a Rolling Stone Positively 4th Street On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ctr. Bombs explode at LHS Two other demands were made, one for more black faculty and staff members and another for an expanded black studies curriculum. These demands are expected to be discussed at the regular meeting of the district 497 school board tonight. Earlier Monday morning a group of 25 black adults, many of them parents of students at Lawrence High School, presented William Medley, principal of the high school, with a letter demanding charges against several black KU students be dropped and black students the high school suspended last week, be immediately reinstated. The letter supported the position of the black students concerning the demands made to Medley last week. The letter said, "Their proposed changes in the course structure and in the mechanisms for recognition and representation of the Black minority of Lawrence High are reasonable and long overdue." The parents were temporarily denied entrance to the high SCHOOL SHORTAGE MEXICO CITY (UPI)—Slightly more than 3 million children between six and 14 years of age are unable to attend school in Mexico because of a shortage of classrooms, according to a survey by the Federal Education Department. school. Medley asked the parents what they wanted, and after several minutes of discussion, Medley allowed the parents to meet with him in the school auditorium. The discussion centered on the suspensions of several black high school students. The students were suspended last week as a result of sporadic trouble at the high school. One parent, whose son was suspended, said that she did not know why her son was suspended, because she received contradictory letters regarding the reason for his suspension. Horace Bond, a black KU graduate student, said the black students were being punished because they were black. "The blacks were treated as a group and punished as a group, he said. "We are going to follow the legal process and conduct individual hearings." Medley answered. Medley said the hearings would be held for the school board. He also said that the students would be suspended unless they brought new evidence to light during their hearings. According to Medley, no student would sit on the board hearing the students appeals. One of the parents said their children did not have any voice at the high school because of the lopsided ratio of whites to blacks. Medley said black students had the same chance at the school as white students. Bond accused Medley of making the black students look like villains, stating that the black students were only reacting to the subtle abuses of the white. Bond called Medley the real villain. Several members of the group asked Medley if any of the whites who had harassed black girls had been suspended. Medley said he did not know. The parents asked Medley for a final comment on whether he would continue to press charges against the black university students. Medley said, "I have no intention of dropping the charges" In the letter presented to Medley the parents called the charges against the KU students, "unnecessary and unjust." The letter also called the presence of the KU students "a stabilizing influence." One of the parents said John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and president of the BSU, only said "You have a leader. Follow him." The impromptu conference ended with little or no agreement between the parents and Medley. The parents said Medley was faced with a crisis and he failed to act. For Students on the Go, We're TOPS 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 Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th 1526 West 23rd Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking BOB DYLAN'S GREATEST HITS Including Rainy Day Women 123 85 Blowin in the Wind Subterranean Homesick Blues Like a Rolling Stone Positively 4th Street On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. WANT A PLACE TO DO YOUR SPRING THING? TRY the Lounge THE LOUNGE AT HILLCREST BILLIARDS S.W. CORNER OF HILLCREST BOWL 9TH AND IOWA BUDWEISER ON TAP OF COURSE WANT A PLACE TO DO YOUR SPRING THING? TRY the Lounge THE LOUNGE AT HILLCREST BRUNCHS W. CORNER OF HILLCREST BOWL BUDWEISER ON TAP OF COURSE SCHOOL Charred ruins remain . . . A gaping hole is all that remains of the Kansas Union roof over the Ballroom. The tedious task of surveying damages to the Union, already estimated at $2 million, began Tuesday. No cause has yet been officially determined for the fire that did damage estimated at up to $2 million to the Kansas Union Monday night. Lawrence Fire Chief Fred Sanders said it would be several days before the state fire marshall could determine the cause, "if that was even possible." Damage survey begins Actual fire damage to the building was confined to the destruction of the roof of the original portion of the building, constructed in 1926, and to the rooms on the third floor on the east and west sides of the building. The interiors of the Pine and English Rooms were destroyed, but the elaborately decorated Centennial Room, immediately south of the English Room, suffered little damage other than waterlogging of the carpet. There was no fire damage to the Ballroom floor, though debris from the caved-in roof, water and smoke caused considerable damage. The main floor, basement and subbasements of the 1951-52 addition to the Union suffered damage from water and smoke. Frank Burge, Union director, said he hoped the new addition, completed only last year, could be opened to the public within 48 hours. The addition suffered only very minor damages "We knew if the fire reached the attic we would be in trouble," he said. No one was admitted to either Lawrence Memorial Hospital or Watkins Hospital for injuries suffered from what Assistant Fire Chief John Kasberger described as "one big hell of a fire." Kasberger attributed the huge blazes on the roof to the combustible furniture and wood-filled attic. "We used about 10 hoses," Kasberger said, "but it took a while to get all of those inside." Onlookers reported weak water pressure at times, but Kasberger felt the pressure was good. since, but Hassler left the pressure was good. Burge expressed gratitude to students who assisted firemen, and said more than $50,000 worth of art objects and furniture were saved through the efforts of the students. Sanders also had high praise for student volunteer firefighters. "I had 30 men fighting the fire and from a hundred to two hundred students were helping," he said. "You just mentioned to them what you wanted done, and they'd do it." Sanders said there was no trouble from the crowd, which ranged from several hundred to nearly a thousand spectators. Administrators worked through Tuesday relocating and rescheduling nearly a thousand events which were to be held in the Union during the final four weeks of the semester. Check cashing services have been moved to Summerfield and Strong Halls. Residence halls will supply food services for the conferences scheduled in the new addition of the Union. Relocation of events originally scheduled in the Union will be announced when obtained from the reservations section of the registrar's office. Student and campus organizations with offices in the smoke and water damaged building were uncertain of where they would relocate. Most of Tuesday, however, was spent sifting through remains and surveying damages in an effort to determine losses. Relocation, said spokesmen for most organizations, was to be dealt with later. (Continued to page 20) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.119 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday. April 22.1970 BULLETIN Governor Robert B. Docking, again placed a curfew on the city from 8 p.m. until 6 a.m. The curfew will restrict the sale of alcoholic beverages, the number of persons on the streets and will prohibit any flammable liquid in any container, and the carrying of any firearms or explosives. Racial tension at LHS again causes violence By TOM SLAUGHTER Kansan Staff Writer For the third time in two weeks, violence erupted on the campus of Lawrence High School Tuesday morning, resulting in the use of tear gas and mace by policemen. A group of about 150 blacks, many of them University of Kansas students, broke several windows and clashed with Lawrence police and public safety officers. The crowd formed in Veterans Park about 9 a.m. and then moved to the high school grounds. As the group moved toward the administration center of School District 497 at the south end of the block, windows were broken on the east side of high school, Principal William Medley said approximately 15 windows were broken. When the group reached the administration center, they were met by two Lawrence policemen. More patrolmen soon arrived on the scene, bolstering the total number of the policemen to about 20 officers. A number of small confrontations ensued between the blacks and the policemen. One female was held temporarily, but was set free after the group demanded she be released. (Continued on page 20) The only injury sustained in the melee was to a Lawrence Heller asks watch Instructions from Acting Provost Francis H. Heller were issued to volunteer faculty members and students who stayed in campus buildings last night for a curfew watch. The instructions said, "We do not expect you to take any action. If, however, you should note strange movement in or around your building, or if you should hear sounds of glass breaking, you should call at once the emergency number." "We hope the night will pass uneventfully," the instructions said, "but recent events suggest that we must take precautionary measures." Because of the curfew, faculty, custodial personnel and students on duty were required to remain in the buildings all night. Heller also released the following statement yesterday afternoon: "This is an unhappy moment in the life of the University, with an unfortunate loss of property, and disruption of academic, cultural and extra-curricular activities of many kinds. "But even in the most tragic of circumstances some bright aspects appear for the University—it was the spontaneous response of hundreds of KU students who helped minimize damage by removing paintings and furnishings from the burning building, by helping firemen with their equipment as they fought the flames and by serving refreshments to the firefighters through the night. "We also wish to give thanks to the Lawrence fire department for their tremendous job in bringing the fire under control so quickly and minimizing damage. The fact that we have a Kansas Union still standing is due to their efforts." Violence breaks out again at Lawrence High School A black student at Lawrence High School was held briefly by police during a confrontation at the high school Tuesday morning. She was released after a group of black students from KU and Lawrence High demanded she be set free. Policemen used tear gas and chemical mace to disperse the crowd after several windows were broken on the east side of the school. THE LAW ENFORCEMENT DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. FOOTING IN A PROTECTIVE GARDEN, THE POLICE BRACES AN OFFICIAL ATTENDANT TO HANDLE A CIVIL PROBLEM. Guardsmen activated to quell snipers, fires By DAN OSBORNE and GREG SORBER Kansas Staff Writers Repeated sniper fire and several attempted fire bombings marked a tense curfew period Tuesday night and Wednesday morning in which state police and National Guardsmen were required to assist local law enforcement officers. Assisting the 50 local policemen were 240 National Guardsmen from the First Battalion, 127th Artillery stationed at Garnett, 30 Highway Patrolmen and eight special deputies. Trouble started almost immediately after the 7 p.m. curfew began. At about 7:05 p.m., curfew violators were reported in front of the Rock Chalk Cafe at 12th and Oread. Policemen arriving at the scene were pelted with bricks and rocks. Several incidents occurred during the night between 12th and 13th Streets on Oread Drive and Louisiana Street. About 7.25 p.m., a fire was reported at 1225 Oread Drive. Firemen arriving at the scene were hindered by debris placed in the street. Ten minutes later gunfire was reported. Also at 1225 Oread, at 7:50 p.m., police reported a youth shooting out a street light, and at 9 p.m. reported an attempt at starting a bonfire. The last incident at this address was a fire on the front porch reported about 9:15 p.m. Earlier in the evening a fire bomb was thrown in the front yard of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house at 1433 Tennessee forty house at 1455 Tennessee (Continued on page 20) Campus briefs Morgan medallion awarded The Marijane Morgan medallion of the Children's Theatre Conference was awarded to Jed H. Davis, director of the University of Kansas Theater, at the Region 6 meeting of the C.T.C. meeting in Springfield, Mo. Davis was cited for service to the organization and profession by "producing quality children theater plays and making them available throughout the region of extended tours." Student places in Karate meet Max Muller, Prairie Village law student and instructor of the KU Karate Club, won third place for black belt form and style Saturday in the 1970 Kansas City Open Karate Championships. He was one of 15 competitors in the black belt division. Muller recently was promoted to second degree black belt by his instructor, Akira Kawakamie, in Oklahoma City. His assistant, Terry Rees, Argentine junior, was promoted to first degree black belt at the same time. Senior to present piano recital Nancy Watson, Kansas City, Mo., senior will present her senior piano recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Miss Watson is a member of Pi Kappa Lambda national honorary music society and is currently president of Beta Beta chapter of Alpha Iota, women's professional music society. She will play two sonatas by Scarlett; "Op. 81a" by Beethoven; "Valse Nobles" and "Sentimentales" by Ravel; and a group of Chopin's short works. "Kansas Alumni," the University of Kansas alumni magazine, won first place in its division at the Professional Advertising Club of Topeka's annual awards dinner Saturday night. Alumni magazine takes first Counselor applications available Applications for freshman KU-Y camp counselors are now available in the KU-Y office, said Tom Moore, KU-Y director, Tuesday. Because of the Kansas Union fire, the KU-Y office has been temporarily moved to 106 Smith Hall. Angel Flight winners announced The winners of the "Date With an Angel" contest sponsored by Angel Flight, women's Air Force ROTC auxiliary, have been announced, said Maryanne Medved, Prairie Village junior and Angel Flight member. The first place winner of an Angel Flight date of his choice and $10 is Roger Heinen, Cawker City freshman and an Air Force ROTC cadet. Second place winners of Angel Flight dates of their choice and $5 are: John Irwin, Lawrence senior and Air Force ROTC cadet, and Richard Brausa, Topeka freshman and Navy ROTC cadet. Accounting seminar to be held An accounting seminar sponsored by the Touche Ross Foundation will be held at the University of Kansas May 21-22. Leading practitioners and university professors from all over the United States, including two visiting professors at KU, will participate in the two-day meeting. Raymond J. Chambers, the visiting Edmund P. Learned Professor, and George Staubus, also a visiting professor at KU, will be among those delivering papers. Union classes and Earth Day activities relocated because of the Union fire are as follows: Marvin Stone, partner of Stone, Grey, & Co., Denver, and Apr. 22 1970 Grey, & Co., Denver, and past president of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, will conclude the conference May 22 with a dinner address. 8:30 a.m. MWF History 3X class moved to Strong Hall Auditorium. 2 KANSAN Relocation announced for classes, activities ties that have been relocated because of the fire are: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. day-long film titled "World Game: Air Pollution Scenario" has been moved to the Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread. ● 8:30 a.m. Thursday History 3X moved to 426 Lindley The popular films for Friday and Saturday have been moved to Dyche Auditorium and will start at 6:30 p.m. 8:30 a.m. Thursday Computer Science 16 moved to Swarthout Recital Hall. The Black Student committee meeting scheduled for 3:30 p.m. April 24 has been moved to 112 Blake. 1 p.m. lecture and film rescheduled for 3:30 p.m. and moved to 205 Flint. The lecture and films are titled "Earth Pollution—The Third Pollution." 8 p.m. lecture and slides titled "Community Growth: by Design or by Default?" has been moved to Central Junior High School, 1400 Mass. Wednesday Earth Week activi- The ManWhoHad His Hair Cut Short APRIL 27 700A900pm UBON 75c The rest of the Earth Week activities will go on as scheduled. SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS 1704 West 24th 1704 West 24th 842-1160 Beautiful one and two bedroom units NOW renting for summer and fall drapes . . . carpeting . . . air conditioning . . . all electric kitchen with disposal . . pool . . laundry storage . . furnished or unfurnished. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Convenient location on bus route See them today all units include: AWS interviews moved from Union AWS Fashion Board interviews scheduled for Wednesday have been relocated to the Pi Beta Phi sorority, 1612 W, 15th, Pam Russell, Kansas City, Kan, senior and president of the board said The individual interview times will remain the same. SHAW AUTO SERVICE shocks mufflers and Your headquarters for miDAS 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 Spring Time is for SANDALS SANDAL Handmade Just For You At 812 MASS. — DOWNTOWN Primarily Leather WATCHBANDS • BELTS • BAGS VESTS • FRYE BOOTS • MOCS MARGUERITE CARTER the unique writings of this amazing woman Now you can have the observations of one of "the best-known experts" in the field or planetary influence upon your life. Oustanding indications of changes, home life, associations with the opposite sex and opportunities are covered in Marguerite Carter's Unitology Forecast with Special Notations for one full year. Her published, astrological predictions have received nationwide attention! She foretold: Richard Nixon's return to the political limelight six years ago, after defeats in presidential and gubernatorial races! Fourteen months before the election, she stated Hubert Humphrey would not be elected president! Almost "two years" before the tragic assassination of Robert Kennedy she wrote he would not reach his political goal due to enemies! Miss Carter's writings have appeared in newspapers here and abroad. She has authored several popular books. Lecturing in most of our major cities brought her into personal contact with thousands of individuals, providing an unusual insight into human problems. Persons from every walk of life have found her Unitology Forecast a valuable guidance. Clients write: "... I found your forecast very helpful, and was amazed at the accuracy of many things you had pointed out. Too, I felt you were truly interested in my welfare and this gave me a kind of courage and strength..." C. M., Calif. "... I find it most encouraging and it has helped me through a so very difficult time I had to face . . ." E. S., N. Y. Send now! Make the next year the most rewarding of your life! Request Miss Carter's Unitogy Forecast with Special Notations for the year ahead. It will be compiled, based on birthdate information. Print month, day, year, place, hour of birth (if known), and include $4.00 plus 25¢ toward mailing costs. Please allow three weeks for receipt of Miss Carter's Unitogy Forecast. Address: Marguerite Carter, Box C, 546 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Indiana 46225. FREE. Write "Gifts", above address, for illustrated list of fine zodiac jewelry and stationery at stock-clearance prices. --- 16 Photo by Ron Bishop Guardsmen stand watch A fire at Seventh and Lyons destroyed an abandoned school building late Tuesday night while Lawrence was under a dusk to dawn curfew. National guardsmen protected the firemen as they battled the blaze. The precaution was taken after sniper fire had hit a firetruck while answering a fire call earlier in the evening. Dusk to dawn curfew order by Docking Governor Robert Docking ordered a curfew in and around Lawrence for a three mile radius from 7 p.m. Tuesday evening until 6 a.m. Wednesday morning. The statement was made Tuesday afternoon by Jim Schaffer, press relations official for governor. The governor also ordered 25 members of the Kansas Highway Patrol and additional National Guard members from the 1st Battalion, 127 Artillery at Ottawa to be stationed at the perimeter of the city. Schaffer said the troops would remain at the edge of the city unless city officials request that they move into the city limits. The order was issued at the request of Donald Metzler, Lawrence mayor, and Daniel Young, Douglas County attorney. Francis Heller, dean of faculties, in cooperation with SenEx, said the curfew would also pertain to the University of Kansas campus. All campus events for Tuesday evening have been cancelled and students are being asked to stay off the streets. Unless they were requested by the local authorities, state patrolmen and other such police protection would not be released to the Lawrence area, Governor Docking said in a press conference early Tuesday morning. "We won't unilaterally send troops unless the situation demands it." Docking said. In a press release Docking said: "Disrespect and disregard for Apr. 22 1970 KANSAN 3 the law cannot and will not be tolerated. As Governor of Kansas, I give my full support to the protection of the individual and his property. "Local law enforcement officials have been notified that if state assistance is needed to maintain order, the Governor's Office stands ready and fully prepared to cooperate with them. This office will take all necessary steps to maintain respect for the laws of our state." Docking referred to the Kansas Union as a "bonded" building. He said the building is on a 90 per cent co-insurance basis. Under such a plan, 90 per cent of the value of the building is covered. The building also has business interruption insurance, Docking said. He said it was insured for $5\frac{1}{2}$ million dollars. Docking said that he knew of no such incidents spreading to other campuses in the state. There was no obvious link with other incidents in Wichita, Topeka and Kansas City, he said. Officials are assessing the potential of the problem and are working on the fire incidents with a strong suspicion of arson, Docking said. Penn State sit-in ends four persons arrested UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) —About 50 students peacefully ended a brief sit-in at the main administration building of Pennsylvania State University Tuesday after riot-equipped state troopers were called to the campus for the second time in a week. Four persons were arrested, police said, two of them on charges stemming from last week's antiwar protest which triggered a week of unrest on the huge campus. Earlier Tuesday, militants fire-bombed some buildings and stoned the home of the school President, Eric A. Walker, forcing him and his wife to flee. The troopers, about 100 strong and clad in riot helmets and carrying long sticks, moved onto the campus at the request of university officials and formed a ring around the administration building, Old Main, shortly before the building's 5 p.m. closing. Fires were set in five girls' dormitories and a cottage. A classroom building and an office building were fire-bombed. The fires were extinguished quickly by campus police and damage was minor. There were no injuries but 1,250 girl students and 560 male students were forced to evacuate the dormitories for up to two hours. A total of 24,000 students are at the main campus. groove to the Court Sounds of the "Jesters" FREE TGIF with KU ID York Earth Day campaigns set throughout nation There was not a gas mask to be had today in Omaha, Neb. They were sold out in preparation for today's Earth Day demonstrations. Earth Day "save the environment," "give earth a chance," and hundreds of other campaigns, spread into virtually every corner of the nation as people urged themselves and others to protect and clean up the environment. Plans for the day ranged from the bizarre to simple pick-up-the litter drives. About 20 per cent of the population of New York City was expected to be involved in some way. The White House said Tuesday President Nixon welcomed the day's events and "feels the activities show the concern of people of all walks of life over the dangers to our environment." Skywriting planes were to inscribe the word "air" in the atmosphere over Los Angeles. Ohio State University students planned a guided walk along the Olentangy River. Ashtabula, Ohio, residents were set for a "premature funeral for the children of tomorrow," to dramatize the unborn children who will die from pollution. Southeast Missouri State students planned a mock funeral to "symbolically bury the earth under a pile of trash." Miami citizens scheduled a "dead orange parade" with a prize for the "most polluted float." The Michigan House approved by a 98-3 vote a bill which would give private citizens the right to take legal action against polluters. Chicago's Commonwealth Edison Co., a target of local pollution fighters, announced Tuesday it has formed an environmental advisory council, composed of doctors, educators and scientists. Seven thousand persons jammed a "declaration of interdependence" rally Tuesday at Philadelphia's Independence Hall. For Top Quality Head For Henry's henrys For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. V13-2139 I love you Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 lowe VI 3-9868 EAGLE NORFOLK FESTIVAL 70 Kind of jacket that attracts crowds, man. Norfolk cut, hip new polyester-cotton fabric, neat pockets — and a talent for absolutely destroying the chicks. Pick one up, today. The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 ( KANSAN COMMENT Curfew night In the long, black hours of curfew night, the Daily Kansan staff was holed up in the news-room of Flint Hall, its only connection with the events of the embattled city a crackling set of voices over the police radio. Tension rose early in the 11 hours of the curfew when patrol cars and the dispatcher traded instructions about fires, sniping incidents, bomb threats and rock throwings. But as Tuesday became Wednesday, the reports slacked in number and intensity. The three long beeps before a transmission (warning that it concerned an emergency) came less frequently, as staff members turned away from the radio to other work. By 3 a.m. today, the city was relatively quiet. Two staff members and I decided to take an automobile ride around Lawrence to view the results of the night's malice-mixed-with-frolic. Traveling down the 13th street hill, we met one campus security auto, the occupants of which glanced quickly at the yellow curfew pass attached to the windshield but decided not to ask us our business. Continuing on to Massachusetts Street and the downtown area, we drove past the Salvation Army snack truck, around which police and National Guardsmen stood sipping coffee and eating doughnuts. One police auto left out of the truck's area, followed us several blocks, then turned off. Crossing the Kaw River bridge, we met another police car with its red and white roof lights flashing, but with its siren muffled in mimicry of the drowsy night itself. Into North Lawrence, over the chuckholed roads we drove, finally arriving at the flaming ruins of an abandoned school house at 7th and Lincoln Streets. No fire trucks surrounded it, no police cars were parked alongside the ancient structure whose half standing stone walls were silhouetted by the orange light of the flames. A charred post leaned against the doorway, the steps below which had already collapsed. Through arched windows above the door, the inner walls were visible, undulating in brilliance while the fire rose and dropped as thousands of candles in a great cathedral flicker on the walls Leaving, we wondered why the fire was allowed to burn untended; it was slowly creeping out from the building to the law adjacent. On the way back to the campus we saw the moon floating in a haze over the glittering campus behind a grove of poplars and the bridge arching over the roiled waters of the Kaw. We heard a lonely diesel locomotive horn, the sound of the river cascading over the dam, and the quiet of all the rest. Passing unlighted gingerbread homes along 6th Street, the neon lit franchise operations and the hundreds of mercury vapor lamps in parallel rows, we arrived at the intersection of 6th and Iowa Streets, where a highway patrolman flashed his light for us to stop. He stoically and undramatically approached the car, beaming the flashlight in our eyes to examine us closely. With a glum "okay," he allowed us to proceed. Turning down 19th Street, we came to Veteran's park, the staging ground for Tuesday morning's dispute at Lawrence High School. Only birds twittering in the hours before dawn gave evidence of life in what had been the setting of the controversy that sparked the curfew itself. At South Junior High School, rows of Army trucks waited to carry home the National Guardsmen whose use that night had been minimal. One guardsman looked suspiciously at our car as we drove past and came forward hesitatingly as another placed his hand on the weapon strapped to his hip. We did not stop. Circling back around campus, we headed up Oread Avenue, where the first of the night's rumblings had occurred. Beer cans and paper cups lay alongside a drawer and a set of bed-springs in the street. Neither police cars nor foot patrolmen were in sight. The night ended in peace after a plethora of rumors-of-war at its beginning. And the majority of those rumors, dire as they sounded on the radio, were of little importance. KU's violence scare may be ready to die after a brief life spawned by the Union fire. Little organized activity beyond some firecracker festivals at residence halls,was apparent Tuesday night, and the placid early morning hours today went unbroken. Whether the curfew will be invoked again tonight depends on today's activities at Lawrence High School. Hopefully, the present storm of violence and fear is dying. It it is, then there is no more need to restrict activity in the city. Lawrence's first curfew last night in several years can be its last. The fewer such actions that spring from threats of almost non-existent danger the better for the city's sanity and its stability. —Monroe Dodd From other campuses Baby seal slaughter from The SPARTAN DAILY San Jose State College Television critic Cleveland Amory rarely says anything worth listening to, but he was right when he appeared on the Dick Cavett Show awhile back and discussed the cruel slaughtering of young, helpless baby seals. Amory traveled to Canada to see for himself what was happening. He related these experiences on the show, bringing a film which depicted the senseless killing. Amory's film showed the hunter approaching the seal and its mother, who puts up a useless struggle to save her baby. Eventually the mother gives up and wanders away, leaving the young seal to its fate. This fate is one of the cruelest I've ever seen. The seals in question are only a few months old, completely at the mercy of their mothers for survival. They can't swim, and if they happen to fall into the water, their mother dives in and pushes them out. While lying completely helpless, the seal is clubbed to death by the hunters, who then cut into the seal and removed the fur and lining. This is done, Amory pointed out, even though the same product may be gained by synthetic means. It has been worse, however. There was a time when the seals were skinned alive, left to die a tortuous death. Public officials now accompany the hunters to assure the seals are killed prior to the skinning. This is not enough. An end must be put to these miserable activities. One hope, Amory pointed out, lies with the young hunters. If they can be convinced to give up this practice the seals may be saved. One hunter told Amory he would kill no more. This came as a result of the pitiful look one of the baby seals gave him while being clubbed. Another approach would be to boycott all products which contain seal fur. This, too, however, is hard to do because the fur appears in so many products, many of which can't be discovered by the average buyer. BY SOKO10FF Griff & the Unicorn COME ON! I SEE SOME HIGH GROUND AHEAD. GLUE! THERE THEY GO... David Sokoloff 1970 hearing voices— To the editor: In the past week, every possible courtesy and assistance has been extended to the members of Kappa Sigma Fraternity. In speaking for the guys as house president, I want to express our gratitude to the members of the fraternity and sorority systems who have so generously helped us. We are even more indebted to the Office of Dean of Men, to those people who aided us at Templin Hall and to Sigma Nu and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternities, where a large number of Kappa Sigs now reside. The amount of time and effort people have devoted to helping us is really unbelievable. I can only say that, when we are settled, we hope to demonstrate our appreciation and, until then, we can only say a very sincere "thank you." David Steen Wichita junior and President, Kappa S President, Kappa Sigma Fraternity * * To the editor: The vast majority of Americans seem concerned about three men whose lives were threatened 250,000 miles from earth but seem to disregard the millions of Americans whose lives are constantly threatened within a couple miles of their own home. This last week the lives of three astronauts were imperiled for nearly four days, when, apparently, a short circuit caused the oxygen tank to rupture. Both the morning and evening Kansas City papers devoted about 40 per cent of their front page space to this story. After the command module carrying the spacemen splashed down in the Pacific Friday, President Nixon proclaimed Sunday a national day of prayer and thanksgiving for the astronauts' safe return. Certainly, I was relieved to learn that the astronauts were recovering from their near-tragic flight on board the USS Iwo Jima. I was glad that newspapers covered this story so thoroughly so that Americans could keep informed of the developments in the flight. I suppose that Nixon's proclamation for last Sunday suited the occasion. But it seems tragically paradoxical that Americans have always been concerned about the fate of the few astronauts who have flown into outer space during our Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions but have rarely been concerned about the great numbers of Americans who have died because of hunger, disease, rat bites. It seems rather inhuman that Americans carefully listen to the astronauts' voice-transmissions over the radio but ignore the pleas for help by the underprivileged. While Nixon's proclamation for last Sunday might be fitting, a national day of concern for America's poor people seems as fitting and more constructive. On this day churches might contribute their entire offerings to responsible organizations that help the poor. I would certainly admit that Americans ought to be concerned about the poor more than one out of every 365 days. But at the present time, we don't even care about them for one day. Dick Hvale La Grange, Ill. senior ★ ★ ★ To the editor: Yesterday, while rambling across campus, I spied a large orange three dimensional form resembling a Rube Goldberg machine. I viewed this with delight, although surprised that our lords, masters and moral protectors—Buildings and Grounds—had let anything that subversive (in their limited intellectual opinion) exist. After all, the students might derive pleasure from this, and therefore it must be a subversive plot. After checking, I found that a Sculpture conference is in the making. Many of these three dimensional forms are going to pop up. "Great"'! I thought. "Maybe now the students would be free of the narrow artistic bounds to which B&G's tastes would confine them. I learned of another instance where B&G saved everyone on campus from subversive influences. A "fire hazard" was discovered in the studio of an art instructor. It seems that paint was left uncovered. A lecture on what constituted proper forms of art was given by a B&G man. It is hoped that this instructor learned his lesson and will in the future consult these arbiters of artistic taste. However, I soon learned that these were to disappear at the end of the conference. In fact, the orange form was almost torn down by those who really control the campus because the instructor put it up before the appointed hour. It would be great to have a People's Park, an opportunity to see fine three dimensional sculpture on campus—but this might lead to all sorts of dangerous ideas. It might be a dangerous seed that would lead to asking more questions. And everyone knows what asking questions leads to! Jim Brothers Eureka graduate student THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3644 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services 图 A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. $60 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 1017-01 S TOM TAILOR PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Easily With Us Early With Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Three marooned astronauts. And only 55 minutes left to rescue them. While the whole world watches and waits... MAROONED MAROONED A FRAMONICH-STURGES PRODUCTION GREGORY PECK RICHARD CRENNA and DAVID JANSSEN and Ted Dougherty JAMES FRANCISCUS·GENE HACKMAN MAROONED co starring LEE GRANT-NANCY KOVACK-MARIETTE HARTLEY Panavision* - Eastmancolor Screepeal by MAYO SIMON. Based on the novel by MARIN CAINON Produced by M J FRAVOKISH. Duced by JOHN STURGES. From California Picture G ALL AGES ADMITTED General Audiences STARTS TODAY Matinee Daily 2:30 Matthew Daly 2:50 Evening 7:10 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065 ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS THOMAS HADWIG RICHARD BURTON as HENRY VIII GENEVIEVE BUJOLD Anne of the Thousand Days IRENE PAPAS ANTHONY QUAYLE·JOHN COLICOS IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFRIRELLI'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET.' "John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Magazine “AN INSTANT CLASSIC. IT HAS A HAMMER-LOCK ON HISTORY, PERFORMANCE, PATHOS AND ROOTING INTEREST!”—Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post ☆ ☆ "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES."-Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5783 ☆ STARTS TONIGHT Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Adults 1.50, Child .75 SPRING WEEK Apr. 22 1970 KANSAN 5 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR Use Kansan Classifieds "A reeking masterpiece. It will kick you all over town." LOOK MAGAZINE "So rough and vivid it's almost unbearable." A JEROME | JOHN HELLMAN | SCHLESINGER PRODUCTION DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" BRENDA VACCARO JOHN McGIVER RUTH WHITE SYLVIA MILES BARNARD HUGHES Screenplay by WALDO SALT Based on the novel by JAMES LEO HERLIY Produced by JEROME HELLMAN Directed by JOHN SCHLESINGER Music Supervision by JOHN BARRY "EVERYBODY'S TALKIN'" sung by NILSSON ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SCORE AVAILABLE ON UNIVERSITY RECORDS X Eve. 7:00 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 ID's Required COLOR bv DeLuxe THE Hillcrest Adults $1.50 No One Under 18 Admitted riverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriver WORLD PREMIERE WEDNESDAY! runriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriver runriver STARTS TONIGHT As old as Because the actual birth of a baby is shown no one under it will be admitted unless accompanied by parent or guardian life and as simple as riverrun COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A film by JOHN KORTY river Produced by Written and Directed by LOUISE OBER • JOHN McLIAM • MARK JENKINS • STEPHEN SCHMIDT • JOHN KORTY • Color Eve. 7:30 & 9:25 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 Adults $1.50 C R THE Hillcrest WILLOWSTONE AMONGS CENTER, GYM, AND KIDS ID's Requested ayflower WORLD-WIDE MOVING Art moved from Spooner Officials and student volunteers were seen removing various art objects Tuesday afternoon from Spooner Art Museum. Bret Waller, director of the museum, said the pieces were being moved as a "precautionary measure." Waller said 50 to 75 art objects were moved to an undisclosed storage area. Students help at fire station While hundreds of students were carring water hoses into and art objects and furniture out of the Kansas Union in Monday night's fire, two other volunteers are rendering their services in a different but just as important way. Ron Olin, Lawrence sophomore and Bill Brubaker, Lawrence High School senior, voluntarily stayed at fire station no. 1, 745 Vermont Street, where they answered phone calls, filled oxygen packs and prepared fresh gloves for the firemen. They were under the direction of Brubaker's father, Clark Brubaker, who was a fireman for 22 years. Brubaker said he had been authorized by Lawrence's fire chief to take out the only truck left in the station if another emergency had arisen. His son and Olin, Brubaker said, were interested in learning to aid firemen on a regular volunteer basis. They already have the proper coats and boots and will soon begin training in how to fight fires, he said. Brubaker said there used to be an auxiliary for the purpose of aiding the fire department in emergencies. Attempts are beng made, he said, to form a similar group again. Art moved from Spooner Officials at the Spooner Art Museum were busily evacuating pieces of art Tuesday afternoon as a "precautionary step," said Bret Waller, director of the museum. "We're just trying to ease the concentration of valuables for insurance purposes," Waller said. Approximately 50 to 75 articles were moved by van to an undisclosed area by volunteer student helpers. "All the people helping are student guards or employees, who came in, although they were not scheduled to work. They have helped in the spirit similar to that displayed by the students helping with the fire." Waller said. Waller stressed that there was no indication that the museum was or would be threatened. "It is just a precaution," he said. The "precautionary step" was prompted as a result of Monday night's fire at the Kansas Union, along with repeated firebombings of Lawrence High School and incidents of arson reported in the last two weeks. Gun sales normal Many local stores have returned their firearm stock to the factories within the last ten days. Five stores sent the guns back, and they have not reported any increase in inquiries about guns. One store manager said he hasn't sold any guns because he raised the price to discourage sales. Several stores did report some increase in sales and that was of ammunition. selling guns to insure that his store wouldn't be the target of burglaries. Lawrence police said there have not been any gun registrations this week. One store owner said he wasn't The first coin authorized by the United States Congress was the 1787 Fugio cent, says the National Geographic. Beginning and the End of World War III Are Coming The Beginning: "Year of the Pig" and The end: "The War Game" See These Two Academy Award Films APRIL 29 - MAY 1 Astronauts disclose thoughts during flight Space Center, Houston (UPI) —Apollo 13 astronauts told the nation Tuesday night there were moments on their ill-fated moon flight when they feared they were doomed to die in space. Jama A. Lovell, Fred W. Haise and John L. Swigert described publicly for the first time in a televised news conference how they survived America's worst spaceflight emergency. Their spacecraft was shattered by an explosion eight days ago near the moon. The astronauts, with help from ground crews, surmounted critical oxygen, power and water problems in a 321,000-mile four-day return trip to earth. "When I looked out the window and saw venting, my concern was increasing all the time," Lovell said. "We were indeed in serious trouble. . . . I went from wonder-ing about the moon landing to wondering if we could get back home again." In the question-and-answer period in the telecast later, however, Lovell said he would be willing to go back to the moon if NASA officials "feel this crew should go back." Lovell said he didn't feel cheated that he had not landed on the moon on what he had planned to be his fourth and last space mission. In his opening remarks, Lovell said he "never regretted" his decision to have Swigert substitute for Thomas K. Mattingly, who was scrubbed two days before the mission when he was exposed to German measles. The measles episode led NASA's medical officials Tuesday to expand the number of diseases against which spacemen are immunized before future flights. The substitution of Swigert for Mattingly came the day before launch—a time when the crew usually takes things easy. Swigert was the man who wrote the rules about what to do when things go wrong in a moonship, and Lovell said his presence aboard Apollo 13 was a boon. Pollution-free car research to be UAW bargaining topic ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) —The 1.8 million-member United Auto Workers (UAW) served notice Tuesday it will make development of a pollution free car a bargaining issue in this year's contract talks. Union wage and fringe benefit demands expected to be the costliest in history also were drawn up. Delegates to the UAW convention, acting on the eve of Earth Day, adopted a resolution making the union the first to make pollution control a bargaining issue 6 KANSAN Apr. 22 1970 and then later almost unanimously approved a set of money goals submitted by UAW President Walter Reuther and other union leaders. Reuther said the union would strike if necessary to get "equity" for workers through "substantial" wage gains, $500 monthly pensions after 30 years of service, quarterly cost-of-living raises, year-end bonuses based on company profits and a dental care plan. The resolution passed earlier called for an enactment of "an environmental bill of rights" and said autos were responsible for 60 per cent of the air pollution. World Campus Afloat is a college that does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them and beyond. Again in the 1970-71 academic year, the accredited World Campus Afloat program of Chapman College and its associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory. Chapman College currently is accepting applications for both the fall and spring semesters. Preliminary applications also may be made for all future semesters. Fall semesters depart New York aboard the s.s. Ryndam for port stops in the Mediterranean and Latin America, ending in Los Angeles. Spring semesters circle the world from Los Angeles, stopping in Asia and Africa and ending at New York. For a catalog and other information, complete and mail the coupon below. You'll be able to talk to a World Campus Alfloat representative and former students: - Saturday, May 2, 2 p.m. - Plaza Inn - 45th & Main, Kansas City, Missouri P Art student Leana Leach of Long Beach sketches ruins of once-buried city during World Campus Alloat visit to Pompeii. RIB SAFETY COURT s. s. Ryndam is of Netherlands registry. Earth Oceans WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT Director of Student Selection Services Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92666 Please send your catalog arid any other facts I need to know. SCHOOL INFORMATION Miss Mrs. Last Name First Initial Name of School Campus Address Street City State Zip Campus Phone ( ) Area Code HOME INFORMATION Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale Home Address Street City State Zip Home Phone (___) Area Code Until ___ into should be sent to campus ☐ home ☐ approx. date I am interested in □ Fall Spring □ 19___ □ I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD CAMPUS AFLOFT WCA 4/13 O Little Cesar's double ices Tiger victory It doesn't take much to please Cesar Gutierrez, but the little shortstop is giving the Detroit Tigers a lot of pleasure. Gutierrez is now playing regularly and he justified Manager Mayo Smith's faith in him Tuesday night when he doubled home the go-ahead run in the ninth inning as Detroit beat the Cleveland Indians, 5-3, for the Tigers' sixth straight victory and a half game lead in the American League's East Division. Gutierrez' winning hit was a slicing double to right center which scored rookie Elliott Maddox from first base and Gutierrez seemed more surprised than any one else by his extra base hit. In other American League games, Minnesota edged Chicago, 4-3; California downed Milwaukee, 3-1; Oakland squeezed by Kansas City, 4-3, and Washington beat New York, 7-5. Baltimore and Boston were idle. In the National League, Cincinnati outslugged Atlanta, 13-8; Chicago beat St. Louis, 7-4; Pittsburgh edged Houston, 9-8; San Diego downed New York, 5-3; and the games between Los Angeles-Montreal and San Francisco-Philadelphia were called off because of bad weather. After doubling home Maddox, Gutierrez scored the Tigers' final run on Al Kaline's single to addle reliever Steve Hargan with the loss. Earl Wilson went the first eight innings for Detroit to pick up the victory. Harmon Killebrew's second homer of the season, a three-run drive in the sixth inning, powered Minnesota past Chicago. Lefty Jim Kaat gained his second win against one loss while Tommy John, who gave up Killebrew's 354-foot homer, took his fourth straight loss. Alex Johnson drove in Jim Fregosi and Jay Johnstone doubled home Bill Voss during a three-run Angels' uprising off losing pitcher Marty Pattin in the third inning. Tom Murphy went the first eight innings for California to raise his record to 2-1. Don Mincher belted a two-run homer in the eighth inning that carried Oakland past the Royals. Teammate Reggie Jackson chipped in with his third round tripper to help Jim Hunter post his third win in four decisions. Jim Rooker took the loss in relief. Bernie Allen drove in four runs with a homer and a single and Lee Maye collected four straight hits for Washington in the Senators' triumph over the Yankees. "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th Bucks coach pleased after inking Robertson MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Milwaukee Bucks Coach Larry Costello has a dream assignment—fitting the "Big O" into a team which already has a superstar in Lew Cindor. Costello was asked about his plans for next season at a news conference here Tuesday at which the Bucks announced they have picked up Oscar Robertson, the "Big O," from the Cincinnati Royals. "I feel Robertson will fit in perfectly. He makes the big play. He's a leader and comes to play. He will be a big influence on our young players, and make Lew better than he is today." Costello said, obviously pleased. The 31-year-old Robertson, who played his collegiate basketball and 10 years of pro ball in with the Royals, including Baltimore, Phoenix, and a couple of ABA teams. "Because of a stipulation in my contract, I was able to choose the club and I felt Milwaukee was the best move under the circumstances. "You have to admit they have a fine team with Lew Acindor and they have an excellent organization," Robertson said. He declined to comment on the salary agreement with Milwaukee, but he quipped that "I'm a junior partner with Uncle Sam now." He reportedly received about $175,000 a year—about $50,000 more than he had been receiving at Cincinnati. TGIF April 24 GYMKANA 8:00 a.m. April 25 Lewis parking lot ICE CREAM SOCIAL Wed., April 22 7:00 p.m. to 9 p.m. Spring Week FUN IN THE SUM APRIL 19-25 STREET DANCE STREET DANCE with T.i.d.e. Sat., April 25, 8:00 p.m. to midnight GAMES 12:00 Noon Sat., April 25 CARNIVAL AND ART SALE 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., April 25 Spring Week Committee KANSAN Sports Cincinnati, had become a bit disenchanted with the Royals in recent months and the trade came as no surprise. In the plush office of his business agents and attorney at Cincinnati, Robertson said: To get him, the Bucks gave up Flynn Robinson, the National Basketball Association's top free throw shooter last season, and Charlie Paulk, a promising rookie who has spent the past two basketball seasons in the Army. "I had a choice of several teams who were ready to make a deal Apr. 22 1970 KANSAN 7 wanted! apartment managers No experience necessary. Only requirements are intelligence, aggressiveness, ambition and a friendly personality. Be prepared for managerial training provided without charge. A rare opportunity, for you to run a multi-million dollar business. Full-time position for both husband and wife. You receive salary, apartment, utilities and telephone. Join the lack P Delosser 'Action Team,' one of the nation's fastest growing apartment companies firms. Must be willing to relocate. Send a computer resume, with photos, to Steve Scholder Administrative Assistant. Property Management Department. Jack P. DeBoer Associates, Inc. Inventor and Designer ASSOCIATION SALE SALE SAVE 20% POLYGLAS Buy now, save $656 to $1176 per tire! GOOD YEAR THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS TIRES "POWER CUSHION POLYGLAS®" TIRES $26 32 Blackwall tubeless size C78-14 plus $2.15 Fed.Ex. Tax. No trade needed. 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Tax and old tire - Clean sidewall design, radial darts on shoulder - Your best tire buy in its price range! BUY NOW AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Any of these Larger Sizes— ONE LOW PRICE $1595 plus $2.17 to $2.33 Fed. Ex. Tax. depending on size and old tire BLACKWALL TUBELESS DEALER DEPENDENTLY GOOD YEAR SALEER Gregg Auto, Truck, Tractor, Implement, Boat & Bike Tires—Orbitread Electronic Processed Retreats - RCA - Westinghouse - Goodyear Batteries - Wheel Alignment and Balancing - Brake and Muffler Service. Hours 8 to 5:30 except closed 4 p.m. Sat. --- BUY TIRES MADE IN KANSAS BY KANSANS 814 West 23rd 842-5451 Tire Co. --- TENNIS Anyone for a game of tennis? Slashed midiskirts guarantee view of knees this fall LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Leg watchers can take heart. Although hems are definitely down, the knees are still clearly visible in the midi-length fall fashions being shown to buyers and the press here this week. Most of the mid-calf length suits and dresses shown by California designers are slashed to mid-thigh in slits up the back, the center of the front, the side, or on both sides with a swinging front panel. The leg kicks through in dresses which are in a way more daring, and which the designers say are more elegant than anything women have worn since they began hiking their skirts in the early '60's. "The new look is definitely a new look for the U.S." said fashion designer William Travilla. Mr. Blackwell placed a new emphasis on the bosom with plunging necklines. High fashion designer Cardinali placed the hem at 19 inches from the floor, or just below the knee, for most of her daytime dresses and suits, but said her entire collection could be worn at three different lengths. Apr.22 1970 8 KANSAN Many evening gowns were barebacked or featured crossed straps across the back. There were plunging necklines in front and back, but there were also demure, covered-up evening gowns inspired by "Anne of the Thousand Days" with high collars and long slim sleeves puffed at the top. Stimulating pastime Hill tennis harbinger of spring By LINDA WRIGHT Kansan Staff Writer When the snow begins to melt and the sun comes out, tennis courts are crowded with students eager to brush up on a rusty serve or backswing. This spring is no exception with more students than ever flocking to courts to enjoy a stimulating afternoon at the nets. KANSAN features Many students have taken up the game as an enjoyable way to exercise and a break from the routine of classes. Mary Westmoreland, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, finds tennis "a fun way to exercise. I'm ready to study after I come in from a few sets of tennis; I've used up all the extra energy that makes me fidgety when I sit down to study." Several courts are available to students around the Hill. Courts near Robinson Gymnasium and Allen Field House seem to be most popular, with courts by the stadium and the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house also used frequently. SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 Europe '70' Finding an open court sometimes presents problems because of the growing interest in the sport and since most students prefer to play at the same time. Late afternoons and Saturday mornings seem to be most popular. For those who find campus area courts too crowded, there are several courts in Lawrence city parks. Students without cars, however, find transportation a problem. Jerry Smutz. Meade sophomore, likes tennis because it's not restricted by age. People of all ages can play together and enjoy themselves. Securing a tennis partner is no problem, says Tom Slaughter, Salina junior and 10-year veteran of the courts. Just go to a court, Tom says, and there is usually someone hanging around who needs a partner, too. Smutz says he doesn't like to American Institute for Foreign Study study work travel Free Film GSP play with girls who don't play well because he usually ends up chasing tennis balls all afternoon. Tennis seems to be more popular with KU men than women, as males dominate area courts. Slaughter believes girls aren't really serious about the game, and says they just come to the courts to "mess around" or get some sun. INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) April 23 8. 00 p.m. Thursday North College Conference Room Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong bos --- The best treat around is a Roast Beef Sandwich from Burger Chef. Try one soon for a snack or a meal. INCLUDING: -100% Pure Beef- 9th & Iowa St. Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS THE BYRDS BALLAD OF EASY RIDER **INCLUDING:** BALLOD OF EASY RIDER, OIL IN MY LAMP ARNELLE OF DOLLINS IT'ALL OVER NOW BABY LOVE JESUS IS JUST ALRIGHT --- On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S TONIGHT! ONLY $1.00 ADMISSION! WE WANT YOU!" FREE BEER from 8:30 to 9:30 with the heavy sounds of MORNINGSTAR THE DRAUGHT HOUSE MISTER GUY THE LINE DANCE OF ROBERT B. HUBBARD WHITE TWILL The summer suit that looks the part. It magnifies every possible shirt and tie outfit. The wide lapel, very deep vent and fluid contoured shaping of this light weight twill must be tried on to appreciate it. Only seventy dollars The Clothing Consultants NINE TWENTY MASSACHUSETTS MISTER MISTER GUY GUY Tallahassee Open field packed TALLAHASSEE, Fla (UPI) — While 30 tournament winners for the past year are in Rancho La Costa, Calif., for the Tournament of Champions, the rest of the professional golf tour heads for Florida's capital city and the $50,000 Tallahassee Open. Former Kansas State football player Jim Colbert, diminutive Rod Curl and journeyman pro Lou Graham shape up as favorites prior to Thursday's opening round. All three made a run at victory in last week's New Orleans Open, won by Miller Barber. However, the field is packed with contenders, including three who tied for second place here last year, the top player on the PGA Senior circuit and one of golf's most colorful names looking for a place to start a comeback. Australian Bob Shaw, Fort Lauderdale's Bert Greene and Texan Jacky Cupit finished second to winner Chuck Courtney in Tallahassee's first PGA tournament last year. Former U.S. Open champion Tommy Bolt is in the field along with Doug Sanders, who hasn't won a tournament since Miami's Doral Open in 1967. Other top names in the field include Homero Blancas, Charlie Sifford, Lee Elder, Terry Dill, Billy Maxwell, Harold and Allan Henning, Bobby Mitchell, R. H. Sikes, and Al Balding. baseball stars Roger Maris and Lew Burdette were scheduled to kick off the ceremonies on the first tee. The tournament is preceded by a $5,000 pro-am today, with a large number of state legislators participating. Gov. Claude Kirk, Lt. Gov. Ray Osborne and former A field of 144 will tee off Thursday, with $10,000 first prize money going to the winner after Sunday's final round. Pro football schedule offers natural rivalries & old feuds NEW YORK (UPI)—The name of pro football is money. Money from tickets and money from television. Pro Football Commissioner Pete Rozelle knows that, and now that he rules all of pro football, his first integrated schedule for the 1970 season is a thing of beauty, colored green, for money. Rozelle and his two aides, Jim Kensil and Mark Duncan, have come up with a schedule for the 26 teams that covers 182 games and will offer natural rivalries, old feuds and, potentially, geographic feuds. The Kansas City Chiefs, the Super Bowl winners, lead off their season against the last pride of the National Football League, the Minnesota Vikings. The Chiefs will carry their old American Football League banner into Minnesota territory on Sept. 20th. The first schedule under the new alignment also tosses the New York Jets, against their hometown rival the Giants, on Nov. 1. Rozelle has Giant fans mad at him because the game goes to the Jet park, Shea Stadium, leaving Giant season ticket holders out in the dark—since the hometown TV `blackout` will prevail. The commissioner, Kensil and Duncan also set up tasty pairings like the Cowboys-Oilers in Texas, the Chiefs-Cardinals in Missouri and the 49ers-Raiders, Chargers-Rams in California. Ron Carr of Missouri won the prone title with a score of 397 points. Individual kneeling award went to Steve Brooks of KSU with a score of 386. A score of 346 by Don Colcord of Colorado won the standing award. The individual scoring for KU was: Mike Jenkins, Salina sophomore, 1,065; Mary Arnold, Holton junior, 1,045; Linn Covey, Ft. Leavenworth freshman, 1,026; Mark Bernstein, Overland Park junior, 1,011; and Carol Waltz, Orange, Tex., junior, 956. The match fired was a full international course consisting of four targets each (400 points) of prone, kneeling and standing with a total of 1,200 points and a time limit of 200 minutes. The conference match closes out the shooting season for the KU team. Dodgers pitcher hospitalized for possible hepatitis The Dodgers lost Pete Mikkelsen, a reliever, early in spring training because of hepatitis. Mikkelsen is out for an indefinite period. The schedule calls for 88 intra- divisional games, 54 inter-divisional and 40 inter conference. There are six divisions in the two conferences under the merger realignment. Missouri No. 1 took first place in the team scoring with a total of 5,376 points out of 6,000. Following MU were Nebraska No. 1, 5,362; K-State Varsity, 5,275; Colorado, 5,267; Oklahoma State, 5,236; Nebraska No. 2, 5,145; Kansas, 5,103; Iowa State, 5,070; K-State Gold, 4,891; Missouri No. 2, 4,793; Oklahoma, 4,560 and K-State Silver, 3,678. He was scheduled to enter St. John's Hospital at Santa Monica for more tests. Singer, who was scheduled to pitch Wednesday night, was put on a plane at Montreal Tuesday and flown back to Los Angeles. 10 KANSAN Apr. 22 1970 The American Conference lineup: Central—Cincinnati, Cleveland, Houston, Pittsburgh; Eastern—Baltimore, Boston, Buffalo, Miami, N.Y. Jets; Western—Denver, Kansas City, Oakland and San Diego. KU woman tops field in rifle match LOS ANGELES (UPI) — The Los Angeles Dodgers said Tuesday that Bill Singer, a 20-game winner last season, may have hepatitis. Singer first revealed he was ill Thursday night when he pitched at Cincinnati with a temperature of 100. His symptoms first were diagnosed as the flu. The National Conference lineup: Central — Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Minnesota; Eastern—Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Washington; Western—Atlanta, Los Angeles, New Orleans, San Francisco. The wild goose has about 12,000 muscles, 10,000 of which control the action of its feathers. American League: Walton, Mil 5; Alyea, Minn 4; Mincher, Oak and Epstein, Wash 3; 21 tied with 2. National League: Perez, Ciz 7. D: Bench and Mia, Ciz 5. D: Bench and Mia, Ciz Rader and Wynn, Hou, Allen, S. L Dietz and McCovey, SF Steve Brooks of KSU led the individual scoring with 1,123 points out of 1,200. Rounding out the top six were Don Colecord, Colorado, 1,114; Bob Boomer, Nebraska, 1,107. Ron Carr, Missouri, 1,095; Ron Menck, NU, 1,087; and Bruce Farwell, CU, 1,086 points. The University of Missouri team, a K-State man and KU woman took the top prizes in the 12th Annual Big Eight Smallbore Gallery Rifle match April 17-19 in the KU rifle range. Official results were announced Tuesday. Home Runs KU's Mary Arnold, Holton junior, fired 1,045 points out of 1,200 to win the high woman trophy. She edged Angela Wenger of K-State by two points. Alyae, Min 721 Foster, Cler 721 Waltm, Min 11 43 Mila, Oak 9 32 Melah, Min 10 35 Oliva, Min 8 33 Johnstone, Cal 9 33 Johnson, Bal 9 33 Spencer, Cal 11 39 Spencer, Cal 8 21 G. AB R. H. Pct. 721 721 6 18 419 6 18 419 4 196 9 32 35 4 146 9 32 35 4 146 9 32 35 4 146 9 32 35 4 146 9 32 35 4 146 9 32 35 4 146 9 32 35 4 146 Perez, Cim... G. AB R.H. H. Pct. H'd, nin' S... SF, 14 51 17 23 451 Dilet, SF ... 10 39 6 17 436 St., St. L ... 9 39 17 436 Monh, St... 9 39 17 436 Szrenne, LA ... 9 23 2 9 391 Hickman, Chi ... 8 26 1 10 385 Hammond, Chi ... 9 16 10 385 H Aarm, All ... 12 49 12 18 383 Clemente, Pit ... 12 49 12 18 379 INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) American League Major league leaders Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong National League THOU SHALT NOT KILL LET'S HUMANIZE NOT BRUTALIZE 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 Guidelines. Vocation Director Paulist Fathers Room 400 415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 Wherever he is . . . as a college chaplain, working in a ghetto or helping in a parish . . . the Paulist is serving. Is there a Paulist in the crowd? 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. Believe it or not; a campus protest group is *not* an unlikely place to find a Paulist. Write to: BANANA LIGHTFOOT BRAVE NEW WORKS SHOP RED FRI DOG FREE BEER INN SAT. DOLLAR NITE Direct from Minneapolis/St. Paul WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS GIBSON'S GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 26 Fashion Parade PANTY HOSE C - Seamless Stretch - Cantroce II - Many Shades - Petite, Medium, - Medium-Tall & Tall April Shower of Values Compare 97c at2.50 Gibson's Discount Price Ladies Animal Print BIKINI PANTIES Compare at 1.00 47c - Permanent Press - Solids, Stripes & Plains WILLIAMSON-DICKIE Plaids • Many Bright Colors 377 - Sizes 28 - 44 Compare at 6.00 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE Largest Selection In Lawrence ENTIRE STOCK OF 8 Track Stereo Tapes 4$^{83}$ GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE Compare at 6.98 Modaceylic Fiber Light Color TV Case and Head Modaceylic Fiber - Complete with Carrying - Light, Cool to Wear STRETCH SHORTY WIG B-4 - Natural Side - Natural Side Parting 1787 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE DECK OXFORDS - Blue, Green, Brown, White - Machine Washable - Dacron® Polyester MEN'S Cotton Blend • Sizes $6\frac{1}{2} - 12$ 297 - Yellow, Brown, White, Blue, Green, Black - Machine Washable GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE WOMEN'S 227 --- RANGER RR-42 Stereo Auto Tape Player 4 & 8 Track Complete with Your Choice of 2 or 4 Speakers Compare at 89.95 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 5997 RAYETTE AQUA NET SUPPRESSED HAIR SPRAY AQUA NET 13 oz. 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Bags Compare at 79c GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 51c Buddy L 2300 434 30 ½" long 30" high 31" deep GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 24" Portable Tripod Folding Brazier - Deep Bowl - Ratchet Grid adjustment Hall of Fame to begin Women's Week Honors Night planned This year's Honors Night, the main event of Women's Week at the University of Kansas, has been planned as an evening beneficial to everyone who attends. Those in charge are trying to make the event on Monday more than an awarding of honors, said Cheryl Burnet, Oklahoma City Okla., senior and chairman of the event. Honors Night is traditionally a spring evening event when KU women are recognized by their peers for outstanding work in the University, Miss Burnet said. The announcement of selections for Mortar Board, CWENS, outstanding women of the living groups and the Outstanding Senior will be made. This year the first entry into the 1970 Women's Hall of Fame will be announced. The Hall of Fame will consist of teachers and alumnae who have done outstanding work with regard to the University, Miss Burnet said. Sheila Tobias, assistant to the vice-president for academic affairs at Cornell University, will be the featured speaker at Honors Night. She has been employed as the "English Press Chief" for the Free Democratic Party in Bonn, Germany, a feature reporter for the "American Weekend" in Frankfort, Germany, and a free lance researcher for NET television and ABC-TV. While working for ABC she was concerned with race relations in the United States and England. Miss Tobias organized a four-day conference on women at Cornell in 1968 with 50 speakers and more than 1,500 in attendance. She founded the National Organization of Women (NOW) and inspired the formulation of the course "Evolution of Female Personality" at Cornell. During the crisis at Cornell University last spring, Miss Tobias wrote that she took unofficial leadership of a group of students and faculty who wished to rebuild the university equitably and to consider a new form of university governance. Throughout the years at Cornell, Miss KU professor to be honored A. Byron Leonard, professor of physiology, cell biology, systematics and ecology at the University of Kansas, and former chairman of the zoology department, will be honored during graduation ceremonies at the Universidad de Oriente in Cumana, Venezuela this week. Leonard will bestow diplomas in biological sciences to the 1970 graduating class at the university. Students receiving the degrees will be called graduates of the A. B. Leonard Class of 1970 in biology. The naming of a graduating class after a person is one of the highest honors the Universidad de Oriente bestows. Dr. Leonard will also receive an even higher honor, an honorary doctorate. 12 KANSAN Apr. 22 1970 INTERVIEWS INTERVIEWS (April 22, 23) Senior '71 Comm. Chairman applications available now at the Dean of Women's Office 220 Strong Tobias said she worked closely with students interested in educational reform, notably the Students for Educational Transformation and the group described above, named the Constituent Assembly. during the discussions Thursday, April 30. The committee has been compiling information during the 1969-70 chool year. Women's Week will begin with a dinner Sunday evening honoring the candidates nominated for the Women's Hall of Fame, said Mrs. Carl Dorris, assistant dean of women. nation exists at KU. Reports from the AWS committee on the status of women at KU will also be available An after dinner discussion session will be held April 30 in seven or eight of the living groups on campus, said Mrs. Bill Weber, assistant dean of women. Recognized women from KU will lead the discussion, centered on Miss Tobias' talk and discrimination against women. The groups will be encouraged to speak out on how or if they think discrimi- 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 PUTT-PUTT® GOLF COURSES AMERICA'S QUALITY COURSES CLIP AND USE THIS 30c DISCOUNT! PUTT-PUTT® GOLF COURSES AMERICA'S QUALITY COURSES Putt-Putt is open daily at 1 p.m. Join your friends. Excitement, fun, win passes, entertainment. CLIP AND USE THIS 30c DISCOUNT! PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSE 30c Discount Ticket One per customer—Expires May 3 > K Freshman Class Party That's right, it's party time-and what a party. (Parties at the National Guard Armory are traditionally the best!) This Freshman Class Party promises to be one of the biggest gigs of the year. Music will be provided by the Peppermint Rainbow, straight from a Las Vegas stint. The tap on the student's favorite beverage will be running FREEly from 8 until midnight, and it is free to Freshman dues payers. The whole thing takes place FRIDAY, April 24, at the National Guard Armory, the swinging-est place to be this weekend. Don't miss it! $2.50 per person for non dues payers Compliments of Ace Johnson Jumping Panel to study impeachment demands WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Judiciary Committee established a panel Tuesday to study demands for impeachment of Justice William O. Douglas, snatching the initiative from the jurist's outspoken enemies in the House. Judiciary Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., who will head the investigation, promised a fair and complete inquiry that would be neither "a whitewash nor a witchhunt." But after a look at the predominantly liberal make-up of the five-man investigating panel, House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford said, "I still think that a select committee would be the preferable course of action." Apr. 22 1970 KANSAN 13 Ford has given his blessing to a move by some 110 House members to put the impeachment issue to a select committee appointed by House leaders. It was learned Tuesday that in view of the Judiciary Committee investigation, the House Rules Committee will shelve for the time being any action on the move to create a select committee. Mindful that the Judiciary Committee in 1953 buried a resolution to impeach Douglas, his opponents in the House had viewed the select committee approach as more favorable to securing impeachment on the new misconduct charges raised by Ford last week. Biggest alligator caught in the United States was a 279-pounder taken from the Rio Grande in 1951. These included allegations that Douglas exceeded the bounds of acceptable judicial behavior by accepting expense money from a foundation with ties to Las Vegas gambling, providing an article for a magazine whose publisher was under federal prosecution on obscenity charges, sympathizing with extremism in his book "Points of Rebellion," and publication of an excerpt of the book in a magazine containing photographs of sex activity. Besides Celler, the members chosen for the Judiciary investigating panel were Reps. William M. McCulloch, R-Ohio; Jack B. Brooks, D-Tex.; Byron G. Rogers, D-Colo., and Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich. Except for Hutchinson, they are regarded as liberal-oriented. All are lawyers. Postmaster bemoans postal deficit WASHINGTON (UPI) — Postmaster General Winton M. Blount said Tuesday his department faces a $2.5 billion deficit that must be offset with higher postal rates, but he drew criticism for proposing a two-cent increase in the six-cent letter stamp to erase most of the anticipated debt. tion's proposal to raise rates by $1.6 billion was caused by lack of reform of his department and by pay increases already enacted and those planned in the wake of postal worker strikes. Blount told a House Post Office Subcommittee the administra- In addition to the two-cent boost in first class rates, second class would go up 48 per cent or about 1.3 cents per item covering newspapers and magazines, and third class, sometimes referred to as "junk mail" because it covers unsolicited advertising, would increase 33 per cent, or an average of two cents an item. In addition, the Post Office is considering a proposed priority mail category, which would cost 10 cents to get assured delivery on time. DON'T GIVE THIS MOTH ANOTHER CAVITY! STORE NOW– PAY NEXT FALL while there is YOU STORE– WE MOTHPROOF FREE MOTHPROOFING at ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 Greek leaders attend Big Eight convention Two University of Kansas leaders attended the annual Big Eight Panhellenic-Interfraternity Council Convention at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln last weekend. The relationship between Greeks and the administration at KU shows much more harmony than at any of the other Big Eight schools, said Dave Andersen, Wichita junior and president of IFC. Relationships at KU seemed more stable, Andersen said. Other schools were looking to KU for advice on various programs, he said. It was an experience in leadership for the KU delegation, Andersen said. It made them more aware of issues and more appreciative of being students at this university, he said. Other universities are still having major problems with black discrimination and inter-visitation among the living groups, among other issues, he said. Several of the delegates present suggested having the convention at KU next year. Andersen said they expressed praise for the value of the last Panhellenic-IFC convention held at KU in 1968. Delegates met to discuss communication problems and approaches to controversial issues on University campuses, said Kathy Hoefer, Prairie Village junior and president of the Pan- Students take Expo honors The Architectural Engineering Association (AEA) took first place in the 50th annual University of Kansas Engineering Exposition last weekend. Receiving the first place trophy were Gregory L. Allemann, Hermann, Mo. senior and president of AEA and J. C. Alberts, Jefferson City, Mo. senior and chairman of the AEA Expo committee. The theme of the entry was The theme of the entry was "The Age of Aquarius." Allemann said architectural engineers in the future would look for two things when building: increased spans without interior support and more economical structural systems. Their exhibit consisted of several structural designs, including a geodesic dome. The dome consisted of wooden dowels connected by rubber tubing in congruent triangles, forming the shell of a sphere. Allemann also won a $50 third place prize in the Phillips Professional Development Fund Award of the Expo. 14 KANSAN Apr.22 1970 THE BYRDS BALLAD OF EASY RIDER INCLUDING: BALLAD OF EASY RIDER / GAIL INKEY LAMP ARMSTRONG, ALDRIN AND COLLINS IT'S ALL OVER NOW, BABY BLUE JESUS IS JUST ALRIGHT On Columbic Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbic Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. hellenic Council. Individual group discussion centered on drug abuse, equal rights and one's individual relationship to Greek houses, she said. Those attending the convention from KU were Andersen and Miss Hoefer; Mrs William Hess, assistant dean of women; Martha Dalton, advisor to Panhellenic; and Barb Reed, Tulsa junior, and Panhellenic rush chairman. The convention next year may be set up as a leadership training event, Miss Hoefer said. HAROLD'S 66 SERVICE U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Ice Cream Social 15c for 2-dips of ice cream and 2-cookies at JRP Parking Lot April 19-25 Wed., April 22 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Spring Week Committee FUN IN THE SUN at JRP Parking Lot * Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified Please help. All of us hate to see empty cans and bottles lousing up what's left of a beautiful country. It's too bad packaging technology today isn't as exotic and convenient as the gimmicks and gadgets on the TV thrill shows; like you, we'd like nothing better than for every empty can and bottle to self-destruct. Someday, soon, things will be different, though...because we and a lot of other concerned people are all working on the problem in earnest. Meantime, there is a foolproof way to keep cans and bottles from cluttering up the countryside, and you can do your part: Please don't throw them there in the first place. BUDWEISER KING OF BEERS A ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. ST. LOUIS • NEWARK LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON COLUMBUS • JACKSONVILLE Snipers, fires mark tense night HARPER 18th to 19th BLOCKED Leannel Block 15 to Forest Photo by Ron Bishop ROCK CHALK CAFE WASHY VILLE Police map shows areas of disturbance... Photo by Ron Bishop Beginning at the Rock Chalk Cafe at 7:05 p.m. ... SHEPHERD Photo by Greg Sorber Apr. 22 1970 KANSAN 15 And ending with gun-shy and weary firemen at the old Lincoln school in North Lawrence Buzzi and Associates, Inc. Insurance Agency P. B. S. Tony Croman "For the Professional Approach to Your Insurance Needs" Bob Joyce - Arden Gray - Mike Reeves Ray Terrell - Janice Peterson Bill Hull - Ralph Light PETER JOHNSON - Steve Gibson - Gene Hadl Lloyd Buzzi Let us help you with: Auto Insurance Renters Insurance Life Insurance Computer Programs Health Insurance Group Insurance Disability Insurance Mortgage Insurance Tax Sheltered Programs Buzzi and Associates Gary Garrett Gary Garrett Ric Marshall Lee Sells 2323 Ridge Court VI 2-7771 Doug Powell Doug Powell INVATION ARM Photo by Ron Bishop Aid from Kansas City The Salvation Army set up a canteen Tuesday night in the parking lot of the A & P grocery store on Massachusetts St., serving sandwiches and coffee to the firemen, police and national guard on duty during the curfew. The canteen came to Lawrence from Kansas City. Lenin centenary celebrated MOSCOW (UPI) — Cuban and Viet Cong leaders opened the celebration of the Lenin centenary today by thanking the Soviets for the guns, fuel and money needed to defend themselves against Americans. Cuban President Osvaldo Doricos told 6,000 persons in the Kremlin Hall of Congresses that the Soviet Union stood by Cuba in the struggle against imperialism, an obvious allusion to the United States. Charges dropped against Panthers NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) — A Superior Court judge Tuesday dropped contempt charges and suspended six month jail sentences for two Black Panthers charged with disrupting a pretrial hearing for Panther leader Bobby G. Seale. The Panthers, party chief David Hilliard and "Minister of Culture" Elmer Douglas, were freed after they apologized to Judge Harold M. Mulvey, saying they had not intended to disrupt his courtroom April 14. Seale, who is charged with the kidnapping and murder of Panther Alex Rackley, appeared in the courtroom only briefly between consultations with his San Francisco attorney, Charles Garry, who arrived Tuesday. The hearing was continued until Wednesday. the planet Neptune was discovered in 1846. 16 KANSAN Apr. 22 1970 "When imperialism began preparing armed aggression against Deferment policy suggestions made WASHINGTON (UPI) The Defense Department has prepared recommendations for Congress to limit occupational and paternal draft deferments and announcement is expected soon. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird has frequently expressed his dislike for special deferments which permit men with children and those with jobs in various "critical" agricultural jobs to escape the armed services. Critics say the deferments have simply induced men to seek out such jobs and that they are not nearly so critical as to warrant virtually exempting job holders from military duty. Laird said last February the administration prepared recommendations and that their public announcement was considered imminent Wednesday. us, we began receiving free of charge from the Soviet Union weapons to secure our defenses," Dorticos said. Ho Xuan Son, representing the Viet Cong, praised the Soviets for "rendering effective, tremendous help to the Vietnamese people who are fighting against American imperialism." - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" B HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn THE NATION'S INNKEEPER® Holiday Inn® 23rd & Iowa 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Holiday Inn® THE NATIONS INNKEEPERS Romanian President Nicolae Ceausescu called for freedom within communism and reconciliation of differences between Communist nations. He did not specifically mention Red China, but referred to the problems created by the Sino-Soviet feud. "Lenin saw in Marxism not a collection of dogma . . . but living instructions for action," Ceaucescu said. "Considering that what unites the Communist parties is more powerful and far above the divergencies among them, our party promotes relations with all fraternal parties." Gary Porteous, Innkeeper Rita Skaggs, Asst. Umkeeper Ceausescu has refused to join the Soviet-led attack on China. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—A three-alarm fire destroyed a tire company and heavily damaged a beauty salon, barbecue eatery and an insurance company Tuesday night in the city's racially tense east side. Police said the blaze was possibly caused by an explosion. There were no injuries reported. Police arriving on the scene were pelted with bricks, bottles and rocks and a Salvation Army canteen truck, set up to aid weary firemen, was taken over by spectators and had to be closed and removed from the area. Firemen were hampered by sightseers of the blaze, which quickly spread to adjacent structures. Nine fire fighting companies converged on the area. PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (UPI)—Fullscale rioting, including clashes between soldiers and coast guardsmen, broke out in Port of Spain Tuesday after the government imposed a state of emergency to cope with black power disorders. State of emergency develops in Trinidad Army rebels—about 50 to 60 of them out of a garrison of 1,000 men—and coast guards menced a shootout when the soldiers tried to rescue 14 arrested black power advocates being taken to prison. An Army private and a 16-year-old boy, apparently a bystander, were shot to death. The renegade soldiers fled into the hills surrounding Trinidad when their rescue assault failed. While the rescue attempt was underway at the army base at Chaguaramas, rioting raged through downtown Port of Spain. Offices of the daily newspaper, Trinidad Express, were sacked after which leaderless mobs ranged through Port of Spain's principal streets, breaking windows and setting fires. The disturbances, triggered by the state of emergency, ended by late afternoon. The government set a 6:30 p.m. (EST) curfew. The Metro Squad was called in to investigate the blaze after the city experienced a wave of bombings for more than a week. The U.S. Navy helicopter carrier Guadalcanal and the landing ship Spiegel Grove, both with Marines aboard, slipped out of San Juan before dawn today and Navy sources said they were bound for Trinidad. Blaze destroys KC tire company All leaves for crewmen aboard the ships were canceled without warning Tuesday after the outbreak of violence in Trinidad. The Guadalcanal had been expected to remain in San Juan until Sunday. Witnesses said they heard an explosion shortly before 8 p.m.—seconds before flames shot out of the Bonner Tire Co. Thick black smoke was visible for 15 miles away. henrys presents the first in a series of... SUNDOWN SAVINGS From 5:00 to 7:00 each evening, Monday through Friday, for the next month, Henry's will offer a special on some item. Tonight hamburgers are only 10c apiece. Check tomorrow for another Sundown Saving. To All Places In All Weather You will Shine Choose An Adorable Little "All Weather- All Places" COAT from ET the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts KU curator describes fossil site Land near the Sahara in southeast Tunisia, in North Africa, was once a moist tropical area, said Craig C. Black, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Kansas University Museum of Natural History. Black recently returned from a three week project of exploration and excavation in Tunisia. The project, he said, is designed to draw conclusions from remains of animals concerning their migrations, what animals were living together and the climate of the area when the now fossilized animals lived. The site has been excavated for three years and a rich deposit of fossils—more than 10,000 specimens—have been uncovered. Black said. The list of fossils sounds like an invoice from the Ark. Black named fossils of gazelles, pigs, Book collectors rewarded Winners in the 1970 Elizabeth Snyder Book Collecting Contest were announced last week by Barbara Backus, assistant special collections librarian. The contest, sponsored by Mrs. Snyder and the Oread Book Shop, was for KU students who had collections of paperback books or hardbacks on certain topics of special interest to them. In the graduate division of the contest, the first place winner was Andre Sedriks, Osawatomie, for his collection on the poetry of Charles Bukowski. The second place winner was Winder McConnell, Lachine, Quebec, for his collection on the Waffen S.S. Jeff Lough, Salina junior, won first place in the undergraduate division for his collection on the Bolivian Revolution of 1952; second place went to L. Lewis Wall, Salina junior, for his books on the culture of ancient Egypt. Runners-up in the contest were Jim K. Swindler, Pratt freshman, human thought; Robert Mitchell, Wichita graduate student, rock and roll; James M. Welsh, Logansport, Ind., graduate student, film theory, history, and criticism. Brian P. Copenhaver, Baltimore graduate student, occultism in the Middle Ages and Renaissance; and Jerry C. Coiner, Kansas City graduate student, warfare in the 20th century. We had an excellent showing this year," said Mrs. Backus. "We had more entries than ever before and a wide spectrum of interests was represented." Each contestant was first required to submit a bibliography of his collection with a statement of his purpose in making it. Ten entries on his bibliography were required to be annotated with a description of the book and special interest. hippopotamus-like beasts, primative three-toed horses, sabertooth cats and fish. University Theatre loses drama director He said the specimens were deposited in a river delta system that flowed into the ancient Mediterranean Sea. Entries were limited to 25 to 50 books from a collection. The books must have been owned and collected by the contestant. Students who have attended the University Theatre have admired not only good acting and interesting plays, but also the excellent stage set designed by James W. Hawes, associate professor of speech and drama. Now Hawes is spending his last semester at the University of Kansas. This fall, he will assume his new position as director of the theatre department at Wisconsin State University in Oshkosh. Black said the strait between Spain and North Africa at the time the animals lived (10-12 million years ago) was wider and farther south than it is now, and the Mediterranean covered a larger area. The water he said, was a barrier to prevent the animals from migrating. The most important discovery, Black said, was the fact that the fauna in Tunisia was more closely related to fossils found in India than in Europe. He said the relationship indicated there was a more direct route for the animals to migrate from Asia and North Africa. The project is funded through the Smithsonian Institution's Foreign Currency Program. The excavation and exploration is done through the cooperation of the University of Colorado and the Tumisia Geological Survey. much like to direct one of Ibsen's plays at Oshkosh, partly also because the population there was largely of Scandinavian descent A preliminary judging was held on the basis of the bibliography papers. The finalists were then asked to bring their books to Spencer Library for final judging. In addition to directing and designing sets, Hawes teaches directing and acting, and also does some acting. Many will remember his performance of George in "Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Hawes also narrated the documentary film called "Leo Beuerman" which was nominated for an Academy Award this year. The winners each received $100 in books to be ordered through the Oread Book Shop and the other finalists each received $10 in books. The judges of the contest were George Allen, Lawrence attorney and book collector; James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor and science fiction writer; and Frank Aydelotte, assistant history librarian. The winning entries will be on display at Spencer Library this week and all of the finalists' entries will be on exhibition at Watson Library later this semester. THE BYRDS BALLAD OF EASY RIDER INCLUDING: BALLAD OF EASY RIDER/OIL IN MY LAMP ARMSTRONG, ALDRIN AND COLLINS IT'S ALL OVER NOW BABY BLUE JESUS IS JUST ALRIGHT On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ctr. Hawes said the reason he was leaving for Oskhosh was that the position of theatre director there seemed such a challenge to him. "The theatre at KU is really too big and we'd like to have a smaller, more intimate one here, too," he said. "They've got all the equipment there that we have here," he explained, "but the theatre there is newer and smaller." Use Kansan Classified "For an intimate play like 'The homecoming' for instance, which I directed here, is really much better with a smaller audience. The KU University Theatre seats 1188 and at Oshkosh the theatre seats only 600." Hawes said. "At Oshkosh they've also got more rehearsal space and more dressing rooms," he added. Hawes said he was very interested in international theatre, and the staff at Oshkosh shared his enthusiasm. Partly because he is married to a native of Norway, Hawes has a genuine interest in the works of Norwegian play-wright Henrik Ibsen. He wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on Ibsen's dramas, and said he would very SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Fine Arts—April 22 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman Apr.22 1970 KANSAN 17 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Musica O Branda Charn Humanities Chairman 6. Art Forums Chairman 1. Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970) — April 22 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications are due in the SUA Office by 5:00 p.m. on the day of your interview. You will select an interview time then. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. Please use the files in the SUA Office to help prepare your interview. Feel free to contact Board Members or last year's events chairman if you have any questions. YWCA goal set at talks The overriding goal of the Young Women's Christian Organization (YWCA) for 1970 is to combat racism, institutional or individual, by any means necessary, said Laura Friesen, Clay Center junior and KU-Y copresident Monday. The goal was formulated at the YWCA national convention in Houston, April 13-18, which was attended by KU coeds Mary Jane Logan, King City, Mo. junior; Marianne Olish, St. Anne, Mo. senior; Sandy Leman, Wichita sophomore and Miss Friesen. At the convention, a resolution introduced by Miss Friesen stating that the YWCA should go on record supporting the abolition of the selective service system, was passed by the Student Assembly Miss Logan was elected as regional chairman of the west-central region of YWCA at the convention. AMC GAGE 4 THEATRES Gage Blvd & Hunloon Topeka, Kansas EXCLUSIVE MIDWEST RETURN ENGAGEMENT THE Umbrellas of Cherbourg In Song and Color English Subtitles a film for all the young lovers of the world BEGINNING APRIL 24 GROUP DISCOUNT RATES AVAILABLE In Lawrence Call Jeff Schnabe at 842-9193 "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" Winner of the Grand Prize. Winner of the Grand Prize Cannes Film Festival. DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes spring goes strap happy! DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" Look for the opened-up, strappy-vamped, WHITE shoe this spring! A. Closed, blunt toe, double-strapped instep and openly-slung over a thick, high heel. In Pink or Barbizon Blue Smooth; White or Black Patent leather uppers. B. A platform sandal, raised on a 2 inch heel, twice-strapped 'n buckled across the instep. Uppers of White leather; Black Shiny Corfam. spring goes strap happy! FANFARES T.M. FANFAKES T.M. KU ecoloaist enthusiastic about Brazil By BEATRIZ CACERES Kansan staff writer The possibilities are unlimited for making studies of the tropical ecology of the lower Amazon, Philip Humphrey, director of the Museum of Natural History and professor of systematics and ecol- 'Hoods Who' booklet identifies KC names KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—A "Hoods Who" booklet identifying by name 54 persons and 17 businesses associated with organized crime in Kansas City was released Monday by the Kansas City Crime Commission. The booklet explains that the organization of criminals to which it is devoted is known by various names, including "Mafia" or "Cosa Nostra." Seven Kansas Citians were named as the "reputed upper echelon" with controlling force in the Kansas City syndicate. Forty-seven others were identified as being either members of the syndicate or "fellow travelers, cronies, associates . . . or dupes" of the organization. A large percentage of those identified are of Sicilian or Italian descent, and the booklet contained the following observations: "We feel it is very essential in all fairness to our law-abiding Sicilian-Italian citizens to point out and make quite clear that for each one associated with the syndicate there are thousands of Schwegler requests crutches be returned Dr. Raymond Schwegler Jr., director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, is asking students to return any crutches not now in use. Schwegler said there has been a large number of small accidents requiring crutches lately. Many students who have had to use the crutches previously have forgotten to return them, he said. It takes six to eight weeks to order crutches, he said, and the hospital is presently in need of them. 18 KANSAN Apr.22 1970 good, honest working, devoted Sicilians and Italians." The booklet also contained the names of 63 persons, many identified previously, who have been convicted of violating certain federal or state laws and who are, by implication, tied in with organized crime. The crime commission booklet also criticized some Kansas City courts. It said that "while there have been many successful prosecutions, the sentences, unfortunately, have frequently not been commensurate with the crime and the criminal." The commission had 2,500 copies of the booklet printed and said it intends to distribute them to its 400 members, persons associated with law enforcement and students of the organized crime problem. THE HTE in the WALL DELICATESEN & DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We've沉降 9+ Ill. Exclusive Representative L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Favors Mugs - Guards - Mugs - Personifications - Riddle - Recognitions - Paddles - Lavalliers Stationery - Gifts - Lavaliers - Stationery - Gifts - Plagues - Sportswear - Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldd. #306 Across from the Red Dog ROCK CHALK CAFE ogy, said after returning from Beemel, Brazil. Humphrey spent two weeks collaborating with a Tropical Forest Ecological Program there. AT THE GET YOURSELVES TOGETHER ample, Humphrey said, Japanese scientists are doing research to adapt the environment of the forest for agriculture. 1875 SOUP & SANDWICH...50c study all aspects of tropical forest ecology of forest reserve areas in the vicinity of Belem. Since that time, the program has grown and all data collected provide information on the ecology of the Lower Amazon forests. Lunch Special The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short The goals of the studies are to learn how the tropical forest environment reacts and how it will react in the future when man will make more complete use of the Amazon. "The Amazon rain forest environment is extraordinarily complex; as an example, in one little area of forest of 10 acres we found 300 different species of trees while in a Kansas woodlot there are a tenth that many," he said. Home of the world famous TRUCK STOP Scientists of other countries are doing important ecological research in the Amazon. For ex- Two factors have hindered continued development of the program: the unstable political situation in Brazil and the reduction of U.S. funds to support the program. At present most of the support for the program comes from Brazilian sources. The ecology program was started in 1965, after having some problems with local peasants who were disturbing the forest environment. In 1966, with the cooperation of the Smithsonian Institute, the Instituto de Pesquisas e Experimentacao Agropequarias do Norte and the Belem Virus Laboratory, the Brazilian government established the program to APRIL 22 7:00am 10:00pm UNION 750 Bandolfi nox Arna The all aboard! VANEQi Special The Halo in Black, Navy, Brown & White Crushed Patent. Summation in Red, Navy, Black Patent, White, and Bone Kid. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 One day KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days Three days 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $0.2 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before public Five days Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the newspaper or on the Internet are referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes--Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Anal- yze of Western Civilization" 4th Edi- tion Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount-your A.R., Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Norelco tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, theses, disertative collating included in the data base, award-winning Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3644. tf Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. ff 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383, Formula S. 428, G-70's, low mileage. Perfect condition. Dick at 616 Kirkland or 842-5225. 4-28 Help a Bird Today! Precaut birdhouse kits and bird feeding stations now available at Histoire Hispaniola Gift Shop. Open daily 8:30 to 4:20 Sundays 1:30 to 4:30. Framus 12-string guitar, $120.00. Norelco Cassette Carry-Corder (battery or A.C.). $45.00. German made 6-string guitar, $45.00. Martin D-35 6-string guitar, 6 months old. $450.00 with hard-shell case. Call 824-727-9000. Need money to pay tax. Must sell two-year-old Masterworks stereo and '59 cyl. Chev. Call 842-8534. 4-22 6-string Gibson guitar in perfect con- formity, hard shell case, $75. 842-000-32, 4-22 One 40 watt tape deck with BSR turntable. Will accept highest reasonable offer. Old RCA console needs work, $$. Call Stu. 1869 4-22 Attention Flocinaeucinhlilippilifenors! For Sale: 1) Unused-8 silver drinking cups; copper chafing dish with stand and burner; calf wallet and key case; Lite-Gem hi-intensity Humidity Gauge; tray-table combination; 2) Used-Norecelo electric shaver; wine decanter with four matching glasses; wicker desk organizer and picnic basket; AM-FM- or AC portable radio, batteries or AC; arranged kitchen items; 843-1400 Horse Teeth Necklaces. . . The Brazilian answer to warding off social diseases! An eye-catching novelty now available at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open Sum- 1:30 to 1:50, Weekdays 8:30–4:30, 4:30 Three Vivitar Manual Lens: 85mm, 135mm, 200mm. Excellent condition. 4-423 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect motion. Must sell now! Call 844-360- 6707. Borg-Warner 8 track car stereo. Call 1-800-7370 or come or order 1025 Emmery Road. 1966 Chevette SS 396. Only 26,000 miles! Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-24 1968 BSA HSA 441c, dirt or road 1975 BSA HSA 323a, dirt or road 1200 after 6. Ask for John in 226, 4-24 1260 after 7. Ask for John in 226, 4-24 '70 Datsun 2-litre, 5 speed, 120 m.p.h. 1800 miles, silver-black, 135 horse-power. Extras. Call Chip, 843-3310. 4-24 $1.75! That's all it costs to place a 25-word classified ad for 5 days. There are sales can you find such a bargain. In the unseen "For Sale" column, of course. Must sell diamond ring set-engagement band, wedding ring, both with diamonds. 843-0152. First National Bank. 4-27 Flute- Arteley, good condition. New pads. Rogers drums, excellent condition, w/Rogers hardware, silver pearl. 842-5648. 4-24 Relaxaiseir, used, but in perfect condition. Instruction book included. Price: $80—cheap if roommates share. Call 842-3803. 4-24 Must sell 1963 Nashua mobile home, 10 x 55, fully furnished and carpeted. 2 bedroom, din. room, low court fee. Asking $2350, 842-4165. 4-28 1969 Dataun 2000 conv. 135 hp—OHC engine. 5-speed, 6-ply radials w/mags, snow tire, radio, heater, brake brakes, many extra discs, b42-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-28 1965 Triumph TR-4--red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, see this for spring, $1300 842- 2191. 4-28 1967 Triumph TR-4A4—IRES, British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelin X tires. $1800. 842-2191. 4-28 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800, 842- 7191. 4-28 1968 Fiat 850 Spyder, convertible, white with black top, black deluxe interior, fine condition thru-out, low mileage, $1400, 842-2191. 4-28 1963 Austin Healy Sprite, black, re- back, hardtop, new clutch, 842-219 842-219 4-28 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, black convertible top, body in excel- ent condition, overhaulued transmission, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1969 Toyota Corolla, looks new, gray hardtop with red interior, 4-spd. easy on the highway, $1500, 842-2191, 4-28 1966 GTO—yellow with black convertible top, 4-apd, big engine, equipped with stereo speakers, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1967 VW, silver mist paint with bronze interior, 76 hp, duty suspension, very cononomical on gas, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air, V-8, automatic transmission, premium belted tires, excellent condition. No reasonable offer refused. 842-6738. 4-28 1962 Buick LeSabre 4-dr. sedan, power steering, power brakes, A.C. good tires, runs good. $400. Call 843-8833 after 5 p.m. 4-24 Save yourself $3.00. Current Western phone is $7.50 for $7.50. 8481. As for Alan 4-28 Repossessed 1969 Chevy II. Yellow with black interior, bucket seats, V-8, 3-speed. See at the First National Bank. 4-27 1960 TR-3, perfect mechanically, new clutch and transmission, 842-7417 after 6:00 p.m. 4-23 Component stereo system with Fisher XP55b speaker and Nikko amp, war- wily left on all components, plus old record collection, $210. 845- 5050. 1968 Suzuki: X-6-250cc. Excellent condition. Two helmets, 2,000 miles. Drafted, must sell immediately. 842- 8884. 4-23 Magnavox stereo, console, contemporary styling, diamond stylus, walnut grained, excellent condition, 5 month lease, leaving Lawrence. $109.00 - 424.76 - 842.57 Mayfair 8 track stereo tapeplayer like new, plus 18 tapes—Doors, Collins, Penetraid, Directrix, Electric Pig, BST, $20 value, price $4-23 Harris, n84-8544. NOTICE Barn available for barn parties. Spot for weiner roasts and Hayrack, heat and electricity, for more information, call Max Lapti, V1 3-4032. 5-14 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want to see them, is this the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our special treat! V-2 515-310. Closed Sunday, Tuesday if Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00. GRI-0440 anytime. N, Kansas City, Mo. 64146. No obligation. Fill form out in 4-24 vate. Rates for Kansan classified are the lowest anywhere around: $1.00 for two days, $2.00 for three days, $1.75 for five days, with only pennies extra for more than 25 words. 4-24 The Castle Tea Room is ideal for lunches, dinner parties, or even reception. Call Libuse Kriz, 843-620-3001. Most unique restaurant Lawrence. The Omnibus Shop has a new exhibit of contemporary art—paintings, serigraphs, lithographs and sculpture. A collection of fine art and crafts. 4-27 Indiana. Will the party who found my orange bilbill in the ladies' restroom in the Union please keep the money and return the bilbill to 621 Illinois or call 843-1411. Reward offered. No questions asked. 4-22 Hand crafted - sandals at reasonable price. Welcome to Padge Dog, 9th. 9th. Fast delivery 4-28 LOST Gabriel Bridal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv. TEXACO Student specials TEXACO W. 9th ★ New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 $10.00 reward for black Prince Gardner wallet. Lost someplace between ATO House and Union Monday, April 13. If found, contact Kip at 843-4811. No questions asked. **4-23** Zippo Cigarette lighter with "Jarvis" written on the front. Lost at Hawks Nest. Reward. Call 3624. **4-27** $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license. No. T2T3PL. No questions. Phone 864-3684 and ask for me. **4-24** ZBT pixin near Marvin Hall. Call Ralph at 842-2038. Reward. **4-28** A wine-rimmed glasses. Contact John Bailey. 843-4811. **4-28** 1 black wallet. Keep money, return wallet, no questions asked. Contact Ralph Nicol. 842-2038. **4-24** Bucherer watch last Sat. night at concert or O-Zone Sentimental van. over loss. Reward. Call 842-3489. **4-28** WANTED Roommate wanted: Mature female graduate student or teacher, wanted to share two-bedroom apartment, $50/month. Call 842-5893 after 5 p.m. graduate student or teacher, wante to share two-bedroom apartment, $50/month. Call 842-5893 after 5 p.m. Male needs apartments from now till June $70/mo, or less, roommates, kitchen, call. Clean 842-2396. 4-23 Summer traveling companion! Forget about school, Relax, see national parks in western U.S., swim in the pacific, visit San Francisco. Inexperienced, call 842-6590. Live in convenient Jaihawkower Towers next fall. If interested and a serious student, call Bruce at 842-7740 after 1:00 p.m. Roommate for summer starting June 1 or earlier. Call 842-3539 or UN 4-3166, Tom. 4-27 Roommate for summer and/or next winter, share a two room air-cond. apt, with pool. Call 842-0610 after 3:00. PERSONAL Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-807-3807 AGENT 108—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Located across from Stonifer 807-3807 a condition air conditioner Shown afternoons or by appointment. 1741 W. 19th. VI-3-8209. 4-22 Want to send a unique birthday card? Want to send a Kansan "personal" ad. G$1.00 per day. 4-24 Handerafter sandals at reasonable prices from the Hodge Pode, 15 West 9th. Fast delivery. 4-28 TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers—plus stenel theses and duplicating. Pick up delivery offered. Bake 842-3597 or 842-6562. Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typemaking, word writer, Pica type, Competent, Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service 5-15 Earn extra money. Sell American eagle license plates. Retail or to deal with pre-owned car parts by George Mack, Carmar Co. 8, Douglass Lane, Kirkwood, Missouri 63122 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Work 643-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. HELP WANTED Needed now: experienced female phone solicitor. Guarantee plus bonuses. Excellent opportunity for hire. 843-6425. Don't ack you're timid. KING GEORGE III Leaving town soon? Want a good job to take with you for security? Part or full-time job with Top Notch Fashions, Inc. See us at the Student Union, Room 101, Wed., April 22, all day. 4-22 ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2323 RIDGE COURT Patrick J. Norris THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S HAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA Kenneth "Roger" Evers APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 542-369 yor (WWP) MENU'S MAIN SURVIVOR the Sirloin Hammercraft DINING Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choire, steaks U.S. choice steaks, Fine sea foods Open 4:30 1½ MI. N. of Kaw Closed River Bridge Monday VI 3-1421 Male or female for kitchen help and cocktail waitress and bookkeeper. Call 842-9248 between 2-5 p.m. Ask for Joe. 4-27 Summer jobs. Earn $2000 (or more with extra hours). The Southwest Company (est. 1868) provided summer jobs in 1969 for over 4,000 students from more than 600 U.S. colleges and universities. This summer program is designed for ambitious college men who are willing to learn and work and must demonstrate responsibility, good personal conduct and self-cipline. For interview appointment, call: Bob Townsend, 843-8557 after 6:00 p.m. 4-28 SERVICES OFFERED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationalwide directories of positions. Relevant fields Accurate. Current. Innovation. Academic. comicom, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O. Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Alterations and dressmaking 20 years experience. 843-2767. 4-27 Made to order rings, pendants, car- rving bags. Also custom leather. Also custom leather. Drop by. PROPST CUSTOM JEWELRY AND HANDCRAFTS. 628½. Mass. BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. Phone 843-2736. tf FOUND Found—at last. The heavy ten stern on the FM, but the GM on the FM dial. Don't lose it. Found: one easy way to sell what you know. 1. At the local store, $1.75 for Kanserlass classics; $1.00 for one day, $1.50 for three days, $1.75 for five days, 25 words or less. 4-24 Pair brown frame eyeglasses behind cam call claim 435-3698 and pay for this ad. FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom ant, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. ff. Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom and air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown Phone 843-5767. apartment living in Lawrence, adjacent to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly im- pendent price and mature singles; studios from $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $225. To view these luxury rooms, visit our houses on David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 843-2055. 1-床bedroom apt. to sub-lett. Avail. June 15. Must leave town, lease runs till Dec. 1 1611 W. 8th Terr., $149/ 842-2314 before 4 p.m. except Wed or Thurs. 2-Apartment to submit for Summer School, or June 1-Aug. 24. 2 bedrooms and study, furnished, TV radiogram, dishwasher, use of swimming pool. About 4 miles from cam- munity, about $100 or lowe- $160.00 per month, plus electric telephone. Call 842-5025, Tues. Thurs. mornings, and any evening. 4-22 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Now leasing for summer and fall. Air-conditioned, private pool. Show afternoons or by appointment. 701 W. 8th Terr., and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on a first come, first serve basis. Call 842-2348, see the resident managers, or consult with rentals at 2107 Hart- Road complexes. Compare our features, loca- tions, and rates and then decide. Tony's 66 Service starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 THE CONCORD SHOP - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - reay-made and parts - Stretcher frames, - McConnell Lumber - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - McCormick Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services 2 bedroom apartment, close to campus, will suit for summer. Call 4-222 4-22 Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in the SOSO BENTS Beautiful courtyard and pool, spacious sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished bedroom, office, phoneto at 842-3801 or 842-3843 or drop see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 Would you believe . . . you can walk to classes from your home in the ARGO APARTMENTS, 11th and Missison's most popular apartment complex special summer rates during June and July!! Call 842-2348, or drop by the resident manager's apartment at 1130 Aurora Street. For central rental offices at 2107 A Harvard Road to get details on both summer and fall leasing. Summer subject May 15-Sept. 12. Central office: 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, wet-bath. Enclosed finished. $175/mo. utilities included. Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once For summer sub-let: furnished three- bedroom house, carpet, paneling. See at 123 E. 19th or call 843-9300. 4-27 and apartments for summer closes and ideal location. Call 843-2854 for details and appointments to see rooms. Check it out! Sublease 2 bedroom room. apt. June 1 thru Aug. 15. $100/ mo. good reward Chicks preferred, by 842-1367 729 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 room units featuring drapes, large loft-10, floor-10, sound conditioning, all electric Frigidaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces, storage room, recreation room, sauna bath, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive apartments afternoons weekdays and weeksend at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE, 2411 Louisiana, 843-552-552 Southridge Plaza Apartments, now renting for summer and fall. One and a half furnished and unfurnished with draperies and open air conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool. On Wednesday they at today 170A, 24th, 842-1160. 4-28 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 2 blocks from stadium, June-July, possibly longer. Call 842-7147 after 5:30 p.m. 4-28 Furn. apt. for graduate student or child, or two children; no children. $125 mnd ut pjd 1633 Venice 843-1209 after 5:00 or weekends. 4-28 Two-bedroom furnished apartment, air-conditioned, near shopping cen- tors; 120 per person. Call 842-42-54 843-0064 SEE Moving To Kansas City? Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Baths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Baths $230 CLUBHOUSE POOL CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN Open Daily 9 Till Dark CHARTER HOUSE S. E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit S.E. Corner I-35 & 95th St. E Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa [Image of a building with smoke rising from its windows] Photo by Ron Bishop Abandoned school building destroyed Firemen were not able to save the building, located at Seventh and Lyon Streets, after two walls collapsed. The fire broke out between 11:30 and 11:45 p.m. Tuesday night. Riots follow Pinilla defeat BOGOTA (UPI)—The government declared a state of siege Tuesday night during wild street battles between Colombian troops and rioters supporting the return of power of former dictator Gustavo Rojas Pinilla despite his apparent defeat in Sunday's presidential election. Mobs smashed windows, set fires, overturned cars and went on looting rampages before troops moved in with tear gas and arrested an estimated 500 people. Unconfirmed reports said one person was killed. Three soldiers were injured by thrown rocks. 20 KANSAN Apr. 22 1970 Rojas Pinilla's aides promised to rally 50,000 demonstrators in the streets of Bogota this morning to "fight by all the means at our disposal" to preserve his victory over Misael Pastrana Borrero, the government candidate who has a 51,000-vote lead in incomplete returns. President Carlos Lleras Restrepo, whose term ends Aug. 7, announced the state of siege, suspending the right of assembly, imposing censorship, creating military tribunals to try civilian cases and declaring a dusk-to-dawn curfew. "I believe an attempt is being made to provoke subversion but the government is ready and prepared to put it down," Lleras said. He warned of the "danger of a general revolt in our country" and emphasized he will spare nothing to quash it. The rioting and measures taken against it were the harshest since April 9, 1948, after the assassination of Jorge Eliecer Gaitan, a popular politician. The 13 years since the ouster of Rojas Pinilla in 1957 have been a period of stability for Colombia. (Continued from page 1) policeman. Thomas M. Jackson, a department of public safety officer, suffered a gash over his eye. The cut was treated at Law- rence Memorial Hospital. Jackson was released later Tuesday. Lleras vowed to carry out his term of office until he turns over the presidency to the legally elected successor, saying "before Aug. 7, I will never leave the presidential palace unless I am dead." Racial tension- Many of the blacks carried clubs, baseball bats and sticks. During the confrontation, policemen used tear gas and chemical mace to disperse the crowd. Medley said no students were injured in the high school from the breaking glass. None of the blacks entered the building. Policemen were stationed inside the school building for the remainder of the day and guards were posted at all entrances. Medley said it was unfortunate police had to be inside the building, but it made the parents feel more confident of their children's safety. Sniping- (Continued from page 1) Street. The bomb was said to have caused little or no damage. More sniper fire was reported during the night at 1200 Louisiana Street, causing police and National Guardsmen to search the area. Two police cars and one fire truck were struck by snipier fire causing only minor damage. The situation was reported to be under control about midnight. "Indications are that they were simply harassment shots and not really intended to kill," said Dennis Kallsen, assistant city manager, referring to the sniper fire About 11.50 p.m. an abandoned school at 7th and Lyons Streets was destroyed by fire. Firemen were unable to save the building after two walls collapsed, but managed to confine the blaze. No sniper fire occurred at the fire. Lawrence police reported 11 curfew arrests and no injuries. Local city and county officials are expected to decide by noon today whether another curfew will be in effect tonight. Medley also said that being in school was probably the safest place for the students at the time The LHS Student Council will meet Wednesday, and black student demands, including those of black cheerleaders and a black queen, will probably be discussed at the meeting. Survey --- (Continued from page 1) David Awbrey, out-going Student Senate president, said the Senate would move into Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer's office temporarily. Awbrey said the Senate's records suffered no damage. Francis Heller, acting provost of the University, said that, because the Union building was owned by the Memorial Union Organization and not by the State of Kansas, it would not be necessary for a legislative session to appropriate funds for rennovation. Brown's defense stalling trial BALTIMORE (UPI)—The defense succeeded in stalling the often-delayed arson and riot trial of H. Rap Brown again Tuesday by taking the case to federal court here just before the missing defendant was required to appear. Howard County Judge James MacGill was ready to call the case to trial after denying a series of defense motions for dismissal or delay of the trial until Brown felt it safe to appear. The delay was the ninth postponement in the Brown case that started in August 1967. BANQUET of NATIONS & SCHEHERAZADE NIGHT Sunday, April 26, 6 p.m. Place to be determined Tickets: $2.00 — Raney's & Union Info. Desk Sponsored by International Club Guardsmen, police have busy night A Photo by Steve Haynes Fire in the Military Science building Two firemen and a policeman cover a fire reported at 12:57 a.m. today in the Military Science building. Minor damage was reported and the fire was extinguished nearly 10 minutes later. Smoke filled the hall above the basement area where the fire supposedly started. The second night of Lawrence's curfew was marked with two fires on campus several bomb threats and many reports of other disturbances. At 1 a.m. today, a fire occurred in the Military Science building at the University of Kansas. Three pumper trucks and a snorkel truck from the Lawrence Fire Department were dispatched to the scene along with police and National Guard troops. The fire, which was quickly brought under control, was confined to the rifle range. At the time the fire was reported, two buildings and grounds personnel reported seeing two suspects running away from the building. There were no arrests,however,and damage to the building was reported as being light. A trash fire in back of Strong Hall was reported only minutes after the Military Science building fire was extinguished. It was put out quickly with a fire extinguisher and no fire trucks were dispatched to the area. During the night there were bomb threats at Naismith, Corbin and Pearson Halls. Some of the residents at these halls were evacuated but no evidence of bombs was found. A fire was reported Wednesday night at 8 p.m. in a 6th floor lounge at Naismith Hall. Judy Levitt, resident director at Naismith said one of the lounge chairs was slashed and a book of matches was stuffed inside and lit by an unknown person. Only minor damage was incurred as the fire was quickly put out. Tension was high even before the 8 p.m. curfew began. A group of nearly 40 persons gathered near the Rock Chalk Cafe shortly before 8 p.m. More than 15 people were arrested there for curfew violations immediately after 8 p.m. The area northeast of the campus in the 1200 block of Ohio was the scene of many disturbances before midnight. Numerous fires were reported (Continued to page 18) (Continued to page 16) THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.120 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 23, 1970 BULLETIN For the third consecutive night, Governor Robert B. Docking has placed a curfew on Lawrence from 10 p.m. Thursday until 6 a.m. Friday. The curfew will restrict the sale of alcoholic beverages, the number of persons on the streets and will prohibit any flammable liquid in any container, and the carrying of any firearms or explosives. Curfew violators pay $250 in bond By TED ILIFF Kansan Campus Editor Many persons arrested for curfew violations Wednesday night said they had difficulty obtaining the required $250 bond. According to several arrested students, the Lawrence Police Department would not allow bond to be posted without the presence of the only bondsman in town, Fred Doane. The police said early in the evening that Doane was out of town, and that some of the persons were being released as their bond arrived by taxis. Nearly 30 minutes later, the police said the bondsman was at the station making bail for many curfew violators, and added the department was releasing persons on bond because the jail was not large enough to hold the nearly 35 persons arrested. At 5 a.m. today, the police department admitted they had not allowed release on bail after 2 a.m., adding that "about half" the persons arrested were being detained overnight. When asked when the others would be allowed to go on bail, police officers said "probably sometime today," however, if another curfew is declared for tonight, police said those persons still in jail after the curfew went into effect would not be released. JOHN WOODS Photo by Jim Hoffman A student being arrested for curfew violation Nearly 35 University of Kansas students were arrested Wednesday night for curfew violations. About half the students were released on bail, according to the Lawrence police department. The arrests occurred about 8 p.m. in the area between 12th and 13th streets on Oread ave. UDK News Roundup By United Press International Court affirms work refusal NEW ORLEANS—The U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals has laid down a precedent for six southern states that non-union employees cannot be fired for refusing to cross picket lines of a striking union. The 5th Circuit said it was ruling the first time on the matter Wednesday when it ordered Mrs. Virginia Anderson reinstated to her job with full back pay at the Southern Greyhound Lines terminal at Miami, Fla. Postal plan opposed WASHINGTON — Postmaster General Winton M. Blount takes the administration's postal reform plan before the Senate Post office Committee today. The chairman, Sen. Gale W. McGee, D-Wyo., appears poised to shoot it down. McGee has vowed to impose his own postal reform plan. It would give the postmaster general firm control, remove him from the President's Cabinet and give him a seven to nine year term. Under Nixon's plan, a nine-man commission would run the post office and set postal rates, subject to congressional veto. Hanoi refuses serious talks PARIS—The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese rejected President Nixon's call for serious negotiations at the peace talks today and called for insurgents in Laos and Cambodia to join them in a common front against the United States. --- [Image of a person standing on a street at night, with a building in the background. The person is wearing a helmet and appears to be looking down the street.] Photo by Mike Radencich National Guardmen accompany firetrucks to campus National Guardsmen stand guard at the rear of the Military Science building after the reported fire in the basement of the building at 12:57 a.m. today. Two firetrucks were dispatched to the scene by the Lawrence fire department. Smoke crept up to the first floor of the building, but only minor damage was done to the lower level. E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., chancellor of KU, will speak to the University Senate today at 3:30 p.m.on the current situation of the campus troubles. Chalmers cut short a Washington, D.C. visit and returned to the campus Tuesday night because of the Kansas Union fire. Chalmers to address Senate The University Senate will meet in the Recital Hall instead of the University Theatre. Charles Oldfather, associate dean of law and chairman of the University Senate, said Wednesday that the meeting was moved so the University Theatre could be used for events that were scheduled for the Kansas Union. 'Duke' ticket sales moved to theatre Ticket sales for the Mount Oread Gilbert and Sullivan production of "The Grand Duke," to be presented May 6-9, have been moved from the SUA office in the Kansas Union to the University Theatre box office in Murphy Hall. Tickets sell for $1.50 or $2 for students with a KU-ID. "The Grand Duke will be presented in conjunction with the First International Conference on Gilbert and Sullivan, to be held at KU. The Senate will discuss and act on two proposed amendments to its code. One of these amendments involves the quorum necessary to amend the code. Oldfather said a report would be given by Herman Lujan, chairman of the committee on ROTC, on the work of his committee. This report, Oldfather said, would be similar to the report Lujan gave at the last College faculty meeting. Hurricanes are officially listed as tropical cyclones with wind speeds of 74 miles an hour or more. Thousand Clowns Starring: Jason Robarts Barbara Harris Martin Balsam 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium SUA Popular Film Series April 23 and 24 2 KANSAN Apr. 23 1970 Galavie Ravidal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 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 for SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters MIDAS mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 Black is beautiful. Red is beautiful. White is beautiful. Yellow is beautiful. $\textcircled{2}$ The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, New York, N.Y. 1970. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F Helping people build a better life THE EQUITABLE For a free 18" x 24" poster of this advertisement, write: The Equitable, Dept. C, G.P.O. Box 1170, New York, N.Y. 10001 Campus briefs Art lecture in Spooner Museum An art lecture titled "The Discovery of Monticelli" will be given by Klaus Berger to the Cercle Francais Club at 4:30 p.m. today in the lecture room of Spooner Art Museum. Monticelli is an artist who was a forerunner of Van Gogh and whose importance is now being re-discovered. The lecture will be supplemented with slides. Everyone is invited to attend. Chinese politics lecture topic John W. Lewis, professor at the Center for East Asian Studies, Stanford University, will speak at 4 p.m. today in 205 Flint Hall on "Chineses Politics in the Aftermath of the Culture Revolution." Lewis is a leading specialist on Communist China. His speech is sponsored by the KU Center for East Asian Studies. Young Republicans to meet Collegiate Young Republicans will meet April 30 in Blake Hall to vote on a new constitution and to discuss the upcoming election of officers. The room and time will be announced later. Yell leader tryouts postponed Tryouts for yell leaders have been postponed, Bob Hartman, Santa Ana, Calif., senior and head yell leader said Wednesday. They were originally scheduled Tuesday at 7 p.m., but were delayed because of the Lawrence curfew. Hartman said they would be rescheduled within the next two weeks. For further information, call Hartman at 842-4944. Two Union events rescheduled The International Club's "Banquet of Nations" has been moved from Sunday in the Kansas Union ballroom to May 10 in the Kansas Union cafeteria. The American Association of University Professors' spring meeting which was to be in the Kansas Room tonight will be held May 7 in Watkins Hospital. Katherine Giele, Union activities adviser, said the Kansas Union would open on a limited scale Friday. The Spring Week ice cream social slated for April 21 was postponed, Mike Bradley, Wichita junior and Spring week chairman, said Wednesday. Social scheduled for tonight Because of the curfew Wednesday night, the ice cream social has been tentatively rescheduled from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight, barring another curfew, behind Joseph R. Pearson Hall, Bradley said. Bradley said no other Spring Week events had been rescheduled. Spring week activities scheduled for the rest of the week are an art sale on the deck of Spencer Library and a carnival at the Campanile Saturday. At the carnival, living groups will sponsor booths featuring cake walks, a faculty dunk, fortune telling, balloon shaving and a T-shirt stenciling booth. The Alarms pulled in two dorms A fire alarm was pulled Tuesday night in Ellsworth Hall, but was later found to be a false alarm. After all the rooms in Ellsworth were checked the students were allowed to return to the hall. As the students were leaving McCollum another fire alarm was heard. Students were evacuated from the building and crowded into McCollum Hall's cafeteria. There many students, some hurriedly dressed and a few in curlers, joked about the alarm being pulled. Several students said they knew someone would pull the alarm and the only question was when. Several students laughed and called the situation "musical dorms," but McCollum did not evacuate and the alarm was turned off. Spring Week 'Fun in the Sun' symbol can be stenciled on at the booth. From noon to 4 p.m. Saturday games will be played, including a balloon toss, downhill iceblock races and a tug-of-war across Potter Lake, Bradley said. Other games include catching greased pigs, a pie eating contest and an undressing contest. Bradley said the undressing contest would be by couples who would undress each other under sheets. He said that the contestants must wear swim suits under their clothes. A gymkhana will be held Saturday beginning at 8 a.m. in Lewis Hall parking lot. Concluding Spring Week activities will be a dance at 8 p.m. Saturday at Oliver Hall. Bradley said that the Spring Week committee is asking students to bring the blue slips from books purchased at the Kansas Union bookstore to help provide scholarships for worthy students at the University of Kansas. SUPPORT EARTH WEEK by learning of its problems. Ecology Books TOWN CRIER Open 'til 10 p.m. 919 Mass. henrys Henrys presents the first in a series of . . . Again this evening from 5:00 to 7:00 Henry's will be offering 10c hamburgers, and Friday from 5:00 to 7:00 fish sandwiches are going for 19c apiece. Check Monday's paper for more of the same Henry's bargains! Award given to professor A book by Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism at the University of Kansas, has won the Frank Luther Mott research award of Kappa Tau Alpha, professional journalism fraternity. The book, "Ed Howe: Country Town Philosopher," is a biography the "saga of Potato Hill" in Atchison. Pickett's book was published 13 months ago and received an award of merit from the American Association of State and Local History. Pickett specializes in journalistic history and American culture, He teaches courses at KU in the history of American journalism and American studies. Apr. 23 1970 KANSAN 3 On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Apple Records Beginning and the End of World War III Are Coming! The Beginning: "Year of the Pig" and The end: "The War Game" See These Two Academy Award Films APRIL 29 - MAY 1 Peace Corps GRADUATES Make your first step towards the future with the Peace Corps. Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries. In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry. 100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-6917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong. KANSAN COMMENT Curfew damage It will be some time before we can determine who really caused the most damage this week—the arsonist who destroyed the upper portion of the Kansas Union, or the officials who ordered the Tuesday night curfew. The damage caused by the arsonist is obvious—an estimated two million dollars. But the damage caused by the curfew (which was suggested by the Lawrence City Commission and ordered by Governor Dockery) lurks just below the surface, ready to pop into view at a later date. Perhaps the governor didn't realize the dangers involved when he ordered everyone in Lawrence to stay home after 7 p.m. Maybe he had forgotten about the aftermath of the Great New York Blackout. Oh yes, the Blackout taught us a lesson about what happens when people get bored. Nine months to the day after the electricity went out, the city recorded an unusually large number of births. A lot of people managed to find each other in the dark—and there was nothing else to do. Now tell us, governor, just what did you expect the good people of Lawrence to do after you forced them to stay home all night? Yes, that's right, your decision contributed to the greatest problem facing the world today overpopulation. The population explosion is placing a severe strain on our natural resources. The fire at the Union may have cost a lot of money, but it also kept a lot of people out of bed. So it wasn't totally bad—there will be less mouths to feed because of it. The hundreds of people watching the fire that night weren't contributing to the world's greatest problem. But the curfew was another matter. It will be surprising if Lawrence Memorial isn't bursting with babies on January 21, 1971. It's too bad that the governor and the Lawrence Commissioners couldn't be forced to pay the expenses of these children of the future, for it's clear that they are just as responsible as the parents. Joe Naas Griff & the Unicorn THERE THEY GO... WITHOUT US! GRIT & THE UNICORN SOKOLOFF THERE THEY GO... WITHOUT US! WELL, DON'T YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO SAY? BON VOYAGE! $ \textcircled{C} $ David Sokoloff 1970 The lighter side WASHINGTON (UPI)—Because his two most recent Supreme Court nominees were Southerners, some people are saying that President Nixon is discriminating against the South. By DICK WEST A White House aide with whom I discussed this matter assured me, however, that the President has no regional bias of any kind. "Being a great humanitarian, the President naturally is distressed when he has to put someone through the ordeal of a Supreme Court nomination," the aide said. "But this is one of those unpleasant duties that is imposed upon him by the Constitution, so he has no choice in the matter. Furthermore, he is not asking the nominees to do something he wouldn't be willing to do himself. "The President would gladly spare others the rigors of a nomination and appoint himself to the post if that were constitutionally possible." Tries To Be Even-handed The aide went on to say that "somebody's gotta do it" (be nominated to the Supreme Court) and that Nixon was striving to be as even-handed as possible in choosing the nominees. Since the South was called upon to provide the two most recent nominees, the blow will fall upon another region next time, the aide said. I'm sure that Nixon does try to be fair in making these agonizing decisions. But it seems to me too much for him to have to carry the responsibility alone. I think that we should have a national Selective Justice System. It would work something like this; All students entering law school would be required to register and would be assigned numbers which would be placed on capsules at Selective Justice headquarters. Classified And Reclassified The students then would be classified 1S and would be given deferments until their graduation. Upon passing the bar exam, they would be reclassified and would become liable for Supreme Court nomination should their number be drawn. That definitely would be the most equitable method of obtaining nominees. But even it would be far from perfect. hearing voices— Although the danger of his actually being nominated would be small, a lawyer would have that threat hanging over his head and the uncertainty could interfere with his plans for marriage and a career. The ideal arrangement, of course, would be to have an allvolunteer Supreme Court. But as long as the nominees come under fire in the U.S. Senate, there is no chance of getting an adequate number of volunteers. To the editor: As I see it, Abbie Hoffman is interested in Abbie Hoffman. Reynolds Shultz is interested in Reynolds Shultz. Chancellor Chalmers is interested in you, the students and faculty of KU. Who do you want to listen to? S. O. Schroeder, M.D. Physician, Watkins Hospital Sorel's News Service La Pilea Hawk talker becomes dove lover NEW YORK-Although he staunchly defended President Johnson's Vietnam policies when he was Ambassador to the United Nations, gubernatorial candidate Arthur J. Goldberg says he now favors "prompt withdrawal of all American troops, including air and naval artillery units." To the editor: As I was watching the Student Union burn Monday night, I could not avoid overhearing numerous vitriolic racist remarks and wisecracks, from longhairs, crewcuts, police officers, and other individuals. If these attitudes, even in the light of the emotionalism of the situation, prevailed in these peoples' minds, then it seems little or no progress has been made in enlightening men's minds, at least in this university. To indict any social group with any crime, before any facts have been analyzed, will surely only expand and intensify the situation in Lawrence. The true test of the mature, responsible person is his ability to keep an open mind, even in a crisis which affects him directly. Joseph R. Schaefer Des Moines, Iowa, junior THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor Ken Peteress Campus Editor Tild Iell News Editor Donna Shrader Editorial Editors Joe Nass, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke Sports Editors Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkens Wire Editor Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Artist Campus Editors Geneva Richards, Gust Geary Assistant Campus Editors Vicki Phillips, Nila Walker Assistant News Editors Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Lefflingwell BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser .. Mel Adams Business Manager ... Jerry Bottenfield Assistant Business Manager ... Mike Banks Advertising Managers ... Larry Cates, Joanne Bos National Advertising Manager ... Oscar Bassisson Classified Manager ... Shiloh Bray Promotion Manager ... John Huggins Service Manager ... John Lagios Member Associated Collegiate Press Olympic Games REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, ING. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Earth Day activities attract many By United Press International Hundreds of thousands of Americans took part Wednesday in demonstrations to keep the earth livable. It was Earth Day, an occasion for Americans of all shades of belief to unite in a determination to stop the spreading pollution of the earth, waters and atmosphere which, some scientists have warned, threatens the very existence of life on this planet. Congress was closed down while senators and representatives spread across the country to address mass rallies. Thousands of colleges, universities and high schools took an active part, with the gasoline-burning automobile a major target of attack of many campuses. Students blocked the four main gates of Syracuse University and manned barricades at Iowa State University to keep cars out. In Ripon, Wis., about 350 school children took merchants up on an offer to pay one cent apiece for discarded cans. The merchants expected to pay about $100.00. But the kids turned in so much junk the final bill was $250.54. Martin Wolterding, 25, led demonstrators who paraded about 20 pounds of very dead fish, plus a long-expired octopus, in front of a power company plant in Coral Gables, Fla. Wolterding wound up in jail for violating the city's sanitary code. Earth Day in Portland, Ore., began with the wedding in a park of two couples, one couple clad in flowing white gowns, by a Yogi bhajan. Indian sitar music accompanied an "Apology to God" on the banks of Lake Mendota on the University of Wisconsin campus. John Smith, an oilman of Raceland, La., snorted at the proceedings. "The kids campaigning for clean air are polluting their minds with marijuana," he said. New York led the nation's cities in demonstrating mounting concern over the threat of pollution. The city's Union Square was made spotless by about 300 persons, aged 8 to 80, who showed up at dawn. Then an estimated 250,000 persons converged on the square to listen to speeches, watch a stage show, and stroll on nearby 14th Street, which was closed to traffic. Gas masks were sold out in Omaha, Neb., because students throughout the city chose to observe the day by wearing them. High school students around Cape Girardeau, Mo., and other communities went on litter-collecting expeditions along the highways. There was a "dead orange parade" in Miami, a "survival march" in California, "a festival of death" in Boston, and, at Southeast Missouri State University, a mock funeral to "symbolically bury the earth under a pile of trash." Although the President took no personal role in the observances, the White House sent word that he "feels the activities show the concern of people of all walks of Apr. 23 1970 KANSAN 5 NICE, France (UP1)—The city of Nice banned midnight bathing from its beaches Wednesday in a move to clear the sands of "vagabonds and beatniks." The beaches will be closed from midnight to 6 a.m. The inspiration for Earth Day came originally from Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., a longtime battler for conservation; Rep. Paul N. McCloskey, Jr., R-Calif.; and the student-oriented, Washington-based Environmental Teach-in Inc. By the time the day arrived, these sources were almost forgotten. On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Apple Records 'MAROONED' IS UP THERE WITH THE GREAT ONES! Beatniks banned 100 URBAN TREND New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller signed into law a new Department of Environmental Conservation and dedicated a bicycle rack under the capital steps. There were some participants who were less than enthusiastic about the event. Michael Grosso, executive vice president of the Fifth Avenue Association in New York, went along with the idea by closing the street for two hours, but said "all this circus type activity will accomplish nothing." And in Earth, Tex., Earth Day was like any other day. "It just slipped up on us," Chamber of Commerce President Terry Martin said. "We just failed to do anything special about it." The Michigan House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved a bill to give private citizens the right to take legal action against polluters. "MAROONED" Businesses across the country have seized the occasion to announce anti-pollution programs, such as a $36 million Scott Paper Co. project and pledges by the Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. and Sun Oil Co. to embark on expensive research developments. The appeal of Earth Day was such that even representatives of firms accused of being major polluters, such as Chicago's Commonwealth Edison Co., took an enthusiastic part in the teach-ins and rallies. Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:00 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK GREGORY PECK RICHARD CRENNA DAVID JANSSEN JAMES FRANCISCUS GENE HACKMAN MAROONED G Panasonic EastmanED Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Nixon seemed to be the only public figure in the country not making a speech. The air over the cities was thick with oratory. McCloskey said, "Everyone I've talked to is making a speech somewhere." life over the dangers to our environment." JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPI) The University of Missouri at Columbia has projected that by 1990,85 per cent of the state's estimated 6.2 million residents will be living in cities. The Gold Diggers of 1933 Directed by Mervyn LeRoy 7-9 p.m. 75c Dyche Auditorium Tonite SUA Special Film Series TICKETS PLANNING A TRIP?? 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Before watching the launch, they toured Cape Kennedy. Both men agreed that the near disaster of Apollo 13 should not greatly affect future manned flight to the moon. Moore, also a professor in electrical engineering at KU, said that NASA would continue its moon-flight program, although the launch of Apollo 14 would probably be delayed until the Apollo 13 explosion has been solved. Strict policy on disruption at Penn State UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa (UPI) —Supporting the tough noamnesty stand of University President Eric A. Walker, a majority of the Pennsylvania State University trustees Wednesday demanded expulsion of students found responsible for campus disorders during the past week. :The campus was reported "calm" Wednesday by university officials, although about 2,000 students gathered at a rally addressed by student protesters. A force of 280 riot-equipped state policemen sent here the previous day was reduced to 175 and was "slowly being phased out," a spokesman said. Walker, who polled the trustees, said 80 per cent of them also favored asking a court to make permanent a temporary injunction enjoining demonstrators from taking over buildings and destroying property. The temporary order was issued by Centre County court, Bellefonte, Pa., when disorder broke out April 15, resulting in injuries to 18 policemen and the arrest of 29 persons. As an indication of the toughened stand taken by authorities, five students arrested Tuesday in a rock-throwing incident were arraigned before Magistrate Louise Green at Bellefonte, and held in $1,000 bail each on malicious mischief charges. The five were committed to the county jail when they were unable to post bond. Student demonstrators arrested last week were released on bond ranging between $100 and $500. Apr.23 1970 6 KANSAN "The only real effect will be on the reaction of the public to future manned moon flights," Moore said. Moore said scientists realized sooner or later something was going to happen and they prepared themselves for whatever was to come. The astronauts, too, realized the risks involved with manned space flight, but most of them are test pilots and are prepared for anything. Barr, a KU associate professor of mechanical engineering, said that it was fortunate that the accident did not happen later on in the flight when they would not have had the lunar module to rely on for back-up life support systems. Barr said after the moon flight program had ended with the last Apollo mission, NASA would probably continue with manned earth-orbit flights to set up space stations, orbiting astronomical observatories and other such projects. He said the problem with accidents in space would be greatly minimized with earth-orbit flights because of the relative ease of recovering the men. Barr said it would be better to continue with the manned lunar missions because so much money and time had already been put into equipment for the missions. APRIL the traditional diamond month FOSSIL SCANDIA $400 ALSO $150 TO 1975 When you select your diamond you want something that you will be proud of forever. Christian's has diamonds that last a lifetime. Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mpse "Special College Dome" VI 3-543 Barr also said he had great confidence in NASA because it could simulate any type of problem that might occur in flight. GSP Europe '70' study work travel Free Film Unmanned space flight shows tremendous potential in all fields of science and public use, Barr said, because advanced weather tracking satellites can be sent up and better communications satellites can be used. North College Conference Room 8:00 p.m. Thursday April 23 Both men were impressed with the Apollo launch itself. They were especially impressed by the vastness of the Vehicle Assembly Building, where the Saturn V rockets are put together, and with the rocket itself. "You don't realize it's that big just looking at it out there with nothing else around it," Moore said, "but it's fantastic when you get inside and look up." American Institute for Foreign Study Tradition broken at military school CULVER, Ind. (UPI) — A 77-year-old tradition will be broken at Culver Military Academy in the fall when the all-boys school goes coeducational. DOUBLE BENEFIT Financial difficulties caused by a drop in enrollment brought the change in policy, officials said. ALBANY, N.Y. (UPD)—New York State's regular drivers' vision examination not only helps traffic safety but the eyesight of motorists, according to the state Motor Vehicle Department. Under state law, a driver must undergo an eye test once every three years before his permit is renewed. In one sample, the department said, 22 per cent of the drivers had to get glasses or have their prescriptions renewed before they could see properly. 100 HELLO, I'M JOHNNY CASH including If I Were A Carpenter See Ruby Fall Blistered I've Got A Thing About Trains To Beat The Devil On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr VANELI Bandolino BANDOLINO, CON BRIO! Spectator in white with navy, black patent and tan. Buckle oxford in white, bone or red. Sandal in navy, white, tan. Only three of more to choose from. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Earth Day goes to Nebraska town KU students hold teach-in at high school By KEN CUMMINS Wire Editor AUBURN, Neb. — While other people were staging stunts and activities to demonstrate the dangers to our environment on Erth Day, two University of Kansas students went into a small community to educate the people about the problem. Randy Frost, Lindsborg sophomore, and Robert Fisher, Auburn, Neb., sophomore, took over several classes at Auburn, Neb. High School Wednesday to bring the problem to the attention of the students and the community. "The whole idea came to me months ago," Fisher said. "I wrote a letter to the superintendent explaining the whole idea behind Environmental Teach-In Day and suggested that biology and English classes use the book 'Population Bomb' as a text." When he didn't get an answer, Fisher went home to talk to them. He said he found people uninformed on the matter. "I decided that maybe this was a symptom of the high school, that maybe the students weren't necessarily apathetic, just unaware of the problem." "Not only is it important to get people educated and action started, but also to make people aware of the fact that this is not a fad but a new attitude, a new way of life." Fisher said. "I called the high school and asked them if it would be okay if I came up to speak to them since they had such a shortage of information." Fisher said. Fisher then said he realized he couldn't handle the whole thing by himself, so he asked Frost, a member of Zero Population Growth, to assist him. Frost and Fisher put up posters around the high school and handed out leaflets. Not all the instructors allowed their classes to be taken over by the two KU students. "The United States is supporting 66 countries that need food aid," he told the students. "The amount of surplus food has been growing faster than demand up until this year. Now these countries are needing the food at a faster rate than it is increasing." US sends arms, ships to Trinidad WASHINGTON (UPI) — The United States agreed Wednesday to fly small arms to Trinidad to help the Caribbean island's government deal with a mutiny and U.S. navy ships steamed to the scene to evacuate Americans if necessary. The State Department announced that the request for light weapons was received from Trinidad government officials Tuesday night after fighting broke out between 200 army mutineers and loyalist government units. Department spokesman Carl Bartch said the arms were being sold for cash. The Navy dispatched a half dozen vessels and a force of Marines for standby evacuation duty which Bartch said was "strictly a precautionary measure to protect U.S. citizens." About 1,000 U.S. citizens live in Trinidad while an unknown number of American tourists are also vacationing on the Caribbean island. The U.S. embassy in Port-of- Spain has a staff of approximately 20. There is a U.S. Air Force tracking station on the island manned by one officer, one enlisted man and 150 U.S. civilians. In announcing the arms decision, Bartch commented: "We have no disposition to get involved in the internal affairs of Trinidad." Some ground squirrels spend as much as three-fourths of their lives sleeping underground. By 1984, Fisher said, the food aid need will just match the amount of foodstuffs the United States can produce. After this point the United States will no longer be able to produce enough food to keep these people from starving. Fisher said some experts predict that this will happen as early as 1975. "All this information was compiled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1966." he said. Frost was asked by a student in one of the classes whether wars were a control on population. Apr. 23 1970 KANSAN 7 "They used to be," the student said, "but they're not anymore. The total number of Americans that have died in all wars has been replaced since midnight Saturday." "Won't space technology solve the problem?" another student asked. "With our present technology we could only send one day's population increase to another planet in a year's time," Frost told him, "and that's not enough." In the classes he spoke to, Fisher tried to relate the problem locally. He told them that Nebraska's population was increasing two per cent annually, the same rate as the world's. This meant 30,000 people are added to the state's population yearly. Nebraska's water fields are drying up, Fisher said, and will be gone in another 50 years. Then the state will have to get water from the Missouri River, which by then will be too polluted to drink, he said. "Nuclear power plants use river water as a coolant," he continued. "When the water is put back into the river it is too hot for cold-blooded fish to survive in." Fisher also told them that thermal pollution would be a problem in the future, referring to the nuclear power plant being built eight miles from Auburn. Classes Fisher and Frost did not attend devoted their time to discussion of the issues. English classes had debates over the legitimacy of abortions. Typing classes practiced typing ecology terms and articles. The Student Council held a meeting in the afternoon to decide what actions the students could take. "One thing you can't do is blame the problems on your parents," Fisher warned them. "People don't look forward and they just weren't aware of the problem before now." Frost told them action would have to take place on the local level because the individual did not have the power on the national level. He said they could start with campaigns to clean up the community and to educate the people to the urgency of the problem. Fisher also told the students they could write letters to congressmen supporting or complaining about the Congress's stand on population growth and pollution control. Frost and Fisher estimated that they talked to over 50 per cent of The Gold Diggers of 1933 Directed by Mervyn LeRoy 7-9 p.m. 75c Dyche Auditorium Tonite SUA Special Film Series the student population. "I think they will think a lot about it now," Fisher said, "and some of them will probably start doing something." On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. K Freshman Class Party That’s right, it’s party time—and what a party. (Parties at the National Guard Armory are traditionally the best!) This Freshman Class Party promises to be one of the biggest gigs of the year. Music will be provided by the Peppermint Rainbow, straight from a Las Vegas stint. The tap on the student’s favorite beverage will be running FREEly from 8 until midnight, and it is free to Freshman dues payers. The whole thing takes place FRIDAY, April 24, at the National Guard Armory, the swinging-est place to be this weekend. Don’t miss it! $2.50 per person for non dues payers Compliments of Ace Johnson + Photo by Steve Fritz The trash fire behind Strong Hall A trash fire was reported in a trash container in back of Strong Hall at 1:27 a.m. today. The fire was put out quickly with fire extinguishers. The basement hall of Strong Hall was partially filled with smoke, but no damage was reported. 1 Photo by Steve Haynes A policeman 'defuses' a stick of 'TNT?' On the fifth floor of Malott Hall police discovered what looked like a stick of dynamite. However, it turned out to be only a cardboard tube wrapped with a piece of red construction paper marked 'TNT' with a pipe cleaner for a fuse. FUN INT TGIF on Friday, April 24 Bierstube — 90c Pitchers 3:00 - 5:00 p.m. Gaslight — 65c Pitchers All Day Wheel — 5c off on All Cans 12:30 - 2:30 p.m. Saturday, April 25 Gymkana $1.00 per car - Lewis parking lot 8:00 a.m. Open to all members of organized living groups - residence halls, scholarship halls, sororities and fraternities. Carnival and Art Sale 10 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.- Deck of Spencer Library Games — Noon at Potters Lake 12:00 — Balloon Toss 12:30 p.m. — Undressing Contest 1:00 a.m. — A Down Hill Race on Ice Blocks 1:30 p.m. Body Passing 2:00 p.m. --- Medicine Ball 2:30 p.m. — Tug-O-War 3:00 p.m. — Balloon Squashing 3:30 p.m. — Pie Eating 4:00 p.m. — Greased Pig Catching Prizes for GamesMovie Discounts DANGER HIGH VOLTAGE Photo by Steve Fritz Power failure on Daisy Hill A Kansas Power and Light (KPL) substation at 19th near Iowa failed Wednesday night causing power loss to the Daisy Hill area, Stouffer Place and other residences in the area. The failure occurred 30 minutes before the Lawrence city curfew was imposed. Steve Thompson a student engineer for KPL said he thought the failure was caused by a Molotov cocktail thrown by an unknown person although KPL officials later said it was caused by equipment failure. Photo by Steve Fritz Smoke-filled hall in Strong basement Soon after the fire was reported at the Military Science building and after a long evening of disturbances, a fire was reported in a trash container behind Strong Hall. Smoke from the fire sifted into the basement corridor of Strong causing this eerie effect. HE SUN STREET DANCE — featuring "The T.I.D.E. Sponsored by Spring Week Committee and Oliver Hall TOMMY TAPPER, BOB ELLENSON AND RICK SMITH In conjunction with class officers, blue slips will be collected at the dance and games for college scholarships (Come to the games and dance and bring your blue slips) Spring Week Committee THE SALVATION ARMY EMERGENCY CANTEEN THE SALVATION ARMY EMERGENCY CANTEEN Photo by Steve Fritz Salvation Army lends aid again For the second night in a row, the Salvation Army set up its portable canteen at 11th and Massachusetts. The canteen, sent from Kansas City, served sandwiches, hot coffee and tea to policemen, National Guardsmen and firemen working in Lawrence during disturbances Wednesday night. ROTC review in Stadium planned May 9 The annual University of Kansas Tri-Service ROTC Review will be held at 3:45 p.m. May 9 in Memorial Stadium, it was announced by University of Kansas ROTC officials today. Last year's review, then called the Chancellor's Review, was the scene of both an anti-war and anti-ROTC demonstration that resulted in several KU students being suspended from school. Rear Admiral Leslie J. O'Brien Jr., director of anti-submarine warfare and ocean surveillance division of the chief of naval operations, will be the reviewing officer. Soviet ships in global move Several awards will be presented at the conclusion of this year's review. The Lawrence chapter of the Reserve Officers Association also will honor an outstanding cadet in each unit. Those awards will be presented by Jack Maxwell, department representative. Finally, the Loyal Legion Awards—engraved gold watches will be given to the outstanding sophomore in each unit by Admiral O'Brien. The KU Marching Band will perform at the ceremonies. Approximately 500 cadets are expected to participate. Dale Kerr, head of the Lawrence American Legion Post, will present American Legion gold medal awards to an outstanding cadet in the Navy, Army, and Air Force units. The Soviet vessels were reported to include, in addition to the carriers, six cruisers, four of them armed with missiles; 20 destroyer-type vessels, eight of them missile carriers; and 25 submarines, 10 of them nuclear powered and "more than one" carrying submarine launched ballistic missiles similar to America's Polaris. 10 KANSAN Apr.23 1970 SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) — The Apollo 13 astronauts passed on a valuable lesson on survival in space Wednesday to the men scheduled to fly America's next two moon landing missions. Astros give helpful hints LONDON (UPI) — Nearly 200 Soviet ships and marinaries were spread around the world Wednesday in an unprecedented naval exercise timed to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Lenin's birth, U.S. and NATO sources said. But the session was primarily for the benefit of the Apollo 14 crew commanded by America's first man in space, Alan B. Shepard, whose plans for a fall moonflight were left in suspense by the accident, and for the Apollo 15 crew commanded by veteran pilot David R. Scott. American and NATO sources said they expected the Russian fleet to remain on station at least throughout May—partly to help observe Wednesday's 100th anniversary of the birth of Vladimir I. Lenin, and partly as a training exercise. It was the third day of the crew's intensive debriefing, scheduled to last through April 29. Thomas P. Stafford, chief of the astronaut office, said almost all the men in the space pilot corps attended. James A. Lovell, Fred W. Haiser and John L. Swigert met with the Apollo 14 and Apollo 15 crews for a pilot-to-pilot talk about how they nursed their moonship through more than 300,000 miles of space to a safe splashdown. They also said "Operation Ocean" was supported by Russian aircraft. At least one flight of four-engine TU95 "Bear" aircraft was tracked on a non-stop flight from northern Russia to Cuba last week and a return nonstop via the same route earlier this week. The sources said the global Russian fleet included 95 to 100 ships and submarines in the Atlantic, 45 to 50 in the Mediterranean, 15 in the Indian Ocean off the east coast of Africa and 20 to 25 in the Pacific, around the Philippine Sea. The sources said the operation, dubbed "Ocean" by Moscow, was "10 times bigger than anything of this nature the Soviets have ever done before." A U.S. Navy source in London said the Russian vessels, which included the aircraft carrier Moskva in the Mediterranean and the helicopter carrier Leningrad off the coast of Scotland, were being tracked around the clock HELLO, I'M JOHNNY CASH including: If I Were A Carpenter See Ruby Fall Blistered I've Got A Thing About Trains To Beat The Devil On Columbic Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. 10 Passover celebrated with religious dinner Patronize Kansan Advertisers SUMMER EMPLOYMENT religious organizations on the Hill, Worob said. In a special message to Congress, Nixon said he was issuing an executive order that will create a new National Council of Federal Disaster Assistance. It will be headed by the director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness, now responsible for disaster activities, and it will coordinate federal relief efforts ranging from those of the Defense Department to the Small Business Administration. available in beautiful, cool Rocky Mtn. National Park Services at the dinner were conducted by Ben Entine, Lexington, Mo., freshman; Stewart Langer, Overland Park freshman; Nancy Friedman, Prairie Village junior and Sidney Fiarman, Hillel faculty adviser. For employment information write ROCKY MTN. PARK CO. 601 Broadway, #414 Denver, Colo. 80203 The sermon, "Freedom, Redemption and Time," was presented by Worob. "Freedom and Redemption," Worob said, "used to be viewed as past events to be thankful for. After the destruction of the second temple in Jerusalem, freedom and redemption were something to look forward to. It is the task of the present to work for the hope of the future." Approximately 100 people attended the Seder celebration sponsored by the University of Kansas chapter of Hillel, Allen Worob, associate faculty adviser to Hillel, said Wednesday. Seder; Worob explained, is the first two days of the Jewish Pass-over holiday. The festival has 13 rituals concerning redemption and freedom and a kosher dinner, he said. The Seder, held in the Lawrence Jewish community Center, was attended by not only Jewish students but also members of all The President said the actions were needed to cope with the increasing toll taken by floods, tornadoes, hurricanes and other disasters which last year caused an unprecedented 300 deaths and an estimated $2 billion in property damage. WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Nixon asked Congress Wednesday for a major overhaul of federal disaster relief operations. He also asked for authority to provide more financial aid to local governments deprived of property tax revenue due to natural calamity. Nixon seeks disaster aid WANT THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY? "MOOREBURGER" HAS BY FAR THE BEST HAMBURGER IN TOWN. COME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF! Burger Call In Your Order! MOORE BURGER MALTS SHAKES 1414 W. 6th MALTS SHAKES VL3-9588 Beautiful New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing at Malls Olde English Village - interior roominess * wall to wall carpeting * air conditioning - sound conditioning Come see 2 and 3 bedroom units afternoon weekdays and weekends - sound conditioning * all electric Frigidaire kitchens - dishwasher - disposal - fireplaces eplaces * sauna baths * recreation rooms 2411 Louisiana 843-5552 KANSAS UNION Photo by Ray Sellers Cleaning out the Kansas Union . . . Cleanup of the debris in the Kansas Union ballroom began Tuesday. This workman dumps a load of burnt rubble from a temporary scaffold constructed outside a window of the ballroom. Topeka blacks boycott schools TOPEKA (UPI)—The Topeka Board of Education stated Wednesday it will overlook the recent black boycott of two high schools here, but students not returning to classes Thursday will face possible disciplinary action. Black students have been boycotting classes at Highland Park High School and Topeka High School since Monday. They have said they wouldn't return until their demands were met, including removal of the two high school principals and a number of teachers. The board issued a statement Wednesday saying it would not remove the teachers of the principals. About 150 black and white students and some parents met with Attorney General Kent Frizzell earlier Wednesday to discuss the legality of suspending classes for two weeks as a "cooling off" peroid. The attorney general said this might be possible. HELLO, I'M JOHNNY CASH including: If I Were A Carpenter See Ruby Fall Blistered I've Got A Thing About Trans To Beat The Devil HELLO, I'M JOHNNY CASH including If I Were A Carpenter See Ruby Fall Blistered I've Got A Thing About Trains To Beat The Devil On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Steroo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified Protests cause violence at colleges, high schools Racial conflict and anti-war protest have recently set off a series of disturbances at several U.S. colleges and high schools. Officials at Hobart College, Geneva, N.Y. locked the ROTC offices and classrooms after a sit-in by 100 Hobart students In Los Angeles a firebomb was thrown through a window of a Bank of America branch, causing extensive damage. Police said they did not know if it was linked to last weekend's turmoil at Santa Barbara, where firebombs were thrown in a Bank of America branch which had been built to replace one burned down in February. At Yale University, New Haven, Conn., the Yale College Student Senate voted 33-26 to urge the entire Yale community to attend a meeting tonight to vote on a strike protesting the approaching trial of eight Black Panthers charged in the slaying of another Panther. At Hutchinson a small group of Negroes walked out of a Board of Education meeting Monday night after school officials failed to fire a grade school teacher who admittedly struck an 8-year-old girl. Polish paintings, drawings rescued from Union blaze Paintings and drawings by Wojiech Wybieralski were saved from fire damage Tuesday night when the artist removed them from their exhibit place in the South Lounge of the Kansas Union about an hour before a fire was discovered on the roof of the Union. Wybieralski is a Fulbright scholar from Poland attending the University of Kansas. Wybieralski said he moved the paintings to an office in Flint Hall at around 9 p.m. Tuesday because the exhibit ended Apr. 23 1970 KANSAN 11 that dav. He said he later went back to the Union for coffee, and while he was in the Trail Room he noticed smoke. "I noticed the smoke," he said, "but I'm not used to being terrified by a little smoke." He added a few moments later the Trail Room was ordered evacuated. Sharing the exhibit with Wybieralski was Piotyr Bozyk, also a Polish KU student and Fulbright scholar. Bozyk was unavailable for comment, but it was believed that his moving wood and wire constructions, which are motivated by pendulums set in motion by the viewer, also escaped fire damage. 14K 14K 14K MAN THING! 4X The Perfect Gift For Him! Here are three new bold designs for him! Select the one to suit his personality. All crafted in 14K gold, each set with fiery brilliant diamond. DEL EISLEE Certified Gemologist American Gem Societies Marks Jewelers BARTHERS BAY MIDDLE BAY UNION ISLAND Authorized Member VI 3-4266 Authorized Member 817 Mass. WANT A PLACE TO DO YOUR SPRING THING? TRY the Lounge THE LOUNGE HILLCREST BRIDGES S.W. CORNER OF HILLCREST BOWL 9TH AND IOWA mB'70 BUDWEISER ON TAP OF COURSE ATTENTION to all honor guests, members of International Club, student judges, and international queens. Due to the damage to the Union building, the annual Banquet of Nations is postponed until Sunday, May 10, 1970 at 6:00 p.m. It will be held at the Kansas Union cafeteria. The tickets are on sale again at the following places: 1) Room 226 Strong, 2) Raney's Drugs downtown, 3) Union check cashing desk upon reopening of the Union. For any further information, call 842-4083 in the evenings. Masoud Moayer, International Club President Graduate student tutors hammer thrower By JIM RYUN Kansan Sports Writer The hammer is a field event in the sport of track. Its implement is a large steel ball attached to a handle by a steel cable and the full weight totals a bulky 16 pounds. Competition is conducted by spinning and at a precise instant releasing the hammer to sail distances up to 247 feet. Its competitors generally are not as large as those in the shotput, but work as hard in a sport that requires perfection and experience. "It is the worst event to throw in because you need a perfect sense of balance and coordination," said Anatoli Welihozki, who is coaching the KU hammer throwers and in particular Bill Penny. KANSAN Sports "It is a physical and mental discipline," he said, "because you can not muscle it as you can in the shot." Prior to Welihozkiy's arrival last fall, Penny was in an event that the University of Kansas' coaches had little experience in although it was part of the agenda for a national championship and the Olympics. Its participants and participation had been limited to the East, particularly to the Ivy league schools. Wellhozkiy, a graduate of Rutgers University, came to KU to work on a graduate degree in Soviet and Slavic Area Studies and to throw the hammer. He said he had learned the hammer throwing technique in the East and was bringing it back to the Mid-West. Penny said that people often asked, "What is the world record?" (247 feet by Anatoli Bondarchuk of the Soviet Union), and "What are you throwing?" (190 feet). He said that people do not realize that a hammer thrower reaches his peak at about 28, after years of experience. During last Saturday morning's rain, Penny and Welihozkiy competed against each other in open competition at the Kansas Relays. Welihozkylz won with a toss of 183 feet and 4 inches to Penny's second place throw of 181 feet 3 inches. "I was not really disappointed," Penny said. "I have been keying more for Drake than this meet." Although Wellihozkiy wants to compete and has aspirations of "trying out for the Olympics," he will not be eligible for this weekends' Drake Relays because he is not an undergraduate. He will travel with the team to help Penny as much as possible in competing against last year's national collegiate champion, Steve D'Autromont of Oregon State. Jayhawks land all-state pick One of the top high school basketball players in the Chicago area, 6-11 Bill Kossick of New Trier East High School, has signed a Big Eight letter-of-intent with KU. Ted Owens, Jayhawk coach, was at Kosick's home in suburban Chicago, when the all-state center signed the scholarship agreement. During his senior year Kosick averaged 28 points and 16 rebounds per game. He scored a high of 48 points against Notre Dame High of Niles, Ill. In addition to being a first team all-stater as a senior, Kosick was a two-time choice for the Chicago All-Suburban team. Students chosen for internships The Newspaper Fund has selected two University of Kansas women to participate in the annual editing and reporting intern programs this summer. Carla Hendricks, St. Francis junior, was among 60 winners from more than 200 students nominated by their schools to receive the editing internship. Miss Hendricks will attend a three week intensive copyediting course in June. Phyllis G. Jones, Wichita junior, was one of the 65 winners of reporting internships from 502 applications. After reporting for a participating newspaper for 10 weeks, she will receive a $500 scholarship. 12 KANSAN Apr. 23 1970 Kosick is the fourth high school basketball standout to sign a Big Eight letter with Kansas. The others are Randy Culbertson, 6-foot guard for Raytown South's Missouri champions; Glenn Russell, 6-3 sparkplug of Kansas City Wyandotte's Kansas state champions and Dave Taynor, 6-3 high scoring guard from Bethalo, Ill. wanted! apartment managers No experience necessary. Only requirements are intelligence, aggressiveness, ambition and a friendly personality. Business and managerial training provided without consent. A run opportunity for you in a million dollar business. Full-time position for both husband and wife. You receive salary, apartment, utilities and telephone. Join the Jack P. DeBoar "Action Team", one of the nation's fastest growing apartment floors firms. Must be willing to relocate. Send a complete resume, with photos, to Steve Scholder, Administrative Assistant, Property Management Department. Jack P. De Boer Associates, Inc. 804-357-8266 WWW.BOERASSOCIATE.COM Give him everything... the time, the day, the date Accutron® by Bulova the most accurate watch in the world So exact is the Accutron tuning fork movement, that accuracy is guaranteed to within a minute a month.® DATE AND DAY "Q" Stainless steel. Blue dial and strap. $175. DATE AND DAY "U" Stainless steel. Silver dial. $175. BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mess. Ph. V1 3-4366 *We will adjust to this tolerance, if necessary. Guarantee is for one year. MICHAEL KORS 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 RECUTRON ACCUTRON BRIMAN'S leading jewelers DEBBIE FOX SAYS HIGH TIDE IS IN IN GOLD & BLUE PAISLEY TEXTURIZED NYLON $14.00 SIZES- 5-13 Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 • 835 MASS. • VI3-4833 KANSAS 95 KANSAS KANSAS 70 KANSAS 70 New Jayhawk co-captains For the first time in Pepper Rodgers' four years as KU football coach, the Jayhawks will be led next fall by co-captains. Steve Carmichael, 6-3, 229-pound defensive end will captain the defensive platoon. Larry Brown, 6-5, 220-pound tight end will head the offensive unit. Hawks announce game schedule A 26-game schedule, including 14 home dates in Allen Field House, was announced yesterday for the 1970-71 basketball season. KU will play its first seven games at home, including two in the Jayhawk Classic December 18-19. Coming to Lawrence for the second annual Classic will be Houston, Villanova and St. Joseph's of Philadelphia. Ted Owens, Jayhawk coach, said pairings for the Classic would not be made until next fall. Invading Allen Field House for early December games will be Long Beach State, Eastern Kentucky, South Dakota State, Loyola of Chieago and Notre Dame The Jayhawks' only road games against non-Big Eight foes are with Louisville and Georgia Tech. The Jayhawks go to Louisville just ahead of the Big Eight tournament and to Atlanta just before the conference race begins. A FIRST CINCINNATI (UPI)—The University of Cincinnati was the nation's first city university, established in 1906. The school also claims the honor of pioneering in cooperative programs in higher education. COLUMBIA STEREO TAPE CARTRIDGE Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water including The Wave Barry Duncan Ben Barnett Blake Robert Frost Claude Rivette Samuel C. Lewis Ben Barnett Troubled Water On COLUMBIA STEREO TAPE CARTRIDGE Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified Try One Today 814 Iowa KU tennis player sports unusual & exciting history A British upbringing, high school at a boys prep school, social work in Borneo and news reporting for a radio station in Hong Kong. It all sounds like a splendid background for a foreign ambassador. Actually, it's a brief description of Tim Williams, KU tennis player. Williams grew up in London, England, where his father was a Wing Commander in the Royal Air Force. He graduated from Brumley Boys School in London in 1965. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Upon graduation from high school Williams elected to pass college for a while. Having traveled much of his life because of his father's various military assignments, Williams enjoyed moving about. He heard of the Voluntary Service Overseas and joined the organization, working for a year in Borneo. "The VSO is much like the Peace Corps in America," Williams says. "Really the Peace Corps is modeled after the VSO. I taught 11-year-olds English, history and math. All of them know how to speak English, but it was our work to help them use the language better." Apr. 23 1970 KANSAN 13 While Williams was in Borneo his father retired from the service and his parents moved to Hong Kong. His father is now the principal of two vocational training centers for boys between the ages of 16 and 22. Williams began work as a news reporter at an English-speaking commercial radio station in Hong Kong in 1967 when he joined his family after the year in Borneo. He learned of KU through his association with Robert Burton, a lecturer in Asian studies at KU, who was doing summer research in Hong Kong. "I met Mr. Burton through a friend of mine at the station," Williams relates. "Through our visits he learned I hadn't attended college and found that I would like the idea of visiting the United States. So, he suggested KU and I decided to come." "I've been kind of impressed with playing on the team. We didn't work much on fitness and working out for the team in London as much as we do here," Williams says. The LIBERATED LOOK!! 417 by VAN HEUSEN You've discovered a whole new life in liberty! Now you're free to pursue happiness in a Van Heusen "417" shirt. Free to choose from wide colorful stripes or deep-tone solids, updated button-down collar or modern longer point Brooke collar. Free to enjoy the no-ironing convenience of permanently pressed Vanopress. Uphold your inalienable rights, man, and be fashion free in a "417" shirt by Van Heusen. 811 Mass. V Ross DISNEY MENS WEAR Open Thurs. Till 8:30 p.m. FRIDAY & SATURDAY music will be provided for your listening and dancing pleasure by SUGAR BEAR THE DRAUGHT HOUSE 8:00-12:00 804 W.24th The DRAUGHT HOUSE It Is Time To Stop, Think and Act About the Great Problem No One Can Solve But Ourselves. L For the last 40 years every President of the United States has faced the problem: how to do what is best for the people when the people do not know what is best for them. Under universal suffrage good leadership requires intelligent followership which in turn requires informed citizenship. Where are you going to lead a people who believe that deficit spending reduces the amount they must pay for government? Where are you going to lead a people who do not know that higher incomes without higher production do nothing but increase living costs? Where are you going to lead a people who do not know that payroll comes from the customer and that the customer is the worker who gets the payroll? You are going to lead them into inflation and then take the blame for the high cost of living. You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't. II. Do you remember the high note on which Franklin D. Roosevelt opened his administration? He said, "Taxes are paid in the sweat of every man who labors because they are a burden on production and can be paid only by production. Our workers may never see a tax bill, but they pay in deductions from wages and in the increased cost of what they buy." It was the economic ignorance of the people that drove Franklin Roosevelt away from sound money. He had to do it to retain his popularity. Do you remember Dwight Eisenhower's futile fight to protect the purchasing power of the dollar? The people wanted it protected but were unwilling to do what had to be done. Newly-elected John F. Kennedy appealed to the people: "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country," but most of the people, ignorant of the economic consequences, still wanted things done for them President Nixon, and all future Presidents, will face the same problem and suffer the same discouragements unless the people can be attracted to a simple self-evident frame of reference that dispels economic fallacies by demonstrating that they could not be true. III. Fortunately that frame of reference has become available and has been "packaged" and tested to a point where its effectiveness is beyond doubt It is the Do-It-Yourself program of Economic Self-Education that has grown out of The American Economic Foundation's exposure of the Ten Pillars of Economic Wisdom to 25,000,000 visitors to the New York World's Fair. These basic principles (reproduced below), emblazoned on bronze plaques at the Hall of Free Enterprise, have gained world-wide acceptance and are proving the greatest springboard to mass economic knowledge ever devised, largely because of their instant impact. They were endorsed by Presidents Hoover, Truman and Eisenhower who were Honorary Chairmen of the Steering Committee of that popular exhibit. They have been placed in the public domain and can be used by anyone, anywhere anytime, in any way. The purpose of this message is to urge everybody, of every political persuasion, to join the rapidly increasing number of volunteers who are working, each in his or her own way, to help speed and expand the already astonishing momentum of this self-education program. Participation can range all the way from getting individuals or campus organizations to reprint this advertisement to spreading the "Ten Pillars" by hand and by word of mouth. Write for free information about how to become an economic detective and expose the fallacies of our times. It will include various ways in which to initiate or accelerate the spontaneous chain-reaction that is making the Do-It-Yourself program "one of the educational wonders of the world." If you would like to see evidence of the impact that this program is making, ask for our 30th Annual Report. DO-IT-YOURSELF ECONOMIC SELF-EDUCATION The Ten Pillars of Economic Wisdom Nothing in our material world can come from nowhere or go nowhere, nor can it be free: everything in our economic life has a source, a destination and a cost that must be paid. 2 Government is never a source of goods. Everything produced is produced by the people, and everything that government gives to the people, it must first take from the people. 3 The only valuable money that government has to spend is that money taxed or borrowed out of the people's earnings. When government decides to spend more than it has thus received, that extra unearned money is created out of thin air, through the banks, and, when spent, takes on value only by reducing the value of all money, savings and insurance. In our modern exchange economy, all payroll and employment come from customers, and the only worthwhile job security is customer security; if there are no customers, there can be no payroll and no jobs. - Customer security can be achieved by the worker only when he cooperates with management in doing the things that win and hold customers. Job security, therefore, is a partnership problem that can be solved only in a spirit of understanding and cooperation. i Because wages are the principal cost of everything, widespread wage increases, without corresponding increases in production, simply increase the cost of everybody's living. The greatest good for the greatest number means, in its material sense, the greatest goods for the greatest number which, in turn, means the greatest productivity per worker. All productivity is based on three factors: 1) natural resources, whose form, place and condition are changed by the expenditure of 2) human energy (both muscular Tools are the only one of these three factors that man can increase without limit, and tools come into being in a free society only when there is a reward for the temporary self-denial that people must practice in order to channel part of their earnings away from purchases that produce immediate comfort and pleasure, and into new tools of production. Proper payment for the use of tools is essential to their creation. and mental), with the aid of 3) tools. 10 The productivity of the tools—that is, the efficiency of the human energy applied in connection with their use—has always been highest in a competitive society in which the economic decisions are made by millions of progress-seeking individuals, rather than in a state-planned society in which those decisions are made by a handful of all-powerful people, regardless of how well-meaning, unselfish, sincere and intelligent those people may be. THE AMERICAN ECONOMIC FOUNDATION 51 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017 "Headquarters For Simplified Economics" This ad was paid for, as a public service to the advancement of mass economic education, by a concerned citizen. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES S Three days 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Journal are intended to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Anak- of of Western Civilization" 4th Edition Campus Med House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynacom, and Revok dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Norelec tape, recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. Office furniture—desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, copies in office collating included at no extra charge if required. Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3644. tf Cash and Carry Everyday Special. cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. ff 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383. Formula S. 426 with G-70's, low mileage Perfect condition. Dick at 616 Korn or 842-525. Attention Floccinaeucilhillipilifera! For Sale! 1) Unused -8 silver drinking cups; copper chafing dish with stand and burner; calf wallet key case; Lite-Gem hi-intensity lamp; humidity Gauge; tray-table com- bination; 2) Used-Norelco electric shaver; wine decanter with four matching glasses; wicker desk or picnic and picnic basket; AM-FM- SHort portable radio, batter or AC; assorted kitchen items. 843-1400. 4-23 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect condition. Must sell now! Call 843-6707. Three Vivitar Manual Lens: 85mm, 135mm, 200mm. Excellent condition. 4-23 843-5180. Borg-Warner 8 track car stereo. Call 1-800-7270 or come in. 1025 Emmery Road. 1968 BSA Victor, 441cc, dirt or road bike. Real good condition, hauls. 842- 1200 after 6. Good ask for John in 226. 4-244 1966 Chevelle SS 396 Only 26,000 miles! Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-24 70 Datsun 2-litre, 5 speed, 120 m.p.h. 180 miles, silver-black, 135 horse- power. Extras. Call Chip. 843-3310. 4-24 Battle- Arteley, good condition. New goods. Rogers drums, excellent condi- tion, w.Rogers hardware, silver pearl, 842-5648. 4-24 Must sell diamond, ring set—engagement band, wedding band, both with diamonds. 843-0152. First National Bank. 4-27 Relaxaciser, used, but in perfect condition. Instruction book included. Price: $80 - cheap if roommates share. Call 842-3803. 4-24 $1.75! That's all it costs to place a 25-word classified ad for 5 days. In the Kansan "For Sale" course, of course. Must sell 1963 Nashua mobile home, 10 x 55, fulv furnished and carpeted, 2 bedroom, din. room, low court fee. Asking $2350, 842-4165. 4-28 1969 Datasun 2000 cohv. 135 hp -OHC engine. 5-speed. 6-ply radials w/mags, disc brakes, many extra tires, disc brakes. 2-Tonneau coverters. Many extra tires. 842-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-28 1965 Triumph TR-4—red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, see this for spring. $1300. 842- 2191. 4-28 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRS, British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelin X tires, $1800, 842-2191. 4-28 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800, 842- 2191. 4-28 1968 Flat 850 Spyder, convertible, white with black top, black deluxe interior, fine condition thru-out, low mileage, $1400, 824-2191. 4-28 1963 Austin Healy Sprite, black, removable hardtop, new clutch, $1100, 842-2191. 4-28 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, black convertible top, body in excel- ent condition, overhauled transmission. $1500. 842-2191. 4-28 1968 Toyota Corolla, looks new, gray easy on the gas. The $1500, 1941-2 4-28 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 1-2008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 1966 GTO—yellow with black convertible top. 4-pad, *spid*, big engine, equipped with stereo speakers, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1967 VW, silver mist paint with black, interior, 78 hp, duty suspension, very *economical on gas, good tires.* $1500, 842-2191. 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air, V-8, automatic transmission, premium belted tires, excellent condition. No reasonable offer refused. 842-6738 4-28 1962 Buick LeSabre 4-dr. sedan, power steering, power brakes, A.C., real good tires, runs good. $400. Call 843-8622 after 5 p.m. 4-24 Save yourself $3.00. Current Western Civilization notes for $7.50. Call 843-8481. Ask for Alan. 4-28 Repossessed 1969 Chevy II. Yellow with black interior, bucket seats, V-8, 3-speed. See at the First National Bank. 4-27 1960 TR-3, perfect mechanically, new clutch and transmission, 842-7417 after 6:00 p.m. 4-23 Component stereo system with Fisher XP55b speaker and Nikko amp, warranty left on all components, plus room for old record collection, $210. 49-5050. Magnavax stereo, console, contemporary mag styling, diamond stylus, walnut grained, excellent condition, 5 months after leaving Lawrence. $109, 842-5670. **4-27** Mmayfair 8 track stereo tapeplayer-like now, plus 18 tapes—Doors, Collins, Hendrix, Lendrix, Electric BST, BST, $220 value, prized $120 Harris, 843-8454. 4-23 1968 Suzuki: X-6-250ce. Excellent condition. Two helmets. 2,000 miles. Drafted, must sell immediately. 842- 8884. 4-23 New T 735-1X E (E78-1X) radial 4 belt tow tires tread disc tread design cut B 725 plus $2.60 Fed tax—fast installation at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Spinet piano, dark mahogany, bench in good condition, 4-29 842-7760 Guitar--classical and folk, Italian madi Gibson import, spruce top, rosewood sides and back, an exceptionally mellow and responsive guitar. Call Ken West at Oliver Hall in mooning. 4-29 S1 Chevy station wagon, great me- chanics. 20 x 65 x 19 in. $125. 842-5197 6 4-29 1967 Sbm-sam Alpine, convertible. $1.150 Call 843-2060. 4-29 Smith-Corona typewriter, portable. condition. Hail 842-7517-4-23 t 6:00 p.m. 4:23 jf 9:00 p.m. 4:23 Classical Guitar, excellent condition. Call 842-5717 after 6:00 p.m. 4-29 '67 Corvette, 327 cu. in., 300 hp, air- conditioned, AM-FM radio, 3-speed, good condition. Getting married, must suit. 842-5631 by 7 p.m. 4-27 NOTICE 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que if you want some honest-to-gooodness 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 11 sunday, Tuesday t Rates for Kansan classifieds are the lowest anywhere around: $1.00 for five days, three days, $1.75 for five days, with only penalties for more than 25 words. 4-24 Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00. GRI-0440 anytime. N. Swift, N. Kansas City, Mo. 64116. Mobilization. Fill form出现 in 4-244 vate The Omnibus Shop has a new exhibit of contemporary art—paintings, sciligraphy, lithographs and sculpture gallery, fine art and crafts. 9th and Indiana. 4-27 Beginning and the end of World War III are coming. The beginning: "Year Three," in 1942. The Game." See these two Academy Award films April 29-May 1. 4-24 The Castle Tea Room is that specia- place to take that special date on the special day. They'll provide candle- light and atmosphere—the best up to you. Girls and Guys: ARENSBERG'S SHOES, 819 Mass, has just the pair to style up your spring. Comfort to the spring sandal ARENSBERG'S 4-27 Raney Drug Stores 3 locations to serve your every need Zippo Cigarette lighter with "Sgt. Javis" written on the front. Lost at the Hawks Nest. Reward. Call 843- 3624. Hand crafted sandals at reasonable price. Hodge Podge, 15 W 9th. Fast delivery. $10.00 reward for white Prince Gardner waller! Lost someplace between home and college on Monday. A13. If found, contact Kip at 841-8411. No questions asked. Kip LOST $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license. No. T2T3PL. No questions. Phone 864-3644 and ask for me. 4-24 1 ZBT pin near. Marvin Hall Call Ralph at 842-2038. Reward. 4-24 A pair of wire-rimmed glasses. Contact John Bailey, 843-481-481. Reward WANTED Plaza, 1800 Mass. Hillcrest, 925 Iowa Downtown, 921 Mass. Bucherer watch last Sat. night at concert or O-Zone. Sentimental value. Sick over loss. Reward. Call 842-3489. 4-28 1 black wallet. Keep money, return answer. Ask asked. Call answered. Ralph Napole. 842-203-86 4-242 Male needs apartment from now until June. $70/mo. or less, roommates, kitchen, clean. Call 842-2396. 4-23 Summer traveling companion! Forget about school. Relax, see national parks. Swim in the Pacific, visit San Francisco! Insensitive! Call 842-659-8 Live in convenient Jayhawk Tower next fall. If interested and a serious student, call Bruce at 842-7770 after 1:00 p.m. Complete lines of cosmetics, Roommate for summer starting June Call 842-3539 or 01 3166, Tom 4-27 PERSONAL Need 2 or 3 gusvs to share apt. for Jam-wharv Kowers. Call 4-29 7128 4-29 Complete prescription departments and fountain service. 2 girls to share luxury West Hills 1 girl to call Fall Call Suit 7853, after 5:30. 4-23 Roommate for summer and/or next fall and spring to share a two-bedroom air-cond. apt. with pool. Call 842-6101 after 3.00. 4-28 Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance. 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. ff Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Special summer rates at College Hill Manor. Located across from Stouffer floor. Pool and air-conditioning. Shannon in condominium or apartment. 1741. W. 19th. VI. 3-8220. 4-22 Jan: Happy ?th birthday. Love R. P.S. You don't look a day over. 4,22 TYPING Handcrafted sandals at reasonable prices from the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. Fast delivery. 4-28 Want to send a unique birthday card? Personal "ad" card: 4-24 $1.00 for one day Happy Birthday Steve Mudda from Stu Mudda and Bill Mudda. 4-23 terrieries Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil cutting and duplicating. Flick up and access offered. Call 842-3597 4-4296562 Experienced typist will type the themes, thases, term papers, other misc. typ- er documents, copywriter, pica writer. Pica type. Connect. Service. Mrs Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 843-281, Mrs. Ruckman. HELP WANTED Needed now: experienced female phone solicitor. Guarantee plus bonuses. Excellent opportunity for further training. 843-6425. Don't call you you're timid. Table Tops AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 Male or female for kitchen help and cocktail waitress and bookkeeper. Call 842-9248 between 2-5 p.m. Ask for 4-27 Summer Jobs. Earn $2000 (or more with extra hours). The Southwestern Company (est. 1868) provided summer jobs in 1969 for over 4,000 students from more than 600 U.S. colleges and universities. This summer program is designed for ambitious college men who are willing to work hard. Must demonstrate responsible good personal conduct, and self-discipline. For interview appointment, call: Bob Townsend, 843-8557 after 6:00 p.m. 4-28 SERVICES OFFERED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPORTUNITIES Nationwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Academic. Postgraduate. coom, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767. 4-27 Made to order—rings, pendants, earrings, or anything. Your designs or colors may be added. Drop by PROPST CUSTOM JEWELRY AND HANDCRAFTS, 6281'S Mass. BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tt FOUND Found--at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM, 106 Radio 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. **4.78** Found: one easy way to sill what you don't want and find what you need. Kansan classes meet $1.00 for one day, days 25 or less. $1.75 for days 25, days 25 or less. 4-24 On northwest softball diamond near Robinson. Set of keys and watch. identify and pav for ad and its yours. 842-1200. Rm. 322. 4-29 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom ant one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. ff Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom with air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasando Drive. Open space, atmosphere unique to Alvamar. Live in luxurious jacacent and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. Available to families with $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $225. To view these luxury rooms, visit town houses on David Rhodus: 842-2313 or tf McGrew Agency: 843-2053 Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall. Rentals of units in the popular and luxurious AVALON APARTMENTS in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, APARTMENTS (11th and Missouri), and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on a first come, first serve basis. Call 215-848-3937 or come to rental assistant managers, or come to rental office in thevard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in RUVEN ROSE SORE SPRING NETTENT beautiful courtyard and pool, spacious sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished carpino at 842-3801 or 842-3248 or drive see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 THE HTE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Some Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III. - Alterations New York Cleaners - Dry Cleaning 926 Mass. - Reweaving For the best in: VI 3-0501 Would you believe...you can wait to classes from your home in the ARGO APARTMENTS, 11th and Miss most popular apartment in Lawrence's most special summer rates during June and July!! Call 842-2348, or by drop the manager's apartment at 1130 A. West Central rental offices at 2107. A Harvard Road to get details on both summer and fall leasing. 5-14 Now leasing—rooms and apartments for summer. Close to student union, ideal location. Call 843-2854 for details and appointments to see rooms. Summer sublet May 15-Sept. 1 or part Overland Park near 79th and 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, of cloets, nicely furnished, $175/night (includes Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once. 4-99 For summer sub-let: furnished three- bedroom house, carpet, paneling. See at 123 E. 19th or call 843-9300. 4-27 Chick it out! Sublease 2 bedroom furn. apt. June 1 thru Aug. 15. $100/ mo. Good deal! Chicks preferred, but .. 842-1467. 4-28 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished with drapes, carpeting, air conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool. On bus route. See them today at 1704 W 24th. 842-1160. 4-28 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, stairs, sound conditioning, sound conditioning, all electric Frigidaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly insulated apartments afternoons weekdays and weekends at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE, 241 Louisiana. 843-552-552 4-28 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 2 blocks from stadium, June-July, possibly longer. Call 842-7147 after 5:30 p.m. 4-28 Furn. apt. for graduate student or married couple. No pets. No children. $125 mo. util. pd. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-129-109 after 5:00 and weekdays 4-28 Choice apt. location open—rent now to be ready for summer or fall—5-11 from Fraser AC, carpeted b-droon 8-242 parking area street parking C: 842-8153 or B: 842-7570. 4-29 Two-bedroom furnished apartment, air-conditioned, near shopping centers. $120 per mo. Call 842-5639 or 843-0064. Furnished apartments for rent. Summer sublease. $90.00 a month. Married or graduate students. 1510 Kentucky. 842-3712. 5-13 SEE Moving To Kansas City? CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Baths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Baths $230 CLUBHOUSE POOL Open Daily 9 Till Dark CHARTER HOUSE S.E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 Exclusive Representative L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Favors - Guards Mugs - Recognitions - Paddles - Lavaliers Stationery - Lavaliers - Stationery - Office - Gifts • Plaques • Surprise Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog All roads into Lawrence patrolled By STEVE FRITZ Kansan Staff Writer All roads may not lead to Lawrence, but if you were on one of the roads that do between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. you would have had a little trouble getting into town. According to the curfew ordered by Gov. Robert Docking no one authorized personel and people going to or from work were allowed on the streets of Lawrence between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. There was little traffic coming into Lawrence according to the Highway Parolman stationed East of town on Highway 10. "We've only had to turn back about six cars all night," he said. his picture taken he smiled and said, "Go ahead, I feel like I've been starring in a movie tonight. I've had so many cameramen out here I might as well have one more for luck." When the Patrolman stationed by the West Turnpike exit was asked if he would mind having The traffic at the west exit was described as also being light but the patrolman on duty said, "We apprehended one car load of undesirables this evening. Outside of that we've had to turn back a few cars, but it's been a fairly quiet evening." Even at 4 a.m. highway patrol- men were friendly, but extremely efficient. When a car was stopped to find out why the occupants were out after curfew the patrolman used a friendly smile and a casual tone of voice but also inspected the rear seat and the floor boards very carefully. Reports approved by Methodist group ST. LOUIS (UPI) — The 950 delegates at the General Conference of the United Methodist Church approved with little debate Wednesday a small portion of the several reports of the legislative committees. The controversial "call for repentance" and demands for more than $20 million to black church groups were not expected to be taken up until Thursday, church spokesmen said. Even then, only the non-financial demands of the blacks are likely to be considered. The five-day conference concludes Friday, and action must be taken by the full conference on all of the proposals before the 14 legislative committees. The committees cannot kill any of the proposals. Some 2,000 petitions, many of which have been consolidated, were assigned to the committees at the start of the conference. A dinner in honor of Charles C. Parlin, Englewood, N.J., was scheduled for Wednesday evening before the conference night session. Parlin is a United Methodist layman considered an architect of the union of Methodist and Evangelical United Brethren churches. Proposals approved at Tuesday night and Wednesday morning sessions included changing the name of a 22-year-old international agency of the church. The Commission on the Structure of Methodism Overseas, known as "Cosmos," was changed to the "Commission on the Structure of Methodism Outside the USA." Guardsmen- (Continued from page 1) and firemen and police met various obstacles when they arrived at the scene. Trash cans, boards and barricades were placed in the streets and alleys in this area. Patrolmen cleared the streets several times. Piano wire was stretched head-high between some houses in the 1200 block of Louisiana. Curfew violators, some armed, were reported moving around the 1200 block of Ohio between 10 and 11 p.m. Two fire bombs were thrown at 832 Pennsylvania shortly before 11 p.m. These bombs did not explode and no damage was reported. Police reported many curfew violators throughout the night. More than 30 persons were arrested before midnight — for breaking the curfew. Three others were arrested for carrying Molotov cocktails. Activity in Lawrence calmed after the two fires on campus. A few curfew violations were reported between 1:30 and 2:30 a.m. today but the streets were empty 16 KANSAN Apr.23 1970 On Apple Records after 2:30 a.m. No disturbances of any kind were reported by patrolmen during the last three and a half hours of the curfew. On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Disruptions begin on Oread FULMICO CollegeMaster No.1 in College Sales Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI 2-4650 A group of nearly 200 people gathered on Oread Drive between 12th and 13th St. nearly an hour and a half before the 8 p.m. curfew was to go into effect, Wednesday. Trouble began even before the curfew went into effect. A fire was started in the deserted apartment house at 1225 Oread Before the blaze could spread, three students who lived next door, rushed into the house with fire extinguishers and put the fire out. Lawrence Police arrived at the scene a few minutes before the curfew was to start. National Guard and more police were called in when the crowd began throwing lumber into the street and shouting at passing cars that the "street was closed." Rocks and bottles were thrown at officers and guardsmen, but no shots were exchanged. When officers started moving towards persons standing in the yards on Oread those persons in houses started yelling, "If you don't live here go home. Get off the street the pigs are coming." Police made several arrests of members of the crowd who were crossing the street to get away. One block away, on Louisiana, police found more trouble when a group of 20 to 25 youths began building a barricade with trash cans, lumber, large rocks, and a regular wooden road barricade. Guardsmen and police, wearing gasmasks, used tear gas to disperse the crowd after the barricade had been drenched with gasoline and set on fire. was small and the fire department quickly brought it under control. An empty garage located between Louisiana and Ohio on 15th St. was also set on fire. The blaze Oread and Louisiana were completely sealed off by National Guardsmen and police until the disturbance was over and the crowd dispersed. And the night had begun. . . One of the estimated 35 persons arrested Wednesday night for curfew violation was David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and president of the student body. Awbrey spent the night in jail after failing to post $250 bond. Awbrey arrested Awbrey was arrested with eight other persons at 8:26 p.m. at 1239 Oread while police and National Guard were patrolling the area. BANANA LIGHTFOOT BRAVEN AND WORKSHOP RED FRI DOG FREE BEER INN SAT. DOLLAR NITE Direct from Minneapolis/St. Paul THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No. 121 The University of Kansas一Lawrence, Kansas Friday, April 24, 1970 BULLETIN City and county officials have decided, that for the first time in three nights, there will be no curfew in Lawrence Friday night. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Professor Lawrence Velvel and Fredric Litto were promoted today by the Board of Regents. Photo by John Ebling Languages: A sign? Amid the tension and the violence of this week, the destruction of Old Haworth Hall continued. During Thursday's work, a sign (?) appeared from the rubble. The workmen were clearing debris and the sign of the cross happened to be formed by two pieces of lumber from the old building. Petition calls for curfew halt By GALEN BLAND Kansan Staff Writer Members of the University Senate Thursday, acting as concerned faculty and students because a quorum could not be reached, passed a resolution to petition Governor Robert B. Docking to call off the curfew and withdraw the National Guard. "Get to the point," one yelled. Averill did. The resolution brought on numerous comments by faculty and student members of the Senate. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., who was at the meeting, said when asked for his opinion on the resolution, "I have already called (the governor) expressing my concern that the curfew was becoming as big a problem as the problem it was intended to solve. The resolution was introduced by Rick Averill, Topeka sophomore and member of the Senate, after the regular business had ended. The crowd in Swarthout Recital Hall soon dwindled to a group of slightly more than 100 as Senate members left while Averill was talking- Averill called the KU situation a police state. He said the entire American system was violent. At this point the exit increased. Some of the remaining members began to harass Averill. Roy Laird, professor of political science, said that a curfew was necessary to minimize the possibility of arson and bloodshed in special cases such as this. One faculty member reminded those who opposed the curfew that the curfew protected black areas from vigilantes as well as the other way. Two student members of the Senate spoke in protest of the alleged invasion of houses without search warrants. Charles Oldfather, chairman of the Senate Executive Committee, made a motion to amend the resolution by adding "as soon as possible" to the end of it. This amendment was defeated by a vote of 47-44. There was then a call for quorum. With the ranks diminished, the Senate was more than 90 members short of the quorum figure. The meeting was adjourned but the resolution was voted on with members acting simply as faculty and students. The resolution carried on a voice vote. Chalmers spoke to the Senate near the end of its meeting. He said he was confident that (Continued to pane 16) Third night curfew calmer For a third straight night the Lawrence curfew was marked with repeated sniper fire and fire bombings. Incidents of fire bombings and sniper fire were less frequent, however, during the 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew set by Governor Robert Docking. A false alarm brought four fire trucks to the scene at Jayhawker Tower Apartments at approximately 9:20 p.m. An estimated 250 persons gathered to see firemen find only a smoldering incinerator fire. At 8:50 p.m. a fire was reported at the Pur-O-Zone Chemical Co., 714 Conn. It was reportedly set by a molotov cocktail. Police entered the building and were able to extinguish the blaze with fire extinguishers. Sporadic sniper fire harassed law enforcement officials during the night. Shots were reported by police as they attempted to put out the fire at the Pur-O-Zone Chemical Co. Sniper fire was also heard on Massachusetts Street, 1411 Haskell and 1225 Oread. At 10:40 p.m. a fire bombing attempt failed at Central Junior High School. Police reported finding two molotov cocktails at the south side of the building. No damage of fire was reported. A fire bombing was made on the Rogers Electric Co., 512 E. 9th, at nearly 10:45 p.m. Bernard Freeman, owner, was guarding the building at the time. He said the fire started when two men threw a fire bomb into a store room located at the back of the building. Freeman reportedly saw the men leaving the scene and wounded one of the arsonists as he fled. Police were also harassed during the night by rock throwing and nail-studded boards that were placed in streets and alleys. The last major incident of the evening and early morning occurred at 12:30 a.m. At this time, the J.R. Edmonds residence, 1546 Rhode Island, was apparently fire bombed. A blaze started when a fire bomb was thrown through an attic window above the second story, said Matt Baumann, Atchison freshman who lives in the Edmonds home. Firemen were called to the scene and the fire was quickly extinguished. The remainder of the morning was quiet and peaceful. All sheriff's units were told to return to the station at 2:15 a.m. this morning. Deferments now limited WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon abolished virtually all future occupational and fatherhood deferments from the draft Thursday, sought authority to induct college students and moved to perfect his four-month-old lottery induction plan. Because of the Vietnam War "From now on," Nixon said in a message to Congress, "the objective of this administration is to reduce draft calls to zero, subject to the overriding consideration of national security." At the same time, the President announced steps he said would eventually lead to an all-volunteer Army but rejected for economy reasons a proposal by a presidential study commission that conscription be ended by June 30,1971. The Pentagon said the draft law should be extended for at least two years, meaning an all-volunteer force would not be created at least before mid-1973. But Nixon said that to start making the armed services more attractive for potential volunteers, he was asking Congress for a 20 per cent pay increase for all enlisted men with less than two years' service, effective next Jan. 1. and other factors, he said, it was impossible to predict whether or precisely when conscription could be ended. For a private recruit that would mean a boost from $124.50 a month to $149.40 plus food, housing and other benefits. For a sergeant with less than two years' service, it would mean an increase from $275.40 a month to $330.60. Meanwhile, the President: Ordered an immediate halt to the granting of all job deferments, including farm work. Young men currently holding such deferments will keep them and those who applied for them before Thursday will remain eligible. There are 500,000 persons with these deferments, most of them teachers, policemen and others in community services. Asked Congress to repeal a provision it wrote into the 1967 Selective Service Act that guarantees to every college student a deferment for four years or until he is 24 years old, whichever comes earlier. Should Congress remove the stricture, Nixon said he would promptly issue an executive order that would bar stu- (Continued to page 16) By United Press International UDK News Roundup Bill aids consumers WASHINGTON—Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., introduced legislation Thursday to aid consumers in selecting retail commodities by requiring that the unit price of each item be shown. Speaking on the Senate floor, Pearson said the bill would reduce confusion in the market place and could result in an estimated savings of 10 per cent in the nation's $120 billion annual food budget. Strike causes layoffs A trucking strike-lockout in the Chicago area continued today without promise of settlement. Wildcat strikes continued in other parts of the nation while a tentative agreement waited for a vote by truck drivers. Strangled transportation prompted more industrial layoffs Thursday, with 3,500 American Motors employees turned away at a Kenosha, Wis., body plant for lack of parts. American also suspended production of two models Thursday, leaving two models in production. Rebels hold arsenal PORT OF SPAIN—Trinidad's army rebels reported themselves in full control of the Chaguaramas arsenal today and said they were holding several loyalist officers hostage pending the outcome of negotiations with the government. Unofficial reports said the negotiations to settle the four-day-old uprising had reached a deadlock with the government's refusal to meet the rebels' demands for amnesty and for permission to keep their weapons. Campus briefs ASME to hold conference The University of Kansas' chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will sponsor a two-day regional student conference beginning Monday. The purpose of the conference is the presentation and judging of technical papers prepared by students for competition. Sophomore party scheduled The sophomore class will give a party May 9 in the Draught House. The party will be from 8 to 12 p.m. and the music will be by the "Together." Sophomore class members with class cards will be admitted free, admission for others is $2. Free beer will be served. Changes of location announced Kansas Union officials Thursday announced two additional changes of location for events originally scheduled in the Kansas Union. The Field Instruction Committee meeting is scheduled April 27 from 3:30-5:30 p.m. in 209 Blake. AWS is scheduled to meet May 5 and 12 from 4:30-6:30 p.m. in 411 Summerfield. Region Reinfrank can be contacted in the Dean of Women's Office for additional information. Meditation meeting changed Naismith scholarship bids due The regular meeting of the Students International Meditation Society which had been scheduled for 4 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Oread Room will meet at the same time at 1137 Kentucky. Application forms for the Naismith Hall Scholarship for the 1970-71 school year are now available from the Office of Student Financial Aid. The winner of the scholarship will be awarded $1,000 to be used for room and board in Naismith Hall. Deadline for applications is May 10. Funds available for students Undergraduate and graduate students may borrow up to $1,500 a year to a total of $7,500 through the United Student Aid Funds (USA Funds), Jerry Rogers, associate director of financial aid said Thursday. Maximum interest rate is 7 per cent simple interest, which will be paid by the Federal Government while the student is in school. Repayment of the loan begins on the first day of the tenth month after the student is out of school. Contact Jerry Rogers at the Office of Student Financial Aid, 26 Strong Hall, for further information. Curfew decision daily The secretary to the city clerk said Thursday that the City Commission hoped to keep moving the curfew time back until there would no longer be a need for one. 2 KANSAN Apr. 24 1970 She said, however, it would be decided on each day whether a curfew would be needed that particular night. seeing spots? If you see spots before your eyes . . . the pimple kind .. better get Fostex. It's the super spot checker. Wash with Fostex and you see yourself smooth and clear. It helps remove blackheads, dry up pimples and oil, and fight germs. For the clear look ... get Fostex Cake. Sold in drugstores. Navy ROTC Capt. J, O. Marzluft said Thursday that three Air Force ROTC members who were serving as security guards should be credited with saving the KU Military Science building from extensive damage in Wednesday night's fire. The fire caused between $500 and $1,000 damages. The fire, which Marzluff said "was definitely set," broke out at 12:45 a.m. in the back of the rifle range in the basement of the building. A janitor smelled smoke and informed AFROTC members Steve McConnell, Atchison senior, and Jack Aenchbacher, Langley Air Force Base, Va. senior, who investigated immediately. Fostex Aenchbacher kicked out a ventilator in a door to gain admittance and sent McConnell for help. Dense smoke in the rear of the range behind the target area hampered Aenchbacher's immediate efforts to put out the fire. FOSTEX ROTC student guards credited for saving building from damage However, all flames had been extinguished with the use of six fire extinguisher by the time firemen arrived 15 minutes later. John Sullivan, Leavenworth junior, was the other AFROTC member to fight the blaze. "Those three men are to be credited with saving this building," Marzluff said. "Had they not acted as they did, I would say we would be looking for a new home today." Marzluff said the three were serving with Air Force Major John R. McKenzie and two janitors as building guards for the night. A check of the building 15 minutes before the fire revealed nothing out of the ordinary. THE HILE in the WALL Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—Ws Deliver—9th & III. DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP SANDWICH SHOP "That's a good question," Marzluff said. "Obviously the place had been cased because they knew exactly where to get into the range." How the arsonist gained admittance to the building has not been determined. Marziulf said admittance to the range was through the same door Aenchbacher entered. He speculated admittance to the building was through a window, but added that many people on campus have keys to the building. Marzluff said future security of the building would remain the same, with one faculty member and three students and janitors serving in that capacity. --- Percy Faith His Orchestra & Chorus Love Theme from 'Romeo and Juliet' Featuring Theme from A Summer Place including Good Morning Starshine Spinning Wheel Walt Disney Without Her One On Columbic Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Thousand Clowns Starring: Jason Robarts Barbara Harris Martin Balsam 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium 50c SUA Popular Film Series April 24 wanted! apartment managers wanted! apartment managers No experience necessary. Only requirements are intelligence, aggressiveness, ambition and a friendly personality. Business and managerial training provided without charge. A rare opportunity for you to run a multi-million dollar business. Full-time position for both husband and wife. You receive salary, apartment, utilities and telephone. Join the jack P. DeBoer "Action Team", one of the nation's fastest growing apartment development firms. Must be willing to relocate. Send a complete resume, with photos, to: Steve Scholder, Administrative Assistant, Property Management Bureau. j Jack P. De Boer Associates, Inc. 210 SOUTH WICHTA; RANNAZ 854 Use Kansan Classified //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// FRIDAY TGIF FUN IN THE SUN Bierstube—90c pitchers, 3:00 - 5:00 p.m. Gaslight----65c pitchers----all day Wheel----5c off on all cans, 12:30-2:30 p.m. SATURDAY— Gymkana—8:00 a.m. $1.00 per car—Lewis parking lot Carnival & Art Sale—10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Games—12:00 Noon 12:00—Balloon Toss 12:30—Undressing Contest 1:00—A Down Hill Race on Ice Blocks 1:30—Body Passing 2:00—Medicine Ball 2:30—Tug-O'War 3:00—Balloon Squashing 3:30—Pie Eating 4:00—Greased Pig Catching Prizes for GamesMovie Discounts Street Dance—8:00 p.m. to midnight-Oliver parking lot Featuring "The T.I.D.E." Sponsored by Spring Week and Oliver Hall Come to the games and dance and bring your blue slips I will not be relied upon to provide any information regarding the content of this image. It is important to note that the provided image is in black and white and does not contain any text or images. If you are seeking additional information, please contact your local police department or relevant emergency services. Photo by Jim Hoffman Where the fire began . . . Monday night's fire at the Kansas Union is believed to have begun in this restroom on the third floor near the Pine Room. Officials are still trying to determine if an explosion thought to have started the blaze was caused by an incendiary device. Two curfew breakers get 6-month term Two of the 26 KU students arrested Wednesday night appeared in municipal court Thursday and were sentenced to six months in jail and fined $100 for breaking curfew and $25 for disturbing the peace. David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, and John McNeese, New Orleans, La., graduate student, were sentenced. The following is a list of those arrested as they identified themselves to the police: Christopher J. Bell, Overland Park freshman, for disturbing the peace and curfew violation; Glenn B. Bridgman, Overland Park sophomore, for two charges of curfew violations counts of assault and battery; Willowbury Lawsuva, Overland Park senior, for curfew violation and disturbing the peace. Marianne Cramer, Dayton, Ohio, junior, for disturbing the peace and curfew violation; Anne E. Daly, Overly senior, for curfew violation; John H. Berman, Overly senior, for curfew violation and possession of narcotics; Michael W. For- Apr.24 KANSAN 3 1970 cade, Prairie Village senior, for curf violation; David A. Gordon, Sloux City, Iowa, freshman, for curf violation; Randy Gould, Lawrence junior, or curf violence; Hal Overland Park, Park City, for curf violation; Richard F. Holzer, Overland Park freshman, for curf violation; Reginald J. Holmes, Kansas City freshman, for curf violation; Donald Andrew Low, Salina junior. for curf violation; Jerry Mall II, Atchison graduate student, for curf Robert D. Marshall, Overland Park Junior, for curfew violation and disruption Ft. Monroe, Va., sophomore, for curfew violation; Harry N. Rice, Lea-chaudonville, Va.; disturbing and disturbing the peace; William J. Rielc, LENexa freshman, for curfew Violation and disturbing the peace; Riechka Good freshman, for curfew violation. Peter N. Shuart, Arlington Heights, Pier sophomore, for curfew violation; Bryan T. Horton, Arlington Heights, man, for curfew violations; Paula J. Siebert, Topeka senior, for curfew violation; Kenneth Roy Turner, Level- land, Texas, graduate student, for curfew violation. Non-students: Tommy R. Allen, 19, 1013 Delaware St., for curfew violation on possession in emergency conditions; Rod C. Gray, 20, for curfew violation; Rod C. Gray, 20, for curfew violation; Jerry L. Joly, 21, for curfew violation; William E. Payne, 22, 926 Maine, for curfew violation on possession; Jonathan D.ron, 24, 1225 Kentucky, for curfew violation, and Jonathan D. Work- forth of $1338.2$ Ohio, for curfew violation. ATTENTION to all honor guests, members of International Club, student judges, and international queens. Due to the damage to the Union building, the annual Banquet of Nations is postponed until Sunday, May 10, 1970 at 6:00 p.m. It will be held at the Kansas Union cafeteria. The tickets are on sale again at the following places: 1) Room 226 Strong, 2) Raney's Drugs downtown, 3) Union check cashing desk upon reopening of the Union. For any further information, call 842-4083 in the evenings. Masoud Moayer, International Club President Court finds sailor guilty for causing disaffection Police given ice cream by parlor owner WASHINGTON (UPI) — A courtmartial jury found seaman Roger Lee Priest guilty Thursday night of two charges of causing disloyalty and disaffection among servicemen but acquitted him of six other charges, including sedition. BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) The Berkeley police department was presented with 30 gallons of ice cream Thursday by the owners of an ice cream parlor that refused to serve two officers. The jury of five Navy commissioned officers deliberated for nearly seven hours after getting Police Lt. R. B. Johnston and officer Carl Lipgens tried to buy cones at Swensen's Ice Cream store near the University of California during last week's anti-ROTC rampages. They have asked the FBI to investigate because they felt their civil rights were violated. Bill Meyer, general manager of Swensen's, said the refusal was the action "of a single employee on his own. We don't feel that way." He added that it will be "a cold Sunday before this happens again." The police department couldn't accept the ice cream because of their status as public officials, but Meyer said the 30 gallons would be donated in the force's name to nursery schools in Berkeley. the courtmartial case at the end of the one-week trial. Defense attorney David Reim said he would appeal the guilty verdicts. Capt. B. Raymond Perkins, the military judge, set sentencing for Monday. Priest, 26, faces a possible maximum sentence of three years in jail on each of the two charges and a dishonorable discharge from the Navy. OXFORD, Ohio (UPI)—Butler County Sheriff Harold Carpenter denied Thursday he used police dogs indiscriminately to break up a student demonstration at Miami University last week. He said he would not risk his dogs on "ill-bred and ill-mannered" students Priest was found guilty of "design to promote disloyalty and disaffection among members of the armed forces of the United States" by publishing and distributing two issues of the antiwar publication, "Om, the Serviceman's Newsletter." Sheriff denies canine controlled demonstration About 170 students were arrested April 15 following a sit-in at an armory on campus. Carpenter defended the actions of his deputies and other police departments in breaking up the demonstration. Among the charges Priest was acquitted of were inciting desertion and sedition among servicemen. The other charges involved smaller technicalities such as circulation of the first pamphlet. Perkins had instructed the jury before giving it the decision that it was not to consider Priest's antiwar views in determining its verdict. Percy Faith His Orchestra & Chorus Love Theme from "Romeo and Juliet" Featuring Theme From A Summer Place including Good Morning Starshine Spinning Wheel Arguins Whisper of Her One On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified GET TOGETHER WITH FRIENDS AT THE ROCK CHALK CAFE R. L. G. Lunch Special SOUP & SANDWICH...50c McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" downtown laurence its finally Sandal Season! and what a season with our beefy leather sandals crafted in Italy by h.i.s downtown Lawrence crafted in Italy by h.i.s KANSAN COMMENT College unrest in California From The LOS ANGELES TIMES By WILLIAM TROMBLEY California college students face the prospect of a violent spring on campus. In recent weeks the state has witnessed rioting in the streets of Isla Vista, the attempted burning of the UC Berkeley library, and demonstrations against Gov. Ronald Reagan on several campuses, as well as lesser acts of vandalism and violence. Educators and other observers hold two theories about the renewed violence, which follows a relatively tranquil fall and winter. According to one theory, leaders of the radical left have lost their following on most campuses and, in their desperation to win new supporters, are turning to ever more extreme actions. Others believe that the radical movement has gained, not lost, support among students and that its leaders now believe they are ready to escalate the struggle from the level of rhetoric to that of violence. Whatever the reason, there is little reason to doubt the words of UC Santa Barbara Chancellor Vernon I. Cheadle, who has told the university Board of Regents "It seems clear that we are in the guerrilla attack stage." The viciousness of recent events has been startling. For example, the attempt to burn down the Doe Library on the Berkeley campus in early March "endangered the lives of hundreds of people and threatened the destruction of one of the world's great libraries," UC President Charles J. Hitch told the regents. Cheadle said the radicals "will use veiled threats as well as action to cripple our facilities. They will attract outsiders, with nothing to lose and something to gain, to vandalize us. They have been doing it for months." In the strongest statement he has made since taking office Hitch denounced the violent acts perpetrated my those who practice what he called the "new conformity" of the left. "Classrooms are disrupted in the name of education, speakers are shouted down in the name of free speech, job recruiters are driven from the campus in the name of morality, and demands for total conformity to a particular line of thought are made in the name of nonconformity and dissent," Hitch said. "In the university, above all other institutions of American society, we have a profound duty to resist and oppose shoddy thinking, lies and rhetoric which inflames and shocks but does nothing for the truth. "Free speech means careful and skeptical listening, not taking a rhetorical trip. Free expression includes, especially in the university, the duty to oppose cant, dogma and ideological harangue by reasoned and disciplined counterargument. "The crowd that turns into a mob is an insult to the principles of democratic society, and it is a moral insult to the fundamentals of a university," Hitch said. In addition, there are specific local problems on many campuses-intolerable housing conditions in Isla Vista, a heavy drug culture in Berkeley, the unpopular firing of a professor at San Jose State and proposed cutbacks in minority student recruiting programs in both the university and the state colleges. An additional irritant is Gov. Reagan's reelection campaign. There is no question that Reagan is widely disliked by college and university students, many of whom consider him to be the personal embodiment of the adult society they regard as hypocritical, indifferent and reactionary. Several of Reagan's campus appearances, even at such relatively quiet, conservative schools as Chico State College and Cal State Fullerton, have led to student confrontations with police. Most administrators believe their basic strategy must be to separate the small numbers of radicals from the moderate mass of students, to try to prevent the kind of incident that would enable the radical few to enlist the support of the moderate many. They believe this can be done by maintaining communication with all segments of student opinion and by dealing with legitimate student requests while disciplining those who break state laws or campus regulations. This is a delicate process and it is best achieved, these men believe, if they have a maximum number of policy options. This is why university chancellors were so perturbed when Reagan proposed that they be required to declare a state of emergency under certain circumstances and that they be forced to impose predetermined penalties. The final compromise plan that was agreed to by the regents left the discretion largely in the hands of the cancellors and President Hitch. hearing voices— To the editor: It disturbs me very much to feel it my duty to be more outspoken than is normally necessary, but unfortunately the great silent majority (more commonly known as KU students), have been living in their "plastic cradle" all too long. I am not writing this as an attack, most assuredly I want this article to take the form of a plea—to all the peoples in this area. We have finally been subjected to the destructive reality that we, as KU students, have always read about in reference to other schools. Well fellow students, this is it. Though many of you may question the reality of the events of the past few days, I think we can all agree that chaos, confusion and disagreement is rapidly overtaking Lawrence. It is common knowledge that in order to properly and effectively solve a problem, that same problem must be defined—in very accurate terms. There are many people, I am sure, with just as many theories as to what has been causing the recent problems in Lawrence. Well, discussion is necessary, but action is also necessary in solving any human relationship, and we must act now! I despise using tired, worn out words, but perhaps this time, pitted against reality, describing most of the KU students as apathetic will strike home. Students! we can no longer sit on top of "The Hill" and ignore the life that is possibly changing the course of history. We need to work together—NOW! Let us band together as one large faction, and tell all the world that we, the students of KU, are willing to do everything and anything we can to improve the plight that has finally brought us into the rather dubious spotlight. I am just one person who has been, up to this time, practically the same as most of you. No longer can I sit and let others do the work—everyone must realize that the problems we face must be corrected by all those who wish to reap the benefits, and hopefully everyone does want to bring back peace and order, and at the same time institute brotherhood and happiness for all. Perhaps my comments are not the most eloquently written that you have read. I am truly sorry if you are displeased with my writing, but I care about making this world a better one for all involved. For those of you who can't seem to understand what I have said, listen to the Youngbloods when they say: "Come on people now. "Come on people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together, try to love one another right now, right now, RIGHT NOW!" Griff & the Unicorn Ron Chanutin Morrisville, Pa., senior HEY! IT'S STOPPED RAINING WE MADE IT! I PROBABLY CAUGHT COLD... THE WATER'S GONE DOWN, TOO I MIGHT GET FNEUROMIA I WONDER HOW DAISY CAME OUT OF THIS... SKIN DIVING, ANYONE? BY SOKOLOFF David Sokoloff 1970 BOOM! CHIL RIGHTS SLOW DOWN HAMNSWORTH CARSMELL DEFEAT LAOS WHITETAPRING SPIRIO INFLATION MRS. MITCHELL BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! IMPEACH DOUGLAS GARDER THE MINNESWEAR JOURNAL 'Yoo Hoo! Hey! Lookee Here!' 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 costs $8 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 660-6925, 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 STAR News Adviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor Ken Peterson Campus Editor Ted Iliff News Editor Donna Shraider Editorial Editors Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke Sports Editors Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver Makeup Editors Charlie Cape, George Wilkes Wine Editor Kcummins Women's Page Editors Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Reviews Editors Assistant Campus Editors Assistant News Editors Photographers Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffwell 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 Bassmon Classified Manager Shane Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Lagios KANSAN REVIEWS RECORDS: 'McCartney' By KENNETH CUMMINS Kansan Reviewer One week after Paul McCartney announced that he was leaving the Beatles, his solo album "McCartney" appeared. McCartney arranged and composed all the material on the album, naturally. He also plays all the instruments heard on the album and is the only vocalist, except for the occasions when his wife, Linda, joins him. A lot of McCartney's album reminds me of the Beatles, or else the Beatles remind me a lot of McCartney. Judging from the album it appears that the latter is truer. McCartney apparently had a tremendous influence on the instrumentation of the group. Especially good is the drumming, which at times sounds as though Ringo Starr decided to sit in. McCartney threw in a drum solo, "Kreen-Akre," just to demonstrate his versatility. But there is one member of the group that McCartney can't replace, and that's George Harrison. McCartney's guitar solos seem simple and naive when compared to Harrison's. And yet the guitar arrangements approach Harrison's style enough to remind me of him. In fact, much of the album is simpler and less intriguing than what the Beatles have done in the past. An exception to both of these last statements is "Oo Yoo" which reminds me of "Come Together." The best material on the album is the five instrumentals, especially "Momma Miss America," which is the best instrumental I have heard the Beatles, or Paul McCartney, do in a long time. "Singalong Junk" continues the easy listening sound of "Let It Be." The song is the instrumental version of "Junk" from the first side of the album but is far better. Another song worth mentioning is "Maybe I'm Amazed" a more complex number with a better guitar arrangement than most of the others on the album. McCartney never seems to get into the heavy bass parts that he has produced in the past. On several of the songs he just seems to be getting into something when the song ends. But the album does demonstrate his vast ability and his influence on the Beatles. From this album it appears that Lennon was the lyricist of the group while McCartney had more of an influence on the music. Oh well, it's ridiculous to discuss McCartney. Let the dead rest in peace. "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" (Hillcrest 1)—A grim and harrowing portrait of New York low life, acted by John Voight and Dustin Hoffman and directed by John Schlesinger. The Weekend Scene "BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE" (Hillcrest 2)—An intelligent and perceptive comedy about American sexual attitudes —in its fourth week. "RIVERRURN" (Hillcrest 3) — Quiet, sensitive work by independent film-maker John Korty, about a young couple attempting "ANNE OF THE THOUSAND DAYS (Granada)—A long and overblowed soap opera about Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, made palatable by Genevieve Bujold's lively performance. "MAROONED" (Varsity) — Gregory Peck works furiously to save three astronauts trapped in space. "A THOUSAND CLOWNS" life on a California sheep ranch. 'MAROONED' IS UP THERE WITH THE GREAT ONES! 'MAROONED' IS UP THERE WITH THE GREAT ONES! "MAROONED" A FRANCHIVEN STUDIOS PRODUCTION GREGORY PECK RICHARD CRENNA DAVID JANSEN. JAMES FRANCISCUS GENE HACKMAN MAROONED Panavision - Eastmancolor Directed by JOHN STURGIS from Columbia Pictures Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:00 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-1065 Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:00 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE · telephone VI 3-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... telphone VI 3-1065 "THE ORGANIZER" (International Series)—Italian film about turn-of-the-century labor strife, with Marcello Mastroianni in the title role. Directed by Mario Monicelli; 1964. "The Three Peony Opera," a bawdy musical comedy, will continue on the University Theatre main stage with performances at 8:20 p.m. tonight and Saturday, barring curfew interference. Three Penny Opera second show tonight The plot of the play revolves around the activities of an underground character in the slums of England named Mcheath, played by Michael Lynott, Scranton, Pa., graduate student, and his associates in that corrupt part of town The music in the play is directed by George Lawner, professor in the orchestra department and the stage director is Anita Masseth, instructor in speech and drama. Apr. 24 KANSAN 5 1970 NATALIE WOOD ROBERT CULP B & OB & CA CE RO E. TE OL B BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON consider the possibilities COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION LELDIY GOULD DYAN CANNOH Soundcast on Audio Aurora on Best Records Soundtrack's Audio Available on Belt Records Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:10 Adults $1.50 I.D.'s Required THE Hillcrest HATT SCHUL (Popular Film)—One of the best American comedies of the sixties, with marvelous performances by Jason Robards and Barbara Harris. Directed by Fred Coe; 1965. (7 and 39th, Dyche Auditorium) BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR A JEROME HELLMAN-JOHN SCHLESINGER PRODUCTION DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" Hillcrest Eve. 7:00 & 9:15; Adults $1.50 Matinee Sat. & Sun. 2:00 ID's required WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT riverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriver from the Berkeley campus to a lonely farm... every generation has to run its course. COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY with LOUISE OBER · JOHN McLIAM · MARK JENKINS · Color Evening 7:30 & 9:25 R A film by JOHN KORTY verrunverrunverrun verrunverrunverrun Mat. Sat. & Sun. Hillcrest 2:30 Hillcrest E Adults $1.50 ID's Requested Anne of the Thousand Days She was young and beautiful and ready to defy anyone, even a king. . . PETER SCHWERING He was King of England, ready to defy the world to get what or whom he wanted... Together They Lived, Loved and Hated for 1,000 Days and Nights. . . Granada THEATRE...telphone VI 3-728 NOW SHOWING Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50, Child. 75 sua FLICS MOVED sua to DYCHE A Thousand Clowns 7 & 9:30 7 only if curfew Friday & Saturday — NEXT WEEK — All Scheduled Films will be shown at Dyche FREE FILM THURSDAY — The Professionals — Earth's energy rapidly depleted Bricker suggests solar cells for energy The development of solar cells as a solution to an energy crisis was suggested by a KU professor at a Thursday seminar in conjunction with Earth Week, April 20-28. Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, said that if biologists could develop a mutant with a 10 per cent efficiency to capture the sun's energy, "we could get enough energy from the Painted Desert in one day for the entire United States." To illustrate the degree of crisis, Bricker used the letter "Q" to describe a large unit of Apr.24 1970 energy equal to 38 billion tons of coal. He said from 10,000 BC to 1850 AD the world used $ \frac{1}{2} $ Q of energy per century, from 1850-1950 the world used 4Q of energy and in 1969 the United States alone used .0065 Q of energy. The rate of energy is going up 4 or 5 per cent annually, he said. Bricker estimated that the total Q potential of energy in oil, gas, coal, and oil shale was between 58-94Q. He compared that figure with an estimated 85Q of energy that would be needed by the year 2500. town down the river suffers," he said. The main problem in finding a solution, Bricker said, was that there are no consumers of energy, only converters. "Whatever is dumped from Lawrence into the Kaw river, the next 6 KANSAN cost, Bricker said. He also said there was a danger in the cement casket containing nuclear waste springing a leak. One possible solution, nuclear energy, is prohibitive because of "You won't need a moon to see where the ocean is, it will be radiated," he said. Union clean-up needs helpers Five days after Monday night's $2 million Kansas Union fire, cleanup operations are in full swing with a major part being done by KU students. Kent Longnecker, Mission senior and Student Union Activities president, said Thursday further student help is invited. Two student shifts are being run daily—the first from 9-12 am. and the second from 1-4 p.m., Longencker said. He said that any interested student should call him at 842-6498 or 843-4811. Fred Meier, St. Louis senior, is also helping co-ordinate cleanup efforts and said students may call him at 842-4720. Only between 30 and 40 workers to each shift will be accepted, Longeneker said. Workmen are currently building temporary walls in the main lobby to form a hallway leading from the north entrance on the east side to the downstairs and new addition areas. The information counter and check-cashing counter will re-open upon completion of the hallway. The Hawks Nest and the Trail Room will possibly re-open today on a limited basis. Further re-openings will depend on cleanup and sanitation operations, Longenecker said. God's Country. In the general aviation business, we enjoy a particularly awesome privilege. Every day, we see America on the grand scale. With shifting perspectives and changing lights, it's quite a spectacle. Never the same twice From where we sit, for example, the small individual farms of the Great Plains sweep big and wide in a magnificent kaleidoscope of line and color. Just beautiful. It's quiet up here. We can't help seriously contemplating all of this land. Waving with wheat, crammed with corn, thick with orchards and green pastures where livestock roam. The promised land. It has fed the whole hungry world for a long, long time.Makes you wonder how we do it.How we even managed this thriving prosperous phenomenon called America. The answer always comes out Free Enterprise.The individual taking his freedom and building what he wants of and for himself and his family. Sooner or later, everyone in America benefits from that individual effort. Morally and materially. For 194 years, we have proved that free enterprise is no experiment. It works. Below us, we see the stunning proof—from the giant cities, small towns and back again to our generous ground that gives and gives yet never gives out. From up here, it is impossible to be numb and indifferent. We see the one thing that remains constant. This land. This republic. This unassailable freedom. This America. Beechcraft Beech Gircraft Corporation Wichita, Kansas 67201 Photo by Tim Yurnell from THIS IS MY LAND, Random House, Inc BARN RIVER FARM To be 'learning experience . Perry Lakesite for sailing regatta FJ 80812U US1866 If hopes for good wind and weather fulfilled . . . The president of the University of Kansas Sailing Club, Jim Walters, Junction City sophomore, has said the club's sailing regatta will be an opportunity for interested persons to learn how to sail. If hopes for good weather and wind are fulfilled, the event will be April 25 at 10 a.m. and then again from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Liberation movies advocate revolution By CHERYL BOWMAN Kansan Staff Writer The Kansas City Women's Liberation group met this week in the Kansas Union Big 8 Room to show films and slides calling for a "revolutionary reconstruction of society's institutions." The meeting, attended by about 100 men and women, began with comments from Susan Halverstadt, a member of the Kansas City group. Miss Halverstadt stressed the need for women to examine and change the institutions of our society so that women would be allowed to become full human beings. She said women's liberation was "women coming together to define themselves and to change their lives." A film, "Up Against the Wall Miss America," satirized the annual Miss America pageant in Atlantic City. The film showed several demonstrations against the pageant and the image it portrayed of women. The film's theme song was "No Miss America No More." Apr. 24 1970 KANSAN 7 One "sister" suggested that a demonstration be staged for the upcoming Miss Lawrence pageant. But another reminded them that some, including the beauty pagament type, were at different stages of liberation than others and that no "sister" should be alienated from the movement. Afterwards, "sisters," as the women were called by the liberation group, commented on the film. One of the men said American women were exploited. He said the American male had a limited acceptance of the female. He said it was up to men to show women that there was more to them than just looks. Another film, "Woman: A Broad Perspective," stressed the need for women to master reality. It reassured women longing to find their role in life that they were more than just wives and mothers—that a woman must decide for herself. The film stressed that women were human-like men—and called for women to examine each other. It said the women's liberation movement was not a struggle against men alone, but a radical revision of our social framework. By TERRY WILLIAMSON Kansan staff writer With hopes for beautitur weather and a good wind, the Sailing Club will sponsor a "learning experience" and sailing regatta April 25 on Perry Lake at 10 a.m. and from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Jim Walters, Junction City sophomore and president of the club, said that the regatta was started several years ago but faded out until last year. At that time, the Student Union Activities (SUA) asked that those interested in forming a Sailing Club and also in being its chairman submit applications. Walters got the job. "The purpose of the club," Walters said, "is to further the interest of sailing and to eventually develop a sailing team. This is very big now in the East." Walters said that intercollegiate sailing was entirely different. Instead of taking their own boats to the races, he said, the team goes and sails the hosts' boats. Walters said there was a definite advantage to being the host team, but that team had to have a lot of money to be able to furnish so many boats. He said that the SUA now contributed $50 per year to the club. He said if a team was formed the SUA would probably have to get a used boat because of the great expense of sailing boats. "The boats are expensive," Walters said, "running from $1000 to $1500 for a boat and trailer." son for sailing," Walters said. He said the club just got started in the fall, so the regatta would be their first chance. "So far it has been a bad sea- Walters said that April 25 would be a combination of an opportunity to learn how to sail and the actual sailing regatta in the afternoon. Relating an experience at the National Championship in Oakridge, Tenn., he told of the National secretary going around a KANSAN features buoy, when suddenly the boat reversed its course and started going back in the direction it had started from because of a shift in the wind. Walters said it really stunned him. SPECIAL SHIP SANDFEJORD, Norway (UP1) The former Norwegian whaling factory ship Thorshavet will be rebuilt into a fish processing ship to catch a special type of herring, the pilchard, off the South African coast. The pilchard is used as raw material for fishmeal and fish oil. The expedition, financed by a joint Norwegian-Swedish enterprise is expected to start operations early in 1970. 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 KU Hillel General Meeting Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr. When— Sunday, April 26, 1970 at 4:30 p.m. The Sitloin MARKETING DINE IN Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choice steaks. Fineest seafoods. Open 4:30 1¼ Mi. N. of Kaw Closed River Bridge Monday VI 3-1431 Kosher (for Passover) Dinner 50c for nonmembers Raney Drug Stores 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. Call Al Blumenthal: 842-1899 Nancy Friedman: 842-5895 Use Kansan Classified Where— For Transportation BANANA LIGHTFOOT BRAVE NEW WORKSHOP RED FRI DOG FREE BEER INN. SAT. DOLLAR NITE Direct from Minneapolis/St. Paul BOOM THE DAILY SACRETICE OF TAKEN AWAY THE AROMATION NOT DESOLATION WILL BE GIVEN MORE TO CLEM WHORO GREAT NOT THE OCCULT OF JESUS CHRIST A different kind of placard As the University of Kansas campus settled into an uneasy calm Thursday, an unidentified woman stood at the corner of Naismith Drive and Jayhawk Boulevard holding a sign urging repentance to all who took the time to notice. Threatening calls placed Several living groups received threatening telephone calls Wednesday evening and early Thursday morning. Most of the calls were bomb threats, but no bombs were reported found in any campus living groups, said Ian Davis, office manager of traffic and security. Naismith Hall received a call at about 12:15 a.m. Thursday morning warning that a bomb had been placed in the building, said Bruce Levitt, husband of the resident director. A night watchman took the call, Levitt said, and it was immediately reported to police. A description of the caller's voice was given to police, Levitt said, and the building was not evacuated. Several calls resulting in bomb threats were reported to police with the same voice description, he said. Levitt said the police told him evacuation did not seem necessary. A fire alarm was reported to Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall late Wednesday evening. The building was not evacuated and no fire was reported, said J. J. Wilson, director of residence and scholarship halls. A telephone call resulting in a bomb threat was reported at Corbin Hall at about 11:40 Wednesday evening. The building was not evacuated and no bomb reported found. Wilson said. A regular security guard and a voluntary guard were on duty in the Corbin area Wednesday night, Wilson said. They have 8 KANSAN Apr. 24 1970 been working very effectively and report almost no traffic during the early curfew period, he said. Vratil said he questioned whether such activity would have occurred without the curfew. the problems that could have resulted by releasing the girls while the building was being searched. "It was hard for me to believe that a bomb could have been placed in the building during that time," Wilson said. "Because of such good security crews capable of inspecting the building adequately, and so many crank calls, we left the residents inside." On Apple Records McCartney On Apple Records McCartney $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. "It seems like a scarce technique," said Dave Clark, Northbrook, Ill., junior. Persons committed to violence are out at night anyway, he said. it's doing but it's a good idea," said Kim Bolton, Overland Park junior. Bolton said he didn't mind staying inside. He said he thought the curfew should continue for about a week. Many persons resent being restricted by the authorities. The curfew might cause reactions that might not have happened otherwise, said John Vratil, Larned law student. More activity has occurred since the curfew was imposed than before, he said. The curfew was lifted for 14 hours Wednesday and placed on Lawrence again Wednesday and Thursday nights. For a half day individuals were allowed to leave home. The Community Building will open at 11 a.m. May 10 for browsing. Lunch and dinner will be available. Gamma Phi Beta sorority received a bomb threat at 10:17 p.m. Wednesday evening, said Nancy Pile, Louisville, Ky., sophomore and member of the house. The house was evacuated and several police and members of the National Guard came to search the house, she said. After about 40 minutes, the girls were allowed back in the house. Also to be auctioned off are services offered by the WILPF members. These include lessons in Hebrew, breadmaking and music theory for children and babysitting, yardwork and sewing. Students questioned about imposed curfew "It's the safest thing that can be done right now," said Don Farrington, Oswego senior. Chambers said the police are just getting a reaction of anger from many under the curfew. Individuals have no place to go that won't get them in some trouble, he said. Many opinions arose about the curfew the night before and students were questioned about their feelings. For many it was the lst time they had been under such a curfew. Objects to be auctioned include homemade bread, peace jewelry and gift items, a large collection of used books, mounted art photos and rummage, including clothes, furniture, toys, plants and old appliances. "They should put an age limit on the curfew," said Ken Chambers, Kansas City, Mo., junior. "Students of the University should be old enough to know how to take care of themselves in this type of situation." "I don't know how much good More individuals are involved now than would have been if the curfew would not have been imposed, he said. There's no way to tell if the demonstrators are just being antagonistic or really trying to start something, he said. "It's good to let the student body know that the police mean business," Farrington said. "It was a mistake," said Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior. "It has accelerated the whole business of fires, sniper firing and bombing." Wilson said he also considered Women's league to hold, sponsor big peace auction A giant peace auction, sponsored by the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, will be held at 1 p.m. May 10 at the Community Building. Proposal eliminates electoral college vote WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Judiciary Committee recommended Thursday amending the Constitution to provide for direct, popular election of the President. The proposed amendment, sponsored by Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Indd, would eliminate the Electoral College system under which presidents have been elected during the past 180 years. The committee approved the proposal by a vote of 11 to 6, breaking an 11-month deadlock. The House of Representatives already has approved a similar amendment. Demands for reform of the electoral system intensified after the 1968 presidential election. The third-party candidacy of former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace threatened to deny a majority to any candidate. Such an outcome would have thrown the election into the House of Representatives. Although the Bayh amendment got an almost 2 to 1 majority in the committee, it will have tougher sledding in the Senate, where a two-thirds majority vote will be required. KU LAWRENCE KU Students Cleaning Headquarters LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities 1029 New Hampshire Phone 843-3711 1905 For the best snack around, come to Burger Chef. You'll love our Super Shef. - 100% Pure Beef - 9th & Iowa St. LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS KANSAS Wilhelm unable to attend Steve Wilhelm, KU shotputter and discus thrower, twisted his ankle during practice this week and will not be able to attend the 61st annual Drake Relays in Des Moines this weekend. Kansas baseball coach Floyd Temple has decided to shake up his defensive alignment in this weekend's three game set against Colorado in hopes of strengthening the Jayhawks overall potential. Baseballers head for Colorado The major switch will come in the form of the coach's son, Biff Temple, who just joined the Jayhawks last week after recuperating from an off-season knee injury. Temple, the Jayhawks regular centerfelder last year, will make his first start of the season against the Buffaloes but it will be at a different position-first base. Regular first baseman Skip James will move to center field. In another major move by coach Temple, error-plagued Jo makes rookie team Former Kansas basketball player Jo Jo White was named Thursday to the National Basketball Association's All-Rookie team. White, who played for the Boston Celtics, was third in the balloting with eight votes. Lew Alcindor, the NBA's Rookie of the Year, was the only unanimous choice to the mythical team. Alcindor, the dominating 7-foot-2 Milwaukee center, was selected by all of the 14 NBA coaches in the ballotting. Teammate Bob Dandridge was next with 12 votes. Rounding out the team were Dick Garrett of Los Angeles and Mike Davis of Baltimore. Garrett and Davis each received seven votes. Honorable mention went to Norm Van Lier of Cincinnati, Lucius Allen of Seattle and Rick Roberson of Los Angeles. KU track team loses two to injuries prior to relays The Kansas track team bused a 27-man squad to Des Moines Thursday for the 61st annual Drake Relays, but left home two athletes with injuries. Steve Wilhelm, one of the Jayhawks' large weightmen, and Jay Mason, a distance runner, both suffered twisted ankles this past week. "Wilhelm was throwing the discus and running out to get it," Coach Bob Timmons said, "when he stepped in a hammer hole." The injury occurred Tuesday. Timmons said Mason's injury happened Sunday as he was training on a country road. "He stepped on a rock and twisted his ankle," he said. "I do not think either of them is hurt real bad," Timmons said, "but I will keep them out of competition this weekend. I do not want to mess them up for the conference meet." Kansas discus thrower Doug Knop will have his last chance at capturing the discus title at Drake in competition that begins today and continues through tomorrow. The title has eluded Knop for three years. He finished second as a sophomore and did not place last year. Weightman Karl Salb will attempt to defend last year's shotput title and Bill Penny will challenge the defending national champion in the hammer. Coach Timmons will have his runners competing in six relays at Drake. Heading the baton squad will be the sprint medley and the distance medley relays that won on their home track the past weekend. KANSAN Sports shortstop Keith Leippman will switch positions with regular third baseman Paul Womble. Leippman, who is leading KU in hitting with a .400 average, has already committed eight errors this season. KU is last in the conference in team fielding with only a .923 average. Jayhawk pitching rotation will remain the same. Ex-basketballer Dave Robisch will pitch in the opener and Bill Stiegemeier will hurl in the nightcap. Golf team plays host The KU golf team will turn host for the first time this year today as it entertains other Big Eight teams in a meet at the Lawrence Country Club. Tomorrow the Jayhawks and other league teams travel to Manhattan where Kansas State will host a similar meet. Today's meet will be a preview of the Big Eight championship tournament which will be played in Lawrence May 15-16. The golfers will play 18 holes and scoring will be based on each team's four lowest individual scores. KU coach 'Wilbur Norton feels his team has a chance to do well. "The players have been scoring well in practice and because we know the course, I hope we do well," Norton said. Norton will probably use Jack Rogers, Keokuk, Iowa, senior; Jim Dennerline, Paola freshman; Warren Wood, Independence, Kan, senior; and Craig DeLongy, Derby sophomore. Stiegemier currently ranks fourth in the Big Eight pitching statistics with an earned-run-average of 1.39. Robisch, who also just joined the team, has an earned-run-average of 0.00 in the 6 innings he has pitched thus far Temple said that Robisch will not pitch the entire game. It is likely that Bob Wolf will relieve the big southnaw late in the game. "Robisch is coming along" Temple said, "but his arm isn't completely ready for a full game yet." Corky Ullom will pitch in Saturday afternoon's finale Temple said. Both KU and the Buffaloes will attempt to jump to the first division in the conference race. The Jayhawks are 2-3 while Colorado is 3-4. The probable starting lineup and batting order for KU is: 1. John Riggins, rf; 2. Lynn Snelgrove, 2b; 3. Keith Leippman, 3b; 4. Skip James, cf; 5. Ken Carpio, lf; 6. Paul Womble, ss; 7. Biff Temple, 1b; 8. Larry Matson,c. HALL OF FAMER COACH TITLE OF FAMER COACH CINCINNATI (UPI) - Paul Brown of the AFL Bengals, is the oldest active professional head coach who is a member of Professional Football's Hall of Fame. Brown is now in his 35th year of coaching in a career that began at Massillon High School in Ohio. On Apple Records McCartney On Apple Records McCartney $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Apr. 24 1970 KANSAN 9 Go places! ...as a UNITED Stewardess "The friendly skies of United" are a great place to work! An exciting, rewarding career is yours as a United Air Lines stewardess. INTERVIEWS Thurs., April 30, May 14, 28 UNITED AIR LINES Administrative Offices Kansas City Municipal Airport For Appt. Call 421-7092 If you are a high school graduate, at least 19 $ \frac{1}{2} $ years of age, 5'2" to 5'9" in height with weight in proportion, and single, we'd like to talk to you! United Air Lines An Equal Opportunity Employer Now Leasing Don't Be too Late! Live in the Manner in which Everyone Should Be Accustomed! Live in the ALL NEW PARK 25 APARTMENTS. 1 BEDROOM 1 BATH 2 BEDROOM 1 BATH 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH TOWNHOUSES Now Leasing For More Information Phone Mrs. Sadler, 842-1455 Stop by and talk to her. 2530 W. 25th #2 CENTRAL AIR DISHWASHER CAR PORTS POOL IOWA 25th Street N E W S N W E S UU Photo by Ron Bishop A tree pass necessary? A campus police officer checks out the identification of (left) Sam Perkins, Prairie Village junior and Conrad Yumang, Leavenworth junior, after they climbed a large pine tree in front of Flint Hall Thursday afternoon. The two said they climbed the tree to break the monotony of the curfew. Med Center certificates to be given Sixteen persons will receive Emeritus certificates from the University of Kansas Medical Center at 4 p.m. today in Battenfeld Auditorium at KUMC. Dr. C. Arden Miller, former KUMC dean and provost and presently vice-chancellor of health sciences at the University of North Carolina, will be speaker for the event. Those receiving certificates are: Dr. Michael Bernreiter, department of medicine; Dr. Pennie, department of medicine; Dr. H. Hashinger, department of medicine; Dr. Ralph H. Major, department of medicine; Dr. Suton Jr., department of medicine; Hugh L. Dwyer, pediatrics; Dr. George V. Herrman, pediatrics; Dr. Marie V. Herrman, pediatrics; Dr. Robert M. Isenberger, Pharmacology; Miss Sarah Patterson, Nursing Education; Dr. Paul G. Roofe, Anatomy; and Dr. Galen M. Tie, radiology. Four certificates are being accepted by the department of medicine; Dr. Ralph I. Canutson, department of medicine; and Dr. H. B. LATIN, maternology; and Dr. H. B. LATIN, maternology. Percy Faith His Orchestra & Chorus Love Theme from "Romeo und Juliet" Featuring Theme from A Summer Place including Good Morning Starshine Spinning Wheel Aquarius Without Her One On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. KU students assault tree Use Kansan Classified The calm that fell over the University of Kansas campus Thursday was punctuated by the assault of a tall pine tree in front of Flint Hall by two mountain climbers who lacked a mountain. Sam Perkins, Prairie Village junior, and Conrad Yumang, Leavenworth junior, said they climbed the gnarled pine tree because "it was there" and "to break the monotony of the curfew." With no special equipment except a long rope, the two braved tree limbs, tree sap, a jeering crowd and one campus police officer during their ascent and descent of the wood perennial. The small crowd gathered below the tree surveyed the pair with some amusement. One spectator asked the pair whether they had a tree pass. Undaunted, the two nonchalantly reached the ground and listened to the words of the waiting police officer. During the climb, the campus police officer serenely wrote information on a standarized form. Under the title "property attacked," he wrote, "pine tree." Under the title "how attacked," was written, "climbing the tree with a large one inch rope." The officer then asked for identification of the students and warned them not to climb trees on campus. The pair have no future plans for other assaults, but an onlooker suggested as they walked off that they might try the campanile. YMCA resolution calls for 10% minority voice Journalists receive Medal of Freedom WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon presented the Medal of Freedom Wednesday night to eight distinguished journalists, one posthumously, at a glittering White House gathering. With high praise for the winners of the nation's highest civilian award, Nixon told an East Room audience the journalists informed "millions of Americans what goes on here." "America has been very fortunate to have people of varying views telling the story of America . . . told the story of politics," he said. The ages of those honored ran from 71 to 89, which led one of the recipients, Edward Foliard of the Washington Post, to remark "this ceremony is a triumph for maturity." The medal for Bill Henry of the Los Angeles Times, who died a week ago, was accepted by his grandson, Capt. Patrick McHartue, but Nixon said Henry knew a month ago he would be given the medal. A resolution which calls for ten per cent minority group representation and ten per cent female representation on all national boards and committees was passed at a recent Young Men's Christian Association convention in Kansas City. German engineer Carl Benz designed and built the first commercially successful motor car. TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO The delegates who represented the KU-Y at the convention were Barry Albin, Topeka senior; Gary Gardiner, McPhrerson sophomore; Walter Mooney, Overland Park senior; Tom Moore, KU-Y director and Mike Blakely, Topeka junior. - Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 ★ Student specials ★ New, experienced management HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 ATTENTION. Incredible Card Holders! The summer 1970 Incredible Tour Program has now been finalized and reservations are being accepted for the following tours ... all Incredible Tours include air transportation, hotel accommodations, transfers and taxes (some even include meals and sightseeing). We promised great tours at great prices . . . and here they are . . . ACAPULCO $196 from Kansas City $135 from Dallas 4 Days, May 28-31 HAWAII $433 from Kansas City 14 Days, August 2-15 NASSAU CRUISE $263.40 from Kansas City 5 Days, June 1-5 ACAPULCO EUROPE $202 from Kansas City 5 Days, August 26-30 $425 from Kansas City 15 Days, July 30-August 13 HAITI $309 from Kansas City 8 days, September 1-8 (Prices based on current air fares & are subject to change) For complete brochure and other information, mail the attached coupon to the Incredible Card tour desk or call 913/843-2540. Space is limited, so call or write today. 10 KANSAN Apr. 24 1970 COMPUTER SERVICES CORP. 1304 EXPRESSWAY TOWER • DALLAS, TEXAS 75206 Send me a complete brochure on CSC's Incredible Tour information on the Incredible Card and all of its many money saving programs. □ I understand there will be no obligation. Name___Card No. Street For Top Quality Head For Henry's henrys City___ State___ Zip. For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. V13-2139 TONIGHT & SATURDAY NIGHT SUGAR BEAR will perform for you from 8:00 to 12:00 "WE WANT YOU!" The DRAU GHT HOUSE Kroger Family Center Scissors Clip 'n' Save $$$ Clip These Coupons and Come to Kroger's and Save On These Specials Kroger's Health & Beauty Aids Savings VALUABLE COUPON ALBERTO VO5 CREME RINSE 10.8 Oz.$.57 Our Regular $.87 Limit 2 Good Through April 28 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20000 VAIUABLE COUPON 1002 ALBERTO V05 HAIR SETTING GEL 8 oz. size $.67 Our Regular $1.07 Limit 2 Good Through April 28 00000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON 000 PACQUIN HAND CREAM 2 for $1.00 5.75 oz. with free with coupon lotion sample, $1.00 value, Limit 2 Good Through April 28 20000 VALUABLE COUPON 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 000 ALBERTO V05 LIGHT TOUCH All-Over Body Deodorant Regular 1.07 size $.43 a can—Limit 2 cans Good Through April 28 VALUABLE COUPON 20000 VALUABLE COUPON SCOPE MOUTHWASH & GARGLE 12 oz. $ .57 Our Regular $.81 Limit 2 With Coupon Good Through April 28 ALBERTO V05 SHAMPOO 7 oz. size $.57 Regular, dry, frequent Limit 2 Our Regular $.81 Good Through April 28 00000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON 000 VALUABLE COUPON 00000000000000000000000000000000 RAYETTE AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY Simple hold, unscented, regular 13 oz. size $.36 with coupon Our regular $.55 Limit one Good Through April 28 Clip 'n' Save At Kroger's Family Center 00000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON RINSE AWAY RINSE For positive control of dandruff 6 oz. size $.57 with coupon Our Regular $.88 Limit 2 Good Through April 28 Kroger's Food Savings VALUABLE COUPON 15c Toward Purchase Of KROGER'S SALTINES 1 lb. box oupon Good Through April 28 00000000000000000000000000000000 VAIUABLE COUPON Clip'n'at At Kroger's Family Center 00000 Old Milwaukee Beer 6—12 oz. bottles $ .75 Sale Good Through April 28 This is not a coupon offer. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 VALUABLE COUPON 10c Toward Purchase Of LUNCHEON MEAT 8-ox. or larger size Coupon Good Through April 28 20000 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON 10c Toward Purchase Of Package of 4 or more Jumbo Size APPLES Coupon Good Through April 28 00000000000000000000000000000000 20000 VALUABLE COUPON 20c Toward Purchase Of 6-PACK ANY BRAND OF BEER Limit one 6-pack per coupon Coupon Good Through April 28 20c Toward Purchase Of 22 10c Toward Purchase Of 2 lbs. or more BANANAS Coupon Good Through April 28 VALUABLE COUPON 00000000000000000000000000000000 VALUABLE COUPON 0002 10c Toward Purchase Of Any Size CHEDDAR CHEESE Coupon Good Through April 28 元 00000000000000000000000000000000 20000 VALUABLE COUPON 000 50c Toward Purchase Of Country Club or Corn King CANNED HAM Any Size Coupon Good Through April 28 Lawyers to study Penn State unrest UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) — The Board of Trustees of Penn State University Thursday night appointed a panel of three prominent state attorneys to hear the cases of students accused of fomenting campus violence and recommended punishment "up to and including expulsion." G. Albert Shoemaker, board chairman who disclosed the decision after a lengthy board meeting in Pittsburgh, said the trust- Patrolman detects SDS tactics during week of KU disturbance A Kansas State Highway Patrol official compared the pattern of violence in Lawrence this week to tactics used by the Weathermen, the activist faction of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). "The tactics that are being used are very much like SDS Weathermen tactics," Colonel William Albott said Thursday. He added that this group "uses fear to gain an open door." Albott said although there was speculation that militant blacks were responsible for the violence, the racial disturbances at Lawrence High School this week could be a diversion. Albott explained that other activist groups could be using the incidents at the high school to avoid suspicion. A Kansas Bureau of Investigation official, Merv Purdy, does not believe there is a Weathermen faction based in Lawrence. "We do have a faction of SDS here, but we don't know if it's Weathermen," Purdy said. He said Abbie Hoffman's remarks April 8 would indicate that no hard-core revolutionaries exist here. In his speech at Allen Field House the night of the student strike, Hoffman criticized KU's radicals as not being revolutionary. Purdy said it would be possible however for Weathermen to come from another area. Committee appointed to select KUMC dean Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. announced the appointment of a Search Committee which will seek a replacement for Dr. George A. Wolf Jr., dean of the School of Medicine and Provest of the University of Kansas Medical Center. The committee consists of Dr. Charles E. Brackett Jr., acting dean of the School of Medicine; Dr. Clifford Gurney, chairman of the department of internal medicine; Dr. Juanita Murphy, representing nursing education; Mr. Russell H. Miller, director of the Med Center, representing hospital administration; Edward J. Walaszek, chairman of the department of pharmacology, representing the basic science departments; Dr. David W. Robinson, representing the senior clinical faculty; Dr. Virginia Tucker, representing the junior clinical faculty; Dr. George E. Med graduates practice Six hundred and forty-two of the physicians in the greater Kansas City area are graduates of the KU Medical Center. KU physician alums number 1,134 in the state of Kansas and 431 in Missouri. ees "had moved as strongly as they could within the legal limits recommended by university counsel." 12 KANSAN Apr. 24 1970 Burket Jr., practicing physician from Kingman; Tim Taylor, graduate student in anatomy; Arthur Douville, 4th year med student; and Dr. Robert Trueworthy, chairman of the house staff committee (residents and interns) and fellow in pediatric cardiology. Appointed to the panel were Robert E. Woodside, a former Superior Court judge and state attorney general; Genevieve Blatt, former state internal affairs secretary, and William T. Coleman Jr., a black lawyer who served on the commission on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. "The panel will serve as a fact-finding body," a university statement said, "and if students are found guilty it will recommend to the university appropriate punishment which may be up to and including expulsion." McCartney On Apple Records McCartney $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. tion and replaced it with the compromise injunction. Beginning and the End of World War III Are Coming! The Beginning: "Year of the Pig" and The end: "The War Game" See These Two Academy Award Films APRIL 29 - MAY 1 Earlier in the day, militant students at Penn State consented to compromise on a court injunction barring them from seizing control of any building on the sprawling central Pennsylvania campus. The court order was hammered out in a $5\frac{1}{2}$ hour session between the students, university attorneys and Judge R. Paul Campbell of Centre County Court. More than 300 Penn State students crowded the courtroom while the attorneys for both sides met with Campbell. A hearing on the original injunction had been set for mid-morning but the agreement was not announced until that afternoon. The school has endured sporadic violence, including bricks thrown through the windows of the president's home and firebombings, since April 15 when state police were called in to enforce a preliminary injunction against 150 anti-war protesters who occupied the administration building, Old Main. Twenty-nine persons were arrested then and more arrests have been made since. Campbell's original injunction was issued when violence erupted during a campus demonstration April 15. The trustees condemned the recent turmoil; told Eric A. Walker, Penn State president, not to grant amnesty to students who are arrested, and instructed university attorneys to seek a permanent injunction against student occupations of campus buildings. In Bellefonte, Pa., Judge Campbell scheduled a hearing early Friday on a new permanent injunction, based on the compromise wording agreed to by the students and the school. He rescinded the preliminary injunc Since then, at least 37 persons were arrested and 18 state policemen injured, eight of them treated, in incidents of rock throwing, arson, fire-bombings, bomb threats and campus rallies. auto europe dept. 47-B STUDENT/FACULTY GRANT Program Special rates in European overseas travel for purchase, lease, & rental of cars. For details and brochure write: University Grant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 Second Avenue, New York, New York 10021. Address ... 7in YOU'RE GOING GREAT IN PEDWIN A cool, casual way to keep your cool. Pedwin sandals. They're imported from Italy, with all leather uppers. Take your choice. Either style, you'll know you've got a good thing going. pedwin. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street [Image of a man in a suit] Photo by Mike Radencich Retiring after 35 years at KU N. W. Storer, professor of astronomy, is retiring at the end of this year after 35 years at KU. Storer began teaching at KU in 1935 but now plans to "just take it easy for a while." Although Storer's retirement is due to an age limit, he said he would have retired soon anyway. Ellsworth Hall stages curfew 'turtle toddle' While a wave of violence threatened the Lawrence and campus areas, Ellsworth Hall locked its doors and trash chutes and staged a turtle race followed Protesters take building at Stanford STANFORD. Calif. (UPI) About 250 anti-ROTC protesters swept in and occupied a building of Stanford University Thursday after clashing with students who tried to bar their way. About 40 students belonging to the Free Campus Movement stood in front of the doors in a vain effort to keep the demonstrators out. At least two students were knocked unconscious during the brief fray. Once inside the center, the group jostled newspaper and television cameramen and forced them briefly from the lobby. Several invaders wore ski or stocking masks to prevent identification. by a "cooling down" with free ice cream cones. All nine turtles entered in the race were placed in the center of a circle eight feet in diameter. The winner, "Turkey," streaked by the outside circle in a flash of speed outdistancing the other turtles by several turtle lengths. Second and third places went to "Cecil-Stuewe" and "Man-Mountain." Turtle owner and trainer Kay Doderer, Iowa City, Iowa freshman, swept win, place and show with her turtles. When asked what the secret of her success with racing turtles was, she replied, "You give it vacations and feed it on salami and dead flies." Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa BURGER CHEF Use Kansan Classified A happy boy playing the flute. Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 Astronomy professor retires after 35 years DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 Apr. 24 1970 KANSAN 13 X COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. After giving 35 years in service to the University of Kansas, N. W. Storer, professor of astronomy, is retiring to an easier life PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa V1 3-9868 Storer said Wednesday that even though his retirement was brought on by age limit, he would have retired soon anyway because he wants to return to things of a family and business nature. "I would just like to take it easy for awhile and not have to worry about deadlines hanging over my head," he said. After receiving his B.A. and M.A. in astronomy from Wesleyan University in Connecticut, Storer went to California and completed his doctorate there in 1927. He taught at Smith College in Massachusetts for a year and a half until the curriculum was changed to place less emphasis on astronomy. He then went back to Connecticut Wesleyan to teach there for a year. Storer said that he might look for a small job with a school that hires retired professors so that he can continue his work in astronomy. Storer acquired his job at KU in a "roundabout" way, he said. After his year at Wesleyan of Connecticut, he went to Ohio Wesleyan for two years until pressure from the depression caused the administration to drop 25 per cent of its faculty. he said. Storer said he went back to Connecticut Wesleyan and held a $1,000 a year job. After his first year there, a professor took a leave of absence and Storer took over his position with a pay increase. Storer said he taught summer school until 1934 when he was offered a job at Smith College to replace a professor who had died. It was during this year, he said, that he received an offer to teach at the University of Kansas during the summer session on a trial basis. KU decided to keep him for a permanent teaching position as head of the astronomy department. The astronomy department, he said, is now looking for a professor to fake over as head of the department and is now reviewing four possibilities. Storer said that if a replacement is not found next year, the astronomy department will most likely be combined with the physics department so that a major in astrophysics instead of astronomy will be offered. SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA APARTMENTS 842-1160 1704 West 24th Beautiful one and two bedroom units NOW renting for summer and fall drapes . . . carpeting . . . air conditioning . . all electric kitchen with disposal . . pool . . laundry . . storage . . furnished or unfurnished. all units include: Convenient location on bus route See them today 猫XK 1 FREE TGIF with KU ID Every Friday! MAD KA me YUK 10 FREE TGIF with KU ID Every Friday! YVES MONTAND IRENÉ PAPAS JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT GP BEST FOREIGN FILM 1969! AN NGC THEATRE FINE ARTS Fairway 262-0701 WEEKNIGHTS at 7:00 - 9:30 SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2:00 - 4:30 - 7:00 - 9:30 ! YVES MONTAND IRENE PAPAS JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT Z GP 1 Photo by John Ebling It's in the bag . . . A design III class jumped inside bags Thursday afternoon as a sculpture project. Being inside the white linen sacks gave the students freedom to perform whatever motions they wanted to express. When asked how long they would be in the bags, their instructor, Bill Blackhurst, said, "Oh, we'll probably let them out for dinner." Sculptors gather for display Sculptors from across the nation have gathered at the University of Kansas for their sixth conference on the campus. A collection of artist's works is being displayed in Allen Field House while panel discussions and lectures are being held in Woordruff Auditorium today. The conference was started at KU 10 years ago to make it possible for sculptors to get together to communicate on what is going on in their profession. KU was chosen for the conference because it is centrally located and because of its outstanding sculpture department. Persons attending the conference are instructors and students involved in sculpture as well as people from industry who are helping sculptors find a market for their talents and to show them new equipment and techniques. The displays in the field house include artforms in steel, bronze sculptures, wood plastic, neon lights and even includes a display made of red and blue balloons filled with helium. COST BY ACRE ST. THOMAS, Virgin Islands (UPI)—The $25 million paid by the United States for the Virgin Islands in 1917 represented $295 per acre, compared with 2 cents an acre paid for Alaska and $38.80 an acre for the Panama Canal Zone. kind of stone. Many materials being demonstrated are tempting to masters in the art of sculpture. A prominent sculptor from New York is scheduled to speak Saturday on environmental sculpture. Isamu Noguchi was described as "one of the real pros of American sculpture." His most exciting designs are in the environmental area and were recently the subject of a feature story in Life magazine, said Elden Tefft, instructor in design at KU and director of the conference. 14 KANSAN Apr.24 1970 Events will be scheduled in Woodruff Auditorium and the Kansas Union until the end of the conference Saturday. Amidst a week of terror and tension, at least a few KU men have been able to turn the situation to their advantage. These are the handful of men who have volunteered to guard the sorority houses and women's halls during the curfew. "It wouldn't have helped if someone had stormed the house," she said, "but it did calm everyone down a little bit." The women seemed to feel much safer with men around, Priscilla Myers, Overland Park junior and member of Chi Omega sorority said Thursday. Mark Brandstead, McPherson Several of the sororities had already asked men to guard their houses Tuesday night. Summer Language Institute CHINESE FRENCH GERMAN HEBREW ITALIAN RUSSIAN SPANISH As a result of meetings Wednesday of the Panhellenic Presidents' Council and a housing committee, it was suggested that at least two men student volunteers be posted at each sorority house and the women's residence halls which do not have regularly assigned patrolmen. Teftt said it is especially important that sculptors meet with industry because so few companies deal in supplies for them. The lectures from industry tell the sculptors how best to build their ideas to be useful to industry. June 29 - August 28, 1970 University of California Santa Cruz Living - learning language programs for beginning and intermediate students. Student volunteers guard sororities, halls Intensive nine week sessions at Merrill College, UCSC. 15 units University credit. When asked how he liked spending the night in a sorority house, Brandstead said, "It wasn't so unusual. By 3 a.m. I was so tired I didn't care where I was." Many kinds of equipment are being shown, including a fire torch that will cut through any junior, stayed in the Chi Omega house Wednesday night. He said he spent most of the time in the living room trying to study. Application deadline: May 10 Cost: $661 including room and board for further information write: for further information write: Ben T. Clark, Summer Language Institute UC Santa Crua, Ca. 95060 A There were no men guarding the Kappa Alpha Theta house, a resident said. She said the girls felt guarding the house was too much responsibility to place on a couple of men. Besides, she said, the Theta house is between the Beta Theta Pi and the Sigma Chi houses and the men from those fraternities were watching over the grounds. Thousand Clowns Starring: Jason Robarts Barbara Harris Martin Balsam 7 and 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium 50c SUA Popular Film Series April 24 On Apple Records McCartney $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. GM MARK OF EXCELLENCE Two new Chevelles at two new lower prices. C Chevelle 4-Door Sedan $148* less than our previous lowest priced 4-door. Chevelle Sport Coupe $147* less than our previous lowest priced hardtop. Chevelle 4-Door Sedan $148* less than our previous lowest priced 4-door. Chevelle Sport Coupe Chevelle Sport Coupe We took America's best selling mid-size car. Then, added two new lower priced models, including a Sport Coupe that's priced less than any other mid-size hardtop you can buy. Still, they both have Chevelle's smart new grille for 1970. And Chevelle's newly styled Body by Fisher. And Chevelle's Full Coil suspension with custom fitted springs at each wheel. And Chevelle's wide-stance chassis design, side-guard beams in the doors, cargo-guard luggage compartment, bias belted ply tires. Lower priced they are, by as much as $148. But lower priced looking and feeling they aren't. Which will get us no love notes from the competition. But maybe it will from you. Putting you first, keeps us first. CHEVROLET *Based on manufacturer's sug- reted retail prices, including tax and suggested dealer new car preparation charges. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES One day Three days 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $0.3 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the various sections are credited 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, 41 W. 14th St. Audio Discount-your A.R., Dynacom, and Revco dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Noreloel tape recorder cassettes, regular $2.95, sale price now $1.99. They fit all brands. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. Office furniture - desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impacable copies, theses dissertation collating include thesis data for the journal Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-36441 tt Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. ff 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383, Formula S. belted G-70's, low mileage Perfect condition. Dick at 616 KG or 842-5225. 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect condition. Must sell now! Call 843-6707. 1966 Chevelle SS 396. Only 26,000 miles! Excellent condition. Yellow with black vinyl top. 4-speed. 4 new tires. Call 843-2954. 4-24 1968 BSA Victor, 441cc, dirt or road bike. Real good condition, hauls. 842- 1200 after 6. Ask for John in 226. 4-24 '70 Datsun 2-litre, 5 speed, 120 m.p.h, 1800 miles, silver-black, 135 horsepower. Extras. Call Chip. 843-3310. 4-24 Must sell diamond ring set-engagement band, wedding band, both with diamonds. 843-0152. First National Bank. 4-27 $1.75! That's all it costs to place a 25-word classified ad for 5 days. But you find such a bargain? In the Knox For Sale "For Sale" umn, of course. Relaxacissor, used, but in perfect condition. Instruction book included. Price: $80—cheap if roommates share. Call 842-3803. Flute- Arteley, good condition. New pads. Rogers drums, excellent condition, w/Rogers hardware, silver pearl. 842-5648. 4-24 1965 Triumph TR-4—red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, see this for spring, $1300, 842- 2191. 4-28 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRS, British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelin X tires, $1800, 842-2191. 4-28 Must sell 1963 Nashua mobile home, 10 x 55, fully furnished and carpeted. 2 bedroom, din. room, low court fee. Asking $2350. 842-4165. 4-28 1969 Datsun 2000 conv. 135 hp—OHC engine. 5-speed, 6-ply radials w/mags, disc brakes, heavy rotary, many disc brakes. 2-Tonneau covers, anteri. 842-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-28 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800, 842- 2191. 4-28 1968 Flat 850 Spyder, convertible, white with black top, black deluxe interior, fine condition thru-out, low mileage, $1400, 842-2191. 4-28 1963 Austin Healy Sprite, black, removeable hardtop, new clutch, $1100, 842-2191. 4-28 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, black convertible top, body in excel- ent condition, overhauled transmission, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1969 Toyota Corolla, looks new, gray hardtop with optional 4-wheel drive. $1500, $1800, 2-191, 4-28 1967 VW, silver mist paint with black interior, 76 hp., duty suspension, very economical on gas, good tires, $1500. 842-2191. 4-28 1966 GTO—yellow with black convertible top. 4-spad, big engine, equipped with stereo speakers, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air, V-8, automatic transmission, premium belted tires, excellent condition. No reasonable offer refused. 842-6783. 4-28 1982 Buick LeSabre 4-dr. sedan, power steering, power brakes, A.C., good tires, runs good. $400. Call 843-8833 after 5 p.m. 4-24 "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W.6th Save yourself $3.00. Current Western Western 750 $7.50 B481. 8481. Ask for Alam 4-28 Repossessed 1969 Chevy II. Yellow with black interior, bucket seats, V-8. 3-speed. See at the National Bank. 4-27 Component stereo system with Fisher XP55b speaker and Nikko amp, warranty left on all components, plus rock left on record collection, $210, 4-27 5050 Magnavox stereo, console, contemporary styling, diamond stylus, walnut grained, excellent condition, 5 months from leaving Lawrence, $189,424-862.760 New 735-1X (E78-1X) radial 4 belt tubless tires disc tread design cut to $25.00 plus $2.80 Fed. tax—faint at station at Hay Stonechuck 9, 429 Mass. Spinet plano, in dark mahogany, benen linen, in good condition, $250 842-7760 4-29 Guitar—classical and folk, Italian mad·gibson import, spruce top, rosewood sid's and back, an exceptionally mellow and responsive guitar. Call Ken West at Oliver Hall in morning. 4-29 $1 Chevrolet station wagon, great me- tle for a big family for parlay $125. 842-5197 6 after 4-29 1967 Sunbeam Alpine, convertible, $1.150 Call 843-2060. 4-29 Classical Guitar, excellent condition. Call 842-5717 after 6:00 p.m. 4-29 '67 Corvette, 327 cu in., 300 hp, air- conditioned, AM-FM radio, 3-speed, good condition. Getting married, must sell, 842-5631 by 7 p.m. 4-27 Apartment furnishings. Am graduating, must sell: Hollywood wood bed, box springs and mattress. Hide-a-Bed, 2 mattresses, 2 end tables, small desk, easy chair, 4 foot air conditioner, phonograph, and other assorted furnishings. 4-30 1967-68 Triumph Spitfire, 2 tops (1 new), tape deck, speakers, new snow tires, 18,500 miles, $1800.00. Phone 842-3391. Excellent condition. 4-30 Curfew special: Drum set still for sale 4 silver sparkle. 3 Zildijan cymbals. Priced to sell. Call Jeff. 843-1711. 4-30 '61 Thunderbird in good condition. 4-30 Call 748-9813. 1965 VW. New engine. Excellent running condition. 843-959 use 5 4-30 Classic 1960 TR-3A. Incomparable at any price. Bargaining starts at $750. Very runnable. Call J. B. at 843-2103. Fisher 400 Stereo Receiver, 65 watts, lots of controls. Looks and sounds like new. Must sell. Need cash des- persely. 842-1047. 4-30 1966 Olds 442 convertible. Good condition, air conditioned, power steering, $1450. Call 843-5112 after 5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Ask for Parris. 4-30 NOTICE 615 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que; if you want some honest-to-goodness Bar Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-5510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday tf Find your Date-Mate by computer, 5 dates $6.00. Hitec GRI-0440 anytime. 1920 Swift, N. Kansas City, Mo. 64116. Vehicle validation. Fill form in required. 4-242 Rates for Kansan classifiedies are the lowest anywhere around: $1.00 for one day, $2.50 for two days, $1.75 for three days, with only pennies extra more than 25 words. 4-24 The Omnibus Shop has a new exhibit of contemporary art—paintings, serigraphs, lithographs and sculpture, of fine art and crafts. 9th and Indiana. 4-27 The Castle Tea Room is that special place to take that special date on special day. They'll provide canadian and atmosphere—the real answer is up to you. Beginning and the end of World War III are coming. The beginning: "Year 3" (2019) or "Year Game." See these two Academy Award films April 29-May 1. 4-24 KING ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 3232 RIDGE COURT THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S NAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA Patrick J. Norris Kenneth "Roger" Eve APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 MEN'S HAIR STYLIST Patrick J. Norris Be Prepared! tune-ups Tony's 66 Service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 LOST Zippo Cigaret lighter with "Sgt. Jarvis" written on the front. Lost at the Hawks Nest. Reward Call 843-3624. 4-27 starting service Girls, and Guys: ARENSBERG'S SHOES, 819 Mass, has just the pair you want. Strip up your spring. Come to the stiring sandal center. ARENSBERG'S. 4-27 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Hand crafted sandals at reasonable price. Bridge Podge, 15 Wes m. Fast delivery $10 reward for my lost dark green wallet with ID's and driver's license. No. T2T3PL No questions Phone 864-3643 and ask for me. 4-24 1 ZBT pin near Marvin Hall. Call Ralph at 842-2038. Reward. 4-24 Summer Jobs Earn $2000 (or more with extra hours). The Southwestern Company (est. 1868) provided summer jobs for students from more than 600 U.S. colleges and universities. This summer program is designed for ambitious college men and women who are hard. Must demonstrate responsibility, good personal conduct, and self-disk. For interview appointment, call: BOB Townsend, 843-4597 at 6:00 p.m. A pair of wire-rimmed glasses. Contact John Bailey. 843-481-REWAR. Rewar 1 black wallet, Keep money, return wallet, no questions asked. Contact Ralph Nicol, 842-2038. 4-24 Bucherer watch last Sat. night at concert or O-Zone. Sentimental value. Sick over loss. Reward. Call 842-3489. 4-28 WANTED Summer traveling companion! Forget about school. Relax, see national travel site, swim in Pacific. visit San Francisco. impressivel Call 842-6599. I-424 Live in convenient Jayhawker Towers next fall. If interested and a serious student, call Bruce at 842-7770 after 1:00 p.m. 4-24 Roommate for summer starting June Call 842-3539 or UM 3166, Tom 4-27 Roommate for summer and/or next fall and spring to share a two bedroom air-cond. apt. with pool. Call 842-6010 after 3:00. 4-28 Need 2 or 3 guys to share apt. for summer. J-hawk Towers. Call 842-7125. 4-29 Needed—student to build pen for rabbit. If interested, call 843-6331. 4-28 Female roommate to share 2-bedroom house near campus for summer school. $/0/month or less. Call Diane, Rm. 805, 842-6600. 4-30 PERSONAL Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fess, 843-8074. ff Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Handcrafted sandals at reasonable prices from the Hodge Pode, 15 Avenue of Deliveries 4-28 Want to send a unique birthday card? Kanan "personal" an A4-24 $100 for one TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, messes and term papers–plus stencil designs and duplicating. Pick up delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 842-6562 Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typ- ing, etc. Competent writer Pica plea. Competent service Wright. Phone 843-9554 5-15 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281. Mrs. Raucknain HELP WANTED Needed now: experienced female phone solicitor. Guarantee plus bonuses. Excellent opportunity for job. 843-6423. Don't call you you're timid Male or female for kitchen help and cocktail waitress and bookkeeper. Call 842-9248 between 2-5 p.m. Ask for Joe. 4-27 SERVICES OFFERED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationalwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Corporate, University. Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767. 4-27 Made to order--rings, pendants, ear- rings, or anything Your designs or customizations will be dropped. Drop by PROPST CUSTOM JEWELRY AND HANDCRAFTS. 6281; 6428 Is your car weak, out of shape? Is it smoking too much? Help your car stay clean with an E class. Come to 317 N. Second just across the Kaw River Bridge on Performance Enterprises. Specializing in sports cars and wagens. 842-119-1 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf FOUND Found -- at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM, 106 Radio, 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. 4-28 Found: one easy way to sell what you don't want and find what you need. Kansas classifieds: for one day, 10 dollars; $1.75 for days, 25 words or less. 4-24 On northwest softball diamond near Robinson. Set of keys and watch. Identify and pay for ad and its yours. 842-1200, Rm. 322. 4-29 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom apt, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tf Furnished single sleeping room. Use of retrig. For male. One bedroom furnished air-conditioned apt. Borders and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kassog Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to apartments located at the entrance to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. Available to families for $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $25. To view these luxury rooms and a town house, call David Rhodus: 842-423 or McCrew Agency: 843-205-65. - Portraits - Passports Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next call Rentals of units in the popular Vacation Park. ARGONMENTS (19th and Avalon) ARGO APARTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on a first come, first serve basis. Call 842-2348, see the resident managers, www.harvardroad.com Harvard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. 4-29 Would you believe . . . you can walk to classes from your home in the AURTMENTS, 11th and Missourl, and I am in leasing at most popular apartment complex at special summer rates during June and July!! Call 842-2348, or by drop the manager's apartment at 1130 A West 11th street, central rental offices at 2107 A Harvard Road to get details on both summer and fall leasing. 5-14 Summer sublet. May 15-Sept. 1 or part Overland Park near 79th and 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C, pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, lots of closets, nicely furnished. $175/mo., utilities included. Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once. 4-28 For summer sub-let; furnished three- room suite with panelling at 1423 E. 19th St. and 8435 E. 4-27 - Applications Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS. beautiful sound-proofed apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished 842-3801 or 842-2348 Mike Carpino at 842-3801 or 842-2348 see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 VI 3-0330 Now leasing—rooms and apartments for summer. Close to student union, ideal location. Call 843-2854 for details and appointments to see rooms. Job Blank, Owner Check it out! Sublease 2 bedroom furn. apt, June 1 thru Aug. 15 $100/ mo. Good deal! Chicks preferred, but 842 - 1467- 4-28 Southridge Plaza Apartments, now renting for summer and fall. One and a half bathrooms, furnished and unfurnished with draperies, open air conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool. Owner brings them today at 170-4 W.24h, 842-120-8 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, a sitting room, sound conditioning, all electric Frigidiaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly inexpensive apartments afterwards weekdays and weekends at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE, 2411 Louisiana, 843-5552. Choice apt. location open—rent now to be ready for summer or fall—5-11 842-8150 AC carpeted b.droom with off ceil parking. Call 429-842-8153 or 842-3750 "Please call for appointment" 721 Mass. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 2 blocks from stadium, June-July, possibly longer. Call 842-7147 after 5.30 p.m. 4-28 Two-bedroom furnished apartment, air-conditioned, near shopping centers. $120 per mo. Call 842-5639 or 443-0064. To male students, nicely furnished studio apartment. Two blocks from Union, utilities paid, private parking. Call 843-8534 4-30 Furnished apartments for rent. Summer sublease, $90.00 a month. Married or graduate students. 1510 Kentucky, 842-3712. 5-13 Furn. apt. for graduate student or married couple. No pets. No children. $125 mo. util. pd. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-1290 after 5:00 or weekends. 4-28 THE CONCORD SHOP HIXON STUDIO R.J.L.P. ready-made and parts - Stretcher frames, - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services Table Tops AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey --- VI 3-4416 McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 New York Cleaners For the best in: - Dry Cleaning - Alterations - Repair For the best in: 926 Mass. - Reweaving VI 3-0501 Photo by Ron Bishor Fire at the J. R. Edmonds' residence The fire was quickly extinguished after a fire-bomb was thrown through the attic window at the residence of J. R. Edmonds, 1546 Rhode Island. Petition- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 17 the fire watch would continue to curtail arson at KU. He said he thought last night was considerably more tense than the night before. There were, he said, 33 arrests which varied from persons with fire-starting devices to students who were protesting the curfew. The total damage estimate, Chalmers said, of the Kansas Union fire was around $2 million. He said perhaps $500,000 was saved by the work of students and staff at the Union on the night of the fire. Chalmers was asked by a faculty member what the University's policy was on bomb threats. He replied to this that when an anonymous bomb threat was made a security team would be sent to check for the bomb. Evacuation, he said, was to be avoided. He added that no serious bomber, that he knew of, had ever phoned an anonymous threat. Both arson and curfew, Chalmers said, are opposed to the purpose of the University. Most KU citizens were taking the situation seriously. In closing he said he appreciated the cooperation of the students and faculty 16 KANSAN Apr.24 1970 and that he hoped the curfew would be short. The meeting began with a report by Charles Oldfather, chairman of the Senate Executive committee. The report was mainly concerned with a rules and regulations amendment passed by the University Council instead of the Senate because the Senate could not field a quorum to act on the motion. The amendment called for students to be included on the academic policy committees of the departments of the University. The number of students, the report said, should be 20 per cent of the number of faculty members in the department. Oldfather said the Senate Executive Committee had sent a letter to the Board of Regents which was not released to the press. This letter, he said, expressed concern with the actions on promotions. He said the committee was concerned for freedom of speech and academic freedom. The University Senate then adopted two amendments to its code. One was to ensure that all work done by the University Senate and Council must conform to the code. The other provided for the number necessary to make a quorum. FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALE Over-stock of Short-dated Contact & Enlarging Paper AZO ● Kodabromide Medalist ● Velox 4x5 through 20x24 1/3 OFF Wolfe's camera shop, inc. TOPEKA 116 West Eight Phone 235-7386 WASHINGTON (UPI) — Already feted by President Nixon, the heroes of Apollo 13 were called today before a Senate committee so friendly it already has authorized money for future moon flights. Although members of the Senate Aeronautical Space Sciences Committee planned to ask the astronauts about the aborted flight, spokesmen made it clear the hearing was not an investigation and signalled no slowdown of the manned space craft programs. Pilot charged with opium transporting flights, including a start on purchasing long-lead time hardware for Apollo 20: $100 million for an unmanned space laboratory, due for launch about 1972, fo which astronauts would be ferried for stays of 30 to 56 days; and $75 million for work on "long-duration" missions to deep space. SAIGON (UPI) — An Air Force major who was a pilot for Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker pleaded innocent Wednesday at a court martial to charges he transported almost half a ton of opium into South Vietnam from Thailand. Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and John L. Swigert J., Apollo To reinforce the point, the committee Wednesday approved NASA's 1971 budget, including the entire $956.5 million requested for the Apollo program. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson, D.N.M., Senate committee chairman, already has warned against letting Apollo 13's troubles prompt a slowdown in the space program. Apollo 13's fate won't hurt program Maj. Delbert W. Fleener, 41, Indianapolis, Ind., 19 years in the Air Force, also is charged with using an Air Force plane to move opium and illegally possessing American dollars in South Vietnam. He faces a maximum sentence of 38 years in prison and dismissal from the service if convicted. Wolf --they reach 20. But because birth dates and available registrants are not evenly distributed among the country's 4,100 draft boards. The committee, however, cut NASA's total 1971 budget to $3.3 billion, down $540 million from the current year and $17 million less than the administration requested. Although a key congressional figure, Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, was out of town and unavailable for comment, Nixon's proposal appeared to have enough Republican and liberal Democratic support to indicate chances for approval were good. The President's message was the result of draft and volunteer army studies by the Pentagon, the White House, the Selective Service System and a special commission headed by former Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates Jr. Witnesses testifying at the opening day of Fleener's trial said one of the aircraft used to transport the opium was a C123 nicknamed the "White Whale," which once was assigned as the personal plane of Gen. William Westmoreland, former U.S. commander in Vietnam. 13 astronauts, were to be joined at the hearing by Thomas O. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA); Rocco Petrone; Apollo program director; and Glynn S. Lunney, Apollo flight director. Fred W. Haise Jr., the third Apollo 13 voyager, was unable to attend. At present, an annual drawing of birth dates determines the sequence under which eligible 19-year-olds are to be called after The House approved 229 to 105 Thursday a $3.6 billion space program authorization that was about $300 million more than President Nixon asked. The House bill would authorize $1.087 billion for Apollo moon "Anyone would have to have moon rocks in his head to believe there's any austerity in this program," said Rep. H. R. Gross, R-Iowa, who was badly beaten on an attempt to trim off $1.5 billion. "We've been had here this afternoon." Deferments— (Continued from page 1) dent deferments except for youths holding them as of April 22, or last Wednesday. Those students would be covered as before. Students who enter acquire deferments after April 22—such as those planning to enter college next fall—and are ultimately selected for the draft would be permitted to complete the semester before they are inducted. Students enrolled in ROTC programs could postpone their active military service until after graduation. Through a combination of a congressional and presidential action, Nixon will try to resolve some of the confusion and inequalities in his lottery plan. Soxless. Drop your socks, grab NOSOX. The now shoes made especially to be worn without sox. Wear NOSOX anywhere. anytime. They're always correct. Always in fashion. So light and so comfortable you'll hardly know you're wearing shoes. But a word to the wise; once you've tried NOSOX, you may never again go back to sox. NOSOX TAYLOR OF MAINE E.E.TAYLOR CORPORATION Freeport, Maine 04032 NOSOX is available in Rusticana in hand-sewn slip ons, boots with buckles, can toes and ties or buckles. NOSOX is available in Rusticana in hand sewn slip ons. boots with buckles, cap toes and ties or buckles. Boots also available in golden or chocolate suede with leather or cushion crepe soles. Chancellor gives his views on unrest Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. gave his views on the turbulent events in Lawrence last week in a radio interview Sunday night. Chalmers said there was no need for parents to worry while their children were at KU. "Demonstractions at KU have been orderly and peaceful. There has been no physical violence or rioting," he said. Concerning the destruction of the Kansas Union, Chalmers said, "There are probably one or two insane people who are intent on burning." He said the Union was adequately insured but it would be fall 1971 before it could be rebuilt. Arson represented such a serious crime that, "Unless I'm sure there is a cure, I wouldn't want an arsonist around in society at all," he said. Chalmers attributed student help in fighting the Union fire to the Student Code. "The student wants to help in a school in which he participates," he said. There was some misunderstanding in the news releases over his thoughts on the curfew. "I thought the curfew created more harm after it outlived its usefulness. Once it achieved its purpose it became as much an obstacle as the arson," Chalmers said. Chalmers said the curfew had produced tension among the students. He said he had received letters from students complaining about not being able to use the library to work on papers. "The University, as other integral parts of the community, operates well past 6 p.m," he said. On the arrest of David Awbrey, outgoing student body president, for curfew violation, Chalmers said, "I don't thing the fact he is a student leader should cause attention in either direction." "The difficulty was to seek out students who were unhappy with the curfew and those involved in arson. A large majority of those arrested were on simple curfew offenses, apparently, this happened to Awbrey," he said. Chalmers said he thought there was a fringe element of about 20 or 30 radicals at KU. He compared this to the Berkeley campus with its more than 3,000 radicals. "Like vultures they feast on the flesh of society's institutions." "I think the South does have less violence and racial conflict. Most of the conflict seems to be in the Northeast and Midwest. Students in the South in my opinion are less interested in the larger society than the students at KU. Students come to KU to get a philosophy of life and an idea of what they would like to do in the world," he said. Chalmers said he had received letters wanting to know why a person as profane as Abbie Hoffman, who advocates the forceful overthrow of the government, should be paid state money to talk to students. Chalmers answered that Hoffman was invited to speak by the Student Union Minorities Forum. The idea is for students to develop a philosophy by exposing them to a full realm of ideas, he said. He added that the Minorities Forum does not use state money. There are many grievances at KU. He cited the Women's Liberation movement, Black Students Union and Ecology. "These groups have counterparts that provide also grievances," he said. Regarding the financial state of the University, Chalmers said the Kansas legislature was fairly responsive. "At least the Kansas legislature recognized the need of funds for new students and a salary raise for the faculty," he said. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BULLETIN Jorn Year, No. 122 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, April 27, 1970 There are unconfirmed reports that a person has been arrested in connection with the ROTC building fire April 22. The person was reported to be a Building and Grounds employe. --light of our last conversation and several conversations prior to this one. I feel that you do not exhibit the degree of confidence in me that I desire. I feel that my effectiveness has been thwarted by your recent instructions. Therefore, I feel that because of your apparent lack of confidence in my ability, it would be in our best interest if you were to terminate my employment immediately." --light of our last conversation and several conversations prior to this one. I feel that you do not exhibit the degree of confidence in me that I desire. I feel that my effectiveness has been thwarted by your recent instructions. Therefore, I feel that because of your apparent lack of confidence in my ability, it would be in our best interest if you were to terminate my employment immediately." UDK News Roundup By United Press International Pesticides plague Russia MOSCOW—"Silent Spring" menaces the Soviet Union, a prize-winning Russian nature writer, Vasily Peskov, warned Sunday. The rare bustard and droves of other wild fowl are being decimated by pesticides, Vasily Peskov wrote in the youth newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda. In a documented echo of Rachel Carson's nightmare prediction of the death of nature, Peskov asked, "Where have all the birds gone. Our forests, fields and gardens are growing quieter and quieter." Blasts rip Baton Rouge BATON ROUGE—Twenty to 30 sticks of dynamite planted near the front of the state Senate chamber exploded Sunday night peeling marble slabs from the ornate rooms, shattering all its windows and splintering lawnakers' desks. Scopes, now 69 and living in Shreveport, La., said Saturday two groups were behind the famous case—The American Civil Liberties Union, which wanted to get a test case on Tennessee's anti-evolution law, and a group of local merchants "who wanted to put Dayton on the map." Moments before the explosion ripped through the 34-story state Capitol Building, another blast caused heavy damage at a plush country club. COLUMBUS, Ohio—John T. Scopes, who as a young biology teacher in Dayton, Tenn., in 1925 stirred a controversy about the teaching of evolution, now says accounts of the "Monkey Trial" case were greatly exaggerated. Scopes says trial distorted Return of mutineers sought PORT AU PRINCE—President Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier has asked for the return to Haiti of the mutinous coast guard crews who shelled his palace and now have sought asylum in the United States. --light of our last conversation and several conversations prior to this one. I feel that you do not exhibit the degree of confidence in me that I desire. I feel that my effectiveness has been thwarted by your recent instructions. Therefore, I feel that because of your apparent lack of confidence in my ability, it would be in our best interest if you were to terminate my employment immediately." Police officers request reinstatement of Smith Lawrence's police and safety division forces remain in a state of confusion since last Friday's announcement of resignation by Gilbert D. Smith, Lawrence director of public safety. At least 19 of the 48 officers of the Lawrence Police Force indicated they plan to resign May 1 if Smith's resignation is not reconsidered by the City Commission and the City Manager. Smith, the city's chief law enforcement and fire officer, handed in his resignation after tension eased in the wake of four straight nights of firebombing and sniping incidents. The memo given to City Manager Buford Watson read, "In In addition, Watson questioned Smith's acquisition of some tear gas. According to Watson, Smith obtained a supply of gas last Wednesday saying the supply was "on loan." When Watson found out, he said he told Smith to return the gas. "If it had been purchased," Watson said, "the tear gas would have been bought using funds allocated to the department in a grant for riot control equipment." Smith said, the state grant was approved last Thursday, however Watson said he was not aware of the grant. According to Watson the gas was acquired the day before the loan approval came. In his response to Smith's letter, Watson said, "I am surprised by your action, however, I can understand the pressure of the past several days. I did not intend to have you feel that the questioning concerning gas last night or the (Continued to page 12) 1970 Photo by Ron Bishop Come here piggy . . . please piggy . . . The greased pig contest, held in connection with the Spring Week activities Saturday provided the participants and the spectators with a few laughs and a good time. (See related story on page 2) A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Photo by Ron Bishop High on helium Balloons took to the air and students took to lolling on the grass around Potter Lake Saturday as part of the "unplanned" activities of Spring Week. A quiet weekend after a hectic week, coupled with beautiful weather, added to the prevalent feeling of "relax and take it easy." Spring Week activities by Potter's Lake Saturday were sometimes fast and furious contests while other events aroused only negligible interest from some of the people participating, according to Bill Perkins, Kansas City junior and games committee chairman. Spring Week activities end Perkins said that the undressing contest was devoid of contestants. "No one would enter the contest," Perkins said, "even after we gave a demonstration." In the tug-of-war, Perkins said, no official pairings were made. Perkins said the balloon toss was won by two couples. Linda Johnson, Wichita freshman, and Van Larson, Overland Park sophomore, won one heat and Mike Walker, Caney sophomore, and Tom Hyde, Kansas City, Mo., senior, won the other heat. In the iceblock race, Keith Kozler, St. Louis junior, and Dave Gardner, Overland Park junior, tied for first place. "It was just people who wanted to get together and have a tug-o- Twice as many women are being hired annually by daily newspapers than five years ago, says the Newspaper Fund. war," he said. "Mostly the kids were out to have fun. "The pig we got for the greased pig contest was really lazy," Perkins said. "He just wasn't worth a darn. Someone would try to chase him and he'd go over by a fence and just sit there." The winners in the greased pig contest were Alice Wagner, Bennington sophomore; Steve Wehmeyer, Prairie Village freshman, and Warren Gross, Overland, Mo., freshman. "We ran the pie-eating contest in two groups," Perkins said. "The winner of the first group and the two fastest in the second group got to go to the finals." Ben Mann, Independence, Mo. freshman, won the first group and went on to beat Ray Hodges, Ava, Mo., senior and Berg Keshian, Arlington, Va., senior, in the final round. A dance featuring the "T.I.D.E." was held at Oliver Hall parking lot at 8 p.m. Saturday. Holiday Inn THE NATION'S INNKEEPER Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon.—Fri. 11:30 a.m.—2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Holiday Inn THE NETONS INNKEEPER® Holiday Inn® MI-LE-26 23rd & Iowa Gary Porteous, Innkeeper On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. 2 KANSAN Apr. 27 1970 Rita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper Local groups meet to discuss racial problems Representatives of the Chamber of Commerce, the Lawrence City Commission, the black community, the Lawrence School Board and the University of Kansas met last week to discuss racial tensions which have plagued Lawrence for two weeks. Morris Kay, Chamber of Commerce president, said the meetings were merely open discussion and that the groups had never taken action on any issue. The idea of the discussions, he said, was to pool ideas which might be used by the organizations represented at the meetings. Vernell Sturns, head of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission, said last week's meetings were proposed by Leonard Harrison in an attempt to reach a working agreement with the black students' demands. The meetings were started two years ago to help secure summer jobs for the youth of Lawrence. Kay said he thought last week's meetings had brought about a better understanding of the Lawrence High School black students' demands. B The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 The Town Shop 839 Mass. VI 1-5755 STRIPES AGAIN! STRIPES AGAIN! Whatever pattern may be the pattern of the moment, there's no stopping our stripes. Fact is they're striking here, there — wherever hip types want the focus of attention, without pushing for it. Nifty fit, premium fabrics, total neat. Stripe for a real commitment. A Photo by W. Ray Sellers It's all in how you look at it The sculpture shown above was one of many displayed by sculptors on campus last week as part of the Sixth National Sculpturing Conference being held at KU. Other conference events included panel discussions, films and exhibits in Murphy Hall, Woodruff Auditorium and Allen Field House. The conference lasted from Thursday to Saturday. Lawrence blazes set with incendiary devices Assistant Fire Marshal Lloyd M. Davies said Sunday that most of the fires the Lawrence Fire Department fought last week were set by some sort of incendiary device. Davies said he did not have any definite knowledge of who started the fires and said that causes of the fires are still under investigation, including the Kappa Sigma and the Gambles Store fires. The fire at the old Lincoln school, he said, was a definite act of some person, since the building did not have any electrical or heating facilities to start the blaze. Most of the fire bombings, he said, were not scientifically planned and were set by many different liquids that could have been carried in a variety of containers. Apr. 27 KANSAN 3 1970 When asked how the sniper fire affected the firemen, Davies said, "Naturally the firemen fighting fires have to concentrate on the fire. The fire is dangerous enough without putting the firemen under apprehension and strain." KU Latin queen chosen at festival Miss Latin K.U., Lili Chan, Venezuela, was crowned April 17 at the Latin Festival held in Westminster Center. The queen will represent the KU Latin-American Club in the Miss KU International contest at the Banquet of Nations, May 10. PENNY RIDE PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Henrys henrys SUNDOWN SAVINGS Finding a parking space in downtown Lawrence on Friday, April 24 was not a problem. Both pedestrian and auto traffic was slow all day. Violence hinders business The savings go on and on. Tonight from 5:00 to 7:00 Henry's chicken dinners (3 pieces of chicken, roll, french fries, cole slaw) are only 69c. Tuesday evening, 5:00 to 7:00, it's Henry's hefty chili dogs for 19c apiece. And stay tuned, there are more sundown savings coming. Many of the downtown merchants complained that the decline in traffic was causing their sales to go down. Richard Clark, assistant manager of Woolworths, said "I think the lack of business is due more to the violence at the University of Kansas rather than the curfew imposed by the city." "Our sales have eased off," Clark said, "but that's only natural when there aren't any people on the street. It's a sad state of affairs when people are afraid to go out on the streets in a town the size of Lawrence." Mrs. Samples, owner of Daniels Jewelry, said her business was slower than usual. "You won't have business if customers don't come into the store," she said. "And customers won't come in POLLUTION AWARD CHICAGO (UPI)—The second annual Gold Medal Award presented by The Sports Foundation, Inc. to members of American industry who have made outstanding achievements in water pollution control has gone to Campbell Soup Company for its development of a unique surface filtration system designed to handle waste at its plant in Paris, Tex. the store if they are afraid to come downtown." The trouble in Lawrence has caused us to lock up more of our stock at night, Mrs. Samples said Ralph W. Campbell, owner of Campbell's Men's Wear, agreed that it was the trouble in Lawrence, not the curfew that affected his business. "We bought a fire extinguisher, just in case," Campbell said. "I think," he continued, "the city made the only decision they could have made under the conditions of violence they were working with." Kroger's downtown had no decrease in business according to William Crane, employee of Kroger's. "People have been coming in earlier in the day, but sales have been normal," Crane said. The University State Bank took precautions against the violence by using extra personnel for security, Kenn Ragland, president of the bank, said Friday. "Bank activities have been normal," Ragland said. "With the information I have about the trouble in town, I think the city is handling the situation well." Tomorrow Hitchcock's The 39 Steps & Notorious with Cary Grant Ingrid Bergman Woodruff Auditorium in the Union Building Give your contact lenses a bath tonight In order to keep your contact lenses as comfortable and convenient as they were meant to be, you have to take care of them. But until now you needed two or more separate solutions to properly prepare and maintain your contacts. Not with Lensine. Lensine is the one lens solution for complete contact lens care. Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensine overnight assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking case on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine. It has been demonstrated that improper storage between wearings may result in the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and in some cases can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensse which is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic. Just a drop or two of Lensine, before you insert your lens, coats and lubricates it allowing the lens to float more freely in LENSINE the eye's fluids. That's because Lensine is an "isotonic" solution, which means that it blends with the natural fluids of the eye. Let your contacts be the convenience they were meant to be. Get some Lensine, from the Murine Company, Inc. KANSAN COMMENT Man : 2001 There has been much talk recently about the problems of ecology. Many people are saying that man is bringing about his own destruction through air and water pollution and the population explosion. These people have little faith in the potential of man. While dinosaurs, dodo birds and passenger pigeons have passed into extinction, man has prospered. Man is the greatest living organism because he can adjust to his environment. He has adjusted to the Ice Age, changes in terrain, families and epidemics, and he will adjust to pollution and over-population. As the atmosphere begins to fill with pollutants, and the oxygen content drops, man's chest will expand so that it can hold larger lungs. A third lung might even be added to act as a reservoir when a man passes through a heavily polluted area (this development alone would add several years to any smoker's life). Man's nose will grow so that he can inhale larger quantities of air and get the oxygen he needs to sustain life. In order to keep the harmful particles in the air from reaching his lungs, he will develop dense growths of nostril hair. Other hairy accouterments, such as the scalp, eyebrows and eyelashes will disappear because they will tend to catch the dirt suspended in the air. The eyes will also undergo interesting changes. Man will soon have two sets of eyelids. Under the present set he will develop a transparent set similar to those found in lizards. When these eyelids are shut, they will protect the eyes from the atmosphere and still allow man to see. Since pollutants will blot out most of the sunlight, man will develop eyesight which will enable him to see in the dark like a cat. Without the present warmth from the sun, man's body temperature will drop and perhaps he will become a cold-blooded animal. There will be a shortage of usable water but man can overcome that too. He will take another hint from the lizard and develop a very oily skin—or possibly scales—which can easily be wiped clean without water. His weight will drop because of a smaller amount of body fluids and also because the population will cut the amount of food available per capita. With the population rapidly expanding, the highways will soon become clogged and man will have to abandon the use of automobiles (unfortunately this will spur the population explosion because of the loss of thousands of highway fatalities which are helping so much to control the population). Because man will be relatively weaker, he will not be able to endure long walks on just two legs. He will probably revert back to being a four-legged animal. This, too, will be an advantage. Any student of anthropology knows that man's organs were meant to be suspended from his backbone not piled atop each other as he stands erect. Women will be happy to learn that walking on four legs will eliminate the painful "milkleg of pregnancy" and varicose veins. If it develops that the world cannot provide enough food to sustain the increased population, nature will again come to the rescue. It will merely raise the death rate and the infant mortality rate until man can live comfortably again. Obviously too many radicals are calling for unnecessary government involvement in the control of our environment. They have no faith in man or nature and want to change the course our world is taking. Man has survived thousands of years and with the help of a few natural adjustments he will continue to survive and rule the world. Unless, of course, there is a nuclear war. U.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OPPoses NIXON'S RADICAL WELFARE PLAN DOWN WITH REVOLUTIONARY GUARANTEED INCOMES 23 SKIPPBOOK RINGER THE MICHAEL JOHNSON COLLECTION 'Funny. I never thought of you as a radical revolutionary.' THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansas Telephone Numbers newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-3588 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rate; $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press 美 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIRECTORY SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10027 H hearing voices— Student's, women's rights To the editor: Authoritarian education as expressed by Professor J. Eugene Fox must be ended in the American educational system. It must be ended because the ideas expressed by Professor Fox are, in fact, no more than paternalistic babblings. This whole idea and concept that force-learning makes for a better liberal education is absolutely absurd. What is needed is a readjustment of what constitutes academic credit. It's time we face-up to the fact that as an academic community the issuing of credits in order that one may gain added insight into one's profession is entirely irrelevant. It is a known fact that most technical know-how has to be learned by experience through on-the-job training. This often involves the reversal of the memorization process taught to us by this authoritarian system. The idea of the liberal arts curriculum is a good one, but to presume that if one does not have a proficiency in some foreign language that he is not entitled to a degree is pure irresponsibility on the part of Professor Fox. The reality of the situation is, in fact, that the current liberal arts curriculum has very little, if anything, to do with that which goes on in the outside world. To quote from the book, "Radical School Reform," Paul Goodman sums up the point brilliantly: "Young men learn more about the theory and practice of government by resisting the draft than they ever learned in Political Science 412." We have to come to grips with the problem of what constitutes a relevant education. We have to realize that the issuing of irrelevant degrees is one of the great problems that the American society faces. Not even our institutionalized system of education can cover-up the fact that students will only remember those things which they deem important or useful. All else will more than likely be forgotten. The question is whether or not society benefits from those individuals who have acquired a liberal arts degree, the end product of a series of repressive requirements. Maybe a more positive way of phrasing this question is whether or not society could benefit from those educated in academically free situations where the students can gain true knowledge. The educational system of today is the great stifler of creativity. Its products are fear, dishonesty, destruction of eagerness to learn, alienation, conformity, smothering of self-expression, narrowing scope of ideas, prejudice and self-hate. You, Professor Fox, and your irrelevant degree requirements are typical of the elements we have to thank for this. Now to get around to this hogwash that we as students are free to choose our own courses. This is like saying we have freedom of choice when we enter the military, simply because there are several branches of the service. Sure, we as students have a choice of taking several different foreign language courses, but that is totally irrelevant because foreign language is a requirement. Contrary to Professor Fox's opinion, everyone in the school of liberal arts is required to have sixteen hours or proficiency to graduate; hardly what I would call a free choice to design my curriculum. In fact, Professor Fox's whole diatribe is nothing more than fancy double-talk. First, he states, "Any student is free to design any curriculum to pursue any combination of courses which seem educationally valid to him . . ." but in the next breath he backs down and states, "If I were asked, however, if I believe that a person who, for example, has no exposure to a foreign language possesses the rudiments of a liberal education, I would answer no." Hardly what I would call a definitive statement on free choice in a curriculum. We as students do not have freedom of choice. Our condition has been well stated by John Holt, a renowned educator: "It is that with very few exceptions the schools, from Kindergarten through graduate school, do not give a damn what the student thinks. Think, care about or want to know. What counts is what the system has decided they shall be made to learn." At the University of Kansas we are made to learn what some unknown has deemed appropriate for us, and I as an individual denounce this authoritarian system. The fact that Professor Fox has taken upon himself the task of being the champion of an archaic and outmoded system is enough of an irresponsibility, but the fact that he had to attack my individuality in the process constitutes a personal affront to me. I feel, contrary to Professor Fox, that I am the master of my own ship, and that I alone am qualified to plot my personal course in education. I am not just yet "prepared to face the eventuality that in some instances the agency would decide that it had more faith in the collective opinion of the faculty than in the individual opinion of the student." Nicely put, Professor, but I am not an agency—I am an individual. The fact that the faculty will take a look into the definition of a liberal education next year, or the next, and then predictably cop-out under the yolk of compromise, or put-off, makes no difference to me. What needs to be done is to return education back to the individual. Mediocrity at our educational institutions can no longer be tolerated. We are decaying, but the truly sad thing, and the thing which worries me the most, is that students and instructors are willing to sit idly by and let the State put a stranglehold on individuality. It is a sorry state of affairs at this university, and I might as well be whistling in the dark. But let's at least give libertarian education an opportunity to prove itself. I am not likely to accept the fact that professional opinion as to what constitutes a liberal education is any better than my humble "novice opinion." Who is in a better position to judge the merits of the education he is receiving than the student himself? Ronald Philip Worth Overland Park sophomore After I arrived I saw no signs of furniture or art rescue operations (although these operations were probably in progress), so I asked about them and was told by a fireman that their only concern at the moment was to extinguish the fire. \* \* \* I am a member of the Union Operating Committee and when I discovered Monday night the Union was burning I hurried to the scene, about 11 or 11:30 p.m. Several times after that, when I saw students running in and out of the Union, I asked police and other officials if I could help in whatever rescue operations were being conducted. I was told to get off the street and I was physically pushed away from the building. I would very much like to know, if there be someone who's willing to tell me, whether the officials who were running the show were of the opinion that a woman has no "call" to be in a burning building, or whether it was merely the case when there were already a great sufficiency of (men) volunteers helping. Although I don't happen to own a coffeepot, somehow I can't help thinking I could have been of SOME help in saving some of the valuable things in the Union from fire, smoke and water. C. Suzanne Atkins Leavenworth junior KANSAN REVIEWS PLAYS: three cent experience By GENELLE RICHARDS Arts & Reviews Editor During the pre-curfew hours and amid the sirens outside, an unusual theatre experience took place in "The Three Penny Opera." Although the production has several good points, overall it does not measure up to previous plays presented this year on the stage of the University Theatre. The opening number complete with black lights and fluorescent costumes is excellent, making the audience sit back and look forward to what is to come. But, unfortunately what follows is not as good. The acting is perhaps the foremost flaw of the production. The actors, for the most part, do not complete their roles leaving an overall unbelievable character. There is one however that is by far the best in the production. Filch played by Richard Gillandi demonstrates the most complete character. He is very believable and quite a delight to watch, for his performance is often a great lift to the play. At the play's end he portrays a messenger and leaves us at a tremendous height, providing some comic relief. Barbara Allen as Jenny gives the next best performance but it does not compare to that of Gilli- Princess Anne gets lady-in-waiting LONDON (UPI) — Princess Anne soon will be given her first lady - in - waiting, Buckingham Palace said Wednesday. A palace spokesman said Miss Mary Dawnay, 34, granddaughter of the fifth Earl Grey, arrived at the palace Tuesday "to learn the ropes" and will take up the combined role of private secretary and lady-in-waiting to the princess in June. Oklahoma State University was the eighth member of the Big Eight Conference of Midwestern university athletic activities. Apr. 27 1970 KANSAN 5 land. She is somewhat forceful which is something her character demands for an accurate portrayal. The great tragedy about the play was the atmosphere in which is was presented opening night. The play should have begun earlier or been cancelled, for many people had to leave slightly before the end because of the approaching curfew. "The Three Penny Opera," although it may not be the best of the year, still should be seen for its unusual touches. Perhaps under better conditions, it will be well received. Two of the best aspects of the production are the costumes and the set. The costumes are authentic in presenting a modern atmosphere as opposed to 1928 of the original script. The set is quite original but simply amounts to scaffolding. Slides are added as the backdrop but at times these become somewhat of a distraction while at other times they are essential and helpful in completing the mood. 'MAROONED' IS UP THERE WITH THE GREAT ONES! PENGUIN 图10-13 "MAROONED" ATLANTIC STUDIOS PRODUCTION GREGORY PECK RICHARD CRENNA DAVID JANSSEN JAMES FRANCISCUS GENE HACKMAN MAROONE G ALPIN AMERICAN GENERAL ASSOCIATION Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK NOTE: Woodruff Auditorium will be open for this week's film showings. Enter through back doors on Baumgartner Drive or Mississippi Street. On campus this week MONDAY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone W1-3-1065 MONDAY STUDENT RECITAL — Scott Bridges, clarinet. (8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall) TUESDAY "THE THIRTY-NINE STEPS" (KU Film Society) — One of Hitchcock's British thrillers; the grandsire of the spy-chase genre. 1938. (7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) "NOTORIOUS" (KU Film Society)—The Master's most romantic and elegantly suspenseful movie. Made in 1946, starring Cary_Grant and Ingrid Bergman. (9 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) "LAND IN ANGUISH" (Latin American Series)—Brazilian film about political conflict in a mythical South American country. Directed by Glauber Rocha. (7:30 p.m., Dyche Auditorium) WEDNESDAY AN EVENING WITH LEACOCK/PENNEBAKER (Classical Film)—A program of documentary films by the world's two foremost practitioners of cinema-verite. (One show only: 8 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) B & C OB & C CE T RO E. A TF O B CA CE. BOL & D consider the possibilities COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A FRANKLIN PRODUCTION NATALIE WOOD ROBERT CULP BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE A MUST SEE FILM!!! ELLIOTT GOULD DYAN CANNON "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." —Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELI'S "ROMEO AND JULIET." " -John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Mag. Soundtracks Album Available on Belt Records Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:10 Adults $1.50 I.D.'s Required THE Hillcrest "AN INSTANT CLASSIC . . ." —Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "A PERFECT MOVIE . . . RICHARD BURTON, CHARMING, ROMANTIC, GENEVIEVE BUJOLD, FLIRTY. THEY'RE GREAT TOGETHER!" -Cosmopolitan Magazine Granada THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-280 NOW SHOWING Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Adults 1.50, Child .75 RICHARD BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days A UNIVERSAL PICTURE - TECHNICOLOR - PARADIGM GP STUDENT RECITAL—Original compositions by Michael Seyfrit. (8 p.m., Swarthout Recicital Hall) A JEROME HELLMAN-JOHN SCHLESINGER PRODUCTION DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" THE Hillcrest Eve. 7:00 & 9:15; Adults $1.50 Matinee Sat. & Sun. 2:00 ID's required Ehrlich is the author of "The Population Bomb," a book describing the frightening consequences of the growing human population. Ehrlich is a professor at Stanford University in Stanford, Calif. He is being sponsored at KU by the Student Union Activities Zero Population Growth. BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR THURSDAY Paul Ehrlich will speak at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Allen Field House. Admission is free. "TARTUFFE" KU Film Society) -Stylized rendering of the Moliere comedy. Directed by F. W. Murnau; 1928. (7 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) TEENY TINY LAND Ecology expert to speak on population problems "THE SPY" (KU Film Society) —Exciting espionage tale by the German master, Fritz Lang; 1928. (9 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium) STUDENT RECITAL — Maria Paula McDougal, piano. (8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall) "THE PROFESSIONALS" (SUA Free Film)-Tense and action-filled western starring Burt Lancaster and Lee Marvin. Directed by Richard Brooks; 1966. (7 and 9:30, Woodruff Auditorium) REPUBLIC OF NAURU (UPI) —This South Sea island, 2,800 miles from Hawaii, is the smallest nation in the world. It covers eight square miles and has a population of about 6,500. riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY riverrunriverriverriver WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT Mat. Sat. & Sun. 7:15 2:30 Hillcrest 3 riverrunriverrunriverrunriverrunriver From the Berkeley campus to a lonely farm... every generation has to run its course. COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY with LOUISE OBER · JOHN McLIAM · MARK JENKINS · Color Evening 7:30 f. 9:25 Adults $1.50 ID's Requested University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present THE THREE-PENNY OPERA Book and Lyrics by Bertold Brecht Music by Kurt Weill English Adaptation by Marc Blitzstein May 1 and 2 May 3—Matinee at 2:30 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Curtain: 8:20 p.m. Current Registration Card admits to $1.40 Seat Photo by Ron Bishop Fire damages Strong Hall auditorium A fireman surveys the damage that resulted from a fire in Strong Hall auditorium Friday. Discovered by three students from Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia at 4:02 p.m., the fire destroyed curtains and scorched paint in the auditorium. Shultz says charges should not be dropped State Senator G. Reynolds Shultz (R-Lawrence) said in a telephone interview with the Kansas Sunday he had been told that if charges of vandalism were not dropped on five black students at Lawrence High, "we could expect more violence." Shultz said he felt the charges should not be dropped, because if the charges against the first group were dropped and not those arrested on curfew violations, it might cause trouble. Shultz said he was impressed with the students who aided firemen during the Kansas Union fire. "I'm concerned that some people think I'm against all students. I think 99 per cent of the students are good kids," he said. Shultz said he thought the sentences of those violating the curfew was not too stiff. "They knew the consequences," he said. He said he thought that under the circumstances, the tight security precautions were justified. 6 KANSAN Apr.27 1970 The geographic center of North America is in North Dakota, a few miles west of Devil's Lake. Aide attacks impeachment NEW YORK (UPI) — Former presidential aide Theodore C. Sorensen charged Sunday an attempt to impeach Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas is "another indication of the attempt to clamp down on dissent" in the nation. He said Attorney General John N. Mitchell "may well be behind this whole impeachment procedure." Sorensen said Mitchell "likes to read other people's mail . . . listen to their telephone calls" and could be setting a precedent for the impeachment of others besides Douglas — specifically, Mitchell himself. "This is another indication of the attempt to clamp down on dissent and other unorthodoxy," Sorensen said of the impeachment drive. "But there may be others who might be impeached. For example, the man who may well However, the former aid to President Kennedy dismissed the thought with the remark "it's foolish to talk about impeaching either one." be behind this whole procedure. Someone might say 'let's impeach Mitchell.'" Sorensen, a candidate for the Democratic senatorial nomination in New York, also lashed out at Mitchell, California Gov. Ronald Reagan, Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew "and their ilk" for attacking dissenters, particularly campus militants. As to the effect of Agnew's attacks on the news media, Sorensen said "I think there's some indication Vice-President Agnew's intimidation of the television networks has succeeded." He said such attacks only goad the radicals to acts of violence and that "the two extremes are feeding on each other" with the result that campus violence only increases the power of "Mr. Reagon, Mr. Agnew, Mr. Mitchell and their ilk." Oil washed ashore from spills in Gulf NEW ORLEANS (UPI) "Heavy pollution" from an oil slick washed ashore in the marshy area southeast of New Orleans, the Coast Guard said Sunday. A Coast Guard helicopter surveyed two oil spills in the Gulf of Mexico that originated about 14 miles offshore. The pilot reported the pollution had taken the form of "a broken silver sheen." SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Recreation— 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman Forums— 4. Quarterback Club Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Fine Arts— 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Art Forums Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970)一 For a snack or a meal, it's Burger Chef. Stop in soon for a Super Shef. — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications may be obtained in the Governor's Room, Kansas Union. Due to the Union fire, interviews can't be announced at the present time. Applications are due in the Governor's Room by 5:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 29. Information about interview times will be announced when you return your application. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. To prepare for your interview, feel free to contact Board members or last year's Events Chairman. Soxless. Drop your socks, grab NOSOX. The now shoes made especially to be worn without sox. Wear NOSOX anywhere, anytime. They're always correct. Always in fashion. So light and so comfortable you'll hardly know you're wearing shoes. But a word to the wise; once you've tried NOSOX, you may never again go back to sox. NOSOX TAYLOR OF MAINE E. E. TAYLOR CORPORATION Freeport, Maine 04032 **NOSOX** is available in Rusticana in hand sewn slip ons, boots with buckles, cap toes and ties or buckles. Boots also available in golden or chocolate suede with leather or cushion-crepe soles. 1 Pollution: Air; Land; Water Pollution—reduces the amount of sunlight which the earth receives, makes the air dangerous to breathe, leaves much of our water supply unusable, sterilizes vast areas of the earth's surface and is endangering the entire population of our planet. This special section of the Kansan is designed to illustrate some areas of pollution and to show the necessity of cleaning them up-for the sake of survival. Specific locations of the pictures are intentionally omitted. They show what anyone can see in almost any location in our state and nation. All photographs in - this special section were taken in Kansas, by photography students in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at the University of Kansas. No one industry is singled out, but merely used as a representation to draw attention to the overall problem of industrial contamination as it exists in our environment. Only a few words. A lot of pictures. Take a good, long look—and then do something about it. Remember, what you're looking at is our final resting place. But how soon? STOP THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.122 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Munday, April 27, 1970 AIRPORT Polluted Air KANSAS 70 SA·13175 MIDWAY USA The image shows a vast, open field with scattered trees in the background. In the upper right corner, there is a close-up of a large industrial machine, possibly used for processing or harvesting crops. The overall scene suggests an agricultural setting, likely in a rural area. Picture Credits Pg. 7: Mike Barry—Pg. 8: Nila Walker, Larry Fencyk—Pg. 9: Ben Bladel, Pat McConnell, David Rhodes—Pg. 10: Ann Pearse, Ed Wiberg, Erica Frederickson, Rick Daughenbaugh—Pg. 11: Sharon Brock, Judy Gerling—Pg. 12: Nila Walker, Judy Gerling—Pg. 13: Marsha Miller, Jim Fey—Pg. 14: Dee Koogle, Dee Koogle—Pg. 15: Alan Purvis—Pg. 16: Ben Bladel, Carolyn Fenoughty—Pg. 17: Alan Simmons, Roger Sneegas—Pg. 18: Cindy Stewart, Randy Leffingwell, Ron Bishop, Mark Sherwood, Larry Bruce, Dee Koogle, and David Rhodes. BONNER SPRINGS PLANT LONE STAR CEMENT CORPORATION I [Image of a large plume of black smoke rising into the sky, with a distant industrial facility visible in the background.] The image depicts a dense fog or smoke笼罩 an area, with a vehicle partially visible in the foreground. The background reveals industrial structures and utility poles, suggesting an urban setting. Polluted Land WHERE THE WASTE CAME No Down 1946 。 [Image of a horse walking on a dirt road with a truck in the background. The ground is covered in patches of snow and gravel.] NO DUMMING THE RECOVERY OF WASTE WASTE MARKETS ARE IN THE RIGHT HAND, ALONG WITH ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION AND AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT. THE RECYCLING OF WASTE IS A VALID FIND, AS IT PROVIDES A NEW CHAIN TO ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY. TO LEARN MORE, PLEASE GO TO: www.waste回收网 PRINTING Polluted Water ... A waterfall cascading down a steep rock face. The surrounding area is covered in dense vegetation, including trees and shrubs. A log is partially visible in the foreground, resting on the ground. The scene appears to be set in a natural environment, possibly a forest or riverbank. A. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. I am not sure what the image is about. It looks like a forest with trees and a stream flowing through it. There are some branches and twigs in the water, but it's hard to make out any specific details. The image has a monochrome or grayscale quality. ... CITY OF NASHVILLE FIRE FOR LITTERING HIGHWAYS Pogo gives pollution solution By JEFF GOUDIE Kansan Staff Writer The automobile in its heyday has been man's status symbol, plaything and constant companion. Figures now show that it is responsible for 60 per cent of the nation's air pollution. Factories and plants, once viewed as symbols of man's astonishing technical advances, are now looked upon with a discerning eye cast at the sky in search for the ominous shadow—the evidence of pollution. Concerned persons throughout the country are researching better methods of air pollution control. A brilliant solution was reached recently by characters in the "Pogo" comic strip. Their solution called for "non-breathin'." gan making plans for their alternative to a clogged environment. Weeks ago, Pogo characters be- The mouse says, "What we is doin' is boycotttin' the U.S. and the air." One might question the methodology required for successful execution of such a plan. The answer arrived at by Pogo members is a television seance show endorsing "non-breathin'" Guests on the television seance show, admit the Pogo characters, would, by the very nature of their lifestyle, be quite dead. Pogo, puzzled by the clear-cut perfection of such a scheme, recently pondered aloud to a friend, "What this means is you're gonna get them that is 'gone' to plug non-breathin?" The mouse replied, not as puzzled as Pogo, "We're gonna get everybody that's dead to put in a word for their way of life." A talk show of this sort, on prime time TV could feasibly be competition for Merv Griffen, and perhaps even Johnny Carson. The arrangements for the "occult teevy seance" have progressed rather slowly, however, because of "environmental eggberts" who would complicate the issue with doubts of its beautiful rationale. A typical remark comes from the Pogo character, the crocodile, who countered, "Thinkin' off the top of my own personal head, it strikes me if you stop breathin' you is through." But the mouse, never to be put off with such paltry arguments, said wisely, "And presumably, if you keeps on breathin' . . . ?" Union rebuilding fund started with one dollar A check for $1 to start a rebuilding fund for the Kansas Union was received by the University Extension Office April 25 The irony of it all. The check was enclosed in a letter written by Mrs. Thelma G. Miller, 62, of Marysville, who received her high school diploma through the University Extension Mrs. Miller described the fire as a tragedy and said she was enclosing the check to start a fund to rebuild the Union. She said that she had never seen the University of Kansas campus, but the University of Kansas Medical Center had saved her life when she had cancer. Young people can be proud to say, "I went to the University of Kansas, even if it was just for one year," Mrs. Miller said. Pre-enrollment scheduled for speech, human relations The departments of speech communication and human relations will hold pre-enrollment sessions April 28, 29 and 30 for all students wishing to enroll in speech or human relations classes next fall. Bobby Patton, professor of speech and drama, said that students could reserve spaces in classes from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. April 29 and from 8:30 till noon April 30 in room 356 Murphy Hall. All faculty members teaching speech or human relations classes next fall will be in their offices April 28 and 29 for consultation. Patton said an informal reception would be held from 3:30 to 5 p.m. April 28 in Murphy Hall lounge for all speech communications and human relations faculty, majors and prospective majors. Apr. 27 1970 KANSAN 7 On Apple Records On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Anti-cigarette crusader faces marijuana charge LONDON (UPI) — American actor Tony Curtis, who is publicly crusading against cigarette smoking, was arrested Sunday and charged with possession of marijuana. Postex Curtis was arrested by Scotland Yard after customs officials at London's Heathrow Airport discovered an unspecified quantity of the drug allegedly belonging to him, police said. If you see spots before your eyes . . . the pimple kind . . . better get Fostex. It's the super spot checker. Wash with Fostex and you see yourself smooth and clear. It helps remove blackheads, dry up pimples and oil, and tight germs. For the clear look . . . get Fostex Cake. Sold in drugstores. FOSTEX Illustrations enlarged SO IN LOVE... and you will be too with these exciting new matched diamond wedding bands. Available in 14Kt. white or yellow gold seeing spots? The perfect symbols of love and devotion. Designed for togetherness with diamonds cut for maximum brilliance, set in 14Kt. white or yellow gold . . . his ring matches hers. Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 Peace Corps GRADUATES Make your first step towards the future with the Peace Corps. Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries.In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry.100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-6917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong. KU weightmen grab wins Records fall at action-filled Drake Relays By DON BAKER Kansan Sports Writer Action in the 61st annual Drake Relays Friday and hot and furious as fans delighted in 78 degree temperatures at witnessing seven meet records fall and one tied in addition to seeing a world record being bettered. But Friday's action was only anti-climatic as Saturday produced more meet records and KANSAN Sports near unforgettable happenings in the university sprint medley relay. The sprint medley began with Rice, Nebraska and Kansas State moving to the front as expected. However surprises soon followed beginning with a mental blunder by Kansas State's heralded Ken Swenson. Weird happenings Swenson, who runs the anchor half mile for K-State, was not ready for the handoff when quarter miler Dale Alexander finished his carry. Swenson, the premier anchor man on the relays circuit this season, was standing in the outside lane thinking to himself about only heaven knows what. Swenson finally snapped from his spell but by the time Alexander got the baton in his teammate's hand, K-State was well out of the race. Swenson admiringly ran a fine 1:48.5 half including a staggering finish when he was completely spent, but the damage was done and the Wildcats finished fourth with Rice winning. Before fans could realize why Swenson blundered the sprint medley experienced its second wierd happening when Nebraska, which finished second, protested the race. A Rice team member ran alongside anchor man Steve Straub at the finish which is a violation of the rules. However, the judges decided to let the finish stand as run, but awarded gold watches to Nebraska. This was done, judges explained, to erase any doubt as to whether the presence of the Rice runner had any effect on the final outcome. Both teams were clocked at 3:19.3. Another calamity occurred in the 480-yard shuttle hurdle relay where runners start when touched by their teammates. The race progressed as expected until judges ruled that all four teams violated the touch-off between the third and fourth runner. All were disqualified but since all teams were effected the same judges decided to let the race stand with Texas A&M the winner. Knop impressive The victory made the Aggies the big winner of the meet with three titles. Of the seven meet marks bettered on Friday, the most impressive was in the discus where KU senior Doug Knop heavened the platter 203 feet and 10 inches, bettering the old mark by more than 12 feet. The throw was also the best ever recorded by any Big Eight perforner. The Jayhawks made a clean sweep in the event when Karl Salb fired a toss of 190-3 for second place. KU also recorded a precedence for Big Eight teams when the Jayhawks ran the four-mile in 16:31.4. However, the effort could only gain the Jayhawks a third place finish behind Bowling Green and Western Michigan. The Royals chased started Dave McNally in the first with run-scoring singles by Lou Piniella, E迪Kirkpatrick and Jerry Adair. Piniella knocked in another run in the second with a single, Kirkpatrick homered in the fifth and Kansas City's final tally came on a single by Pat Kelly in the seventh. Pete Richert, the Orioles' sixth pitcher, saved the victory for Dick Hall, the victim of Oliver's homer. The victory moved the Orioles into first place in the American League East. Orioles nip Kansas City Salb highlighted Saturday's action for KU when he easily won the shot put with a heavie of 63-9¼. The Crossset, Ark. junior was disappointed with the throw despite winning. He later explained that it seemed that he does not throw the shot as well when he has previously thrown the discus Brooks Robinson doubled home another pair in the fifth. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—Don Buford's three-run homer down the right field line in the eighth inning carried Baltimore to a 10-9 victory over Kansas City Sunday, the 14th straight loss by the Royals to the Orioles. The Orioles jumped off to a 5-0 lead in the first as Oliver's throwing error let in one run and set up a two-run double by Brooks Robinson and a two-run homer by Dave Johnson. Jayhawk hammer throw specialist Bill Penny was forced to take an unaccustomed second place finish when he was beaten by De Autremont of Oregon State. Penney's throw of 191-1 was nearly 19 feet short of Autremont's 209-9. The line drive off loser Al Fitz- morris came after Clay Dalrymple walked and pinch-hitter Terry Crowley singled. It offset Bob Oliver's three-run smash that put the Royals ahead for the first time in the sixth. Timmons unhappy Apr.27 1970 8 KANSAN KU coach Bob Timmons expressed dissatisfaction with the total Jayhawk performance. "I wasn't real pleased with the way we ran relays," Timmons said in a telephone conversation. "We drowned the baten in both the sprint medley and the quarter mile relays," he said. "We dropped the baton in both Salb and Penney. New York Cleaners New York Cleaners For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Timmons did express pleasure with the field events. He noted in particular Knop's record setting throw in the discs in addition to Iowa where the Jayhawks win face Southern Illinois and Iowa State. Chicago Chicago including: Poem For The People / In The Country / The Road It Better End Soon / Where Do We Go From Here? On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The following weekend, May 15-16, KU will host the Big Eight meet. Timmons said this weekend is an "off" weekend in which the team will recuperate from injuries and prepare for next weekend's triangular meet in Ames, Cause a SANDAL SCANDAL 17 Let a little skin show EXPERIENCE spring & summer footwear that doesn't smother your feet by covering up all that beautiful skin. Free yourself from restraint! ENJOY comfort as refreshing as a gentle spring breeze, style that demands attention. Sport a pair of scandalously scrumptious sandals from Arensberg's—or nothing at all! Arensberg's = Shoes Arensberg's = Shoes Where Styles Happen 819 Mass. 843-3470 167 Photo by Jim Forbes High soaring 'Hawk Soaring high, but just knicking the crossbar at 16-7, is Jan Johnson, KU pole vaulter competing at the 61st Drake Races. Rodgers says turf benefits university KU football coach Pepper Rodgers said Sunday that the new Tartan Turf to be placed in Memorial Stadium this summer will benefit not only Jayhawk football but the entire university as well. Talking about the artificial turf as he watched his football team warmup prior to a two hour scrimmage in the stadium, Rodgers said the field will give KU facilities second to none. "You put this turf with the addition to Allen Field House and Jayhawk Towers and there's not M. S. K. BALENICHEZ Pepper Rodgers another school in the country that can offer as much," Rodgers said. Rodgers also mentioned the significance of KU being the first in the Big Eight conference to put down artificial turf and the resulting recruiting advantages. The only other Big Eight schools to announce plans for a similar field are Nebraska and Kansas State. Nebraska football coach and athletic director Bob Devaney announced last week that he is studying artificial turfs in hopes that the Cornhuskers will be playing on one by 1971. Kansas State announced soon after KU in January that they too hoped to have such a facility by the 1970 season. However, upon presenting its proposal to the State Board of Regents it was rejected for being "financially unsound." Presently the school is hurriedly trying to correct that major obstacle so that approval can be gained in time for the surface to be finished before the coming season's opener. Apr. 27 1970 KANSAN 9 Contacted by the Kansan Sunday night, K-State Athletic Director Ernie Barrett said K-State is still hopeful of having the facility by September 12, the Wildcats' home opener. The K-State proposal is based upon donations. Interested persons can "buy" a square yard of the turf for $28.50. It will take 8,431 square yards for the project, Barrett said. "As of right now I don't really know how we stand," Barrett said, "but I'm happy to say that as of our last report we were progressing very well." Barrett said that their project was based on a county basis with money then channelled to K-State. The Board authorized the KU Endowment Association to install the synthetic turf, which will be Tartan Turf, with the understanding that the state architect must approve all plans and specifications. Confirmation that KU would actually get the facility came Friday morning when the Board of Regents, meeting in Kansas City, gave approval to Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers' recommendation of installing the allweather surface. It was also stated that on completion, the project will become the debt-free property of the University of Kansas. The agreement also states that the Endowment Association will act only as the contracting agency and that the athletic department will make its payments through that body. Chalmers said the project would be paid off in five years. Actual cost of Tartan Turf, which is manufactured by the 3M Company, is estimated at $220,000 with an additional $25,000 interest. The actual financing of the project is still sketchy. Chalmers told the Board that the fact that KU's athletic department revenues have exceeded expenditures over the last several years was the main reason KU could finance it. THE BOXING FELTS Making a big splash Photo by Jim Forbes Going over the water jump in the 3,000 meter steeplechase is Jayhawk distance ace John Callen. Callen, steeplechase winner at the 45th Kansas Relays and in a dual meet against UCLA, failed to place at the Drake Relays. Oilers boom past Aeros in 9th TULSA (UPI)—Luis Melendez three-run double and game-winning single by Bob Guindon highlighted a four-run 9th inning rally as the Tulaa Oilers came from behind to defeat Wichita 8-7 Sunday night. Jerry DaVanon opened Tulsa's rally in the final inning with a single to left and, with two out, Galen Pitts and Lee Thomas walked to set the stage for Melinda's triple. Melinda came in as Guindon lined a single to center. Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 The Sirloin Dine in candlelight atmosphere US choice steaks, Fineest seafoods. Open 4:30 1½ Mi. N. of Kaw Closed River Bridge Monday VI 3-1431 politics... rebellion. S politics... rebellion. See this superb contribution to political cinema Terra em Iranse (LAND IN ANGUISH) Here is a film which updated and changed the course of Cinema Novo of Brazil. The director, Glauber Rocha, chose for its theme the cynical realities of a political campaign in a mythical South American nation. If politics and rebellion are topical, TERRA EM TRANSE is a film which should not be overlooked. See it! Terra em Iranse (LAND IN ANGUISH) TUESDAY 7:30 P.M. Dyche Auditorium Free Presented by the Center of Latin American Studies KANSAS Photo by Jim Forbes A worn out Jayhawk Doug Smith, sophomore distance runner, turned in his best mile double at the 61st Drake Relays with a 4:05.0 mile on the third leg of KU's four-mile relay team and a 4:10.0 in open mile competition. Hawks belt Buffs in three game series Sharp pitching and plenty of clutch hitting pushed KU into second place in the Big Eight baseball scramble as the surging Jayhawks belted out a three-game weekend sweep over the Colorado Buffaloes in Boulder. James once again provided the dynamite for KU in the nightcap as his three-run homer paced the Jayhawks to a 6-1 triumph. The weekend sweep, coupled with doubleheader victories against K-State a week ago, extended the 'Hawks winning streak to five games. KU, now 5-3 in conference play and 10-4 for the season, trails league-leader Iowa State by $1\frac{1}{2}$ games in the Big Eight standings. The Hawks started the weekend sweep by stopping the Buffs, 6-5, in Friday's 10-inning series opener. Second baseman Lynn Snelgrove scored the winning run for the Jayhawks when he singled in the 10th, moved to second on an error and was chased home on first baseman Skip James' sharp single to center. James unleashed his 385-foot blow off Buff starter Bob Guernsey in the first inning. KU scored three times in the second with James once again displaying clutch hitting by singling home a Javawk tally. KU hurler Bill Stiegemeier allowed only two base runners through the first six innings in route to chalking up his third victory of the year against two losses. Stiegemeier limited the explosive CU bats to only three hits and one unearned run while pitching his second complete game of the season. Shortstop Keith Leippman and pitcher Bob Kaufman provided the heroes for the Jayhawks in Saturday's 5-3 squeaker over the Buffaloes. Leippman collected three hits in five trips to the plate and drove home three KU runs with a double and two singles. Kauffman came on in relief of starter Corky Ullom in the seventh inning to short circuit a CU scoring opportunity and save the win for Ullom. THE HOME in the WALL THE HILL in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Some Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th Ft. IL. OSU golfers sweep Kansas invitationals Big 8 Baseball League Standings A BABY BALDEN W L Pct. GB Iowa State 6 1 .857 — Kansas 5 3 .625 $1 \frac{1}{2}$ Oklahoma 5 3 .625 $1 \frac{1}{2}$ Nebraska 4 4 .500 $2 \frac{1}{2}$ Kansas State 5 6 .455 3 Missouri 3 4 .429 3 Colorado 3 7 .300 $4 \frac{1}{2}$ Oklahoma State 2 5 .286 4 * * * Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. Oklahoma State won both the Kansas Invitational Golf Meet and the K-State Invitational in weekend Big Eight golf, while KU settled for a tie for second Friday in Lawrence and took a nose dive to a last place finish in Manhattan on Saturday. Results last week; 10 KANSAN Apr. 27 1970 Jayhawk team was composed of Jack Rogers, Keokuk, Ia. senior, Jim Dennerline, Paola freshman, Warren Wood, Independence senior, and sophomore Roger Wells of Denver. Iowa State 8-6-3, Oklahoma 2-5-7; Kansas 6-6-5, Colorado 5-3-3; Kansas State 8-3-3 Oklahoma State 7-7-0; Nebraska 3-1-2; Missouri 2-3-4. Games this week: Lou Brock scored the Cardinals' second run when he singled in the fourth and came around on Jose Cardenal's double. The Cardinals added their third run in the sixth off Ray Washburn after he walked Gibson, gave up a single to Brock and walked Cardenal and Torre. Cincinnati scored in the sixth when Bobby Tolan doubled home Tommy Helms, who was safe on a Fielder's choice. Friday — Kansas State at Iowa State, Oklahoma at Oklahoma State (2), Colorado at Nebraska (2), Missouri at Kansas (2). St. Louis added a run in the eighth when Allen and Torre singled. Both runners advanced on an infeld out and Hague was walked intentionally. Allen raced home on a force play at third. Oklahoma State won the meet at the Lawrence County Club with a total of 302. The Cowboys, last year's Big Eight champions, were followed by KU and Oklahoma with 304 strokes each. Nebraska took fourth with 306. Next came Iowa State with 315, Missouri with 319, and K-State last with 322. The Jayhawks shot 295 Saturday at Manhattan Country Club—but finished last. Oklahoma State was again champion with a team score of 3-over-par 283. Chicago All four members of the KU team shot identical 76's. The Chicago including: Poem For The People In The Country/The Road It Better End Soon/Where Do We Go From Here? Jim McGlothlin's control problems got him into trouble in the third when he walked Richie Allen. Joe Torre was safe at first on a fielders choice and rookie Leron Lee walked to load the bases. McGlothlin then walked Joe Hague to force in a run. Cincinnati pitchers allowed nine hits and walked 10 batters including two with the bases filled Chicago including: Poem For The People In The Country; The Road It Better End Soon! Where Do We Go From Here? On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ct ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Bob Gibson pitched a five-hitter and struck out 15 batters in his first complete game of the season Sunday as the St. Louis Cardinals downed the Cincinnati Reds 4-1 Gibson pitches Cards past Reds Cyclones take pair BURGER CHEF Iowa State scored eight runs in the seventh inning of Friday's opener after being held to two singles the first six innings. In the nightcap, Iowa State catcher Bob Case slammed a three-run homer in the seventh to tie the game and the Cyclones won in the eighth. Iowa State, picked to finish near the bottom of the Big Eight Conference baseball race, won four straight before invading Norman, Okla., for a three-game match with conference favorite Oklahoma. By United Press International Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa The Cyclones scorched the Sooners Friday, 8-2 and 6-5, with two seventh-inning rallies. Oklahoma came back to win the third game, 7-3, Saturday and end Iowa State's skin. ! Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... a classic and a kick Two styles to A b in b kick hone. rubber it's a c choice. McCoy shoes mr Two styles to choose. A bold new classic trimmed in brass. Or the new style kick. A sandal with real honest-to-goodness tiretread rubber soles. Either way, it's a cool, comfortable choice. Make it soon. ROBLEE. McCoy's shoes 813 Mass. St. $8.95 Phone VI 3-2091 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS Three days One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 One day KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the news weekly 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 Map Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, perox service, impceable copies, thes disseas, colatina, dacid at no extra chatea Lawrence Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-3644) tf Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tf 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior, 383. Formula S. 428 with G-70's, low mileage Perfect condition. Dick at 616 Kickoff or 842-5255. 4-28 12' walnut speaker system. Perfect motion. Must sell now! Call: 6707. 4-30 6707. Must sell diamond ring set-engagement band, wedding band, both with diamonds. 843-0152. First National Bank. 4-27 Must sell 1963 Nashua mobile home, 10 x 55, fully furnished and carpeted, 2 bedroom, din. room, low court fee. Asking $2350, 842-4165. 4-28 1969 Datsun 2000 conv. 135 hp—OHC engine. 5-speed. p-6 poly radials w/mags. radio, radio heater, disc brakes. onneuse, many extras. a 842-7613 after 6 pm. 4-28 1962 Austin Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800, $42-2191. 4-28 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRES, British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped, Michelin X tires, $1800, 842-2191. 4-28 1965 Triumph TR-4—red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, see this for spring. $1300. 842- 2191. 4-28 1963 Austin Healy Sprite, black, reclam- hardtop, new clutch, 85-291-191 4-28 1968 Flat $55 Spyder, convertible, white with black top, black deluxe interior, fine condition thru-out, low mileage, $1400, 824-2191. 4-28 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, black convertible top, body in excellent condition, overhaulled transmission, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1969 Toyota Corolla, looks new, gray hardtop with red interior. 4-spd.—easy on the gas. $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1966 GTO—yellow with black convertible top. 4-spd., big engine, equipped with stereo speakers, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air, V-8, automatic transmission, premium belted tires, excellent condition. No reasonable offer refused. 842-6783. 4-28 1967 VEH, silver mist paint with black interior, 76 hp., duty suspension, very economical on gas, good tires, $1500. 842-2191. 4-28 Save yourself $3.00. Current Western Civilization notes for $7.50. Call 843-8481. Ask for Alan. 4-28 Repossessed 1969 Chevy II. Yellow with black interior, bucket seat, V-8, 3-speed. See at the First National Bank. 4-27 Component stereo system with Fisher XP55b speaker and Nikko amp, warranty left on all components, plus弘科 record collection, $210. 45- 425050. Magnavax stereo, console, contemporary magazine styling, diamond stylus, walnut grained, excellent condition, 3 month duration, leaving Lawrence. $10.00 842-5670 4-27 482-5670 New 735-1X (E78-1X) radial 4 belt tubeless tires disc, tread design cut to $25.00 plus $2.00 Fed tax—fast as in station at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEM'S HAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA KING ATHOS BANK Kenneth "Roger" Ever Patrick J. Norris MEN'S HAIR STYLISI APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 442-3659 ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2333 RIDGE COURT "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W. 6th Spinet piano, dark mahogany, 250 in good condition, $86 842-7760 4-29 Guitar—classical and folk, Italian made Gibson import, spruce top, rosewood sides and back, an exceptionally mellow and responsive guitar. Call Ken West at Oliver Hall in morning. 4-29 '51 Chevy station wagon, great mechanical condition, ideal for parties. $125. 842-5197 after 6. 4-29 1967 Sunbeam Alpine, convertible, $1.150, Call 843-2060. 4-29 Classical Guitar, excellent condition. Call 842-5717 after 6:00 p.m. 4-29 '67 Corvette, 327 cu. in., 100 hp, air- conditioned, AM-FM radio, 3-speed, good condition. Getting married, must build. 842-5831 by 7 p.m. 4-27 Apartment furnishings. Am graduating, must sell: Hollywood bed, box springs and mattress. Hide-a-Bed, 2 tables and 2 table tables, small desk, easy chair and foot air conditioner, phonograph, and other assorted furnishings. 4-30 1967-68 Trifumph Spitfire, 2 tops (1), tape dck, speakers, new snow tires, 18,500 miles, $1800.00. Phone 842-3391. Excellent condition. 4-30 New Canon FT/QL single lens renex, lens, quick loading, meter, case, UV filter. More than $80.00 or $187.50. Phone 843-9252. Weeks 5-6 p.m. Buscher tenor horn, metal mouthpiece. Make offer. Good condition. Dan Harkness, 645 Mich. 843-0723. 5-1 1964 Corvette, dark blue with same color interior, 365 h.p., 327, 4-speed, posi-trac, $1800. $42-5983. 5-1 Curfew special: Drum set still for sale 4 silver sparkle, 3 Zildjian cymbals. Priced to sell. Call Jeff, 843-1711. 4-30 '61 Thunderbird in good condition. Call 748-9813. 4-30 1965 VW. New engine. Excellent running condition. 843-959 usef 5 - 430 Classic 1960 TR-3A. Incomparable at any price. Bargaining starts at $750. Very runnable. Call J. B. at 843-2103. Fisher 400 Stereo Receiver, 65 watts, lots of controls. Looks and sounds like new. Must sell. Need cash des- persely. 842-1047. 4-30 1966 Olds 442 convertible. Good condition, air conditioned, power steering, $1450. Call 843-5112 for 5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Ask for Parris. 4-30 NOTICE 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-guest Bar-B-Que this is the place to get at Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday tf The Omnibus Shop has a new exhibit of contemporary art—paintings, serigraphs, lithographs and sculpture, of fine art and crafts, 9th and Indiana. 4-27 The Castle Tea Room is that special place to take that special date on holiday. They will provide can delight and atmosphere—the 4-29 up to you. Girls and Guys: ARENSBERG'S SHOES, 819 Mass, has just the pair sandal sandal up your spring. Come to the spring sandal sandal ARENSBERG'S. 4-27 Summer Jobs, Earn $2000 (or more with extra hours). The Southwestern Company (est. 1868) provided summer jobs in 1969 for over 4,000 students from more than 600 U.S. colleges and universities. This summer program is designed for ambitious college men willing to learn and hard. Must demonstrate responsibility, good personal conduct, and self-discipline. For interview appointment, call: Bob Townsend, 843-8557 after 6:00 p.m. Hand crafted sandals at reasonable prices from the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. Fast delivery. 4-28 Zippo Cigaret lighter with "Sgt. Jarvis" written on the front. Lost at the Hawks Nest. Reward. Call 843- 3624. LOST A palp of hair-rimmed glasses. Contact John Bailley, 843-481-391 4-28 Bucherer watch last Sat. night at concert or O-Zone. Sentimental value. Sick over loss. Reward. Call 842-3489. 4-28 HAROLD'S SERVICE PHILIPS 66 U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers WANTED 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Roommate for summer and/or next fall and spring to share a two bedroom air-cond. apt. with pool. Call 842-6010 after 3:00. 4-28 Roommate for summer starting June 1 or earlier. Call 842-3539 or UN 4-3166, Tom. Need 2 or 3 guys to share apt. for Jumbo J-hawk Towers. Call 7125 4-29 7125 4-29 Needed-student to build pen for rabbit. If interested, 843-6331. 4-28 Female roommate to share 2-bedroom house near campus for summer school. $40/month or less. Call Diane, Rm: 805, 842-6600. 4-30 Responsible and quiet male roommate for summer and fall to share apart- ment with pre-med student. Jawkah yawk. $70. Beginning June 1. Stewk 842-7710. Summer traveling companion! See national parks in Western U.S., campgrounds in Pacific, and Francisco. Las Vegas. Inexpensive! Call 842-6599. 5-8 PERSONAL Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fum, 843-8074. tf Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM, 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Handcrafted sandals at reasonable sandals and a reasonable Fordodge Pidge, 13-4-28 9th. Fast delivery. I forgive ya Linda Taint 'no big We at the ole G.B. still 4-27 ya. Dan We TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, and term papers-plus stenell cutting and duplication. Pick up delivery offered. Call 842-539-848 or 842-6562. Experienced typist will use theme, theses, term papers, other misc. types, with Pica writer with Pica writer with Competent service. W. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Call 843-3281, Mrs. Ruckmank HELP WANTED Male or female for kitchen help and cocktail waitress and bookkeeper. Call 842-9248 between 2-5 p.m. Ask for Joe. 4-27 SERVICES OFFERED Is your car weak, out of shape? Is it smoking too much? Help your car at the F.E. class. Come to 317 N. Second just across the Kaw River Bridge on Specializing in Performance Enterprises. Specializing in cars and V-5 wagens. 842-119-1 SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Computer Science, Computer- cloom, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Made to order—rings, pendant, earrings, or anything. Your designs or accessories can be dropped by DROP by PROPST CUSTOM JEWELRY AND HANDCRAFTS. 628½; Mass. $79.95. For Top Quality Head For Henry's Alterations and dressmaking. 20 years experience. 843-2767. 4-27 henrys For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's 6th & Mo. V1 3-2139 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazine, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store. 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf FOUND Found—at last. The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-FM, 106 Radio, 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. 4-28 On northwest softball diamond near Robinson. Set of keys and watch. Identify and pay for ad and its yours. 842-1200, Rm. 322. 4-29 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom apt. one, block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom with air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 211 Kasold Drive. Open space, atmosphere unique to Alvamar. live in beautiful juvenile jacent to and overlooking Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprisingly indoor setting for families and mature singles; studio units $130; one bedroom units from $150; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms $25. To view these luxury apartments in town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or mcGrew Agency: 843-2055. Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall. Rentals of units in the popular AVALON, AVALON APARTMENTS (9th and 10th floor) and OAPARTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on call, come first, serve basis. Call 842-2348 or visit www.harvard.com or come to rental office at 2107 Harvard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS. Beautiful, bright, cozy, cloosing sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished rooms, large sitting room, Mike Carpino at 842-3801 or 842-2348 see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 Would you believe . . . you can walk to classes from your home in the ARGO APARTMENTS, 11th and Miss Lawrence's most popular apartment complex special summer rates during June and July! Call 842-2348, or by drop by the resident manager's apartment at 1130 and come or come to our central rental offices at A. Varday Road to get details on both summer and fall leasing. 5-14 TEXACO Student specials W. 9th TEXACO ★ New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 We Care About We Care About What You Wear And If You Care Bring Your Shoes To 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon - Portraits - Passports - "Please call for appointment" - Applications 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO P. VI 3-0330 Summer sublet. May 15-Sept. 1 or part. Overland Park near 79th and 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C, pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, lots of closets, nicely furnished. $175/mo., utilities included. Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once. For summer sub-let; furnished three- floor suites; 120 square feet; 123 E. 19th or call 843-9300 4-27 Now leasing -rooms and apartments for summer. Close to student union, ideal location. Call 843-2854 for details and appointments to see rooms. Check it out! Sublease 2 bedroom furn. apt. June 1 thru Aug. 15, $100/ mo. Good deal! Chicks preferred, but . . 842-1467. 4-28 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, rugs, sound conditioning, sound conditioning, Frigidaire kitchen including dish-washing disposal, gas grills, fireplaces. Addition: storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, location and surprisingly inexpensive. See Sec. 10. Apartments afternoons weekdays and weekends at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE, 2411 Louisiana, 843-555-522 Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and a half-bathrooms, unfurnished with drapes, carpeting, air conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool. On 9th, 84th, 842-1160, they today at 170am. 4-28 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 2 blocks from stadium, June-July, possibly long. Call 842-7147 after 5:30 p.m. 4-28 Furn. apt. for graduate student or married couple. No pets. No children. $125 mo., util. pd. 1633 Vermont. Call 843-129 after 5.00 and weekdays. 4-28 Choice apt. location open -rent now to be ready for summer or fall-5睡觉 AC, carpeted bedroom with off street parking. Call 842-8153 or 842-7350. Call 4-29 Furnished apartments for rent. Summer sublease, $90.00 a month. Married or graduate students. 1510 Kentucky. 842-3712. 5-17 Large, quiet, carpeted rooms for summer and fall. Nearly furnished, air-cond. private entrance, bath—2 blocks west of campus. 843-7827 evenings. To male students, nicely furnished studio apartment. Two blocks from Union, utilities paid, private parking. 843-8534. 4-30 Available June 1st: modern luxury apartment. Furnished, air-cond, dishwasher, private parking facilities, plus room than one block from campus. 842-6941. 5-1 ready-made and parts THE CONCORD SHOP - Stretcher frames, - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for miDAS° mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 Velvel, Litto promotions granted by Regents By DAN OSBORNE Kansan staff writer University of Kansas Professors Lawrence Velvel and Fredric Litto were granted promotions April 24 at the Board of Regents meeting in Kansas City. The Regents' action ended a month-old controversy about the two men, which resulted in the KU student strike April 8. The promotions for Velvel, associate professor of law, and Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama, had been delayed since the Regents' meeting March 21. Velvel's promotion was delayed allegedly because of his speech in February to a group of demonstrators protesting the Chicago Seven trial. The promotion for Litto was postponed allegedly because of his part in producing an "obscene play," which was produced overseas. After the March 21 meeting, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. submitted additional information to the Regents concerning academic qualifications of the two professors. vote was 6 to 2 in favor of the promotions. The dissenters were Paul Wunsch of Kingman and T. J. Griffith of Manhattan. Regents voting in favor of the promotions were Jess Stewart of Wamego, Lawrence Morgan of Goodland, Elmer Jackson of Kansas City, William Danenbarger of Concordia and Dr. James Basham of Fort Scott. Henry Bubb, Topeka Regent, was absent but sent a letter to be read at the meeting. Bubb's letter stated that an instructor's character, in addition to his academic qualifications, should be considered when the Regents grant promotions. The letter said Bubb, who did not favor promoting Velvet and Litto, had not found additional information that would change his opinion. "Academic freedom is not academic license to use gutter language or intemperate remarks to students in schools throughout Kansas or elsewhere." Bubb's letter said in reference to Velvel's speech. Union reopens today Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, announced Sunday that the Kansas Union would be back in business today on a functional basis. The north and west entrances and the tunnel from X zone to the Kansas Union are open for student traffic, Burke said. After a thorough cleaning and sanitizing operation the following rooms were opened: Hawk's Nest, Oread Book Store, Council Room, Forum Room, Woodruff Auditorium, International Room, Big Eight Room, the upper floor of the Book Store, Prairie Room, and the Cafeteria. "There was little or no damage to the areas that we are opening," Burge said. "Engineers and architects have declared the open section completely safe." "The insurance company, engineers, architects and contractors (Continued from page 1) fact that the City Commission decided not to have a curfew for one night to show a lack of confidence." Officers may- Watson said, "I didn't ask for his resignation but am accepting it because when a man gives you his resignation at a time like this I don't think you should do anything but accept it." Lawrence will not be without protection if the officers who threatened to resign do so, Watson said. If necessary state authorities could provide enforcement personnel through the highway patrol, he said. There are about 240 mammal species in Australia. have insisted that damaged areas have no trespassing," Burge said. "The damaged areas still have falling debris and are not safe." 12 KANSAN Apr. 27 1970 Burge said the main floor corridor should be open within the week. "We ask the students who will be coming to the Union to follow the signs that are up and to use their own good judgment," Burge said. Nixon, a spokesman said, favors the lower minimum age but is doubtful that it can be legally accomplished by a Senate rider on the Voting Rights Act. Nixon asks voting bill be rejected WASHINGTON (UPI) — The White House said Sunday President Nixon would ask House leaders this week to reject a Senate move to lower the voting age to 18 by legislation. Instead, he will ask that the minimum age be lowered through a constitutional amendment. The President, according to the White House, will urge the House to separate the rider and the bill, then join the Senate in preparing a constitutional amendment that would have to be ratified by three-fourths of the states. Already in the Senate there are 71 sponsors of a resolution calling for such an agreement. And there were indications that an amendment would be favorably accepted in the House. Velvet told the Kansan that he was "really happy" about the promotions and said that the controversy was "a threat to academic freedom." Nixon is expected to tell House leaders, in a letter early this week, that he fears the 1972 elections might be jeopardized if 18 year olds vote under authority of the Senate rider. Clergy asks amnesty for LHS students "Some damage has already been done," Velvel said, "but I hope we don't have to worry about future threats." When contacted by the Kansan, Litto said he had no comment. The letter was not released until after the meeting. Twenty-three Lawrence ministers issued a statement last week, calling for immediate amnesty and reinstatement of all Lawrence High School students and the dropping of all charges connected with the recent disturbances at LHS. The statement, presented to the Board of Education of Lawrence Unified School District No. 479 and to the school administration, was issued by the clergymen as individuals, not as representatives of their congregations. The clergymen said the statement was issued in an effort to clear the air and to foster a healthier atmosphere for respond affirmatively to the demands of the black students at LHS. "We do not condone violence in any form by any segment of our society," read the statement. "We pledge ourselves to a continuing ministry of reconciliation and justice." It was signed by Otto Zingg, Jerry Catt, Don Conrad, Clint Dunagan, Stuart W. Herrick, William H. DeLaughder, Harold E. Hamilton, Timothy A. Miller, Norman L. Steffen, Rafael Sanchez Jr., Donald L. Baldwin, John E. Felible, Walter H. Lutz, Thomas C. Emswiler Jr., Sharon Neufer Emswiler, A. Lewis Parker, Robert Freitag, W. S. Sims Sr., Harold T. Hutton, P. Garrison, Ronald L. Sundbye, James Jackson and M. C. Allen. In other action April 24, the Regents authorized KU to begin receiving insurance payments to restore the sections of the Kansas Union damaged by fire April 20. Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Guards - Recognitions - Lavaliers - Gifts - Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog 猫神 groove to the Court Sounds of the "Just Friends" FREE TGIF with KU ID KOKU HAPPY BIRD MUCK the Yak Why do men who are going places become Jesuits? Because we are a team of men serving Christ in the world. In today's complex society, Jesuits have chosen various direct and indirect means of service. Some of our current involvements are: Accounting, American Studies, Anthropology, Biology, Business Administration, Chemistry, Classics, Communications, Economics, Education, Counseling and Guidance, Engineering, English, Fine Arts, Geophysics, History, Hospital Administration, Industrial Relations, Law, Mathematics, Medicine, Modern Languages, Philosophy, Political Science, Physical Education, Physics, Psychology, Social Work, Sociology, Seach and Theology. We have been in action for four hundred and thirty years—ever since an ex-Spanish soldier named Ignatius Loyola and nine of his friends began the Society of Jesus in 1540. Today, we are 34,000, in almost every nation in the world—8,000 American Jesuits, working in many countries. Now, as then, our purpose is total dedication Sociology, Speech and Theology. We are artists, administrators, educators, missionaries, pastors, researchers, social workers, spiritual counselors and writers. In truth, Jesuits can use almost any skill which you may have. of our lives to Jesus Christ in a unique community of men for service to people—anywhere, any job—in and through the Catholic Church. From the beginning, Jesuits have been asked to provide leadership service to people in need, both in the Church and in the world at large. For instance, many of the expert advisers at the Second Vatican Council were Jesuits. We publish America magazine. Jesuits are organizing Catholic radio and T.V. communications in Latin America and Asia. We operate hundreds of high schools, colleges and universities. We man the Cambridge Massachusetts Center for Social Research. We have Jesuit painters, poets, novelists, sculptors, and musicians. Others are concerned with business ethics (everything from the corner store to international power for alleviating poverty, ending racism and improving education for the poor. the post. These are a few of our activities. As we become more and more diversified, we demand a greater unity among ourselves because we are, first of all, a team. We are continually seeking new ways to integrate our efforts—by bringing the university services to the ghetto and the parish; by international cooperation, sharing with Jesuit universities and parishes in Latin America and Asia; by encouraging interdisciplinary research; literally, by using whatever is useful. As oids to our total commitment to Jesus Christ, we Jesuits: 1) use money and power for Christ's work, not for personal fulfillment. Christ's work is our fulfillment. 2) maturely choose abstinence from marriage as witness to our faith in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ 3) select fellow-Jesuits to unify diverse activities and resolve conflicting priorities. 4) live in community in order to grow deeper in prayer life and do more effective work as individuals in community, than as individuals alone. Within the Jesuit vocation, some Jesuits choose the priesthood, while others do not—all are Jesuits in the fullest sense. MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS- a basic desire to care a basic desire to serve Christ men—age 18-50 Single or widower without dependents Roman Catholic, at least three years average intelligence confidence in yourself that you can do good work with long term dedication willingness to attain a Bachelor's Degree and probably a Master's Degree in your chosen work. ability to live in a community of mature men—you can live the Jesuit life for two years before deciding whether or not you wish to become a Jesuit. If you are interested, send us your name and address. --- Joseph Damhorst, S.J. Rockhurst College 5225 Troost Kansas City, Missouri 64110 I would like further information about joining the Jesuits. I understand that there is no obligation, and that my inquiry will be kept confidential. Name ... School ... Home Town ... Year in School ... Mailing Address ... City ... State...Zip Code... Signature ... JESUIT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.123 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, April 28, 1970 UDK News Roundup By United Press International Soviet enact pollution law MOSCOW—The Soviet Union published a new anti-pollution law Monday that gives authorities the right to shut down any factory, mill, farm or river boat that fouls the water. In a drive to halt the threat of a "silent spring," authorities have launched a propaganda campaign against misuse of water supplies and slapped heavy fines and probationary sentences on executives of polluting factories. Inquest made public BOSTON—Documents from the secret inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne will be released Wednesday afternoon, nine months after the blonde secretary died in a midnight auto accident involving Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. What the public will get a chance to see are two documents—the 764-page transcript of testimony and the 12-page report of inquest Judge James A. Boyle of the Edgartown District Court, where the closed-door investigation ended Jan. 8. Strike intervention urged A fresh appeal was made to the White House Monday to intervene in the violence spotted wildcat strikes of truck drivers amid signs the walkouts are taking a toll on the nation's economy. The Dayton, Ohio, Chamber of Commerce sent President Nixon and other federal officials telegrams warning "a chain reaction is setting in from the strike, bringing on an acute shortage of goods and services." Cleveland Mayor Cari Stokes said Nixon had not replied to his appeal, made last week, asking White House intervention. Strikes threaten reform WASHINGTON—The House Post Office Committee today starts drafting a new postal reform bill as two independent union leaders threaten another round of postal strikes if the Nixon administration's reform bill is enacted. --- Committeetudies schools WASHINGTON (UPI)一A Senate committee studying school segregation problems was told Monday that American schools are so bad they're hardly worth integrating. Charles E. Brown, a former junior high school teacher who served eight years as school superintendent in Newton, Mass., said grades are "idiotic," and that schools rule most children by fear and stifle their minds. "The entire system must be changed," Brown told the Senate's new Select Committee on Equal Educational Opportunity. "Rather than seeking equality in terms of . . . expenditures, class size, college placement, etc., we must learn to seek equality in new terms, in human terms, such as respect, dignity, trust, humanity, freedom, responsibility, integrity, joy, authenticity, compassion, empathy, tenderness and love." "We might be going aground here," said Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., a strong proponent of school integration. He suggested that Brown perhaps picked the wrong committee. Brown is now a program officer for the Ford Foundation. "I am intrigued, disturbed and appalled a bit by the statements of the witness," said Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., an opponent of compulsory integration. He shook his head at Brown. "You go off in such long tangents," McClellan said, "I can't get a concrete answer from you." "I anticipated I was going to get in trouble with this testimony," replied Brown, nervously puffing a cigarette. He acknowledged his ideas sounded like "soft words and loose concepts." "But we are not going to approach equal educational opportunity until we face these problems," he said. Arrest made for ROTC fire After several hours of deliberation Monday morning, a statement was finally released naming a University janitor as the person allegedly responsible for setting a blaze in the Military Science Building April 23. Douglas County Attorney Dan Young said that Howard Dean Decker, 24, employed in the Building and Grounds department was arrested at noon Monday on charges of second-degree arson. Bond was set at $25,000. The ROTC fire, one of a series of small blazes which followed a $2 million fire at the Student Union Building Monday night, April 20, caused an estimated $500 damage. Decker of 912 Tenn., had been an employee of the Buildings and Grounds department since April 18, 1968. Officials theorize that Decker took corrugated cardboard, wood and target cloth and set them ablaze with a flammable liquid of some sort in the middle of the building's basement. Sen, Mark O. Hatfield, R-Ore., said his experience as a father of three made him doubt that teachers, administrators or "the system" make students live in fear. "The greatest fear my children bring home is not from the teachers or the administrators but from their fellow students, demanding conformity in styles and fads, in dress and hairdos—a cruel conformity," Hatfield said. Sen. Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn., committee chairman, came to Brown's defense. "You're saying that it's not simply enough to look at a racial mixing process," Mondale said. "Otherwise children who are failing now will continue to fail." PENNY ROBINSON Photo by Randy Leffingwell Hair gets in your eyes... The KU student body can be assured that spring has sprung. The wind is whipping up, around and over the Hill. The girl-watchers delight in the flying skirts and blowing hair that goes along with the spring phenomena on the Hill of the Wind. Union renewal soon to begin The state Fire Marshal Arthur Ramey announced Monday that the evidence had established the fire in the Kansas Union on April 20 was started by flammable liquid. He said the physical and laboratory evidence established that a flammable petroleum product was used to start the fire, which destroyed the roof and the top floor of the old section. Reconstruction of the Union might begin in two months, said Frank Burge. Union director. The complicated task of remodeling the structure will be completed, hopefully before 1972. Burge added. No exact figure has been reached as to the extent of damage, however state architect William Hale, said it would be in excess of $2 million. The state architect said some areas are still wet, and this is one reason a formal estimate of the damage can't be reached. Some Union equipment must still be checked to be sure of the exact damage, he added. The damage is almost entirely covered by insurance, because a private corporation operated the Union building. Burge said. As soon as potential hazards to workmen in the roof trusses and other damaged parts have been found and eliminated, construction would begin on a temporary roof to prevent further weather damage. Hale said. Because three entities are concerned —KU. the state and Memorial Union Corp.-special procedures must be taken in handling reconstruction. A request for guidelines to help alleviate bottlenecks over jurisdiction will be considered by the Kansas Board of Regents, said Hale. Undamaged facilities have been under reorganization, Burge said. The usable sections of the Union are already being used for conferences by historians, sculptors and social workers. A team has been organized to speed progress on construction Burge said, and as soon as this team completes a report on the situation, state officials will start on the rebuilding job. B. A. Green Construction Co. began the removal of the debris Friday, and will construct the temporary roof. After a preliminary inspection of the damaged portion of the Union, Hale said the completion date on the reconstruction would be 1972. Another Union spokesman said the main portion of the Union—the English Room, the Pine Room and the Ballroom—wouldn't be finished for 23 months. Temporary quarters have been set up for the rescheduling of Union activities. Most activities have been rescheduled within the Union itself, the spokesman said. With the re-shifting the Union can accommodate almost everything except Ballroom activities and some food functions, he added. (Continued to page 8) Campus briefs Bookstore to hold fire sale Harold Holden, Kansas Union Book Store manager said the book store would have a fire sale Wednesday. Book store supplies that were damaged in the Union fire will be sold in the covered area outside of the Hawks Nest, he said. The sale will be held on Wednesday only, he said. Western Civ reviews scheduled Western Civilization Comprehensive Exam study sessions will be held at 7:15 April 28 and 29 in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. About 1,300 students have registered for the exam to date. Senate committee positions open Any student interested in serving on a Student Senate or University Senate committee has until Friday to sign up for positions. Students may sign up in the Student Senate office, now relocated in the Alumni Association Office on the main floor of the Kansas Union. Positions are available on the following committees: Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities; Student Publications; Finance and Auditing; Health; Elections; Off-campus Housing; Human Relations; Lectures and Convocations; Film Series; Libraries; Student Financial Aid; Parking and Traffic; Curriculum and Teacher Evaluation; and University Judiciary. Pianist to present program Renato Premezzi, guest pianist and head of the keyboard faculty at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, Ill., will present a program at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. Premezzi will play 12 preludes by Debussy, Op. 68 by Scriabin, La Valse by Ravel and an original composition by Premezzi titled Suite (But Short). Orientation period dropped The Summer orientation period at the University of Kansas, known to most students as "KU Previews," is no longer in existence, at least for this summer. John Myers, assistant to the registrar and one of the coordinators for Previews, said a few of the administrative deans described Previews as not being functional. Since there will be no Previews, Myers pointed out several problems would exist in the orientation of the new students. The two basic reasons for the Previews in the first place were to give placement exams to entering freshmen and to give administrators a chance to speak directly to the students who would be new to KU. Since KU now requires ACT test scores as an entrance requirements, there will be no more placement exams to be given during orientation. Myers said the Previews, first started in 1954, were an excellent Security retained for building 'precaution' In the wake of last week's fire bombings, the University is retaining its tight building security Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. said Monday afternoon. He said the administration was not expecting any more attacks on University property but that the retention of the tight building security was simply a precautionary measure. Reading of poetry scheduled in Union Diane Wakoski, who bills herself as "the poet with the pistol," will read her poetry today at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union Big Eight Room. This will be the last reading sponsored by the English department this year. 2 KANSAN Apr. 28 1970 The other odor No feminine spray can stop it. The "other" odor, it starts in the vaginal tract where no spray can work. You can't spray it away. And it's more offensive than external odor caused by perspiration. That's the reason you need Norforms"...the second deodorant." These tiny suppoistories kill germs—stop odor in the vaginal tract for hours. Something no spray can do. And doctor-tested Norforms can be used as often as necessary. They insert easily, quickly. Norforms Artistic Design Get Norforms' protection for the "other" odor no spray can stop. The second deodorant. FREE NORFORMS MINI-PACK plus informative booklet! Write: CN, Norwich, N.Y. 13815 (Enclos- 25C for mailing, handling) Name ___ Street ___ City ___ State ___ Zip Don't forget your zip code. 22-03A 22-03A Beginning and the End of World War III THE BEGINNING: "The best film on Vietnam to date." WE ARE ALL "A BLOODY GOOD BUNCH OF KILLERS"... IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG a film by Emile de Antonio THE END: THE WAR GAME DIRECTED BY PETER WATKINS - A BISHIP BROADCASTING CORPORATION PRODUCTION Presented in ASSOCIATION WITH THE BISHIP FILM Institute - A PATHE CONTEMPORARY FILMS RELEASE "Extraordinary. I urge you to see 'THE WAR GAME.' The New Yorker See These Two Academy Award Anti-War Films Thursday, Apr. 30: 3:30,7:00,9:30 or Friday, May 1: 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 HOCH AUDITORIUM Admission $1.00 time to get the "little things" out of the way. Such things as physical examinations, identification photographs and pre-enrollment were taken care of during Previews. Now, all this will have to be done in one short week before school starts in the fall, he said. Myers said KU Previews attracted approximately 2,000 students each summer during the usual eight three-day sessions. The previews were also a great time for new students to meet their future classmates and new friends. In many cases, students found roommates during Previews, said Myers. Myers said the greatest problems will arise in the week before the start of school next fall. It will be interesting to see if Watkins Hospital can accommodate approximately 5,000 new students seeking physical examinations in one week, Myers said. Attention Seniors FULUICO CollegeMaster FULUICO CollegeMaster A CollegeMaster Representative will be in touch with you. Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co. 6th & Iowa VI2-4650 © VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA, INC. Since it's never in,it's never out. Each year the new cars come rolling out with the latest frills. Wow. And each year the old Volkswagen rolls out looking just the same. Ho hum. But when the year goes by, new fads soon outdate the old fads. And the hottest-looking car last year is just that: the hottest-looking car last year. But a VW is still just a VW. Not looking up-to-date, but not looking out-of-date either. (So you'll never have a Has-Been on your hands when you want to sell it.) Instead of wasting time making the VW look better, we spend our time making it work better. And this year there are dozens of ways it works better. (That makes over 2200 in all since it first started working period.) In the end, the choice is yours: pay a big price for a year of glory. Or a small price for a VW. JERRY ALLEN MOTORS, Inc. SALES—SERVICE—PARTS 2522 Iowa V13-2200 VW AUTHORIZED DEALER Board replies to demands The board of School District 497 issued a statement Friday concerning demands recently made by black students at Lawrence High School. The three-point position statement was released after a closed meeting with Vernell Sturns, Lawrence director of human resources and community development; Leanard Harrison, director of the Ballard Center and Leroy Colquitt Jr., assistant professor of physics at KU, who acted as representatives of the Lawrence black community. In its statement, the school board: - Reaffirmed a motion passed April 20 commending the Lawrence High student council for the way it handled the demands for a black cheerleader. The council established a squad of cheerleaders composed of five whites and two blacks. Cheerleaders will be elected by members of their own races. The board also urged the Lawrence High students to meet with black students and seek a solution to the problem of a black queen. - Said the idea of a fourth school within the school at Lawrence High could benefit the overall educational program. It ordered a study of the possibility to be made by administrators. Lawrence High now operates with three such divisions. The board also said it would seek a black administrator to act as director of the proposed school. It said anyone considered must be a qualified administrator, as prescribed by the State Board of Education. - Concurred in the need for black studies to be further developed in the high school, as resources became available. The board refused to drop charges against five persons who were arrested or charged as a result of an April 13 demonstration at the high school. The question of amnesty for the five persons was raised, but the discussion ended when James W. Paddock, board president, announced that the board had "voted on that last time and our position has not changed." None of the persons arrested Summer applications for on-campus jobs due Students intending to participate in the College-Work-Study Program should notify the heads of their departments before Friday. By that date all the departments at the University will have submitted their requests for participants in the Work-Study Program for this summer, Bernard Taylor, assistant director of financial aid, said Monday. To participate, students must meet the following requirements: - Must be a national of the United States or intend to become a permanent resident. - Must come from a low-income family or have no family at all. - Must be in need of such earnings to pursue a course of study at the institution. - Must be able to maintain a good standing at the institution while employed under this program. - Must currently be enrolled in the University or enroll for the fall semester. Eligibility has been extended to all students who are determined by the institution to be in need Weather Sunny and unseasonably warm with strong southerly winds 20 to 35 miles per hour today. Partly cloudy and warm tonight but with shifting northwest winds 15 to 20 mph and turning cooler by early Wednesday morning. of financial aid from part-time earnings. Apr. 28 KANSAN 3 1970 The employment is on-campus only and the program undertakes no off-campus employment. Minimum wage is $1.45 an hour; maximum is $3.00 an hour. Students should note, however, said Taylor, that the maximum wage is for graduate research assistants only. Taylor estimated the average hour payment at $1.65. A new rule to go into effect this summer, Taylor said, is that a student may work for up to 40 hours a week providing he performs his academic work satisfactorily. The Office of Student Financial Aid will be responsible for the selection of students to be employed in the program. FASHION On Epic Records EPIC Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. STAND! SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE On Epic Records EPIC Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. were students at Lawrence High School, John Spearman Jr., Lawrence sophomore and president of the KU Black Student Union, was among those arrested. TONIGHT Hitchcock's The 39 Steps & Notorious with Cary Grant Ingrid Bergman Woodruff Auditorium in the Union Building 3 CHICAGO INCLUDING: T'M A MAN/SOMEDAY/BEGINNINGS LISTEN/LIBERATION The Chicago Transit Authority On Columbic Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. WHATLL YOU DO AFTER YOU GRADUATE? You can put off plastics for a year. VISTA the SUA presents PAUL EHRLICH POPULATION BOMB B O M B POPULATION CRISIS : where we stand now ALLEN FIELD HOUSE april 28 : 8 p.m. !!FREE ADMISSION!! sponsored by: SUA, Kansas University, Zero Population Growth KANSAN COMMENT P Sorel's News Service 1. 1870s King Charles IV. Sapphire Inc. World rights reserved Saving The World for Hypocrisy SAIGON—Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, ignoring the fact that the United States has dropped more bombs on Vietnam (North and South) than on the Axis powers during World War II, assured his audience in a recent speech that "we are engaged in fighting a limited war, for limited objectives with limited resources." hearing voices— To the editor: By dealing light-heartedly with a possible curfew by-product—a baby-boom—your editorial "Curfew Damage" has neglected a more distressing result of the ban: the temporary loss of our civil liberties. While I recognize that serious civil disorders justify curfews and states of emergency, I don't believe that conditions in Lawrence have warranted such a response. Neither fear by merchants nor by university officials nor indeed the reelection plans of a governor are adequate reasons for confining the citizens of Lawrence to their homes. Violence to our liberties is no less damaging than violence to property; both should be protected. Instead we are asked to protect one at the expense of the other. Who pays the price? We do-students and faculty. Surely the local merchants don't. The curfew has been planned with the cooperation of the Chamber of Commerce and the late Thursday curfew preserves that traditional shopping night. What value is my right to speak if I am threatened with arrest after a fixed time of night? What value is the right to bail if the city police threaten to arrest me for coming to the police station to pay bail for a student? How can I protest if I am not permitted to assemble? How can I exercise my freedom of worship if the police threaten to arrest me for celebrating a religious holiday? We hear so many voices protesting violence and claiming the frailty of our institutions—yet where are these voices now when our civil liberties prove so fragile in the state's hands. Let the police power be used in a law abiding way. The National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders ("Kerner Commission") in declaring that the preservation of "civil peace is the first responsibility of government," added a corollary that "in maintaining the rule of law, we must be careful not to sacrifice it in the name of order." Yet law—our civil liberties—was the first thing sacrificed in Lawrence this week. David M. Katzman History Department assistant professor S.C. & ED CREATED BY © 1970 ED OAKLEY S.C. WILSON YOU'LL NEVER BELIEVE HOW SOCIALLY NAIVE ONE OF MY PROFESSORS IS. IN WHAT WAY? HE THINKS THE "CHICAGO SEVEN." ... IS THE NAME OF A ROCK GROUP. hearing voices- To the editor: This letter is written to protest the recent Kansan review of Justice William O. Douglas' book, Points of Rebellion. I do not believe that the reviewer had as full an understanding of Justice Douglas' motivations of the burning frustrations of the oppressed peoples of the world as he should have had. Justice Douglas wrote, for the current issue of the Evergreen Review: "Violence has no constitutional sanction; and every government from the beginning has moved against it. "But where grievances pile high and most of the elected spokesmen represent the Establishment, violence may be the only effective response." I do not see how a thoughtful person can help but concur with this view. There are disturbing things about violence, but one of them surely is not simply that it's being used to destroy the Establishment. The Establishment must be confronted with violence if any change of any kind is to happen at all. A recent issue of the UDK contained an article which statistically demonstrated that positive social change had taken place more often on campuses in the United States where violence and disruption had taken place. While I have read Points of Rebellion and have been present at one of his speeches, I surely am not qualified to explain Justice William O. Douglas' position for him. However, I find it extremely vital to try to explain to others what my interpretation is of what he says. I feel rather strongly that: (1) violence (the destruction of human life or happiness by other humans in anyway) is a basic evil ideally to be avoided but realistically to be used most sparingly; (2) force is often necessary to effect change in a society where the elites' activities are all too often (a subjective judgment) based on purely selfish motivations; (3) that "force" means the destruction of human life or happiness, that force is violence. In other words those who want to create a situation where human happiness and creativity can exist may have to destroy the happiness and lives of those who are too selfish to share the earth's riches and their own personal talents with everyone as much as possible. The only real (and Mr. Morrissey, that disappointed, probably-draft-exempted "Kansan Staff Writer" surely did not feel obligated to present his "constructive alternatives") alternative that anyone has been able to come up with control and limit man's selfish nature is to try to convince him to "love" his fellow man in some way. I am confident that millions of humanists of all kinds are trying, all the time, to try to change man's nature through this type of psychological evolution. Sometimes I strongly suspect that this tradition, that this humanistic movement which is trying to create less selfish individuals, is failing. Then, it seems to me that the only alternative is violence. Also it seems to me that this violence can only be an alternative if it is well thought out with goals, widespread support of the oppressed and the tools for effectively destroying those parts of the "Establishment" which are harmful and for building much more humanistic and (also) efficient replacements. It seems that the "system could be changed peacefully from within" by prayers, the psychological evolution I refer to above and by simply getting more humanitarian laws passed if the following were true: (2) those who control society now would or could be made to obey "lawful" commands simply by telling them that they are lawful, and (1) the problems of the oppressed peoples of the world were not so urgent as to require "CHANGE NOW" (3) if there was actually some progress taking place using the above methods. Those who know anything about history and public affairs know that other high public figures have often written controversial tracts, in other words, Douglas' book cannot be called inappropriate on those grounds. The purpose of public leaders is not, as Senator Shultz and Mr. Morrissey indicate, to control social change; the purpose of public leaders is to provide the best possible opportunities for the most people to attain the most happiness. It seems to me that none of the above has taken place and it appears unlikely that they ever will. Perhaps I am too rash. My sympathy for the truly oppressed peoples of the world, and my own great personal frustrations which have come about because of that slavery they call the Selective Service System, have created a state of mind which is very receptive to plans which call for social and legal change. My problem (for to harm anyone is truly the worst deed) is that violence could be the only way to cause social and legal change. The violence of which I speak must not be wasted. More than the beautiful sky and the rich earth, human life and happiness must be conserved. However when people and institutions who control things are selfish then violence must often be used to get them from control. Obviously Justice Douglas is motivated by the desire to save nature, to unite the oppressed by minimizing the political effects of the generation gap and the desire to let all men be freed from the shackles of others who act selfishly so that everyone may creatively cooperate with others to really build a better world. Jen Lough Salina junior THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates; $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisement 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. AWS Honors Night spotlights KU women The woman of the 1970's won't fit the patterns that have been established for her to date, said Sheila Tobias, assistant to the vice-president for academic affairs at Cornell University. She spoke at the 1970 AWS Honors Night Monday evening in Hoch Auditorium. There will be a much different family life, the presence of more part time jobs and women will no longer be shaping their children into outdated feminine roles, Miss Tobias said. There is a fear of success among women today, Miss Tobias said. Women fail success because it may bring on social rejection or they are uncertain of it because of their overall lack of concern for social issues, she said. Women are also afraid to confront the ambivalence of doing well and remaining "feminine" women, she said. Miss Tobias said that a general contempt is present for successful women either by men or other women. Women have been programmed since youth into a socialized category; now that they are trying to break away, they form a minority group, she said Women and those around them tend to develop a pathological type of hatred for the members of the minority group, Miss Tobias said. She said this hatred is true for any minority group. She cited slaves and colonial plantation living as an example. Women face the same characteristics ascribed by a ruler to those he rules, she said. The new feminist movement states that women need to develop a consciousness raising, Miss Tobias said. She explained that they must recognize the forces causing them to behave the way they do. They also must develop a form of solidarity, she said. Women must find their common needs and goals with respect to all races and financial backgrounds, she said. The feminist movement is gaining younger, more politically active members and will continue to do so in the 1970's, Miss Tobias said. A large faction has come from the McCarthy campaign and the SDS movement, she said. Outstanding women students at the University of Kansas were also recognized at the Honors Night event. Newly selected members of Mortar Board, (senior women's honorary) Watkins Scholars, female members of Phi Beta Kappa, CWENS, (sophomore women's honorary scholarship winners, Jay Janes scholarship winner, the Corbin scholarship winner and outstanding woman of the living groups and KU were among the women honored. Mortar Board members are Char- lottes D. Hoeffler, L. Cedar, Cedar Vale, Louis Louton, Ewing, Independence; Candy Hedberg, Topeka; Kathy Koefer, Prairie Village; Patty Johnson, Overland Park; Landa Loa- mo; Mo.; Kathleen McKown, Derby; Kathy Newcomer, Omaha, Nebr.; Rhonda Plymate, Topeka; Susan Kansas City; Mary Cleveland, Omaha, Nancy Friedman, Prairie Village; Ann Beth Heifey, Manhattan; Irus Hamm- lin; Nancy Jorn, Oberlin; Ann Marshall; Cheryl McElhose, Kansas City, Mo.; Betyl Menke, Webster Groves, Mo. Charges on George, Ascough dismissed The charges filed against Peter George, Tuckahoe, N.Y., law student and unsuccessful candidate for student president, and Brent Ascough, Topeka law student, have been dropped. Legal aid funds started to help curfew violators A group of University of Kansas students is starting a legal defense fund for persons arrested for curfew violations last week. David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said persons who wanted to contribute to the fund could leave money at the Rock Chalk Cafe. Joan Irvine, New York senior, who was arrested for a curfew violation, said money was badly needed to cover lawyers' fees, court costs, bonds and appeals. Five of the 60 people arrested will appear in District Court Thursday to face charges of curfew violation. Miss Irvine said Thursday's session would probably determine what would happen to everyone else who was charged. Miss Irvine requested that spectators not attend the trial so that court officials would not be antagonized. Apr. 28 KANSAN 5 1970 An Evening with LEACOCK PENNEBAKER April 29,8:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium 75c George said Monday night the charges had been dropped because the University judiciary lacked jurisdiction in the case and because the charging parties had released information on the case before the hearings. The charges said that George had misused his office, a member of the Student Senate, by allowing Ascough to use his U-zone, all lots, parking sticker. George and Ascough were charged with the violation of the clause of the Student Bill of Rights and Responsibilities that reads: "A student who knowingly . . . misuses University documents or instruments of office with intent to defraud may be subject to sanction of not less than suspension." George said that at worst he had violated a traffic and securities regulation and that Ascough took care of that by paying two traffic tickets. He said he put his sticker on Ascough's car because Ascough loaned him the car. The problem arose when Ascough used the parking pass. George said he had wanted to go through with the case because he was sure he would have won it. He said he saw the charges as a purely political move because they were made just before the election for student president. Diana Pike, Wichita; Barb Reed, Tulsa, Ola; Janet Umler, Law- wer, Kansas SMOP scholarship winners are Sharon Baucom, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Karon Baucom, Kansas City, sophomore; Janis Ogrizovich; Wikiki Baucom, Woodend, Mo. sophomore; and Sue Theisen, Fort Worth, Texas, sophomore. Jay James scholarship winners are Nancy Ann Hoff, Pittsburgh junior and Ana Maria Ortiz-Vargas, freshman. The Corbin scholarship winner is Pan Bailey, Overland Park freshman; the outstanding women of the living at Pam Bailey, Overland Park freshman; Gertrude Sellars Pearson, Janet Lippe, Overland Park freshman; Oli Lippe, Crist Fairbairn, Council Bluffs, low school; Lisa Linda Polnoy, Oberlin senior; Ellsworth, Carol Bottom, Beloit sophomore; McCollum, Cindy Anderson, McCollum, Donna Shafer, Wichita senior; Lewis, com, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. CHICAGO INCLUDING: I'M A MAN/SOMEDAY/BEGINNINGS LISTEN/LIBERATION The Chicago Transit Authority On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The Chicago Transit Authority CHICAGO INCLUDING: FM A MAN/SOMEDAY/BEGINNINGS LISTEN/UBERATION The Chicago Transit Authority Naismith, Kathy Snoodgrass, Wichita senior; Miller Hall, Mary Torrence, Nepher senior; Selardas, Kathy Necma senior; Sherry Lippen, Sherry Lippen, Topeka senior; Watkins, Doris Sodin Butler, Great Bend senior; Alpha Chi Omega, Mary Lippkin, Wichita senior; Alpha Delta Pl, Jill Cheyne junior; Alpha Epsilon Phi, John Furstenberg senior; Alpha Gamma Delta, Pat Rich, Leawood junior; Alpha Phi, Janet Nothnagel, Kansas City senior; Chi Omega, Mat Tidwell, Tulsa, Okla. Pat Kearney junior; Ewing, Independence junior; Delta Gamma, Shannon Mandle, Wichita senior; Gamma Phi Beta, Ellen Tyler, Kansas City senior; Kappa Angela Theta, Karma Crune, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Karma Crune, Hummphrys, Ashland, Pt Beta Phi Russell, Iola senior; Wichita Kappa, Linda Westphal, Wichita junior. The Outstanding Senior Woman or 1970 is Barb Blee, Bonner Springs. The Outstanding Junior Woman or 1970 Women's Hall of Fame are Cora Downs, professor emerita of microbiology and Eliswoldt, professor emerita of education and Easton, professor emerita of social welfare. The Outstanding Woman is Jeanne Stump, instructor of art, history. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The Outstanding Teaching Assistant in microbiology, teaching assistant in microbiology. The Outstanding woman graduate of Margaret Hughes Fran- ley, Chicago. Watkins Scholars for 1969-70 are: Seniors: Jantel Bass, Tulsa, Okla. Seniors: Amy Beeer, Beyer, Lyons; Kathryn M. Blinn; Julia Blakeles; Independence; Philiss L. Culham, Junction City; Kathleen Currey, Kensington; Grace Ann Dexter; Elizabeth Park; Overland Park; Joyce Goering; Mound Ridge; Carolene Graham, Omaha. Neb. Candy Hedberg, Topeca; Carla Fannock; Francis Lidlow Hofman, Overland Park; Susan Hanczy; Nancy Jorn, Oberlin; Susan Kangas, Overland Park; Linda Lemons, Topeca; Suzanne Schardein, Suzanne Soden Butler, Great Bend; Marla Jean Drinkwater; Patricia Melvin, Fairway; Carol L Shapley, Wichita Spencer. Overland Park; Barbara Waller. Overland Park. Juniors: Karen K. Barker, Beloit; Ruth Ann Dick; Louise Ewing, Independent; Mary Lou Haekney, Wichita; Kristine L. Holmes, Plains; Margaret Mary McBride, Lawrence; Barrington; Mary McBride, Parkland; K. Khelps, Overland Park; Diun G. Pike, Wichita; Mary Joanne Thorn, Atheism; Carolyn Whitman Sophomores: Theresa Bridges, Norborne, Mo.; Susan Culbertson, Overland Park; Anne DeCamp, Prairie Village; Margaret Earley, Kansas City; Kathryn Hamm, Alice Engelken, Katherine Hines, ita; D. Ann Hirsch, Kansas City; Nancy S. Johnson, Wichita; Linda Digg,odge City; Nancy McCartney, Dane Meador; Heatherinson; Nixon, Preston; Incolson, Iola; Carolyn Weber, Topkaka Freshmen: Gwen Adams, Mary Ditton, Linda Ferrell, Linda Hoopes, Claudia McAllaster, Sara Martin, Barbara Pike, Mary Schishll, Ellen Schultze, Susan Smith, Jill Whitley, Beey Williams, Nane Zabel. Members of CWENS, sophomore women’s honorary selected Monday are Betsy Jean Adams, Overland Park; Barbara Bachman, Wichita Falls; Barbina Bachman, Wichita Falls; Overland Park; Catherine J Berg, Kansas City, Mo; Rebecca A. Berry, Ballwin, Mo; Carolyn Boor, Chrysan Brown, Wichita; Cynthia A. Breton, Lake City; Chaput, Overland Park; M. Costello, Bartlesville, Okla.; Alice Ann Crawford, Salina; Ramona Curry, Council Grove; Kristy Fairairbain, West Palm Beach; Eugenia Godfrey, Topeka, St. Haas, Wheaton, Ill.; Fran Hale, Topeka; Martha J. Hollister, Overland Park; Anice A. Howell, Overland Park; Ida C. Howell, Dubuque; Iowa, Kay Lallier, Pliner; McLeard, Overland Park; Margaret McLaughlin, Chapman; Margo Milleret, Manhattan; Mary S. Mitchel, University of Idaho; Morgensen Prairie Village, Milwaukee; Kansas City; Kay Polson, Wichita; Leslie Polst, Kirkwood, Mo; Patriciateilberg, Overland Park; Barbara虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹虹 Stimson, Great Bend; Jan Svoboda, Chapman; Julie A. Thompson, Overland Park; Gifford Weary, Junction City. All are freshmen. Phi Beta Kappa members include Louise Alpert, Northbrook, Ill., senior; Alice England, Topeka senior; Allie Beer, Lyons senior; Joyce Goering, Mound Ridge senior; and Sharon Schofletuckley, Libby, Mont. senior. 'MAROONED' IS UP THERE WITH THE GREAT ONES! 'MAROONED' IS UP THERE WITH THE GREAT ONES! "MAROONED" CREATIVE STUDIO PRODUCTION GREGORY PECK RICHARD CRENNA... DAVID JANSSEN JAMES FRANCISCUS GENE HACKMAN MAROONED PANORAMA Eastmancolor Directed by JOHN STEPHENS New Counties Peters Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:10 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI-3-1065 Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:10 - 9:45 SPRING WEEK Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... telephone VI3-1065 TOMORROW RICHARD BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR PRIVILEGE GP Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-5734 Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-7824 A MUST SEE FILM!!! "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELIL'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET.'" John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts MAe. “AN INSTANT CLASSIC . . .” —Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "A PERFECT MOVIE . . . RICHARD BURTON, CHARMING, ROMANTIC, GENEVIEE BUJOLD, FLIRTY. THEY'RE GREAT TOGETHER!" Cosmopolitan Magazine NOW SHOWING Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Adults 1.50, Child .75 University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present THE THREE-PENNY OPERA Book and Lyrics by Bertold Brecht Music by Kurt Weill English Adaptation by Marc Blitzstein May 1 and 2 May 3—Matinee at 2:30 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Curtain: 8:20 p.m. Current Registration Card admits to $1.40 Seat Williams mixes career, tennis A British upbringing, high school at a boys prep school, social work in Borneo and news reporting for a radio station in Hong Kong. It all sounds like a splendid background for a foreign ambassador. Actually, it's a brief description of Tim Williams, Kansas tennis player. Williams grew up in London, England, where his father was a Wing Commander in the Royal Air Force. He graduated from Brumley Boys School in London in 1965. Upon graduation from high school Tim elected to pass college for awhile. Having traveled much of his life because of his father's various military assignments, Tim enjoyed moving about. He heard of the Voluntary Service Overseas and joined the organization, working for a year in Borneo. "The VSO is much like the Peace Corps in America." Williams says. "Really the Peace Corps is modeled after the VSO. I taught 11-year olds English, history and math. All of them knew how to speak English, but it was our work to help them use the language better." While Williams was in Borneo his father retired from the service and his parents moved to Hong Kong. His father is now the principal of two vocational training centers for boys between the ages of 16 and 22. Tim began work as a news reporter at an English-speaking commercial radio station in Hong Kong in 1967 when he joined his family after the year in Borneo. He learned of Kansas through his association with Robert Burton, a lecturer in Asian studies at KU, who was doing summer research in Hong Kong. "I met Mr. Burton through a friend of mine at the station," William relates. "Through our visits he learned I hadn't attended college and found that I would like the idea of visiting the United States. So, he suggested Kansas and I decided to come." 6 KANSAN Apr. 28 1970 This is Williams' first year on the Jayhawk tennis team, although he has been in school the past two years, majoring in Oriental language. His 2.26 grade point average (on a 3-point scale) the first semester was tops on the tennis squad. "I've been kind of impressed with playing on the team. We didn't work much on fitness and working out for the team in London as much as we do here," Williams says. "Our team is young but we're improving. I'm not playing well yet, but after three years away from competitive play, it's beginning to come back a bit." Upon graduation from KU Tim plans to return to Hong Kong and take up a profession in journalism, preferably in radio-television. "I've always liked that type of work. I plan to stay in the Southeast Asia vicinity in my work, though. I really like it there," Williams says. "I've also thought about politics." ★ ★ ★ One of the top high school basketball players of the Chicago area, 6-11 Bill Kosick of New Trier East, has signed a Big Eight letter of intent with Kansas. Ted Owens, Jayhawk coach, was at Korsick's home in suburban Chicago when the all-state center signed the scholarship agreement. During his senior year Kosick averaged 28 points and 16 rebounds per game. He scored a high of 48 points against Notre Dame High of Niles, Ill. In addition to being a first team all-stater as a senior, Kosick was a two-time choice for the Chicago All-Suburban team. Kosick is the fourth high school basketball standout to sign a Big Eight letter with Kansas. politics... rebellion. Jumping Person H e l o l R c y politics... rebellion. See this superb contribution to political cinema Terra em Transe (LAND IN ANGUISH) Here is a film which updated and changed the course of Cinema Novo of Brazil. The director, Glauber Rocha, chose for its theme the cynical realities of a political cam-paign in a mythical South American nation. If politics and rebellion are topical, TERRA EM TRANSE is a film which should not be overlooked. See it! TUESDAY 7:30 P.M. Dyche Auditorium Free Presented by the Center of Latin American Studies See this superb contribution to political cinema Terra em Transe LAND IN ANGUISH) Terra em (AND IN ANGUISH) Jumping People To Our Students: The upper (supply) level of the bookstore is open. The lower level, or textbook level, is closed, but if you need a required text, we can get it for you if you ask. Glad to be serving you again, kansas union BOOKSTORE WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $0.1 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the manual are reserved 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 Edition Campus Mad House, 411 W. 14th St. Audio Discount-your A.R., Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m. 842-2047. 4-30 Office furniture--desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, theses dissertation collating included, data extraction training, tiff, Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-36448 Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tf 1967 Fastback Barracuda, burgundy with black interior. 383. Formula S. 425. G-70's, low mileage Perfect condition. Dick at 616 KK or 842-825. 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect condition. Must sell now! Call 843- 6707. 4-30 Must sell 1963 Nashua mobile home, 10 x 55, fully furnished and carpeted, 2 bedroom, din. room, low court fee. Asking $2350 842-4165 4-28 1969 Datsun 2000 conv. 135 hp—OHC engine. 5-speed. 6-ply radials w/mags. 842-7613 water, disk brakes. 2-Tonneau covers, many extras. 842-7613 by 6 p.m. 4-28 1965 Triumph TR-4--red with white convertible top, fully equipped, good tires, see this for sale $1300 842- 2191. 1962 Austen Healy Sprite, white with red interior, new tires, $800, 842-2191. 4-28 1967 Triumph TR-4A—IRES, British Racing Green, wire wheels, fully equipped. Michelin X tires, $1800. 842-2191. 4-28 1963 Austin Healy Sprite, black, removeable hardtop, new clutch, $1100, 842-2191. 4-28 1968 Fiat 850 Spyder, convertible, white with black top, black deluxe interior, fine condition thru-out, low mileage, $1400, 842-2191. 4-28 1966 GTO—yellow with black convertible top. 4-psd, big engine, equipped with stereo speakers, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1969 Toyota Corolla, looks new. gray on the hardtop. 2002 Toyota Camry, easy on the gas. $1500, $1800, 4-238, 4-249 1965 MGB, British Racing Green, black convertible top, body in excellent condition, overhailed transmission. $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 1967 VW, silver mist paint with black interior, 76 hp, duty suspension, very economical on gas, good tires, $1500, 842-2191. 4-28 Save yourself $3.00. Current Western Civilization notes for $7.50. Call 843-8481. Ask for Alan. 4-28 1958 Chevrolet Bel Air, V-8, automatic transmission, premium belted tires, excellent condition. No reasonable offer refused. 842-6783. 4-28 New 735-1X (E78-1X) radial 4 belt tubeless tires disc tread design cut to $25.00 plus $2.00 Fed tax—fast at station at Ray Stonehacke. 929 Mass. 4-29 Spinet piano, dark mahogany, bench included, in good condition, $250. Call 842-7760. 4-29 Guitar—classical and folk, Italian made Gibson import, spruce top, rosewood sides and back, an exceptionally mellow and responsive guitar Call Ken West at Oliver Hall in morning. 4-29 151 Chevrolet town square for great me- meals $25, 842-5197 after 6 4-29 842-5197 1967 Sunbeam Alpine, convertible. $1.150 Call 843-2060. 4-29 Classical Guitar, excellent condition Call 842-5717 after 6.00 p.m. 4-29 Apartment furnishings. Am graduating, must sell: Hollywood bed, box springs and mattress. Hide-a-Bed, 2 mattresses and 20 tables, small desk, easy chair and foot air conditioner, phonograph, and other assorted furnishings. 4-30 1967-68 Triumph Spitfire, 2 tops (1 new), tape deck, speakers, new snow tires, 18.500 miles, $1800.00. Phone 842-3391. Excellent condition. 4-30 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa V1 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 New Canon FTQL single lens reflex, fl 8 inches, quick loading, meter, case, filter. More than $80.00 off list $187.00 Phone 843-925-8952 time 5-1 p Buscher tenor horn metal mouthpiece Rockwood 66, Mich. M48-80723, 95 Harkness, 66, Mich. M48-80723, 95 1964 Corvette, dark blue with same color interior, 365 h.p., 327, 4-speed, pos-trac. $1800. 842-5583. 5-1 Curfew special; Drum set still for sale 4 silver sparkle. 3 Zilgian gymbals. Priced to sell. Call Jeff. 843-1711. 4-30 '61. Thundbird in good condition. Call 748-9813 4-30 1965 VW New engine. Excellent running condition 843-9598 after 5 4-30 Classic 1960 TR-3A. Incompatible at any price. Bargaining starts at $750. Very runnable. Call J. B. at 843-2103. Fisher 400 Sterco Receiver. 65 watts, lots of controls, Looks and sounds like new. Must sell. Need cash des- perately. 842-1047. 4-30 1966 Olds 442 convertible. Good condition, air conditioned, power steering. $1450. Call 843-5112 for 5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Ask for Parris. 4-30 '55 Chevirot--sell this week—Edellrock, Mickey Thompson, Harper, new Goodyear Polyglas, Holley, new interior, 842-7000. Rm. 1028. David. 4-30 1967 Firebird Sprint, stick. PS, radials. AM-FM-MPX, tape, red in and out, $1850. Also Midship 8 Mono coupon. Custom Car to highest offer. 842-984-98 Salc: Saturday, May 2, Stouffler Place, Bldg. 11, 10:30-5:30 Carpets, drapes, tablecloths, upholstery, ceramics, ceramics, sofas, linens, kitchen utensils, lamps, appliances, etc. 4-30 1970 Datsun 2-litre silver black. 135hp. 5-speed. 120-mph, low mileage. top, boot and torneau cover plus base. front to rear to appreciate Call Chip. 843-3310. 5-4 Got drafted. Need to sell 1956 Indian motorcycle (needs repair) and new 120-watt stereo FM-AM multiplex system. 843-9072. 5-4 1962 Buick LeSabre, power steering, power brakes, air-conditioned, brand new new cars, battery, good tires, good货车, good $400, battery considered. 842-8833 after 5 p.m. 5-4 Magic Chief refrigerator, 22" × 21" x 14" Grand Piano, 100 Excellent dition. Calm 843-1943. 5-4 NOTICE 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-gooodness 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 1-2510, Closed Sunday, Tuesday if The Castle Tea Room is that special place to take that special date on that special day. They'll provide can lights and atmosphere—the 4-29 up to you. Hand crafted sandals at reasonable price. Fully fudge-topped. Fudge Podge, 159 Ballast delivery 4-28 Summer Jobs Earn $2000 (or more with extra hours). The Southwestern Company (est. 1868) provided summer jobs for students from more than 600 U.S. colleges and universities. This summer program is designed for ambitious college men who want to work hard. Must demonstrate responsibility, good personal conduct, and self-discipline. For interview appointment. Townsend. 843-857-3600 6:00 p.m. 4-28 Camper friends visiting you? You them about KOA campgrounds, one mile north of East Lawrence exit off turnpike. Electrical and water hook-ups. laundry. showers. Telephone: 843-3877 after 4 p.m. 5-5 Bucherer watch last Sat. night at concert or O-Zone Sentimental value. Sick over loss. Reward. Call 842-3489. 4-28 Mont Bleu Ski Lodge: now available parties: For information by 844-2363 A pair of wire-rimmed glasses Contact John Bailey, 843-481-2192 Reward A pair of black-rimmed glasses-lost near Cancellor's house or along Jayhawk Blvd. Phone 843-6400 Chip Sloan. Phone 4-30 4-10 LOST 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 Tan saddlebag purse—missing strap Reward. If found, please bring to 1017 Rhode Island Sandra Linley. 4:30 Roommate for summer and or next fall and spring to share a two bedroom air-cond. apt with pool. Call 442-6010 after 3:00. 4-28 WANTED Need 2 or 3 guys to share apt. for summer. J-hawk Towers. Call 842-7125. 4-29 Needed—student to build pen for rabbit. If interested, call 843-6331. 4-28 Female roommate to share 2-bedroom house near campus for summer school. $40/month or less. Call Diane, Rm. 805, 842-6600. 4-30 Summer traveling companion! See national parks in Western U.S., camp out, hike, swim in Pacific, visit San Diego, Vegas. Inexcusable. Call 842-6599. 5-8 Newly married couple needs a place to live. June 1st-June 21st. Call UN 4-3201 between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. 5-4 Need 1 to 4 guys to share large, clean house on Kentucky for summer. Separate bedrooms with plenty of space. Call 842-6217. 5-4 PERSONAL Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fults, 843-8074. ff Agent 008—listen for your instructions every evening in stereo on 10-6 heavy radio, KLWN-FM. 105.9 on the FM dial. 4-28 Handcrafted sandals at reasonable prices from the Hodge Podge, 15 West 9th. Fast delivery. 4-28 TYPING Ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers—plus stenlin and duplicating. Pick up and delivery offered. Call 842-3597 or 4-29-6562. Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc typetype. Must have copywriter Pica team. Competent service. Mrs Wright. Phone 843-9554. MRS Wright. Phone 843-9554. Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate work. Call 434-3281, Mrs Ruckmank Typing, IBM Electric Accurate de- vices, work- guaranteed devices 841-3186 5-4 HELP WANTED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationalwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate Current. Department of Library Science. comicom. Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O. Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Architecture Grad—permanent position with Construction Co. 913-HA2555 Box 307, Edwardsville, Kan. 66022 5-4 SERVICES OFFERED Is your car weak, out of shape? Is it smoking too much? Help your car regain its physical fitness. enroll it in a training program and just across the Kaw River Bridge on an open performance Enterprises. Specializing in imports cars and wagens. 842-1191. V-5-7 Made to order-rings, pendant, earrings, or anything. Your designs or colors may be changed by Drop by PROPST CUSTOM JEWELRY AND HANDCRAFTS. 628* . Mass. $159.00 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. Phone 843-2736. tt SAVE YOURSELF A FINE Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 FOUND Found—at last The heavy ten in stereo on KLWN-JFM. 106 Radio, 105.9 on the FM dial. Don't lose it. On northwest softball diamond near Robinson. Set of keys and watch. Identify and pay for ad and its yours. 842-1200, Rm. 322 4-29 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom apt, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. Furnished single sleeping room. Use of tiring. For male. One bedroom air-conditioned apt. Borders camp and near downtown. Phone 843-5767 Alvamarar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 2111 Kasold Drive. Open space; atmosphere unique to apartment living in Lawrence, ad-directed by Booking.com. Alvamarar Hills Golf Course. Quail Creek interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. Available to families and mature singles: one bedroom beds from $180; two bedrooms from $180; three-bedroom apartments, these luxury apartments and town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 842-2055. Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall. Rentals of units in the popular luxurious AVALON APARTMENTS (11th and 12th floor) AGIO APARTMENTS (11th and Mission and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on three acre, first serve basis. Call 844-348-2480 for managers or come to rental office at 212-694-7440. Vard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in AND SQUARE APARTMENTS. Beautiful, clous sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished or unfurnished. Call Mike Carpino at by see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 Would you believe... you can want to classes from your home in the ARGO APARTMENTS, 11th and Missouri, and enjoy living in Lawrence's special summer rates during June and July! Call 842-2348, or drop by the resident manager's apartment at 1130 A West 11th Street, or come to our offices at 1207 A Harvard Road to register on both amusement and fall leasing. 5-14 Summer sublet May 15-Sept 1 or part Overland Park near 79th and 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C, pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, lots of closets, nicely furnished $175/mo., utilities included. Call (413) 381-1926 evenings at once. Now leasing—rooms and apartments for summer. Close to student union, ideal location. Call 843-2854 for details and appointments to see rooms. Southridge Plaza Apartments now renting for summer and fall. One and two bedroom units, furnished and air conditioned, with air conditioning, all electric kitchen, disposal, laundry, storage, pool OW, 24h, 842-1160, time at 10am to 4-48 24h, 842-1160 THE HITE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th Gr Iii Galerie BrydeL Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. 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. Check it out! Sublease 2 bedroom furn. apt, June 1 thru Aug. 15. $100/ moo. Good deal! Chicks preferred, but . . 842-1467 4-28 Beautiful new luxury apartments now leasing at Malls Olde English Village. 2 or 3 bedroom units featuring drapes, air-conditioning, sound conditioning, frigidaire kitchen including dishwasher, disposal, gas grills, fireplaces, storage room, recreation room, sauna baths, swimming pool, car ports, convenient location and surprisingly indoor apartments afterworks weekdays and weekends at MALLS OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE, 2411 Louisiana, 843-5552. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, 2 blocks from stadium. June-July, possibly longer. Call 842-7147 after 5:30 p.m. 4-28 To male students, nicely furnished studio apartment. Two blocks from Union, utilities paid, private parking. Call 843-8534. 4-30 Furnished apartments for rent. Summer sublease. $90.00 a month. Married or graduate students. 1510 Kemeny 842-3712. 5-13 Furn. apt for graduate student or married couple. No pets. No children. $125 mo. util, pd. 339 Vermont. Call 843-1209 after 5:00 or weekends 4-28 Choice apt. location open—rent now to be ready for summer or fall—5-11 rooms, AC, carpeted bedroom with off street parking. Call 842-8153 or 842-3750. Large, quiet, carpeted rooms for summer and fall. Nicely furnished, air-cond, private entrance, bath—2 blocks west of campus. 843-7827 evenings. Available June 1st: modern luxury apartment. Furnished, air-cond, dishwasher. private parking facilities. campus. 842-6941. S-1 Furnished house for rent—keep it whole or divide into rooms $150 per month. Available June 1, 917 Maine. 842-7568. 5-6 Save 50$. Load and move your own belongings—make reservations. Hertz Truck Rental, 737 East 22nd Street. Call 843-8016 or 842-6297. 5-4 For Rent; to married couples. 5 rms. and bath, disposal, entire first floor kitchen. 12 rms. 3 rm and bath walkout furnished apt. Both off s.t pkg. Close to KU, utilities available or pets. 5 rm. apt. available May 15th. 3 rm. Jum- phone 1-597-3183. Jum-4 Golfers' summer special for tenants of Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Townhouses, 2111 Kasan Drive, and the Golf Course, $65.00 on the beautiful adjacent Alvamar Hills Golf Course. One, two and three bedroom units available for 1 or more guests on evenings call Dave Rhodus, 442-2313, or call McGrew Agency, 843-2053, tf Moving To Kansas City? SEE CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Baths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Baths $230 CLUBHOUSE POOL Open Daily 9 Till Dark CHARTER HOUSE S.E. Corner I-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 Home of the "Big Shef" BURCER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Ehrlich to speak tonight Paul Ehrlich, nationally known ecologist and University of Kansas alumnus, will speak at 8 p.m. today in Allen Field House. National president of Zero Population Growth (ZPG) and author of the book "The Population Bomb," Ehrlich will speak on "The Population Crisis: Where We Stand Now." Ehrlich attended KU as a graduate student and received his master's degree here in 1955 and his Ph.D. in 1957. He now teaches population biology at Stanford University. "The Population Bomb" has 850,000 copies in print at the present and is a required text in several KU classes, including Biology I. The sales of the book in the Kansas Union Book Store have reportedly gone up after his TV appearance on the Tonight Show and other TV talk shows. Ehrlich also has a book coming out soon called, "Population Resources and Environment." James Koevgni, associate professor of botany and biology and connected with several ecology activities on the KU campus, said that people are coming in from Topeka, Baldwin, and McPherson to hear Ehrlich speak. ZPG has more than 8,000 national members including 180 paid members in the Douglas County chapter. It emphasizes the need for population control and encourages the two-child family. ZPG advocates governal support of birth control, including abortions, and is trying to get the government to give tax incentives for the smaller family. Ehrlich and his wife, Ann, also a KU alumnus, have one child. Private printing firm to publish BSU paper The University of Kansas Black Student Union (BSU) will have its newspaper, Harambee, printed by a private firm because of a ruling Friday by Attorney General Kent Frizzell, said John Spearman, Lawrence sophomore and BSU president. Frizell ruled that anyone involved in the publication of the Rented plane pilot hijacked to Havana MIAMI (UPI) — A pilot wearing cowboy boots dropped a note on a Florida landing strip Monday reporting his rented plane was being hijacked to Cuba. Two hours later it landed at Havana. Federal Aviation Agency personnel were puzzled by the flight. They reported that when the twin-engine Piper Apache stopped at Naples, Fla., only the pilot was seen aboard it. "I have people to go to Cuba," the note read. "Give me a heading, now." The pilot, identified as Tex Etheridge, 52, threw out a note written on an aeronautical chart as the plane taxied on the Naples runway. "Before I could give him the heading he took off," Eidson said. "He looked nervous." Jessie David Eidson, an FAA worker at Naples, tried to wave the plane toward a parking area while asking another airport attendant for the heading. Eidson said he saw only Etheridge in the plane. The FAA said the plane landed in Havana two hours after it left Naples and there were no immediate plans for its return. Etheridge had rented the plane earlier in the day at West Palm Beach, across the state from Naples. He boarded the plane carrying a suitcase and two coats, saying he planned to fly to Key West, It was the second incident in recent days involving the flight of a small plane to Cuba. Last week an ex-convict and his girl friend commandeered a single-engine plane at Gastonia, N.C., and forced the pilot to take them to Havana. 8 KANSAN Apr. 28 1970 An Evening with LEACOCK PENNEBAKER April 29, 8:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium 75c third issue of Harambee is subject to prosecution under Kansas statutes dealing with speeches and written matter advocating crime and violence. The statement said that in the third issue of Harambee, the question of obscenity was only minor. Employees of the University Printing Service will not be forced to publish Harambee, because they could be prosecuted for the publication. Frizzell said the theme of the third issue of Harambee was the arming of the blacks. Under what he described as a "veneer of references frequently made to 'defense,'" this issue advocated violence for political ends and analyzed the effectiveness of certain firearms for killing policemen. Such material "should not be protected under the guise of free speech," Frizzell stated, "to hold otherwise commits all of us to the position of welcoming and fostering our own murderers." The opinion was requested by Douglas County Attorney Dan Young after an attorney for the printing service employees asked if the printers could be prosecuted for printing the Harambee. In part, the copy in question stated, "a .38 (pistol) will open prison gates!" and "seize the time. Before the pigs seize you we must move from resistance to aggression, from revolt to revolution." Frizzell said it was "highly inappropriate" for a publication like the Harambee to be financed with public funds. The KU Student Senate appropriated $10,000 to the BSU for programs it could not finance through University channels. Part of that sum is composed of student fees, which Frizzell said were not voluntary contributions. The BSU is now soliciting private contributions for the purpose of having Harambee printed by a private enterprise. If Harambee is published by a private firm, student fees cannot be used. Union- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 14) Warner Ferguson, Union business manager said Monday the Union will be open on a limited basis from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Meals will be served at the cafeteria Monday through Friday and on Sunday, Ferguson said. Breakfast will be from 7 to 8:30 a.m., lunch from 11 a.m. to 1:20 p.m., and dinner from 5 to 6:30 p.m. The J-Bowl, Ferguson said, will be open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday. The Oread Book Shop and the second floor of the book store will be open for students to buy supplies from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Ferguson said. NORDIC "COMMON MARKET" STOCKHOLM (UPI)—Sweden, Norway and Finland are currently working on a plan to create a Nordic "Common Market." The plan calls for a Nordic customs union and a wide extension of economic cooperation among the neighbor countries. STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK WILL NOT APPEAR AT THE Draught House APRIL 29 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 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman Use Kansan Classifieds SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Recreation— 1. Coffeehouse Director 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman Forums— 4. Quarterback Club Chairman 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman Fine Arts— 1. Exhibits Chairman 1. Exhibits Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 6. Art Forums Chairman Summer Board Summer Board (Summer 1970) — 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) Applications may be obtained in the Governor's Room, Kansas Union. Due to the Union fire, interviews can't be announced at the present time. Applications are due in the Governor's Room by 5:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 29. Information about interview times will be announced when you return your application. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. To prepare for your interview, feel free to contact Board members or last year's Events Chairman. Graduation Announcements are safe and may be picked up any time this week at the Oread Book Shop in the Union. Extra announcements available and for sale. kansas union BOOKSTORE Alumnus say it's a middle class problem Photo by Tom Slaughter Ehrlich advocates abortion, birth control methods BY JOHN GOODRICK Kansan Staff Writer The average baby born in the U.S. consumes 50 times as much per capita power as an Indian baby and uses 300 times as much steel as the average Indonesian, said Paul Ehrlich. The nationally known ecologist and University of Kansas alumnus, told an estimated 8,000 persons in Allen Field House Tuesday night the problem of over population must start in the United States among middle class white Americans. If you give equal educational and economic opportunities to the black communities, he said, the black growth rate will lower to the same rate as the white's. Ehrlich said in reference to governmental support, "When we get a President with some guts he will say any patriotic American will have no more than two children—that will be a start." It all started Ehrlich said, on January 3,8,000 B.C. At that time agriculture began to develop and people began to stay in one place and store their food. This resulted in a lowering of the death rate and a marked increase in population growth, he said. Since that time the world population has been doubling in shorter and shorter intervals with the present number estimated at 3.6 billion and is expected to reach four billion by 1975 or 1976, Ehrlich said. In the press conference Ehrlich said if persons aren't successful with population control on a personal basis "the government will put sanctions on child bearing . . . don't kid yourself if you don't think that it will come along." A good example of the "direct effects of population" is the pressure that the Chinese are putting on the Soviet Union on the Manchurian border. Ehrlich said the 600,000 men killed in wars "from the Revolutionary War to the war in Laos" would take the World four days to replace. In reference to birth control pills he said that if the abortion laws were more lax the manufacturers wouldn't need to make the pill as strong. Even though a few more pregnancies might occur abortion could compensate for these and the side effects of the reduced strength of the pill would probably cause less side effects. (Continued on page 20) In reference to food surpluses in several countries he said, "It's not more food than the people can eat. UDK News Roundup By United Press International Repressive mood shown NEW YORK—A poll in which the majority of Americans interviewed said they would be willing to repeal part of the Bill of Rights shows they are "very, very fed up with violent demonstrations." Sen. Barry Goldwater said Tuesday. The poll, taken by CBS news and released on its show "60 Minutes," showed the majority of those interviewed favored repeal of parts of the Bill of Rights. Militants obtain weapons WASHINGTON—Defense Department officials are becoming increasingly alarmed by the theft of military weapons that later turn up in the hands of militant groups dedicated to violence, a top California law enforcement official said Tuesday. The state official said the arms—including machine guns, bazookas, hand grenades and extremely powerful plastic explosives—were ending up in the hands of groups such as the Weathermen and the Black Panthers. Hanoi may aid Sihanouk Mme. Binh told a news conference the summit conference attended by Sihanouk and top leaders of North Vietnam, the Viet Cong and the Pathet lao decided to "do everything in their power to offer each other mutual assistance, according to the wishes of the interested party and on the basis of mutual respect." PARIS—Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, the Viet Cong foreign minister, indicated Tuesday that Vietnamese Communist forces might intervene militarily in Cambodia to help ousted Chief of State Prince Norodom Sihanouk return to power. Pope scraps marriage law VATICAN CITY—Non-Catholics marrying Roman Catholics no longer need make any promises concerning the upbringing of children under new mixed marriage regulations announced today. In a 2,400-word apostolic letter, Pope Paul VI said Catholics would be required to promise to do "all in their power" to have their children baptized and brought up in the Roman church. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No. 124 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, April 29.1970 Court to release Kopechne report BOSTON (UPI)—An 11th hour bid to delay the release of the secret documents from the inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's car failed Tuesday. Superior Court officers went ahead with plans for release of 87 copies of the documents at 3 p.m. EDT Wednesday. Jerome P. Facher, attorney for the court stenographers who transacted the inquest and then claimed the right to distribute copies of the transcript to the news media for a fee, petitioned the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for a restraining order to halt the documents' release. Chief Judge Bailey Aldrich rejected the motion. "The Massachusetts judges," he said, "have been made aware of the problem. We do not propose to make any further orders." A damage suit brought by the stenographer, pending in the Federal Appeals Court, was not affected by Tuesday's ruling. The documents—the 12-page report of the inquest judge and the 764-page transcript of testimony from the four-day secret investigation—will be given to members of the media who have paid $75 for the set of two documents. There are 87 sets spoken for, according to court officers. Distribution will be in alphabetical order in a seventh-floor Suffolk County Superior Court room. The entire procedure has been awaited for 109 days since the inquest closed Jan.8. "On July 18, 1969 at approximately 11:15 p.m. in Chappaquiddick, Martha's Vineyard, Mass., I was driving my car on Main Street on my way to get the ferry back to Edgartown." With that statement to police nine months ago, Kennedy set off one of the most explosive stories in many years. The death of the 28-year-old freckled-faced blonde from Plymouth, Pa., also marked the most damaging blow to the fortunes of the surviving Kennedy son. Kennedy, then at 37 a leading Democratic contender for the 1972 presidential nomination, took himself out of the race—some said forever. Kennedy spent almost two hours agonizing over his accident report in the small police headquarters at Edgartown which was caught up in the middle of its usually colorful summer resort trade. "I descended a hill and came upon a narrow bridge," he wrote. "The car went off the side of the bridge. There was one passenger with me, one Miss Mary Jo Kopechne, a former secretary of my brother, Sen. Robert Kennedy. The car turned over and sank into the water and landed with the roof resting on the bottom." Kennedy struggled out of the black sedan. Miss Kopechne was found the next morning floating in the back seat by a scuba diver. Her death was ruled due to drowning by the medical examiner on the scene, but no autopsy was performed. House probes Douglas' files WASHINGTON (UPI)—A House subcommittee investigating possible impeachment of Justice William O. Douglas said Tuesday that it would like to see Douglas' personal records in addition to all Federal records on him. Douglas had offered the special five-man investigating panel subcommittee complete access to his own records, including personal files and Supreme Court papers. Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., subcommittee chairman, told reporters his committee not only would like to see Douglas' personal papers but already has asked President Nixon for authorization to examine Federal files "relative to malfeasance or misconduct" by Douglas. These include, he said, records of the Justice Department, Internal Revenue Service, the Securities and Exchange Commission Douglas once headed, and records of "any other departments that may have pertinent information concerning Justice Douglas." Campus briefs Old, new Senateshold joint meeting The old and new student Senates will meet jointly at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the auditorium in Bailey Hall. Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and former student body president, will preside over the meeting of the outgoing Senate, which will elect three carryover members to the new Senate. Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and newly elected student body president, will be formally sworn into office during the meeting. German fraternity holds initiation Delta Phi Alpha, German honorary fraternity, will have its initiation meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union International Room. Education frat to hold meeting Phi Delta Kappa, professional fraternity for men majoring in education, will hold a meeting from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. tonight in the Rubayyat Club of the Ramada Inn. The meeting was canceled last Wednesday because of the curfew. At 8 p.m. the meeting will be moved to the Media Center at 7th and New Hampshire streets. Panel to discuss Mid East crisis The KU Hillel chapter will hold a panel discussion on the Middle East Crisis at 8 p.m. tonight in McCollum Hall. Allan Blumenthal, Cleveland junior and editor of KU Shalom, said the panel was a response to the Palestinian panel discussion that had been held two weeks ago. Participating on the panel will be Mrs. Edith Goldman, a lawyer and Tel Aviv graduate student; James Seaver, professor of history; Al Worob, West Orange, N.J. graduate student and Hillel adviser, and Blumenthal. Speech exemption exam slated The final speech exemption examination of the semester will be held from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday in room 6-A of Lindley Annex. Students who pass the examination are exempt from taking Speech 1-A or 1-B, and fulfill the fundamentals of speech requirement for graduation. Students wishing to take the examination should sign up in Lindley Annex today. Student composer presents recital Michael Seyfrit, Wheaton, Ill. senior, will present a program of original compositions at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall. Seyfrit received a $300 prize in the Phi Mu Alpha Contemporary Music Symposium for his composition titled Symphony No. 2. He is currently teaching the instrumental portion of a music history workshop under the guidance of KU faculty and is a member of the Phi Mu Alpha professional music fraternity. Forty-five students and three faculty members will participate in the program. 2 KANSAN Apr.29 1970 Give Mom a BigHug early. And make Mother's Day last longer. Call or visit an FTD florist today. And order a BigHug Bouquet to arrive early. He'll send it across the street. Or country. A special arrangement. For a very special mother. Yours. Usually available at less than $12.50 The FTD BigHug bouquet. FTD FESTIVAL DE FLOWERING WINNER CENTRO DE ARTE MATERIALIZADO The report, presented at the meeting by Paul R. Burton, associate professor of biology and physiology, suggested that the following changes be made in the current structure of college faculty and student representation: that there be expansion in the number of elected committees within the College; that the constitution of the college assembly be all college faculty of the rank of instructor, elected part time faculty (teaching assistants and assistant instructors) and elected undergraduate student representatives; that there be five elected committees, with membership on these consisting of nine regular faculty representatives, two teaching assistants and assistant instructors and three undergraduate representatives; that all members of the afore mentioned committees be accorded voting rights; and that to insure minority group representation on the committees an "enabling clause" be adopted, which would allow the various committees, if they desired, to augment their committee membership by seeking out minority group mem- A subcommittee report on bylaws and legislation generated a certain amount of debate at the College Faculty Meeting Tuesday in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Report prompts debate Upon completion of his report Burton was asked by William L. Silvert, associate professor of physics, why there should be an established delineation between minority group members and students. He said he considered minority group members simply as students and not as members of a certain minority. He suggested that all student representatives be elected through normal channels and that a recourse be provided for minority groups in case they did not feel they had received proper representation. He said he did not feel that the "enabling clause" did anyone justice in that it amounted to revolution by fiat by the Faculty Council, which is to be comprised of the five elected committees. Several faculty members questioned the need for establishing a Faculty Council. This group suggested that the present faculty meetings served the purposes that the committee meetings would serve and allowed a greater number of faculty members to be heard. In response to these comments, Burton pointed out the poor attendance of the College faculty meetings and said he felt the committees, being a smaller group, would be more efficient than the potential membership of the entire College faculty. A question about the value of greater student representation was brought up by Howard Kahane, associate professor of philosophy. Kahane commented that he wondered if greater student representation in the areas of degree requirements would not somehow negate the value of the degree. Kansas City quarterback Len Dawson is one of the few players to qualify for a pension in both the National and American football leagues. A counter to this remark came from another faculty member who said he felt that in the area of student-faculty relations, an ideal situation should be a community of interests between the two parties and, in this respect, student representation was necessary. Adding to the comments on this subject, Herbert Galton, associate professor of Slavic languages, said if student desires to abolish the language requirement were any indication of students' thoughts on degrees, then he felt the degree could be damaged internationally. He said that taking into consideration the average American student's lack of knowledge of other cultures and languages, the American degree would be of less value internationally if the language requirement were abolished. Tempo YOUR STORE WITH MORE AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES OPERATED BY GAMBLE-SKOGMO, INC. OPEN HIS EYES TO A BEAUTIFUL SURF PRIZE $1097 "Red, White and U" by surf togs SWIM SUITS And...U will be his first mate in this stretch. nylon knit figure-hugging blouson, with the accent on the bold red, white and blue braid ...and separate boy shorts to keep you trim and ship-shape. Red/white/blue, in sizes 32-38. PUTT-PUTT® GOLF COURSES AMERICA'S QUALITY COURSES CLIP AND USE THIS 30c DISCOUNT! PUTT-PUTT® GOLF COURSES AMERICA'S QUALITY COURSES CLIP AND USE THIS 30c DISCOUNT! Putt-Putt is open daily at 1 p.m. Join your friends. Excitement, fun, win passes, entertainment. PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSE 30c Discount Ticket One per customer—Expires May 3 Cambodian incident evokes warning TOKYO (UPI) — Communist China warned the United States today to leave the peoples of Indochina alone and said America will be held responsible for whatever arises from U.S. action in the area. An official statement by the Chinese government, broadcast by the New China News Agency, said the Indochinese people have "a powerful backing" of the 700 million Chinese people in their fight against "U.S. imperialism." The statement was made in connection with the recent "summit conference of Indochinese peoples" which brought ousted Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk together with the Communist leaders of North Vietnam, Art removed from museum Spooner Museum is minus $1 million worth of art. These art objects have been moved to the basement of Spencer Library. The 100 objects are being stored in special vaults in Spencer. According to Jim Enyear art, museum curator, there are no immediate plans to return the art objects to Spooner. The removal of the objects from Spooner resulted from a plan set up by the previous security administration at Kansas University under the late Mr. Moomau, the endowment association, the art museum and the insurance company that holds several million dollars worth of insurance on the art at KU. Laos and South Vietnam last Friday and Saturday. In Paris, Mm. Nguyen Thi Binh, the Viet Cong "foreign minister," said Communist forces in Indochina will give all-out support, possibly including military aid, to Sihanouk in his bid to regain control of Cambodia. The plan of action was set up for any emergency whether natural or man-made. The objects were to be removed if any of these organizations felt it necessary to do so. The plan was enacted by the insurance company at this time. operating with the mediocre pieces on display. Mme. Binh, speaking at a hastily called news conference, was asked directly whether the Communists were giving Sihanouk military aid. The insurance company people have their doubts about the security of the museum and so there is a question whether the objects will ever be returned to the museum. Enyeart said the most valuable and rare piece removed was a 15th century wood-carving of the Madonna by Tillman Riemenschneider. She said the summit conference of Indochina Communist leaders with Communist China last weekend decided to "support vigorously" Sihanouk's efforts and "as to the question of how this aid will be provided, the interested parties are going to discuss it." Senator Muskie to discuss youth in KU appearance Senator Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, will discuss what today's youth can do to resolve the pressing issues of our time when he speaks on campus next Friday, May 8. Mike Dickeson, Atchison senior and president of the KU chapter of Collegiate Young Democrats said Muskie will speak at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. Muskie's speech is expected to last approximately 45 minutes and will be followed by a 10 to 15 minute question and answer period. Late hour in library little used New England has 41,957 farms. The new policy, made possible by Student Senate funds specifically for this purpose, is being tried on an experimental basis and will continue until the end of the semester. Terrance Williams, assistant director of Watson Library, said Monday that so far only a small number of students had been using Watson Library during its extra hour of service. "Since you have stretched your Two weeks ago Watson Library began staying open one hour later Enyear said the museum has over 12,000 objects but only 1,000 are ever displayed. He said that the excellent pieces had been removed and the museum was now Williams said he didn't know whether the reason students were not using the extra hour was a lack of knowledge of the new hours or whether a poorly lit campus kept students from using the library at night. He said he hoped the new policy would be carried over next fall because he believed there was a need to keep the library open longer for those who had no other adequate place to study. The new Watson Library hours are 8 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. to midnight Sunday. Only the basement and first floor remain open the extra hour. The top two floors remain closed. Apr. 29 KANSAN 3 1970 University of Kansas Theatre and School of Fine Arts present THE THREE-PENNY OPERA Book and Lyrics by Bertold Brecht Music by Kurt Weill English Adaptation by Marc Blitzstein May 1 and 2 May 3—Matinee at 2:30 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Curtain: 8:20 p.m. Current Registration Card admits to $1.40 Seat aggressive claws into Cambodia and are further expanding your war of aggression against Vietnam and Laos, you must be held responsible for the consequences arising therefrom," said the Peking statement. Dwight Boring* says... College Life created the BENEFACTOR especially for college men. It has behind it the planning and research of the original and only life insurance company serving college men only. You should know all about the BENEFACTOR policy. I can tell you its short story with a happy ending—a short story you'll be glad you he ar d through the years ahead. PETER HOLLIS Check into it. Call me. *Dwight Boring 209 Providence Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-0767 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA To Our Students: ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men The upper level at the bookstore is open. The lower level (textbooks) is still closed. If you do need a required text, though, we can get it for you. Just come to the upper level and ask. kansas union BOOKSTORE KANSAN COMMENT hearing voices Union in retrospect To the editor: The memory of KU's Classes of 1920, 1921, 1922 and 1923 was brought to the minds of thousands of KU students, past and present, Tuesday morning. For as we look at the desecration of the Kansas Union, one of the nation's greatest student traditions, respected by colleges and universities everywhere, has been scarred. As a former KU student, I know that our minds now must turn to the rebuilding of the one campus structure that has always been so much a part of everyday life on Mount Oread. But at this same time, may I take a few minutes to remind today's students of the gutsy techniques and sweat that those classes, fifty years ago, put forth to build the Kansas Union? Three years ago, this story was related to me by Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen in a personal interview for a book that I was compiling on American traditions in school pep and spirit. In 1919, America's bigger universities were enhancing their stature with construction of giant football stadiums and student union buildings to help attract attention and increase enrollment. KU was behind. Student committees had been fighting to replace a rickety 2,000-seat wooden stadium. Their funding appeals to alumni in Wichita, Kansas City and Lawrence had been ignored. It would take a million dollars. Too many people said, "Too much money. Impossible. It's never been done here before." KU had a below-average football team in those years. Nevertheless, we were scheduled to play powerful Nebraska—some boys that outweighed us by over 20 pounds per man. Undefeated Nebraska. Awesome even in 1919. But KU went to Lincoln anyway. Astounding everyone, the Jayhawks outscored the big boys 26-20, but the last touchdown was called back. The game ended a 20-20 tie. But it was like a crashing victory. The KU student body was estatic. (Dr. Allen says this is an understatement!) Riding on an unprecedented wave of enthusiasm, the football team returned to Lawrence. A cheerleader realized the occasion and rose to it. Receiving permission from Chancellor Lindley, yell captain Shirley K. Winsor (a male cheerleader, by the way) called an all-student assembly for 10:00 Monday morning "KU is no longer a small, Midwestern prairie college," Winsor told the 4,000 students assembled in Robinson Gymnasium. "Our parents and alumni across the state have denied us a stairway to excellence; a new stadium." Cheers and the Rock Chalk chant. Then Winsor made the big push. The 4,000 students of the University of Kansas retired to classes that morning after having pledged $60-a-man to spark the fund drive. Close to a quarter million total. The results: a student-led and managed campaign that ended with the building of the Memorial Stadium and the Kansas Memorial Union. Students built the University of Kansas. Names of unselfish students dot the campus. Pearson. Douthart. Corbin. Ellsworth. Learned. Who dares to desecrate the students of the University? There are more than a few who are asking that question this morning. Randy Neil 9302 W. 87th Terrace Overland Park \* \* \* To the editor: Ron Chanutin's plea in the Kansan of April 24, was just what was needed to get me to pick up the banner for a "Vociferous Majority" so badly needed everywhere in this land. To see someone taking the courage to speak out gave me the courage to do the same. I hope the curfews will make people realize what Negroes have had to put up with in this country for more than 300 years. Rev. Sundbye of the First Methodist Church had to make that completely clear to me; like he said, maybe you wouldn't have done anything anyway, but the fact that you weren't allowed to do anything made the dormitories, Greek houses, apartments and homes in Lawrence just like prisons. As I see it, one must come to the realization that the seat of our problems is the refusal of so many, myself included at times, to regard their fellow human beings, regardless of color, creed, national origin, or sex, as fellow, and with equal right, inhabitants of this globe—as neighbors. To dislike or hate someone because he or she is different is ridiculous, all the more so because it is easy. To like or love people for what they are is most difficult, but, for me, that is what makes life such an adventure and challenge. Leon M. Green Rapid City, S.D., junior * * * To the editor: As a January 1970 graduate of KU, I am not surprised at the fire bombing that greatly damaged the south wing of the Kansas Union. What is surprising is the length of time it is taking for the great majority of the students to get involved in the problems at the University. I believe that they came to the University to get an education. But what they do not seem to realize is that actions like the Kansas Union fire work the greatest hardship on them. They are the ones who are being deprived of the use of the bookstore. Most want to see changes made at the University in both race relations and social responsibility. Unfortunately, a few such as those responsible for the fire bombing are not concerned enough with education and change. I believe that repression and further denial of rights will be the outcome of the continuing silence of the majority, a few of whom know the individual or individuals responsible. To the guilty I can say beware of the anger of your peers, because once pushed to the active point they will be more difficult to deal with than any University administration could possibly be. However, as long as this silent majority remains silent, it will continually be denied its rights and the University will remain a center of turmoil. The educational function of the University will be no more. John A. Bouie 43 Jones St., Newark, N.J. ★ ★ ★ To the editor: Who was this group—these individuals—whose demands were not met, whose rights were trampled, and what connection did they have to the Union fire? What rights, what privileges, what prerogatives were denied this group that burning the Kansas Union would retrieve? What deed done to these people was so intolerable that warranted the destruction of the rights, privileges, and opportunities of 16,000 people at the University of Kansas who might otherwise have used the Union facilities peacefully and productively? Those whose actions resulted in the Union fire either by choice of deliberate action, or by chance of circumstance owe the people of Kansas, the students, and the Alumni the answers to these questions. Furthermore, the students, faculty, and citizens of Lawrence had best reappraise where they stand, lest the University be wiped out before the "slate is wiped clean!" Gregory L. Lauver (B.A. Kansas 1969) Northwestern Medical School 710 N. Lake Shore Drive Chicago 710 N. Lake Shore Drive, Chicago Griff & the Unicorn "DO NOT BE AFRAID TO VOICE YOUR OPINIONS. BE OUTSPOKEN. YOUR FRIENDS WILL ADMIRE YOU..." 'MORNIN, KYLE' HELLO, GRIFF, YOU LAZY, GOOD-FOR-NOTHING BUM... WHAT DID I DO WRONG? BY SOKOLOFF WHAT DID I DO WRONG? $ \textcircled{c} $ David Sokoloff 1970 LAOS THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Carefully, Mr. Nixon Washington window 'When I said we were withdrawing from Vietnam, I didn't say by what route.' By STEWART HENSLEY UPI Diplomatic Reporter WASHINGTON (UPI)—Events in Southeast Asia have reached a point where President Nixon must proceed with extreme caution lest he be trapped in the political quicksands that pulled down President Lyndon B. Johnson. Expanded Communist military operations in Cambodia, together with the continued strategic position of Hanoi's forces in Laos, have underlined the fact that Vietnam cannot be dealt with in isolation. The savage Communist military reaction against the Cambodian government which ousted Prince Norodom Sihanouk has made it clear that what the United States must deal with in Southeast Asia is a war involving all Indochina and not just Vietnam. That is why some high officials in the Nixon administration are willing now to admit that Nixon's Vietnamization program—even if it works—is the answer to only part of the fateful issue facing the President. The idea of bolstering Cambodian forces to fight against the 40,000 Hanoi and Viet Cong troops in the eastern part of that country, while South Vietnamese forces attack them from the other side, has considerable appeal for military strategists. However, the President and his top advisers must weigh the political consequences of such a move, which might well draw the United States into an even wider war in the area. Secretary of State William P. Rogers has urged action by "the international community to protect and restore the independence and neutrality of Cambodia." He has branded the 40,000 Communist Vietnamese troops that originally went into eastern Cambodia—using it as a sanctuary from the war in South Vietnam—as outright aggressors threatening the very independence of all Cambodia. While providing limited military supplies to Cambodia, the United States has made its first effort to deal with the increased peril in Southeast Asia by psychological and diplomatic tactics. Such a statement could be interpreted as laying the groundwork for justifying direct U.S. military intervention within the framework of the "Nixon Doctrine" proclaimed at Guam. However, Rogers for the time being is using it instead as the basis for bringing new pressure on the Soviet Union and other countries which were involved in the Geneva conferences on Indochina to take a hand in the situation and try to force Hanoi to negotiate. An All-American college newspaper THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . . James W. Murray Managing Editor ... Ken Peterson Campus Editor ... Ted Iliff News Editor ... Donna Shrader Editorial Editors ... Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke Sports Editors ... Bruce Carnahan, Steve Shriver Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkens Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Women's Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Artists and Reviews Editors ... Geneleli Richards, Rich Geary Assistant News Editors ... Wade Phillips, Hill Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Sessor, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffingwell Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks Advertising Managers Larry Cates, Joan Bos National Advertising Manager Oscar Bassinson Classified Manager Shelley Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Laglos KNSAN REVIEWS FILMS: back to nature By RICHARD GEARY Assistant Arts & Reviews Editor John Korty's "Riverrun" is a lyrical, almost intangible movie, containing no more and no less than is necessary for the richly affecting celebration of life that it is. The tone is so quiet and the action so elusive, that it is difficult to recall particular scenes, or speak of the film in terms of technique at all. Sarah and Dan are a young unmarried couple who leave the crowded Berkeley campus to live on a lonely seaside sheep ranch in northern California. They are today's most admirable people: dropouts with the courage and determination to practice what they preach—and the ability to make it work. As the story begins, Sarah's father, a salty merchant seaman, comes to visit for a few days; he learns that his daughter is pregnant and lengthens his stay to be present at the birth. The father gradually becomes accustomed to the kids' offbeat lifestyle, and, for a long while, it looks as if no conflict will develop at all to keep the story moving. But tension slowly builds: The father becomes increasingly hostile to Dan's ideals—unable to see how basically alike he and his son-in-law are—Sarah becomes increasingly angry at both of them, and everything culminates in the baby's premature birth in the farmhouse. John Korty, who wrote, directed and photographed "Riverrun" is that rare animal: an independent film-maker. From financing to editing, the film is all One liners... United Press International United Press International HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — The Southern California Motion Picture Council honored Alfred Hitchcock with its "Family Award" for his new thriller, "Topaz." HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Oscarwinning composer Maurice Jarre, who has captured two Academy Awards, will write the musical score for "El Condor" which stars Jim Brown and Lee Van Cleef. HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Warner Bros., under new management, will film "Diary of a Rapist" which Stuart Rosenberg will produce and direct. HOLLYWOOD UPI)—Kristina Holland, who plays Bill Bixby's secretary in "The Courtship of Eddie's Father," will make her movie debut in MGM's "The Strawberry Statement." HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Producer William Orr and director Ted Post have formed a company to produce a movie titled "Pike," based on the life of the late Bishop James A. Pike. HOLLYWOOD (UPD)—Columbia topped its single-day casting record when producer Stanley Kramer signed 25 actors for speaking roles in "R.P.M." which stars Anthony Quinn and Ann-Margret. HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Sidney Poitier will star in a sequel to "Heat of the Night"—which won Rod Steiger an Academy Award —titled "They Call Me MISTER Tibbs!" HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Universal Studios will begin production on "Justice in the Backroom" based on the 1963 Wylie-Hoffert murder case in New York City. HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—James Mason will star in "The Yin & The Yank" in Hong Kong with Burgess Meredith directing. Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN 5 his, and all praise and blame must fall upon his shoulders. His only blantat fault is his insistent use of short, choppy flashbacks—so obligatory these days—merely to show how irresponsible the father had been in years past. They are useless to the story and become a genuine irritation to the viewer, but fortunately they are few. Praise, though, can be given generously: Korty's camera lingers lovingly over the small actions and artifacts of everyday life, giving them stature and beauty; his dialogue reveals the complex character relationships with sensitivity and compactness; his overwhelming conviction of the goodness of life close to the soil is undiminished throughout the movie. Louise Ober as Sarah, Mark Jenkins as Dan and John McLiam as the father give restrained, natural performances. The title is from the first line of Joyce's *Finnegan's Wake*—"riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shore to bend of bay"—which serves as introduction to and summation of this delicate but absorbing little film: a poetic depiction of the continuity of life and man's attempt to be at peace with his environment. 'Three Penny' continues offering modern adaptions By KAREN KLINKBERG Kansan staff writer "The Three Penny Opera" continues Fri on the University Theatre stage. A bawdy 1928 English musical-comedy with whores and gangsters has been given a 1970 twist by its stage director Anita Masseth, assistant professor in speech and drama. The plot of the play centers around the exploits of a knife-carrying Macheath, played by Michael Lynott, Scranton, Pa., graduate student, and his loyal five-man gang. The action begins after Macheath's sneak marriage to Polly Peachum, played by Molly McCray, Fairway junior, despite the disapproval of her parents, played by Mary Pat Green, Prairie Village freshman and James Rigler, Highland Park, Ill., sophomore. As the story unfolds we find out that Macheath is not only a two-timer but a three-timer laying claim to two more women in his life, Jenny, played by Barbara Allen, Lawrence sophomore and Lucy Brown, played by Jody Altman, Leawood freshman. Several episodes later, Mack is captured by the police despite the efforts of Tiger Brown, his police friend, played by Roy Sorrels, assistant instructor in speech and drama, and the play ends with the trumpeted arrival of "The Messenger," played by Richard Gilliland, Overland Park sophomore, who saves the hero. The play, by German playwright Bertolt Brecht, is described as "anti-greed, anti-corruption and pre-Hitler" by director Mrs. Masseth. "In its day, this play was put on in a wayout way. Brecht said the theatre was meant for change—that there were no rules," she said. "When I heard that, I decided to follow Brecht's idea of the theatre. Every rule the audience expects in the plot is changed. The hero is made a non-hero, the set has been changed to scaffolding," she said. Though the play is about a corrupt society in the English slums with a house of ill-repute and underworld characters, the message of the play is relevant. The greed, corruption and hypocrisy present now has been incorporated into the play through the use of slides, tie-dyed costumes and strobe lights. Though a 1928 play the message is sent in 1970 language. The music, including the popular song of a few years back, "Mack the Knife," is being directed by George Lawner, professor of orchestra. The orchestra is composed of select music students, and includes a banjo player and versatile student on the organ and piano. The play, a combination of the talents of music and theatre sides of Murphy, continues Fri. and runs through Sun. with a 2:30 p.m. matinee on Sun. The Fri. and Sat. performances start at 8:20 p.m. BOOKS THE GENEROUS YEARS, by Chet Huntley (Crest, 75 cents)—A warm, enjoyable autobiography by the celebrated news-caster. "The Generous Years" is about a Montana boyhood, long before the era of "Goodnight, David." The book received high praise for its naturalness, its capturing of a time and a place. There is much more of Mark Twain than of eastern sophistication in this charming book. TV future outlined HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Nathaniel Lande is a youthful visionary at Cinema Center Films who will oversee production of two films for television next season and produce another pair personally. He is enthusiastic about his projects, but his eyes become neon when he outlines the future of home entertainment. "The next development in movies-television is the three-dimensional hologram," he explained. "It will be beamed from a small device in your home into an area of space which you can walk around or see from any angle. You will be able to run your hand through it. "There are no limitations of screens—movie or television. "At the moment systems are being developed by IT&T, the Bell System, AT&T, Itek, Xerox and other electronic firms. "Americans will be able to go to a library, choose a movie they want to see and bring it home in cartridge form, in a cassette. We will be able to buy them or rent them as the case may be." INTERVIEWS (Wed., April 29th) Senior Class Committee Chairmen Applications Available Now at Dean of Women's Office. 220 Strong THEY WERE REBELS. THEY WERE IRISH, THEY WERE CATHOLIC, THE WERE THE "MOLLY MAGUIRES" RICHARD HARRIS SEAN CONNERY SAMANTHA EGGAR THE MOLLY MAGUIRES 4 MARTIN RITT PRODUCTION FRANK FILMAY WRITTEN BY MASTER WATERTIMM PRODUCED BY MARTIN MAYER AND MALTER SEMINER DRAWED BY MARTIN KITT MUSIC DESIGNED BY MARYMAN BRANCH MANIFESTATION TECHNOLOGY A MAKROUT PRODUCTION A PARAMETRIC DIRECTORY **GP** MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:10 - 9:45 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1-3065 John Korty The Adapter, Director, Producer & Photographer of "Crazy Quilt" & "The Own & The Pussy Cat" PREMIERES HIS THIRD FILM PREMIERES HIS THIRD FILM WORLD PREMIERE WEDNESDAY! Every generation has to run its course... a film by JOHN KORTY rinneerererererererererererrrrii riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY LOUISE OBER • JOHN McLIAM • MARK JENKINS • Color Starts THE Hillcrest HILLOWELL SHIPPING CENTER & STAples AND JOBS Wednesday SHE WANTED A CROWN . . . HE WANTED A SON . . . FRENCH QUEEN MARY I AND HER SON JOHN II. A LOST TIME OF CHILDHOBS. RICHARD BURTON as HENRY VIII GENEVIEVE BUJOLD in Anne of the Thousand Days Granada THEATRE ... telephone V1.3-5784 HELD OVER Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50, Child. 75 Group condemns arsonists A group of concerned students and faculty at the University of Kansas is attempting to do something about the incidents of last week. They call themselves the Concerned Student-Faculty Association. The group now consists of about 15 faculty, graduate and undergraduate students and originated previous to the Kansas Union fire, said Stan Jasper, Topeka junior. The association is attempting to study the interworkings of KU, the Lawrence community, the Board of Regents, faculty and students, Jasper said. Pontiff loosens rules in inter-faith marriage WASHINGTON (UPI) — Pope Paul VI has loosened only slightly the Roman Catholic Church's restrictions on mixed marriages of Catholics and other faiths, it was announced Tuesday. The new rules, announced by the U.S. Catholic Conference in Washington, abandoned the requirement that the non-Catholic party to a marriage promise in advance to let the children be reared as Catholics. But the new rules still require the Catholic partner to promise Nixon holds yacht sale to economize WASHINGTON (UPI) — Two White House yachts named for President Nixon's daughters will be put up for sale as an economy move, it was announced today. The sale of the 90-foot cabin cruiser Patricia—Tricia's full name—and the 64-foot cruiser Julie will trim the President's personal fleet by two-thirds, leaving only the 99-foot Sequoia for the First Family's boating pleasures. that he will "do all in his power to have all the children baptized and grow up in the Catholic Church." The White House estimated deactivation of the two cruisers would result in an estimated saving of $200,000 a year. The net effect of the change is that the non-Catholic partner will no longer be compelled to make a promise of his own which he might consider a violation of his conscience, but would be aware that he will be forcing his mate to violate a solemn promise unless he goes along with the Catholic upbringing of the children. The new rules, issued March 31, by the Pope in a 2,400-word letter entitled "Matrimonio Mixta" and effective Oct. 1, are more likely to irritate than to placate Protestants who have long felt hindered by the Vatican's position on mixed marriages. The revised instructions were to have been made public on Thursday but were released by the conference here Tuesday when they were published in violation of an embargo. Protestants had hoped that the Pope would eliminate any strictures on child-rearing in the faith and that he would permit Protestants to take part in mixed marriage ceremonies. 6 KANSAN Apr. 29 1970 The Pope did neither, although he relaxed previous rules on both points. Going further, he rejected arguments from some quarters that mixed marriages can be means of furthering the ecumenical movement of reconciliation among faiths. The letter stated that such marriages are unlawful and should be discouraged, although they are valid with proper dispensation. Have you tried a Super Shef? It's a heap big sandwich. Buy one today! — 100% Pure Beef — 9th & Iowa St. BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS LET'S ALL GO TO BURGER CHEF Disapproval of the burning of buildings and violence in Lawrence has been expressed by the association. Members have termed it irresponsible, stupid and damaging to the students of the University as well as the community at large. No demands have been made by the individuals who caused the incidents, Jasper said. Since no demands have been made, no demands can be met and no dissipation can occur among the persons who found reason to create such acts. The persons who caused such incidents seem to have given up on any means of communication. With no knowledge of their anger or why they feel the way they do, there can be no resolving of the issue, Jasper said. Those interested in contributing to the work of the association are asked to contact Jasper. henrys Henrys SUNDOWN SAVINGS Onion Rings are flying out of the fryer for only 19c an order tonite only, from 5:00 to 7:00. Just another of the many bargains Henry's will be throwing at you this month. Patronize Kansan Advertisers RING ON! Bandolino VIA Italy—Today's newest look in sandals for every occasion. Pictured style is only one of many to choose from in a wide range of colors. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Social Work Day to involve two states Alums to sponsor social welfare project Social workers, social agency heads, faculty and alumni of the Social Welfare School at KU are gathering May 4 for the Social Work Day at KU. Social Work Day is a traditional project of the alumni of the school with the purpose of pulling together people from Kansas and part of Missouri that are involved in social welfare, whether they be workers, faculty or heads of welfare offices, said Larry Brown assistant professor of Social Welfare. This year the day consists of a workshop in "inter-communication." Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN 7 Brown said there are four basic areas of social work being brought together at the meeting. Each contain different ideas on what the priorities and goals of social welfare should be. The School of Social Welfare, which was started in 1947, trains students professionally in social work. The instruction of a social worker includes one-half class work and one-half work in the field. Because there are not enough agencies in Lawrence to offer field positions to the social welfare students, they are scattered across the state and into Missouri. They work at such places as the KU Med Center, Topeka State Mental Hospital, the Men- ninger Foundation, family service centers and the state welfare departments. Between some of the students and the heads of agencies there has been a difference of opinion as to the organization of social work. Students are saying that the social agencies are a "band-aid" on society's ills and radical changes are needed. The agencies, on the other hand, are afraid to change too rapidly. The faculty at the school has had almost a complete turnover in the last few years, Brown said. Most of the members are new to this region and the agencies are questioning whether the students are radical because of the faculty. The alumni of the school are questioning what is going on in their school, Brown said. They want to keep up with the changes in social welfare and wonder about the changes they hear about, he added. The gathering, Brown said, will get these people together. What they will probably do, he said, is have each group formulate a list of priorities of what they think is most important in social work and then discuss why each group chose different objectives, if they are different. One of the moderators of the workshop is to be Merril Raber, an associate at the National Training Laboratory and director of the Community Service at Prairie View Mental Health Center, Newton, Kansas. The other moderator is Dr. Dean Kerkman, a clinical psychologist at the KU Health Center. It is hoped that this workshop will bring the several areas of social work in this region together on their goals and priorities, Brown said. 1969 WEATHER HONG KONG (UPI)—The weather in Hong Kong in 1969 was warmer, sunnier and drier than usual. The year's rainfall of 74.63 inches was 13 per cent less than normal. DON'T GIVE THIS MOTH ANOTHER CAVITY! STORE NOW-PAY NEXTFALL while there is YOU STORE- WE MOTHPROOF FREE MOTHPROOFING at ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 Frizzell calls for lobbying law changes TOPEKA—(UPI)—Attorney Gener I Kent Frizzell, who ruled Monday on violations of the law surrounding the pari-mutuel wagering bill in the 1970 legislature, has called for a change in recently-passed state laws governing lobbyists and their salaries. Frizzell said the laws should require the dollar amount of payment received by lobbyists for their work. If the dollar amount paid to lobbyists on the betting bill would have been known, Frizzell said, much of the "suspicion, rumor and innuendo" surrounding the measure would not have resulted. But the dollar amount of payment is not mandatory. The new laws enacted by the 1970 session require lobbyists earning $1,000 or more a year to disclose the source of their pay, the manner in which pay was determined, and the manner in which expenses were reimbursed for the preceding calendar year. Frizzell's ruling Monday culminated a five-week probe into reports of possible lobbying violations for the wagering bill which died in the 1970 legislature. The reports stemmed from a $30,000 payment to Topeka lobbyist Donald L. Deam and innuendoes of a possible connection between votes on the measure and invitations extended to 25 lawmakers by Sen. Jack Robinson, R-Wichita, a proponent of the bill, to go on a South African trip. Frizzell said $30,000 was supplied to Deam, but it was "expended for lawful purposes." He said there was also no connection found between the bill and the trip, although some statements made by Robinson were "misleading" Frizzell admitted some of the practices might have been questionable on ethical grounds, but there were no laws broken. Docking 'doubtful' of Frizzell TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking said today the "personal involvement" of Attorney General Kent Frizzell "raises serious doubts" about the investigative report on lobbying for the pari-mutuel wagering bill. Frizzell, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, released a report Monday on his probe of possible wrongdoing in lobbying for the parimutuel bill killed in the 1970 Legislature. He said no laws were violated. Docking, a Democrat, said in a prepared statement he would study the report closely. "Until all questions I have concerning lobbying procedures are answered, I will not consider the case closed." Docking said. "Unfortunately, the personal involvement of the attorney general in the matter raises serious doubts about the investigation and the subsequent report. Even Ambrose Saricks, professor of history at the University of Kansas, has been appointed dean of the graduate school at Wichita State University. KU professor WSU dean of grad school Saricks was appointed during a meeting in the Kansas Board of Regents in Kansas City. He is also associate dean of the graduate school at KU. He has been at KU since 1950, and has acted as director of the Experimental Teacher Fellowship Program in History, director of the NDEA Institute in History and as coordinator of conferences for high school and junior college teachers of history. Saricks served as chairman of the campus United Fund drive and president of the Lawrence Kiwanis Club in 1968. Saricks was co-chairman of the Student Faculty Committee on University Governance and chairman of the Senate Council Executive Committee. He received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Bucknell University at Lewisburg, Pa., and his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin. He formerly taught at Ohio State University and the University of Wisconsin. Judiciary Committee dismisses first case The incident before the Judiciary dealt with the misusing of university documents in an incident March 10 involving traffic and parking regulations. The University of Kansas Judiciary Committee disposed of its first case last week because it did not fall into its jurisdiction. In a statement issued by Harold Rosson, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering and chairman of the Hearing Division of the University Judiciary, the case was dismissed because it involved University Parking and Traffic Regulations which, according to the Senate Code, fall under the jurisdiction of the University Student Court. in the closing days of the legislature, it was commonly known that the attorney general personally contacted key Republican senators, urging them to kill a resolution which would have provided an independent investigation of lobbying activities," Docking said. 8 KANSAN Apr. 29 1970 an investigation of the reports by the governor's committee on governmental ethics died in a conference committee. In the waning hours of the 1970 session, a resolution calling for Docking said Kansans deserved an "independent, objective, nonpolitical investigation." The governor said since he had taken office he had attempted to bring lobbying under more public scrutiny. Spring Time is for SANDALS 100 Handmade Just For You At Primarily Leather WATCHBANDS • BELTS • BAGS VESTS • FRYE BOOTS • MOCS 812 MASS. — DOWNTOWN Griff's Warm Weather Special Free 10c Lemonade With Purchase of a Giant The weather's warmer and to help quench your thirst Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, Griff's is offering you a refreshing lemonade FREE with every purchase of Griff's famous GIANT Hamburger. Come in today. Come in tomorrow. The weather should be just as beautiful and our lemonade and GIANTS just as delicious. Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W. 23rd WENSKO Graduation Announcements are safe and may be picked up any time this week at the Oread Book Shop in the Union. Extra announcements available and for sale. kansas union BOOKSTORE KU professor finds glass objects Earth spheres appear similar to moon discs Glass spheres similar to those brought back from the moon by Apollo 11 astronauts have been found on earth by a University of Kansas geology professor. H. A. Ireland, professor of geology, said, "I have been finding similar spheres in my research work in limestones that are dissolved in acid in order to extract microfossils." Ireland said he had found the spheres in the acid residues of Silurian limestones all over the world for the last 35 years but he did not know what they were. After he saw a publication in Science magazine that showed some of the spheres from the moon, he knew what they were, he said. "It is obvious that geological conditions similar to that on the moon existed on the earth 425 million years ago." Ireland said. "It is also quite possible that the microspheres could be the result of the impact of meteors which we know exist on the moon," he said. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. recently spent several days in Central America participating in ceremonies for the renewal of the cultural exchange between the University of Costa Rica and the University of Kansas. Robert P. Cobb, director of international programs at KU, was with the Chancellor at the meetings. In El Salvador they met with representatives of the Organization of Central American States who are working for cooperative educational programs for the Central American countries. In Mexico City they met with a representative of the Ford Foundation. Chancellor Chalmers said there were symbolic reasons for his desire to participate in the signing of the cultural exchange agreement. Chalmers renews ties for cultural exchange "I wanted to signify by my presence that the close relationship between the two universities, initiated by Dr. Rodrigo Facio Brenes and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and renewed by Rector Carlos Monge Alfaro and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, would continue, Chalmers explained. "This is evidence," he said, "that volcanic activity occurred on the moon and within 50 feet of the lunar module." He also said it proved without using instrumental data that the moon is very old. "One of the great curiosities about the discovery of the spheres is that they have been found in marine sediments which means that they must have been carried to their place of deposition by wind," he said. all of the spheres were associated with volcanic areas," he said. Ireland said spheres similar to those found on the moon have been made in a laboratory in Lindley Hall by the State Geological Survey and similar spheres are on the market as reflectors for projection screens and road signs and markers at night. Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN 9 PHILIPP 66 In the laboratory, he said, finely ground powder of quartz was dusted from a weight of three feet into a tube over a high Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 "MOORE"BURGER "The Biggest Hamburger In Town" VI 3-9588 1414 W.6th intensity bunsen burner. The heat set up a turbulence which blew the dust out of the tube. The dust then changed into the glass spheres as it settled down. THE ONLY COPYRIGHTED MEN'S HAIRSTYLING TECHNIQUE IN AMERICA Patrick J. Norris Kenneth 'Roger' Evers MEN'S MASTILLE HAPPY PARK ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE 2322 RIDGE COURT APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE PHONE 842-3699 Ireland said he had an arrangement with Edward Zellar, KU professor of geology and physics, who has requisitioned samples of moon rock from NASA to let him look at the sample for half a day. SHAW AUTO SERVICE Chalmers said that during the past decade nearly 200 hundred students and more than 100 faculty members of the two universities had studied or taught in the exchange program. Your headquarters for miDAS* "At present, I have found that Ireland said that after the discovery of the similar looking spheres he started looking for the spheres and have found them in recent beds as young as 2 million years old. mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 "On the moon," he said, "the spheres are all colors but on earth they are all clear." "Equally important," Chalmers said, "I wanted to underline the commitment of the University of Kansas to international education. The University has, in addition to its agreement with the University of Costa Rica and its Latin American Studies program, a number of other study abroad opportunities and two National Defense Education Act centers in foreign language and area studies, the Soviet and Slavic Studies program and the East Asian Studies program. Chalmers said that in spite of changing patterns of support, he fully expected that KU would continue its present programs as well as discover ways in which they might be strengthened and expanded. "In either case," he said, "their origins were similar. The energy developed by a volcanic explosion or by the impact of a meteor would liquify the rock at either of those points. "The material would be blown into the air and would form tiny globules which would solidify into glass microspheres before they struck the ground." INTERVIEWS (Wed., April 29th) For Motorcycle 220 Strong Senior Class Committee Chairmen Applications Available Now at Dean of Women's Office. Complete Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. St. V1 3-3012 WHITEWALL OFFER KUMHO WHEELS $1295 6.50 x 13 whitewall tubeless plus $1.78 Fed. Ex. Tax and old tire. Goodyear "All-Weather IV" Tire - Clean sidewall design, radial darts on shoulder - Triple-tempered nylon cord construction - Buy now at these low prices 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRE ANY OF THESE SIZES ONE LOW PRICE 7.75 x 15 7.75 x 14 8.25 x 14 $17.95 plus $2.17 to $2.33 Fed. Ek, Tax and old tire. WHITEWALL TUBELESS GOOD YEAR THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS TIRES USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM: Because of an expected heavy demand for Goodyear tires, we may run out of some sizes during this offer, but we will be happy to order your size tire and have it shipped by our own check for future delivery of the merchandise. BUY NOW—PAY LATER ON OUR EASY TERMS --- INDEPENDENT GOOD YEAR Gregg DEALER Auto, Truck, Tractor, Implement, Boat & Bike Tires—Orbitread Electronic Processed Retreads - RCA - Westinghouse - Goodyear Batteries - Wheel Alignment and Balancing - Brake and Muffler Service. Hours 8 to 5:30 except closed 4 p.m. Sat. BUY TIRES MADE IN KANSAS BY KANSANS --- 814 West 23rd 842-5451 Tire Co. DOWNS Photo by Ray Sellers After the party — now what? Disposable soft drink and beer cans eventually pile up, whether or not they are thrown away. To combat this waste and prevent aluminum mountains from forming in the nation's junkyards, ecologists urge returning them for reuse. Who's whose Pinnings Shelly Levine, Overland Park sophomore majoring in liberal arts, to Stewart Farbnan, Wichita senior majoring in journalism, Zeta Beta Tau. Kaye Salminen, Kansas City sophomore majoring in French education, Alpha Chr Omega, to Walt Thompson, Overland Park senior majoring in history, Kappa Sigma. Annie Miller, Hastings, Neb. sophomore majoring in vocal education, Pi Beta Phi to John Shuss, Parsons sophomore majoring in chemistry, Beta Theta Pi. Don't chuck that beer can . . . GRIFF AND THE UNICORN exclusively in THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Griff & the Unicorn, Copyright, 1970, University Daily Kanam. Daily habits can pollute Look around, Americans, and listen to what ecologists are saying about the environment. Many who protest pollution (and wear indestructible buttons saying so) add to the problem every day, probably without realizing it. In the "Environmental Handbook" in the April Issue of Mademoiselle magazine, writer By CHARLENE MULLER Kansan Staff Writer For those essential, but nondecomposing containers, de Belle suggests keeping them for other uses. These include cellophane, waxed paper, styrofoam and plastic containers. Old coat hangers don't fade away—they just pile up. De Belle suggests returning them to the cleaners. When working in the garden, work fertilizers deep into the soil, otherwise the phosphates cause algae to accumulate in water systems. DDT and other pesticides should be avoided. If 10 KANSAN Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN features Also, de Belle suggests using heavy plastic garbage bags for trash instead of metal cans. They are odorproof, neater, lighter, and quieter, he says. Garret de Belle suggests several interesting methods to "depollute" the earth. Although decorator-conscious housewives may be partial to colored facial tissues, paper towels and toilet paper, de Belle says no. After the paper dissolves, it leaves the dye to tinger in water systems. Leaving water to run is wasteful because only a limited amount of water can be purified and recycled properly in a certain time period. Be on the lookout for aluminum cans and unreturnable containers. Those living around New York, Denver, Houston or San Francisco get a half-cent refund on each returned can. Reynolds Aluminum pays $200 a ton for cans, old TV dinner trays and old lawn furniture. Young mothers, offended by the idea of washing dirty diapers, are often tempted to buy the throwaway kind. De Belle discourages using them because they contribute to pollution by clogging up plumbing and septic tanks. a garden must be fertilized, it should be with natural poisons from plants like nicotine, sulfate, rotenone and pyrethrum. 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 HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE U-HAUL Trucks and Trailers 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 HAROLD'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE SUA SPRING INTERVIEWS Recreation— 1. Coffeehouse Director 2. Coffeehouse Arrangements Chairman 3. Coffeehouse Publicity Chairman Forums- 1. Minority Opinions Chairman 4. Quarterback Club Chairman 2. Featured Speakers Chairman 3. Women's Liberation Chairman 1. Exhibits Chairman Fine Arts— 3. Poetry Hour Chairman 2. Picture Lending Library Chairman 4. Music & Drama Chairman 5. Humanities Chairman Summer Board 6. Art Forums Chairman Summer Board (Summer 1970)— Applications may be obtained in the Governor's Room, Kansas Union. Due to the Union fire, interviews can't be announced at the present time. Applications are due in the Governor's Room by 5:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 29. Information about interview times will be announced when you return your application. Your interview will be scheduled for five minutes. To prepare for your interview, feel free to contact Board members or last year's Events Chairman. 1. Chairman 1. Chairman 2. Other Areas (Publicity, Secretary, Recreation, etc.) We have a story to tell Our's is a simple story to tell. We feel that our first and most important work is to serve good food to you. We don't pretend to be a real fancy establishment but our home cooked meals are no pretention. One of our tenderloin or hamburger steak dinners is just the thing to fill the bill for your quest of a delicious home cooked meal. Try one of our Double-D Burgers. With a cheeseburger on top and a hamburger on bottom it will handle any size appetite. Double D Diner 23RD AND BARKER ACROSS THE STREET FROM HASKELL INSTITUTE COUPON This coupon good for one Double-D Burger Large Coke French Fries only 90c save 15c MISTER GUY Hour SPRING FANCIES Fresh spring clothing ideas from Mister Guy are headed by Cole and Haans White Buck Buckle Shoe, the White Popcorn Knit with contrasting trim and a multitude of Collared Knits in many colors. The Clothing Consultants NINE TWENTY MASSACHUSETTS MISTER GUY GUY OEO opposes occupational deferments The Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) is opposed to the granting of occupational deferments for service in the OEO, said Francis J. Matthews, acting director of Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) in the Office of Economic Opportunity. The statement came shortly before President Nixon announced that he had abolished virtually all future occupational and fatherhood deferments from the draft last week. Representatives for VISTA are on campus to talk with prospective volunteers this week. They may be reached through Tom Moore, director of the KU-Y. The representatives are especially interested in future lawyers, architects, planners, business gradu- ats and liberal arts students, said Charlie Howell, one of the representatives. Howell asked that students be made aware of the recent stand of the OEO. Issuing a deferment to one registering in the selective service increases the exposure to the draft of other registrants, Matthews said. Deferments of individuals who work in the OEO activities would increase the exposure of draft age men from poor families. This result would not be consistent with the purposes of the Economic Opportunity Act, Matthews said. For every VISTA volunteer that receives a deferment someone else, frequently a young man from a poor family, will be drafted, Matthews said. The New York City police threaten to walk out NEW YORK (UPI) — Four-fifths of New York City's police force threatened Tuesday to begin a walkout Friday midnight that would be one of the greatest crises in John V. Lindsay's career as mayor. Complicating the situation was the possibility that Transit Authority police would support the walkout. The 25,000-member Patrolmen's Benevolent Association's (PBA) delegate assembly met throughout the day to discuss the threatened "sick out" which would leave only 5,000 uniformed police to maintain essential services in a city of nearly 8 million. A Tuesday midnight deadline was put off until Friday. At stake were jail sentences for the association officers, fines and possible dismissal or probation for those taking part in the job action which would be illegal under the state's Taylor Law banning work stoppages by public employees. 12 KANSAN Apr. 29 1970 State Supreme Court Justice George M. Carney issued an injunction against a walkout Monday. However, PBA President Edward J. Kiernan said he was willing to go to jail. whatever decision they believe is warranted and permissible under the selective service regulations as a result of the agency's policy, he said. In most cases new policy will apply prospectively and volunteers on duty will be able to complete their service. agency's policy is dictated by its belief that such a policy is inconsistent with the agency's mission to assist the poor. The agency does not purport to speak for other government agencies having different statutory responsibilities, he said. The patrolmen are angry because the city raised the salary of police sergeants to the same level as fire lieutenants last February without raising the wages of the men on the beat. The patrolman's contract provides for an equalizing adjustment but the Lindsay administration has held that it would be too costly. The agency will not change the classifications of volunteers who previously obtained deferments by their service in VISTA, Matthews said. It will communicate its policy to the selective service system and to local draft boards. Local boards may then make The total land area of Liechtenstein is 62 square miles. PARTNERS IN PROGRESS Budweiser BUO MAN 2015 WE'RE DOING OUR THING AT the Lounge MINI-PITCHER AND PEANUTS STILL 50c 12-7 Daily Special Summer Rates At College Hill Manor Apartments 1741 West 19th 843-8220 Short-term lease on luxury apartments. Air-conditioned, fully carpeted, all electric. Most utilities paid, including air-conditioning. Swimming pool and laundry. Shown afternoons or by appointment. The gate Photo by Ron Bishop Construction in Lawrence . . . Spring weather brought with it the usual rash of building projects. Workmen began construction on an overpass at K-10 and Haskell Avenue this week. Traffic on 23rd Street will be rerouted through a detour for several months until the overpass is completed. 100 Photo by Jim Forbes ... and on the KU campus On the University of Kansas campus, buildings and grounds employes began installing lights for the tennis courts south of Robinson Gymnasium. Warm weather and illumination should encourage tennis buffs to take advantage of the courts at night. Walking event held for hospital fund Jay Steinberg would walk 100 miles for a hospital. Steinberg, Glen Ellyn, Ill., junior and president of the Kansas Track Club, is looking for students and faculty who will back him as much as they can afford—per mile. The walking event is sponsored by Haskell Institute and will take place Saturday in Kansas City. Contestants will walk as far as they can to raise money for a hospital for Navajo Indians who live in the northern part of New Mexico. Steinberg said Monday that the race would be walked around a 20-mile circuit with recorders at every mile marker to record the distances. "I'll walk as far and as fast as I can," he said. "I hope to make 75 to 100 miles Saturday. I'm in pretty good shape." At this time, he said, he is the only one from KU who will be walking in the event. He said he hoped to convince some of the members of the Track Club to get sponsors and enter the event. Anyone interested in walking a few miles this weekend should contact him, he said. "They really need a hospital down there," Steinberg said. "The nearest one now is 75 miles from where the Navaios live." Several men from Haskell will be walking in the event, he said. "Many are being backed by Lawrence businessmen," Steinberg said. "Some of them have pledged 10 cents a mile." Steinberg said he hoped he could get support from KU students. Even a penny a mile, he said, would help. He said donations would be accepted but he preferred the pledges because they present a challenge. Pledge cards should show the amount a mile the pledger is willing to give. They should be brought to the University Daily Kansan office. Fifteen win election to University Council The University Faculty Senate has elected 15 members to the University Council and filled a position on the Athletic Board in a mail ballot. Results of the elections were announced Monday by Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the university. Elected to three-year terms to the council were: Ronald Calgaard, associate professor of economics; Dower Dykes, professor of design; Herman Lujan, chairman of the political science department; John McNown, professor of civil engineering; Russell Mesler, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering; R. K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering; Martha Pitel, nursing education at the KU Medical Center; Richard Rundquist, professor of education; Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law; Edward Walaszek, pharmacology at the medical center; Paul Wilson, professor of law; and Lee Young, acting dean of the School of Journalism. Elected to serve one-year terms for members who had resigned were John Wright, associate professor of human development and family life, and Capt. Joseph Marzluff, professor of Naval ROTC. Kenneth Anderson, professor of education, was elected to a three-year term on the athletic board, succeeding Don Haines, associate professor of civil engineering. Beatle says group to 'come together' NEW YORK (UPI) — Beatle George Harrison said Tuesday he believes the group will work together again despite Paul McCartney's recent announcement that he was going his separate way. "Right now, everybody is doing their individual albums, so let it be for a while." Harrison said after arriving from London. "As far as I am concerned, there is every prospect of our getting back together again, and I'm ready." Bubb stands by Regents' move to approve delayed promotions Henry Bubb, the regent who wanted to deny promotions for two University of Kansas professors March 21, said yesterday that he "is willing to stand by the decision of the board." The Board of Regents granted promotions to Lawrence Velvel, associate professor of law, and Fredric Litto, assistant professor of speech and drama. April 24 at the meeting in Kansas City. The promotions for the two had been delayed since the last regents meeting March 21. "I believe in the form of government in which we live where the majority rules," Bubb said. "I just wish the two men well," he added in reference to Velvel and Litto. Students to navigate cars at annual sports car rally However Paul Wunsch, the other regent who wanted to deny the promotions, had less to say. Wunsch would not say if he would back the Board's action. "I think the action of the board should speak for itself," Wunsch said. The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will conduct its seventh annual sports car rally at 1 p.m. Mav 3. It will be held in cooperation with the Kansas School for the Visually Handicapped. The drivers will depart from the school, located in Kansas City, and follow a course over rural roads to a picnic area in Wyandotte County Park. Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN 13 Each driver will be accompanied by a student from the School for the Visually Handicapped who will act as navigator. They will read the course directions in either braille or largetype printing. Trophies for the event have been donated by the Lawrence New Car Dealers Association. Food for the picnic has been provided by Lawrence merchants. A knot, measure of speed is one nautical mile per hour. While you are reading these words four people will have died from starvation. Most of them children. Dr. Paul R. Ehrlich POPULATION CONTROL OR RACE TO OBLIVION? THE POPULATION BOMB WHILE YOU ARE READING THESE WORDS FOUR PEOPLE WILL HAVE DIED FROM STARVATION. MOST OF THEM CHILDREN. DR. PAUL R. EHRLICH OREAD BOOK SHOP A Sierra Club Ballantine Book Ninety-Five Cents WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS GIBSON'S GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 2525 Iowa • Lawrence, Kansas VACATION DAYS Headquarters MENS AND BOYS BASKETBALL OXFORDS - Black and White - 100% Cotton - Sizes Boys $ 2 \frac{1}{2} -6$ Mens $ 6 \frac{1}{2} -12 $ GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 297 Compare at 4.95 for Students, Storage META with new 787 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE PRICES GOOD THRU MAY 10 GIBSON FACIAL TISSUE 200 Count 2 Ply 2/37c - White, Yellow, Pink make Coconut Oil Chinese Herbal Swedish Tanning Secret Balm Swedish Tanning Secret Balm Swedish Tanning Secret Balm SWEDISH TANNING SECRET LEEMING - PACQUIN GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE Coca-Cola Coke — 7 Up 12 oz. Size 6 CAN PACK GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE - 6 oz. Butter 4 oz. Lotion Compare at 1.59 KIMBERLY-CLARK KOTEX TAMPONS 4 oz. Oil Compare at 2/58 Compare at 1.75 to 1.90 YOUR CHOICE 97c GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 269 SPARK PLUGS GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE Regular or GIBSON'S Super DISCOUNT 77c Box of 40 PRICE 67c Compare at 89c CHAMPION & AC All Popular Brand CIGARETTES Regular or King Size Dr. Pepper Flip-top Can Canned POP GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 47c VISTA by Simoniz ONE-STEP CAR CLEANER AND WAX GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 137 STP OIL TREATMENT GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 59c 315 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 100% Human Hair Wig - Medium Length - Tapered Neckline - Case & Head Included Compare at 39.95 1997 LONG FALL #206 100% Human Hair GIBSON'S 2987 18" to 20 DISCOUNT Compare at 50.00 PRICE PROCTER & GAMBLE IMPERIAL LIQUID PRELL 16 oz. Size GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 89c Compare at 2.15 - Economy 6 oz. Bottle CUTEX NAIL POLISH REMOVER CUTEX GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 29c Compare at 69c NEW CRUSH PANTY HOSE - One Size Fits All - Many Fashionable Colors GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 73c Compare at 2.00 497 NATIONAL PRESTO PROFESSIONAL HAIR STYLER - Sets Hair in Minutes 20 Individual Curlers res - Stylish Travel Case with Mirror EC-20 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 1447 Compare at 29.95 PRO-SLIM SEVEN DAY DIETARY REDUCING AIDS - No Cyclamates - Drink Mix or Wafer PRO-SLIM GIBSON'S DISCOUNT PRICE 277 TECHMATIC BAND RAZOR - Plus 5 Super Stainless Steel Edges GIBSON'S 137 DISCOUNT PRICE Compare at 2.29 Style DENIM CREAM Jeansen Denimcream Menswear and Women's Denim creams Good Homespooling SOLIDITY Style - 13-oz. Can - Regular, Super Unscented Compare at 89c 39c Chalmers talks of trends "Changing Trends in Education Today" and "Changing Trends in Our Society" were the combined topics of a speech given Tuesday morning at Barstow School in Kansas City, Mo., by KU Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. "If university administration is difficult today," Chalmers said in an advance text, "It is not because the job is inherently more difficult than other professions. Rather, it is because conflicting value systems are most likely to clash in the administration building of a college or university campus than they are in business, or even in government. Chalmer's said that although the conflict is not inherent, the potential is there. He said that the addition of social problems is the basis for conflicting values. He said that there were "at least two basic value systems that are becoming polarized to an ever-increasing degree. "I... assume we seek solutions that do not totally subjugate one value system to the other, but solutions that will lead to a healthy synthesis of both or at least a mutually advantageous symbiosis of both systems," he said. He said that the first step toward the resolution, or de-polarization, would be mutual understanding of the conflict. He said if the educational institutions could not provide leadership, they deserved to be "devoured by our citizens." He said that the first change he noticed was student participation in the decision-making processes of higher education. He said that this was bound to affect secondary education to some extent. "Today, on campuses like mine, students make the final decisions on extra-curricular rules and regulations." Chalmers said. "Moreover, they have proven themselves to be immensely conscientious and able in these endeavors." He said that "relevance" was the "in-word" in academic decisions. He said that the efforts toward relevance have produced conscientious and capable reactions when students have been allowed to participate. "More important," Chalmers said, "it provides the impetus to complete the innovative efforts of the sixties, the opportunity for academic administrators to facilitate change." He said many people would misinterpret suggestions for innovations in the area of faculty performance as rubber-stamped criticism of faculty members. He said most faculty members are dedicated and conscientious and would make changes if the opportunity and incentive to change were provided. Chalmers outlined some of the changes predicted for the 1970's in the educational systems and society as a whole. Some of the changes he outlined were: - Use of the society as an academic, rather than completely extra-curricular, sphere of learning. - Student participation in areas up to the decision making level of university degree requirement programs. Johnson forces comment about assassination off air - Students helping in evaluations of academic endeavors such as testing materials and learning methods. NEW YORK (UPI) — Former President Lyndon B. Johnson has forced Columbia Broadcasting Company to delete a segment of a forthcoming television interview in which he reportedly voiced doubts about the "single assassin" conclusion of the Warren Commission report on the slaying of President John F. Kennedy, it was disclosed Tuesday he was discussed Tuesday. The Washington Post quoted a CBS source as saying Johnson frankly voiced reservations about the Warren report's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, shot the President to death in Dallas. Johnson said his doubts were grounded in the "motivations and connections" of Oswald, who had been a defector to the Soviet Union, the paper said. Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN 15 "As an educator," he said, "I am committed to the proposition that educational institutions are required not only to study and analyze such conflicts, but to prepare future citizens to cope with a rapidly changing university." Walter Cronkite said he could not comment on the request "until after the show." ENGLISH PROSE POLISH POETRY AND OTHER NEW PENGUINS THE PELICAN BOOK OF ENGLISH PROSE. Volume 1 edited by Roger Sharrock. Volume 2 edited by Raymond Williams. Selections reflect the development of English thought and literary style, and the growth of the English language itself, from medieval times to the present day. Volume 1, $2.95. Volume 2, $2.25 POST-WAR POLISH POETRY. Edited by Czeslaw Milosz. A collection of poetry by twenty-one writers whose work has come out of the literary tradition of post-war Poland. $1.25 CROSS - CULTURAL STUDIES. Edited by D. R. Price-Williams. A blend of psychology and anthropology, this book explores research into important psychological variables as they appear in African, Latin American, and non-Western cultures. $2.75 EMPRESS JOSEPHINE. Ernest John Knapton. A fascinating portrait of Napoleon's wife and the era of France's first Empire. $1.95 EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY IN INDUSTRY. Edited by D. H. Holding. A look at the ways in which men and machines interact in modern society. $2.95 PENGUIN BOOKS INC Look for these and other informative Penguins at your campus bookstore. Indian claims suicide caused Custer's death 7110 Ambassador Road · Baltimore, Md. 21207 SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI)—Chief Eagle of the Teton Sioux tribe says Gen. George Custer killed himself with a bullet in the temple during the Battle of Little Big Horn nearly a century ago. TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION As Taught By Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1) TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION IS A NATURAL SPONDANTEOUS TECHNIQUE WHICH ALLOY EACH INDIVIDUAL TO EXPAND THE MATERIALS OF THIS HISTORY. Introductory Lecture Introductory Lecture By Bob Brandt Fri., Feb. 29, 8 p.m. Forum Room, Union Contact Terry Schnake VI2-6330 B WHEN WE GET IN GEAR FOR SALE J. W. H. S. WATCH OUT! THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY we're celebrating the 20th ANNIVERSARY of serving our friends in Lawrence with a SALE!! - A Clothing Group 20% to 33% Off - At Least 10% Off on Every Item - All Men's and Women's Wear Included - All Our New Spring Fashions Are Included. The Town Shop 939 Mass. VI 3-5755 The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 Country House HOLIDAY HOUSE Swoboda more mature but still worries; says contracts pay for man, not averages By MILT RICHMAN UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK — Ron Swoboda worries too much. Remember how he was so ashamed of what he did he couldn't go back and face his wife? That's what he said anyway. Ron Swoboda worried needlessly. There was no domestic crisis at all. When he got back home that day after signing for $40,000 instead of $50,000 his wife, Cecili, told him to relax and stop worrying. The world was going to go on. Swoboda's wife said whatever he did was perfectly all right with her. "She said I shouldn't push things, but no matter what, she'd never be disappointed in me," says the Mets' sometimes lambasted, sometimes lionized right fielder. Swoboda, more mature now approaching 26 than he was when he first came with the Mets five years ago, still feels he gave in too easily at contract time. He is completely familiar with his figures last year—a .235 batting average, 52 RBI's and nine homers—and is aware that when he said what he did about his $40,000 contract some people wondered what right he had to kick. "They don't understand," he says about those people. "If you go by their standards and only look at the numbers, I'm overpaid. But if you don't realize what the numbers represent then you can't really understand my argument." Okay, what do they represent? Okay, what do they represent? "They represent wins and they represent the man behind the numbers," Swoboda says. I think I understand what Ron Dimaggio uncertain about baseball Swoboda is trying to say and it reminds me of a former Dodger player who fought for a raise one year even though he hadn't played too many games for the club the year previous. TOPEKA (UPI) — Baseball great Joe Dimaggio, who just ended a spring coaching stint with the Oakland Athletics, said Tuesday he has no current plans to get back in baseball in the near future. "The Yankee clapper" was in the Kansas capital for the grand opening Wednesday of "Joe Dimaggio's," the first in an Italian restaurant franchise named after the baseball hall-of-famer. Dimaggio said in an interview he currently has no plans to get back in baseball in "the real, close future," although he said just before spring training this year baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn offered him a job as a representative of his office. The former New York Yankee slugger said he turned Kuhn down, "but he (Kuhn) left the door open by saying if I did consider it in the future and he was still receptable of having me back, why, we could at that time discuss it." Dimaggio, who now lives in San Francisco, said he had no problems with the colorful owner of the Athletics, Charles Finley, during his coaching years with the team. "My association with him was very good. He didn't bother me, and I just went ahead with my job," he remarked. It's something he's always asked about (Finley) when in the Kansas City area. Finley caught the wrath of many A's fans when the team was in Kansas City, prior to moving to Oakland. "I can't take it as well as I used to," said the 55-year-old sports great. "It's not only the traveling, though, it's everything that's connected with it." Dimaggio, who ended his contract with the A's following spring training, said he currently has no plans to re-enter baseball, partly because of the regimentation of the travel required. Dimaggio said it gets to be too much with night ball games, and trying to find eating places after the night games. "I don't have that kind of stomach any more. I've got to put sandwiches in my belly," he said. Although Dimaggio was voted most valuable player three times in the American League and set many batting records, the only one still standing is hits in 56 consecutive ball games. He said it will probably be bettered. An Evening with LEACOCK PENNEBAKER April129 8:00pm Woodruff Auditorium 750 INTERVIEWS (Wed., April 29th) Senior Class Committee Chairmen Applications Available Now at Dean of Women's Office. NCAA says 'no' 220 Strong FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) The policy-making body of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), still is in no mood to add new college football bowl games. The 18-man NCAA Council Monday turned down bids from six cities wanting to stage postseason games. They were the Cactus Bowl in Phoenix, the West Coast Bowl in Tampa, Fla., the Blues Bowl in Memphis, the Carnation Bowl in San Diego (Calif.), the Copper Bowl in Tucson and the Charity Bowl in Lake Charles, La. 16 KANSAN Apr.29 1970 It was the third consecutive year the council has turned thumbs down on new bowls. Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Favors - Badges - Recoanitions - Paddles Guards Mugs - Mugs - Recognitions * Paddles * Locks * Stocks - Lavaliers - Stationery - Plagues - Gifts - Plaques - Sportswear Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter V13-1571 For Top Quality Head For Henry's henrys For the Finest Shrimp, Chicken, Hamburgers, etc. Hurry to Henry's ch & Mo. VI 3-213 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog TOM PETE PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 琴童乐部 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 MORNING MARIO HAEMANTE It Can Be A Special Place For The Two of You The Castle Tea Room The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence Reservations Suggested 1307 Mass. 843-1151 GIRAFA Photo by Jim Forbes Off and running . . . for now. Cubs look for omen By VITO STELLINO UPI Sports Writer The Chicago Cubs are only hoping it's a good omen. They won their 11th straight game Monday night. Of course, they remember even better the last time they lost the pennant. That happened last year. That's why the Cubs tried not to get too excited when they beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 1-0 for their 11th straight. The significance is that the last time they won 11 straight was in 1945. And those long-suffering Cub fans can't forget that's the last time they won the pennant. The Cubs scored their only run on an error and were nursing that run in the ninth inning when the Pirates had runners on first and third and one out. Bob Oliver hit a one-bouncer at pitcher Hank Aguire, who only had to turn and fire to second to start the game-ending double play. Plays it Safe Aguirre played it safe and tossed to third to trap the lead runner who was caught in a run-down. Phil Regan then came on and got the final out and the strategy worked. Lolich out to prove his worth By STEVE SMILANICH UPI Sports Writer Mickey Lolich is out to prove he gained the No.1 spot in Detroit's pitching rotation on merit and not by default. The chunky Tiger lefthander, called upon to carry the mound load during Denny McLain's half season absence, responded again in magnificent fashion last Wednesday by hurling his second shutout, to give the Tigers their seventh straight triumph, a 5-0 success over the Cleveland Indians. The 29-year-old Lolich struck out seven and walked none in beating Indian ace Sam McDowell, who was chased in the sixth inning. "I should do all right," said Lolich recently, "if I can stick around for seven innings every time I pitch." Apr. 29 1970 KANSAN 17 seeing spots? If you see spots before your eyes . . . the pimple kind .. better get Fostex. It's the super spot checker. Wash with Fostex and you see yourself smooth and clear. It helps remove blackheads, dry up pimples and oil, and fidt germs. For the clear look . . . get Fostex Cake. Sold in drugstores. Fostex FOSTEX "The decision was made before I threw a pitch." Aguirre said after he relieved rookie Joe Decker. "I was told to 'look Roberto Clemente back' if I got the ball because the batter (Oliver) is a fast kid." Clemente tripled with one out for the sixth hit off Decker, who got credit for his second major league win. Aguirre came on and walked pinch-hitter Bob Robertson. Beginning and the End of World War III THE BEGINNING: "The best film on Vietnam to date." WE ARE ALL "A BLOODY GOOD BUNCH OF KILLERS"... IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG a film by Emile de Antonio THE END: THE WAR GAME SPEAKING BY PETER WATKINS - A BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION DIRECTED BY PETER WATKINS : A BIRTHCARE BROADCASTING CORPORATION PRODUCTION PRESENTED WITH THE BIRTHFILM II MISSION - A PAINTERS CONTEMPORARY FILMS RELEASE "Extraordinary. I urge you to see 'THE WAR GAME.'" The New Yorker A T O R E S T O N E R T O R E S T O N E See These Two Academy Award Anti-War Films Thursday, Apr. 30: 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or Friday, May 1: 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 HOCH AUDITORIUM Admission $1.00 Buzzi and Associates, Inc. Insurance Agency C Tony Croman "For the Professional Approach to Your Insurance Needs" PARKER Bill Hill - Mike Reeves - Ralph Light 1950 Bob Joyce - Janice Peterson Lloyd Buzzi - Steve Gibson Rav Terrell Arden Gray - Gene Hadl Ray Terrell Arden Gray 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 Dilip Haldwani Buzzi and Associates 2323 Ridge Court V12-7771 Leo Salki Lee Sells Doug Powell 1. Israel, Egypt trade air strikes at Suez By United Press International By Stephen Press Racquetball Egyptian and Israeli warplanes traded air strikes Tuesday across the Suez Canal front lines. Israel said two Soviet-built Egyptian Sukhoi 7 fighter-bombers were shot down in a dogfight, but Egypt claimed all of its planes returned safely. A senior Israeli military officer told newsmen in Jerusalem that Egypt has opened a "spring offensive" along the canal to wrest the initiative on the ground and in the air from Israel, and that Israel's steady air strikes were aimed at breaking the offensive. In Cairo, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser was reported holding high level conferences with Libyan and Iraqi officials on the Middle East situation. Sources said they also would discuss the roles of both the United States and the Soviet Union in the Arab-Israeli dispute. An Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv said Israeli jets pounded Egyptian military positions along the canal and the northwest bank of the Gulf of Suez for three hours. He said Israeli interceptors went into action when "formations" of Egyptian planes tried to attack Israeli positions in the occupied Sinai. Two Sukhoi 7 jets were hit in low-level dogfights near the Bitter Lakes—about midway between Ismailia and Suez City and went down in flames on the Egyptian side of the canal, the Tel Aviv spokesmen said. The spokesman said all the Israeli planes returned safely and no casualties were suffered by the ground forces. The reported "kills" brought to 111 the total of Arab warplanes Israel has claimed to have shot down since the 1967 war-91 Egyptian and 20 Syrian. Israel has reported losing 20 planes in the same period. A military spokesman in Cairo denied any Egyptian planes were shot down in dogfights during the Berlin traffic tolls raised BERLIN (UPI)—East German communists imposed higher tolls on supply traffic to isolated West Students at the University of Kansas now have the opportunity to purchase International Student Identity Cards which will enable them to make arrangements for low-cost traveling in Europe. The Council on International Educational Exchange issues the cards. ID cards enable students to travel at lower prices The card, which can be purchased for $1 through the Student Union Activities office, entitles the holder to discounts and student reductions at some theaters, concert halls, shops and most museums in Europe. Intra-European student charter flights and student bus and train transportation is another benefit. The flights, usually on jet aircraft, depart frequently during the summer months and continue throughout the year. The fares for these flights are often as low as one-third of the equivalent commercial fares. Those wishing to obtain the ID card should take to the SUA office one passport size photograph of themselves that need not be returned, proof of their student status and $1. Card holders may also obtain lodgings and meals in student hostels and restaurants in cities and university towns throughout Europe. Prices range from $1-3 for an overnight stay while the average cost for dinner in a student restaurant is $1. Low cost tours lasting from 2 days to one month also are offered at low costs. 18 KANSAN Apr.29 1970 AUTO CLASS INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Table Tops INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey --- VI 3-4416 - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Berlin Tuesday in a new harassing move even as the Big Three Western allies met with the Russians in an effort to ease access to this outpost city. An East German Finance Ministry order published Tuesday raised by 25 to 30 per cent the tolls on trucks and barges carrying supplies across East Germany to and from West Berlin. The increase is effective May 1. The new tolls mean that a trucker carrying 20 tons of cargo the 139 miles to Berlin from the East-West German border in the Hamburg area will have to pay $43 instead of the old rate of $36. The East Germans thus demonstrated their power over the city's lifelines while the U.S., British and French ambassadors to West Germany met with the Soviet Ambassador to East Germany in Factors that influence the strength of wood are moisture content, size, number and location of knots, crossgrain and checks. a second meeting on the Berlin problem. The West Berlin city government said the East German action was a deliberate attempt to disrupt the ambassadors' talks. "It is more than remarkable that the new measures of the authorities of the East German Democratic Republic have been announced on the same day that the Big Four ambassadors met again to discuss improvements in the traffic routes," a city government statement said. The Big Four ambassadors met in secret Tuesday in the former Allied Control Authority Building in the American sector of West Berlin. Details of the meeting were not disclosed but the envoys scheduled a third meeting for May 14, and every two weeks thereafter. A major aim of the Western Allies in the talks is to improve Western access to West Berlin and to end East German harassment of traffic to and from the divided city. Holiday Inn® THE NATION'S INNKEEPER® Luncheon Buffet $1.45 Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities command post 18 miles east of Ismailia on the canal, and scores of bunkers and other fortifications from Ras El Ish, just below Port Said on the Mediterranean, to Uyun Musa on the gulf about 30 miles below Zuez City on the southern end of the canal. Gary Porteous, Innkeeper Holiday Inn 23rd & Iowa Rita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper The Cairo spokesman said Egyptian bombers destroyed an Israeli day. He said "large units" of Egyptian fighters attacked Israeli military targets along the canal and the gulf, inflicting heavy casualties and damages before returning safely to their bases. $995 Go WIDE TRACKIN' with Pedwin. Includes free installation Whitewalls not available It's the going thing. Sandals with tiretread rubber soles that really grip the road. They're guaranteed too against most road hazards and blowouts. Try a pair soon. mccoy's shoes 813 Mass. St. VI 3-2091 VOTE TODAY for '70-'71 officers of your respective residence hall. LEWIS Pres. Patty Baldwin Judy Visin Secretary Ann Gensman Treas. Carol Adams Minda Means NAISMITH Pres. Kent Waterbury Vice Pres. Jane Beaty Sec. Gretchen Whittaker Treas. James Rovick Soc. Chm. Nolan Babcock Russel Ritchel NAISMITH McCOLLUM Pres. Doug McKibben John Mendoza Men's V.P. Steven Hickert Women's V.P. Ann Ginsler Kathy Kruger Carolyn Smythe Sec. Sec. Dattie Berry Barbara Urban Treas. Bob Burns Men's Soc. Chm. Terry Breitenstein Women's Soc. Chm. Joyce Campbell Sara Steere TEMPLIN Pres. Gerald A. Caldwell Carl C. Ferguson Mike Howell Doug Kincaid Joseph H. Prados Vice Pres. Vice Pres. George Oliver Phil Schubert Treas. George Tiffany Soc. Chm. Larry Poff Athletic Chm. Keith Kozlen HASTINGER Pres. Katie Cline Vice Pres. Kathy Haake Joy Laubhan Gail Mohr April Terada Treas. Dianna Christensen Steph Ottesen HASHINGER JRP Pres. Bill Larery Mike Sundermeyer Vice Pres. John Pederson Warren Willmeth Treas. Jim Fischer Larry Mowrey All other halls will hold their elections later this spring or next fall Courtesy of the Association of University Residence Halls WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 One day KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days --- Three days 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the new catalogue will be 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 Edition Campus Campus Md House, 411 W 14th St. Audio Discount-your A.R., Dynaeco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impeccable copies, thesis dissertations, collating included, designs for the media Typewriter-700 Mass. 843-36443 tf Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays, Wide- selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. tf 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect condition. Must sell now! Call 4-30 4-30 New 735-1X (E78-1X) radial 4 belt tubeless tread disc. treasured design cut 25,00 plus $2.60 Fed tax—fast as 25,00 plus $2.60 Fed Stoneback. 929 Mass. 4-29 Spinet piano, dark mahogany b-nch in good condition $250 842-7750 4-29 842-7750 4-39 Guitar—classical and folk, Italian made Gibson import, spruce top, rosewood sides and back, an exceptionally mellow and responsive guitar. Call Ken West at Oliver Hall in morning. 4-29 $11. Chevlyer wagon, great meal $125. 842-5197 after 6. 4-29 1967 Sunbeam Alpine, convertible. 51 150. Call 843-2060. 4-29 Classical Guitar, excellent condition. Call 842-5717 after 6:00 p.m. 4-29 1967-68 Triumph Spifire, 2 tops (1 new), tape deck, speakers, new snow tires, 18,500 miles, $1800.00. Phone 842-3391. Excellent condition. 4-30 Apartment furnishings. Am graduating, must sell: Hollywood bed, box springs and mattress. Hide-a-B-C. dineetree 2 dresses. 2 end tables. desk, chair, table. air conditioner, phonograph, and other assorted furnishings. 842-5030. 4-30 New Canon FT/QL single lens reflex, new lenses, quick loading, meter, case, UV filter. Moore 843-9252 $187.50. Phone 843-9252 Best time 5-6 p.m. 5-1 Buscher tenor horn metal mouth tension 45,6 MHz Bassman 843-9723, 5-1 Park Hammack, 645 Mich. 843-9723, 5-1 '61 Thunderbird in good condition. Call 748-9813. 4-30 1964 Corvette, dark blue with same color interior, 365 h.p., 327, 4-speed, posi-trac, $1800. $42-5983. 5-1 Curfew special: Drum set still for sale 4 silver sparkle. 3 Zildjian gymbals. Priced to sell. Call Jeff. 843-1711. 4-30 1965 VW. New engine. Excellent running condition. 843-959侮 5. 4-30 Classic 1960 TR-3A. Incompatible at any price. Bargaining starts at $750. Very runnable. Call J. B. at 843-2103. 4-30 Fisher 400 Stereo Receiver, 65 watts, lots of controls. Looks and sounds like new. Must sell. Need cash des- perately. 842-1047. 4-30 1966 Olds 442 convertible. Good condition, air conditioned, power steering, $1450 Call 843-5112 after 5 p.m. Mon thru Fri. Ask for Parris 4-30 '55 Chevrolet -sell this week—Edelbrock, Mickey Thompson, Harper, new Goodyear Polyglas, Holley, new interior, 842-7000, Rm. 1028, David. 4-30 1967 Firebird Sprint, stick, PS, radials, AM-FM-MPX, tape, red in and out, $1850. Also Midship 8 Monoocone Custom Car to highest offer 842-4948. Sale: Saturday, May 2. Stouffler Place, Bldg. 11. 10:30-5:30. Carpets, drapes, wallpaper. Tile and acrylic ceramics, sofas, linens, kitchen utensils, lamps, appliances, etc. 4-30 1970 Datsun 2-litre silver/black, 135hp, 5-speed, 120-mph, low mileage, top, boot and torneau cover plus transmission to give appreciation. Call Chip, 843-3310. 5-4 Got drafted. Need to sell 1956 Indian motorcycle (needs repair) and new 120-watt stereo FM-AM multiplex system. 843-9072. 5-4 THE HOLF in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill. 1962 Buick LeSabre, power steering, power brakes, air-conditioned, brand new hanko, battery, good tires, battery, 400 lb., considered 843-8833 after 5 p.m. 5-4 Magic Chief refrigerator, 22" x 21" x 4" Dellation 100 Excellent Dellation 843-194-5 5-4 Used碧 modern divan. $50. Call 843-1290 after 6:00. 5-5 1970 Austin Healey 3000 Collector's condition 10,000 m³ s=1 $3150.842 -7428 s=1 1967 Dostoffer mobile home -12" x 50" 1½ baths, new wall-to-wall carpeting, air conditioner, all gas, excellent condition $3,500. $1,893-874-265. 5-5 1968 WB, radio, 29,000 miles, $1,500 or b st off. Call 842-1410, ask for St-5 Stroo system: 40 watt Channel Lab 80 turntable with the AR-4X Speakers. $340 investment, sacrifice at $150. Call 842-1136 after 6:00. 5-5 1964 Chville SJ convertible, dark blue, 283-4-BL. Low miles, excellent engine, body S-II or trade for bike or economy car and cash. 842-2454. 5-1 Magnavac Cassette Recorder, used 1 month, now $30 at Ray Stonebush 5-5 No elco stereo cassette changer, plays 6 hours of continuous music. Was $129.90, now $99.90 at Ray Stone- back's, 929 Mass. 5-5 Famous Brand Custom Component Systm m (tape, receiver, spanners), was $20.00, now $250.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 5-5 1862 Austen Healy Spritz, white contour, $800. Interior, new interior, new 8800. Call 842-4192. 5-5 1968 Fiat 850 Suyder, white convertible with black top, black deluxe interior, like new condition throughout, low mileage, $1400,824-2191. 5-5 1965 MGB, British Racing Green with black convertible top, body in excellent condition, overhaulled transmission. $1500, 842-2191. 5-5 1967 Volkswagen, silver with black tires. MODEL # 842-191. p-5 ext as. $1800, #842-191. p-5 1989 Toyota Carolla Sprinter, green 4,000 miles, like new, 842-219-1 5-5 3,000 miles, like new, 842-219-1 5-5 1988 Datum 2000 roadster 5-speed, black body, four door soft top lot- back black interior. $1995, #824-2191 1965 Triumph TR-4, spotless red body with white convertible top, fully quipp d, asking $1300. Call 842-2191. 55 '67 Corvette, 327 cu. in., 100 hp, air- conditioned, AM-FM radio, 3-speed, good condition. Getting married, must sill. 842-5631 after 7 p.m. 5-5 Garrard SLX-2 module turntable wam less than 50 hours use. Priced new at $70, will take the best offer over $39. Phone 843-2353. 5-1 1961 F-85 Olds V-8, automatic trans. power steering, radio, heater, two spare snow tires. $235 Call 843-311-5 at 3:00 p.m. Don't have a bad trip! Ride easy to your summer destination in a spacious room at Lorenbole Van First $800 takes the way Oscar at 842-652-502 tween 7 p. 7 pm. Pair of speaker systems. 12" woofers and horn type tweeter in bass-reflex fixtures. Includes features, touches. Green sound for the money only $30 each. Phil Morrison. 842-5800. The Castle Tea Room is that special place to take that special date on special day. They'll provide candlelight and atmosphere—they up to you. 4-29 515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-god Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone VI 2-9510. Closed Sunday. Tuesday f Early S.F. acid rock. Five albums on Takes OF. Big Brother (pre-cheap Thrills). 1st Canned Heat; 1st Young- Lands. 2nd Canned Heat; 8th. Phone 843-2353 or 842-8322. 5-1 NOTICE Camper friends visiting you? Tell them about KOA campgrounds, one mile north of East Lawrence exit off turnpike. Electrical and water hook-ups, laundry, showers. Telephone: 843-3877 after 4 p.m. 5-5 KU Men. When you decide to buy sandals, come to the store with a selection: ARENSEIBEN SHOPS, 818 Mass., where styles happen 5-1 Galerie Pruddel Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv. Would the person in the maroon Mustang who took the key from the motorcycle at the accident Sunday please call Mike Miller at 843-8454. 5-1 Mont Bleu Ski Lodge; now available parties For information call 843- 2563. LOST A pair of, black-rimmed glasses—lost near Chancellor's house or along jayhawk Blvd. Phone 843-6400 Chip Sloan. 4-30 Tan saddl bag purse--missing strap. R-waad. If found, please bring to 1017 Rhode Island Sandra Linley. A-30 Tan purse with brown bone fastener in booth in Union. Reward. If found, plase contact Sheila Hilst at 1017 Rhode Island. 5-1 Would the person who found my pursus in the rest room 3rd floor of Strong Hall please return. Reward—no questions asked. Reward depends on amount of material returned. Paula Branson, 842-4990. 5-1 WANTED Need 2 or 3 guys to share apt. for assister J-hawk Towers. Call 4-29 4-29 Responsible and quiet male roommate for summer and fall to share apartm- men with pre-med student. Jayhawk 880. Beginning June 1. Steve. 842-7710 Female roommate to share 2-bedroom house near campus for summer school. $40/month or less. Call Diane. Rm. 805, 842-6600. 4-30 Summer traveling companion! See national parks in western U.S. camp, lake, swim in Pacific, visit San Francisco, Vegas. Negas Inc. 842-659-8388 5-8 Newly married couple needs a place to sleep. 3201 between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. 3-4 Need 1 to 4 guys to share large, clean house on Kentucky for summer. Separate bedrooms with plenty of space. Call 842-6217. 5-4 1-2 girls to share luxurious, convenient Jianhyawang Towers apt. for summer. Maximum monthly rentals paid Call Site. 842-7835 after 5.30. 5-1 PERSONAL Fritzie: Happy, eestatic, scrumptious, wonderful, yummy, colorful, memorable, meaningful, fulfilling birthday! Loose, Goof. 4-29 Pat. You're just,uh,uh,uh,uh, P.S. Happy Passover (?) Steve, P.S. Happy Passover (?) 4-29 Mike--Forgive my attitude on the phone. I honestly hoped you could come. Tell George hi. Good luck on your finals . . . Pat. 5-1 R-ready to type your next project immediately. Electric elite and pica type available. Desire general typing, theses and term papers-plus stencil cutting and duplicating. Plek up and my offered. Call 842-3597-6562. Experienced typist will type themes, thesis, term papers, other misc. typ- ing and writing assignments. Picea. Compat. Services. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. Service- 5-15 TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter prompt, accurate call. Call 434-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. Typing: IBM Electric, Accurate, de- velopment, work- guarded. Phone 843-3186 Architecture Grad-permanent with Construction Co. 913-HA2-5555. Box 307, Edwardsville, Kan. 66022. 5-4 HELP WANTED The Sirloin Pleasantview DINING Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choice steaks. Open 4:30 1½ Mi. N of Kaw Closed River Bridge Monday VI-134-131 Girl type rifle or sailor for Minnesota girls camp. 842-0587. 5-7 SERVICES OFFERED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Nationalwide directories of positions. All relevant fields Accurate Current. Academic Positions, Harvard com. Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O. Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Is your car weak, out of shape? Is it smoking too much? Help your car work better. Go to FE class. Come to 317 N. Second just across the Kaw River Bridge on Specializing Performance Enterprises. Specializing cars and wagons. 842-119-1. V-5 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf FOUND On northwest softball diamond near Robinson. Set of keys and watch. Identity and pay for ad and its yours. 842-1200, Rm. 322 4-29 FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom apt, one block from campus, furnished $135; unfurnished $120. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tt Furnished single sleeping room. Use of retrig. For male. One bedroom air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown Phon. 843-5767 Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 2111 Kaslo Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to apartment living in Lawrence, adjacent to and overlooking Alvamar's quail court, interior roominess at surprisingly inexpensive rates. Available to families and mature singles; one bedroom units from $160; two bedrooms from $180; three bedrooms. To view these luxurious apartments and houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 842-2055. Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall. Rentals of units in the popular Luxurious AVALO APARTMENTS (the Bison) (the Hoonah) ARAPTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on a first come, first serve basis. Call Harvard Road at 207 Harvard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in HARVARD SQARE APARTMENTS, a pool, booked sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished or unfurnished. Call Mike Carpino at 212-348-7500 or see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 Would you believe . . . you can walk in to classes from your home in the ARG+ APARTMENTS, 11th and Missoula most popular apartment complex at special summer rates during June and July! Call #824-2348, or drop by the resident manager's apartment at 1130 A. West 11th Street, or come to our office at 210 W. Third Avenue Road to get details on both summer and fall leasing. 5-14 Furnished apartments for rent. Summer sublease, $90.00 a month. Married or graduate students. 1510 Kentucky, 842-3712. 5-19 TEXACO W. 9th TEXACO Student specials ★ New, experienced manage- ★ Open 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. 9th & Miss. 842-9413 THE CONCORD SHOP - Stretcher frames, - today made and p - Artist's Converses - ready-made and parts - Artist's Convasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnen Lumber 844 E.13th VI 3-3877 Summer sublet. May 15-Sep-17 or part. Overland Park near 79th and 1-35. Spacious one bedroom, double marble sink in large bath, 2 patios, A/C, pool, garbage disposal, dishwasher, lots of closets, nicely furnished. $175 mo. utilities included. Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once. Choice apt. location open—rent now to be ready for summer or fall—5-11 parking. AC, carpeted b droom with lift on parking. Call 842-8153 or 842-3750 Large, quiet, carpeted rooms for summer and fall. Nicely furnished, air-cond., private entrance, bath—2 blocks west of campus 843-7827 evenings. To male students, nicely furnished studio apartment. Two blocks from Union, utilities paid, private parking. Call 843-8534 4-30 Furnished house for rent—keep it whole or divide into rooms. $150 per month. Available June 1. 917 Maine. 842-5768. 5-4 Available June 1st: modern luxury apartment. Furnished, air-cond, dishwasher. private parking facilities. places plus than one block campus. 842-6941. 5-1 For Rent: to married couples. 5 rms. and bath, disposal, entire first floor kitchen, laundry room, 3 rm. and bath walkout furnished apt. Both off s. pkg. Close to KU, utilities or pets or pets, 5 rm. apt. available May 16th, 3 rm. Jun- phone 1-597-3183 5-4 Save 50% Load and move your own b-longings-make reservations. Hertz Truck Rental, 737 East 22nd Street. Call 843-8016 or 842-6297. 5-4 2. bedroom apt ·—½ block from Union —air conditioned, fully carpeted; dishwasher; available June 1. Call immediately, 843-9444. 5-5 Golfers' summer special for tenants of Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and townhouses. 2111 Kasold Drive. Three bedrooms at $65.00 on the beautiful adjacent Alvmar Hills Golf Course. One, two and three bedroom units available for 1 year or summer lease. Intermediate buildings with Rhod. #842-23351, or call me Gregen Agency. #842-23553. Will sublet, June through August, a one-bedroom furnished apartment. Excellent living and very reasonableness, possible angst and fall. Call 842-1814 after 5:00 p.m. 5-5 Short-term lease and special summer discounts at the College Hill Manor Apartments, now leasing for up to 40 percent of the kitchen of cabinets, and plenty of closet space. Thick carpeting wall-to-wall in all rooms, attaching central heat and air conditioning Swimming pool and laundry facilities. Short walk to KU. Off-street parking. Shows afternoon shops on West Apt. S-B or phone 843-8230. 5-13 SEE Moving To Kansas City? SEE CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Baths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Baths $230 CLUBHOUSE POOL CLUBHOUSE POOL Open Daily 9 Till Dark Open Daily 9 Till Dark CHARTER HOUSE S.E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF NEW LOCATION Try One Today 814 Iowa Ehrlich outlines population trouble (1) Ehrlich talks with press Paul Ehrlich, KU alumnus, reiterated to the press what he had said earlier in his speech Tuesday night in Allen Field House. Officer saves toe WICHITA (UPI) — Motorcycle Patrolman Ray Hartley couldn't believe it Monday when a woman motorist flagged him down during rush hour traffic. Handing him a human toe, she demanded: "Get this to Wesley Hospital as quick as you can!" Hartley did and doctors sewed the toe back on the foot of 2-year-old Heather Hedrick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hedrick. (Continued from page 1) Light travels at the rate of about 186,282 miles per second. 20 KANSAN Apr. 29 1970 (Continued from page 1) It's more food than the people can sell." The prices of goods directly effect their consumption in underdeveloped countries, he said. The "green revolution," a plan to grow more food of the same types of crops produced today by using the best strains, will not be successful, he said. The revolution would only increase the suffering and possibly very temporarily postpone the crisis, Ehrlich said. One of the problems with agriculture today, Ehrlich said, is the farmer substitutes a more complex pattern of plant life which is more stable, for a simpler pattern of plant life in which one plant is grown over a large area producing a very unstable pattern. Ehrlich compared the pollution of the earth to a complex computer. He said "We are pulling transistors out at random. We can't tell when the whole thing will drag to a halt, but ecologists can say that if the practice continues, it will stop." The planet has gradually been cooling off, Ehrlich said, a "veil of pollutions covering the entire planet." He said in 1816 a volcano erupted and covered the atmosphere with so much pollution that, in that year there was no summer in the Northern Hemisphere. This could happen again he added. "You all are an experiment by the Petro-Chemical Company." Blackmun visits Senators WASHINGTON (UPI)—Judge Harry A. Blackmun made dozens of courtesy calls in the Senate Tuesday on the eve of hearings on his nomination as President Nixon's third choice for the Supreme Court vacancy. Blackmun, meantime, won the endorsement of the American Bar Association's Committee on the Federal Judiciary, and his home state senators predicted he would be a shoo-in for confirmation. The · ABA committee said Blackmun, a member of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, had met "high standards of professional competence, temperament and integrity"—a phrase denoting no reservations about the nominee. On one point that led to Senate rejection of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr.-Nixon's first nominee-Lawrence E. Walsh of New York, the ABA committee chairman, said questions about Blackmun's finance holdings had been carefully considered. "His stock holdings are so small that in our opinion he violated no statute or canon," Walsh said in a letter to Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The committee starts confirmation hearings Wednesday with Blackmun as its first witness. Blackmun, dressed in a brown suit and loafers with briefcase in hand, roamed Senate corridors to meet personally with key senators. "You look like a candidate," said Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., as he viewed the entourage of newsmen and photographers following the judge. Sen. Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn., said he did not believe Blackmun's financial situation would alter "the basic disposition to confirm this man" because Blackmun had made a full and willing disclosure of his holdings. he said. They are seeing what happens to chlorinated hydrocarbons in the body over extended periods of time. He said the problem with using pesticides is that it may take 30 years to show their effects. One of the best pollution control systems introduced was in London, he said, when they prohibited the burning of hard coal which was a main source of pollution and caused several deaths. The banning of this type of burning cleaned up the London air considerably. The nation needs a President that will say, "No one drives or builds a large automobile," Ehrlich said. Ehrlich said most foreign countries are still looking toward America as a leader. "If we can show the underdeveloped countries that the average life of the average American is going to kill the American off," he said, "you'll be amazed how fast they will switch their opinions. He said if the U.S. bans pesticides because of their harmful effects you won't find any underdeveloped countries buying pesticides either. The U.S. and the Soviet Union must get off their "cowboy economy" he said and face up to the facts of the crisis of pollution, population and the dwindling supply of natural resources. In response to whether ne thought the amount of money spent on the space program was justified Ehrlich replied, "Most certainly not. The cost in resources is far beyond their worth," he added. Ehrlich said some politicians are only "mouthing the words" while others really want to do something about it. He said much of the popularity will wear off, but what he is concerned about is getting programs started which will continue. In reference to some politicians whom he feels are not helping the problem he said, "You have a state senator who could use some opposition." Confidence appeal coming in speech WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon will address the nation soon on the present economic situation, the White House said Tuesday on a day when stock prices on Wall Street plunged to their lowest point since President John F. Kennedy's assassination in 1963. Presidential spokesman Gerald L. Warren told newsmen that Nixon believes his economic policies are working and "feels that the American people should share that confidence." Warren spoke about John L. Spafford of Houston, Tex., president of the Society of Association Executives, spent 35 minutes with Nixon in a courtesy call and emerged to tell newsmen that the President would make a major address within the next two weeks urging Americans to have faith in their economy. The Dow-Jones industrial average dropped 10.82 points Tuesday to 724.33, the lowest level since Nov. 22, 1963, the day Kennedy was assassinated. For 19 straight sessions, the number of declines in listed stocks has exceeded advances by a substantial margin. International Club's Red Dog Inn Dance Friday, May 1 8:00 p.m. Red Dog Inn — Free Beverages! Members free—non-members, $1.50 per couple Sponsored by International Club THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 80th Year, No.125 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, April 30, 1970 New Senate sworn in, Awbrey leaves office B Photo by Ron Bishop The quiet transfer of power . . . The new student body president was sworn in Wednesday night in the Senate meeting. (From left) David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior turns from the ceremony to congratulate Bill Ebert, Topeka junior and new student body president. Before swearing in student body president Bill Ebert, Topeka junior, Awbrey held the traditional elections for three holdover Senate members chosen from the old Senate to continue in the new and later addressed the new Senate as past outgoing presidents have done. David Awbrey, Hutchinson senior, as out-going student body president, told the incoming senate Wednesday night that they must be committed to the problem of the blacks in Lawrence and at the University of Kansas. Those chosen to continue from the old Senate were: Lyle Fischer, Dodge City junior; Rick von Ende, Abilene, Texas, graduate student and Peter George, Tuck-ahoe, New York law student. "I Bill Ebert swear to uphold the University of Kansas . . ." began Ebert repeating after Awbrey. Then as new president of the student body, Ebert swore in Gregg Thomas, vice-president and Topeka sophomore, and then swore in the whole student senate. (Continued to page 16) American forces supply aid in raid on Cambodia SAIGON (UPI)—A force of 6,500 South Vietnamese soldiers drove into neighboring Cambodia under U.S. aerial and artillery cover Wednesday and destroyed a Communist outpost in one of the biggest military operations of the war. Allied military spokesmen, who described the attack, said 332 Communists were killed in the raid opposite South Vietnam's Tay Ninh province 35 miles west of Saigon. They said U.S. Air Force planes, flying tactical strikes, accounted for about 300 of the dead. Spokesmen for Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, U.S. military commander in South Vietnam, said American forces provided support for the Cambodian raid "in the form of helicopters, artillery and tactical air strikes." A separate statement said the United States also provided logistical and medical support for the raiding party, and military sources said some Americans accompanied the South Vietnamese forces across the frontier. The Allied military spokesmen gave no indication how far the attack penetrated into Cambodia, but they said it was one of the largest mounted in the war. Other military sources reported a second attack across the border into Cambodia Wednesday, describing it as a thrust south of the main line of attack about 52 miles west of Saigon. Both attacks were in the vicinity of the "Parrot's Beak" section of Cambodia that juts into South Vietnam and, according to Allied sources here, provides sanctuary for about 15,000 Vietnamese Communist troops. Fighting was light and scattered in South Vietnam Wednesday, spokesmen said. Communists shelled eight targets in the country overnight Wednesday, causing casualties or damage in three of them. The sources said an additional 113 Communists were killed in the thrust to the south, raising to 445 the number of Communists reported slain in the two operations. The announcement of the raids into Cambodia came shortly after the U.S. Defense Department in Washington said the United States would provide advisers and other support to assist South Vietnamese military operations inside Cambodia. UDK News Roundup By United Press International Free press acquitted ELDORADO—The Butler County District Court Tuesday ruled that trespassing charges cannot be extended to include the sale of newspapers in acquitting six members of an underground publication from Wichita. The charges stemmed from six members of the Wichita River Tribe Free Press who refused to leave the grounds of the Butler County Community Junior College last fall while selling issues of their publication. Judge impresses Senate WASHINGTON — The Senate Judiciary Committee is ready to recommend overwhelmingly, perhaps unanimously, confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Harry A. Blackmun. Ten members of the 17-member committee already have pledged to endorse Blackmun, and Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss., the chairman, said he knew of no opposition that would postpone immediate action in the committee. Pre-flight damage charged DENVER — An Oxygen tank that was aboard the trouble-marred Apollo 13 Lunar mission was dropped and damaged at Cape Kennedy, a Denver newspaper reported today. The Rocky Mountain News said it had learned from a source in Boulder, Colo., that the tank had been rejected twice by inspectors and was dropped after a third inspection in which the spherical-shaped container was accepted. Six students shot COLUMBUS, Ohio — Six students were shot Wednesday night in confrontations with police on the Ohio State University campus. About 300 city police officers patrolled the troubled campus and more than 1,200 National Guardsmen stood by, ready to assist them, following a day of disturbances and protests that left more than 20 persons injured and 35 arrested. Judge said Kennedy was 'negligent' BOSTON (UPI)—A judge, casting doubt on Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's testimony, believes the senator intentionally drove Mary Jo Kopechne down a dirt road leading to a secluded beach probably in a negligent — even reckless — manner that contributed to her death, according to secret inquest documents made public Wednesday. District Judge James A. Boyle of Edgartown said he did not believe Kennedy and the young blonde secretary were driving back to the ferry to Judge Boyle, who presided over the inquest into Miss Kopechne's death, noted "inconsistencies and contradictions" in the testimony of Kennedy and 26 other witnesses. Edgartown—as Kennedy said they were—when their car hurtled off a bridge on Chapaquiddick Island after a party last summer. Judge Boyle's 12-page inquest report and the 763 pages of testimony given at the inquest were released by Suffolk Superior Court. The documents had been under legal wraps since the four-day inquest ended Jan. 8. Kennedy, in his testimony at the inquest, and in two previous public statements on the accident, said he and Miss Kopechne, 28, were headed back to Edgartown from Chapaquiddick Island when he took a wrong turn and went off a bridge. From Washington, the surviving son of the Kennedy clan said he rejected Boyle's findings and found them "not justified." Judge Boyle said: "I infer a reasonable and probable explanation of the totality of the . . . fact is that Kennedy and Kopechne did not intend to return to Edgartown at that time; that Kennedy did not intend to drive to the ferry slip and his turn onto Dike Road was intentional." Boyle's report reviewed the entire 763 pages of testimony Dike Road leads to Dike Bridge, a wooden, unrailed span across a tidal pond and leading to a secluded beach on the east side of Chappaquiddick Island. and 33 exhibits from the inquest and said he found "there are inconsistencies and contradictions in the testimony, which a comparison of individual testimony will show." Boyle's finding was that "there is probable cause to believe that Edward M. Kennedy operated his motor vehicle negligently . . . and that such operation appears to have contributed to the death of Mary Jo Kopechne." Kennedy and Miss Kopechne had been attending a cookout reunion the night of July 18 at (Continued to page 16) Fate of military course credit set ROTC credit to be dropped in 1971 By GALEN BLAND Kansan Staff Writer The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, by a 193 to 165 mail ballot vote, chose to deny credit, starting September, 1971, to ROTC courses that are not integrated into the regular academic courses of the University. The results of the vote were announced Tuesday in a College faculty meeting in the Kansas Union Woodruff Auditorium by Eugene Fox, associate dean of the College. A similar question was defeated by the faculty last year, but this year the question was supplemented by a plan to integrate present ROTC courses into the regular academic program. Herman Lujan, chairman of the university Senate temporary committee on ROTC, had requested at the last College faculty meeting that the proposal be defeated, but Wednesday he saw the vote as an approval of the plan formulated by his committee. Lujan said the vote posed no threat to the major points of the plan of integration. Those major points are the substitution of academic courses for ROTC courses wherever possible, attaching a military science section to each substituted course and the use of team-teaching where substitution is not possible. The ROTC companion courses would be overseen by a special ROTC education policies committee. Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. did not believe the vote or the proposed plan of integration would damage the ROTC program. Chalmers said the vote would probably not cause the number of ROTC students to drop. He Police report no threats in 48 hours The Lawrence Police Department reported Wednesday that bomb threats in the city have subsided since numerous such reports during the weekend and Monday. The office of Richard Stanwix, Superintendent of Police, said that in the last 48 hours no bomb threats have been reported. The last threats received were Monday when two private homes received anonymous calls. The last report on campus came at 3 a.m. Saturday in Snow Hall. The building was evacuated but no bomb was found. 2 KANSAN Apr. 30 1970 KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS BROOKS - SUITED RECORDS KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS $299 Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Mall's Shopping Ctr. compared the situation with that which developed when compulsory ROTC programs were made voluntary. He said he found the situation to be in accord with directives by the legislature and statements by the Board of Regents. He had taken steps at Friday's board meeting, he said, to head off a panic at the vote results because the University could live with either outcome of the college vote. allow from five to 16 hours of credit for ROTC courses. Some of the military science men are not as convinced as was Chalmers. Air Force Col. Rayburn Lancaster and Navy Capt. Joseph Marzluff, leaders of the ROTC programs, said they expected the vote would be reflected in enrollment. If their programs are threatened as an outcome of this vote, both expect the regents to get involved to prevent the College faculty from denying the programs to all KU students. Col. Philip Riedel, head of the Army program, was optimistic about the possibilities of achieving integration and said time would reveal the vote's impact on enrollment. The College presently permits up to 25 hours of credit from another school or department to be applied toward a bachelor's degree. ROTC credit is included under this arrangement. The eight other undergraduate schools The resolution passed by the College faculty was: "As of September, 1971, those military science courses which have not been successfully integrated into the departmental offerings of nonmilitary science departments shall not apply toward graduation requirements in the college except for the student currently enrolled in ROTC courses at the University of Kansas." KILLCREST IOWA AT 9TH U13 9012 RANEY PLAZA CENTER 1800 MASS. U13 0684 DRUG STORES FOR THE '70'S DOWNTOWN 921 MASS. U13 3521 this is definitely for the NOW image SUN GLASSES Campus briefs Russian film to be shown A prize winning Soviet film, "The Lady With the Dog," called Chekhov's short story, will be shown Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Bailey Hall, room 3. The film, presented by the Russian Club, is in Russian with English subtitles. Admission is free for the film, which is open to the public. Foundation president to speak The president of the American Occupational Therapy Foundation will speak in Dyche Auditorium from 4 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday. Nancy V. Snyder will speak on the topic "Origin and Purpose of the American Occupational Therapy Foundation." The executive vice-president of McGinnis and Associates, Inc., Charles A. James Jr., will also speak on "The Allied Health Professions In and Out of Court." James will speak from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. on the same date. McGinnis and Associates is a firm of insurance consultants in Chicago, III. KU archers to compete in tourney Ten students from the University of Kansas will participate in the Central Region Postal Archery Tournament Friday, Ray Totten, Overland Park junior, said Monday. The tuernament, Totten said, will be held every Friday at 2:30 p.m. for three weeks in Robinson Gym. Shultz to speak at 'Dining In' The University of Kansas Air Force ROTC's annual "Dining In" will be tonight at the Forbes Air Force Base Officers Club in Topeka. Senator Reynolds Shultz will be guest speaker and 11 cadets and one KU official will receive awards for outstanding achievement. Graduation offices to be moved General commencement headquarters are being moved from the Kansas Union to McCollum Hall, said Jerry Hutchison, assistant director of the Alumni Association. McCollum Hall will be used to accommodate parents and alumni during commencement activities. Some of the smaller commencement events will remain in the north part of the Union, Hutchison said. The 1920 Golden Anniversary will be held at McCollum the evening of May 30. The All-American Class Luncheon will also be held the evening of May 30 in the Lewis Hall dining room. Free shuttle bus service will be available to and from McCollum, Hutchison said. Date correction for annual review Feast features foreign food The April 23 Kansan ran an article which listed an incorrect date for the annual Tri-Service ROTC Review. The correct time and date for the event is 3:45 p.m., May 8. Foreign food connoisseurs will have the opportunity to taste specialty dishes from eight nations at the International Club banquet at 6:30 p.m. May 10 in the Kansas Union cafeteria. Apr. 30 KANSAN 3 1970 Single Muffler Installed for any American car. $12.95 Dennis Parle, assistant to the dean of foreign students and a representative of the International Club, said the club would be celebrating its fifteenth anniversary on the KU campus at the banquet. Members of the International SAVE YOURSELF AFINE T.I.R.E. co. 720 East 9th VI 3-0950 Club, Parle said, will prepare the entire dinner. The meal will start with an Iranian salad. Various entrees include a Turkish chicken casserole, a pork and chicken dish from Thailand—vermicelli, a Latin American bean dish—frijoles, a Chinese shrimp vegetable dish and an Indian rice dish—pullao. Dessert will be baclava from Egypt. Parle said four numbers were included on the entertainment Highlighting the evening will be the crowning of the annual Scheherazade queen, Parle said. This year 11 girls from different nations including Latin America, Israel, Thailand, Great Britain, Finland and China will compete. program. In addition to an Israeli pantomime, Indian popular songs and Arabian folk dances performed by students from those nations, east European folk songs will be sung by Piotr Bozyk, Lodz, Poland, graduate student. Kansan errs; KU coed not arrested in curfew Raney Drug Stores Joan Irvine, New York senior, was not arrested for a curfew violation as reported in Tuesday's Kansan. Miss Irvine said she became involved with the legal defense fund established for people arrested because another person in the house where she lives was arrested, and Miss Irvine made arrangements for legal services. 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. TOM PETTERS BICYCLE PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 1 EPIC DOROVAN'S GREATEST HITS INCLUDES: SUNSHINE SUPERMAN WEAR YOUR LOVE LIKE HEAVEN MELLOW YELLOW/HURDY GUROY MAN On Epic Records EPIC Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterea Malls Shopping Cr. PUTT-PUTT® GOLF COURSES AMERICA'S QUALITY COURSES 1 Putt-Putt's ONCE-A-YEAR-SALE May1,2,3 only Package Deal—30 games $10.00 Regular $22.50 Can be used any time Get yours! The DRAUGHT HOUSE is SMOKEY BEAR This weekend from 8:00 to 12:00 HEAVY MUSIC Both SATURDAY & FRIDAY The DRAUGHT HOUSE $1.00 PER PITCHER 804 W. 24th KANSAN COMMENT Evening the odds Washington has escaped damage. The State Capitol Building still stands in Topeka. Democracy has been saved from the Harambee. The BSU newspaper is seditious, Attorney General Frizzell said. It will no longer be printed by the Kansas University Printing Service, since there is a Kansas statute which prohibits publication of materials urging violence. And the theme of Harambee, Frizzell said, is that blacks must arm themselves. So that is sedition. In Kansas, a black can have a gun if he's in the National Guard. A student can have a gun as long as he's in ROTC. A man can be armed, you see, if the government can be sure that he's on the right side. Basically, Harambee was calling for its readers to even up the odds. The events of last week proved that an entire community can be placed at the mercy of the government within a matter of hours. An unarmed community has no choice but to follow the orders of the military. What happened to freedom in Lawrence last week? Freedom vanished when the National Guard and Highway Patrol entered the town, bearing guns. Freedom proved to be only an illusion. The government displayed the strength that enables it to turn a town into a prison whenever it desires. The people of Lawrence had no power to resist. Just exactly what is this democracy that Frizzell is trying to defend? Is it a democracy in which people are free as long as they are not doing anything? When the people begin to act, their rights are nullified and troops are sent in to make sure there is no reaction. Yes, it makes a big difference who's holding the gun. It even makes a difference who's talking about it. Speaking about campus violence recently, the governor of California said, "If it takes a blood bath, let's get it over with. No more appeasement." Gov. Reagan later explained that "blood bath" was a figure of speech. When Reagan calls for a blood bath, it's a figure of speech. But when the Harambee calls for self-defense, for an equalization of power, it's sedition. Last week's curfew enforcement showed that Harambee's plea was extremely relevant. It is possible that Frizzell may silence Harambee. But if it survives, Frizzell's actions will only serve to give it more force. Joe Naas Others on issues This column is made available periodically for campus leaders to discuss current issues By GUS diZEREGA By GUS diZEREGA (Ed. note—diZerega is a former student senator, still active in campus politics.) Last week the revolution came to Lawrence. The nightly crunch of military boots on abandoned pavement shattered our quiet oasis from reality. This week the students of Berkeley demonstrate on our behalf. Dave Awbrey and other students face six months in jail for the henious crime of curfew violation. Yes, even in Kansas. And it has only just begun. The corruption and illegitimacy of "our" government have reached the point where some prefer the risks of insurrection to the continuing of the status quo. Before you attack the violent bombing of the Kansas Union (which, I agree, was exceptionally stupid) and before you condemn the violence of those who fought in the streets last week, think of the many times you have acquiesced during the Vietnam War and think of those now dead from it on both sides. Think of those now threatened by the draft while you complacently enjoy your 2-S, high lottery number, or sex. Think of the red, black, brown, and yellow people who have been on the receiving end of establishment violence while many of you talked of "patriotism" and "niggers." Think of the violence of a system which can blow the world up several times over, is spending billions in order to do it better and regards a few million dollars more for HEW as "inflationary." Compare this "legal" violence to our illegal violence. Then don't talk to me of the threat of student violence, hippie violence, or left violence. Compared to Richard Nixon, Senator Dole, or Herr Shultz the most violent revolutionary is nearly a pacifist. The war has come home. It has come home because reason and facts and good intentions have proven unable to end the Vietnam War, to end racism, to end the exploitation of all Americans by a tiny wealthy elite. If reason cannot shake up the chauvinist who defends the rape of Vietnam because "we must preserve our national image" then something else will. Even if the Vietnam War were to end tomorrow there would still be only a rise in military spending. Between 1965 and 1969 $338 billion was spent on national "defense." Nixon's figures indicate that in the first six years of the 70s, $415 billion in 1969 prices will be spent on "defense." There will be no war's end bonus—it will go to the Pentagon. The poor pay out more in taxes than they get in welfare aid yet the middle class has been tricked into blaming them for higher taxes. Simillarly, various groups have been conned into attacking one another to the benefit only of our elite controlled government in which the rich get richer and the poor . . . well the average standard of living has gone down in recent years. There is no longer a good reason for the continued existence of the present system. Government services are dwarfed by its disservices. Political avenues are presently closed to us because only the parasitic fat cats have the bread to participate in the political arena. They will let us have a voice in governing KU because they don't feel we can threaten their vital interests here. On vital issues, however, the streets are increasingly the only realistic alternative to principled impotence. Last week we took to the streets. We will do it again and again all across the country until we get either major reform or revolution. The real issue is not Vietnam, the real issue is a military-industrial society which makes Vietnams possible. Most KU students detest violence (as do most radicals for that matter) and say "Please work within the system. We agree with your goals but your methods are wrong." Many of us have seen years of peaceful agitation accomplish substantially nothing on vital issues, but more importantly, most of those students who urge peaceful activism have never done any activism of any kind. They seem to be saying "Please don't do anything to force us to make a choice, our inertia is so much more comfortable." Those of us who do not rule out violence a priori can only answer "First you get involved peacefully and then talk to us about peaceful tactics. Until then, are you sure you know what you're talking about?" Griff & the Unicorn BY SOKOLOFF Yum! COTTON CANDY IS MY FAVORITE! CWHOOSH! STRONG WIND TODAY... THIS IS CRUNCHUOUS! I DON'T KNOW WHAT ELSE CAN HAPPEN TO ME! © David Sokoloff 1970 MULTI-BILLION SECRET LITTLE WAR IN LAOS U.S. TAX PAYERS THE MUNALKER JOURNAL 'The theory is that what you don't know won't hurt us.' hearing voices— To the editor: The recent decision by the state's Attorney General Frizell is simply another crystal clear example of overt racism. At first he wouldn't make any statements about why he stopped the printing of "Harambee." Now he has clearly stated the paper "advocates crime, criminal syndicalism, sabotage, violence, etc." (Thurs. April 16th Lawrence Journal World) By doing this he has drawn a clear line of demarcation between Black People in general and the contributors of "Harambee" in specific. Frizell probably feels he has paralized the black liberation struggle here at KU greatly by denying us "freedom of the press." But we will continue to communicate and get the truth to the people "by whatever means necessary" via handbills, newsletters and the black owned and operated "Grapevine." The recent wave of vicious, brutal police attacks on black women and children has caused us to "table" plans of attack on the recent ruling on Harambee. Frizell has jumped on the political platform of Schultz of getting tough with people who don't endorse his means of accomplishing the American dream. By denying black people "freedom of the press" he has denied all people "freedom to read." We can't have our paper printed through the state owned and operated printing service. Therefore we need funds to have our paper printed by a private firm. Let's not let any politician dictate to us what we can read and what we can't read. Monty "Fats" Beckwith Chicago, Ill., freshman To the editor: Reading Mr. Schaefer's letter to the editor in Thursday's Daily Kansan I felt compelled to relate a similar and appalling incident. I was seated in my morning class Tuesday and overheard remarks pertaining to the Union fire as well as current Lawrence school system incidents. The remarks between the two girls were overtly racist in nature, inherently ignorant of the crux of racial problems in the schools, and most shocking of all, from the mouths of student teachers in one of the local elementary schools. As future teachers we are constantly reminded of the unconscious effect we have on our students. We often transmit values without ever being aware of it. I am sickened to imagine such ideas as these "teachers" were discussing to be even-so-lightly hinted at in the classroom. If the greatest path to freedom from injustice and prejudice is through the minds of the young, we need take a closer look into the minds of the teachers and administrators. What possible hope can this nation have for survival if more educators are unconsciously passing on similar bias to their students? Janice Wittmeyer Ottawa senior THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Kausan 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 Adviser . . James W. Murray Managing Editor... Ken Peterson Campus Editor... Ted Iliff News Editors... Donna Shraader Editorial Editors ... Joe Naas, Monroe Dodd, Mike Rieke Sports Editors ... Bruce Campbell, Sue Swerer Makeup Editors ... Charlie Cape, George Wilkena Wire Editor ... Ken Cummins Womanizing Page Editors ... Linda Loyd, Carolyn Bowers Arts and Reviews Editors ... Ginnie Rhoads, Nataly Geary Assistant Campus Editors ... Vicki Phillips, Nila Walker Assistant News Editors ... Cass Sexson, Robin Stewart Photographers ... Ron Bishop, Bruce Bernstein, Randy Leffingwell Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams Business Manager Jerry Bottenfield Assistant Business Manager Mike Banks Advertising Managers Larry Cates, Joanne Bos National Advertising Manager Oscar Bassinion Classified Manager Shiley Bray Promotion Manager Jim Huggins Service Manager John Lagios 'Ecological doomsday' considered an 'if' Economics prof says future not so grim In the wake of recent predictions of an "ecological doomsday" by Paul Ehrlich and other eminent ecologists, at least one man at KU does not believe the future is really so grim. Ronald Calgaard, associate professor of economics at the University of Kansas, said Wednesday that Ehrlich's predictions center around the word "if." Calgaard explained that predicted famines and overpopulation are projected from current birth rates. This is inaccurate, Calgaard said, because it fails to consider technology and other things that could alter the future situation. Calgaard said that technology and economic growth could affect population growth. "When countries experience economic growth and prosperity, people's attitudes often change regarding family size," Calgaard said. This means that prosperity can make smaller families desirable, he said. Indicating that technology can also change famine predictions, Calgaard cited India as an example. "Since 1967, India's food production has increased seven to eight per cent." Calgaard said. He said this has happened because of improved agricultural technology. Exhibits explore plays of Gilbert and Sullivan An exhibition organized in conjunction with the International Conference on Gilbert and Sullivan is now being shown in the basement of the Spooner Art Museum, Bert Waller, director of the museum, said Wednesday. The exhibition features 52 items: posters, costume studies and set designs by 14 artists concerned with various Gilbert and Sullivan shows, Waller said. He said the works included in the exhibition were selected by John Bush Jones, assistant professor of English and chairman of the Gilbert and Sullivan conference. "The enduring appeal of the Apr. 30 1970 KANSAN 5 DONOVAN'S GREATEST HITS INCLUDING: SUNDAY SUPERMAN WEAR YOUR LOVE LIKE HEAVEN MELLOW YELLOW/ HURDY GURDY MAN On Epic Records EPIC Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Allen Funt His first Candid Camera feature film. "What Do You Say to a Naked Lady?" X No One Under 18 Admitted! I.D.'s Required COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists STARTS WEDNESDAY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045 works of Gilbert and Sullivan is attested by the 52 items in this exhibition," said Waller. Waller said the museum was indebted to the Victoria and Albert Museum and to Graham Reynolds, the keeper of the department of drawings and prints of that msueum for the help they provided in setting up the exhibit. The works included in the exhibit are concerned with the following Gilbert and Sullivan shows: "The Pirates of Penzance," "Princess Ida," "Patience," "The Gondoliers," "Ruddigore," "Iolanthe," "H.M.S. Pinafore," "The Mikado," "The Yeoman of the Guard," "The Sorcerer," "Ivanhoe," "The Chieftan," "The Rose of Persia," "The Emerald Isle" and "The Grand Duke." Waller said the exhibit would coincide with the international Conference on Gilbert and Sullivan to be held at KU in May. Calgaard does believe, however, that there is a population problem. He said that although India's food production is increasing, the situation could be better if there were fewer people. Calgaard said although many critics of population control argue that small populations mean a decrease in economic growth, "this is not the case." They Were REBELS, They Were IRISH, They Were CATHOLIC, RICHARD SEAN SAMANTHA HARRIS CONNERY EGGAR THE MOLLY MAGUIRES Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:10 - 9:45 He explained that after World War II, Japan reduced its population and still increased its economic growth. But as a result, many Japanese cities such as Tokyo are heavily polluted, he added. Calgaard said that increased production does not have to yield more pollution. Varsity THEATRE ... telephone VI3-1065 "But in order to correct pollution," Calgaard said, "consumers are going to have to bear the costs." He said at present, industries installing anti-pollution devices are making consumers bear the costs by increasing product costs. Automobile pollution is an example of costs to consumers. "Automobile manufacturers who install anti-pollution devices BUSY IRS NEW YORK (UPI)—The Internal Revenue Service audited 2.9 million personal income tax returns in 1968, assessing 1.5 million taxpayers additional taxes and crediting refunds to 150,000, according to Bernard S. Browning, president of General Business Services, Inc., a record-keeping and tax return-preparing organization. SEE WHY ... 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS KING AND QUEEN "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times RICHARD BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD IN THE HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Anne of the Thousand Days Eve. 7:15 - 9:45 Mat. Sat., Sun. 2:30 Adults 1.50, Child .75 Granada THEATRE ...telephone VI 3-5784 BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR JEROME HELLMAN-JOHN SCHLESINGER PRODUCTION DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" Eve. 7:00 & 9:15; Adults $1.50 Matinee Sat. & Sun. 2:00 ID's required increase costs of the product as compensation," Calgaard said. "The question is," Calgaard said, "are people willing to pay the costs of eliminating pollution?" Although Calgaard believes that people should be informed about ecological problems, he disagrees with what he called "scare tactics" used by Ehrlich in the book, "The Population Bomb." "Scare tactics do call attention to the problem," Calgaard said, "but they cause reactions before thought." "As funny and charming and, above all, as human as any comedy that has been made in the United States this decade!"—LIFE STATES this decade!"—LIFE BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE WHAT'S WRONG WITH THAT? Eve. 7:10 & 9:10 Mat. Sat.- Sun. 2:10 Adult $1.50 I.D.'s Requested THE HillcrestZ HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND IOWA WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT Now Second Big Week river river river river river river river river river COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents riverrun A film by JOHN KORTY Live life as close to the source as you can. Color Eve. 7:30 & 9:25 Mat. Sat.- Sun. 2:30 Adult 1.50 I.D.'s Requested xxxxxxxxxx THE Hillcrest3 HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND 10TH Tonight SUA Special Film Series presents The Professionals (A story of soldiers of fortune set in the West) starring Lee Marvin, Burt Lancaster Robert Ryan and Claudia Cardinale A film by Richard Brooks (who directed Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Elmer Gantry, In Cold Blood, etc.) WOODRUFF AUD. — TONIGHT 50c 7:00 and 9:00 50c Students express views, impressions Week of drama at KU leaves confusion One week has passed since KU experienced a wave of violence, tension and destruction unequalled in the history of the campus. Reactions expressed by KU students to the events of that week ranged from shock and disbelief to disgust. Many confessed to being left in the wake of the upheaval with feelings of confusion and uncertainty. "I'm one big question mark," said one coed shortly after curfew was lifted Friday morning. "I don't understand why this happened or who is behind it all." Several days later, with the community and the campus returned to normal, the lack of understanding still prevails. While police and fire department officials puzzle over who set the fires and caused the disturbance, KU students sift through rumors, theories and a few scattered facts trying to figure out what happened and why. The "causes," as such, of the five-day wave of fire bombings are unclear. Why burn the Union? The fire set at Strong Hall might be assumed to be a strike against the administration, a fire in the Military Science building could be attributed to an anti-ROTC faction, and fire bombs thrown at the administration building at Lawrence High School would logically be related to the recent racial issue there. But the burnings of the Union, a furniture store in downtown Lawrence and an abandoned school building in north Lawrence seem totally unjustifiable for the ends of any faction. Some believed the trouble began with the racial tension at Lawrence High, others said it was a carry-over from the "academic freedom" issue after the Board of Regents passed over the promotions of two KU professors. Still others blamed the appearance of Abbie Hoffman for the upheaval. Some were willing to place the beginning of last week's incidents as far back as the ROTC demonstration last spring. Why KU? Abbie Hoffman noted that KU students were "unrevolutionary." Lawrence, Kansas—almost a ludicrous setting for nightly arson attempts, bomb threats and a three-day curfew complete with armed National Guardsmen. Those who advance the theory of outside agitators say KU was chosen for the very reason of its "unlikelihood" as the scene of a major disturbance. One fact is certain—the incident was national news everywhere. And the impression they are left with is the same given by KU students — confusion over what appears to be senseless destruction. What issue or combination of issues prevalent in the past several weeks warranted $2 million damage to the Union? Concern for KU's national image prompted remarks from many students. One coed said her parents tried to persuade her to transfer, not out of fear for her safety, but because of what prospective employers might think if she graduated from a "riot-torn university." Students had numerous comments to make about the events of the week, ranging from what they felt when news of the Kansas Union reached them to praise and criticism of the way the situation was handled, particularly in reference to the curfew imposed by Governor Robert Docking. For many KU students, this was the first time they had ever been under a curfew. There were those who refused to accept the gravity of the disturbance, and complained that the curfew "interfered with social life," or "infringed on my rights." Parents will not get student grade report The University of Kansas will no longer automatically notify parents of student's grades. The policy switch is due to the new code of student rights, responsibilities and conduct. The grade policies are but one part of a section on confidentiality of records which affects procedures in the registrar's office. Essentially, the section describes a confidential relationship between student and university, and lists records which are kept and to Balfour said it might be possible for students to indicate if they wanted their grades to be reported at registration and enrollment. The curfew (said one student, was a mistake because it in itself became an issue. William Balfour, dean of student affairs, said Wednesday that grades will be sent to parents only at the request of students. It had been policy at KU to automatically report grades of single students under 21 years of age to their parents or guardians. whom the information may be given. Still another said she thought it "showed the ineffectiveness of a curfew in stopping violence." TRANS-ELECTRONIC MUSIC PRODUCTIONS, INC. PRESENTS SWITCHED- ON BACH VIRTUOSO ELECTRONIC PERFORMANCES OF: BRANDENBURG CONCERTO NO. 5 - AND ON A G STRING - JESU JOY OF MAN'S DESIREMENT - PHILLOWS AND FUGUES FROM THE WILLIAM TEMPLE CENTER PERFORMED ON THE MOOD SYNTHESIZER TRANS-ELECTRONIC MUSIC PRODUCTIONS, AND PRESENTS: SWITCHED-ON BACH VIRTUOSO ELECTRONIC PERFORMANCES OF: BRANDENBURG CONCERTO NO. 3 'AIR ON A G STRING' 'HELL, NOT OF MAN'S DESIGN' PRELUDS S AND HOUSES FROM THE WELL, TEMPERRED CLAIVER' PERFORMED ON THE MOOD SWITCHEDER On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. PERFORMED ON THE MODEL, STATEN ISLAND 6 KANSAN Apr. 30 1970 Those who supported the curfew said that some show of force must be made to stop anarchy. On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S "People looked at the curfew HILLDALE SOUTH, INC. OPENING SOON METZGER REAL ESTATE OZAWKIE Kan. Carl Metzer, broker West Side of Beautiful Lake Derry KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS BREMER-SHIRT MEETS KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS $299 Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. as an annoyance rather than as a protective device for their benefit," said one student. And what now? Have the events of last week changed anything? Many students believe there has been a change—in the attitude of the students toward the University, in the outlook for the future and in themselves. "It was interesting to note how students reacted in a more conservative manner than was their normal nature," said a coed. "Lawrence is no longer a 'refuge,'" said a graduate student, "but subject to the same tension as the entire United States." For now, Lawrence and the University of Kansas campus are quiet. Students have the time now to sort out their thoughts and form their own conclusions to the five-day drama of last week. What in the future? Time will tell. POLARIZED CARE FOR YOUR GARMENTS Now's the time... STORE YOUR FURS AND CLOTHES FOR SUMMER POLARIZED CARE Don't bother taking your winter clothes home this summer have them cleaned with free moth-proofing and stored all summer ready for you when fall comes. Repairs, Alterations and Reweaving Fur Cleaning Coat Linings Pick-up and Delivery Service NewYork Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Serving Students for 58 years CALL: VI 3-0501 NewYork Cleaners CALL: VI 3-0501 DON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR PHONE DISCONNECTED Before you leave for the summer, remember to have your phone disconnected. Just call the business office, 843-9900 as soon as possible, and tell us when you'll be leaving. We'll do the rest. And if you're returning to the same address next fall, there's no need to have your phone taken out and installed again in September. Just ask us about our special vacation rate. It saves you an installation charge and you keep the same phone number, all at a discounted rate. Bell Southwestern Bell Photo by John Ebling Just I and my friend . . . The recent warm weather brought these two nature lovers to the banks of Potter Lake to enjoy the cooling shade of the Redbud trees and the delightful fragrance of the breezes (?) winging their way over the lake. Mount Oread Troupe stages unfamiliar play The last play on which Gilbert and Sullivan collaborated and a play which has not been performed since it opened in 1896, will be a feature of the International Conference on Gilbert and Sullivan, to be held May 7-9 at the University of Kansas. The play, "The Grand Duke," is the story of a band of strolling players and actors who attempt a revolution in an 18th century German baronry. According to Bob Butler, publicity chairman for the Mt. Oread Gilbert and Sullivan Co., no one has ever presented the play since its original opening in 1896. It closed soon after it opened. Butler said "The Grand Duke" closely parallels other Gilbert and Sullivan works in its music and comedy. "But there are elements in this play that are more grotesque, because some of the characters are moral idiots. This play was ahead of its time," he said. More than 200 Gilbert and Sullivan scholars, historians, and performers have registered for the conference. This will be the first time many of those at the conference will have seen "The Grand Duke." Usually when a Gilbert and Sullivan work is performed, it is a familiar one, such as "H.M.S. Pinafore" or "The Mikado." Butler said. Lynn Schornick, musical director of the company, is working from the original manuscripts of the play, handwritten in 1896. The music has never been published. Some of the musical numbers, as well as parts of the play were censored because they offended Victorian morals, but they will be included in this performance. "The Grand Duke" will be presented May 6-9 in the Central Junior High School Auditorium. Tickets are $2.00 for general admission and $1.50 for KU students, and may be purchased at the University Theatre Box Office in Murphy Hall. "The Grand Duke" is directed by John and Sandra Jones, founders of the local Gilbert and Sullivan company, and the guest artist will be Ron Highley of the Kansas City Lyric Opera Company. More than 3,000 Guardsmen were alerted in northeastern Ohio and began assembling in Cleveland and Akron armories for possible guard duty on highways where there have been repeated incidents of violence and vandalism. Gov. James A. Rhodes of Ohio Wednesday ordered National Guardsmen on standby alert and vowed to stop "open warfare" on the state's highways in a wildcat Teamsters' strike. Labor Secretary George Shultz rejected a proposal by Rhodes that the federal government reopen talks with the Teamsters Union. Shultz said in Washington the Federal Bureau of Investiga- Statement to be entered as evidence NEW YORK (UPI) — Assistant District Attorney Joseph Phillips said Wednesday he plans to use as evidence a statement made by Richard Moore, one of 13 Black Panthers facing trial on bombing conspiracy charges, that he had refrained from shooting police only because he was cleaning his gun at the time of his arrest. Phillips told the defense the statement attributed to Moore was made on the morning of his arrest April 2,1969,to the other defendants in the district attorney's office. Attorneys for Moore and two other defendants protested the statements which Phillips said he planned to introduce on the grounds that the defense had not been given sufficient time to prepare motions for their suppression. Change machine in Union vanishes By United Press International A dollar bill changing machine has disappeared from the Kansas Union, said Frank Burge, Union director. Doctors implant atomic battery Burge said the machine was found missing yesterday morning by a routine service check. The office of Traffic and Security will make a full investigation today, Burge said. Guard on standby in Ohio He said there was no way to determine the money loss until audits are made. PARIS (UPI)—Surgeons Monday implanted an atomic battery into the body of a woman suffering from failing heart beat. This is the first such operation on a human being, the French Health Ministry announced. Until now, heart "pacemakers" installed in humans have been powered by electricity from mercury batteries, ministry officials said. Pacemakers powered by atomic energy have been implanted only in dogs, first in the United States in 1968, then in France the following year. The grafting of a radio isotopopropelled battery Monday at Broussais Hospital was successfully carried out on a woman of more than 50 years of age, the officials said. The heart stimulators were named "pace makers" when American scientists first developed them in 1952. FAMOUS LAST WORDS VERSAILLES, France (UPI)—Footnote to history: 50 years ago the Treaty of Versailles was signed between the victorious Allies and defeated Germany to end World War I, "the war to end all wars." Apr. 30 1970 KANSAN 7 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — A jury Wednesday awarded $50,000 damages to Gloria Sykes, the 29-year-old former Sunday School teacher whose attorney claimed a runaway cable car gave her a runaway sex life. 'Sex drives' suffered; jury awards damages Marvin Lewis, Miss Sykes' attorney, said he might appeal the award—one-tenth of the $500,000 he was asking. But he hailed the verdict as a "legal breakthrough" which established the principle of "psychic damages." As a result, Lewis contended in the trial, she suffered from uncontrollable sex drives which drove her into the arms of more than 100 men. Miss Sykes was on a Hyde Street cable car in 1964 when it broke loose, plunged down a hill and smashed into a power pole. WHERE THERE'S SMOKING. Miss Sykes, who testified for 21/2 days during the trial, said she was a former Sunday School teacher and choir singer. NEW YORK—Smoking may be hazardous to your environment as well as to your health, says the Insurance Information Institute. Of the 960,900 U.S. building fires in 1967, nearly one in five was traced to causes related to smoking and matches. situation in Ohio but he said the violence "primarily is a matter for local law enforcement." On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Apple Records Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes met with mayors of 18 other Ohio cities to discuss the strike which the Greater Cleveland Growth Association said was costing the area $6.5 million a week in lost payrolls and $23 million per week in production. The general executive board of the Teamsters Union met in Washington to go over final details of a proposed national contract and to ratify a vote on the proposal. Some 12,600 Ohio drivers, 9,600 St. Louis drivers and about 10,000 Los Angeles drivers have been on wildcat strikes protesting the national agreement which would provide for wage increases totaling $1.10 an hour over three years. About 40,000 Chicago area truck drivers, who bargain with truckers separately from the national talks, also are on strike. They walked out to enforce demands for increases over three years totaling $1.65 an hour. SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for miDAS® mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 SHAW AUTO SERVICE Your headquarters for miDAS® mufflers and shocks 612 N. 2nd St. 843-8943 On Apple Records McCartney $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Tempo YOUR STORE WITH MORE AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES OPERATED BY GAMBLE-SKOGMO, INC. 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As students watched, the 60-foot tall crane lifted debris and scorched pieces of metal onto trucks. The large machine will be used until most of the bulky debris is removed from the Union. In response to the Palestinian panel discussion that was held two weeks ago, the KU Hillel chapter held another discussion Wednesday night in McCollum Hall. Middle East crisis debated The panel included Allan Blumenthal, Cleveland junior and editor of KU Shalom; Mrs. Edith Goldman, a lawyer and Tel Aviv graduate student; James Seaver, professor of history at KU and Al Worob, West Orange, N.J. graduate student and Hillel adviser. During the discussion and question-answer period held afterward, three major issues were discussed. The Palestinian refugee problem. - The issue of territorial reacquisition. - Possible solutions for the future. In discussing the first topic, the Palestinian side said that their countrymen felt they were driven from their homes and that the big powers could not really help them since they do not realize the aim of the Palestinians in their wish to retain their homeland. Their solution to this problem would be the establishment of a Palestinian Democratic State where people of all religions could live in harmony. 宝宝游泳 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 D DRIVE-IN AND COUN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 In the territorial issue, the Palestinian side that resistance of the people is natural. KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS RECORDER + CHILDREN RECORDS KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS $299 Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Air conditioning problem in Union opening attempt Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, said that all the steel items should be taken out of the damaged area of the Union building by today. Before a temporary roof can be placed on the building, all of the major pieces of debris must be cleared away. Because the ballroom is exposed to the outside, problems have arisen in air conditioning the main part of the Union. Air conditioning is operational for those parts of the structure, Burge said, through a repiping arrangement. Burge said that B.A. Green Construction Co., who is installing the temporary roof, is making "good progress." But, he said, the Union staff will continue to have problems until the cavity is sealed off. Work has begun to make the Union Forum Room more accessible to the public. To do this, workmen are making an outside entrance to the room. A cement sidewalk will be poured to the entrance at the northeast corner of the Union building. Burge said that the sidewalk entrance will not provide access to the whole building. It will only act as an entrance and exit for the Forum Room. 8 KANSAN Apr.30 1970 TOM RUSH including: Child's Sona/Wild Child/Old Man Song Drop Down Mama/Colors Of The Sun TOM RUSH including: Child's Song/Wild Child/Old Man Song Drop Down Mama/Colors Of The Sun On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Drop Down Mama / Colors Of The Sun You own the sun Child of Aquarius. Sun worshiper... Coppertone takes you back to nature with a deeper, darker, richer tan...faster. And there's a Coppertone tan that's just naturally right for you. Eleven fabulous blends. Make Coppertone a part of your bag...beach bag, that is. Coppertone P.S./For a totally different sun experience try new Coppertone Tanning Butter (cocoa butter and coconut oil). Wild! Coppertone LOTION Coppertone Tanning Butter Products of Plough, Inc. 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The success of this year's team can be attributed to the fine pitching of Bill Stiegemeir, Bob Wolf, and Corky Ullom. All three pitchers have ERA marks under 3.00 with Stiegmeier leading the team with a fine 0.88 average. Wolf is not far behind with 0.90 and Ullom follows up with 2.38. KU has also received clutch performances from Dave Robisch and Bob Kaufman. The pitching mark for the Jayhawks (1.80 ERA) is the best staff average for a conference team in three years. Along with the pitching, KU has also received top performances in the hitting department. They are third in the Conference with a .265 average and have three hitters in the top 15. Larry Matson and Ken Carpio have made considerable improvement to balance out the Jayhawks attack which is led by shortstop Keith Leippman's sizzling .370 hitting mark. Missouri's pitching staff will be tested this weekend as they try to tame the hot bats of the Hawks. Missouri will go with Bill Todd and Bob Sheetz on Friday and righthander Mike Crim will pitch on Saturday. The Tigers are currently in sixth place although they are second in hitting with a fine 274 clip. Leading the Tigers is husky catcher Steve Patchin who tops all Big Eight hitters with a 500 mark. Neil Sloman and Bill Boyd also present problems for the Hawks as they have combined for eleven hits and a .407 average collectively. The doubleheader on Friday will begin at 1 p.m. with Saturday's game starting time moved up to 11 a.m. TEACHERS WANTED Southwest, Entira West and Alaska froes years SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY 1303 Central Ave. N, E. Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Free Registration—Good Salaries Netters to go against Shockers The Jayhawk tennis team, winner in seven of eight duals in April, has two matches slated this week. The Jayhawk netters meet Wichita State at Wichita today, then play Oklahoma City at Lawrence Saturday at 10 a.m. on the KU courts west of Allen Field House. The Jayhawks had won seven straight duals before defending Big Eight champion Oklahoma ended the skein with a 9-0 victory last Saturday. KU recorded three victories last week, 8-1 over Emporia State, 9-0 over Washburn and 5-2 over Kansas State. Two players have notched 6-2 records in the recent KU surge that has improved the Jayhawks' season record to 10-7. Sophomore Cal Simmons and junior Tim Williams each has gone 6-2 in April. 0-State prepares for spring game Pug Gabriel, the Poke's offensive coordinator, will coach the white team. OSU defensive head Duke Babb will coach the Orange squad. STILLWATER (UPI) — Oklahoma State football coach Floyd Gass split his players into two squads Wednesday as the Cowboys continued preparation for Saturday's annual Orange and White game. The spring game is set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Lewis Stadium "The players are in really good spirits," Babb said. "They know there is going to be some equal competition Saturday, and that's what it takes to have a real good spring game." The Orange and White teams worked as units Wednesday, going over fundamentals and specialty drills and scrimmaging briefly. 10 KANSAN Apr. 30 1970 DONOVAN'S GREATEST HITS INCLUDING: SUNSHINE SUPERMAN WEAR YOUR ONE, LIVE HEAVEN MELLOW YELLOW/HURDY GURDY MAN On Epic Records EPIC Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. HOLE THE HOLE IN THE WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Save Time—Phone In Order 842 7685 9th & Illinois We Deliver SUMMER EMPLOYMENT available in beautiful, cool Rocky Mtn. National Park For employment information write ROCKY MTN. PARK CO. 601 Broadway, #414 Denver, Colo. 80203 RANEY Today GENUINE FOOT EXERCISE SANDAL Scholl Casper only big name missing Player tabbed favorite in Nelson Classic DALLAS (UPI) — South Africa's Gary Player, who has a hard time feeling sorry for himself despite some crucial missed putts recently, was as good a choice as any Wednesday as the favorite on the eve of the $115,000 Byron Nelson Golf Classic. The effervescent little foreigner, who has averaged $10,000 per week on the PGA tour during the seven weeks he's been in this country, postponed a planned return to Johannesburg for a week so he could take a crack at the 7,031-yard, par 35-35-70 Preston Trail Golf Club. Flubber short putts on the 72nd holes at the Masters and at last week's Tournament of Champions tournaments cost Player dearly—a spot in the playoff with Billy Casper and Gene Littler at the Masters and $6,000 more that would have gone to him for undisputed second spot at Rancho La Costa. But, Player shrugged them off. Jayhawk coach Ted Owens has announced that Tom Kivisto, high school basketball All-American from Aurora, Ill., signed a Big Eight letter of intent with KU Wednesday. The 6-3, 175-pounder is the brother of Bob Kivisto, sophomore starting guard with the Jayhawks the past season. Both played at Aurora East High School and were coached by their father, Ernie Kivisto. Owens was in Aurora Wednesday for Kivisto's signing at a news conference arranged by his father for Chicago area news media. The latest Jayhawk recruit led Aurora East to a 27-4 record the Owens announces signing of Kivisto past season, best in the school's history and established numerous records while averaging 27 points a game. Kivisto was credited with 340 assists his senior year and 802 for three seasons, both state records. Among his school records, in addition to the assists: 837 points for one season, 1,757 points for a three-year career, 134 steals for one season, 306 steals for career, and 56 points for a single game. The latter figure topped the previous high of 45 by his brother, Bob. During the past season, Kivisto shot 52 per cent from the field in sparking them to conference, regional and sectional championships. Hawks to compete in Wichita meet KU golfers will join other midwestern schools at Wichita this weekend for the first Great Plains Intercollegiate golf tournament. The meet opens with 36 holes Friday and a final 18 Saturday. The tournament, hosted by Wichita State, will be held at the University course in Wichita, formerly the Crestview Country Club. Big Eight and Missouri Valley member schools will be among the competing teams. KU coach Wilbur Norton's selections for the trip includes freshman Jim Dennerline, who has the lowest average among Jayhawk regulars with a 76.7 stroke average in 11 rounds. Also competing at Wichita and their average rounds are: Jack Rogers, 78.3; Warren Wood, 78.6; Craig DeLongy, 79.1, and David Ross, 80.0. "I hope we can continue to score well at Wichita," Norton stated. "We have been shooting much better the past two weeks." The Jayhawks had a team score mitted to an appearance at Expo 70 in Japan this week. Apr. 30 KANSAN 11 1970 On Apple Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. of 304 last Friday at their own meet to tie Oklahoma for second, two strokes behind winner Oklahoma State. On Saturday the Jayhawks were last at Kansas State in a six-team Big Eight meet, but improved their score to 295. "Ah, but it is a game of sorrows, you know." DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP THE HOLL in the WALL Same Time — Phone Order 843-765-7—Weel Over—Oth & Ill. Player skipped the Nelson Classic last year, but in his only other 72-hole tour of the Preston Trail layout in 1968, he shot a three-under-pay 277 to tie for fourth to pick up $4,650. The 277 would have won last year. With Player, Arnie Palmer and The first solar calendar was devised in Egypt. Wear a Date & Day Watch- by BULOVA Wear a Date & Day Watch- by BULOVA Keep the date and day on hand all the time. Automatically. Wear a "Golden Clipper" by Bulova and you wear the completely modern watch. GOLDEN CLIPPER "E" 17 jewels. Stainless steel. Matching blue dial and strap. $80 BRIMAN'S leading jewelers Expert Jewelry & Watch Repair 743 Mass. Ph.VL3-4366 BURMA DAY 23 MONTH WEDNESDAY HORIZON SUNDAY 8AM-10AM SWITCHED BULOVA GOLDEN CLIPPER "E" 17 jewels. Stainless steel. Matching blue dial and strap. $80 BRIMAN'S leading jewelers Expert Jewelry & Watch Repair 743 Mass. Ph. VI 3-4366 GOLDEN CLIPPER "E" 17 jewels. 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St. Phone VI 3-2091 Peace Corps GRADUATES Make your first step towards the future with the Peace Corps.Begin your 27 month experience this summer in one of several hundred training programs for 50 different countries.In demand are graduating seniors in Business, Economics, Engineering, Education, and Liberal Arts graduates with special skills in agriculture, mechanics, carpentry, or masonry.100 KU applicants are needed now. For applications call Mario Karr: VI 2-6917 or see Dean Coan, 226 Strong. Reward fund started to halt crimes A "Douglas County Reward Fund" has been started by several concerned Lawrence residents to aid the various law enforcement agencies in the county to solve major crimes. Representatives from the city, county and the University have been meeting since Monday to make plans for the collection and distribution of the fund. Travis Glass, 944 Jana Dr., said precautions will be taken to insure the anonymity of the persons involved in the program. Glass said members of the three-man committee would remain anonymous, with the members of the committee changing on a yearly basis. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the Chancellor, said, "the University is going to cooperate" in the program. Nichols said the representative from the University to the committee would "remain anonymous for obvious reasons." Nichols also said the University would not handle the monetary aspect of 12 KANSAN Apr. 30 1970 A TRANS-ELECTRONIC MUSIC PRODUCTIONS, MUSIC PRESENTS: SWITCHED ON BACH VIRTUISO ELECTRonic PERFORMANCES OF BRANDENSBORG CONCERTO NO. 3 - HR ON A G STRING' JESU - JOI OF MAN'S DESIGN PRELIDES AND FIGURES FROM THE WELL MADE DE LAVIE PERFORMED ON THE MOOG SYNTHESIZER On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr The other odor No feminine spray can stop it. The "other" odor. It starts in the vaginal tract where no spray can work. You can't spray it away. And it's more offensive than external odor caused by perspiration. That's the reason you need Normers* ...the second deodorant.* These tiny suppositories kill germs—stop odor in the vaginal tract for hours. Something no spray can do. And doctor-tested Norriers can be used as often as necessary. They insert easily, quickly. Get Norforms' protection for the "other" odor no spray can stop. The second deodorant. Norforms Artistic Discourse Norforms Adventure Design FREE NORFORMS MINI PACK plus informative booklet Write Norwich Pharmacal Co., Dept. CN, Norwich, N.Y. 13815 (Enclose 25c for mailing, handling. Name___ Street___ City___ State___ Zip___ Don't forget your Zip code. 22-04A the program. He said contributions should be handled through the various city banks participating in the program. Mike Thomas, acting director of KU Traffic and Security, said his office has not been contacted concerning the program. Thomas said he had "heard nothing" officially of the program, only what he had read in the papers. Dan Young, county attorney, said his office had not been contacted, and the program is being conducted outside of his office. Glass said four banks would handle the contributions and receive donations for the fund. Contributions can be made in the name of the "Douglas County Reward Fund" at any of the four Lawrence banks. 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 number on the upper corners of the information. The informer should tear the right corner off the paper and keep it. If the information leads to a conviction in a major crime, authorities will match the two numbers. The donations can be made anonymously, and can be made in any amount. Glass said many of the details relating to the program were still undecided and more should be known about the specifics later this week. If an individual wishes to submit information concerning a major crime, to protect his anonymity, he should select any five digit number and write that International Club's Red Dog Inn Dance Friday, May 1st Red Dog Inn----8:00 Free Beverages Members Free Non-members, $1.50 per couple Sponsored by International Club TOM RUSH including: Child's Song/Wild Child/Old Man Song Drop Down Mama/Colors Of The Sun On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Sterao Malls Shopping Ctr. Child's Song/ Wild Child/Old Man Song Drop Down Mama/Colors Of The Sun ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES Authentic. Coppertone Tanning Butter SPRAY COCOA BUTTER COCONUT OIL NET WT. 1.5 OZ RANEY Suggests ignoring some politicians Docking outlines solutions to disorders Governor Robert Docking Monday described the events of the past two weeks on the University of Kansas campus and in the many state high schools as "most disappointing and certainly discouraging." Addressing the Wichita Kiwanas Club, Docking said he believed those who defy public officials, who break the law, and who commit violent acts are a minority. "This minority has been successful in convincing too many persons that we are a so-called sick society, that America has degenerated into a morally bankrupt nation; that we have never experienced such violence and civil disorder," he said. He said that history indicates the threat of disorder has always been a part of this nation. Those who break the law to disrupt Kansas schools and communities will be recognized as criminals and, hopefully, will be arrested and prosecuted in the public interest, Docking said. "We have adequate plans or procedures to handle these disturbances—plans for handling disorder in the cities or in the campuses," he said. The governor said that he does not intend to allow violence and fear of violence to keep Kansas citizens in their homes at night. "Disrespect and disregard for the laws of this nation and state cannot and will not be tolerated," Docking said. "As governor, I intend to maintain a lawful and orderly society. We are a people governed by laws and we must live by those laws." The governor outlined a five-point program for resolution of the problems which the disorders have generated. "First, we will resolve differences and conflicts according to the ground rules of a free democratic society. I believe this is expressed and implied by the Constitution of the United States and by the constitutions of several states. So long as we move vigorously to support and maintain these rules we are not likely to err." Docking said. "Second, we have courts and laws for courts to enforce. Fewer injustices will occur if we rely upon the judicious temperament which has generally characterized our courts. ticated sentences and phrases. "Finally, we must not punish the greater part of our students, faculties and citizens generally who live by the rules, who are good citizens in every respect, by applying sanctions which treat them as though all are guilty of disturbing the public peace. "I advocate not softness, but a tough-minded adherence to our heritage," he said. Public safety force to get federal money "Thirdly, we must move effectively to eliminate the legitimate causes of unrest, so that the extremists will not find new recruits to join them in their destructive activities. "This is an inheritance of a system of law and a system of decision-making. It is a legacy which men who love freedom have everywhere and always prized," Docking said. A grant of $41,400 by the Federal Highway Administration to the Lawrence Department of Public Safety for training and equipping an eight-man team of officers has been announced. "Fourthly, we ought to turn a deaf ear to politicians who are seeking to make political capital out of these events, who disguise their demagogy in sophis- campus. However Sen. Pearson's office refuted the claim Tuesday morning, saying the order had been placed March 23. The announcement, released jointly by the offices of Senators James B. Pearson, Robert Dole and Representative Larry Winn, said the funds would provide salaries for the new men as well as purchase of equipment for traffic controlling devices, videotape systems and accident investigation kits. Initial speculation was that the fund came as a result of the recent outbreak of incendiary fires both in the city and on 78% OF STUDENTS WON'T BE IN CHURCH SUNDAY DON'T BE A CONFORMIST This Sunday For Earth Sunday 9:00 a.m.—FOLK SONG FEST for St. Francis Guitars: Dave Bliss & Nancy Boudrie 11:00 a.m.—EARTH CELEBRATION Apr. 30 1970 KANSAN 13 5:30 p.m.—Dr. Robert Johnson, recently returned from Africa, on "Nigeria" (after the best 50c supper in town) UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 15th & IOWA MAY 12 700.0-930. WASHINGTON AVE. 501 the committee TRANS-ELECTRONIC MUSIC PRODUCTIONS, INC. PRESENTS SWITCHED-ON BACH VIRTUOSO ELECTRONIC PERFORMANCES OF BRANDEBURG CONCERTO NO. 10 'NIM ON A G STRING' THE OLD MAN'S SEARCHER PELLETS AND FUGUES FROM THE WELLS EMPIRE CAMPET PERFORMANCE ON THE MOOD SWITCHED-SIZER TABLE On Columbia Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. ROCK CHALK CAFE [Image of an elderly woman with white hair and dark eyes, wearing a black shirt. The background is plain and light-colored.] Home of Beautiful Women SOUP & SANDWICH 50c Vest suits and T.J. shirts from the Unclothing store... C Campbell's MEN'S WEAR VI 3-0454 Lobbying investigation topic of conflict Frizzell reacts to Docking's criticism TOPEKA (UPI) — Attorney General Kent Frizzell Wednesday accused Gov. Robert B. Docking of "an attempt to undermine and sabotage" his probe of lobbying for the pari-mutuel wagering bill. Frizzell, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, also challenged the Democratic governor to a "face-to-face discussion" of the investigation. Frizzell's comments during a news conference came in reaction to Docking's criticism of the attorney general's review of lobbying for the controversial bill killed in the 1970 Legislature. Docking said Tuesday, following release of the investigative report, he still had questions, and he said Frizzell's "personal involvement" in the pari-mutuel matter raised serious questions about the report. The attorney general had said he found no violations of the law during his probe of $30,000 paid a lobbyist for the bill which was killed during the session, and a South African trip for legislators promoted by a state senator who favored the bill. Docking alleged in the closing days of the legislature that Frizzell contacted key GOP senators urging them to kill a resolution which would have ordered what he termed "an independent" probe by the Governor's Committee on Governmental Ethics. The resolution died in a conference committee. Frizzell Wednesday flatly denied the accusation. "I challenge him (Docking) to come forth with any such senators who will verify his statement," he said. Frizzell challenged Docking to Public urged to keep faith in economy WASHINGTON (UPI) — The administration increased its efforts to calm Wall Street jitters Wednesday but a former adviser to President Nixon predicted that the nation may be seeing "the end of the American economy as we have known it." Pierre Rinfret, a New York economist who advised the President during the 1968 election, said he expects continuing inflation, and higher interest rates during the rest of this year. "If Cambodia accelerates and they accelerate Vietnam, you are witnessing the end of the American economy as we have known it," Infref told a group of bankers at a Washington hotel. 14 KANSAN Apr. 30 1970 TOM RUSH including: Child's Song/Wild Child/Old Man Song Drop Down Mama/Colors Of The Sun On Columbic Records Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. TOM RUSH including: Child's Song/Wild Child/Old Man Song Drop Down Mama/Colors Of The Sun The attorney general said if Docking had questions, he had the opportunity to ask them April 20 when his office contacted the governor. He said Docking was asked to talk about the parimutuel matter and ask any questions, but all that was received was a one-page statement. a "face-to-face discussion" with representatives of the public and the press invited. "I leave it to the governor to name the place, date and time at his convenience. I will be present." Frizzell said. Frizzell said the statement related to the South African trip, and the governor only said a South African government official had invited him to the nation but he declined the offer. The GOP gubernatorial candidate also accused Docking of interfering with his investigation. Frizzell said when he requested income tax returns from James T. McDonald, state revenue director, on three persons during the probe, McDonald said he would have to check with the governor. McDonald is a Docking appointee. The attorney general said McDonald then said the returns would be supplied when a written request was submitted, and the records were obtained this way. He said in the past he had obtained returns on simple oral requests. A spokesman for the governor's office said following Frizzell's remarks that Docking had no intention of debating the attorney general and called his statements "wild and ridiculous." said Frizzell's letter of April 20 did not ask if the governor had any questions regarding the parimutuel matter, only about the South African invitation. The Docking spokesman also RUSSIAN REVOLUTION POSTERS henrys A collector's edition of political graphics open 'til 10 p.m. Henrys SUNDOWN SAVINGS TOWN CRIER----919 Mass. Thursday evening, 5:00 to 7:00,19c will buy you a tasty hot dog. And the savings spirit prevails Friday during the same hours, when a quality shrimp dinner will be only 69c. See you at Henry's! SUPER STRETCH PANTYHOSE $1.39 AND STOCKINGS 89¢ Leggs AT OUR LEGGS BOUTIQUE Our Leggs fit your legs. Get a new pair of Leggs at our Leggs Boutique today. Stockings (fit 4'11" to 5'10") 89¢ Pantyhose (fit 5'0" to 5'8") $1.39 Leggs are here! WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES One day S 25 words or less: $1.50 each additional word: $0.2 Three days Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days Five days 25 words or less: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 FOR SALE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the main menu are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Western Clv. Notes—On sale! Revised, comprehensive.“New Analysis of Western Civilization” 4th Ed. Campus.Mad House, 411 W.14th St. Audio Discount--your A.R., Dynaco, and Revox dealer offers the best of audio at lowest price. Buy at factory cost, pay shipping, plus 10% handling charge. Open Tuesday and every evening 4-10 p.m., 842-2047. 4-30 Office furniture -desks, chairs, files, Xerox service, impractable copies, collation required, included at no extra charge. Typewriter -700 Mass. 843-3644. ttf Cash and Carry Everyday Special, cut spring flowers and plants. Cut flowers at Ramada Inn Sundays. Wide selection of gifts for brides, graduation. Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. 842-1320. ff 12" walnut speaker system. Perfect condition. Must sell now! Call 843- 6707. 4-30 Apartment furnishings. Am graduating, must sell: Hollywood bed, box springs and mattress. Hide-a-Bed, two chairs and small desk, easy chair and foot stool, air conditioner, phonograph, and other assorted furnishings. 842-5030. 4-30 1967-68 Triumph Spifrete, 2 tops (1 nite), tape deck, speakers, new snow tires, 18,500 miles, $1800.00. Phone 842-3391. Excellent condition. 4-30 New Canon FT/QL single lens reflex, new lenses, quick loading, meter, case, UV filters. more than $80.00 off list. $187.50. Phone 843-925. Best time 5-1 p.m. 1964 Corvette, dark blue with same color. 30-inch rear wheel; 4-5-1 post-tire. $1800, $42-9983, 4-5-1 Buscher tenor horn, metal mouthpiece. Make offer. Good condition. Dan Harkness, 645 Mich. 843-0723. 5-1 Curfew special: Drum set still 10l sale, 4 silver sparkle, 3 Zildjian gym- bals. Priced to sell. Call Jeff, 843- 1711. 1965 VW. New engine. Excellent running condition. 843-959 (after 5) 4-30 Classic 1960 TR-3A. Incomparable at any price. Bargaining starts at $750. Very runnable. Call J. B. at 843- 2103. 1966 Olds 442 convertible. Good condition, air conditioned, power steering, $1450. Call 843-512-15 at 5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Ask for Parris. 4-30 Fisher 400 Stereo Receiver, 65 watts, lots of controls. Looks and sounds like new. Must sell. Need cash des- perately. 842-1047. 4-30 1961 Firebird Sprint, stick, PS, radials, AM-FM-MPX, tape, red in and out, $1850. Also Midship V8 Monocoupe Custom Car to highest offer. 824-4984. '55 Chevrolet - sell this week —Edelrock, Mickey Thompson, Harper, new Goodyear Polyglas, Holley new interior, 842-7000, Rm. 1028, David. 4-30 Sale: Saturday, May 2, Stouffel Place, Bldg. 11, 10-30-5 L: Carpets, drapes, tiles, dishes, dishes, ceramics, sofas, linens, beds ornils, lamps, appliances, etc.! 4-30 1970 Datsun 2-litre silver/black, 135hp, 5-speed, 120+mph, low mileage, top, boot, tonneau cover plus driver, towbar, drive assist for Call Chip, 843-3310. 5-4 Got drafted. Need to sell 1956 Indian motorcycle (needs repair) and new 120-watt stereo FM-AM multiplex system. 843-9072. 5-4 1968 Dodge Coronet, metallic blue, 383, automatic, stereo tape, power steering; call 842-5569. 5-6 Martel AM-FM stereo receiver with 8 "walnut speaker1s. 1/2 years old. 35 watts per channel, IHF music power. $175 Sells new for $240. 842-7618. 5-4 Black and white 3-year-old Zenith TV. 20 inch screen on cart, perfect condition. Call 843-5615 mornings or after 5 p.m. 5-6 MGB-1963 Rebuilt engine, new paint. The tires and tire $550 S211 $4- Antique lantern fixtures and wagon wheel light fixtures complete with hangers at Krazy Karl's. 1811 West 6th, 843-3333. 5-6 30 most recent almost new stereo records. Jazz, folk and popular, reasonable. Phonola portable record player. Like like new. Call 845-8241 6 p.m. 5-6 1968 Chevelle SS 396. 4-speed, mags, new tires, buckets and console. Light blue with vinyl top. David Pellett, 849-1967. 5-6 1962 Buick LeSabre, pov er steering, power brakes, air-cond ioned, brand title, good battery, good call. Mitsubishi, good; 400, battery considered. 843-8833 after 5 p.m. 5-4 Magic Chief refrigerator, 22" x 21" x 14" edition. Call 843-1902. S-4- dition. Call 843-1901. Used beige modern divan. $50. Call 843-1290 after 6:00. 5-5 1970 Austin Healey 3000. Collector's condition. 10,000 miles. $3150. B42-7458. m-1 1967 Detroiter mobile home—12" x 50", 1½ baths, new wall-to-wall carpeting, air conditioner, all gas, excellent condition. $3,500, 1-819 - 897-263. 5-5 1968 VW, radio, 29,000 miles, $1,500 or offer. Call 842-4101, ask for Steve. Stereo system: 40 watt Channel Lab 80 turntable with two AR-4X speakers. $340 investment, sacrifice at $150. Call 842-1136 after 6:00. 5-5 1964 Chevelle SS convertible, dark blue, 282-4-BL. Low miles, excellent engine, body. Sell or trade for bike or economy car and cash. 842-2454. 5-1 Magnaxav Cassette Recorder, used 1 monor now $30.00 at Ray Stonebush 5-5 Noreloe stereo cassette changer, plays 6 hours of continuous music. Was $129.90, now $99.90 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 5-5 Famous Brand Custom Component System (tape, receiver, speakers), was $250.00, now $250.00 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 5-5 1962 Austen Healy Sprite, white con- trol vest, interior, new kitchen, $800. Bq 424-812. 5-5 1668 Flat 850 Spyder, white convertible with black top, black deluxe interior, like new condition throughout, low mileage, $1400, #422-2191, 5-5 1965 MGB, British Racing Green with black convertible top, body in excellent condition, overhauled transmission. $1500, 842-2191. 5-5 1967 Volkswagen, silver with black windows. It has many optional options. exsport, 1845-842-211, 5-5 1969 Toyota Carolla Sprinter, green 3,000 miles, like new, #824-2191 3,600 miles, like new, #824-2191 1968 Datumst. 2000 roadster, 5-speed, 1973 Datsun 2000 roadster, 5-speed, black interior, $195, 842-219-55 $25, 842-219-55 1965 Triumph TR-4, spotless red body with white convertible top, fully equipped, asking $1300. Call 842-2191. 5-5 '67 Corvette, 327 cu. in., in 300 hp, air-conditioned, AM-FM radio, 3-speed, good condition. Getting married, must sell. 842-5631 after 7 p.m. 5-5 Garrard SLX-2 module turntable with less than 50 hours use. Priced new at $70, will take the best offer over $39. Phone 843-2353. 5-1 1961 F-85 Olds V-8, automatic trans, power steering, radio, heatter, two spare snow tires. $235. Call 843-3117 after 5.00 p.m. Don't have a bad trip! Ride easy to your summer destination in a spacious room. Or递 Econline Van Tarr $800 takes Oscar at 842-5002 for tween 7 - p.m. Pair of speaker systems, 12" woofers and horn type tweeter in bass-reflex oil暖枪 enclosures. Great arm grip, the map is smaller $30 price Phil Morris. 842-5800. 5-5 Early S.F. acid rock. Five albums on one tape reel. Jefferson (Airplane Takes Off; Big Brother (pre-cheap Thrills); 1 canned Heat; 1 young-bloods; 1st Buffalo Springfield. $15. Phone 843-2353 or 843-8232. 5-1 515 Michigan St, St. B-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-gooodness 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 t NOTICE Been eating at the same restaurant all? Now's the time to try a new one — The Castle Tea Room—the most unique restaurant in Lawrence. 5-6 VISTA is alive and well. Check its pulse at Green, Strong and Summer-hold Halls until May 1. Free literature, posters and applications. C4-30 4:39 Camper friends visiting you? Tell them about KOA campgrounds, one mile north of East Lawrence exit off turnpike. Electrical and water hook-ups, laundry, shows. Telephone: 843-3877 after 4 p.m. 5-5 KU Men: When you decide to buy sandals, come to the store with a large selection: ARNESEMENTS, 819 Mass., where styles range 5-1 Mont Bleu Ski Lodge: now available parties. For information call 845- 2263 PHILIPS 66 Tony's 66 Service starting service Be Prepared! tune-ups 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 tune-ups starting service Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Would the person in the maroon Mustang who took the key from the motorcycle at the accident Sunday please call Mike Miller at 843-8454. 5-1 A pair of black-rimmed glasses—105 near Chancellor's house or along Jay- hawk Blvd. Phone 843-6400. Chip Sloan. 4-30 LOST Tan saddlebag purse—missing strap Reward. If found, please bring to 1017 Rhode Island. Sandra Limley Tan purse with brown bone fastener in booth in Union. Reward. If found, please contact Sheila Hilst at 1017 Rhode Island. 5-1 Would the person who found my purse in the rest room 3rd floor of Strong Hall please return. Reward—no questions asked. Reward depends on amount of material returned. Paula Branson, 842-4990. 5-1 3 comparatively quiet guys to share apt. at J-hawk Towers next year. Approx. $58 a month. If interested, call Stu at 842-7654. 5-6 WANTED One or two female graduate students or teachers are wanted to share a computer equipment. Access to swimming pool 'Call Susan after 4:00 p.m. 843-0342. 5-6 Wanted for summer. Two male roommates to share apt. 2½ blocks from Union. Split $90 a month rent. Call Berry, 842-8539. 5-6 Female roommate to share 2-bedroom house near campus for summer school. $40/month or less. Call Diane, Rm. 805, 842-6600. 4-30 VISTA (Volunteers in Service To America) need: 3,000 liberal arts majors, 350 education majors, 300 business majors, 150 health specialists/planners, 100 health specialists. Responsible and quiet male roommate for summer and fall to share apartments pre-med student. Jayhawk Towers, $80. Beginning June 1. Staircase 842-7710. 5-1 Summer travelling companion! See national parks in Western U.S., camp out, hike, swim in Pacific, visit San Diego or Vegas. Inexpensive Call 842-6599. 5-8 Newly married couple needs a place for their children. 1201 between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. 5-4 Need 1 to 4 guys to share large, clean house on Kentucky for summer. Separate bedrooms with plenty of space. Call 842-6217. 5-4 1-2 girls to share luxurious, convenient Jayhawk Towers apt. for summer. Maximum monthly rent paid. Call Sue. 842-7583 after s. 30. 5-1 PERSONAL Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfus, 843-8074. ff Experienced typist will type themes, theses, term papers, other misc. typers, proofwriters, bookwriters. Pica tape. Competent. Service. Mrs. Wright. Phone 843-9554. 5-15 Mike -Forgive my attitude on the phone. I honestly hoped you could come. Tell George hi. Good luck on your finals . . . Pat. 5-1 Typing: IBM Electric. Accurate. depend- work—work guaranteed. Phone: +1 (800) 342-7656. TYPING Experienced typist will type your term papers, thesis or dissertation. Electric typewriter, prompt, accurate call. Call 434-3281, Mrs. Ruckman. Research? Let COMPSTAD analyze your data. Perform the processing and statistical services. P.O. Box 1781 La Jolla, Calif. 92037, 714-459-3831. AUTO GLASS INSTALLATION Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey --- VI 3-4416 HELP WANTED Architecture Grad-permanent position with Construction Co. 913-HA25555. Box 307, Edwardsville, Kan. 66022. 5-4 Type girl type or sailor for Minnesota girls camp. 842-0587. 5-7 SERVICES OFFERED SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. Nationwide directories of positions. All relevant fields. Accurate. Current. Office of the Director of clocem, Box 317, Harvard Square, P.O., Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 5-11 Is your car weak, out of shape? Is it smoking too much? Help your car regain physical health to a 317 N. Second just across the Kaw River Bridge on specializing in Performance Enterprises. Specializing in sports cars and wagons. 842-1191. 5-7 BUY, SELL OR TRADE Used paperback books, Playboy magazines, and comics. Buy, sell or trade. H & H Furniture Store, 934 Mass. St. Phone 843-2736. tf FOR RENT Available now, two bedroom apt. one block from campus, furnished $150; unfurnished $135. Call 843-2116. Santee Apts. tf Furnished single sleeping room. Use of refrig. For male. One bedroom air-conditioned apt. Borders campus and near downtown. Phone 843-5767. Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Town Houses, 2111 Kaisog Drive. Open space atmosphere unique to apartment living in Lawrence, adjoining a golf course and Hills Golf Course. Quality design and interior roominess at surprizingly inexpensive rates. Available to families and mature singles; one bedroom units from $160; two bedrooms from $230; three or four luxury apartments and town houses, call David Rhodus: 842-2313 or McGrew Agency: 842-2055. Now is the time to reserve your choice of apartment units for next fall. Rentals of units in the popular Luxury (19th and Avalon), APARTMENTS (19th and Avalon), ARGO APARTMENTS (11th and Missouri) and HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENTS (Harvard and Iowa) are on a first come, first serve basis. Call 484-267-3500 or come to rental office at 207 Harvard Road for details on these three complexes. Compare our features, locations, and rates and then decide. Girl watchers and the girls they watch are taking advantage of special summer rent rates to live in HAWAII. TIME WEEK TENTATIM Beautiful courtyard and pool, spacious sound-proof apartments, ideal location at Harvard and Iowa Streets, central a/c, dishwashers, furnished room, kitchen. Mike Carpino at 842-3801 or 842-2348 see for yourself how nice this summer in Lawrence might be. 5-14 Would you believe . . . you can walk to classes from your home in the ARGO APARTMENTS, 11th and Miss. most popular apartment complex at special summer rates during June and July!! Call 842-2348, or by drop by the resident manager's apartment at 1130 A West 11th Street, or come to our residential road to get details on both summer and fall leasing. 5-14 Furnished apartments for rent. Summer sublease, $90.00 a month. Married or graduate students. 1510 Kentucky, 842-3712. 5-13 Galerie Braydal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear STKK 910 Kv. - Reweaving New York Cleaners - Dry Cleaning - Alterations For the best in: 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Summer sublet. Spacious one-bed- room, furnished. I-35 near 79th in Overland Park. 2 patios, air-conditioned, pool, disposal, dishwasher, large closets. Call (913) 381-1926 evenings at once. $160, utilities included. 5-13 Sub-lease for summer: large 3-4 bed room house, furnished, $200 a month, excellent location—call 842-5760 or come and see at 1200 Ohio. 5-6 Must sublet. 2-bedroom apartment. Furnished and air-conditioned. Available June 1. Will negotiate rent. Close to campus. Call 842-4892. 5-6 To male students, nicely furnished studio apartment. Two blocks from Union, utilities paid, private parking. Call 843-8534. 4-30 Furnished house for rent—keep it whole or divide into rooms. $150 per month. Available June 1. 917 Maine. 842-5768. 5-4 Available 1st 1st: modern luxury apartment. Furnished, air-cond, dish-washing room for parking facilities. Renz Apts, less than one block from campus. 842-6941. 5-1 For Rent: to married couples. 5 rms. and bath, disposal, entire first floor room. 5 rms. and walkout furniture 3 rms. and bath walkout furnished apt. Both off st. pkg. Close to KU, utilities available for pets or pets. 5 rms. available May 15th. 3 rms., June 5- phone 1-597-3183. Save 50%: Load and move your own belongings--make reservations. Hertz Truck Rental, 737 East 22nd Street. Call 843-8016 or 842-6297. 5-4 Golfers' summer special for tenants of Alvamar's Quail Creek Apartments and Townhouses. 2111 Kasalo Drive, Alvamar Hills Golf Course, one, two and three bedroom units available for 1 year or surplus to hire at $65.00 on the beautiful adjacent Alvamar Hills Golf Course. O 2 bedroom apt. $^{-1} / 2$ block from Union-air conditioned, fully carpeted; dishwasher; available June 1. Call immediately, 843-9444. 5-5 Will sublet, June through August, a one-bedroom furnished apartment. Excellent light and even reason-able possible arrangement fall. Call 842-1814 after 5:00 p.m. 5-5 Short-term lease and special summer discounts at the College Hill Manor Apartments, now leasing for the summe- rent of $1490 per cubic foot of cabinets, and plenty of closet space. Thick carpeting wall-to-wall in all rooms attracting students and faculty, including central heat and air conditioning. Swimming pool and laundry facilities. Short walk to KU. Room with balcony and by appointment. 1741 West 19th, Apt. 5-B or phone 843-8220 5-13 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Moving To Kansas City? CHARTER HOUSE APARTMENTS 15 MINUTES DOWNTOWN Studios $145 1 Bdrm. $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Baths $185 3 Bdrm., 2 Baths $230 CLUBHOUSE POOL Open Daily 9 Till Dark CHARTER HOUSE S. E. Corner 1-35 & 95th St. Exit S.E. Corner I-35 & 95th St. Exit Lenexa, Kansas Ph. 913-888-6599 Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Badges - Guards - Guards - Favors - Recognitions - Paddles - Recognitions - Padules - Laylwers - Stetionen - Gifts - Sportswear - Stationery - Plants - Plaques Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog Food stamps to aid local families By MARILYN McMULLEN Kansan Staff Writer Federal food stamps, issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, will go on sale May 5 in Douglas County, said John Derrick, county welfare director. County welfare officials have been working for a year to establish the program in which about 100 Douglas County families will participate. Derrick said the stamps would be sold at the county welfare office, 319 Perry. They will provide a 33 percent discount on food items at seven Douglas County food stores. "We hope that $10 worth of stamps will eventually buy $20 worth of food," Derrick said. Food stamps, he said, are the coming thing in the federal government's welfare plan. They will eventually replace the commodity program, which gives welfare recipients groceries directly. Derrick said that a person must be eligible to receive public assistance before he can participate in the food stamp program. He does not have to be receiving public assistance to be able to buy stamps. The stamps are purchased on a sliding system in which the price and number of stamps varies with an individual's income and the number of his dependents. Derrick said that the federal government advocates a welfare plan involving a floor income and food stamps which will "blanket" the country. The government is also proposing a switch from county to federal welfare distribution. Stamps will be sold twice a month. They must be paid for in cash, because as Derrick explained, banks will not accept a draft for the stamps in checks. The original application for the program was made in June, 1969. Derrick said the Agriculture department must have some local agency to make the exchanges and do the paper work, for which tasks the county welfare department was chosen. Derrick estimated that from $8000 to $9000 worth of stamps would be distributed in May, and added that more families, not on welfare, would probably become eligible to buy stamps in the future. Senate sworn in- More stores in the county, Derrick said, will probably accept the stamps after the instigation of the program. "I don't think they can afford not to," he said. In an address to the new Senate Awbrey said that KU was "extremely progressive in terms of structure" and added that students are represented on every committee on campus that affects the students. "I can not praise enough the Chancellor, Dean Heller and Dean Balfour," for their cooperation, said Awbrey. (Continued from page 1) As he left the podium both old and new Senate members gave him a standing ovation. Participants in the stamp program can use the stamps to purchase any food item except beer, pet foods, tobacco and several imported food products. Stores The giving of money to many smaller groups which are not pertinent and are not established for the betterment of the University must stop Awbrev said. Awbrey said one of the chief concerns of the new Senate must be in helping the black community not only on campus but also in north Lawrence. The new senate must be concerned with the "ghettoes of Lawrence" and the "ghettoes of KU." The first order of business for Ebert was to hold elections for a School of Journalism vacancy created by Joe Bullard, Ellis junior. Richard Louv, Wichita junior was elected to replace Bullard. Senate members elected seven more members to the University Council besides the three hold-over senators previously elected who are automatic members. Those elected were: Mohammed Amin, Rafsenjan, Iran junior; Karen Baucom, Kansas City, Mo. junior; George Laugehead, Dodge City junior; Chuck Loveland, freshman in the School of Medicine; Brad Smoot, Sterling sophomore; and Harrietta Stallworth, Hartsele special graduate student and Frank Zilm, St. Louis, Mo. senior. A proposal was brought up before the close of the meeting asking the Senate to establish a committee to conduct an investigation on the students arrests during the curfew, and if inequities are found to call in the student senate's attorney. The motion passed 57 to 9. Kennedy notes released- (Continued from page 1) a rented cottage on Chappaquiddick Island, which is about 120 yards across a channel from the bigger Martha's Vineyard. Five men and five "boiler room girls" who worked during the 1968 presidential campaign of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy also attended the party. 16 KANSAN Apr.30 1970 "There was not much drinking at the party," the judge said, "and no one was under the influence of liquor at any time. No one admitted to more than three drinks, most only to two or less." "The last word in thrillers. Terrific." —Look Magazine "Enough intrigue and excitement to eclipse James Bond." —Playboy YVES MONTAND IRENE PAPAS JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT AN NGC THEATRE FINE ARTS Fairway 262-0701 HE IS ALIVE! Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa BURGER CHEF KUMRA SUTRA RECORDS SHEERGIRL SHIPPLY WHEELS $299 Available at KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. cannot convert the stamps to cash. The smallest denomination of the stamps is 50 cents. Derrick said no change could be returned from a purchase made with food stamps. County stores currently approved to redeem the stamps are the A&P, the three Rusty's stores, and Goble's Market in Lawrence, Merlin's Hy-Klass in Eudora and Ford's IGA in Baldwin. Beginning and the End of World War III THE BEGINNING: "The best film on Vietnam to date." WE ARE ALL "A BLOODY GOOD BUNCH OF KILLERS"... IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG a film by Emile de Antonia THE END: THE WAR GAME DIRECTED BY PETER WATKINS: A BISHIP BOARDACASTING CORPORATION PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE BISHIP FILM INSTITUTE - A PATHE CONTEMPORARY FILMS RELEASE "Extraordinary. I urge you to see 'THE WAR GAME.'" Award Thursday, April 30 3:30,7:00,9:30 Friday, May 1 3:30,7:00,9:30 Saturday, May 2 7:00 & 9:30 HOCH AUDITORIUM Admission $1.00 DIVINA DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes"