Graduation ends tense year By United Press International An academic year wrought with tension ended last week with graduation ceremonies on campuses in many parts of the country. Speakers ranging from Cabinet level government officials to heads of corporate giants received varied welcomes. Fifty of the 2,000 Fordham University graduates and a handful of professors walked out of commencement activities prior to the speech of presidential urban advisor Daniel P. Moynihan. In his address, Moynihan said events of the past few months have produced "the unavoidable impression" that fear, some times expressed as fury, had "come to be a pervasive emotion among great elements of educated or educating youths." "This condition is epidemic on American campuses at this moment," he said. At the Camp David presidential retreat David and Julie Eisenhower were feted by members of their families and close friends at a graduation dinner. Eisenhower, and his wife, President Nixon's younger daughter, skipped their commencement ceremonies at Amherst College and Smith College respectively for fear of antiwar and anti Nixon demonstrations. At Hoboken, N.J., Interior Secretary Walter Hickel told the 1707 class at Stevens Institute of Technology: "Your task is nothing less than the creation of a whole new civilized industrial technology to replace the brute machine that has raised so much ecological hell. Youth's great gift is creativity to possess minds and spirits free enough to view the world without preconceptions." Scattered shouts of "polluter" and "war monger" from a few in the audience greeted United States Steel Co. board Chairman Edwin Hayes Gott as he received an honorary degree from the University of Maryland. Negro Georgia state legislator Julian Bond was applauded by the audience at Syracuse University commencement exercises when he referred to Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew as "a gate-mouthed Maryland farmer." In referring to a controversial Nixon administration proposal to fight crime in Washington, D.C., Bond said, "One has a sneaking (Continued to page 16) THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 80th Year, No.1 THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Photo by Gary Mason Photo by Gary Mason Fruit of the labor Faculty in full color Christopher Morgan receives his Juris Doctor degree in graduation ceremonies Sunday night. Graduate and professional degrees were awarded a day before baccalaureate degrees. R. W. Kemp Professors bedecked in full academic regalia added color to the graduation proceedings Sunday and Monday, May 31-June 1. Delegates register to plan model state More than 1,650 outstanding Kansas high school seniors-to-be arrived at the University of Kansas Sunday to begin a week as participants in model state, county. and city governments. Registration for the 442 girls attending Sunflower Girls' State, conducted by the Kansas Department of the American Legion Auxiliary, was held in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall where they will live during the session. The 1,220 boys attending American Legion Boys State registered at Lewis Hall where they will be assigned to model cities in Lewis, Templin, Hashinger and Ellsworth Halls. Inauguration of the Boys' State governor will be Wednesday evening. Governor Docking will address Boys Staters Thursday at 11 a.m. in Murphy Hall. Highlights of Girls' State week include the inauguration of the 1970 Girls' State governor with an address by Governor Docking Thursday evening, Kent Frizzell, Kansas attorney general, will speak Wednesday on "Youth's Role in Democratic Society," and Thursday Sen. Glee S. Smith of Larned will discuss the organization and procedures of legislatures. Girls' Staters will use the Kansas Union facilities for meals and meetings, holding general assemblies in the new Woodruff Auditorium. Dr. Earl Nehring, associate professor of political science, will serve as coordinator of instructors for Girls' State. Elected officials of Girls' and Boys' States will meet their counterparts in Kansas government and visit actual meetings such as a session of the Lawrence city commission. For the first time, Girls' Staters elected to the mock legislature will travel to Topeka to meet in the chambers of the Kansas Legislature. Because the two sessions are being held simultaneously for the first time, Girls' State representatives have been invited to attend the Boys' State Governor's Ball Friday evening. Boys' State will end Saturday and Girls' State Sunday. Drugs concern Coloradans Schools throughout Colorado—which ranks 12th among the 50 states in illegal use of drugs—are using everything from ex-drug addicts to movies to try to get youth to decide drugs are not the answer to growing pains. DENVER (UPI) Colorado educators fearful of a growing "pill popping" generation that already is evidencing itself as early as the sixth grade in a few instances, are arming themselves with a variety of programs they hope will curb the problem. In the forefront of officials who have encouraged schools to offer drug education programs has been a state senator from suburban Lakewood, Ruth Stockton. "Schools are the first line of attack in the battle against drugs," Mrs. Stockton said in an interview. "They're the best place to get the most of the people." The Republican, one of only two women in the state senate, helped guide a 253,000 drug and alcohol bill through the 1970 session of the Colorado legislature. The money will go to the state departments of public health and education in an effort to launch a program in every school district in the state. Actually, Colorado had a law on its statute books even before the turn of the century, requiring that schools teach about the dangers of drugs and tobacco and alcohol. The law which some observers say has done little more than gather cobwebs provides that teachers who do not comply "shall be removed." "The law is not tremendous in its observance," said Dr. John Lampe, staff physician to the Denver city and county schools. "It's against the law to spit on the street too, but there are not many indictments for doing it. The problem is that I can say that I read a section on narcotics to my class and still be in compliance with the law." The variety of school drug programs being offered is nearly as varied as the number of school districts offering them. Programs range from little more than a slide presentation to full scale efforts covering several grades. "We can't achieve our ends with texts," Dr. Lampe said. "It's simply not a matter of information. Most kids know that drugs are not good for them. It is no use going through the golden rule to say that they are not. "But what is in question here is kids' behavior—their values, their acceptance of drugs. That's what we must change." KU graduating class largest in history of the University The 1970 Preliminary Commencement program of the University of Kansas lists the names of 4,129 persons as having earned degrees and certificates in medical specialties since the previous Commencement or having candidacies for a degree or certificate in the annual exercises which were held May 31 and June 1. This potential number is the largest ever for a 12-month period. It surpasses last year's record of 3,971 candidacies. Forty-eight states, the District of Columbia, and 51 foreign lands are represented by the current class. The foreign countries represented are Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Białra, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, Dominican Republic, Egypt, England, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Honduras, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Kenya, Korea, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Norway, Okinawa, Pakistan, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Syria, Taiwan, Thailand, Uganda, Venezuela, Yugoslavia, and Zambia. Campus Briefs Polish work is on display "Contemporary Architecture in Poland," an exhibit of 15 kinds of architecture shown by enlarged photographs and accompanying text, may be seen through June 15 on the third floor of Marvin Hall at the University of Kansas. The exhibit is mounted on wooden scaffolding forming 15 booths, each with an architectural concept, from post-war restoration to modern building projects. Included are a 100,000-seat stadium, school housing, apartment complexes, supermarkets, cultural buildings and monuments. According to the text, 750,000 buildings in Warsaw alone were lost in World War II. Post-war reconstruction was followed by construction employing the latest technological development and skills of Polish craftsman and architects. The exhibit is sponsored by the Polish Embassy. Journalists win KU awards Twenty Kansas high schools have won recognition for excellence in journalism in the 50th annual high school newspaper contest of the University of Kansas William Allen White School of Journalism. The contest this year was divided into two divisions. Entries were received from 24 schools with 300 or more enrolled and from 16 schools with 299 or fewer enrolled. Bob Simison, a senior at Wichita South High School, was the only student to win first place in two categories. He won first place in the news and feature story and sports categories in the division with 300 or more students enrolled. Shawnee Mission West High School won four awards in the division with 300 or more students, and Moundridge and Norton each won four awards in the other division. The winners are: Photography; First—Dave Winger, The Epic, SHAWNEE MISSION WEST. Second—Mike Boatwright, Campus View, TOPEKA WEST. Third—John Martin, Panther Tales, GREAT BEND. SHAWNEE MISSION WEST. News and Feature Stories; First—Bob Simison, The Southerner, WICHITA SOUTH. Second—Jan Phillips, The Campus View, TOPEKA WEST. Third—Theresa Foiles, The Epic. DOWNWELL MISSION WEST Honorable Mention—Carla Roberts, The Southerner, WICHTA SOUTH; Bunny Miller, McPherson High Life, McPHERSON, Bill Beahm, Panther Tales, GREAT BEND. Editorials and Columns; First Carolyn Finney, Campus View, TOPEKA WEST. Second—Ric Willett, The Epic, SHAWNEE, MISSION WEST Third—Lon Teter, Lionel Express GODARD. Honorable Mention-Judie Black, High Life, McPHERSON; John Beisner, Lance, SACRED HEART, Salina; Joe Tenenbaum, Harbin- gia, SHAWNEE MISSION EAST. Sports Stories; First—Bob Simison, The Southerner, WICHITA SOUTH. Second—John Beisner, The Lance, SACRED HEART, Salina. Third—Tom Church, The Newtonian, NEWTON. Honorable Mention — Dennis Brown, The Epic, SHAWNEE MISSION WEST; Tom Church, The Newtonian, NEWTON; Gary Exline, McPherson High Life, McPHERSON. Advertisements; First—Marlene Thomas and Harold Chapman, Reporter, PAOLA. Second — Paul Robinson, The Harbinger, SHAWNEE MISSION EAST. Third—Dennis Gerstner and Dave Peacock, Panther Tales, GREAT BEND. Honorable Mention—Peggy Seibel, The Harbinger, SHAWNEE MISSION EAST. Schools with 299 or fewer enrolled Photography; First—Fred Pace, Blue Power, ST. MARY'S. Second—Mark Kaiser, The Happening, AGRA. News and Feature Stories; First—Renee Tatro, Wildcat's Howl MOUNDRIDGE. Second—Michelle Jarboe, Spyglass, DEERFIELD. Third—Bernie Rishstatter, Blue Power, ST MARY'S. Honorable Mention — Greg Abbott, The Happening, AGRA; Mona Segrist, The Holtonian, HOLTON; Priscilla Yarnell, Demon Booster, LUCAS. Editorials and Columns; First—Willard Westblade, Viking Mirror. LINSEBORG. Second—Laurie Ediger, Wildcat's Howl. MOUNDRIDGE. Third—Anna Babb, The Holtonian, HOLTON. Honorable Mention—Greg Abbott, The Happening, AGRA; Kay Ridgeway, Norton Nuggett, NORTON; Vicki Olson, Powwow, OSAGE CITY. Sports Stories; First—Dennis Webb, Viking Mirror, LINSBORG. Second—Kent Mumaw, The Holtonian, HOLTON. Third — Gary Rolland, Norton Nuggett, NORTON. Honorable Mention—Renee Tatro. Wildcat's Howl, MOUNDRIDGE; Rosalie Chavez, Powwow, OSAGE CITY. Advertisements; First— Connie Godwin, Chocolate Gold-digger, BELLE PLAINE. Second—Susan Drommer, Norton Nuggett, NORTON. Third—Claudia Herr, Wildcat's Howl, MOUNDRIDGE. Honorable Mention-Larry Sayles, Norton Nuggett, NORTON. KU black student wins scholarship for journalism Phyllis G. Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Anderson, 2819 Ellen, Wichita, is one of 45 recipients from 28 colleges and universities of grants totaling $21,412 from the Negro Journalism Scholarship Fund of the American Newspaper Publishers Association (ANPA) Foundation. She will be a senior majoring in journalism at the University of Kansas. The grants, which will become effective for the fall 1970 term, are made to students who have shown special interest in newspaper journalism. KANU alters programming The University of Kansas FM radio station, KANU, will extend its evening hours of broadcasting to include contemporary music and discussions beginning next September, as a result of a $7,-500 grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Dr. Bruce A. Linton, director of radio and television at KU and recipient of the grant, said two graduate students will be hired to program material from ten to midnight, two or three nights a week. "The purpose is to make the FM station a more meaningful experience," Dr. Linton said. He noted that past studies have shown that KANU is more popular with older than younger people. This he attributed mainly to the serious-type of music now played predominantly on KANU and to its 10 p.m. sign-off time. The ten to midnight time slot will be filled with informational programs such as talk shows and contemporary music such as folk-rock and jazz-rock, Dr. Linton said. ROTC damage set at $1,925 The damage, which consisted of broken windows, broken slats on wooden venetian blinds and two glass desk tops, involved approximately $600 in materials. Buchholz estimated. Labor to repair or replace will involve $1,000. Temporary protection in the form of plywood over the windows the night of the incident cost approximately $325 in time and materials. Damage done to the Military Science building at the University of Kansas in a rock-throwing incident on May 6 will cost $1,925 to repair, Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, estimates. This is the first official estimate released by the University. Newspaper estimates have ranged as high as $5,000. About 57,000 tons of steel went into New York's Empire State Building. 2 KANSAN June 9 1970 STRAWBERRY FIELDS 712 MASS. CLOTHES PIPES bell bottoms LEATHER BLACK LITES LAMPSHADES JEWELRY GIFTS UNDERGROUND PAPERS SCARVES INDIA PRINTS STROBE CANDLES INCENSE Photo by Cromwell Grants, Awards Two University of Kansas students have been named Charles Hobbs Scholars in mathematics for 1970-71. Barbara A. Kasten, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, and Thomas A. Rudkin, Wichita, freshman are the recipients of the scholarship established in 1954 to memorialize Charles Hobbs, a KU alumnus and a former Kansas commissioner of insurance. ★★ A research grant of $19,618 has been awarded to the University of Kansas by the U.S. Public Health Service of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare for another year's study of interpersonal constructs and impressions of others. The study was begun in 1969 under the direction Dr. Walter H. Crockett, professor of speech and drama. The grant was awarded on recommendation of the National Institute of Mental Health. \*\*\* Leigh Clark, a junior from Wichita, is winner of first place in the annual William Herbert Carruth memorial poetry contest at the University of Kansas. Other prize winners in the contest memorializing one of the great English teachers in KU's history are: second, Karl Crum, Overland Park junior; third, Stephen Bunch, Shawnee junior; honorable mention, James Adams, Longmont, Colo. graduate student. * * Munro Shintani, assistant professor of education, has been given a $21,000 grant from the U.S. Office of Education for a project involving three KU-affiliated mental retardation centers. The award, Dr. Shintani said, will be used to coordinate facilities at the KU campus, the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, and the Parsons State Hospital. Working with Dr. Shintani as coordinator of the project is Nancy Peterson, assistant professor of education and a research associate in child research. * * Ronald E. Goddard, doctoral candidate from Des Moines, Ia., in the department of physiology and cell biology, received a research and graduate study fellowship for the summer at the University of Michigan Biological Station, Douglas Lake, Mich. He will study limnology and do research on the organization and structure of protozoan communities. He will work in the laboratories of Dr. John Cairns, Jr., formerly professor of zoology at KU, who will be teaching and directing research at Douglas Lake this summer. Taylor fund aids J-school An endowment for journalism scholarships has been established through a bequest of $25,000 from the estate of Miss Frances Elizabeth Taylor of Kansas City to the Kansas University Endowment Association. A 1903 graduate of the University of Kansas, Miss Taylor taught English and journalism at Argentine High School in Kansas City from 1904 to 1952. She also was sponsor of the high school paper and of its yearbook, The Argentinian. Miss Taylor died Jan. 22, 1967, in Kansas City. Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, said the first Frances Elizabeth Taylor scholarships in journalism will be awarded for the 1970-71 academic year. June 9 1970 KANSAN 3 The child research wing of Haworth Hall at the University of Kansas has been named in honor of the late John T. Stewart II of Wellington. New Haworth wing named The Kansas Board of Regents approved the recommendation of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. that the facility be called the John T. Stewart Children's Center. The facility is a part of the Kansas Center for Research in Mental Retardation, which also includes research structures at Parsons and Kansas City. The two-story Children's Center has about 23,000 square feet of classroom and laboratory space. It is used primarily by the departments of human development and family life, speech and drama and the Bureau of Child Research and the School of Education. The facility was one of the objectives of the University's Program for Progress, the capital funds' campaign through which more than $19,600,000 was contributed to the University in the past three years. A substantial gift to provide a portion of the funds required for the child research wing was made by the son and daughter-in-law of Mr. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. John T. Stewart III of Wellington. The late John T. Stewart II was a member of the KU class of 1911. In addition to an active and extensive business career in banking and real estate, he became widely recognized for his leadership in youth, educational and church activities. He became a trustee of the KU Endowment Association in 1929 and was elected to the executive committee of the Association in 1938, serving until his death in 1949. His devotion to the University was recognized by gifts to establish with the Endowment Association the John T. Stewart Memorial Scholarship Fund shortly after his death. The younger Stewart and his wife, the former Linda Bliss, are alumni of KU. Since graduation in 1958, Stewart has been active in many phases of alumni activity. Like his father, he is a trustee of the Endowment Association and on its executive committee. He is a member of the advisory board to the School of Business and serves on the University's Athletic Board. He is executive vice-president of Welco Aerospace Corporation in Wellington. "The name of John T. Stewart II is highly appropriate distinction for the Children's Center, and one we are proud to have permanently identified with the University," Chancellor Chalmers said. "In their generous gifts to the Program for Progress, John and Linda Stewart have epitomized the loyalty, dedication and service of alumni which have done much to make this University great." The child research wing contains facilities for training graduate students and modern laboratories for the study of child behavior. It is under the direction of Dr. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, Director of the Bureau of Child Research. Among its specialized facilities are a laboratory for research in early childhood educaton, with a parallel program for training prospective teachers; a speech and language clinic, an advanced audio and visual laboratory, classrooms and clinical observation rooms and a motion picture production studio. Independent study offered The Extramural Independent Study Center of University Extension wants students to know their alternatives. The University of Kansas permits up to thirty hours of independent study to apply toward a degree program, no more than six hours of which may be received during the last thirty hours of credit earned for a degree. The Extramural Independent Study Center offers many courses which help meet degree requirements. The new catalog lists these courses with detailed descriptions. Students who intend to enroll in independent study need the written consent of their deans to insure credit on their official transcripts. Student Services personnel, directed by Mrs. Vivian McCoy, have planned a special summer school enrollment day June 11. Enrollments can be completed any week day, however, in the portable building at Oread and Baumgartner Drive, directly north of the Kansas Union. The official summer session schedule also provides this information on page 5. Many students use the summer months to accelerate their college programs through independent study. SUA SUMMER FILMS Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union June 5 MAJOR DUNDEE, Charleton Heston, Senta Berger, Richard Harris (U.S.A.,1965) June 10 SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT, Ingmar Bergman (Sweden, 1955) Dyche Aud.) June 12 THE PARADISE CASE, Gregory Peck (U.S.A.,1947) (Dyche) TORN CURTAIN, Paul Newman, Julie Andrews (1966) June 17 GATE OF HELL, Best Foreign Film (Japan, 1954) June 19 NINOTCHKA, Greta Garbo (U.S.A.,1939) THE DEVIL IS A WOMAN, Marlene Dietrich (U.S.A.,1935) June 24 JULIET OF THE SPIRITS, Fellini (Italy,1965) June 26 LADY L, Paul Newman, Sophia Loren, Peter Ustinov, David Niven (U.S.A.,1966) July 1 SWAMP WATER, Walter Brennan, U.S.A.,1941 THE SOUTHERNER, Zachery Scott (U.S.A.,1945) July 3 REBECCA, Alfred Hitchcock, Joan Fontaine (U.S.A.,1940) CAUGHT, James Mason, Robert Ryan (U.S.A.,1949) July 8 L'ECLISSE, Antonioni, Alan Delon (Italy, 1962) July 10 A VERY PRIVATE AFFAIR, Brigitte Bardot (1962) July 15 UGETSU, Machiko Kyo (Japan, 1953) July 17 DUEL IN THE SUN, Gregory Peck (U.S.A.,1947 MY DARLING CLEMENTINE, Henry Fonda (U.S.A.,1946) July 22 LE JOUR SE LAVE, Marcel Carne (France,1939) SHORT: PABLO CASUALS, The Unaccomplished Cello July 24 THE CAINE MUTINY, Humphrey Bogart (U.S.A.,1954) THE BIG SLEEP,Bogart and Bacall (U.S.A.,1946) July 27 TWO RODE TOGETHER, James Stewart, John Ford (U.S.A.,1961) MANOLETE-HIS LIFE AND DEATH July 29 MONIKA, Ingmar Bergman (Sweden, 1952) The End of Tradition At the Democratic national convention of 1968, in one of the few moments that could be viewed as memorable, keynote speaker Daniel Inouye, a senator from Hawaii, observed that the French student rioters that year had cut down, to use as barricades, beautiful old Parisian trees that had survived the Revolution of 1848. Inouye, a liberal, was commenting on something which has proved a telling metaphor for others, notably conservatives: society is like a tree, in a sense, and one does not cut down that tree to examine the roots, for in the process the roots are exposed and the tree dies. As does society. This spring on the campus of the University of Kansas, and on other campuses throughout the land, one might pause to reflect on the destruction of the trees. One of these years, probably, the beautiful grove between Bailey Hall and the stadium will go, in the name of Progress. Perhaps it will go because of administrative action; perhaps the students will be responsible. But trees die, and buildings die, and universities—at least what they have been to many generations of teachers and students—also die. Our University has not died. Some of us felt this spring, however, that the school year died. And in its passing (most years don't really die, you know, but this one seemed to) there may be reason to believe that the University of Kansas of 1980 will be quite different from the University of Kansas of 1970. Some will say "Cheers!" and "Good riddance" to the old University. Others, reflecting on what the University has been, will feel differently. Some, who are quite ready to accept—and who may have been in the vanguard of promoting—a better society, may not be resigned to a University of Kansas that has become political, that has become an active social agent, that has thrown out the past, cut down all the old trees, to become a Free University, where every class "relevantly" is designed to repair the ghetto or the reservation or the ghetto, where all education is one long LAS class, life becoming a glorious festival at Woodstock. Some of these, not at all opposed to some classes being designed to repair the crippled environment, may feel that some of the old concepts and some of the old methodologies are quite valid for the Brave New World ahead. It is unlikely that some of our institutions of 1970—better make that 1965—will be around in 1980. This was the spring that, thanks to a fire-battered Memorial Union, we were forced to forego those traditional celebrations that honor the students who are bringing their baccalaureate—and other—educations to an end. The honors programs have gone the way of ties and shirts at commencement (all admittedly conventions of the Establishment). Commencement was greatly altered; thanks to the weather, and changed plans in the parade, those of us who sentimentally like to see our students passing between us as we stand (backs aching) on either side of the stadium track, did not have that experience this year. And suddenly it's the morning of June 2, and it's all over, and caps and gowns are returned. And everybody's gone. And we realize that the students are no longer like those slobs of the silent generation who went to commencement and attended awards programs and even, in some cases, came to say goodbye. Our week of Alternatives killed classes and did, some of us think, great harm to some concepts of human relationships that have been established in this middle class land that suddenly is so absolutely out. As universities cancel, or greatly alter, commencement, and some of the other things that have come to symbolize the university for some old-fashioned professors, one more of the pleasant little civilities of life will disappear. The University is becoming, for a few teachers who are not educationally inspired by workshops in guerrilla warfare and classroom tactics, a place that has lost its appeal. We now anticipate a fall semester that will bring more agitation, violence, and one ideological holiday every week, perhaps. And our mood, as we see patterns of the past disappearing (yes, children, this is conservation), is no longer that which it was back in that ancient time, five years ago, when we walked back from the stadium on that June night, a moon perhaps guiding us up the hill, and thought that it was over for another year but that they'd be back in September, and what better prospect could there be for a teacher than that?—CMP BOOKS IT HAPPENED IN BOSTON?, by Russell H. Greenan (Crest, 95 cents)—A mystery novel that the publisher thinks enough of (one way of looking at it) to promote a $5,000 write-a-review contest around it. It's shades of "Rosemary's Baby," in a way, with matters of the occult and sinister doings. For many readers it probably will seem quite silly. WE LOVE YOU SNOOPY, by Charles M. Schulz (Crest, 50 cents)—A new and, as usual, charming collection of cartoons from Peanuts. EDITOR THE MIDWALKER JOURNAL Published in Perth, Scotland, 1970 "its true you left wing editors who support those eftec snops, rotten asses,criminally insane, intellectual enuchs cool it!" THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published, second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to clor. creed, or national origin The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the opinions expressed In the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. Managing Editor . Adviser ... Business Manager Executive Staff Executive Staff Cass Peterson Calder M. Pickett Jim Hatfield Member Associated Collegiate Press Docking gives views on American college youth (Editor's Note: These remarks were made by Gov. Robert Docking at the convention of the Kansas Bankers Association in Wichita.) Until World War II, college was a place for a small minority of Americans. In 1940, nearly 1.5 million students attended college less than a third of the collegeage population. The students who attended college tended to be from affluent segments of society, secure knowing that they could eventually hold a high place in the nation's economic and social life. And those who did have to work their way through college were far too busy trying to maintain their jobs and their class grades to concern themselves with other affairs. Despite the flurry of student activism in the 1930's, college, for the most part, still was a place of serenity, a preparation for a life of earning. By 1960, this all changed. The college population had exploded as the nation's growing affluence and its increased commitment to higher education opened the doors to many other qualified young persons. College in the 1960's became somewhat of the norm-not the exception. More than 6.5 million students now are in college and soon the majority of American youth will have some college education. Those in college in 1960 were products of an affluent age—a time that had never known economic catastrophe; a time of rapid communication and mobilization. It was a time when a nationwide student community became a reality; and without the threat of joblessness and poverty, this community became involved with broader concerns. Some of the young people entered the Peace Corps. Others volunteered to work in VISTA to help our nation's needy. Some learned trades which will enable them to contribute constructively to our society as a whole. Others accepted responsible positions in government. And while the overwhelming majority of students was trying to better themselves and, in turn better our country and our world, a small group became determined to destroy the foundation and moral fiber upon which this nation has stood so strong for so many years. These few are determined to obey only those laws with which they personally agree. They would rather tear down our institutions than strengthen them. In destruction, they apparently believe they will find an immediate cure for our nation's ills. One of these self-styled revolutionists, Jerry Rubin, explained his methods to change policies in the United States. "Kill your parents," he said. "They are dictators over us. They're trying to get us to lead the same miserable lives they do." Jerry Rubin's group and his ilk have tried to close our nation's colleges and universities. His small band of rabble rousers did cause more than 300 schools in this country to close a few weeks ago. Universities closed in California and New York, and in Ohio. "If we close the universities," he went on to say, "we will deliver a body blow to society. Books should be burned. . . We are going to invade the schools and free our brothers who are prisoners. We will burn the buildings and the books. We will give brooms and pails to the administrators so they can be useful and sweep the place up. By closing down one hundred universities in one day, we the peasants, can level the most powerful blow possible against the pigs who run American society." But, that small group of Rubin- But, that small group of Rubin- I am certain most citizens are tired of hearing 1 per cent of our college students claim that "doing their own thing" means disregarding and disrespecting the laws of this nation; that academic freedom means burning administration buildings and cancellable legitimate university functions; that civil rights means calling public officials fools, pigs, fascists and warmongers; that our nation's colleges and universities are a place for the students to teach—not to learn. I am losing patience with that destructive minority whining about the country in which they live. It is disgusting to allow a few to interfere with the rights of the majority of students. As a taxpayer, I am tired of seeing public buildings unnecessarily damaged without reason. For generations, men and women have fought and died for the right of an individual to secure and obtain an education free from threats of violence and intimidation. type revolutionaries did not close the schools in Kansas with violence and threats of violence; and while I am governor, that minority will not force the schools in this state to close. As governor, I will protect the rights of the majority of our state's college students who want an education. The colleges and universities in this state do not belong to the students, the Board of Regents or the Governor. The colleges and universities belong to the people of this state who support and maintain them. These few who are innocent of history and its consequences do not deserve the attention they are getting. I think it is time we direct our attention to the 98 or 99 per cent of our nation's young people who are concerned, but who realize that this is a nation in which if you have a better way to do something, the people will accept it. I think it is time we began listening to that large majority of youth who know our system is based on that "better than" philosophy and that nothing is accomplished in tearing down unless you have something better to build in its place. I think it is time we started listening to that overwhelming majority of our nation's youth who are talking not about rights but rights coupled with duties and responsibilities. Perhaps not since the founding of our nation when Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence at 32, Henry Knox built an artillery corps at 26, and Alexander Hamilton joined the fight for independence at the age of 19 has there been a younger generation of Americans brighter, better educated and more highly motivated than the young generation of today. The vast majority of today's youth are fair minded and responsible—but this does not mean they are satisfied with the statusquo. They see need for reform, just as we do. They share with us an interest in a broad objective—to improve conditions in American life. This large group of young persons has shown an idealism and devotion to their country matched in few nations and excelled in none. The vast majority of our nation's young people attempt to work within the time-tested channels to improve our society and their future. They have worked through the political system by becoming involved in business, government and political campaigns. They have made the Peace Corps, VISTA and the Teacher's Corps more than slogans. Many young persons are preparing for long-term efforts to change society. For example, law students today are concerned "Positive" category. Today, the members of our generation have called many of the ideas of the youth impractical and we have said many of their views were overdrawn. But there is no question of their energy, ability and above all of their honest commitment to a better world for us all. Perhaps it is time we now make an effort to take the causes of the majority of our youth and to lend to their idealism and daring, the insight and wisdom of our experience. less about trusts and estates and corporate law and more about how just the laws are and how justice can be better served. The young people always have been articulate and in search of new ways to do things. But they never have been familiar with the actual operation of our institutions. They know little about the many obstacles to a utopian management of our economy or to the development of a harmonious community. The biggest single fact is that the lessons of experience cannot be learned by theoretical means. The history of our country is an evolution of human experience through many decades. These human experiences have brought about significant improvements in communications, transportation and the general standard of living. Criticism by young and old is necessary. But a thorough knowledge of the pros and cons of public questions is essential for any useful appraisal—and this always is aided by practical experience. There is a lifetime of work for them, to improve, to build. There still is much more to be done. We are looking to the young people to carry on, to show us a better way—through the processes which we preserved so they could, indeed, proceed. All of our youth will learn, as all of us over 30 have learned, that the road to progress and a better quality of life is always under construction. Highjackers continue to bug airlines WASHINGTON (UPI)—For the airline industry, the hijacker has become a terrifying puzzle. How can he be stopped? How can a potential hijacker be spotted in a line of waiting airline passengers? What should be done once he shows his hand? At present the most obvious deterrent in use against hijackers is the threat of a long federal prison term. But for spotting and handling trouble, authorities now are relying primarily on a weapons detection system and a psychological "behavior profile" of the typical hijacker designed by the Federal Aviation Administration The results are mixed. So far this year six American airliners have been hijacked, compared with 33 in 1969 and 18 the year before. Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe says the decline stems from a concentrated attack on the problem. He reports that "in recent months 24 persons" were kept off airliners when they either tripped a weapons detection device or were spotted by airline employees using the psychological profile. Teaching honors go to professors with experience Teaching experience counts with students in the School of Business, a faculty evaluation conducted by the University of Kansas Business Council, a student organization, proves. Weapons, ranging from guns to Teaching honors in the undergraduate division went to instructors who have been on the faculty for over 20 years. They are Associate Profs. Frank Pinet, R. Keith Weltmer and Sherwood Newton. ranging from guns to Professors Weltner and Newton also received "top grades" from their students in the graduate division. Joining them in this distinction were Profs. Robert Sterling and Lawrence Sherrn. Evaluations were completed by each student in all classes taught in the business school last fall. The test used was developed by Prof. Donald P. Hoyt of Kansas State University and results were computed there. The choice of measures of teaching excellence was made by the KU Business Council, according to Roby Ogan, Great Bend senior and president of the KUBC. Each faculty member received a report of his own evaluation and thus could see where he stood on the scale. Questions related to preparation and organization, student involvement, clarity of communication, stimulation, speaking style, personalism, exams, assignments, textbooks, and course content. Green named as chairman Don W. Green, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, has been named chairman of that department for the 1970-71 school year. He will assume his duties next fall from Prof. Harold F. Rosson, chairman since 1964. Green served as acting chairman in the 1967-68 school year. Green received the B.S. degree from the University of Tulsa in 1955, the master's degree and Ph.D. in chemical engineering in 1963 from the University of Oklahoma. His professional experience includes work with the Continental Oil Company, the Gulf Oil Corporation, and the Jersey Production Research of Tulsa. June 9 1970 KANSAN 5 knives, have been found in airport waiting rooms where they presumably were discarded by airline passengers who feared the detection system, Volpe said. Only three airlines — Eastern, Trans World and Pan American—are using detection devices. A fourth airline is expected to join the group shortly. An FAA spokesman says the government also hopes soon to get airline agreement on a plan to equip entire airports with the devices so that each airline gate would be covered. If every gate were covered, authorities might be able to avert hijackings such as last week's takeover of a TWA jetliner by a passenger who boarded the plane at Phoenix. The gate the hijacker used to board the plane was not equipped with a device and there was no detection of the gun he carried. The personality of the hijacker is one of the biggest puzzles. Dr. John T. Dailey, chief FAA psychologist, says that commander-eing a plane is the hijacker's one moment "of power and glory in a life of failure." The records show that most hijackers have been either criminals or emotionally disturbed persons bearing a grudge. Sprinkled in between are politically motivated individuals who use airplanes as a way to get to places like Cuba. Except for possibly being emotionally disturbed and bearing a grudge, the hijacker of the TWA jet did not fit any of these patterns. "He had suicide on his mind" a psychologist said. KU students win honors with photos Six University of Kansas student photographers won honors in the 25th Annual Intercollegiate Photography Contest at the University of Missouri. Greg Gorman, a junior from Overland Park, majoring in photojournalism, was third in the portfolio category and the Kappa Alpha Mu Founder's Award of $100 scholarship. The portfolio category contained 20 prints representative of the student's work for the year. Gorman included pictures from the second moratorium in Washington, a picture story of a narcotics arrest and campus demonstrations. Gorman also will receive a $25 savings bond for first place in the "College Life" category with a picture of a stern looking policeman holding back a group of students in Washington, D.C. He also placed a print in the show, one of three in addition to the prize winners, in the "Portrait" category with a picture of a hippie sitting on a roof. Bill Higgins, a junior majoring in photojournalism from Mission, won a $25 savings bond for first in the "Portrait" category. The winner was a picture of a Bowery bum helping a friend. Kathy Hird, fine arts senior from Lawrence, won a $25 savings bond for first place in the "Picture Story" category. Her story was on he Amish community of Yoder, south of Hutchinson. The judges commented that this was one of the best picture stories they had seen in the competition. John L. Brown, a sophomore from Kansas City, Mo., was second in the "College Life" category with a picture of two young college students sitting on a statue on which was inscribed "Study the Past." The picture was made during his trip to Washington to cover the moratorium in that city. armed because some airlines do James B. Hoffman, Jr., a junior in photojournalism from Pratt, placed two prints in the "Feature category and one in "College Life." Greg Sorber, a sophomore from Topeka, placed a print of campus demonstrations in the show's "Feature" category. The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) believes the best solution is for all nations to support the Tokyo Convention which requires signatories to return hijackers to the country of their origin. This should be coupled with quick and severe punishment by U.S. courts, says ALPA President Charles Ruby. Other efforts to curb hijacking range from a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a hijacker to the FAA proposal to bulletproof cockpit doors. Some possible solutions have Professors get grant for water basin study Green already has worked with a model for predicting the availability of ground water such as that found in the Equus Beds, which cover approximately 2,000 square miles in Sedgwick, Harvey, Reno, McPherson, Rice, Ellsworth and Marion Counties. Development of a basin hydrology simulator and its field testing in the Little Arkansas River Basin by two University of Kansas professors will be financed by the Office of Water Resources Research in the U.S. Department of the Interior. The first phase of the new project will be to combine these two models with adjustments to account for the interaction between surface and ground water. Then the investigators will test the model mathematically, relying on data from the Little Arkansas Basin collected since 1940. In another project, Pogge has experimented with a surface water model based on such variables as precipitation, surface run-off and the flow of streams. Dr. Don W. Green, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering and Dr. Ernest C. Pogge, associate professor of civil engineering, will direct the project, one of 33 authorized this year under Title II of the Water Resources Research Act of 1964. Funding, which awaits a Congressional appropriation, is tentatively set at $68,460 for a 26-month period. The KU professors seek a reliable method of predicting the availability of basin water in the Little Arkansas and the Equus beds of south-central Kansas to meet the future demands of cities, industry and agriculture. The third phase will involve actual testing of the model at a Little Arkansas Basin site. Using data on stream flow and water levels and records on the geology An associate professor of Slavic languages and literature at the University of Kansas, Dr. Edward J. Czerwinski, is a member of the editorial board of Books Abroad been ruled out. Pilots are unnot want to risk a gunfight in the cabin when a passenger could be killed and there is no guarantee it would lead to the capture of a hijacker. MEMBER OF BOARD The 43-year-old quarterly sponsored by the University of Oklahoma has established a $10,-000 international literary prize, to be first bestowed in 1970. THE UNIVERSITY OF JAMAICA Armed guards were ruled out by many airlines for the same reasons. THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY Presents "HALLS OF ANGER" GP COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists ENDS TONIGHT Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1-1065 of the basin, Green and Pogge will compare the calculated basin behavior with the historical records of the area. By programming the computer model with earlier information and comparing predictions with actual past occurrences, the research team hopes to set up a general model suitable for use in all such basin areas. After the model has been tested, Green said he hopes to show it can be used effectively as a tool for management of water resources. As the needs of people, industry and agriculture increase, it is conceivable that all water demands cannot be met without effective management, he said. As an example, he referred to the 55 wells presently used by the city of Wichita to draw about 30 million gallons of water a day from the Equus Beds. Such a model could be used to determine the rate of replenishment and, therefore, determine the maximum amount of water which could be removed while preserving a constant source for future use. An advisory board will review progress of the work and recommend other areas of research. Members include Prof. Robert L. Smith, director of the Water Resources Institute at KU; Keith Krause, Topeka, director of the Kansas Water Resources Board; Dr. Frank C. Foley, director of the State Geological Survey; and Charles Lane, chief of the Kansas district, Water Resources division of the U.S. Geological Survey at KU. $403,300 given to aid teachers The U.S. Office of Education has awarded grants totaling $403, 300 to the University of Kansas for the training of teachers of exceptional children. Eightly students, ranging from undergraduates to Ph.D. candidates, will receive teaching and research training under the program which takes in both the KU campus in Lawrence and the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. Support for the project is broken down so that $182,300 goes to the Lawrence campus and $221,000 goes to the Kansas City Campus. Dr. Richard Whelan, associate professor of education, is program administrator at the KU Medical Center. There, 46 students will receive training in the areas of deaf education, crippled youngsters, and emotionally disturbed children, he said. On the Lawrence campus, Dr. Jerry Chaffin, assistant professor of education and program administrator, said 34 students will work under the program during the 1970-71 academic year. Training here, he noted, is in the areas of mental retardation, learning disabled and in the preparation of administrators. Besides classroom training, Dr. Chaffin said, students have the opportunity to teach and supervise in the classroom. He noted that some students receive fellowship support from the grant. The epic journey of four generations of Americans who carved out a country with their bare hands HOW THE WEST WAS WON Evening 8:00 Only Adults $1.50, Child 75c THE Hillcrest G CO HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER # 9TH AND IOWA THE Hillcrest G HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 619 AND JONES 67 67 People are the ultimate spectacle. Shows 7:20 9:35 Adults $1.50 Child .75 ENDS TONIGHT THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? THE Hillcrest 2 THE BEATLES "Let it be" TECHNICOLOR United Artists ENDS TONIGHT THE Hillcrest Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 People are the ultimate spectacle. Shows 7:20 9:35 Adults $1.50 Child .75 ENDS TONIGHT THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY? THE Hillcrest 2 THE BEATLES "Let it be" TECHNICOLOR United Artists $8 million private support given KU Nearly $8 million in private support became available for the benefit of the University of Kansas in the year ending April 30, trustees of the K.U. Endowment Association were told at their annual meeting. "But as private support has reached new highs in almost all phases, I must report that the climate for educational fund raising has never in my 22 years of experience been so poor as it is now," Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary reported. Youngberg said that even more responsible than the uncertainty caused by campus unrest is the depressed state of the securities market. He said that cultivation of future bequests is a most promising area for effort at this time. The $8 million in "new money" is represented by about $1/2 million in gifts directly to the University and $71/2 million generated through the Endowment Association. Of that there was $6,284,000 in contributions and bequests, $979,000 in investment income and the remainder from income from properties and net gain on the sale of property. Youngberg reported more than $900,000 was disbursed in scholarships and fellowships and more than $1.2 million in loans to students and faculty. More than $2 million was spent for aids and facilities on the Lawrence campus and $3½ million for similar projects at the K.U. Medical Center in Kansas City. Book value of the KUEA assets rose to $27,021,000, up from $24,857,000 a year ago. The trustees elected four alumni to the board of trustees and reelected officers. New trustees are John Eberhardt, Wichita attorney; John O'Leary, Jr., a banker in Luray; Stanley Porter, an accountant firm executive, Tulsa, OKla.; and Robert B. Riss, Kansas City businessman. Reelected were Dolph Simons, Sr., Lawrence, president; Lloyd Ruppenthal, McPherson, first vice president; Olin Petefish, Lawr- ence, second vice president; Arthur B. Weaver, Lawrence, treasurer; Irvin E. Youngbear, Lawrence, executive secretary; Maurice E. Barker, Lawrence, assistant secretary; Carl Lavery, Lawrence, assistant treasurer. Members of the executive committee will be Michael Chalfant, Hutchinson; Howard M. Immel, Iola; Balfour Jeffrey, Topeka; and John T. Stewart III, Wellington Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. reported on the "12 days of campus unrest" following the $2 million fire in the Kansas Union and explained some of the decisions made during that period. He noted that the University was not closed, no classes were cancelled and that the year's academic goals had been achieved, that the traditional Commencement program is being held, that no events were disrupted except those dislocated by the Union fire, and "the only bloodshed came when students began to go bare-footed in the spring." On the positive side he noted 17 K.U. seniors had been named Woodrow Wilson Designates, sixth best in North America; K.U. debaters not only won the official national championship, but another K.U. team was third in the tournament, an unprecedented feat by one school; the Interfraternity Council was judged best in its size category; and Kansas won its second consecutive Big Eight all-sports championship. Answering a query, Chancellor Chalmers said that were the Vietnam war to be ended, other issues would immediately gain the attention of students but he doubted those issues would cause so much emotion. "The college generations of the 70's are the 'committed generation' and will work for solutions rather than demonstrating, which was a characteristic of the 'concerned generations' of the 60's," he said. Simons told the trustees their endowment association, both in income and accomplishment, was one of the strongest anywhere, but it is important that it retain its independent status and that it guard against "growing old" by adding more young men o the board. Robert B. Riss, retiring president of the Alumni Association, reported paid membership up nearly 15 percent during the year to about 21,000. The association had reorganized by eliminating 12 committees in favor of three. He noted the membership had just elected to the board the youngest trustee ever, Sam Evans of Salina, a 1965 graduate; and the first Negro, Dean Nicholas L. Gerren Sr., Wilberforce, Ohio, holder of four degrees from Kansas. Michael Chalfant of Hutchinson, retiring chairman of the Greater University Fund advisory board, said the $560,000 in the "annual giving program" was the most ever raised but that the number of donors was down 455 from a year ago—a situation existing nationally. "We received very few donations in the last three weeks of April," he said. K. U.'s annual giving program still leads all Big Eight schools by a wide margin, both in amounts and in number of alumni and non-alumni donors. Maurice Barker reported that the $18.6 million Program for Progress goal was topped by a million dollars to the Endowment Association and about $1 June 9 1970 Endowment Association recently had supplemented state funds by $175.000 for the Malott Hall addition and is putting $100.000 into equipment for the Space Technology building, which is financed principally by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. KANSAN Youngberg emphasized that the Endowment Association was making invaluable contributions to the University through its assistance on physical facilities. Approximately one building a year has been added during the 22 years he has served as secretary, "and this is perhaps where our future challenge lies. For as state support has brought faculty salary levels to a competitive status, there has been a lag in funds for buildings," he explained. million more in gifts directly to the University. Youngberg explained that the RADIO SHACK - Stereo Headphones — starting at $7.95 Complete Line of Stereo and Recording Equipment - 2400' Polyester Recording Tape $2.69 (Lots of three) - Complete Line of Psychedelic Lights - Strobe Lights $29.95 - Police Radios (only a few) Hi/Lo $29.95 - Intercom only $9.95 713 Massachusetts — VI 2-1566 Hours: 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday till 8:30 p.m. The only beer that always tastes light enough to have another. FALSTAFF FALSTAFF. Beer For Over Four Generations Our Families Master Brewers Have Devoted Their Lives and skills to Making this most Rewarding Beer Enjoyed Throughout The World since 1870...This is the Guest Product of the Brewers Art. --- Fatstaff Brewing Corporation, St. Louis, Mo THE MASTER AND THE PROFESSOR Pharmacists discuss joint program Representatives from the KU School of Pharmacy and the Victorian College of Pharmacy, Parkville, Victoria, Australia, discuss a joint Ph.D. program to be offered by the two schools. Architecture students receive scholarships James Carl Alberts, fourth year student from Jefferson City, Mo., is the recipient of a $500 Leslie B. Simpson Scholarship. Scholarships totaling $3,600 have been awarded to nine University of Kansas architecture students for the 1970-71 academic year by the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design. The program, called Intersearch (International Graduate Research Program), is designed to teach methods of research, and offer a broadening international experience, President Grinlington and Dean Manning said. Both administrators believe the program is the first of its kind and see it as unique academically and internationally. President Grinlington sees it as a possible model for others. "It's actually the fusing of the two campuses," he pointed out. Dean Manning first Ph.D. candidate may be at KU this fall, the two administrators said. A minimum residency of one year will be required on each campus. Clayton Fink, second-year-student from Gravois Mills, Mo., has been awarded a $500 Goldwin Goldsmith Scholarship. Prof. Goldsmith was the first chairman of the department of architecture and architectural engineering and established the first curricula in that department in 1913. Robert E. Phel, first-year-student from Ridgewood, N.J., is the recipient of a $250 Goldsmith Scholarship. felt its "uniqueness lies in the internationalism" and thought it was significant that two countries are involved in making rules in common. William H. "Chip" Sloan, first-year-student from Bartlesville, Okla., has been awarded a $300 Goldsmith Scholarship and a $300 George M. Beal Scholarship. This latter award was established to honor Prof. George M. Beal, former chairman of the department of architecture and architectural engineering. Interest in KU developed when students from the Victorian College attended the KU School of Pharmacy and did well, they noted. Out of this interest, the present program emerged. Dennis Wellner, second-year student from Blackburn, Mo., is the recipient of a $400 Goldsmith Scholarship and a $100 award from the Kansas City chapter of Ray Grinlington, presider t, and Dean Nigel Manning of the Victorian College of Pharmacy, met with the faculty and administration of the KU School of Pharmacy last week to work out the details of the program. The Victorian school awards the bachelor, master's, and doctor's degree in pharmacy and is run by the Pharmaceutical Association of Australia. It is one of the few schools left in the world run by a profession, the administrators noted. Pharmacy plan launched The University of Kansas and the Victorian College of Pharmacy in Parkville, Victoria, Australia, have joined in a unique graduate school program which will result in a jointly awarded doctor of philosophy degree. The State Board of Regents and the Council of the Pharmaceutical Society of Victoria approved the program on April 24. the American Institute of Architects. June 9 1970 KANSAN 7 Under the new program, the The data collection functions served by the centers as well as new research operations will be carried on by two new centers within the Institute: a new Governmental Research Center and a Center for Urban and Regional Technology. A third research center within the Institute will be the Center for Environmental Studies, which will explore the University's interests, resources, and programs in environment and consider possible new academic programs. Dr. Robert T. Aangeenbrug, now director of the Center for Regional Studies and acting director of the Governmental Research Center, will direct the institute, which will remain in facilities occupied by the two centers on the top floor of Blake Hall. He is an associate professor of geography who came to the Kansas faculty in 1966. Robert A. Whitley, second-year-student from Lawrence, received a $350 Goldsmith Scholarship and a $150 George R. Eckel Scholarship. The latter award was established by Mrs. George R. Eckel in memory of her husband, a St. Joseph, Mo., architect. The new institute will combine the resources of two long-functioning programs, the Governmental Research Center and the Center for Regional Studies. Environmental institute is created here The creation of a new Institute for Social and Environmental Studies at the University of Kansas has been announced by Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. Three incoming freshmen have been awarded scholarships for the next academic year. Willial D. Laskowsky, St. Louis, Mo., and Marshall Russell, Wellington, have each been awarded $250 Joseph M. Kellogg Scholarships. This award is designed especially for entering freshmen to honor Prof. Kellogg, the second chairman of the department of architecture and architectural engineering. He was department chairman from 1928-45 and retired from teaching in 1956. Gary A. Nevius, Paola, has been awarded a $250 Leslie B. Simpson Scholarship from the Masonry Division, Kansas City Builders Association. WHY TRADE IT OFF? Renew your car for less money than you might think. Come in and check our low cost fine service. Students, you get a 10% discount on all work. THIS MONTHS SPECIAL $39.95 Paint Jobs In Over 3,000 Colors. G & R Body Shop 1248 E. 13th McCall's "Put Yourself on our Shoes" McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" spring takes on bare but bold Italian sandals! Strappy, upfront vamps for Spring's bold, sporty look! A. Multi-strapped sandal with the look of an opened-up shoe! Beige or Brown Antique Striated Leather uppers. B. Double-belted in front, trimmed with shiny gold rings. Brown Leather uppers. C. Studs decorate the unique upfront look of this sandal. White or Dark Brown Smooth Leather uppers. FANFARES A B C The Amish of Yoder, Kansas Portfolio by Kathy Hird 1000 AMISH BUCKINGHAM. AMISH BULLDOGS. AMISH BULLDOGS. AMISH BULLDOGS. CHRISTOPHER R. COX ATTENTION Western Civilization Students If you could read this Western Civilization Students If you could read this 60¢ Erich Fromm MAN A Socialist Manifesto and Program With A New Foreword in 5 to 10 minutes (10,000 words) WOULD IT HELP YOU WITH 60¢ Erich Fromm MAN A Socialist Manifesto and Program With A New Foreword ★ $25 Prize For Best Name! You may win $25.00 for your entry in The Haas Hardware Name—The—Store Contest. The winner and the new name for our store will be announced June 30th. Come in and see our unique gift items and submit your entry—you may be the winner. Haas Hardware 1029 Massachusetts [Picture of a dark brown horse standing in a stable, with a person kneeling beside it. The horse is harnessed and appears to be well cared for.] T 1976 NOT SO SWEET DISCOVERY VERONA, Italy, (UPI) Thieves broke into a Verona business firm, took the safe and drove to a secluded place in the countryside with it. They blasted it open and found—a box of chocolates. 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Phone VI 3-2644 SONY SUPERSCOPE Step in with a Splash to a cool summer swimsuits especially for adorables the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts VI 2-1400 Lord of the Flies William Kellett THE AGE OF ANALYSIS pure times in psychology RESPOCERY IN AMERICA THE ENLIGHTENMENT AND SOCIAL CONTRACT THE UTILITARIANS - This is a unique opportunity to learn to read dynamically on the Western Civilization readings. - On Western Civilization material you will learn to read at least three times faster (2-5 pages a minute). - You will learn valuable study methods and techniques which will improve your comprehension and recall. - You will develop a range of reading speeds depending on the authors read. - You will find, because you actually read the authors assigned, that some of them are really worth your effort. - This course has a guarantee. If you do not at least triple your reading efficiency we refund the entire tuition. - This course has an additional guarantee. If you do not pass the Western Civilization Comprehensive examination in July we refund the entire tuition of the course. i This class begins June 17, Wednesday, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. You Must Pre-Enroll Call Now: 843-6424 or 843-6426 I will do my best to preserve the original form of the text. Any alterations may be made without changing the meaning. The image provided is a black and white photograph of an elderly man with glasses, wearing a suit and tie, sitting with his arms crossed. He appears to be in a library or study room, as there are bookshelves visible in the background. The focus is on the man, who looks calm and composed. Alumni association elects 3 to board Three men have been elected to five-year terms on the board of directors of the University of Kansas Alumni Association. Samuel D. Evans, Jr., Salina; Prof. Nicholas L. Gerren, Wilberforce, Ohio; and Dwight D. Sutherland, Kansas City, Mo., will take office at the end of Commencement ceremonies Monday. Robert B. Riss, Kansas City, Mo., retiring president of the association, automatically begins a four-year term as director. Retiring directors are Ellis Cave, Dodge City; Clarence McGuire, Kansas City, Mo., former association president; H. William Reece, Scandia; and Mrs. Mary Varner Warwick, Shawnee Mission. Howard "Tony" Immel, Iola, will become president for a one- year term beginning June 1. Serving with him will be three regional vice-presidents: Charles S. Haines, II, New York City, east; W. F. "Bill" Barber, St. Louis, Mo, midwest; and Mrs. Pat Penny Bennett, Los Angeles, Cal., west. Mrs. Bennett replaces Frank L. Snell, Scottsdale, Ariz. 10 KANSAN June 9 1970 Odd Williams, Lawrence, will begin serving in the newly-created office of executive vicepresident. This year 6,177 voted in the election, a participation second only to the record 7,047 last year. Evans, a 1965 business graduate, is associated with the Evans Grain Company in Salina and is vicepresident of EVCO Distributing, Inc. He served as president of the Saline County KU Club in 1968. Evans is also active in various community programs including the Salina Community Action Council. Gerren is professor and dean of the School of Music and Art at Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio. He received degrees in fine arts and education in 1934 and 1935 respectively as well as a master's degree in 1948 and a Ph.D. in 1953. A concert violinist, composer and conductor of original music, he has held previous positions at Texas Southern University, Lincoln University, Bennett College and Moscow Conservatory of Music in Russia. Sutherland, a 1945 graduate, is a partner in the Sutherland Lumber Company in Kansas City, Mo. Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, University Professor of Music Education and director of music therapy, died June 3 while on a fishing trip in the Ozarks. He was 68 years old. Thayer Gaston dies at 68 Widely known as the "father of music therapy," Dr. Gaston was designated a University Professor in 1968 in recognition of his outstanding accomplishments in both teaching and research. He joined the KU faculty in 1936, established the University's first degree program in wind instruments, the Psychology of Music Laboratory, the University's first courses in the psychology of music and the influence of music on behavior, and the Ph.D. program in music education. He established the first music therapy curriculum in the world at KU in 1948. Four out of five of all university and college teachers of music therapy graduated from the University of Kansas. . Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., said, "Dr. Gaston was an outstanding example of that most desirable combination in a professor—he was both a superb classroom teacher and a distinguished research scholar. His death is a great loss to the field of music therapy and to this University, as well as a deeply felt personal loss to his many friends, students, and colleagues. "Dr. Gaston was a pioneer in the use of music to re-establish lines of communication weakened by mental illness. Although his career has ended, the results of his research and the work of his students will live on to give hope to some who need it most." Professor Gaston edited "Music in Therapy," published in 1968. The first comprehensive book in its field, it encompassed the work of 59 prominent therapists, clinicians, researchers and psychologists. The National Association for Music Therapy receives all proceeds from the book's sale. He is also author of more than 125 publications in professional books and journals. Born in Woodward, Okla., on July 4, 1901, Prof. Gaston married Ardis May Waite in 1924. Mrs. Gaston died earlier this year. Their son, Dr. Lamont Waite Gaston, lives in St. Louis, Mo. Professor Gaston was a graduate of the Lewis high school in 1919, received the A.B. degree from Sterling in 1923, the bachelor of music degree from Sterling in 1935, and the Ph.D. in educational psychology from the University of Kansas in 1940. Among his many offices in professional organizations, Professor Gaston was past chairman of the National Committee on Functional Music, Music Educators National Conference; past chairman of the National Committee on Music Therapy, Music Teachers National Association; chairman of the Committee on Research, National Association for Music Therapy; and member of the executive committee, vice president, and president of the N.A.M.T. At the time of his death, he was editor of the journal of the N.A.M.T. Sandy come as you are... hungry A home of the plaid beret Don't Forget "Pepsi Hour Daily from 3-4:00 AT SANDY'S 15c Pepsi For 10c Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS Carriag Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS We invite you to visit the Carriage Lamp Private Club. we offer: ✩Dancing—Live Entertainment✩ every Wednesday, Friday, & Saturday Nite Inquire about your membership today! Carriage Lamp on the Malls, 23rd and Louisiana Agency to study debtor jails WASHINGTON (UPI)—A new federal agency named to scrutinize consumer credit will undertake this month to find out why, among other things, debtors are still going to jail in some parts of America. The National Commission on Consumer Finance, cite "widespread abuses" in the financing field, announced Sunday it has summoned a star-studded group of witnesses to testify on methods now used to collect consumer debts. held in Washington June 22-23 The hearings by the commission, authorized by the 1968 "truth in lending law," will be "We believe there are wide spread abuses of creditor remedies which place a particularly harsh burden on unsophisticated or uneducated low income families," said Robert Braucher, commission chairman. "Indications are that these abuses have had severe economic and social consequences on thousands upon thousands of American families." such currently legal and "all too frequent" situations where; - A housewife can be sued if she refuses to make payments on a washing machine that doesn't work. If the store where she bought it has turned the loan over to a finance company and the company sues, she has no defense. - A driver whose car has been repossessed can be sued for the difference between what the car brought at public auction and the full amount of his auto loan. According to the commission staff, of particular interest are - Families who believe their debts have been wiped out by court bankruptcy action can later be sued by finance companies charging fraud in their loan application. - Debtors can be ordered by a court to pay the full amount sought by a lender without a hearing—either because they signed a contract with a fine print clause agreeing to the action or because a process server deliberately threw away the summons for them to appear in court. Racial issue proves big Wallace theme BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) — "What kind of a deal would a man make for 250,000 votes?" The backers of George C. Wallace supplied both the question and the answer, contending that, if elected, Governor Albert P. Brewer, Wallace's opponent, would name 175 blacks to the state highway patrol. Brewer took over the governor's chair two years ago when Laur-leen Wallace, who was elected as a stand in for her husband, died of cancer. Wallace soundly whipped Brewer last Tuesday in a runoff primary in which Brewer was attempting to win a four-year term of his own. Although Brewer hammered away on a variety of issues, including schools, law and order, and taxes. Wallace hit upon the one that jarred the voters into action. He warned repeatedly of the "black bloc vote" and said if he suffered defeat, blacks would take over the reins of state government and hold them for "the next 50 years." "Don't you let them niggers beat us," he remarked to a friend at the Barbour County 'court-house, where he cast his ballot election day. Brewer, who called the campaign the "dirtiest" he'd seen in his political career lamented that race was "the one issue we couldn't win against." Wallace, long accustomed to having Alabama voters rubber stamp his every campaign bid, found himself in trouble following the first primary May 5. Brewer, while failing to get a majority, had outpolled him by 11,000 votes and Wallace faced an uphill fight. On the night of the first primary, as he sat in front of his color television set and watched Brewer take the lead, he began to talk more and more about something he'd mentioned, but had not emphasized, in the first campaign—the "black bloc vote." By the time he made his speech to campaign workers that night, Wallace had apparently decided on the issue, which he rode right down to the wire. In the speeches that followed, Wallace repeated over and over that Brewer received "250,000 black votes" and asked what kind of a deal would a man make for 250,000 votes?" Wallace forces answered their own question in newspaper advertisements. Wallace produced returns from black precincts in the first primary which indicated Brewer carried them by tremendous margins. "Why there's more opposition in Soviet Russia," Wallace cracked. Seeking to again take the initiative, Brewer was forced to play down his "performance, not promises" pledge and make some promises. He said he would reduce the cost of automobile tags and abolish the sales tax on drugs and medicine—which he called a "tax on misery." Despite this, and the pointea references to tax hikes during the Wallace administration, Wallace set the tempo of the runoff campaign. Brewer could not stem the Wallace tide. When it was over Wallace wished Brewer "luck" and said his election had assured Alabama a continued "place in the sun." Social welfare school offers summer study Eight summer institutes for social workers will be offered by the University of Kansas School of Social Welfare at four sites in late June and early July. Programs on supervising youth on probation will be offered at the Broadview Hotel in Wichita June 23-24 and at Fort Hays Kansas State College, Hays, June 30-July 1. Lecturers will be Profs. Ray R. Price and Forrest L. Swall, who also is assistant dean of the School of Social Welfare. Social work and family planning will be discussed by Mrs. Mildred Webb Sigler of the KU faculty and guest lecturers July 7-8 at the Broadway in Wichita and June 30-July 1 at the Holiday Inn, Kansas City, Kan. Consultation as a mental health service is scheduled for June 23-24 at the Broadview in Wichita. Profs. John C. Baird and Larry L. Brown will instruct. Six morning periods will be led by Prof. Goodwin Garfield on "Social Work with Groups" at the University of Kansas Union. Dates will be June 23-25 and June 30-July 2. Smith, Stitt to head staff of '71 Jayhawker Prof. Louis L. Frydman will offer sessions on changing perceptions of mental disturbances July 7-8 at the Broadview in Wichita and at the Ramada Inn in Lawrence July 14-15. Scott E. Smith of Indianola, Ia., and Ronald W. Stitt of Shawnee Mission will be the editor and business manager respectively of the 1970-71 Jayhawker, the magazine-yearbook of the University of Kansas. The two were chosen by the Jayhawker Advisory Board, a student-faculty body. The Jayhawker is published in magazine form four times during June 9 1970 KANSAN 11 the year. When assembled in a post-binder cover, it serves as a yearbook. Smith, Indianola, Ia., is the business manager for the 1969-70 Jayhawker. He was a junior in the School of Business but is changing career objectives and will enroll this fall in the School of Education. Stitt, Shawnee Mission, has been personnel manager for the business operations of the Jayhawker. He will be a senior majoring in chemistry and premedicine. June 8-13-Darlene Austin June 15-20-General Assembl June 22-27-Saints'n Sinners June 29-July 4-The Pride Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center Live Music Every Night (except Sunday) — All Summer — THE MUSIC STAR OF TWO YEARS Welcome Summer Students & Campers BITE A BIT OF BRITAIN! Eating Alfie's Fish & Chips is like a visit with the Bard. Or watching the changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace. The Fish are tender, flaky filets, fried crackling crisp in fresh hot oil. The Chips are golden bits of fried potato. And, of course, there's the zesty, tangy flavoring of Alfie's exclusive imported malt vinegar. Alfie's AUTHENTIC ENGLISH FISH & CHIPS 6th & Maine Pope John Paul II with the Archbishop of Tallinn and Cardinal Giuseppe Albanese. KU professor greets Pope Sesto Prete, left, professor of classics, traveled to his native Italy in April to be present at the audience of Dr. Michael DeBakey (right) famous Houston heart specialist, with Pope Paul VI. Shown with them and the Pope is the Chancellor of the University of Milan, who arranged the audience. Prete is host in visit to Pope A University of Kansas faculty member played host last month to Dr. Michael DeBakey, of Houston medical fame, when he was presented to His Holiness, Pope Paul VI. Dr. Sesto Prete, visiting professor of classics at KU, traveled to his native Italy in April to introduce Dr. DeBakey to medical students at the University of Milan and accompany the internation- the only private medical school in western Europe. It was to this group that DeBakey, who is famous for his work in heart transplants, spoke. ally famous heart specialist to his audience with Pope Paul. Arrangements for DeBakey's trip had been made by Dr. Prete, who is dean of the summer session for American students at the Catholic University in Rome. He is also connected with the medical school at the University of Milan, years. Several manuscripts belonging to the Vatican have been described by Dr. Prete after 20 years of work and were published by the Vatican last year. tempt to receive accreditation from a chaotic German government. He eventually traveled to the United States on a Fulbright Scholarship at which time he lectured at Berkeley and Columbia. Browne quits post at KANU to head KXTR, Kansas City R. Edwin Browne, director on radio stations KANU-FM and KFKU at the University of Kansas since 1951, has resigned effective July 1, to become president and general manager of radio station XKTR, Kansas City. Browne has been managing the Kansas City station the past year while on sabbatical leave from KU. Browne is also an assistant professor in KU's William Allen White School of Journalism. KANU, under Browne's direction, became America's first educational stereo station. He also directed the establishment of the KU Sports Network whose first full-time director, Merle Harmon, has become a national figure in sports broadcasting. Browne has been secretary of the board of the National Association of Educational Broadcasters and president of the Kansas Audio Visual Communications Organization. He was president of the Kansas School of Religion during the campaign for construction of Smith Hall. Archeologists to work at Kansas reservoirs Professor Johnson said the sites range from Indian campuses and meeting places to hunting University of Kansas archeological teams will spend the summer working on archeological salvage projects at three Kansas reservoirs under National Park Service contracts totaling $24,000. Alfred E. Johnson, associate professor of anthropology and curator of anthropology at the KU Museum of Natural History, said an $8,000 contract calls for a "shoreline survey" of Tuttle Creek Reservoir near Manhattan. Under the direction of Charles and Eileen Johnson, Lawrence, the team will attempt to salvage archeological sites which are being destroyed by wave action along the shore. grounds. A second contract for $6,000 will finance work at the construction site of the El Dorado Reservoir. A team headed by Roger Grosser, Brookfield, Ill., and Dennis Yaple, Lawrence, will continue to recover material from sites which will be covered by water when the dam is completed. This is the fourth summer for work at El Dorado. James Marshall, Topeka, and Richard Carrillo, La Junta, Colo., will direct similar work at the construction site for the Hillsdale Reservoir between Olathe and Paola. A $10,000 contract funds the second summer's work there. All are graduate students except Carrillo and Yaple, who have finished their junior year at KU. Start the summer RIGHT Here's How: Competition Sports Cars, Inc. TRIUMPH TOYOTA SAH accessories Sales & Service Competition Preparation 1209 East 23rd Street, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Why hassle transportation problems through three more months, when you can be driving a Reliable Used Car now. We've got a wide selection of imported sports & economy cars in all price ranges. Don't forget our new Toyota & Triumphs. Financing is available, so you can enjoy your car immediately. Come out to Competition Sports Cars right now & let us help you solve your transportation problems. 1/4 Mile East of Haskell Drive on 23rd St. detour 842-2191 HELLO! Welcome to KU, Lawrence and THE HOLE IN THE WALL DELICATESSEN AND SANDWICH SHOP VISIT US WHILE YOU ARE IN LAWRENCE AND TRY OUR: • HOME COOKED FOOD • • SANDWICHES • (INCLUDING OUR FAMOUS "HERO") • PIES AND COOKIES • 9th and ILLINOIS [2 BLOCKS NORTH OF STADIUM] TELEPHONE 843-7685 -Delivery Service- Start the summer RIGHT Here's How: Competition Sports Cars, Inc. TRIUMPH TOYOTA SAH Accessories Sales & Service Competition Preparation 1209 East 23rd Street, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Why hassle transportation problems through three more months, when you can be driving a Reliable Used Car now. We've got a wide selection of imported sports & economy cars in all price ranges. Don't forget our new Toyota & Triumphs. Financing is available, so you can enjoy your car immediately. Come out to Competition Sports Cars right now & let us help you solve your transportation problems. 1/4 Mile East of Haskell Drive on 23rd St. detour 842-2191 HELLO! Welcome to KU, Lawrence and THE HOLF IN THE WALL DELICATESSEN AND SANDWICH SHOP VISIT US WHILE YOU ARE IN LAWRENCE AND TRY OUR: • HOME COOKED FOOD • • SANDWICHES • (INCLUDING OUR FAMOUS "HERO") • PIES AND COOKIES • 9th and ILLINOIS [2 BLOCKS NORTH OF STADIUM] TELEPHONE 843-7685 -Delivery Service- Graduate named top young woman in state A University of Kansas graduate, who virtually returned from the brink of death as a child to lead a normal, useful life as a future physician, was recently named Outstanding Young Woman of Kansas. The story of Susan Kasper Harris, who has just completed her second year at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, is a modern medical success story. Susan, born with a congenital heart defect, underwent open heart surgery in 1957. At the time of her surgery, such an operation was an innovation, done only in rare cases. During the operation Susan's heart stopped completely and only the manual massage of her doctor kept it beating for an hour. When her heart began to function again, her recovery and the extent of damage were uncertain. KANSAN Women addition to almost normal health, she has been a better than average student at the University of Kansas, first as an undergraduate (she earned her degree in zoology in 1968) and now as a second-year medical student at the KU Medical Center. Today, Susan is alive and seemingly quite well, with only the inability to run as fast as the average person as a reminder of her once precarious health. In She was named Outstanding Young Woman of Kansas this year, one of 50 young women specially honored from the 5,000 named to Outstanding Young Women of America. Nominated by the Ellsworth Chapter of the American Association of University Women, Susan is from Wilson. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Richard Kasper. Her husband is Dennis Harris, also a KU graduate (B'70). The couple lives in Kansas City. While on the Lawrence campus, Susan lived in Miller Scholarship Hall, where she was an officer and representative to the Associated Women Students. In 1966 she went to Germany on the KU summer language institute. She held a National Science Foundation research grant the following school year. At the Medical Center, she is a member of the Student American Medical Association and the student elective committee. June 9 1970 KANSAN 13 Back in 1958 (at age ten), Susan was a Valentine Girl of the American Heart Fund Campaign. In this capacity she traveled to Washington and participated in the kick-off ceremony for the campaign, meeting Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower and Dr. Paul Dudley White. In some ways, Susan may have been luckier than a normal child. Being subject to such serious illness at a young age no doubt helped her plan her career. As a patient at National Jewish Hospital in Denver, she began thinking about becoming a doctor. "It is extremely hard for me to put a finger on what caused Since graduation is still two years away, Susan has no definite plans concerning what area of medicine she will pursue. the decision," says Susan. "I didn't just wake up one day and decide—I can't really give a specific reason. Of course, my being in the hospital contributed to it. It was my first encounter with medicine and the medical profession. In one way, I have a tremendous responsibility since if innumerable people hadn't done so much for me when I was in the hospital, I wouldn't be here today." THE WORLD OF BIOLOGY Outstanding Kansas woman Susan Kasper Harris, Outstanding Young Woman of Kansas for 1970, and Randy Johnson, second year medical student from Hutchinson, examine a diseased organ in a pathology laboratory at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. Susan, chronically ill as a child, has finished her sophomore year in medicine. The Bull & Boar SANDWICH SHOP Reubens 96c B-B-Q Ham 78c Roast Beef 78c Corned Beef 83c B-B-Q Beef 76c Grilled Swiss 48c All Sandwiches Include Chips & Relish ★ Coors on Tap ★ OPEN: 10 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. LOCATED: 11 West 9th St. VI 2-3335 LOCATED BEHIND WEAVERS DEPT. STORE THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? BERNARDO "Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large, in supple leather. Navy, Brown White, Red $14.00 Bunny Black's Royal College Shop BERNARDO "Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large, in supple leather. Navy, Brown White, Red $14.00 Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Sandal Up! with Roblee's two... Other Men’s Sandals From $5.95 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. m'cow shoes 813 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-2091 $8.95 Four KU professors win $1,000 awards Four University of Kansas professors will receive awards of $1,000 each for effectiveness of teaching, Dean Francis H. Heller, acting provost, announced at a luncheon for graduating seniors and their parents. Dr. James L. Koevenig, associate professor of biology and botany will receive the $1,000 H. Bernard Fink award for outstanding classroom teaching. Mr. Fink, a Topeka businessman and K.U. alumnus, funds the prize. Clifford S. Griffin, professor of history; Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and chairman of Foundation Faculty Fellow in 1967-68. the East Asian Studies Center and Alfonso Verdu, associate professor of philosophy, will receive $1,000 awards provided by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) Foundation. Griffin, a K.U. faculty member since 1959, received the B.A., degree from Brown University and both M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Wisconsin. He was an instructor at Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, Ill. He is the author of a book "Their Brothers' Keepers, 1800-1865" and many articles in professional journals. Orientation begins for foreign students About 50 foreign students will attend a six-week session on American society and life in U.S. colleges as the 20th Orientation Center for Foreign Students opens here July 18. The KU Orientation Center (KUOC), which is the oldest continuously operating program of its kind in the United States, offers foreign students an introduction to the American cultural system as well as preparation for academic and administrative procedures in U.S. colleges and practice in English. The program, directed by the founder Dr. J. A. "Tony" Burzle, professor of German and associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will operate under a $36,995 grant from the U.S. State Department. Other members of the KUOC staff include Dr. Gerhard Zuther, professor of English, and Dr. Stanley Eitzen, assistant professor of sociology, both of KU); Dr. Larry Rosen and Professor Robert Kahle, both of Baker University, and Dr. Ted Garten, Central Missouri State College. Lee Miller and Ron Horwege, former KU graduate students, will serve as head counselors and staff members. Completing the staff are Kansas graduate students Jim Anderson, Santa Cruz, Calif.; Gayle Emmel, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Mary Holloran, Silver Lake, Kan.; and Hester Williams, Rochester, Minn. American honors students in the International Honors Program in 1967-68. He also directed a Themis Project study of communities undergoing rapid cultural change. Last year, he was a U.S. representative to a conference on tradition and change in Korea. Houston doctor named top medical alumnus Dr. Lamb, a native of Fredonia, graduated from the University of Kansas in 1945, received his medical degree from its School of Medicine in 1949, and interned at the KU Medical Center and continued there in a medical residency until 1951. He returned as a fellow in cardiology in 1954. Moos joined the faculty in 1961. An A.B. graduate of the University of Cincinnati, he holds M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Washington. A cultural anthropologist specializing in the Far East, Moos has published several articles and monographs in English, Japanese and German. He was one of three professors appointed to accompany and direct 20 top North Besides his full-time Baylor professorship, Dr. Lamb is clinical professor of environmental medical research at the University of Texas School of Public Health in Houston, and is on the advisory committee on computer sciences in the Baylor University College of Medicine. Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb, professor of medicine in the Baylor University College of Medicine, Houston, Tex., has been named the Distinguished Medical Alumnus for 1970 by the University of Kansas Medical Association. Dr. Lamb was cited at the annual Medical Alumni banquet May 29 at the Plaza Inn. Presiding was Dr. Charles B. Wheeler Jr., Kansas City, Mo., president of the organization. 14 KANSAN June 9 1970 Verdu, whose special interest is in Oriental philosophy, received his B.A. from the University of Valencia, Spain. He also holds Licentiate of Philosophy and Licentiate of Theology degrees from the Universities of Barcelona, Spain, and Frankfort on Mainz, Germany, respectively. Verdu became a lecturer at Sophia University in Tokyo after receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Munich, Germany. After holding a lecturer's position at K.U. for two years, he became an associate professor in 1968. Dr. Lamb's major interest is in preventive cardiology and his book, "Your Heart and How to Live With It," is being distributed by the Book of the Month Club, and is being published in England, France, Germany and Iceland. Dr. Lamb was a research fellow of the American Heart Association in 1954 and received the Arnold D. Tuttle Award of the Aerospace Medical Association. In 1962 the Department of Defense presented him the Distinguished Civilian Service Medal, and in 1966 he received the Air Force Meritorious Civilian Service Award. Dr. Lamb also gave the annual Peter T. Bohan Lecture on May 29. The Bohan Lecture memorializes the late Kansas City internist, Dr. Peter T. Bohan, who died in 1955. Dr. Lamb's subject was "The Doctors Health." Koevenig, who joined the faculty in 1964, holds B.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Iowa and an M.A. from Northern Iowa University. Before coming to Kansas, he was resident consultant to the American Institute of Biological Sciences Curriculum Studies program at the University of Colorado. A member of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi, Koevenig has also served as U.S. representative in biology at the American Science Film Forum in India in 1965. He was one of four U.S. representatives on the UNESCO Single Concept Film Commission in 1963 and a National Science For The Unique .. TEHRAN GALLERY Imported Jewelry from Iran ... Authentic Rugs, Brass and Ceramics 7th G. Mass. Sandals are the goin' thing for Spring. Wrapped 'round with hardware, bold on design or circled in perf's, sandals are where it's at, sports fans ZOIAC ALITA Style no. 22 Style no. 23 Style no. 16 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 81 get ROTC commissions Eighty-one graduating men at the University of Kansas received commissions in a joint ceremony of the Army, Naval and Air Force ROTC Tuesday, June 2, in Murphy Hall. Regular commissions in the Army were given to two men, and 25 men were commissioned in the Army Reserve. The Navy gave direct regular commissions to 25 men, and two men received regular commissions in the Marine Corps. Eight men were commissioned in the Naval Reserve, and one man in the Marine Corps Reserve. Eighteen were commissioned in the Air Force Reserve. Those receiving commissions Second Lieutenants in the Regular Army Second Lieutenant in the Regular Army David Francis Sindelar, Howells, Neb.; Terrence Lee Toler, Baldwin. Second Lieutenants in the Army Reserve Stephen Thorton Adams, Leawood; William Bevan III, Baltimore, Md.; James Blaylock, Wichita; Thorium E. Earnam, Leaward; Robert Lee Chase, Galena Paul E. Davis, West Des Moines, Ia.; Wayne Martin Erck, St. Louis, Mo; Charles Edward Falk, Keansburg, N.J.; George E. Fisher, Paola Bruce Talbot Groff, Topeka; Douglas R. Hale, Boulder, Colo.; David S. Jeans, independence, Mo.; Warren L. Independence, Cushman New华all Miller, Winhill Edward Stephens Murdock, Shawna Kaplan, Samantha Osaka, Okla; John Sheenha O'Connor, Leavenworth; William H. Penney, William Worth Radcliffe III Sterling. Michael Peter Sarras, Kansas City; Richard B. Simmons, Wichita; Richard S. Stegelman, Winfield; Walter Rees Stromquist, Charleston, Ill.; Thomas D. Washburn, Leavenworth; Christine Tucker, Denver, Colo. Options in the Results Ensigns in the Regular Navy Ronald Eugene Adams, Cheshire, Conn. Richard Douglas Barrows, Lawrence and Richard Barrow, Atwood; Robert Michael Blekel, Tulsa, Okla.; John Stanley Cameron III, Paso Robalz, Calif. Ronald G. Carpenter, Weiser, Idaho; Ronald E. Green, Washington; Ralph Ernest Chatham, Chagrin Falls; Ohio; Michael D. Conklin, Wichita; Charles Connolly, Royal Palm Beach, Florida. Kenneth H. Delano, Prairie, City, North Carolina; Roberto rado; Franklin Thomas Dunn, Virginia Beach, Va.; Robert A. Erwin, Law- ty, North Carolina; W. Gehbart, Grand Randis, Mish. Kenneth Wayne Guest, Coffeeville; James David Keen, Mission; Robert Thomas Kim, Northridge, Calif. Philip Duke, McFalls, Philip Dupe Patterson, Tonka Crichton Carver Roberts, Oberlin; James Ahley Sexton, Topeka; Dan Amato, Shawnee Mission; Sprague, Shawnee Mission; Anthony Michael Turberville, Waianaa, Hawaii. Second Lieutenants in the Roland V. Funk, Germantown, N.Y. Richard D. Metcalf, Tallahassee, Fla. Brian M. Husband Scott R. Barnes, Merriam; Stephen Edwin Conroy, Sinsbury, Conn.: Richard E. Holderman, Lawrence; William Wayne Knox, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Steven Jay Krug, Overland Park. Dr. Mathias P. Mertes, professor of medicinal chemistry, received a $14,991 grant from the National Cancer Institute to continue research which could aid in the treatment of cancer. Richard C. H. Pasley, Ames, Ia; Anthony Stephen Robson, Alexandria, Va; John Alexander Russck, Mullica Hill N.J. Mertes grant will aid in cancer study The project, now in its tenth year, is concerned with the "design and synthesis of new chemicals that potentially could be useful in the treatment of cancer," Mertes said. June 9 1970 KANSAN 15 Marine Corps Reserve John Randall Page, Shawnee Mission. Second Lieutenants in the Air Force Reserve Second Lieutenants in the Bredhoeff, Overland Park; William Whitsa; Wheats; Kenneth C. Dickson, Topeka - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" Ralph Deniston Johnson, Tinker AFB, Okla.; Steven C. McConnell, Cleveland; C. Carlson; Atwood; Roby Donald Opens Great Bets! David Mickey *Rhindus*, Kansas City. Harold B. Domeney, Downs; Joseph Michael Doyle, Kansas City; Alan Michael Doyle, Hamburg; Wichita; Larry Ray Hixson, Boise; Harvey Hutchison, Holton HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Owner 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Arthur Eugene Aenbachacher Jr. Alison Ann R. Becker Barksdale AFB, LA Steven John Caldwell AFB, LA 图示:摄影师在拍摄场景中摆拍。 Gabriele Bradal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. Gabriel Paredes Robert P. Ryan, Overland Park; Gary Lund Turner, Independence, Mo.; Michael Lewis Weber, Hutchinson. 乐器演奏 DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS 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 Where The Sound Of Quality Is Heard AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY 928 Massachusetts G G & R Body Shop . Lowest Prices - 3,000 Colors - Student Discounts 1248 East 13th 843-3735 KANSAN CLASSIFIED Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the course will be served agreed to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and India prints from the Hodge Podge at 15 W. 9th. 10:00-5:30 NOTICE TYPING The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $5.25 at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 7-31 Experienced typist with electric typewriter, desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-597-3991 Themes, theses, dissertations type and/or edited by experienced typist w/ KU B.S. (English-Speech Education) Office-size electric Phone 7-842-2873. Baby-sitter in exchange for room and lunch. 9 am to 12 pm, to campus. 843-0139 after 4 p.m. 6-23 mo. WANTED The lost art of fine handcrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Podge. Find your new belt, vest, sam-sam watchband at 15 W. 9th; 7-11 5.30. Sirtoin Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choice steaks, Finest sea foods Open 4:30 154 MI, N. of Kaw Closed River Bridge Monday VI 3-1431 LOST AND FOUND Male student to share my furnished apartment, two blocks from campus. Must be to be appreciated. $40 hourly. Small labs included. 842-3436 fore 10:00 a.m. Bare feet to be fitted for bencheftarded sandals. Over 25 styles from $14.75, 3 day service. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 842-0682. 7-31 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 PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Tony's 66 Service Be Prepared! tune-ups 2434 Iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Visit Vis Bik In Lav Priced from $12 Visit Bikiniville In Lawrence FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● B35 MASS. ● VI3-4833 Brilliant strategy for sun-bronzed bodies, our fluid newsmakers ka-powed with color and draped shapely. All bodysoft. Bodylean. Marvelously free. Just the supple fascinations to turn your friends green with envy. Sizes 5 to 13 "B" to "D" Cups Jay SHOPPE New York Cleaners For the best in: ● Dry Cleaning ● Alterations ● Reweaving 926 Mass. V1 3-0501 THE HOLE in the WALL DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th &'ll. "If The Shoe Fits .. Wear It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Graduation- (Continued from page 1) suspicion that that gatemouthed Maryland farmer who presides over the Senate has more on his mind than his apparent incompetent jaw flopping would suggest." H. I. Romnes, president and chairman of the board of American Telephone and Telegraph Co., addressed graduates of St. Louis University. "I would ask you to grant that it might just be possible that a businessman, whether his views match yours or not, might be quite as concerned, quite as anguished, over the events of the last few weeks as any of you," he said. About 100 longshoremen from Cleveland and Toledo, Ohio, wearing hardhats with stickers reading, "I Love America" came by bus to Kenyon College to protest the appearance of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, a longtime critic of American involvement in Indochina, was at the Gambier, Ohio School to receive an honorary degree. Graduating seniors at Virginia Tech took out a quarter page advertisement in the Richmond Times Dispatch to express their thanks for having the privilege of attending the university. "... During this period of national turmoil, much public attention has been focused on this nation's institutions of higher learning," the ad said. "A small minority of students have managed to present a very unrealistic picture of the American college student. The majority has continued within the framework of society to attain a goal of higher education... Thank you for giving us an opportunity." Public outcry slows search for pesticide BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)—The outcry over lingering pesticides is hampering the search for an acceptable alternative to DDT, U.S. Forest Service researchers complain. Researchers have lab tested a dozen new "ecologically sane" compounds for controlling forest insects. But public "fear and overreaction" is so intense they can't get them into the field, they say. Even if they could be field tested, a chemical industry spokesman said, the Agriculture Department has imposed a moratorium on new compounds. Until these new highly selective compounds can be tested in the field, the Forest Service will have to continue to use the old methods—including limited amounts of DDT—on the nation's forests. One chemical which researchers say has been thoroughly lab tested for every imaginable effect under every condition is called Zectran. An expensive compound, it probably will never be produced commercially without government subsidy. Researchers developed Zectran for use against one particularly destructive pest the spruce budworm, but they believe it might be useful against others. "There's so much public fear and overreaction to the use of new compounds that they don't even want you to do the testing," said Carl Crisp, a plant physiologist for the Forest service. "If there are going to be alternatives to DDT, some where along the line the experimental work has to be done and it has to be done in the environment." Crisp said small scale field experiments were necessary with researchers publicizing what they were doing and immediately dropping any project the public didn't approve of. "It's ridiculous to give us money for research and not let us take the next step," Crisp said. "It's like building a rocket for the moon and not firing it." Raymond Miskus, a chemist on the team of Forest Service researchers, said an extensive project was launched in 1964 for the specific purpose of eliminating DDT in forests. "We've investigated a whole variety of methods of control that aren't just chemically oriented—that aren't just a simple evaluation of an insecticide on an insect." Miskus said. "We're concerned with better means of application, better timing and the total effect on wildlife, fish, other insects and the region's ecology." Miskus said more data has gone into the study of Zectran, for example, than any other compound in forestry research history. Dow Chemical Co, was supposed to produce Zectran A company spokesman said it still could be done if Forest Service requirements were large enough to make it economically feasible, but even then the Agriculture Department would have to clear it first. Far in the future are "third generation pesticides"-biological controls, hormones and sterilization. The investigations carried out with these will be similar to those with chemicals but more expensive and time consuming, researchers said. Moore wins contract to study ocean wind Dr. Richard K. Moore, the Black and Veatch distinguished professor of electrical engineering and director of the Remote Sensing Laboratory at the University of Kansas, has received a $77,984 contract from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for development of a radiometer — scatterometer (RADSCAT) device to be used for monitoring winds over oceans. Moore said the contract is part of the intermediate stage of development of "applications satellites," that is, satellites used for technology or for observation of the earth. Weather and communications satellites are in the "applications" category. Moore will present a paper on his program at the June 23 meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in Paris. RADSCAT 16 KANSAN June 9 1970 Winds and wave conditions on the ocean's surfaces are presently determined from isolated reports from ships. While a fairly good monitoring system is maintained for the North Atlantic and part of the North Pacific, few consistent reports are available from other areas. devices, if successful, would be used in weather and wave forecasting. Dr. A. K. Fung, associate professor of electrical engineering and research associate at the Center for Research in the Engineering Sciences (CRES), and Fawwaz T. Ulaby, associate director of the Remote Sensing Laboratory and research investigator for CRES, will assist Moore with the project. They will combine their efforts with Prof. Williard Pierson of New York University, an oceanographer studying wave forecasts, and Prof. W. H. Peake, Ohio State, who has developed the theory behind RADSCAT. Eight thousand dollars FOR A COLLEGE EDUCATION and you do not even know how to . . . READ Free Speed Reading Lesson Raise your Reading rate 50-100% Free 7:00 p.m. Tuesday . . . June 9 Friday . . . June 12 Holiday Inn — Jayhawk Room M TELEPHONE 843-6424 843-6426 NAMESIA C Staters elect governors Cindy Avery, a 16-year-old Norton girl, sheds a few happy tears as she is informed she has been elected governor of the 33rd annual Sunflower Girls' State Newly elected Boys State governor Richard Felton, 17, from Junction City, raises his hand in victory. Both Felton and Miss Avery were Federalist candidates for the office of governor. They will preside over meetings of Girls' and Boys State and will be honored at the annual governor's Ball Friday evening. (See story, page nine) THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 80th Year, No. 2 Friday, June 12, 1970 Old Glory celebrates birthday By United Press International Sunday is Flag Day—the anniversary of the day the Stars and Stripes became the official flag of the United States. On June 14, 1777—nearly a year after the Declaration of Independence — the Continental Congress resolved that "the flag of the United States shall be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white, with a union of thirteen stars of white on a blue field representing a new constellation." The 13 stars were for the 13 original states. Of the 50 stars the flag now contains, the last was added officially on July 4 1960, by executive order of President Dwight D. Eisenhower dated Aug. 21, 1959, the day Hawaii became the 50th state of the union. In popular lore, the first American flag was sewn by Elizabeth 'Betsy' Ross at her upholstery shop on Arch Street in Philadelphia. According to the story, George Washington, Robert Morris and George Ross, acting as a committee of Congress, went to the shop carrying a rough drawing of the proposed flag and asked if she could make one. When the finished banner was taken before Congress it was officially adopted. Almost 150 years passed before any formal action was taken relating to civilian display and handling of the flag. Then in 1923 the National Americanism Committee of the American Legion held a conference in Washington, D.C., at which a group of patriotic organizations formulated a "flag code" that, while it lacked federal authority, was generally accepted. Not until World War II was a federal flag code accepted. On June 22, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a joint congressional resolution codify- Second cabinet shuffle gives Shultz high card WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon announced his second cabinet shuffle in five days Wednesday, switching Labor Secretary George P. Shultz to head up a new executive management and budget agency. The President announced Saturday he was shifting Welfare Secretary Robert H. Finch to the White House where he will serve as a top assistant to Nixon. ing rules for flag display. This is known as Public Law 623. As director of the Office of Executive Management and Budget, Shultz will take over what could become the second most powerful post in the federal government. Nixon named Labor Uudersecretary James D. Hodgson to succeed Shultz in the cabinet post Robert P. Mayo, who has headed the Budget Bureau since Nixon took office, was named a White House counselor to the President. to newsmen in the White House Rose Garden, Nixon said Caspar W. Weinberger, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, would become Shultz' chief deputy with primary responsibility for the budget. In his announcement of the Shultz change-made personally The old Budget Bureau will be expanded into the new management and budget office when a reorganization plan proposed by Nixon earlier this year takes effect. Nixon called Shultz "a distinguished economist" and "one of the best administrators in the government." Under the code, the flag should be flown on virtually all holidays, weather permitting, half staff until noon on Memorial Day, and on Flag Day. - The flag is never to be flown with the union stars down except as a signal of distress. - the American flag is to be to the right. - The flag may never be used as a drapery of any sort or used as a design on cushions, handkerchiefs, etc., or "as any portion of a costume or athletic uniform." Most rules for how the flag should be flown or displayed are - The flag may not be draped over any vehicle. - No other flag may be flown above the Stars and Stripes; If flags are flown on the same level, obvious courtesy. But there are also a long list of rules governing improper display or use of the flag. Among them: Nixon revamps welfare program WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon today resubmitted to Congress a new welfare program revamped to meet the objections of conservatives. He proposed replacing Medicaid with a national health insurance program for the poor. Nixon also recommended tying the food stamp program with welfare under the Department of Health Education and Welfare to overcome complaints in Congress that the original plan would penalize welfare families if they improved their earnings by working. Nixon's original plan, unveiled 10 months ago, cleared the House but was sent back to the administration for major changes by a Senate committee. The initial program featured a family assistance plan which drew criticism chiefly from Republicans in and out of Congress. The chief change proposed by Nixon was for a pre-paid insurance program under which poor families with children would pay some premiums that would buy insurance covering their hospital and doctor bills. They contended the Nixon proposal would put one of every eight Americans on welfare and cost the federal government $10 billion more than it now spends on welfare. The administration estimated the cost at $4.4 billion. Under Medicald, such bills are submitted item by item to the government, a procedure which critics claim gives doctors and hospitals no incentive for holding down their bills. Medicaid is a federal state program for paying medical expenses of the poor with the recipients making no contribution. "Medicaid is plagued by serious faults." Nixon said in a statement. "Costs are mounting beyond reason. Services vary considerably from state to state. Benefits are only remotely related to family resources." Summer students' fees must be paid June 27 Registrar William L. Kelly sait today that fee statements have been mailed to all summer session students. The fee payments are due by Wednesday, June 17 and must be paid in full at the Business Office in the basement of Carruth-O'Leary Hall to complete registration. Kelly said that the fee statements now in the mail will be the only statements sent to summer session students. If a student has not received a statement he should come to the Office of the Registrar, 122 Strong Hall. Kelly added that many statements are returned to his office because of incorrect addresses and that in these cases it is up to the student to contact his office to complete registration. If fee payments reach the Business Office in Carruth-0'Leary Hall after June 17, but before June 26, the enrollment will be considered complete but the student will be charged a $10 late payment fee. Enrollment will be cancelled for students who have not paid their fees or their late payment charge by June 26. Enrollments thus cancelled may be reinstated only upon payment of all fees and charges. "These rules and regulations seem harsh." Kelly said, "but collection of fees helps to keep the doors of the University open for business. These rules also make a lot of students think that the Registrar's office contains a bunch of old fogies—but we're not. We're always glad to talk with students concerning any problems they might have. Drop in and try us." Anatomy, zoology prof to retire Dr. Paul Gibbons Roofe, professor of anatomy and zoology at the University of Kansas, will be among those faculty retiring this month. Dr. Rooef, born 1899, received the B.S. degree from Kansas State University in 1924. He earned the bachelor of divinity degree in 1929 from the Meadville Theological School, and the Ph.D. in 1934 from the University of Chicago. Before joining the KU faculty in 1945, he taught at the University of Louisville. He was named a professor of anatomy in 1945, and was chairman of the department until it was moved to the School of Medicine in Kansas City. Shortage of financial aid likely for 70-71 school year The cost of attending the University of Kansas is increasing, but financial aid to students who apply for it is not keeping pace. in the United States presenting papers on his work and lecturing. Typical of this national prominence was his travel during one period in 1955 when he spent time as a leader at a conference sponsored by the Association of American Medical Colleges and the American Medical Association, represented KU at the meeting of Armed Forces Medical Libraries, visited the Carnegie Institute of Embryology to prepare a human embryo for study, and was guest at the dean's meet- Proportionately fewer students will be receiving financial help next year, and those who are granted funds will be getting less, said Robert Billings, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid. Although federal allocations for National Defense Student Loans have dropped from $438,000 to $425,000 for the 1970-71 academic year, the University will have available about $750,000 for NDSL purposes, compared to about $700,000 last year. The difference will be made up by collections on outstanding student loans. Well-known for his research activities, Dr. Roofe received numerous grants from the National Science Foundation and from the U.S. Health Department for his work, especially his early work with the polio virus. At one time the KU anatomy department was the most productive in the nation in graduate degrees. quently, proportionately fewer applicants will receive aid, and the average grant will be less. But the increasing cost of attending the University, plus an expected increase in enrollment, will result in a larger number of applications for aid. Conse- Billings said he expected about 3,000 applications for aid from the money available, compared with 1,500 applications in the 1964-65 academic year. That year KU had $938,000 available for financial aid. ing of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The Office of Student Financial Aid set the estimate average expense for students attending KU next year at $1,950 for Kansas residents and $2,500 for non-Kansans. This estimate reflects an increase of $120 for in-state fees and $250 for out-of-state fees. The author of two books and more than 60 articles on anatomy, zoology and related sciences, he is a member of the American Academy of Neurology, Association of Anatomists, and served on its executive committee, the Association for the Advancement of Science, American Society of Zoologists, and Sigma Xi. Students will be selected for aid on a basis of greatest need and the best academic records. June 12 1970 2 KANSAN Book costs are expected to rise about $15. Room and board, estimated from the cost of a University residence hall, is $900, and $450 is allotted for miscellaneous expenditures. He has traveled extensively The state flower of Texas is the bluebonnet. Married to the former Heilen Waddle, he and his wife have one daughter. June 8-13-Darlene Austin June 15-20-General Assembly June 22-27—Saints'n Sinners June 29-July 4-The Pride Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center Live Music Every Night (except Sunday) - All Summer - Free TGIF with ID's Iris Heywood Become a Dynamic Reader A STEPHEN CHURCHILL "Through increased reading speed and comprehension, my studies are extremely well organized and I know it will be very beneficial to me in my future vocation." THE REGULAR COURSE Over 1,000 K.U. Students and Faculty Have Enrolled In Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics. This Course Will Teach You How To Read Faster and To Improve Your Comprehension and Recall. You Will Learn Exciting and Effective Study Techniques and Approaches To Novels, Newspapers, and Journal Articles. This is a Seven Week Course. It Meets Once A Week For Two and One Half Hours. Two To Five Pages A Minute Is Going To Make College Worthwhile. M SPECIAL READING DYNAMICS WESTERN CIVILIZATION COURSE This Is A Unique Opportunity To Learn To Read Dynamically On The Western Civilization Readings. You Will Learn Study Methods On Material That Is Required For Your Graduation. You Will Develop A Range of Reading Speeds Depending On The Authors Read. You Will Find That Some of The Men You Will Read Really Are Worth The Effort. This Course Has An Additional Guarantee: If You Do Not Pass The Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination, We Refund the Cost of the Course. "This course has been useful for me by helping me get to material I otherwise might have had to miss. It also helped me get a general view in my studying - it was so much less depressing to know I could get through my studies without using all my time for only that!" DOREEN ANDES ] STEVE BRAY "I feel this course greatly benefits one's ability to take in large numbers of reading materials, and in so doing, expands one's education." FRESHMAN ENGLISH COURSE The Reading Dynamics Institute Will Offer A Special Class For Entering Freshmen. This Basic Course Will Concentrate On Improving The Student's Reading and Study Skills In A Crucial Freshman Course. Books From English I, The Most Difficult Required Freshman Course Will Be Covered In This Special Reading Dynamics Section. This Course, As Well As The Regular Section, Would Be A Good One For High School Juniors and Seniors. CALL FOR INFORMATION TODAY: 843-6424 or 843-6426 Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics "The Basic Course" for KU Freshmen Pass - no credit option available for summer Summer session students who elect to take the Credit No Credit option may pick up option cards at the office of the Registrar, 122 Strong Hall, or in the various school offices on Monday. June 15. The option cards must be completed and returned to school offices or to the Registrar's office by 5 p.m. Friday, June 19. Students will be required to present their KU-ID cards when the option cards are checked. Any regularly enrolled undergraduate summer session student—except those in the schools of Education and Business—may select one course under the Credit/ No Credit option. A student may not enroll in a course in his de- declared major on this option. Students will receive the mark of Credit for grades of A, B and C. Students will receive the mark of No Credit for grades of D and F. Once a student has optioned The instructor will not be informed of the student's option and will assign the usual letter grades. The office of the Registrar will convert the letter grade into a Credit or No Credit mark and record it. for a Credit/No Credit mark in a course, it can not be changed to a letter grade. Courses marked Credit or No Credit do not count in the computation of the grade point average. Courses marked Credit count in the total hours earned for graduation; courses marked No Credit do not count as hours earned. If, after the "cancel period," a student drops a course in which he has elected the Credit/No Credit option, his permanent record will carry the notation "W" or No Credit, depending upon whether his work was of passing or failing quality at the time of disenrollment. Missouri strike mark is worst in country WASHINGTON (UPI)—Missouri had the worst strike record in the nation in terms of man days lost in 1969, the Bureau of Labor statistics says. It added that the state's two most populous areas ranked No. 1 and 2 among American cities in strike losses. Kansas City lost 2,730,900 man days and the loss in the St. Louis area was computed at 2,356,000 man days, placing both in worse position than June 12 1970 KANSAN 3 New York City, which was No. 3 in the nation. The Missouri total of 5,046,900 man days lost amounted to 1.42 per cent of the estimated total working time of private non-farm workers and set a record. It compared with a national rate of only .28 per cent. The Missouri figures included Illinois and Kansas segments of the metropolitan areas as federally defined and were the only data compiled for Missouri. Both cities and the state as a whole saw heavy strike losses continue in the first half of 1970. ★ ★ $25 Prize For Best Name! You may win $25.00 for your entry in The Haas Hardware Name-The-Store Contest.The winner and the new name for our store will be announced June 30th. Come in and see our unique gift items and submit your entry-you may be the winner. Haas Hardware 1029 Massachusetts WELCOME BACK From ACME where you have . . . ★ A 10% discount ★ Pick-up and delivery service ★ 3 locations (one near you) 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 KANSAN Comment The shame of Old Glory Sunday is Flag Day. On flagpoles across the nation, that striped and spangled cloth —symbol of this country—will snap proudly in the breeze and proclaim the patriotism of the millions of Americans who fly it. Or will it? What meaning will those millions affix to the flag as they display it on their homes and businesses this June 14? The flag has become a target of derision and scorn by radicals and militants. Adopted as a symbol of American militarism and the administration, the flag has been torn down by protesters, burned in anti-war demonstrations and desecrated with painted slogans and obscenities. Some wear replicas of the stars and stripes, made into articles of clothing; some wipe their noses on it. But equally as distasteful are those who use the flag as a symbol of righteousness for their own form of protest. The New York construction workers who attacked and beat a group of peace demonstrators last month waved the flag above their heads as though it gave them the right to club those who disagreed with them. And the millions of Americans who display flag decals in the windows of their cars do so, as often as not, to deride the peace movement. To many, the decals indicate support of the war. Is it necessary to support war in order to be patriotic? And is it less of a desecration to reproduce the flag on cheese-cloth and crepe paper for decoration than it is to adorn the body with a reproduction of the flag? Red-blooded Americans who were appalled to see Abbie Hoffman wipe his nose on a flag replica were not even mildly disturbed to see prominent businessmen sit back from a dinner meeting after wiping their lips with a linen napkin decorated with a copy of Old Glory. The red, white and blue—symbolic of loyalty, integrity and purity—have been twisted to serve the purposes of greed, hatred and bigotry. And it is no less a national crime for a congressman or political group to "use" the flag for voter appeal than it is for a radical or militant group to "misuse" the flag. The flag memorializes brave men who died in the service of this country. But is it a fitting memorial for that flag to indicate support of a war which claims annually thousands more of those men? Perhaps this year, Old Glory should not snap so briskly in the wind. Maybe the flag should hang limp in shame. CSP. hearing voices— For four days last week, the Student Union cafeteria management preempted the cafeteria facilities to accommodate the Bank Manager conferees. The way in which the whole affair was conducted leaves much to be desired. The Student Union is primarily for the service of the students and staff members of the university, and the cafeteria is no exception. Visitors should not by any means be excluded from these facilities, provided that the Union management sees to it that the persons for whom they are of main service do not suffer as a result. This was certainly not the case last week. Students and staff members who unwarily went to the main cafeteria to avail themselves of its facilities were either told to go one flight of stairs below to the Hawk's Nest, or shoo'd away for not noticing that the cafeteria was exclusively reserved for bank officials. In the forthcoming week the same conditions will prevail for Girls' and Boys' State. One might have put up with this inconvenience if the alternate facilities provided for our use were adequate. But they were not, both in terms of what was available to eat, and of sufficient space. Surely we deserve better! Surendra Bhana, Graduate student senator Dr. Rehman Manjra, Research Associate Vincent Danisi II, Graduate Student THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Thursday during the Summer Session. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to cler, creed, or national origin. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the editor's. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. Executive Staff Managing Editor ... Adviser ... Business Manager Cass Peterson Calder M. Pickett Jim Hatfield Member Associated Collegiate Press Sorel's News Service Edward Hock 70 © 1970 King Feature Syndicate Inc. World rights reserved The Laird Is My Shepherd CHICAGO—Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird recently told a gathering of 500 Presbyterians that Christianity calls on men to be "dual servants of both God and of the people." Men in public service must strive to "re-fashion" society to conform to the Biblical commandment: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." Suspect held in Manhattan bomb affair NEW YORK (UPI) — Police have arrested a suspect in their "relentless" search for the bomber who dynamitted police headquarters and touched off a series of bomb threats against the lower Manhattan landmark. No information about the suspect was immediately available. Chief of Detective Frederick Lussen said a number of individuals known to belong to the Weathermen, a radical splinter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), and similar groups were under investigation. Bernadette Dohn, fugitive Weathermen leader, issued a warning May 25 that there would be an attack within 14 days on "a symbol or institution of American justice." Lussen said he could not link the warning to the blast at police headquarters. "We have no hypotheses and the door is open," he said. "There is no evidence to put it on radical groups either way." Eight persons received slight injuries when a dynamite bomb exploded early Tuesday evening on the second floor of the headquarters, wrecking an elevator and a series of offices. The FBI joined police in the investigation. Sophomore wins Naismith award The fourth annual $1,000 Naismith Hall Scholarship has been awarded to Vicki Sue Swenson, Independence, Mo., sophomore. The scholarship was established by Allen and O'Hara, Inc. of Memphis, Tenn., operators of Naismith Hall, a privately-owned and operated coeducational residence hall. The award is made on the basis of financial need, academic record and faculty recommendation. Miss Swenson has previously received the Greater University Scholarship and the Delta Delta Delta Service Projects Scholarship. BOOKS VENUS U.S.A., by William Iversen (Pocket Books, 95 cents)—A semi-scholarly examination of women's magazines and their attitudes toward sex and the place of women within society. Considerable excerpting takes place to tell what you can find in these magazines, from the slicks to the confessions. For your light moments come several new books, all in the Gold Medal line. First is a collection of strange signs, SIGNS OF LAUGHTER, edited by Tom Gallagher (50 cents). "Please do not squeeze the fruit. The management reserves the right to pinch back." "Rummage sale. Ladies, get rid of the things you don't use around the house. Bring your husbands." There's a new Gothic mystery, THE CURSE OF MALLORY HALL, by Dorothy Daniels (60 cents). It's about the mysterious deaths of three husbands, and the young bride who fears her husband will be the next victim. Two adventure thrillers: BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE, by Lou Cameron (60 cents) and ASSIGNMENT: WHITE RAJAH, by Edward S. Aarons (60 cents). The first is a detective tale, the second a spy thriller. And finally a new western, THE EASY GUN, by E. M. Parsons (50 cents). The theme: pursuit and revenge. LOVE, ANYONE, by Alice Wayne (Crest, 75 cents)—Sex is the theme, sex at the "singles" vacation resorts populated by the easy new world of the Pill. The author professes to have the dope on the ski resorts, the bars, the "in" places throughout the hemisphere, and she gives us inside stuff about the people who inhabit these places. ELEANOR THE QUEEN, by Nora Lofts (Crest, 75 cents)—Historical novel about Eleanor of Aquitaine, who became a mass celebrity when Katharine Hepburn portrayed her in "The Lion in Winter." Eleanor was the wife of Henry II, mother of Richard the Lionhearted, and one of the toughest old dames British royalty ever knew. THE WINTER PEOPLE, by Phyllis A. Whitney (Crest, 75 cents)—New suspense novel by the gal who seems to turn one out every few months. This one is about a dame who falls in love with a guy and then wonders if she had goofed when he takes her to his mysterious old Victorian Mansion. (Sound familiar so far?) Lots of atmosphere for the romantically inclined. ADA, by Vladimir Nabokov (Crest, $1.25)—A big major novel that is likely to absorb most readers the way "Ship of Fools" and "Doctor Zhivago" did (which means not at all). An excellent writer, and one of the major names of our time, Nabokov is too obscure for most tastes. "Ada" is a love story, about Ada Veen and Dr. Ivan Veen—brother and sister. The love affair lasts for a Century. Don't think you're in for quick jazzy trash like "The Adventurers" and "The Voyeur." Nabokov, as in all his books, is much more than an entrepreneur of best-selling eroticism. HUE AND CRY, by James Alan McPherson (Crest, 95 cents)—A collection of short stories by a young black writer, who deals with need, loneliness, and human misery. In this day when just to be a black writer will get a book published it is of interest that McPherson has been recognized as one who deals not just with a hot contemporary theme but with the entire human condition. THE WINDING STAIR, by Jane Aiken Hodge (Crest, 95 cents)—More Gothic romance, this one combining political intrigue, terror, and love. The heroine goes to a castle on the cliffs of Cavo Raoca in Portugal, not knowing that the place is the secret meeting place of spies and terrorists. Ah ha. THE PREMIER BOOK OF MAYOR POETS, by Anita Dore (Premier, 95 cents)—A collection from the Middle Ages to the present, all English and American poetry. The editor has grouped the poems by theme. Pop musician says respect due public PALMA, Majorca (UPI)—One of the important figures in pop music believes it's time the public began to demand the respect due it from some of the pop superstars who have come to believe in their own legends. Bill Graham of the Fillmore Corp. of San Francisco, told the International Music Industry Conference at its annual meeting here that it is "a terrible thing to say" but a little booing in the right place might do some good. Graham took part in a symposium on "the impact of the youth revolution in entertainment" which drew a claim from Richard L. Broderick, vice-president of MCA International of New York, that the youth market is "exaggerated and overemphasized." Broderick said there was a "silent majority" of music lovers over 35 drowned out by the attention paid youth, and it was this older group which by 1980 would command two-thirds of the nation's spending money. "Tom Jones is a reincarnation of Elvis Presley and he appeals to the over 30s," Broderick said. "So does Presley. Even the Beatles are getting ready for the over 30s. They're practically members of the establishment." Broderick said that if, instead of "bowing to youth," the industry properly exploited all age groups, the million record seller which now earns a gold disc would be a symbol of mediocrity rather than success. Graham said the rock music scene was afflicted with what he called "too much too soonism." Some stars achieved the status of "God Jr." with their fans before they had had a chance to develop either personality or professionalism, and this was reflected in their attitude to audiences. Graham said it was up to the public to insist that all its idols give good value. He urged music executives to be more forthright in dealing with pop stars—"dare tell him he's wrong take the risk of alienating him tell him he's not a god. Why apologize when you've given him $18,000 for 45 minutes and he's late?" He said the present trend was for stars to pretend they were not interested in money. He quoted Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones Discussing the changing style of the University, the Chancellor emphasized that "turbulence" at the University this year did not interrupt the regular flow of academic business. to break the law against narcotics," he said. "If you're going to ask someone to break the law get out on the firing line yourself and put yourself at risk." Chalmers gets ovation at graduation luncheon Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr. of the University of Kansas received a standing ovation from about 600 members of the class of 1970 and their parents after he spoke at a Commencement luncheon Monday (June 1) in Lewis Hall Dining Room. Drawing an analogy between the normal operation of the University and the normal flow of physical forces in engineering, Chalmers said he prefers the term "turbulence" to describe the disorders which occurred here during the 1969-70 school year. Turbulence, he explained, effects but does not halt normal flow Citing some of the awards and honors received by the students Best Sellers Fiction LOVE STORY--Erich Segal. THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN--John Fowles. as saying, 'We do nothing for money.' "He gets plenty," Graham said. DELIVERANCE — James Dickey. TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT— Graham Greene. THE LOSING BATTLE—Eudora Welty. Music lawyer Paul G. Marshall of New York reminded the in- THE GODFATHER — Mario Puzo. THE GANG THAT COULDNT SHOOT STRAIGHT — Jimmy Breslin. MR. SAMMLER'S PLANET— Saul Bellow. GREAT LION OF GOD—Taylor Caldwell. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX—David Reuben. UP THE ORGANIZATION—Robert Townsend. Nonfiction MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS—Antonia Fraser. "Don't make money telling kids LOVE AND WILL—Rolly May. THE SENSUOUS WOMAN— "J." THE NEW ENGLISH BIBLE Oxford University Press and Cambridge University Press. I KNOW WHY THE CAGED BIRD SINGS--Mary Angelou. THE SELLING OF THE PRESIDENT 1968—Joe McGinniss. dusty that it had obligations to society as well as its stockholders. He attacked records which extol "the wonders of narcotics." POINTS OF REBELLION William O. Douglas. June 12 1970 KANSAN 5 and faculty since the 1969 Commencement, Chalmers said the University community has continued its tradition of excellence while instituting constructive change. Among the honors won by the University students during the past year were 17 Woodrow Wilson Designates, and one George C. Marshall Scholarship to England. Chalmers also noted that KU received the Big Eight Conference's All-Sports Trophy for overall achievement in league athletic competition for the second consecutive year. The Chancellor added that the University presently holds 100 grants totaling about $10 million for research primarily by faculty. Chalmers said it is a credit to KU students that the 98th annual Commencement was being held. He noted that several colleges and universities throughout the United States have cancelled graduation ceremonies because of campus disturbances. "We meet here . . because your sons and daughters wanted it that way," the Chancellor said. He referred to the vote of the students May 8 deciding to keep the University open but providing alternatives for completion of semester work for individual students. When the Chancellor emphatically stated that no activities of any administrative or faculty office or extra-curricular group were halted by campus turbulence and that all of this year's academic expectations were fulfilled, he received a applause. The group also honored a number of students and faculty members with awards. In other items on the program, Susan Brimacombe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Brimacombe, 5725 State Line, Kansas City, Mo., and co-chairman of the senior gift committee, presented a monetary gift to Chalmers for purchase of medical equipment for Watkins Memorial Hospital. "The Cockeyed Cowboys of Calico County" starting Dan'Hoss' Nanette Blocker / Fabray Star of "BONANZA" A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR ™ Mat. DAILY 2:30 Eve. 7:15 - 9:20 Varsity THEATRE • Telephone V13-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone 913-1655 R THE DRAUGHT HOUSE IS... RIGHT ON! the COMMON FEW This weekend at The College Club that knows what you want. The DRAUGHT HOUSE PHILADELPHIA 66 Tony's Service Be Prepared! tune-ups starting service 2434-iowa VI 2-1008 Lawrence, Kansas 56044 1000 STARTS WEDNESDAY Eve. 7:15 - 9:30 Mat. Daily 2:30 Adults 1.50 Child .75 WALT DISNEY'S Sleeping Beauty Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5782 METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PRESE A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS DOCTOR ZHIVAGO IN PANAVISION' AND METROCOLOR Eve. 7:30 only Mat. 2:00 Sat. & Sun. Adults $1.50; Child 75c ENTS THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 8TH AND IOWA From MGM and CINERAMA HOW THE WEST WAS WON METROCOLOR Don't Miss This Great American EPIC! Evening 8:00 Only Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 Child .75c THE Hillcrest "I wish my mother would stop treating me like a man" My lover,my son Eve. 7:15 & 9:15 Adults $1.50 TOMORROW THE Hillcrest R History prof gets fellowship Dr. Edward E. Daub, associate professor of history at the University of Kansas, is one of 10 recipients of the Underwood Fellowships for 1970-71 offered by the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis, Mo. He will conduct research on ethical issues in science Title insurance school planned by committee Professional responsibility, analysis of records, the courts, oil and gas properties, and title insurance are some of the topics for the 10th Kansas Abstracting and Title Insurance School June 12-13 at the Broadview Hotel, Wichita. The University of Kansas School of Law and Extension are conducting the short course for the Kansas Land Title Association. T. E. Hart of Westmoreland will be dean of the school. Assisting him will be nine instructors for the six concurrent class sections. The lecturers and their topics are: Courts—Fred T. Wilkin, Se- Microbiologist continues study through grant A $21,654 grant from the U.S., Public Health Service will allow Dr. Bruce A. Molholt, assistant professor of microbiology at the University of Kansas, to continue study of chemical changes in genes. Specifically, Dr. Molholt said he is looking at detrimental effects of chemical modification on genes. When certain chemicals are applied to genes, they are protected, he said, but when those chemicals are removed, they are destroyed. Assisting Dr. Molholt on the project are two graduate and three undergraduate students. They are: andy Hudson, a Ph.D. candidate in microbiology, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hudson, 301 Shamrock Dr., Little Rock, Ark. Don Simpson, a masters candidate in microbiology, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Simpson, 3020 Iowa, Lot C-25, Lawrence. Linda Denton, junior, majoring in microbiology, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Denton, 1409 Country Club Rr. Atchison. Terry Franklin, freshman, majoring in microbiology, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Franklin, 421 West Bridge, Humboldt. Bow Howland, senior, majoring in biology, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Howland, Rural Route 1, Formoso. Workshop on drug use scheduled Scientists and doctors from across the nation will meet at the University of Kansas Medical Center June 15-19 for the second workshop on Drug Evaluation in Man. Fifty-five participants, chosen on the basis of applications, will be involved in the workshop. Dr. Daniel L. Azarnoff, professor of medicine and pharmacology at the Medical Center, will direct a program on the clinical evaluation of drugs and medications The workshop is supported in part by a grant from the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association Foundation, Inc. curity Abstract Co., Independence. There are 31 million names of veterans in the Veterans Administration's master index file. Oil and Gas—Clem H. Silvers F.S. Allen Abstract Co., El Dorado. Descriptions and Plats — Andrew Douglass, Regier Loan and Abstract Co., Newton. Title Insurance — Charles A. Willis, Chicago Title Insurance Co., Kansas City, Mo., William O. Finley, Finley Abstract and Title Co., Oskaloosa. Abstractors' Responsibility and Tools of the Trade-Melvin A. Collier, Collier Bonded Abstracter, Smith Center, Roy Rodgers, Jr., Osage County Abstract & Title Co., Lyndon. 6 KANSAN Analysis of Individual Instruments of Record — Marjorie Wright, Logan County Abstract Co., Oakley-Russell Springs; Dan M. Hannah, Rice County Abstract and Title Co., Lyons. June 12 1970 John Pattinson, of the KU Wichita Extension Center is course coordinator. and technology this summer and during the summer of 1971. Daub, who came to KU in 1965 holds bachelor's and master's degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Wisconsin, B.D. and S.T.M. degrees from the Union Theological Seminary in New York, and a Ph.D. in history of science from Wisconsin. He was a recipient of the Elizabeth M. Watkins summer scholarship for research in 1966, and he currently holds a National Science Foundation two-year grant for study of the development of the "Second Law of Thermodynamics" since the 19th century. In 1967, Daub was invited by the National Council of Churches of Christ to participate in a Chicago consultation on technology and human values. The new Underwood Fellowships, named in honor of the late Dr. Kenneth W. Underwood, director of the Danforth Study of Campus Ministries and professor at Wesleyan University and Yale University, are available to faculty, administrators, parish clergy and campus ministers. This year the fellowships were awarded to five campus ministers, two faculty members and three parish clergy. Nearly half the nation's population is comprised of veterans and their dependents. SONITA $450 ALSO $130 TO 2100 Unquestionably-the ultimate gift So brilliant, so beautiful and so perfect...Every diamond is cut by experts to reflect maximum beauty and brilliance. When you're looking for the ultimate gift, look for the name Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 MUSIC BY RICK SHEPHERD FROM THE BOWFIELD MUSIC COMPANY AFTER 1974 ROCK & ROLL HOLIDAY RED DOG SUMMER $1 PITCHERS PITCHERS $1 TOGETHER → Tomorrow SATURDAY JUNE 13 - Night Grants Awards Dr. Robert B. Sanders, assistant professor of biochemistry at the University of Kansas, has been awarded a summer research fellowship as visiting scientist at the Batelle Research Laboratories in Richland, Wash. Dr. Sanders will investigate the mechanisms of amino-acid transport from the surrounding medium into microorganisms as an indicator of how these "building blocks," which make up proteins, are taken up by and incorporated into the protein of the cell. *** The University of Kansas has received a $14,742 research grant from the U.S. Public Health Service for continuation of a study on the fine microtubules and endocrine pancreas by Dr. Paul R. Burton, associate professor of physiology and cell biology. The study, which began in 1968, will be continued as planned through May 1971 at the recommendation of the National Advisory Council on Allergy and Infectious Diseases. \* \* \* Floyd R. Horowitz of the University of Kansas English department will be chairman of the humanities section of a Conference on Computers in the Undergraduate Curricula June 16-18 at the University of Iowa. His group, meeting on June 16, will consider computer animated film for art and education, sentence generation through visual cues, computer - supplemented Latin instruction. *** Two University of Kansas graduate students, Maria Marques, Cordoba, Argentina, and Kyung Sook Lee, Korea, are recipients of major scholarships for 1970-71 from the P.E.O. International Peace Scholarship Fund. The scholarships of $1,400 each will cover tuition, books and supplies. Miss Marques is studying linguistics, and Miss Kyung is doing work in political science. \* \* \* Dr. Frederick E. Samson, Jr., professor and chairman of the department of physiology and cell biology at the University of Kansas, again has been appointed a summer scientist in the neurosciences and brain research program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology at Cambridge. Mass As for several summers, Dr. Samson will participate in colloquia and research dealing with the physical basis for brain functions, especially at the nerve-cell level. He and other participants will discuss and screen information on brain researches from laboratories all over the world for the preparation of an annual report on the current status of knowledge about brain functions. ** Five students were honored by the University of Kansas department of microbiology in ceremonies at the University State Bank. The Cassandra Ritter Memorial Award for undergraduate and graduate scholastic excellence went to Edith Lord, senior from Kingman. John E. Findley, Lawrence, and Setsuko Yasuda, Tokyo, Japan, were the graduate winners. The Scientific Products Award was presented to Connie Coleman, graduate student, Lawrence, for excellence in teaching. Graduate fellow awards for the most contributions to other graduate students were received by Anne Rankin, a master's degree candidate, Kansas City; and John E. Findley, doctoral candidate, Lawrence. June 12 1970 KANSAN 7 Weltmer is recipient of first Bubb award W. Keith Weltmer, professor or business administration, is the recipient of the first Henry A. Bubb Award for Distinguished Teaching in Business, it has been announced by Dean Clifford D. Clark of the University of Kansas School of Business. The award was established by Mr. Bubb, chairman of the board of Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association, Topeka, to recognize and encourage outstanding classroom teaching. To select the recipient, the KU Business Council, a student organization, distributed a questionnaire to all Business School students. Evaluations were then submitted to a committee of two faculty members, two undergraduates, and one graduate student who made the unanimous selection. [Portrait of] Professor Weltmer has been on the Kansas faculty since 1946, holding the rank of professor since 1958. He teaches in the field of business law and is currently writing a text for classroom use next fall. Professor Weltmert holds B.A. and J.D. degrees from Washburn University and the M.B.A. from the University of Kansas. In 1968 he received the Standard Oil Company Foundation Award for Keith Weltmer Distinguished Teaching and in 1964 was honored as "Hill Teacher" by the Jayhawk yearbook. He is an honorary member of the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants and a brigadier general in the Kansas National Guard. Apricots have more than 25 known uses, including kernel oil for perfume and soap. THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? BERNARDO "Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large, in supple leather. Navy, Brown White, Red Bunny Black's Royal College Shop LPG welcomes Students LA PETITE GALERIE 410 KENTUCKY LOWER LEVEL Saved from demolition Ghetto store becomes street university MIAMI (UPI)—Roy Barry and Charlie Smith have signed a five year lease on a dilapidated two story ghetto store, once marked for demolition, which they plan to convert this summer into a youth run "University of the Streets." The university will be located in the heart of Miami's central Negro district—an area still scarred by three days of rioting in the summer of 1968. Art by KU faculty on display at Omnibus An exhibition of paintings featuring recent works by KU faculty members Richard Dishinger, Robert Green, Maude Ellsworth and Robert Sudlow will be displayed in the gallery of the Omnibus, 846 Indiana, now through July 3, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dishinger, instructor in the drawing and painting, has the most "avant-garde" canvas in the exhibit. Titled "Upstairs, Downstairs" it is an example of "hard-edge" painting, stressing razor sharp contours: Folsinger faces court charges SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Folksinger Linda Ronstadt 23 and her five backup musicians Sunday faced charges of possessing stolen property after trying to board a plane with tickets the airline said were stolen. The musicians who said they had been supplied the tickets by their manager in Los Angeles, took a later flight to Hawaii after being released on $1,250 bail each, Saturday. TWA said the tickets were stolen April 27 in Hollywood. Green, professor of drawing and painting, has two colored ink paintings in the exhibit. Titled "Cedar Beau Bay" and "summer in the Tetons," these paintings have great impact—which is an unusual accomplishment in this media. Miss Maude Ellsworth, a retired faculty member, has two watercolors in the exhibit titled "Spring Fling" and "Irish Village." Miss Ellsworth uses a limited palette in expressing the delicate mood of these landscapes. Robert Sudlow, associate professor of drawing and painting, painting in the impressionistic style, has four canvases in the exhibit. 8 KANSAN June 12 1970 Two of Sudlow's works, "Amy in Bright Morning," and "Peter in Late Afternoon," are light studies capturing a specific time of day. His other two canvases are: "Wood and Field Study" and "Light Study No. 1." Also featured in this exhibit will be the works of Leonard Schneider of Lawrence. His three canvases, titled "Kay," "Annie," and "Annie's Group," are full length representational portraits against a white background and painted in a "new-realist" style. As Barry, Smith and a dozen other youngsters envision it, the University of the Streets will provide ghetto youth with neighborhood recreational facilities, formal and informal courses in art, music, dramatics and black culture, "and a clean place to meet, rap and discover themselves." The idea of the university, according to Smith, "is to help ghetto youth bridge the gaps that separate them from the white society-communication confrontation and education." Florida Atlantic University and Miami Dage Junior College have agreed to sponsor courses for credit at the University of the Streets. Smith and Barry have a long list of volunteer teachers and several businesses have offered equipment. What they need is money- Smith, 22, a postal employee is chairman of the board of "Black Inc." a nonprofit corporation chartered by the state of Florida. Barry, an area director of the Economic Opportunity Program Inc. of Miami, is a charter member of the corporation and its "senior" adviser. He is 25. $220,000. So far they've got only 1,500 and a lot of polite "we'll think it over" replies from businesses they have approached. "I think everyone is sitting back and waiting for the other guy to make a move," Smith said. "But when people see how this project will benefit them I believe they'll move." Smith, Barry and the others working to make the University of the Streets a reality approached the project in a businesslike manner. One of the first things they did was to incorporate. Black Inc. got its first big break from Joseph Caleb, the powerful black president of Local 478 of the International Laborers Union. He kicked in the $1,500 they needed to sign the five year lease. Caleb also agreed to provide much of the manpower needed to renovate the building that Smith and his colleagues personally saved from a wrecking crew last month in their only break with nonmilitancy. A primary goal of the university is to open new areas of employment to ghettoyouth. "Most blacks don't know there Art history teacher will retire to 'professor emeritus' status are jobs available in such professions as photography, writing, modeling, stage design and lighting and the arts, such as painting, sculpture and ceramics." Smith said. "It will be the aim of the university to expose new things to them and teach them the skills that will open new careers to them." Dr. Klaus Berger, member of the University of Kansas art history faculty for 20 years and since 1967 holder of the distinguished title of University Professor, has elected to take early retirement this month. "The first thing we'll open is the gym with judo and karate courses. These will be the drawing cards for total involvement in the university," Barry said. "Besides it doesn't take much equipment and it will get the university operating." Wometco Inc., an entertainment oriented firm, donated the old ghetto Ritz Theater to Black Inc. and Smith says they hope to convert it to a ghetto "little theater" through which black writers and actors will be exposed to the community and ghetto youth can learn the various types of work available in the theater. The bottom floor of the two story building—once a department store—will be devoted to offices and recreational facilities such as a gym, music rooms and a snackbar. The upper floor will house the classrooms. The whole atmosphere of the university will be informal. The volunteer teachers will be carefully selected. "It was the wrong kind of teachers in the formal atmosphere of a white community that drove many of the kids out of school in the first place," Smith said. "We can't make the same mistake here." The native of Berlin, Germany, will add "emeritus" to an outstanding teaching career at Kansas, but will continue to be regarded as a great international authority on art by scholars around the world. Since the idea of creating University of the Streets in Miami's central Negro district was born last June, Smith and Barry have spent most of their time trying to save the two story building from the demolition crew until they could raise enough money to lease the building. ATTENTION Western Civilization Students If you could read this 60¢ ERICH FROMM MAN A Socialist Manifesto and Program With A New Foreword in 5 to 10 minutes (10,000 words) WOULD IT.HELP YOU WITH 60¢ ERICH FROMM MAN A Socialist Manifesto and Program With A New Foreword On April 28, Smith and a dozen other Black Inc. members had a tense face to face confrontation with a city wrecking crew. Smith wrapped himself around a steel crane wrecking ball and the others climbed atop the building and refused to move. ment of Bavaria for a year. He taught at the University of Kansas City three years before joining the KU faculty in 1950. in 5 to 10 minutes (10,000 words) WOULD IT.HELP YOU WITH EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD In 1952 he added the chairmanship of the art history department and was acting head of the Museum of Art. In 1954 he held a Fulbright fellowship to teach at the University of Cologne, Germany. It is a rare distinction for a native German to be invited back there. Born in 1901, Dr. Berger studied art history, aesthetics and philosophy at the universities of Munich, Heidelberg, Gottingen, and Berlin and the Paris Ecole du Louvre. He earned the Ph.D. degree at Gottingen, magna cum laude, and was a visiting professor at the University of Lille, France, head of the art department of University of Berlin Extension, and special advisor at the Paris Bibliotheque Nationale. He came to the United States in 1943, taught at Northwestern University, served a year at Biarritz Army University, and as Monuments and Fine Arts officer of the U.S. Military Govern- In 1958 he was an official American delegate to the 19th International Congress of Art History in Paris, and in 1962 he was an American-Soviet Cultural Exchange Scholar to Leningrad and Moscow. A new record summer session enrollment of 5,886 was recorded as classwork began Monday morning, William L. Kelly, registrar, announced. Enrollment increases 6 per cent The figure reflects a gain of 342, or 6.3 per cent, over last year's record. Kelly estimated the final count would be more than 7,250 persons registered for credit throughout the summer. Last year's official count was 7,083. As of Monday morning, there were 4,964 students registered on the Lawrence campus, up 283 over last year, and 922 at the Medical Center in Kansas City, up 59. Enrollments for credit on the Lawrence campus is expected to increase to about 6,300. Little change is expected in Kansas City. Kelly's figures do not include high school students who will attend the Midwestern Music and Art Camp or non-credit enrollments of more than 5,000 persons for events scheduled by University Extension. SenEx sidetracks BSU appropriations The Student Senate Executive Committee temporarily discarded appropriations for two KU student organizations in a meeting Monday. Appropriations of $14,125 to the Black Student Union (BSU) and $10,000 to Catalyst, a social action organization, were sidetracked until after a meeting with the Student Senate finance and auditing committee to consider the requests for fee money. All appropriations come from student activity fees. The action does not mean the two organizations will not get funds. Appropriation requests are being restarted after the Senate's procedures for appropriating the grants was challenged in the KU judiciary. The Senate is not committed to funding any organizations as yet, Miller said. The finance committee is trying to get fund requests from organizations which have received allocations of fees in previous years so that the committee can recommend a budget for appropriations from the expected $400,000 in student fees available to the Senate. David Miller, Eudora senior and treasurer of the finance committee, said some funds may be available from fees collected for the current fiscal year to fund BSU and Catalyst summer programs. The bulk of the allocation to them, he said, must come from next year's student fees. Top scholars elect six to serve on committee The Summerfield and Watkins-Berger scholars at the University of Kansas have elected six of their group to serve on the University Honors Scholarship committee for the 1970-71 school year They are: Larry L. Aldrich, 123 N Elm, Osborne, who will be a junior; James E. Beckman, 621 W. 9. Concordia, to be a senior; Stanley L. Jones, 249 W. Main, Gardner, to be a junior; Nancy Jorm, 111 N. York, Oberlin, to be a senior; Susan Krehbiel, 1800 N. Jefferson, Hutchinson, to be a sophomore and Pam Meador, 212 W. 19. Hutchinson, to be a junior They will be on the committee that plans the selection program for and makes the award of Summerfield and Watkins-Berger scholarships, which are the highest honor KU can confer on Kansas high school senior boys and girls. They also will help choose the recipients of Honor Scholarships, an award of recognition next to that of the Summerfield and Watkins-Berger awards. AMERICAN LEGION BOYS STATE Boys Staters, citizens of a model state, present a solid front Elections top model states Amid cheers and enthusiasm, the governors of Boys and Girls State were elected Wednesday. Cindy Avery, 16, Norton, was elected governor of Sunflower Girls' State on the Federalist ticket. Richard Felten, 17, Junction City, is the governor of Boys State. Richard also was a Federalist candidate. The elections top off a week of activity in the government-inaction program, which is sponsored by the American Legion and the American Legion Auxiliary. The young Kansans, more than 1,650 of them, arrived Sunday to register and be assigned to model cities in University residence halls. More than 1,220 boys, selected by their home town Legion posts, participated in the 35th annual Boys State. Sunflower Girls' State, celebrating its 33rd year, attracted 442 high school senior girls. The groups divided into two parties—the Nationalists and the Federalists—and put up candidates for election in primaries Tuesday and general elections MISSIMERICA QUEEN NAIA Wednesday, City, county and state government officials were represented in the appointment and election of officers and representatives. Enthusiastic applause follows candidate's speech The format for Boys State and Girls' State followed essentially the same format of model elections and government sessions, but met separately for the week of activity. The girls, however, will be the guests of the boys for the annual Governor's Ball this evening. The program is designed to promote a greater understanding and appreciation of the American system of government. Elected officials of both Girls' and Boys State meet with their counterparts in Kansas government, and visit actual meetings. Tuesday the group paid a visit to the Lawrence City Commission meeting. The campaign was lively and enthusiastic. Campaign posters were displayed and slogans chanted for the candidates for public office. A total of 55 Federalists and 64 Nationalists filed for eight state posts, ranging from governor to state printer in Boys State. In the Girls' State primaries, 65 Nationalists and 74 Federalists filed for state posts. Mayors were elected for the model cities set up in residence halls. Lawrence Mayor Donald Metzler lunched with girls chosen mayors of their cities. Winners in the primaries then faced each other in Wednesday's general elections. Kansas Attorney General Kent Frizzell, who is deep in a gubernatorial campaign of his own, spoke of the "Youth Role in a Democratic Society" to Girls Staters in Woodruff Auditorium Wednesday morning. Gov. Docking appeared before both groups in separate sessions Thursday. State Sen. Glee S. Smith (R-Larned) also met with the Staters Thursd to discuss the organization and procedures of legislatures. Alumni reunions for former Boys and Girls' Staters will be held this weekend to round out a full week of activity. June 12 1970 KANSAN 9 Photos by Greg Sorber EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD These TRACT LAURENCE A. WALDER ANTHONY J. GALLIFEO BUSSELL HILTON AMHERST VOLTAIRE THE ANTHONY OF BERKELEY CIVILIZATION Existentialism CALVIN MARSH How to Read a Book Author HENRIK O. VECTORIAL CIVILIZATION JONATHAN P. DOWNEY - On Western Civilization material you will learn to read at least three times faster (2-5 pages a minute). - This is a unique opportunity to learn to read dynamically on the Western Civilization readings. - You will learn valuable study methods and techniques which will improve your comprehension and recall. - You will develop a range of reading speeds depending on the authors read. - You will find, because you actually read the authors assigned, that some of them are really worth your effort. - This course has a guarantee. If you do not at least triple your reading efficiency we refund the entire tuition. - This course has an additional guarantee. If you do not pass the Western Civilization Comprehensive examination in July we refund the entire tuition of the course. M This class begins June 17, Wed. 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. You Must Pre-Enroll Call Now: 843-6424 or 843-6426 EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOD EVELYN WOOR Know the country you're visiting NEW YORK(UPI)—No one expects every American on vacation to be an expert on foreign affairs, languages, customs and traditions. But you may add much to the enjoyment of travel abroad by learning something about the people and places you intend to visit. Probably even more important, such an obvious interest in the other fellow's problems and way of life could help erase the image of the self-centered "Ugly Amer- can" which still survives in some areas. And you may make many new and interesting friends. Actually, it is not all that difficult to double as an unofficial ambassador of goodwill for the United States while enjoying yourself. The main thing to remember is that you are a guest in a foreign country and that the United States may be judged on the impression you make. It works both ways—you probably will base your opinion of the country on the people you meet and how they act. Usually you should have no language problems in most popular tourist destinations abroad—a surprising number of local residents speak at least some English. But it really doesn't take too long to learn some common phrases like "good morning," "thanks," "excuse me," "goodbye" and even "where is the bathroom, please?" It not only is flattering to your Unisex 'out' for men's wear NEW YORK (UPI)—Fashion designers can do their daftiest, but one place where you will always be able to tell the men from the women is on the beach. Advocates of the "unisex" look can deck men out in the kind of tank suits that ladies once wore in Mack Sennett movies—and that's what they are doing—but it won't work. The human body, unlike tank suits, just wasn't built for a unisex look. The designers also are pushing bikinis for men—topless, of course, except for an occasional matching beach shirt—and if there ever was an outfit designed to underscore the difference, that's it. For after-beach cocktails or what-not, the peacock look carries on in designs that once would have been found only in women's wear. Take lace shirts, for instance. They're big this year, giving men the sort of elegance they haven't had since before the French Revolution. Or men can lounge about in bright-colored print shirts that are sash-tied at the waist. Sometimes the shirt colors are brighter than the tropical foliage of the exotic resorts in which they are worn. Men who are looking for something new is more easily recognized as masculine—even when it's still on the hanger—needn't abandon hope and drag out last year's duds. 10 KANSAN June 12 1970 The new idea—one hesitates to say wrinkle—consists of conventionally cut boxer or midhight length suits with matching shirts that the manufacturer made of a sheer polyester and cotton fabric that is supposed to be "tan through." There are still plenty of plain, trim-tailored boxer style swimsuits for male beach wear. But even among these, you can find a new twist. PERFECT FOR OFFICE USE or "CARRY 'ROUND' ENTERTAINMENT COMPUTER In many countries, particularly in the major cities and big towns, people generally dress much more conservatively than Americans usually do at home. So leave the aloha shirts and shorts in the closet and save the casual wear for traveling on the beaches and mountains. And never, never wear hair curlers in public. Summer suits in more conventional cloth, and cut, are also widely seen, although such slightly splashing plaids as the windowpane add a contemporary air. And there's nothing that isn't Perfect for office use, or for carry 'round entertainment. The solid-state Sony Model 70 provides the convenience and portability of cassettes in a streamlined monophonic unit at a budget-pleasing price. It boasts the famous Sony Easymatic push-button operation, a Stop/Start microphone for easy dictation, plus a unique backspace review button, a feature which makes the Sony 70 ideal for stenographic work. strictly masculine about this year's shirt suits-flap-pocketed shirts worn over straight-tailored slacks. The news is in the fabric—that most comfortable summer terry. local traditions. Despite the recent relaxations on dress by Rome, women in Europe are still expected to cover their heads and arms (and no miniskirts or slacks) when visiting Roman Catholic churches. Before entering Moslem mosques, you are expected to take your shoes off. Don't smoke or take pictures unless permission is granted. In Asia, the generally accepted greeting is folding the hands as in prayer and slightly inclining the head. In Japan, however, you bow unless the other person offers his hand first. The deeper the bow, the more respectful. The Western handshake is becoming increasingly popular, however. If your sightseeing plans include places of worship, observe The news here can be found in lapels cut to expose more shirt and tie than usual, and you can round out the look by wearing a barrel-cuffed shirt and pulling the cuffs well down from the jacket sleeve. hosts but you might be pleasantly surprised at how eager they will be to be extra helpful. And you will be a lot more comfortable—and enjoy yourself more—if you know something about local customs and traditions. They differ from country to country and continent to continent. BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. Phone VI 3-2644 —Don't take photographs of people or places without prior approvel. Some people in Asia and Africa object on religious grounds. In other countries, particularly in Eastern Europe, pictures may be prohibited because of propaganda or military security reasons. For instance, Europeans shake hands (just a quick pump) with men and women every time they meet, and they will be impressed if you give them your calling card. Some, particularly in Italy, still kiss milady's hand and in Eastern Europe men and women often are welcomed with a bear hug and a buss on the cheek. You will have to leave your shoes outside in Japan, too, when visiting homes, inns, restaurants, tea and geisha houses and other places which maintain the old customs. Here are some other general guidelines that could help you avoid embarrassing yourself or offending your hosts: SONY SUPERSCOPE —Don't refer to Europeans, Asians and other non-Americans as "natives." You probably won't mind being identified as a native of the United States but would resent being called an American native. And never call a porter, waiter or anyone else in Asia or Africa "boy"—it is regarded as a derogatory term associated with the days of colonialism. Welcomes You To --- 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 Lasagne Sea Foods Spaghetti Chicken 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. Located in The Malls Shopping Center There will not be live entertainment Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS Military agreement to be renewed soon TOKYO (UPI) Japan's conservative government is ready to renew its military security treaty with the United States for an indefinite period. The 1960 pact, so controversial a decade ago that it toppled a government, will renew automatically on June 23 unless Tokyo or Washington cancels it. June 23 is the first date since the treaty was signed 10 years ago on which Japan can give notice of withdrawal from U.S. military protection. Under the treaty, signed amid Japanese street riots against it, the United States maintains air and naval strike forces in Japan and agrees to come to Japan's aid in the event of military attack. The United States now keeps 39,200 uniformed men in Japan including 18,300 Air Force, 8,700 Navy, 7,400 Army and 4,800 Marines. These forces are backed up by the U.S. 7th Fleet and the 5th U.S. Air Force which roam the seas and skies of East Asia and the western Pacific. Docking puts 4 on council for ecology TOPEKA (UPI)—Gov. Robert B. Docking appointed four members to the state's new advisory council on ecology today. Appointed to two year terms on the panel were: Leonard L. Sammons of Pittsburg; Brad Thompson of Wichita; K. W. Kirkman of Great Bend; and Robert J. Robel of Manhattan. The 1970 Legislature created the 18-member council to anticipate environmental problems and propose solutions. Docking also named as chairman of the new council, Dale E. Saffels, chairman of the Kansas Corporation Commission. The governor is authorized to name the chairman. Sammons is owner and director of Sammons Medical Laboratory in Pittsburg. Thompson is coowner of Brad Thompson Co., a termite and pest control firm, Kirkman is president of Great Bend Feed Co. and the Barton County Flour Mill Co., and Robel is with the division of biological science at Kansas State University. June 12 1970 KANSAN 11 MY OWN. The best thing next to your bath MY OWN HOMECOMING DECEMBER WEEKEND WOMEN MY OWN. The best thing next to your bath Your tubside companion for freshness. Start off with a wisp of MY OWN Spray. You're confident all day. MY OWN. Hygienic Deodorant Spray.. for women only. Available also in cleansing towelettes. The Japanese forces are responsible for the home defense of the Japanese Archipelago, a chain of islands which arch around Soviet Siberia and Communist China. Japan operates its own self defense force, but it is one of the smallest military organizations in Asia. But the big job of defending Northeast Asia and Japan is left in the hands of the United States with its nuclear air and sea forces. Japan refuses to build atomic weapons although it has the technical ability to do so. By leaving the big cost of defense in the hands of the United States, Japan has been able to spend less than 1 per cent of its gross national product on the military and direct its energies into building the world's third largest economy after the Soviet Union and the United States. When the security treaty renews June 23, Japan is not required to specify how long it wishes to remain under the U.S. nuclear umbrella. The first term of the treaty was set at 10 years. Best guesses are that Prime Minister Eisaku Sato's conservative government will make a vague announcement on the renewal date without placing any life expectancy on the treaty. RADIO SHACK Complete Line of Stereo and Recording Equipment - Stereo Headphones — starting at $7.95 - 2400' Polyester Recording Tape $2.69 (Lots of three) - Complete Line of Psychedelic Lights - Strobe Lights $29.95 - Police Radios (only a few) Hi/Lo $29.95 - Intercom only $9.95 713 Massachusetts — VI 2-1566 Hours: 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday till 8:30 p.m. Patronize Kansan Advertisers L DROP ANCHOR AT THE Captain's Table What are you doing today? How about this idea? Take the little woman (or big woman, whatever your personal preference may be) to the Captain's Table for lunch and 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?) OPEN from 8:30 a.m. 8:00 p.m. The Captain's Table Across the Street From Lindley Hall The Captain's Table Activists give support to peace incumbents WASHINGTON (UPI) — The antiwar activists of the new politics are learning a maxim long accepted by practitioners of the old politics: it is easier to win by supporting incumbents than by trying to replace them. Only four incumbents in Congress have been unseated so far this year in party primaries held in 18 states. The most conspicuous loser was the antiwar Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough (D-Tex.). The movement of U.S. troops into Cambodia prompted some of the antiwar youth groups to try lobbying and electionering instead of demonstrating to change attitudes in congress about the Vietnam War. Pre-Cambodia organizations such as Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) and Referendum 70 already were trying to make their weight felt in selective primary contests. Where they and their new allies contributed to victories, they won more often by helping to renomi- nate incumbents than by defeating them. Although ADA is not a single issue organization it is giving priority to termination of the war in Vietnam. In Democratic senatorial primary contests so far, ADA endorsed the winners in Illinois, Montana and New Jersey, and the losers in California, Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia. In none of these states did the peace issue alone control the outcome. Referendum 70 is recruiting volunteer campaign workers for "peace and new priorities" candidates who want them. Like ADA, the Referendum 70 Senate endorsements included Adlai E. Stevenson III, the Illinois Democratic winner, and Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr., D., N.J. Also with ADA, Referendum 70's list included Rep. George E. Brown Jr., who lost the California Democratic Senate nomination to Rep. John V. Tunney, and Norval Reece, a loser in the Pennsylvania Democratic senatorial primary. Officials say nation faces energy deficit TULSA, Okla. (UPI)—Former Texas Railroad Commission chairman William J. Murray Jr. says the nation is headed for an energy deficit that "will throw this nation out of its position of power leadership." Murray is not the only one concerned over dwindling supplies of energy resources in the United States. There is, however, a great difference of opinion as to how the problem should be solved. Many government officials lean to a slowdown in the rate of growth of energy use by a concerted effort to avoid wasting short supply resources. Others in government advocate increasing rates of return so the energy industry-oil, natural gas and coal producers—can boost the supply to meet the demand. The Federal Power Commission leans in that direction. Murray, meanwhile, says those outside the industries are drawing the wrong conclusions because they do not understand the facts. "There is a gas shortage now," he says, "and it is rarely true that you can divide the search for oil and gas." He adds it must also be made clear the nation has no net efficient surplus or reserve producing capacity. "On that point," he said, "a major national policy error could turn since it was reserve producing capacity upon which the President's task force recently based its conclusions." Other areas of misunderstanding, he said, include presumption by the task force regarding Canada, "which in truth is a net importer of crude oil," and Venezuela, an area the task force considered a safe source of supply. He said Venezuela in 1969 drilled fewer wells than New Mexico. "Also," Murray said, "those outside the producing states must be made to understand that the function of state conservation bodies actually serves the national welfare more than anything else by protecting the sources of supply so that maximum production may be realized from known reserves. "This nation must be made to understand that state conservation regulation is not a price tool," he says. Murray, now president of the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners Association. 12 KANSAN June 12 1970 (TIRPO) says if the facts pertaining to the energy crisis were understood the importance of independent domestic producers to the welfare of the nation "would be apparent." "Washington must have the facts and their impact on the consumer interest," he says. The energy crisis is also causing problems in the current campaign to improve the environment. 1 Who Could Be More Convenient Than Nobody, that's who, because YOUR University State Bank is located close enough to campus that your financial needs will only take a minute to take care of. Our 3 convenient drive-in windows are ready to serve you quickly and efficiently the second you drive up, and as an added convenience, they're open until 6:00 p.m. every Friday. YOUR University State Bank is here to serve you, the college student. We can give you the most reliable service in: - Savings Accounts - Personalized Checking Accounts - And all other Full-service Banking Facilities YOUR COMMUNITY MINDED BANK WELCOME BACK! University State Bank 955 Iowa Telephone 843-4700 University Theatre Presents Destry Rides Again Rip-snortin' Musical June 12th & 13th 8:20 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall For Tickets Call UN 4-3982 Soviets, U.S. negotiate ABM system VIENNA (UPI) — Soviet and American arms negotiators have reached an "understanding" to limit anti ballistic missile ABM systems, official sources said today. This understanding may be announced when the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) recess later this summer, the sources said. that such an announcement would help give SALT political support and momentum. Both sides are known to feel The sources said the understanding reached so far stops short of complete concurrence and the siting and number of ABMs to be held by each side. All this must be worked out later. But the understanding goes well beyond the bland public statements of "progress" which Instead, the sources expressed a restrained optimism on the progress of SALT since it began here April 16. They said the ABM understanding could take the form of an agreement to limit ABM defenses to protective rings around "national control centers”—Washington and Moscow. A native Kansas and an alumnus of two state schools will become director of the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Kansas effective July 1. June 12 1970 KANSAN 13 Griffith named new Latin director Dr. William J. Griffith, who has been on the faculty of Tulane University since 1947 and director of its Center for Latin American Studies since 1964, is a native of Kanopolis. He graduated from Southwestern College in 1930 and earned the M.A. degree at the They stressed that the Nixon administration still hopes for a "comprehensive" arms limitation agreement covering not only defensive missiles but also offensive weaponry. University of Wichita in 1937. The University of California at Berkeley awarded him the Ph.D. degree in Latin American history in 1942. have issued from the talks so far. Prof. John P. Augelli, director of the Center for Latin American Studies since 1961, took a similar position at the University of Illinois in January. Issued from the talks so far. The two teams met for only 47 minutes—their second shortest meeting so far—in their 15th session at the Soviet Embassy this morning. The sources cautioned against reading any significance into the brevity of the session. Griffith will also be chairman of the Latin American Area committee, comprised of about 25 specialists on the Kansas faculty, and will direct an interdisciplinary graduate seminar on Latin America. He will also teach courses in the department of history. The Super Sandal It's more you than shoe for breezy summer comfort. Authentic design, rugged good looks. Bitter Chocolate leather with leather sole. Swingle Swingle h.i.s McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE h.i.s McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" WHY TRADE IT OFF? Renew your car for less money than you might think. Come in and check our low cost fine service. Students,you get a 10% discount on all work. THIS MONTHS SPECIAL $39.95 Paint Jobs In Over 3,000 Colors. G & R Body Shop 1248 E.13th -Delivery Service- TELEPHONE 843-7685 9th and ILLINOIS [2 BLOCKS NORTH OF STADIUM] VISIT US WHILE YOU ARE IN LAWRENCE AND TRY OUR: • HOME COOKED FOOD • • SANDWICHES • (INCLUDING OUR FAMOUS "HERO") • PIES AND COOKIES • THE HOLE IN THE WALL DELICATESSEN AND SANDWICH SHOP Welcome to KU, Lawrence and HELLO! Guest of honor fails to show Bernstein throws impromptu pool party VIENNA (UPI)—The guest of honor didn't show up and the host ended up in the swimming pool with the cast of "Hair" while the other guests watched. The party was an enormous success. The host was Leonard Bernstein and the guest of honor was supposed to have been Herbert von Karajan, the famed Austrian conductor and Bernstein's arch rival for the affections of the Viennese. Karajan didn't appear. Maybe it was because Bernstein, who is also conducting at the Beethoven Festival here, scheduled his party for the night of Karajan's triumphant return to the Vienna musical stage. Or maybe it was because the American conductor's party was held at the home of Karajan's former wife, Anita. Everybody else who counted was there-Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, three members of his cabinet, the American and Israeli ambassadors, three dozen opera singers and the cast of "Hair." The "Hair" people were the only ones to follow Bernstein in to Mrs. Karajan's private pool. All wore swimsuits. Bernstein opened the festival which honors Beethoven's 200th birthday, with a triumphant performance of the opera "Fidelio" two weeks ago. On that night he won the heart Women hail arrival of long - due report "I think it's wonderful they finally released the report," said Geri Joseph, vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee in Minneapolis. accounts with Bernstein and Karajan thereupon drank a solitary glass of champagne and went home to bed, ignoring Bernstein's invitation. WASHINGTON (UPI)—Reaction among women to a presidential task force report on women's rights generally was favorable today although there were some complaints its release was tardy. "It's six months overdue, but better late than never," she said. The report titled "A Matter of Simple Justice" was released by the White House Tuesday along with a set of Labor Department guidelines on equal employment opportunities for women. The guidelines were recommended in The audience gave him a 30-minute ovation which squared Mrs. Joseph said she thought one of the report's best recommendations was for establishment of an office of women's rights and responsibilities headed by a woman who would be a special assistant to the President. the report by a task force of 13 women "to carry out prohibition against sex discrimination by government contractors." The report was delivered to the White House in December. 14 KANSAN June 12 1970 conduct the first of a series in which he will play all nine Beethoven symphonies. The task force, noting "American women are increasingly restive over denial of equal opportunity," recommended reconvening a White House conference on women's rights, presidential pressure to enact a constitutional amendment to bar discrimination on the basis of sex, a national goal of child day care centers, and special legislation by Congress to equalize opportunities for women. Pop Some Cork! Arensberg's = Shoes Pop goes the hottest fashion surprise of the season. The new cork look sandals. Thick, comfortable cork innersoles give the look that gets looks. Pop on some cork today. From Dexter. DEXTER MADE IN ITALY of Vienna, which takes these things seriously. Karajan, who stormed out of Vienna six years ago vowing never to appear here again, returned Tuesday night to 2 come as you are... hungry Sandy's home of the plaid beret Don't Forget "Pepsi Hour" Daily from 3-4:00 AT SANDY'S 15c Pepsi For 10c 90 Welcome Summer Students & Campers BITE A BIT OF BRITAIN! Eating Alfie's Fish & Chips is like a visit with the Bard. Or watching the changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace. The Fish are tender, flaky filets, fried crackling crisp in fresh hot oil. The Chips are golden bits of fried potato. And, of course, there's the zesty, tangy flavoring of Alfie's exclusive imported malt vinegar. Alfie's AUTHENTIC ENGLISH Fish & Chips 6th & Maine Writer sounds drug alert NEW YORK (UPI)—"The cost of the cure for drug addiction comes high. But it is a trifle in comparison to the cost in human misery and in the crime of not doing anything about the drug problem." Those words mainline it to parents and others who want to wipe out the growing scourge of the new generation. "If you want an environment . . free of the drug menace, you will have to work at it," says Alice Shiller, a writer in the health and social service fields. "Know about legislation needs and work toward more effective laws and law enforcement." "Blast away at some comfortable stereotypes. For instance, the dope pushers among the young are not likely to be evil old men tempting your children, but may actually turn out to be their own friends sharing their fantasies for free or dealing in drugs to get enough money to support their own habits. "School officials describe current legal efforts in the schools to stop student pushers as the 'revolving door system,'" says Miss Shiller. "Too often they say the student pusher is arrested, taken to court and released on probation . . . then more popular than Army drops murder case, soldier freed FT. McPherson, Ga. (UPI)—The Army dismissed for lack of evidence charges against one of four officers charged with murder in an alleged massacre near My Lai in South Vietnam. Capt. Thomas K. Willingham, 25, was told of the action by telephone at Ft. Meade, Md. where he is currently stationed. Lt. Col. Herman L. West, to whom the charges were referred for a determination as to whether Willingham should be court martialed, said that based on available evidence, no further action should be taken in the prosecution of the charges. Willingham's tour of active duty expired Feb. 10, but he was held involuntarily pending investigation and disposition of the murder charges. Willingham, of Allenhurst N.J., was charged with "the murder of 20 Vietnamese whose names are unknown with rifles and machine guns." THE HILF in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Some Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 'III. THE HITE in the WALL ever before because he has 'beaten the system.'" Calling on all parents to get involved in efforts to wipe out drug abuses Miss Shiller says that "just writing a check for a donation to private institutions helping young drug users may not be enough. Money raising in large amounts may be needed in your community to help those who help your children or help your children to help themselves." Miss Shiller examines the whole youth drug scene in a new publication from the public affairs committee. A nonprofit educational organization with headquarters in New York. "Drug abuse and your child" is its title. Statistics on drug abuse are "fragmentary," she says. But it's estimated that 20 million Americans have smoked marijuana. Haskell school to get new automotive shops The two buildings will be constructed on the south side of the campus at a cost of $860,650. They will house automotive shops, and will include classrooms, mechanical rooms, tool rooms, paint rooms and equipment. A contract to build two buildings on the Haskell Institute campus has been awarded to Constant Construction Company of Lawrence. The contract was granted through the Department of the Interior by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Work is expected to begin in 30 days. Haskell Superintendent Wallace Galluzzi expects the buildings to be under construction about a year, and to be completed in time for use in the fall of 1971. The National Science Foundation has made a facilities and equipment improvement grant of $17,000 to the department of physiology and cell biology at the University of Kansas, to match an equal sum funded by the University. And the documentation is there for the deaths of 224 teen agers in New York City in 1969 from overdose of drugs. So are such headline case histories as the death of Diane Linkletter, daughter of the entertainer, who was a victim of the effects of LSD. The money will be used to improve the laboratory teaching facilities and curriculum for courses in physiology, neurophysiology, endocrinology and reproduction. Drs. Jerome M. Yachim and Charles R. Wyttenbach, associate professors of physiology and cell biology, prepared the grant proposal to the National Science Foundation. Dr. Yochim has been designated director of the grant. 快乐地唱歌 NSF grants 17,000 fund for KU labs K Alert parents should watch for such clues to drug abuse as punctures on the arms, the paraphernalia for injection, glazed eyes, enlarged pupils, sunglasses worn constantly, drowsy behavior, slurred speech, prescription drugs disappearing from the medicine chest, tubes of cement and airplane glue around, and the constant borrowing or money manipulation with family or friends. DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP: 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS - Portraits Where The Sound Of Quality Is Heard - Passports AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY - Applications Bob Blank, Owner 928 Massachusetts Bob P "Please call for appointment" 721 Mass. HIXON STUDIO Bob Birch Our G & R Body Shop - Lowest Prices the Sirloin Restaurant DINING - Student Discounts 1248 East 13th - 3,000 Colors Dine in candlelight atmosphere S. choice meals Fresh flowers Open 4:30 1% Mi.N. of Kaw Wednesday V-1-3431 843-3735 TINY TIME PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour Malls Shopping Center TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 KANSAN CLASSIFIED Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the workbook will be offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and India prints from the Hodge Podge at 15 W. 9th. 10:00-5:30 Porch sale Saturday and Sunday, June 13 and 14 from 9:00-5:00 at 1325 Tennessee. Chest of drawers, TV and others. 6-12 '68 Datumn 2000 roadster - 5 sp, robin '69 Datsuki 2000 roadster - 5 sp, robin new head, new head, B4 824-1191-6 26 new head, new head, B4 824-1191-6 26 '65 MGB-BRG, almost new Michelin X's, overhaired transmission, new clutch, fantastic condition. Call 842-2191. 6-26 Owner must leave town July 1. Needs someone to assume 18 payments on peanutette, under 3,000 mile sports extra fee, VIII-3005 or UN-4A17 (Judith) 6-26 '65 Mus—225 horse V-8, hurst shifter, 'Cagers man, new wide rubber, new paint, super clean, $1195. Call 842- 2191. 6-26 '63 Sprite-black, new tires, both transmission and transmission 442-8191 6-26 6-26 '68 VW—Red sedan, one owner, carefully maintained, priced at wholesale. Call 842-2191. 6-26 EMPLOYMENT Occupations That Pay occupations that Pay Employees have information substantiated by U.S. Bureau of Labor on over 600 occupations and over 700 jobs. The types of hour jobs are and occupations and professions rewarding their employees $23,000 or more. Selling is $1.91 per month and postage to: Advisory Enterprises, P.O. Box 1063, Kansas City Missouri 64141, Dept. II. LOST AND FOUND The lost art of fine handcrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Podge. Find your new belt, vest,套上 watchband at 15 W. 8th. 10-30 5:30 WANTED Baby-sitter in exchange for room and board for Summer and/or Fall. Close to campus. 843-0113 after 4 p.m. 6-23 dare feet to be fitted for benchercrafted dresses or styles from $15. day service The Hodge Dodge. 15 W. 9th. 842-0682. 7-31 Male student to share my furnished apartment, two blocks from campus. must be seen to be appreciated. $40 be seen to be accompanied all. 842-346-698 fore 10:00 a.m. New York Cleaners For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweavine 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa NOTICE The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $5.25 at the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 7-31 7-31 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-goodies Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some Ribs, Chicken, Brisket are our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone V2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday. Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students, Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. 7-31 Students of objectivism-meets every Monday night to discuss the philosophy of Ayn Rand. If desire further information, call 842-6210 by 5:30. Visit a nudist camp free. For information write Garden of Eden. PO Box 590, Tonganoxie, Kansas 60806 & 36 TYPING Custom made leather--sandals, vests, pants, belts, waistbands, purses, stash of cash. $199 OFF THE LEATHER WORKS. OPEN 2-6 daily except Sunday. 6-26 Themes, these, dissertations typeset and/or edited by experienced typist KU B.J. S.B.(English-Speech Education). Office-size electic Phone 843-7287. Experienced typist with electric typewriter desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-3597. Accurate typing of thesis, papers, manuscripts by experienced tylist on IBC carbon ribbon electric. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson V12-2124. 6-26 Experienced in typing term papers, theses other misc. typing. Have elec- tric spelling & punctuation. Pta type. correct spelling & punctuation. VI-935-844. Mrs. Wright. 7-31 FOR RENT You get the 12th month free when you rent a 2 bedrm, unfurnished apt for $135, or 1 bedrm. unfurn. for $120. Same deal with 2 bedrm. furnished for $150 or 1 bedrm. furn. for $120. Call 843-2116 or 843-1085. 7-31 Tired of paying rent in a strangent town? Two families are looking for one or two couples to share mortgage payments on a large house after Sept. Prefer stable students interested in companyships. Advantage of getting most of the housing when property is sold. Call 842-997-61 after 6:30 for details. Coluee Bridal 2 bedroom furn. apt. a/c $95 per month, call 843-8241 and after 5:00 p.m. call 843-9373. 6-26 Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. "If The Shoe Fits .. Wear It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Favors - Guards - Mugs - Guards - Mugs - Packaged Favors - Recognitions - Paddles - Gifts - Lavaliers - Stationery - Plagues Girls Plaques Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog 'No sex orgies,' student asserts PARK CITY, Utah (UPI)—Western governors have been assured by a university administrator and a student leader that modern dormitory life does not automatically lead young coeds into "sex orgies." "Everyone assumes when two students of the opposite sex get together they're automatically going to jump right into bed—that's just not true," said Randy Dryer, 21, student body president-elect of the University of Utah. Dryer replied to a question from Idaho Gov. Don Samuelson, who wondered whether the parent would feel "secure" in allowing a daughter to visit a boys' dormitory. The governors holding their annual conference in the Wasatch Dryer told the governors they worry too much about campus speakers. He said radical Jerry Rubin recently spoke on the Utah campus and the students regarded him "as a clown. They laughed at him." mountains 35 miles east of Salt Lake City listened intently and participated freely in a wide open discussion on campus unrest. Midwestern College fighting to survive Dryer said the whole philosophy of politics of confrontation "is that by breaking the law you get a lot of publicity" and dramatize a cause. "Breaking the law will only bring this country to anarchy and a police state." responded Gov. Forrest H. Anderson of Montana. "Somehow or other I think you can get us fellows to listen without breaking the law." DENISON, Iowa (UPI)—Students of Midwestern College manned a booth at a recent Iowa Democratic party convention and urged delegates to "contribute your pennies for Denison." Air pollution fund gets OK in House WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House has approved 374 to 1 a bill to pull together the flagging federal air clean up program and clamp new antipollution controls on automobiles, industries and airplanes. The legislation, which conformed in many respects to recommendations of the Nixon administration, would for the first time authorize the federal government to set national standards of air purity and step in if states failed to enforce them. Other provisions would require assembly line spot checks of whether auto exhaust cleaners were working up to par and empower the Health Education and Welfare secretary to outlaw fuel additives such as lead if they were proved a health hazard. To carry out the program spending of $775 million, spread over the next three years, would be authorized by the bill, beginning with $200 million for the fiscal year beginning July 1. About two-fifths of the money would be earmarked for research on controlling pollution from the combustion of fuels. Rep. Glenn Cunningham (R-Neb.) cast the lone no vote on the final roll call. Nixon backs YAF in Missouri drive ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI)—The "build--don't wreck" campaign of the Missouri Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) has received the support of the White House. Harry Dent, special counsel to the president, wrote to Michael W. Thompson, national vice-chairman of YAF and Missouri state chairman. "The president asked me to express to you and the Missouri YAF his gratitude for your active support of his policies in Southeast Asia. Your 'build—don't wreck' program could serve as a model project for young people all over America and we wish you every success." 16 KANSAN June 12 1970 A Denison businessman has offered free trips to Las Vegas to the Midwestern students who recruit the most new students for the fall semester. Midwestern needs more money and more students to survive. Its motto is "We kindle the light of knowledge," but college officials are battling to keep even a flicker of hope alive. Midwestern is virtually at the end of its financial rope. It has delayed its faculty payroll for May. It needs an estimated $150,-000 just to keep operating through the summer. The college's 800 students have worked closely with administrators and faculty members to save the 5-year-old institution. They have made "marches for Midwestern." They have conducted a number of fund collection drives. Dr. Edwin Coen, the school's second president, is working on a three-step plan to put the college on firm financial ground. It includes a student recruiting drive, establishment of a public relations office to solicit funds on a year-round basis and enlargement of the board of trustees to add one student and one faculty member. Midwestern is about 400 students short of its capacity. Its current enrollment represents only a 200 student increase since 1965, the first year of its operation. 6 offer pleas to vandalism NORRISTOWN, Pa. (UPI) — Six white persons pleaded guilty Wednesday to charges of vandalism in a rampage through the WCAU-TV studios following a documentary on the Black Panther party. Four men and a woman were sentenced to jail and a second woman was placed on probation. They were fined a total of $900 and ordered to pay $500 restitution by Montgomery County Judge Richard S. Lowe. The Quaker City Weatherhier chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society claimed responsibility for the rampage Jan. 10 when windows inside the studio were smashed and furniture was damaged. The chapter had said it objected to a documentary on the Panthers, presented several days before the rampage at the studio on the Philadelphia city line. A seventh suspect in the case, Theodore Gold, 23, of New York City, was killed in an explosion which demolished a Greenwich Village townhouse March 6. Police said the townhouse was a "bomb factory." Eight thousand dollars FOR A COLLEGE EDUCATION and you do not even know how to . . . READ Free Speed Reading Lesson Raise your Reading rate 50-100% Free 7:00 p.m. Tuesday . . . June 9 Friday . . . June 12 Holiday Inn — Jayhawk Room Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS M TELEPHONE 843-6424 843-6426 Moon landing 'hoax,' say skeptics MIAMI (UP) — Many skeptics feel moon explorer Neil Armstrong took his "giant step for mankind" somewhere in Arizona. There is wide support for a theory that the government and the news media conspired to whockwink the public with a fake telecast of a moon landing. Others feel that man in space is infroncing on God's territory. stav off." "Man can get so wise he'll destroy himself," said a Negro maid in Miami. "That's what he's doing now. It's God's moon, he'd better These were some of the observations drawn from a survey conducted by Knight newspapers in Miami, Philadelphia, Akron, Ohio, Detroit, Washington, Macon, Ga., and several rural communities in North and South Carolina. A total of 1,721 persons were asked: "Do you really completely believe that the United States has actually landed men on the moon and returned them to earth again?" Douglas Bently, a Negro construction worker in Miami, said he watched the moon landing on television but "I don't believe none of it." Negroes appeared to be more skeptical than whites, said a report of the survey appearing in Sunday's Miami Herald. In a black ghetto of Washington, D.C., 86 of 160 persons interviewed—54 per cent—said they doubted the moon voyage had taken place. In Charlotte, N.C., 20 out of 67 Negroes interviewed expressed doubt, while only 15 out of 172 whites indicated skepticism. Skeptics numbered only 2 per cent in Detroit, 4 per cent in Akron, 5 per cent in Miami, 9 per cent in Philadelphia and 19 per cent in Macon. The survey "made no attempt to reach a scientific cross section of the population in the communities involved," the report said. Mrs. Emma Holmes, a 68-year-old Philadelphia grandmother, was among those who felt the moon telecast was "staged in the Arizona desert," and a Macon man in his sixties said the setting was a "petrified forest in Arizona." "Ive heard they have a place somewhere that looks like the moon," said a 20-year-old woman in Charlotte, an inspector at a hosiery mill. A woman in Macon said she knows she couldn't watch a telecast from the moon because her set wouldn't even pick up New York stations. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 80th Year, No.3 Tuesday, June 16, 1970 SOME BIG TIME ANSWERS Summer session, for some students, is a vacation in itself 1970 Summer Student Directory A Aren, Lynn Joy, 4D, 147 W 19. Abushilaa, Bessha, 2020, 1020, Olmth. KC Adballah, Wm. P, 6G, 2537 Rd Gt Abdel, Razek A. 6G, 1247 Ohio Adbulgaiwad, L. M, 3E, 180 Nsmst. Abdel, Razek A. 6G, 1247 Ohio Adbulgaiwad, L. M, 3E, 180 Nsmst. Abdel, Razek A. 6G, 1247 Ohio Abduqaye, Jacob, 6G, 932 Miss Abbrahamson, Carol I, 9G, 944 Lawr Alervero, Dolores P., 9A, 1618 W 22 Aderma, M., 7M, 5416 Skylne, Mission 286-9096 *Amborn, S., 5N, 6116 Marty, Shaw Mn. 362-1532 *Amar, M., 1A mibruk, 0G Amdenhoe, D., 4N, 827 Eckman Amenono, P., 4N, 4953 Nwr, Shw Mis. 236-9186 Amdsen, Matthew H., 3J, 821 Ind Amdsen, Melanie A., 3D, RRI, McLouth 796-3914 Amdsen, Melanie A., 3D, RRI, McLouth 796-3914 Anaya, David F., 3E, RRI, Piper 727-3484 *Andersen, Jolene B., 9A, 832 Ky *Andersen, Marshall L., 9A, 832 Ky *Andersen, Melanie A., 3D, RRI, McLouth 796-3914 Andersen, Sarah R., 0G, 1343 Tenn Andersen, Arthur A., 4D, 802 Avalon Andersen, C, 4M, 5041 Parish, Sh Mns. 236-6072 Andersen, Cynthia L., 3A, 1423 Ohio Andersen, Chas F., 11, 2026 Emerald. 483-9144 Andersen, Chas. 3A, 2864 Mulv, Tpk. 234-8370 Andersen, Cynthia L., 3A, 1423 Ohio Andersen, Chas. F., 11, 2026 Emerald. 483-9144 Andersen, David H., 2L, Field Work Andersen, Donald, GO, 1208 Miss Andersen, Douglas R., 26, 1607 W 9 Andersen, Karen E., 11, 1815 Nais Andersen, Kenneth L., 0G, 220 W 26 Andersen, Kerry Bath, 3D, 1800 Nais Andersen, Karen E., 11, 1815 Nais Andersen, L. F., 4S, 1924 Awlation. 483-7404 Andersen, L. F., 4S, 1924 Awlation. 483-7404 Andersen, Philip N., 6G, 3155 Kansas Andersen, Ronald K., 6G, 220 Harper. 482-6584 Andersen, Vicki, 4D, 2436 Cedarwood. 483-9149 Anderson, 6218 Rbn, Ov Pk 261-8164 Anderson, Doreen L., 3A, 2800 Abov Andresco, Bolea Y., 4D, 1208 NH Andresco, Micheline Z., 6G, 2028 NH Andresco, Sandra Y., 4D, 2436 Cedarwood. 483-9149 Anderson, Mangela R., 6G, 1510 Kira Angulo, Linda K., 2R, 837 Ark Annis, Alison E., 16, 1815 Nais Anthony, N. C., 2B Academy, Tpk. 482-8333 Antidisel, Monte R., 3B, 363 Avon Appelhans, M., PA, 2812 W 43, KC Appleot, Keith Roy., 1316 VI Archer, Richard L., 4A, 1000 Miss Archibald, Sherri A., 4D, 1012 Emr Dl Arlas, F瑟, 7M, 5026 Skylne, Shw Miss Arkers, M., 6G, 1206 W 25 Armas, Miguel, 10Q Aroad Armostrong, D., M, 6G, 813 Cantbrly. 482-7485 Arstrong, Judith, 3A summer abroad Arstrong, Judy Jo. O, 6G, 8001 W 86 Tp Ov Pk Arntd, Howard D., 6G, 2020 Harper Arnold, Mas, M, 4B, Gndvw Ov Pk Arnold, Mas, M, 1340 Tenn W 888-3841 Arjueline, 14, 100 S W 15 Arjueline, Lawrence, 5P, 1 Stouffer 482-7814 Arnie,杏丽 Pratt, 5I, 909 Av Rd Arnie,杏丽 Pratt, 5I, 909 Av Rd Arriola, Jaceline S., 3E, 1334 Ohio *Articles, Ben H., GM, 3000 W 50. 423-1460 Arutunoff, Christina, 4F, 1512 Wit. 842-5752 Ascough, B. M, 4M, 4620 Sumit, K. Mo. *Ah*, Sphen, 4M, 5517 Brdrm, Shw Mis. 722-5462 *Ash*, Stphen, 4M, 4620 Sumit, K. Mo. *Ashcraft*, K, 65M 709 Conser, Ov Pk. 648-5428 *Ashcraft*, W, C, 6M, 7418 Btry, Shmis. 262-7460 *Ahim*, Larry D, 3A, 902 W 29 Ter. 842-5236 *Ashland, Peggy Annie, J., 4S27 W 9. 842-7556 *Ashton, Donald B, 28, 1317 W 19. 842-5925 *Ashton, Jean M, 0G, 918 La. 842-6056 *Ashton, Leonard, 24, 917 Naishm. 842-7000 *Ashton, Joel A., 917 Naishm. 842-7000 *Asmussen, R. D, TM, 2109 N 10, KC. 842-7166 *Atchison, Chrspr, 4B, 703 N 12, Leav. 882-6763 *Atchison, Dixie, 0G, RKl, Overbrook. 842-7060 *Athey, Roderick E., 6G, 1709 Ill. 842-5449 *atkinson, D, 3M, 3717 StL, KC Mo. 531-9234 *atkisson, James D., 4A, 721 Mo. 842-2824 *attamana, Chad, 0G, 1528 Tenn. 842-8792 Attery, Patricia L, 21, 1009 W 22 Tr. 842-8792 Atwell, Charles E, 3A, 905 W 9. 842-3731 Auld, Conrad Susan, 403 N茶. 842-5173 Authier, Kristi Ann, 22, 1107 Ind. 843-7766 Autry, Donald A, 3D, 1800 Naishm. 843-7766 Aveledo, Claude E, 6G, 908 Ind. 842-5173 Avery, Ellott L, 4E, 2909 Mo. 842-5676 Awbrey, Stuart Stuart, 4A, 1340 Tenn. Axe, Kathryn J, 6D, 508 Fr Rd. 843-0039 Aveyre, Daniel J., 4E, 2909 Mo. 842-5173 *Ayres, James W, G, 23 Stouffer 843-4197 Azul, Raul F, IE, 1603 W 15. 842-1891 B *Baca, Oswald G., 6G, 20 Stouffer 8 *Bacarach Verne R., 6G, 1623 W 9 18 *Bachelor, Judith L, 3A, 1943 Miller 8 *Bachman, Barbara L, 6G, 1623 W 9 18 *Bachin, Beni L, 1210 Ohio *Bacon, Rhonda Rilhog, 0G, 406 Minn 8 *Bacon, William R. 4F, 1903 W 25 18 *Badzewski, Denis A, 1903 Bkler 9 *Peter, Jaffe A, 1903 Bkler 9 *Deborah, Deborah J, 22, 1630 Bk勒 8 *Baer, Ann Marshall, 6G, 513 Okla 8 *Bagan, Nancy C, 1914 Belle, Tpkra 272-0674 *Bajemia, M. R. 11, RKri Box 163 878-6209 *Bajemia, M. R. 11, RKri Box 163 878-6209 *Baler, E堡 B., 4D, 1828 Almira 878-6209 *Bayley, Gen S., 9D, 1136 Rwlnd, KC 321-1196 *Bayley, Hugh, 3M, 2520 W 50, Shw Miz 831-3765 *Bayley, Jeffrey W, 9G, 807 W 29 Tcr 841-4199 *Bayley, Jeffrey W, 9G, 807 W 29 Tcr 841-4199 *Bayley, Joy Helen, 4D, 1603 W US 841-4193 *Beona, G. C., 6G, 1623 W 9 18 *Bair, Jeffrey H, 6G, 1106 W 29 Tcr 842-6240 *Bair, David Vance, 6G, 1729 La 842-6228 *Bair, Jane A., 26, Box 107, Linwood 723-3337 *Bair, Martha Leeson, 0G, 715'1 W 5 843-4694 *Bair, Robert J., 4A, 2530 Redbud 842-7503 *Bakalar, M. B., 0G, 2317 James, Tpkra 727-1910 Baker, Alma J. 12, 1815 Naismith K. Barker, I. M. 12, 1816 Naismith K. Berkner, Bierie B., 0G, 1913 Elmwood K. *Baker, Clonton, AM, 1227 N, 64 KC. 299-6828* Baker, Gregg H. 24, 13041* Penn KC. 284-7281* Baker, John F. 3E, 28 Stouffer 6 KC. 284-7674* Baker, J. F. AM, 4625 Blujak, Shown KC. 361-6015* Baker, Keith Alan G, 2630 Barker KC. 284-8244* Baker, Robert Aldrich, 3A, 6431 E 19 KC. 284-8948* Baker, Sandra, PA, 3724 Booth, KC. 323-1010* Baker, William J. 4F, 1016 Maine KC. 324-8527* Baker, James C. 325, 326* Penn KC. 324-8527* Bakshi, Sushila D, 9G, 1140 Lw W. 342-9247* Baldwin, Deirdre, 4D, 3510 W 7. 342-9226* Baldwin, Teresa D, 4D, 3510 W 7. 342-9226* Baldwin, Katherine D, 4D, 28 Stouffer 4KC. 284-1018* Bales, John R. W, 6G, RRI Box 336 KC. 184-1841* Bales, Lynn E. 12, 1707 Brook Bafour, Barb, 0G, 1913 Tpka KC. 253-6300* Bafour, Barb, 0G, 1913 Tpaka KC. 253-6300* Bill, Charles K, 4A, 1130 Harvard KC. 203-6066* Billianl, Luis A, 4A, 1130 W 15 W. 342-9174* Ballou, Kennedy B, 28, 1900 Tpka KC. 272-9404* Barber, Jacques M, 24, 1014 Miss KC. 342-4998* Barber, John K, 4D, 1013 W 24 W. 342-4998* Barber, Marcelle W, 0G, 1231 Gread KC. 482-5877* Barber, Mary J, W, 0G, 1231 Gread KC. 482-5877* Barber, Nancy A, 3A, 1037 Tenn KC. 482-5877* Barber, Vivian E, 4D, 1630 Barker KC. 423-2233* Bourbour,LOBert J. 4D, 1630 Barker KC. 423-2233* Baurou, Kathryn J. 4D, 1630 Naismith KC. 423-2233* Barbe, Rex Owen, 6G, RR2, Box 45 KC. 473-5684* Barfield, Rosemary, 0G, 1030 Mo KC. 482-7090* Barker, Bruce E, 0G, 1640 Crescent KC. 423-2006* Barker, Deborah Ann, 4A, field work KC. 482-7090* Barker, Lance E, 16, 1815 Naismith KC. 472-9004* Barker, Rosemary, 0G, 1030 Mo KC. 482-7090* Barker, Bruce E, 0G, 1640 Crescent KC. 423-2006* Barker, Deborah Ann, 4A, field work KC. 482-7090* Barker, Martha Sue, G, 0G, 2328 Murp KC. 423-0648* Barger, Jerry J. 18, 2035 KC. 482-3576* Barlow, Margaret A, 1D, 1920 Aila KC. 482-3201* Barnard, Joseph D, G, 11510 Ohio KC. 482-1909* Barnard, Joseph D, G, 11510 Ohio KC. 482-1909* Bois, Louis Marie, 4D, 518 Fr Dr KC. 482-7591* Barnes, P, R/7M, 4801 E Lwnd KC Mo. 461-4700* Barnes, Richard E, G, 0G, 1912 Terr KC. 482-9069* Barnes, Richard E, G, 0G, 1912 Terr KC. 482-9069* Barr, John Charles, E, 12, 1932 Vt KC. 482-2722* Barr, Kevin P, 6G, 1605 W 6 Ter KC. 426-2966* Barr, William G, 22, summer abroad KC. 482-2722* Barr, Rebecca S, D, 1527 W 9 KC. 482-2722* Barr, R.E. G, 0G, 3258 Crby KC. 482-2420* Barrett, S. B, G. 12 Brskde, Ottawa KC. 482-7000* Barrier, Janice P. 16, 1815 Naismith KC. 482-7000* Your Kansas Union Bookstore welcomes you to the Summer Session 50 One of the more useful souvenirs you could choose—a bronze Jayhawk paperweight. $3.50 KANSAS UNIVERSITY 912 KANSAS 514 KU KANSAS KU KU KU Kansas University T-Shirts for casual wear, $2.25 each KU pennants, $3.25 & $2.40, and felt Jayhawks, $.60, .95, 1.25, make great gifts for future Jayhawkers. Kansas Seal $1.30 KU All time favorites are these stuffed Jayhawks, $2.65 & $2.95, fuzzy and friendly companions for children of all ages. kansas UNION BOOKSTORE *Barrish, Harriet S., G 61, 1147 Ohio *Barrish, Dennis L. D, 3L 826 Avon *Barron, Diana L. D, 4D 334 Murp *Barron, William A. E 4E 1733 Ohio *Barrows, Edward M. 6G, 1012 Emu Rd *Bartee, J M, G 1001 Farley, Ov Pk *Bartee, William A. E 4E 1733 Ohio *Bartee, Edward M. 6G, 1012 Emu Rd Beaver, Robert J. 3E, 1417 E 15 Beschleit, H A. OG, 625 Reeder, Sh Ms 631-5151 Beschleit, H A. OG, 625 Reeder, Sh Ms 631-5151 Beck, John L. 0G, 2324 N K 86 Beck, Mary Ellen, 3M, summer abroad Becker, Frances A. 24, 1735 W 19 Becker, Jill, 12 P, Box 444, Eudora 842-3674 Becker, Jill, 12 P, Box 444, Eudora 842-3674 Becker, Laura B. 4D, 1003 W 19 Becker, Sherrilyn, 0G, summer abroad Bevar, William J. 6G, 2113 Ohio Bevar, William J. 6G, 2113 Ohio Beodya, Cathie, 3E, 2412 Carwood Bee, Annette C. 4A, 1094 Yorkshire Beer, Kathleen M. 18, 3027 Nathan Beer, Kathleen M. 18, 3027 Nathan Bee, Dearborn, 3M, 2605 W 39 KC Bee, Dearborn, 3M, 2605 W 39 KC Bebon, John E. 3B, EA 829 Biggs, Gail Adkisson, 6G, 918 W 24 Beller, Aler Jean, 3B, 2345 Rd CT Beller, Aler Jean, 3B, 2345 Rd CT Bellerhens, Robert L, 2R, 1916 Ky Behrends, Steve, 3M, 1794 S 32 KC B尔德, Terry L. 4, 1121 Ohio B尔德, Terry L. 4, 1121 Ohio B尔德, Barbara E. 14, 1115 Ky BELL, D W, 10640 W 98, Ov Pk BELL, Hanan Samuel, 0G, 1026 W 14 BELL, Hanan Samuel, 0G, 1026 W 14 Bennarous, E. OG, 9808 Glnwnd, Ov Pk Bennarous, E. OG, 9808 Glnwnd, Ov Pk Bencivengo, Frank R. 0G, 1324 Vt Bender, Neva Lea, 0G, 905 Em Rd Bender, Neva Lea, 0G, 905 Em Rd Bennarous, J. OG, 9808 Glnwnd, Ov Pk Bennarous, J. OG, 9808 Glnwnd, Ov Pk Bennett, S A, 0G, 1243 Wrkpa, T39 Bennert, Charles T, 4E, 1911 Stewart Bennert, Charles T, 4E, 1911 Stewart Benson, L E, 6M, 8406 Nahmth, KC Bentman, Barry Alan, 3P, 1815 Nais Bentman, William L, 0G, 1239 Barker Bentman, William L, 0G, 1239 Barker Bentman, William L, 0G, 1239 Barker Berg, Rich, 3M, 3633 St Ln, KC Mo 531-3146 Bberger, Barbera E, 12, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Berry, Nerley nn, 1815 Naias 842-7000 Berry, Micec II, 2F, 8000 Wr, Ov Pk 849-4881 Berry, W R, 6M, 8118 Wr 97 T0, Opk 849-4881 Berner, Neal, 3M, 4210 Lloyd, KC 432-2513 Bernie, Edward J, E 3, 936 Illum 482-8697 Bernie, Edward J, E 3, 936 Illum 482-8697 Bernstein, Martlyn F, 12F, 108 Miss 482-0965 Berry, Archie W Jr, G6, RRI Box 322 482-0965 Berry, Dorothy J, D 18, 1815 Naismith 482-7000 Berry, Olivia G, 6Q, 1813 Clare 482-3395 Berry, Str Matrix N, 1813 Clare 482-3395 Bertels, Str Mary A, OG, 169 Stratford 482-6459 Bhaf, A F, 0G, 6527 Blujekt, Shaw 619-9059 Bhaf, A F, 0G, 6527 Blujekt, Shaw 619-9059 Betty, Ruby A, 4D, 1024 Cheyn, Leav 682-4728 Betty, Ruby A, 4D, 1024 Cheyn, Leav 682-4728 Betty, Leslie L, M 3A, 1800 Nails 482-4786 Bevan, Earl D, 6G, 1300 Tenn 482-6790 Beaver, Grant, M 300 E, 8K C 421-3984 Beaver, Grant, M 300 E, 8K C 421-3984 Richie E, 2B, 1245 W Cramers 482-7780 Bhana, Surendra, G6, 1324 Tenn 482-6387 Blakel, Barbara, RM, 2028 N. 6K C 299-0365 Blankel, Barbara, RM, 2028 N. 6K C 299-0365 Blancovoy, Anthony N, 6G, 1934 La 482-7682 Bible, Peggy D, 2, 1042 W 24 482-7482 Bickford, Elizabeth F, 9R, 2420 Orchard 483-9532 Stephen P, 6G, 2528 Cedarwd 482-4260 Bnicke, N 9G, 1891 Ctrlk, KC Mo 518-3834 Bwell, B N, 9G, 1891 Ctrlk, KC Mo 518-3834 Bwell, Jo, 6M, Lake Quivira, KC 613-6534 Bwell, R E, 6M, Lake Quivira, KC 613-6534 Bwell, R E, 6M, Lake Quivira, KC 613-6534 Bigles, J S, 0G, 9009 Chrone, Leawd 482-7415 Bigles, Floyd I, 4D, 1005 W 24 482-7415 Biggs, Michael N, OG, 802 W 25 482-6188 Bigges, Wrestfd, Qvlate 782-0453 Bigham, Charles R, I 4D, 1537 W 24 482-7477 Billingsley, T H, 6M, 4606 W 54, Sh Ms 432-5629 Bilotta, Vincent J, 0G, 3603 W 10 482-2626 Binkley, Janet R. 0G, 536 Fireside 842-5251 *Binns, Diana J. A. 0G, 2537 Bremer 842-5101 *Binns, Donald A. A. 0G, 1402 E Glem 843-9309 *Binns, Donald A. A. 0G, 1402 E Glem 843-9309 *Blondi, R. M, 6M, 1043 Manilow 842-3254 *Blondi, R. M, 6M, 1043 Manilow 842-3254 *Birch, Charles G. 6G, 19 Stouffer 11 842-8520 *Birch, Helen Dechant, D. 420, 2200 Harper 842-9148 *Birch, Helen Dechant, D. 420, 2200 Harper 842-9148 *Bird, Richard James A. 6G, 19 StouFFER 10 842-7681 *Bird, Richard James A. 6G, 19 StouFFER 10 842-7681 *Birdsell, Alan E. 3D, 1800 Engel 842-6600 *Birkholz, Dick W. 6G, 24 Stouffer 5 842-6011 *H醛, Sue C. K. G. 6G, 24 Stouffer 5 842-6011 *H醛, Sue C. K. G. 6G, 24 Stouffer 5 842-6011 *Bishop, Charles C. Jr, 6G, 1900 Vt 842-8956 *Bishop, Janet Lee, 0G, 812 W 25 842-7995 *Bishop, Raymond D. 6G, 16 Stouffer 8 424-9381 *Bishop, Raymond D. 6G, 16 Stouffer 8 424-9381 *Bittender, Carol A. 1F, 3603 I 15 842-7884 *Bittender, Carol A. 1F, 3603 I 15 842-7884 *Bittender, Carol A. 1F, 3603 I 15 842-7884 *Black, James D. 11, 400 La 842-4427 *Black, Larry D. 0G, 2333 Rdg Ct 842-3616 *Blackburn, D. 0G, 9543 Connell, OvPk 882-2406 *Blackledge, Linda Lee, 4A, 816 Ib 882-5946 *Blackledge, Linda Lee, 4A, 816 Ib 882-5946 *Blackney, David G. 6G, 2 Stouffer 11 842-8155 *Blackney, David G. 6G, 2 Stouffer 11 842-8155 *Bakely, Charles M. 3A, 1110 Ib 842-1581 *Blage, J. L. 3B, 7823 Carter, OvPk 881-7980 *Batchley, Jeremy A. F. 133, Vt 842-6596 *Batchley, Stephen A. F. 1002 Vt 842-7226 *Batchley, Samuel M. 3A, 1110 Ib 842-1581 *Bledse, Samuel R. 6, 20 Stouffer 9 *Bledzinger, R. 4M, 4142 Booth, 842-0570 *Blese, John Ross E. G, 6G, 639 Tenn 842-0312 *Blese, John Ross E. G, 6G, 639 Tenn 842-0312 *Bloom, Johene Rae, 14, 1815 Nais 842-7000 *Bloom, L. T. M, 961 6185 Horton 849-6418 *Blim, Gene E. G, 1111 W 10 842-1890 *Boillard, A. 4I, 4132 Fluker, KC 842-1890 *Boillard, Tracy, 3A, 918 Grove, Baldwin 944-3627 *Bockhorst, Susan G. 2, 1815 Nisthm 842-7000 Twisters cause heavy damages Damage from a twister which hit Iola late Thursday night was estimated by an advisor to Gov. Robert Docking at $1.24 million. The governor called up the Iola unit of the Kansas Army National Guard to assist removing debris and prevent looting. In the Carrollton Mo., area one or more twisters tore out trees and damaged power lines. June 16 1970 KANSAN 3 RED DOG INN Saturday June 20 ICE ICE ICE Dollar Pitchers ICE ICE ICE Saturday June 20 RED DOG INN What the Dickens is fish & chips? You think they're just fried fish and potatoes?? Good Grief, Sir (or Madam), do you know what you're saying?? To call ALFIE'S Fish and Chips "just fried fish and potatoes," is like saying the London Symphony is just a group of fiddlers!! It's like saying Great Britain is just an island!!!! (The very idea!!!) But how to describe ALFIE'S Fish and Chips? The mind boggles! I can tell you that the fish are tender, flaky files, fried crackling crisp in fresh, hot oil. That the chips are golden bits of fried potato. stai n n Oa pay woo u J kao But what good? You can't really eat words, that's just a saying! So you'll just have to eat ALFIE'S Fish and Chips! Be sure to splash on plenty of ALFIE'S exclusive imported malt vinegar...which is neither malt nor vinegar...but a zesty, tangy flavoring you'll find only at ALFIE'S! Once you've eaten ALFIE'S Fish and Chips, you'll know what the dickens we're talking about. ALFIE'S Fish and Chips are Covent Garden, The Beatles, Robin Hood, Mary Quant, Selfridge's, The Red Lion, Piccadilly, Shakespeare ...and all the rest!!! There's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite... Alfie's T.M. AUTHENTIC ENGLISH © Alfie's Fish & chips Open 7 Days A Week Mon. - Fri. 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., 4 p.m. - 12 Sat. 11 a.m. - 12 mid Sun. - 11 a.m. - 12 mid. OR TAKE OUT © 1969, Alfie's Fish & Chips, Inc. T.M. © Alfie's Fish & Chips ©1969 Alfie's Fish & Chips, Inc. Corner of 6th & Maine *Boddle, Jas E. 6G, 8515 Barnett, KC* 299-8450 *Boilet, Ken, 28, 6G, 8524 Dearborn, KC* 432-0703 *Boettcher, Edith A, 6G, 1607 W 9* 842-2825 *Bogatell, Edith A, 6G, 1207 Mass* 842-6237 *Bogatell, David, B, 1745 MW* 842-6237 *Bogart, D, G 4M, 5300 Sherwd, Sh Ms* 842-2306 *Boggan, Michael, 6M, 5202 W 50, Sh Ms* 842-6017 *Boguan, Eugien, M, 6G, RR2, Tongxue Ms* 845-2481 *Bolquist, B, 4G, 8500 W 59 Tr, Misson* 836-8731 *Och, H, 6M, 5000 W 59 Tr, Misson* 836-8731 *Billieg, Biley, G, 3A, 1810 W 25* 842-3820 *Boley, Susan, E, 12, 1815 Naismith MW* 842-7000 *Boley, Susan, E, 12, 1815 Naismith MW* 842-7000 *Bolley, James, B, 1745 MW* 842-7000 *Bholme, Per E, 7M, 3148 W 45, KC* 836-6672 *Boltler, Merle, R, 5M, 2906 W 42, KC* 236-5357 *Bond, Gary, G, 3A, 1810 W 25* 842-3820 *Bond, Gary, G, 3A, 1810 W 25* 842-3820 *Bond, Zeena, M, 0G, 2920 Iowa* 842-8108 *Bonds, Nedra, P, 4A, 2506 Redbud MW* 843-4038 *Bonds, Nedra, P, 4A, 2506 Redbud MW* 843-4038 *Bonds, T, J, 9A, 3530 Oakland, KC* 841-4373 *Bonnner, Jerry L, 0G, 1894 KW* 887-6554 *Bonnner, Ralph, S, 3A, 1819 KW, KC* 887-6554 *Bonnen, Ralph, S, 3A, 1819 KW, KC* 887-6554 *Bonnen, Ralph, S, 3A, 1819 KW, KC* 887-6554 *Borning, Wayne C, 5A, 2510 Ark MW* 887-6554 *Borning, Wayne C, 5A, 2510 Ark MW* 887-6554 *Borning, Wayne C, 5A, 2510 Ark MW* 887-6554 *Borning, Wayne C, 5A, 2510 Ark MW* 887-6554 *Bor 4 KANSAN June 16 1970 Bretz, Lynn M. 34, 1200 Tenn Brewbaker, Marlene G, 1800 Engel Brewer, Mark Wayne, 4A, 2800 KC Brewer, Mark Wayne, 4A, 2800 KC Brewster, Wail G, 0R, 183D Baldwin Bristen, Wm J, 4M, 2045 W 42, KC Bristen, Wm J, 4M, 2045 W 42, KC Bridges, Marita M, 0G, 1835 LK Bridgman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brigman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Briggs, Sdr L, 0G, 3041 S, 11 KC Brugman, Glenn B, 22, 1219 Ohio Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Cynthia W, 4F, field work Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bryn, Richard T, 6G, 1834 FK Bru Burns, Phyllis C. 11, 1815 Naismith 842-700 Burns, Robert M. 0G, 1800 Engel 842-660 *Burns, Robert E. 0G, 1800 Box 78 842-9017 Burns, Bruce E. J, 929 Skipper 842-692 Burns, Suzanne P. 4D, 2113 Harvard 842-362 Burroughs, N. 3M, 2014 W 3T, Tr KC 842-0545 Burroughs, N. 3M, 2014 W 3T, Tr KC 764-3496 Burruss, Kathryn C. 0G, 740 Iatle 842-5661 Burruss, William B. 6G, 740 Iil 842-5661 Burtson, Candice A. 18, 1815 Naismith 842-700 Burtson, E. 1815 Naismith Em Rd 842-7963 Burtson, Thomas E. 4A, 706 Iile 842-4077 Burscher, Margaret. 6G, Quail Crk 842-0077 Busy, Karen H. 0G, 2045 Ark 842-0322 Busy, Lena H. 0G, 503 Tpka 842-0187 Busch, C. P, 0G, 7027 Ov Pk 842-362 Bushet, Betty B. 14D, 1017 Ind Bushet, Betty Waller. 3A, 1012 Em Rd 842-700 Bushet, Lena H. 0G, 2045 Ark 842-0322 Bushet, Leo H. 0G, 503 Tpka 842-0187 Busse, Ellen. 3A, RR2. Box 334 843-0074 Joan, Joan A. 28, 1815 Naismith 843-700 Butler, Leo J. 252 & Mich 843-1624 Butler, Leo J. 252 & Mich 843-1624 Butterworth, D. 2F, 2000 Tc, Tpka 272-2408 Butterworth, D. 2F, 2000 Tc, Tpka 272-2408 Buxhair, Janiel H. 0G, 22 Stouffer 843-4804 Buxhair, Janiel H. 0G, 22 Stouffer 843-4804 Byers, Hazel B. 4A, 1107 Ind Byers, Helen Amelia, 3F, 1603 W 15 842-2488 Byers, Helen Amelia, 3F, 1603 W 15 842-2488 Byers, William M. 0G, 303 W 21 842-7077 Byerson, R约翰 E. 4B, 905 W 21 842-3479 C Cabanas, J. H, 8610 W 99 Tr Opk 648-392 Cable, Janet L. 14, 1815 Naismith 842-700 Cabera, Jesu. 0G, 2549 Redbud 842-7132 Cabero, Andre. 6G, 702 W 411 842-7078 Cabarmochmal, P. 6M, 4117 Adams 826-2900 Cadot, Cynthia B. 0G, 21 Stouffer 11 842-5784 Daddy, Mary Beewl. 14, 1823 O卿 842-3750 Cahn, Lyn Denise. 11, 1815 Naismith 843-7830 Calder, Joan A. 12, 1216 Iil 842-4785 Caldwell, An C. 3A, 2327 Murp 842-8712 Caldwell, An C. 3A, 2327 Murp 842-8712 Calmhoun, M. V, 0G, 3051 Entire. KC 842-2591 Call, Leonard M. 9G, 1419 O卿 842-2591 Callahan, Hilda J. 0G Calnan, Ross Dennis. 6G, 3W 842-3454 Calnan, Ross Dennis. 6G, 3W 842-3454 Cambern, T. GG, 7521 Aberdeen, P Vil 848-1060 Cambern, T. GG, 7521 Aberdeen, P Vil 848-1060 Cammert, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Cammert, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Cammert, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Cammert, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Carnwall, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Carnwall, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Carnwall, A. H, 4D, 25 Frontier 842-4703 Cobbins, J. H, 3A, 1940 Emerald 842-5471 Cobbins, J. H, 3A, 1940 Emerald 842-5471 Carbery, S. 3J, Lake Forest. Bn Spns 422-5348 Carden, K. L, 5N, 29 & Rbwow. KC Caresw, Montgomery. 12, 539 O卿 842-5359 Carliner, Louis A. 3A, 941 WIL 842-5785 Carlock, M. I, 0G, 1175 NTr. KC 299-4740 Carlson, Edith M. M, 2J Grill, Cofflive 842-7643 Carpenter, Bruce L. 0G, 3020 Iowa 842-7643 Carpenter, Bruce L. 0G, 3020 Iowa 842-7643 Carpenter, James P. 0G, 2130 W 26 842-9062 Carritt, J. K, 0G, 9119 Santa Fv. Opk 842-1054 Carritt, Rodney E. 0G, 1608 Edgehill 842-1054 Carritt, Rodney E. 0G, 1608 Edgehill 842-1054 Carritt, Rodney E. 0G, 1608 Edgehill 842-1054 Carrett, R. P, 2M, 703 W 24 842-8153 Carrett, R. P, 2M, 703 W 24 842-8153 Carrett, R. P, 2M, 703 W 24 842-8153 Carriefarbs, J. M, 2TN, & Rhbo. KC 842-6271 Carriefarbs, J. M, 2TN, & Rhbo. KC 842-6271 Carriefarbs, J. M, 2TN, & Rhbo. KC 842-6271 Cassiner, John M. 0G, 1245 Entr. KC 842-6760 Cavanaugh, Evelyn N, 0G, 1409 W 22 Cavanaugh, Kath A, 3A, PQ Box 87 Cavin, William B, 6509 W 2 Ter Cavin, Lawrence M, 6G, 7509 W Cavin, William B, 6509 W 2 Ter Cavinee, Dessanna D, 3D, 3311 Manchstr Cavinee, Dessanna D, 3D, 3311 Manchstr Caryah, Barry Grant, 3R, 1815马斯库 Caryah, Barry Grant, 3R, 1815马斯库 Cerynak, Susan E, 6G, 6029 W 25 Cerynak, Susan E, 6G, 6029 W 25 Chabas, A.7M, 4208 Campbell, KC Mo Chaet, Eric Richard G, 6G, 1011 Ind Chaet, Eric Richard G, 6G, 1011 Ind Chalmer, Hant W, 4D, 9239马斯库 Chalmer, Robert E, 4B, 2211Tenn Chambers, K.0G, 6118 Glenwud, OvPK Chambers, K.0G, 6118 Glenwud, OvPK Chambers, Mary Anne D, 4D, 2633Ind Chambers, Mary Anne D, 4D, 2633Ind Chapman, Melinda S, F, 1130Ky Chapman, Jorge S, 0G, 1815Naisimh Chapman, Jorge S, 0G, 1815Naisimh Chan, Man Ying K, 0G, 1422Masuda Chan, May Lee, 6G, 2619Stouffier 4 Cancellor, Philip, 0G, 514Fr Dr Cancellor, Philip, 0G, 514Fr Dr Chandra, Rakesh, 0G, 1741W 28 Chandra, Rakesh, 0G, 1741W 28 Chang, Sheng, 6M, 3919 Adams, 王坤 Chang, Sheng, 6M, 3919 Adams, 王坤 Chapman, Cheryl C, 4D, 508Fr Dr Chapman, Cheryl C, 4D, 508Fr Dr Chapman, Joane F, 4D, 2633Ind Chapman, Joane F, 4D, 2633Ind Chapman, L.D. 3E, 1334 Wayne, Tpkpa Chapman, M. S, 6G, 2333 Leavunch, Tpkpa Chapman, M. S, 6G, 2333 Leavunch, Tpkpa Chappell, Katherine A, 11, 2825Ma Chappell, Katherine A, 11, 2825Ma Chappler, R, 4M, 4117Adams, 王坤 Charlton, J.H, 28, 101Pawnee Charlton, J.H, 28, 101Pawnee Chasey, M. PN, 639Ky, 王坤 Chasey, M. PN, 639Ky, 王坤 Chatterjee, A, 7M, 39 & Rnbo, 王坤 chaudoin, Curtis M, 4J, 815Ohio chaudoin, Curtis M, 4J, 815Ohio Chayaniyayodhin, D, 0G, 2633Ohio Chelemer, M.J, 2D, 200W 26 Cellline, W, 0G, 821W 31, Indpndence, 461-3647 Cellline, W, 0G, 821W 31, Indpndence, 461-3647 Chen, Yi-Shong, 0G, 2429Ohio Chen, Yi-Shong, 0G, 2429Ohio Cheng, Chao-Fu, 0G, 1223Ohio Cheng, Deh Lin, 6M, 39 & Rnbo, 王坤 Cheng, Deh Lin, 6M, 39 & Rnbo, 王坤 Martin, Fenn, 6G, 1015Ma Martin, Fenn, 6G, 1015Ma Menniss, Suskel K, 0G, 1729Ky Mester, Thomas J, 26, 2414Ousdahl Mester, Thomas J, 26, 2414Ousdahl Dirkless, Marsh, W, 22, 407Ma Dirkless, Marsh, W, 22, 407Ma Steven Paul, MS, 1012EmRd Chipman, C, 3M, 3942Genesse, 王坤 Chipman, C, 3M, 3942Genesse, 王坤 Chirphonghoen, B, D, 0G, 2633Ohio Chirphonghoen, B, D, 0G, 2633Ohio Chiholson, Robert M, 4R, 1815Ma Cho, Cheng T, 0G, 3726Booth, 王坤 Cho, Cheng T, 0G, 3726Booth, 王坤 Choi, Sunling U, 0G, 2012Ohio Choi, Sunling U, 0G, 2012Ohio How, YaPing, G, 0G, 1238Miss How, YaPing, G, 0G, 1238Miss Chima, B, L, 0G, 39&Rnbo, 王坤 Chima, B, L, 0G, 39&Rnbo, 王坤 Chun, Michael J, G, 1607W 24 Chun, Michael J, G, 1607W 24 Jarry, Geo, I, 1123Ind Jarry, Geo, I, 1123Ind Churchill, Ralda M, MR, RMRI, 301Kc Churchill, Ralda M, MR, RMRI, 301Kc Churchill, S, M, 1900N 41Tr, Kc Churchill, S, M, 1900N 41Tr, Kc Churchill, Steven C, A, 1403Prairie Churchill, Steven C, A, 1403Prairie Churchill, B, G, 624FJDr Rd Chlearw, J, A4, 1312N H Chlearw, J, A4, 1312N H Judither, A, 141A, 1210Ohio Judither, A, 141A, 1210Ohio Leeward, B, L, 2424Harmand Rd Leeward, B, L, 2424Harmand Rd Ljose, Jose A, 4A, 1312N H Ljose, Jose A, 4A, 1312N H Judither, A, 141A, 1210Ohio Judither, A, 141A, 1210Ohio Leeward, B, L, 2424Harmand Rd Leeward, B, L, 2424Harmand Rd Ljose, Jose A, 4A, 1312N H Ljose, Jose A, 4A, 1312N H Clark, Stella T, G, 1612N H Clark, Stella T, G, 1612N H Stevens Hayme, G, 2014Tenn Stevens Hayme, G, 2014Tenn Marke, Wallace J, Gr, 3038W 7 Marke, Wallace J, Gr, 3038W 7 Mekele, M, Milton, OG, 121W 14 Mekele, M, Milton, OG, 121W 14 R, L, 0G, 8720Bridmor, QvPK R, L, 0G, 8720Bridmor, QvPK Clinton, J.R, 1608Dennis, Olatka Clinton, J.R, 1608Dennis, Olatka Cloton, Judith W, 4D, 903Pamela Cloton, Judith W, 4D, 903Pamela N, PA, 1008Dennis, Olatka N, PA, 1008Dennis, Olatka Coach, Peter H, G, 6919E 21Ter Coach, Peter H, G, 6919E 21Ter Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Clivt, R, C, 6970M1 Woodan, OvPK Civermann, George L, 2, 101Miss Civermann, George L, 2, 101Miss Willen, PJr, 21, 1247Ohio Willen, PJr, 21, 1247Ohio Connuckelman, G, 1906R I Connuckelman, G, 1906R I Cocseley, Cynthia D, 14, 821Tenn Cocseley, Cynthia D, 14, 821Tenn Clinton, J.R, 1608Dennis, Olatka Clinton, J.R, 1608Dennis, Olatka Closter, J, V, 42, 149College, Tpka Closter, J, V, 42, 149College, Tpka Willen, PJr, 21, 1247Ohio Willen, PJr, 21, 1247Ohio Willen, PJr, 21, 1247Ohio Conkul, Ann Kuckelman, G, 1906R I Conkul, Ann K SALE McCalls PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% - Sandals - Dress Shoes - Sport Shoes - Casuals Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence Patronize Kansan Advertisers Hand Made Clothing & Jewelry India Print Clothes Tie dyes Bead supplies Lepidoptera Creations 19 West 9th Street *Coffman, J. 6M, 9609 Bellinder, Leawd 649-6905 *Cohen, Audrey H. 3D, 1618 Tenn 842-6810 *Cohen, Jaco D. 3D, 1800 Naismith 843-8367 *Cohen, Steven M. 3D, 1800 Naismith 848-8833 *Correr, Jerry Chase, OG, 3248 Murp 842-4039 *Colt, Kenneth Jay, 3C, summer abroad 842-7066 *Colburn, Kristine B. 1344 Ky 842-7066 *Collea, Anita J. 4D, 1344 Ky 854-6888 *Collea, Barbara G. 6M, 4140 Booth, KC 822-6678 *Collea, Frankl L. 14, 1815 Naismith 842-4700 *Collea, & ibso, Ko C. 206-4141 *Collea, John Thurmar L. 2C, 1815 Naismith 842-4734 *Collea, Sherman M. 3M, 3901 Booth, KC 842-4945 *Colean, Constance O.G, 522 Fireles 842-8525 *Colean, Constance O.G, 2909 Seneca, KC 822-5984 *Colean, Jack Olivier I. 4C, 1815 Naismith 842-4934 *Colean, Robert T. 2L, 1431 Oudahl 842-0498 *Colean, Strarie M. 0G, 1300 La 842-7280 *Colean, Daniel R. 22, 511 Fireles 842-7280 *Colean, Fisher I. 6M, 592 Fireles 842-7280 *Collins, Charles O. 6G 842-7280 *Collins, David R. 0G, 2200 W 26 842-7848 *Colein, Elwin F. Jr. 1343 Box 113 842-8681 *Colein, Matthew Box 113 842-8681 *Colein, Gary James, 28, 1815 Calton 842-0508 *Combs, D E. 9G, 3325 N 79 KC 299-6676 *Combs, Jay Everet, OG, 1603 W 15 269-6197 *Comde, L. K 9D, 1703 Maplein 842-0240 *Conde, David G. 0G, 1930 W 1343 *Conderman, Paul, 3A, summer abroad 842-7777 *Condra, Garry Lee, 6G, 1629 Powers 843-6434 *Condra, Mike Young, 6G, 1629 W 12 843-4578 *Condra, L. K 9D, 1703 Maplein 871-0851 *Conley, Stephen C. 3D, 1527 Stouffer 842-4777 *Conn, Leslie, 24, 1537 Tenn 842-4777 *Conn, Jennifer Dell, OG, 1333 Tenn 862-1540 *Conn, B. J. E. Dell, OG, 1333 Tenn 862-1540 *Conn, Hilton L. 4E, 420 North 842-8727 *Connett, Ruth V. 6G, 811 W 28 Tern 842-6363 *Connett, Francis J. 6G, 1208 W 10 842-5353 *Connett, Morgan J. 6G, 1208 W 10 844-0942 *Connert, Robert Jack, 4A, 1312 Ohio 842-6350 *Conoley, G. 6551 W 11, 500 Tr. Ovp 842-4425 *Conrad, Janice Y. OG, 1506 Crescent 842-1964 *Consolver, J. 3M, 4141 Klamm, 8GCM 843-0528 *Constable, Linda K. 11, 516 Fireles 842-7721 *Constance D. D, 3R, summer abroad 842-6588 *Cook, F. E. 0G, 2818 W 4323 KC 842-6588 *Cook, J. 9D, 2818 Trempon, Tpkp 263-4066 *Cook, Louise W. 6G, 7011 III 842-0285 *Cook, B. J. PN, 4744 Klamm, Mkcm 842-8990 *Cook, Virginia A. 16, 1815 Naismith 842-4035 *Coyley, James Donald, OG, 1135 N J 842-0438 *Coyley, James Donald, OG, 909 W 20 Ter 842-5252 *Coyley, B. M. 6M, 9609 W 20 Ter 842-5252 *Coyley, Christopher, B. 4P, 1904 W 24 842-8990 *Coyler, David E. G. 1621 W 22 Ter 842-4035 *Coyler, Dean E. E. 2, 8 Stouffer 842-6456 *Coyler, Gerald L. 24, 3020 Iowa 842-1685 *Coyler, Jean Ann, OG, 415 Forrest 842-5687 *Coyler, John Owen, OG, 1 & Mich 842-5303 *Coyler, Marvin K. D, 3R, Stouffer 842-9234 *Coyler, Sandra, 1507 Tauronee, KC 821-0071 *Morgan, Betty G, OG, 294a Paola 194-2950 June 16 1970 KANSAN 5 *Copeland, Marilyn J. 3D, 3020 Iowa *Corbet, John R. 4A, 1405's Mass *Corbet, Michael D. GG, 1801 Maine *Corbet, M. KM, 7839 Mohawk, Pr Vl *Corbin, Neal C. OG, 1 Stouffer 9 *Corcoor, Lauran A. D, 9605 Century *Corbitt, M. KM, 7839 Mohawk, Pr Vl *Corbitt, C.A, OG, 3384 Clare, Tpkca *Corjacueyln J. 4D, 1241 La *Corjudy, D.OG, 3221 N. GK *Corjull, T.OG, 3221 N. GK *Cordionier, Alan E. B, 4151 W. 9 *Corkill, Cora Ellen, 4J, 1607 W. 24 *Coryl, Tim H. G, 1100 Co Ln KC *Cordonier, Alan E. B, 4151 W. 9 *Corkill, Cora Ellen, 4J, 1607 W. 24 *Coryl, Tim H. G, 1100 Co Ln KC *Cordonier, Alan E. B, 4151 W. 9 *Cornellson, Gayle L. 6G *Cornett, Myrna M. 3D, 1800 Engel *Cornish, Carol B. 4B, 1017 Ind *Cornish, Carol B. 4B, 1017 Ind *Cornish, Carol B. 4B, 1017 Ind *Corswell, P. R. 21军 shred *Corsv, F. M. 6039 El Monte, Sh Ms *Cortner, M. 5N, 7W, Chipewa Pea *Cortner, M. 5N, 7W, Chipewa Pea *Cosgrove, Barbara T. 4F, 2327 Mrp *Coskvest, Sarah J. 9D, 518 FireSire *Coslett, Gary Dean, A. 1607 W. 9 *Cornish, Carol B. 4B, 1017 Ind *Cornish, Carol B. 4B, 1017 Ind *Costa, Laura P. 0, 6U 7 *Crollo, M. R. 4M, 3411 Adams, KC *Costa, M. R. 4M, 3411 Adams, KC *Costa, M. R. 4M, 3411 Adams, KC *Costa, M. R. 4M, 3411 Adams, KC *Costa, M. R. 4M, 3411 Adams, KC *Coutsel, D.葛, 26, 1815 Naismith *Couter, Christina B. 3A, 9 StouFFER I KC *Couter, Christina B. 3A, 9 StouFFER I KC *Couter, Thomas Lee, 3A, 9 StouFFER I KC *Counh, Dimcan, 6G, 2112 Wear 24 *Cuneh, Vess, G. 16Z, 1722 Wear 1 *Coushen, Lute, E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Coushen, Lute, E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Coushen, Lute, E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Coushen, Lute, E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Coutser, Daley, Z. 0E, Wellsville *Coutser, Daley, Z. 0E, Wellsville *Coutser, Daley, Z. 0E, Wellsville *Cowpea, W. 6M, 4908 W. 57 KC *Courtney, W. 6V, 4908 W. 57 KC *Courtney, H. V. 2918 N. K2 *Courtney, James V. 3B, 1605 W. 9 *Curtney, Lucie E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Curtney, Lucie E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Cowpert, T. J. 4M, 135 S. 8K *Cowpea, W. 6M, 4908 W. 57 KC *Courtney, W. 6V, 4908 W. 57 KC *Courtney, H. V. 2918 N. K2 *Courtney, James V. 3B, 1605 W. 9 *Curtney, Lucie E. 4D, 1207 Harvard *Cowpert, T. J. 4M, 135 S. 8K *Cowpea, W. 6M, 4908 W. 57 KC *Courtney, H. V. 2918 N. K2 *Courtney, James V. 3B, 1605 W. 9 *Cowl, Joseph P. 0, 1212 W. 29 Ter *Craven, Stanley E. 3L, 923 La 842-5688 Crawford, David G. 3A, 1605 W 9 842-3731 Crawford, Watson K. 3E, 603 W 15 842-4119 Crawford, Waack H. 3D, 603 W 15 842-4849 Crawley, D. B, 4M, 3740 Booth, KC 236-9754 Craycraft, Della R. 0G, 132 E Glen Corey, Ronald S. 0G, 1328 Vt 843-0953 Cree, Charles G. 11, 1850 M 842-7000 Creek, Cynthia Lite J. 4A, 2340 Murp Creighton, Janet M. 4D, 929 Ky 842-8466 Cree, Charles G. 11, 1850 M 843-6088 Crippen, T. D, 4D, 103 N Friklin, Tkpa Crist, Robert D. 6G, 39 & Rnbo, KC Crockett, Gary O. 16, 1319 Vt 843-1166 Cronin, Lynne A. 2P, 2348 Murp 842-7867 Cronin, Robert Gerald, 1201 Oreden Cropp, David F. 6G, 11 Stouffer 11 842-0481 Crockett, Gary O. 16, 1319 Vt 843-1166 Cronin, Lynne A. 2P, 2348 Murp 842-7867 Cronin, Robert Gerald, 1201 Oreden Cropp, David F. 6G, 11 Stouffer 11 842-0481 Crockett, Gary O. 16, 1319 Vt 843-1166 Cronin, Lynne A. 2P, 2348 Murp 842-7867 Crown, Cropsy M. 3B, Compton Sq 842-8482 Crosby, Ivan K. 6M, 39 & Rnbo, KC Crossfield, Orquestra M. 38, 923 W 842-0665 Crossfield, Jo Anne, 11, 932 Rookdage 842-1665 Crowley, J.A. 3M, 6201 Cedar, Mission Crowley, Marsha, 25, 1529 W 842-1879 Crowley, Sandra Sue, 0G, 1310 Tkpa Cudney, Barbara J. 9A, 1310 Teenn Cudzell, Foos F. 6G, 11 57 W Ter Crugman, Kimberly, 25, 1529 W 842-1104 Candra *Day, Suphalux A, 4B, 1017 Ind 842-9479 *Dallenbach, D. A, 6G, 2516 Century 843-5774 *Daffary, Romesh V, G, 6G, 1251 Crescent 843-4400 *Carol, Caro I, 4G, 2200 W 26 843-2456 *Dahlin, Marie, P. 3G, 2019 Ohio 842-4636 *Dahlstrom, Paul A, 6G, 2101 Ohio 843-7330 *Dahringer, Paul, 6G, 1547 Ky *El, Clausen Jean, 26, summer abroad 842-7576 *Dialman, E. D, 5N, 5212 W 6g, Tr. P 262-8483 *Daly, D. L, AM, 5433 Cherry, KC Mo 444-6966 *Daly, D. Richard E, A, 1041 Miss 842-5862 *Daly, Thomas B, F, 415 W 17 Damann, Carinolyn S, F, 4237 Murp Daniels, Phillis S, OG, 8290 Itawea Daniels, R, L, OG, 2626 N 46 Tr, KC Daniels, Wanda Lea, D, 4283 Redbud Danielson, James A. J, 1012 En Rd Danielson, James A., 1101 En Rd Darrow, Alfred C Jr, GG, 1800 Nais Dary, David A, OG, 1101 W 27 Daue, Jerald Paul, GG, 2460 Ousdahl Daue, James M, OG, 1218 Daue,,李凯Y, M, 12 Regency Davidson, L, OG, 1037 Garfd, Tpk Davidson, Vicky M, I, 12 Regency Davidson, L, 21, 1603 W 15 Davidson, L, OG, 1037 Garfd, Tpk Davidson, Vicky M, I, 12 Regency Davidson, J, W, OG, 1026 Forest, KC Davis, Jodie Jr, P, 1203 Orread Davis, John Clyde, GG Davies, Linda C, 1815 Smithmith Davis, Lucile J, Y, 620 Lao Dadley, Maleney R, 1F, 1529 W 22 Dadley, 李敏 S, 326 Clint, Ottawa Dadley, Linda C, 1815 Smithmith Dadley JIMI HENDRIX Band Of Gypsys $399 KIEF'S JIMI HENDRIX Band Of Gypsys $3.99 KIEF'S ANTONIONI's ZABRI SKIE POINT NOW SHOWING — ENDS TONIGHT Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Evening 7:15 - 9:25 Matinee Daily 2:30 ANTONIONI's ZABRI SKIE POINT Granada THEATRE-----Telephone VI 3-5788 ENDS TONIGHT DAVID LEAN'S FILM DOCTOR ZHIVAGO IN PANAVISION AND METROCOLOR Evening 7:30 Only Adults 1.50; Child .75 THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 974 AID AND IOWA "The Cockeyed Cowboys of Calico County" STARFUN Dan'Hoss' / Nanette Blocker / Fabray Star of "BONANZA" A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR ™ 8622 Mat. DAILY 2:30 Eve. 7:15 - 9:20 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI.3-1965 The relationship between sensual people is limited; They must find a new way. DIESEL LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN present KEN RUSSELL'S film of D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" R COLOR by Deluxe United Artists Starts Wednesday THE Hillcrest ENDS TONIGHT HOW THE WEST WAS WON From METRO GOLDWYN-MAYER and CINEMAA • METROCOLOR Patronize Kansan Advertisers Evening 8:00 Only Child .75; Adult 1 THE Hinterrest When A Woman Hungers For Love . . . It's Easy For A Man To Use Her! MGM PRESENTS A JERRY GERSHWIN ELLOTT KASTNER PICTURE the walking stick GP PANAVISION* AND METROCOLOR. ENDS TONIGHT! Evening 7:15 & 9:10 Adult 1.50; Child .75 THE Hillcrest HILLEBERT SHOPPING CENTER A STATE UNIVERSITY 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including "BEST PICTURE"!! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S BEN HUR WIDE SCREEN THE Hillcrest • METROCOLOR Starts Wednesday HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 911 AND SOHA Hillcrest "THE LIBERATION OF L. B.JONES IS UNFORGETTABLE! A TOTALLY COMPELLING PIECE OF STORY-TELLING! IT IS UNSENTIMENTAL, UNSPARING, UNFORGIVING, BRUTAL, POWERFUL, DISTURBING AND SUPERBLY WELL-ACTED!" —CHARLES CHAMPLUN, LOS ANGELES TIMES a WILLIAM WYLER film THE LIBERATION OF L.B. JONES A WILLIAM WYLER ROMANIE LUBEN PRODUCTION WEEKLY LEE 3 ANTHONY NUSSEM LEE LEE BARBARA KAPNET CHILL COBB-ZERBE BROWNE-MAJORS HERSHEY KOTTO-WILLS and introducing LOLA FALANA Scenes by STRIING SEMPIONANT and JESSE HILL FORD. Based on the novel by JESSE HILL FORD. Director of Photography WEBB GARRETT. Made by LUMIN BEHNSTEIN. Produced by RONALD LUBEN. Directed by WILLIAM WYLER. C R Starts Wednesday a WILLIAM WYLER film THE LIBERATION OF L.B. JONES THE Hillcrest FOREST SCHOOL CENTER WEST HILLCITY, NY The Average Student Takes 2-3 Hours To Read This Book Excellence CAN WE BE EQUAL AND EXCELLENT TOO? "Good in a while a book comes along which, if taken to heart, possesses the capacity to lift the whole tone of a nation's thinking. John W. Gardner has produced such a book." — Christian Science Monitor JOHN W.GARDNER Our Students - 30-45 minutes Here's How 10 of Our Students Progressed NAME BEGINNING ENDING Speed Comprehension Speed Comprehension Joe Botinelly (Engineering) 392 65% Steve Bray (Geography) 318 55% Steve Churchill (Business) 221 30% Steve Converse (Education) 299 45% Roger Haack (Accounting) 548 60% Jack Montgomery (Journalism) 363 73% Ed Murdock (Physics) 509 50% Linda Plinsky (Business Admin.) 318 45% Mark Sprague (Business Admin.) 291 44% Gayle Trigg (Education) 485 65% 2,118 85% 1,629 70% 1,412 75% 1,471 70% 1,145 85% 1,033 90% 1,033 85% 1,500 85% 1,022 82% 1,629 95% ★ Summer Classes—deadline is June 17th ★ For Fall Classes Call The Number Below 书 evelyn wood reading dynamics VI 3-6424 or VI 3-6426 Course Guarantee Course Guarantee We guarantee that we will refund the entire tuition to any student, who, after completing minimum class and study requirements, does not at least triple his reading efficiency as measured by progress in the course and beginning and ending tests. Denton, Carol E. 26, 1012 W 29 Ter Denton, Linda A. 4, 2113 Harvard Denton, Norma Marie. 3D, RR5. 843-4843 Denton, Norma Marie. 4C, 1531 Shaw. 831-9010 Dedebshan, Homania E. 15, 127 Ind Deravi, Kliomars. 1E, 1743 W 19. 842-6744 Derrington, K. 4M, 3936 Wyo. KCMO. 513-5945 Deterding, C. 3W, Box 83 Meriden. 842-2828 Dettling, Lymn. 3F, 1510 Ky. 842-2828 Deutch, Karen R. 3D, 1603 W 15. 843-4530 Deutsch, J. 3M, 3828 Rainbow, KC 842-6928 Devillier, James R. 3P, 1818 Naismith 842-7000 Devor, Alice E. 0G, 127 E 19 Dewar, Darrrell D. 0G, 1223 Ohio 842-9596 Dewary, M. B, PN 3, & Rwobn. ICD. 362-5825 Dexter, Stephen H. 5E, Regency 842-0513 Dhanattakul, Thawee G., 0G, 1127 Ohio 842-4172 Dizzell, James R. 3P, 1818 Naismith 842-7454 Dizz, Fernando E. 1R, 2404 Yale Diaz, Gregorio, E. 2404 Yale D sillya, D. 1501 Crescent 843-4614 Dewey, M. B, PN 3, & Rwobn. ICD. 362-5825 Dexter, Stephen H. 5E, Regency 842-0513 Dhanattakul, Thawee G., 0G, 1127 Ohio 842-4172 Dizzell, James R. 3P, 1818 Naismith 842-7454 Dizz, Fernando E. 1R, Donham, J, I 9A, RR1, Box 72, Grdrn 884-8962 Donley, J, L 31M, 3123 Mydrk, KC 236-6980 Donne, Jan E, 30M, 1123 Mydrk, KC 843-8430 Donne, Jane B, 4E, 815 Naismith 843-8430 Doremus, G, OG, PCB 237, Tongue KG 845-3255 Doremus, M, 9D, PO Box 237, Tongue KG 845-3255 Dornois, J, C 5M, 4419 Lloyd, KC 423-2414 Dorscom, David L, 3A, 1123 Naismith 842-7000 Dorzab, W E, 4M, 3716 Bell, KC Mo 561-3871 Doss, C, L G, 1421 E 11, Winfield 212-1921 Dougan, Diana J, 3D, 1924 La 842-3521 Douglas, Bruce A, 4D, field work Douglas, Gloria L, 4F, 1815 Naismith 843-8344 Douthat, Edward M, 3A, 2401 W 242-4029 Douthat, Helen B, 3A, 2401 W 25 842-4029 Douville, A, 4M, 9600 Woodson, OvPk 824-2992 Dove, Barbara Gall, 4D, 1529 W 9 Dowell, Michael T, 4G, 1012 Emr Dk 824-2922 Dowell, Frank E, Jr. 3D, 918 W 24 824-2433 Dowell, Sharyn R, 16, 918 W 24 824-2433 Downs, Rhonda J, 4D, 1753 W 19 824-3678 Dove, Barbara Gall, 4D, 1529 W 9 Doyle, Michael T, 4G, 1012 Emr Dk 824-2922 Drake, Barbara N, 0G, 920 E 19 824-7691 Drake, J, D, 4M, 1901 W 63, Pr Vil 269-9562 Doyle, Michael T, 4G, 1012 Emr Dk 824-2922 Drake, Barbara N, 0G, 920 E 19 824-7691 Drake, J, D, 4M, 1901 W 63, Pr Vil 269-9562 Dresser, John A, 2G, 1234 Tenn 842-7000 Dresser, Alice G, 4D, 707 Ariz 842-5806 Dressery, Essie G, 0G, 902 Leavnth 862-0182 Dressiek, P, 6M, 1009, 38, KC Mo 931-5323 Driscoll, J, R, 4E, 4401 W 54, Sh Ms 722-4626 Driskel, Mary C, 4N, 1924 La 842-3521 Driskel, M, 6M, 1009, 38, KC Mo 931-5323 Drisenk, P, 6M, 1009, 38, KC Mo 931-5323 Driscoll, J, R, 4E, 4401 W 54, Sh Ms 722-4626 Drubey, NIU, TM, 4132 Rnowb, KC 362-7466 Drubey, Joseph Taylor, A, 1745 W 742-7000 Druten, Michael W, 11, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Druten, Lorraine, A, 4G, 1307 Crescent 842-9916 Dukelow, Jas S, Jr. 6G, Cornish Sq 843-6776 Dukes, Nicolete, 2A, 1741 W 19 842-7516 Duckeldt, C, J, 9A, 3907 W 47, Ms 263-7452 Dukeren, J, M, 5916 W 392, Ter Ms 842-6822 Dunchan, Chas H, Jr. 0G, 1123 Ind 842-6822 Duncan, Patricia, 0G, RR2, Baldwin 943-5359 Duncan, Nicolete, 2A, 1741 W 19 842-7516 Dunken, Lennard, 2R, 1012 Emr Dk 842-8838 Dunnan, Lorraine, A, 4G, 1307 Crescent 842-9916 Dunnan, Chas H, Jr. 0G, 1123 Ind 842-6822 Duncan, Patricia, 0G, RR2, Baldwin 943-5359 Duncan, Nicolete, 2A, 1741 W 19 842-7516 Dunken, Lennard, 2R, 1012 Emr Dk 842-8838 Durle, R, H, M, 515 Buena Vis, OvPk 849-5282 Durkin, Margaret, A, 4G, 103 W 15 842-2488 Dutton, Kirk, 3M, 3735 Eaton, KC 262-6837 Dutton, Martha E, 1F, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Dutton, Paul W, 1815 Naismith Vt 842-7913 Dwigens, Cathy M, 4A, 1328 W 842-7913 Dwyer, P, V 4A, 9307 E 81 Tr, Raytn 353-5738 Dwyer, J, Pascal C, 8560 Grant, Ov Pk 381-2752 *Dyers, Jas C, Mg, 8650 Grant, Ov Pk 381-2752 *Dysart, David B, I, 181 Miss 842-2960 *Eades, Alma Jean, 0G, 725 W 25* *Eados, John D, 6G, 725 W 25* *Eads, Joseph I, 22, 1815 Naismith* *Eakes, William S, B, 309 Tenn* *Eakins, Susan James, 84, 901 Avalon* *Eakins, Susan James, 4A, 901 Avalon* *Earl, Kent Douglas, B, 2434 Murp* *Earles, Ralph M, 0G, 11 & Mo* *Eastard, Napoleon B, 6G, 921 W 24* *Easterday, M, 0G, 623 Laramie, Atchn* *Eastman, Ann M, 2F, 742 Ohio* *Eastman, Robert I, 2L, 940 La* *Eastman, R. E, 6M, 8412 W 89, Ov Pk* *Easton, William R, 2E, 3020 Iowa* *Eastwood, David R, 2E, 80 Stouffer 3* *Eastman, Robert I, 2L, 940 La* *Ebert, William F III, 4A, 025 Emery* *Echelle, Alice F, 4A* *Eckels, Lance F, J, 1815 Naismith* *Eckles, Danny R, 3R, summer abroad* *Economides, Michael, 9E, 1003 Emery* *Eddy, Charles Byron, 4D, 1012 Emr D* *Edun, Kayode, G, 1017 Ind* *Edwards, Brian J, 3J, 1527 W 9* *Edwards, Gary E, 4E, 1505 W 22 Ter* *Edwards, Gloria A, 15, 1450 W 15* *Edwards, A, 4206 Lovie K* *Edwards, R, L, 0G, 420 W 46, KCMo* *Edwards, Stenhen R, 4G, field work* *Edwards, Gloria A, 15, 1450 W 15* *Edwards, D, 3M, 4035 SpgdT, 42 *Edinson, Gary R, 24, 816 Crestline* *Eells, Dwight, 0G, 3448 Watson, Tpkra* *Ebert Barry, 3M, 4130 Fisher C, 72 *Ehrlich, Robt, 3M, 2629W, W 43C* *Ehrlich, Robt, 3M, 2629W, W 43C* *Ehrlich, Laurence A, 4E, 329 E 19* *Eldt, Laurence A, 3M, 3736 Booth, KC* *Einhhell, Mark Allen, 4X, 1733 Ohio* *Elet, Edith Maricle, X, 918 W 24* *Elend, Edith Maricle, X, 918 W 24* *Elend, Charles, G, 1007 W 29 Tear* *Elant-Antably, Barbara, G, 1608 W 9" *Elash, Daniel D, 6G, 714 W 25* *buni, Abdulzai, G, 1247 Ohio* *Eleey, Donn D, 0G, 1301 W 42* *Ellenbecker, Sandra, 2L, 1340 Tenn* *Elliott, Ann L, 9D, 1602 W 9* *Elliott, George F, 4A, 822 W 25* *Elliott, Jeffrey, 3M, 3730 SpgdT, 26 *Elliott, Marlee, 4D, 1392 N, 4KC* *262-988 *262-988 Elliott, Mary C, 0G, 1131 Ky 842-6581 Pamela, J, Mamed A, 3D, D22 W 825 842-1467 Elliott, Rebecca R, 5N, 1912 W 37 KC Elliott, Oxford G, 1023 W 842-1155 Chaar, J, Charles D, 4F, 747 R 842-2160 Ellis, James Myron, 2E, 530 Redbud 842-1015 Ellis, Robert B, 4A, 102 N Y 842-3044 Ellis, Robert Wm, 7M, 1120 Hazn 842-4571 Ellis, Terry, 773 M, 1120 Hazn 842-1155 Ellis, Sharon, 0G, 772 Oakland, KC 899-1736 Ellison, D K, 3P, 2405 Harris, Tpk 232-4037 Ellison, Lanny Dean, F4, 1244 Ohio Ellison, Nancy Lee, 0G, 914 L 842-4234 Elzouk, Ashour, 6G, 20 Stouffer 4 842-1831 Manuel o, 0G, RR2, Lee Summit Mo. 831-1087 Emuel, Sq. acey, 0G, 1023 W 842-1155 Emerson, Glacey, 0G, 2437 Mur 842-8194 Emerson, John A, 14, 2229 West 843-4557 Emert, R L, 3A, 1237 Milkco, KC Emery, James Dale, 0G, 1733 Miller 842-1087 Emmer, Gayle Jerome, 0G, 1734 O川 842-4082 Emmot, J S, 4M, 5101 Rosewd, Sh Ms 262-1575 Emmot, W m, 4M, 5101 Rosewd, Sh Ms 262-1575 Emmpg, J T, 7N, 2020 Oakland, KC 832-5606 Empson, Marjorie, PN, 2711 S 7K C, 375-1077 Enders, Geo L Jr, 6G, 1707 W 2T Ter. 842-5098 Enders, Geo L Jr, 6G, 1707 W 2T Ter. 842-5098 Enders, James G, 400 W 21 R 842-7004 Engber, Wm, 5M, 4140 Booth, KC 262-2083 Engber, Lawrence A, 26 summer abroad 842-8849 Engber, James W, 0G, 435 Mich 842-2065 English, C M, 3R, M9 & Rnbow, KC 262-2552 Engmann, Gary Roy, 6G, 817 Ohio 842-9010 Enholm, Donald Ling, 0G, 1240 O川 842-1087 Enlow, V L, 22, 5715 Maple, Sh Ms 832-6040 Enns, Maribeth, 14, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Enright, Katherine A, 3D, D22 Work 842-7000 Erickh June 16 1970 KANSAN 7 RED DOG INN RED DOG INN Saturday June 20 ICE ICE ICE Dollar Pitchers ICE ICE ICE Saturday June 20 RED DOG INN ICE ICE ICE Saturday June 20 RED DOG INN Carriage Lamp ON THE MALLS Welcomes You To --- 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. MILITARY CARRIAGE Located in The Malls Shopping Center There will not be live entertainment Evers, Wm C III. 21, 2345 Rdg Ct Evers, Katherine F, 6G, 905 W 29 Tc Ewton, Thomas F, 6G, 905 W 29 Tc Eyre, Nancy J, 6G, 1025 In Eyre, Nancy J, 6G, 1025 Iin Ewood, David J, Ezechao, Peter A, 6G, 1128 Ohio *Fabor, H D, 6M, 5314 Skylne, Sh Ms 722-2582 Dennis, Mick M, 22, smarb abroad Fabian, C, 3M, 5401 Windsor, Sh Ms 262-0264 Cul扶all, A, 7N, 2020 Olathe, KC 326-5660 Frault, J, 7N, 2020 Olathe, KC 326-5660 Fagerberg, Richard E, 21, 1590 W E 43-0370 Faeyen, Ronald F, GG, 1400 W E 13-0420 Fahrenholtz, H M, 3M, 4033 Spgfd, KC 262-1599 Falen, Frances D, 0G, RH Hope 368-7800 Fairees, C, R G, 212 Central, Olathe 764-4227 Fairleigh, Sheila A, 22, 1017 Ind 842-9479 Falen, Frances D, 0G, RH Hope 368-7800 Farken堡, Martha B, 17, 1736 La 842-1205 Fall, Janet Lynn, 4D, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Faraj, Bahjat Alfred, GG, 303 W 23 842-3208 Farris, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fwell, K E, 5N, 1920 W 43 KC 262-0860 Farbman, Stewart R, 4J, 2130 W 26 842-1869 *Farmer, Fred, 0G, 2400 N 131 Piper 842-7000 Farrales, F, 6M, 39 & Rnbc, KC 421-6958 Farras, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fwell, K E, 5N, 1920 W 43 KC 262-0860 Farbman, Stewart R, 4J, 2130 W 26 842-1869 *Farmer, Fred, 0G, 2400 N 131 Piper 842-7000 Farrales, F, 6M, 39 & Rnbc, KC 421-6958 Farras, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fwell, K E, 5N, 1920 W 43 KC 262-0860 Farbman, Stewart R, 4J, 2130 W 26 842-1869 *Farmer, Fred, 0G, 2400 N 131 Piper 842-7000 Farrales, F, 6M, 39 & Rnbc, KC 421-6958 Farras, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fwell, K E, 5N, 1920 W 43 KC 262-0860 Farbman, Stewart R, 4J, 2130 W 26 842-1869 *Farmer, Fred, 0G, 2400 N 131 Piper 842-7000 Farrales, F, 6M, 39 & Rnbc, KC 421-6958 Farras, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fwell, K E, 5N, 1920 W 43 KC 262-0860 Farbman, Stewart R, 4J, 2130 W 26 842-1869 *Farmer, Fred, 0G, 2400 N 131 Piper 842-7000 Farrales, F, 6M, 39 & Rnbc, KC 421-6958 Farras, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fwell, K E, 5N, 1920 W 43 KC 262-0860 Farbman, Stewart R, 4J, 2130 W 26 842-1869 *Farmer, Fred, 0G, 2400 N 131 Piper 842-7000 Farrales, F, 6M, 39 & Rnbc, KC 421-6958 Farras, Sandra A, 4D, 1118 Eudora 842-2303 Farthing, James W, 2E, 627 Ohio 842-2015 Fell, Janet Lynn, 4D, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Faraj, Bahjat Alfred, GG, 303 W 23 842-3208 Farfriens, Benjamin E, 4M, 1820 Oakmilh Feltam, Sam E, 3M, 3001 Mahco, KC 423-4945 Feng, Dafel, GG, 1421 W 19 Feng, Hsuan-Chung, 6G, 1218 Wemilh Fernberr, Robert M, 3A, 2357 Dgct, C 241-2992 *Ferbert, J H, 5N, Williams, Edwdwl Ferguson, Carl Carter, 26, 1815 Nais Fernberr, Hugo L, 6G, 1629 Califl Fernandez, Juan M, 6G, 1629 W 20 Ter, KC 424-6824 Ferrell, Joanne, 0G, 1822 Mau Ferrells, Robert M, 3A, 2357 Dgct, C 241-2992 *Ferbert, J H, 5N, Williams, Edwdwl Ferguson, Carl Carter, 26, 1815 Nais Fernberr, Hugo L, 6G, 1629 Califl Fernandez, Juan M, 6G, 1629 W 20 Ter, KC 424-6824 Ferrell, Joanne, 0G, 1822 Mau Ferrells, Robert M, 3A, 2357 Dgct, C 241-2992 *Fife, Jerry Leo, 4E, 1904 W 24 *Figg, Stephanie L, 28, 1242 LA Fincher, Judith A, 0G Finley, Patricia A, 4D, 1512 W 5 Finley, S, W 34, Oksalawo Finney, Michael G, 4M, 1749 Wichco Finney, Kevin S, W 1222 Ohio Finney, Oliver John, G, 602 W 125 Finney, Rosalynn L, 4D, 1517 W 9 Finney, Rosalynn L, 4D, 1517 W 9 Firestone, C, S, 0G, 608 S Leust, Ottwu Fischer, Marlin, 4A, 1741 W 19 Fischer, Rosalynn L, 4D, 1517 W 9 Fibernum, C, S, 0G, 608 S Leust, Ottwu 8 KANSAN June 16 1970 Fisher, Jane H, 6G, 1238 R I Fisher, J L, 0, 1322 HIGH, Baldwin *Fisher, Linda F, 5N, 1919 Olathe, KC 362-0825 *Fisher, William B, 0G, 9 Stoffer 14, 3129 Fisk, Larry Lee, 3F, 1131 Tenn Fite, Maura J, 0G, 1339 Ohio Fitzer, broad, 6D, 1300 La Fitzergald, C, 9D, 1300 La Fitzergald, Harry, 24, 1527 W 9 Fitzergald, Catherine, 11, 1210 Ohio Fitzergald, D, 9D, 1300 La Fitzergald, Harry, 24, 1527 W 9 Fitzergald, Catherine, 11, 1210 Ohio Fitzergald, M, 3S, 10900 Ascida, Shawnee 613-6387 Flager, Daryl Lee, 4A, 307 W 23 Flaherty, Richard E, 6G, 627 W 25 Fechting, A, 5M, 1020 Minneke, KC 722-0807 Fleming, Constance, 26, 1816 Maine Fleming, Samuel E, 2L, 1423 Ky Fleming, David G, 6G, 1230 Miss Fleming, John R, 6G, 1230 Miss Bonnie Jo, 26, 2200 W 26 Flint, D, 0G, 5829 Speaker, KC 287-5684 forez, James J, 127 E 17 Forez, John R, 6G, 1230 Miss Flury, K, 4E, 39M, WKO, KC 511-5854 Flynn, Albert Dale, 26, 2 Stouffer 8 Flynn, Edward P, 4D, 1101 Ohio Flynn, John R, 6G, 1230 Miss Forsea, Alfredo F, 24, 1527 W 9 Forsea, Peggy Sue, 21, 1145 KY Ford, B, H 3D, 815 Acorn, Eudora Ford, B, H 3D, 815 Acorn, Eudora Forsea, Alfredo F, 24, 1527 W 9 Forsea, Peggy Sue, 21, 1145 KY *Frisbie, Carolyn S. 22, 1800 Engel *Fritz, D. Jendra M. 19, 83 Lenae *Fritz, J. M. 4A, 2300 Woodend, KC 236-5996 *Fritz, Lora Marie, 0G, 1123 Ind *Frohn, Michael David, 12, 1145 La *Frost, Gregg B. 16, 1174 Broadroad *Frost, Michael D. 3, 624 WZ 8 143-007 *Fry, Darrel Kent, 4B, 109 Av Rd Fry, Virginia, 6G, 1703 W 24 Frydman, B. A, 6G, 139 Providence Fugger, Susan M. 3D, 1012 Em Rd 242-1157 *Fuller, Joye, 6G, 2610 W 42, KC 722-2926 *Fuller, M. G, 10262 Rivriew, Bn Spg 721-1045 *Funderbark, S. G, 16M, 1812 W 41, KC Mo 521-1015 *Fundis, Ronald J, 6G, 1123 Ind *Fung, Ho Leung, G. 6626 Ohio 434-0696 *Fundersburg, S. G, 16M, 1812 W 41, KC Mo 426-6733 *Hunk, E. H, 6G, 6619 Floyd, Ov Pk 426-5734 *Fuqua, Nancy G, 4D, 230 Stuffer 482-3136 *Fragey, B. M, 4D, 5117 Parkway, KC 269-7929 *Gage, John贝勒 II, 18, 2166 W Z 8 143-0871 *Gale, Barbara, 22, 1423 Ohio 820-0510 *Gale, Melvin, 5M, 3917 Cambridge, KC 432-4768 *Galecki, G. 3N, 160W 37, KC Mo 753-3475 *Gall, Barbara Lynn, 24, 1529 W 9 *Gallard, T. M, 16M, 1812 W 41, KC Mo 423-3065 *Gallagher, Wm J. 0G, 16M, 180tatte, KC 728-1554 *Gauria, N. U, 7N, 2020 Olathe, KC 432-5660 *Gauri, Nursial, 0G, 39 & Rubey, KC 811-1894 *Gann, Ronald F, 2L, 1527 W 9 *Gans, Mary C, 22, 1012 Em Rd 820-5750 *Garcia, A. C, 3D, 1814 Stouffer 7 *Garcia, David, 4D, 1941 Stewart, KC 825-5667 *Garden, Donald B, 4B, 21RX, Box 82 *Garden, Gary Alan, 22, 1800 Engel, KC 826-6000 *Garden, Rita M, 4A, 2021 Emerald, KC 826-5628 *Garner, Rosema J, 0G, 20 W 27 Ter. KC 824-3946 *Garner, Linda Cazin, 0A, 26 Stouffer 7 *Garnetre, Thomas P, 3L, field work 843-5912 *Garrine, John S, 3B, 133 Tenn 843-5912 *Garrine, S. D, 0G, 6325 Maple, Sh Ms 423-4563 *Garrine, S. D, 0G, 6325 Maple, Sh Ms 423-4563 *Garrion, Henry J, 16, 1815 Naismith KC 824-7000 *Garrion, Henry J, 16, 1815 Naismith KC 824-7000 *Garry V, V. 6M, 1232 College, KC 863-4238 *Garton, Nora J, 0G, 1815 Naismith KC 824-1299 *Garton, Nora J, 0G, 1815 Naismith KC 824-1299 *Gauen, Susan C, 4L, field work 843-5912 *Gear, Bennie W, 0G, 1529 W 23, Tpkra 834-7890 *Gaylord, W. G, 2812 Parkwauk, KC 424-4035 *Gaylon, W. G, 2812 Parkwauk, KC 424-4035 *Gelse, Joseph G, 6S, 822 N. 3, Atchison Guzit, J. M, 3M, 4175 W 55, Mission 422-8845 *Genour, James, J. 4G, 10V Avalon 824-7572 *Genour, Hugh, G. 6G, 1713 Maples, KC 432-3579 *Gelt, Joseph G, 6S, 822 N. 3, Atchison Guzit, J. M, 3M, 4175 W 55, Mission 422-8845 *Georaphf, Robert N, 4E, 1623 W 22, KC 843-5804 *George, Paula Sue, 4D, 1125 W 123, KC 843-5804 *Georaphf, T. M, 2904I, W 45, KC 826-7761 *Gerami, Mehld, 1E, 1815 Naismith KC 824-7000 *Gerber, M. L, 3M, 2901 Seneca, K C 824-6812 *Gerhardt, Edward H, G Perry 824-6114 *Germain, Malcolp, G, 409, W 1815 Naims *Getto, Charles A, 14, 10 Westwood 843-6191 *Getto, Charles A, 14, 10 Westwood 843-6191 *Gets, Candy Sue, 16, 1815 Naims *Geyer, Dave Lee, 4A, 1815 Naims 824-7000 *Ghuma, Mohamed G, 4G, 1334 Ohio 820-8552 *Gianakon, Harry G, 100S Ky 824-6812 *Glibank, W. G, 10400 W 70, ShMs 831-4079 *Gibler, Pauletta, 3D, RR2, Baldwijn 821, C. AM, 7823 Carter, Ov Pk 831-9695 Gibson, Glenn Ray, 4E, 1709 Vt 842-6781 Gibson, Roy A, IL, 8 Boulter 3 usr 1 Ger, R H, 6M, 5345 Woodson, Mission 831-1188 Gerber, K, 6M, 6345 Woodson, Mission 842-0046 Carol James, G, 0G, 1615 E 18 Gilbert, Eladia K, 9D, 1012 Em Rd 842-2533 Gilbert, James N, 4D, 1012 Em Rd 842-2533 Gilbert, Verlin, G, 0G, 915 E 18 Gilham, Shirley C, G, 1657 R 142 Gilham, Steven A, 0G, 1537 R I 842-3803 Gilham, Steven A, 0G, 1537 R I 842-3803 Gill, George W, 6G, 1297 Kc Mo 842-6538 Gill, George W, 6G, 1297 Kc Mo 842-6538 Gille, Barbara, 4D, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Gille, Jennifer A, 4A, 1345 Vt 842-7957 Gillespie, Ellen E, 2B, 1605 W 25 Gillespie, Epine G, 1680 Naismith 842-9904 Gillespie, Gilbert, 1680 Naismith 842-9904 Gillespie, Karen H, 0G, 460 Calif 842-9597 Gillespie, Karen H, 0G, 460 Calif 842-9773 Gillespie, Robot O, G, 1680 Naismith 842-9904 Gillesse, Timothy J, 26, 1517 W 9 Gignannon, Dorothea, U, 1602 Crenshaw 843-3066 Gignannon, E, 6G, 10616 E 32 Kc Mo 831-1668 Gillandi, Camila, A, 14G Tenn 842-7733 Gillandi, Robyn Sue, I, 118, 115 Nailsmith 842-7000 Gimple, Ken, 4M, 2908 W 43 KC 842-4659 Gingerbrook, I, 1630 Wilhelm, Olathe 872-1275 Glandor, V, 0G, 8002 Kc Mo 842-2021 Gleaser, Richard D, G, 650 E 0H 842-1342 Glass, Max H, 4A, 1402 Davis 843-6355 Gish, Joan Boszie, 141, 181 W 21 Tr 843-6355 Glandor, V, 0G, 8002 Kc Mo 842-206 the university shop announces its ANNUAL SUMMER SALE JUST IN TIME FOR FATHER'S DAY!! SUITS KNIT SHIRTS SHOES DRESS SLACKS SPORTCOATS RAINCOATS BERMUDAS SHIRTS TIES USED FORMALS FLARE SLACKS SWIMWEAR JACKETS WASH PANTS NOW 20-25-33-or 50% OFF Entire Stock Not Included the university shop MEN'S APPAREL Slight Charge For Alterations On the Hill 1420 Crescent Road Al Hack *Gordy, Diane, 5N, 3735 Booth, KC 236-4260 Gorges, Janee, PA 2515 Seattle, KC 362-9439 Gorsky, Edward, 4B, Summer Abroad 842-9100 Gossy Billy Lee, 4D, 9053 T 134 Engel 842-9100 Gossy Frichelk, P. 6G, 1011 Ind 843-9402 Gossy T, C. 4M, 3048 S 11, KC 831-4890 Gossy T, Gene E., 3R, 7614 Arlington, Ray- town, Mo FL3-4436 Gough, James A., 3F, 1800 Engel 842-6000 Gough, J. S., 5M, 4029 Sprendfg, KC 842-0805 Gough, J. S., 3F, Field Work 842-2499 Govin, Rheta Schaeffer, 0G, 1722 Ohio 842-6031 Grady, Brita L. 16, 1815 Naismith 842-6031 Graham, David T., 0G, 3 Stouffer 4 Graham, Malone J., 0G, 8001 Mo 842-2499 Graham, Malone J., 5M, 7164 ArmSTRM, KC 788-7238 GJohn, W. J. 26, 2428 Redbud 842-3222 G汗s, Hanoi, 12I7 Ind 843-1636 G汗s, Hanoi, 62, 1914工面 842-7105 Gunsted, J. F, Jr. 0G, 1149 Ohio 843-9510 Grant, Craig F, 0G, 1116 W 29 Terr 843-9510 Grant, Synthia s., 3D, 509 Leaven, Leaven, Mo MU2-5110 Grant, Diane, 0G, 1116 W 29 Terr 843-5110 Grant, Don E, 0G, 2427 N 59 KC AT7-1736 Grant, Stephen E, 9A, 1515 W 9 Grant, Stephen E, 9A, 1414 Tenn 842-0565 Graucl, Truman W. 6M, 3902 W 72 T Priale Village 842-7152 Gauerholz, I. J. 12, 10 W 128 842-5673 Gray, B. S., 22, 1381 Env Box 221, Grdn 842-7033 Gray, G. K., 22, 1381 Env Box 221, Grdn 842-7033 Gray, Judy Eddy, 0G, RR 3 Baldwin 844-6764 Gray, W. L., 408 Fr Dr 842-9130 Gray, W. L., 408 Fr Vil 843-9177 Graybill, Robert V. 0G, 308 E Culton WM- burg, Mo KT 847-5384 GrayDavid, J. 6G, 2436 Redbud 842-6565 GrayE, E. D, 2119 N 4514 W 842-2799 Green, Frances M. 9D, 324 Stevenson, Glathe 764-2205 Green, Brent C. 3A, 1001 Miss 842-5202 Green, Louis S. 0G, 1536 Tenm 846-7291 GreenMarion, 4B, 720 E 37, Tpkma AM6-7291 Greenamnye, M. 3A, 2141 Quail Crk 842-8652 Green Kathleen, 4D, 1 Stouffer 842-8362 Green, William A., 4D, 1 Stouffer 12 842-8362 Greenhouse, Ted. 22, 1815 Naismith 842-3914 Greenwell, Linda K. 3D, 1605 W 9 842-3914 Greecar, Jaqueline, 15A, 1503 Crescent 842-3914 Greecar, Robert Glenn, 6G, 314 W 13 842-3464 Greecar, Janice K., 18, 3516 W 7 842-3464 Greecar, Van Douglass, 26, 1406 Tenn 842-9421 Greewing, Colleen, 4J, 905 Em Rd 842-2716 Gregg, Gary Keith, 0G, 1314 W 22 842-6189 Grebbion, Haile A., 4470 W 67 W Terrion Prairie Village HE2-1462 Gregory, John R., 0G, 1603 Mo HE2-1462 Gregory, Judy R., 3M & Richmond KC 842-0805 Grene, Van Douglass, 26, 1406 Tenn 842-9421 Grewing, Colleen, 4J, 905 Em Rd 842-2716 Gribbon, Constance K, 0G, 1314 W 22 842-6189 Gribbon, Constance K, 0G, 1314 W 22 842-6189 *Griffith, J. C., 4D, 26, Summer Abroad *Griffith, Joy P. D, 4D, 21 Stouffer 6 *Griffith, June E., 11, 1815 Naismith *Griffith, Michael D., 0G, 3020 Iowa *Griffith, Kyleah S., 11, 1815 Mass *Grigg, Stanley W., 4P, 1330 Mae *Grigg, Robert D., 3A, 1328 W 19 Terr *Grigg, Robert D., 3A, 2413 Ousdalh *Grillo, Peter J., 5M, 3012 Idwrd *Grindel, Joseph M., 0G, 1236 W 26 *Gripka, R. E, 3E, 252 S Fereer KC *Grisham, Donald R., 6G, 4965 Woodsham *Grissom, Mark P., 4A, Regency *Groman, Martin L., 0G, 1311 W 6 *Groman, Thomas E., 4G, 15 E 53, KC *Groman, Thomas E., 4G, 15 E 53, KC *Groom, Gerald L., 3A, 1012 Enr Dk *Grosko, David J., 4J, 1130 Ky *Grosko, David J., 4J, 1130 Ky *Grosso, J.W., 4G, 0G, Summer Abroad *Grossman, Linnard E., 815 Naismith *Grossman, Andrew E., 5M, 1792 D S 32, KC *Grossom, M.H., 6M, 4121 Thpmsp, KC *Grossom, Marina L., 4M, 2017 W Ground, R.L, 24, Summer Abroad Grover, Patricia, 0G, Summer Abroad Groves, Marina, 3A, 1810 Ala Grossk, B.K., 3A, 1810 Ala Grunder, Mariejo, 0G, 1855 Naiasmith Gruzmacher, Margo G., 0G, 1714 Vt Guznov, Maria A., 3A, Summer Abroad Guznov, Maria A., 3A, Summer Abroad Guhn, Edith Lynn, 4A, 1012 Enr Dk Guirdy, Loyd Joseph, 0G, RR4 Box 150 Guilder, Barbara L., 1734 Engol Guilder, Barbara L., 1734 Engol Gunderson, Barry K., 2L, 2133 Ohio Gunderson, Barry K., 2L, 2133 Ohio Gunnels, George M., 4D, 281 Shower 6 Gupta, Parveen K., 0G, 1741 W 19 Gubert, Robert, 24, Summer Abroad Guilt, Raynane R., 0G, 1851 W 6 Gutierrez, Jose R., 0G, 611 W 6 Guttery, Barbara, 18, 1815 Naismith Guy, Brenda D., 0G, 424 Miss Guy, Brenda D., 0G, 424 Miss Guzman, Manual, 6M, 5051 Mission Shawnee Mission Guzman, Herbert C., 0G, PO Box 318,杏城 Gwin, Robert E., 3A, 2105 Terr 8 H Hake, Betty Mae, 4N, 39 & Rainbow, KC Haas, Lawrence J., 4E, 821 Del, Tongue, noise Haack, B.J., 9D, 1915 Straford Haack, David Paul, 4Z, 2300 Haacker, C., 26, 1308 Ohio Hackner, C., 9G, 1132 Lane Tpk4 Hackner, C., 9G, 1132 Lane Tpk4 Hackernorth, John W., 4D, arwd Haddadin, M.J., 0G, 1419 Ohio Haddadin, M.J., 0G, 1419 Ohio Haddadin, M.J., 26, 1815 Naismith Haddadin, M.J., 26, 1815 Naismith Haegelin, Diane M. 0G, 1231 La Haegert, Daryl Lee. M. 6201 Barker Haagh, Earl L., 1L 905 Em Rd Haagh, Earl L., 1L 905 Em Rd Haagh, Kathleen, N. 1620 Stratford Haagh, Michael M. 0G, 1510 Ky Haagh, Michael M. 0G, 1510 Ky Haagh, Michael M. 0G, 1510 Ky Hageman, C. 12, 1815 Naismith Haglin, Gilbert A. M. 6G, 8001 Falmouth Prairie Village Hall, Kevin H. M. 6G, 8001 Park Hill Haks, Larry An. M. 3R, 1311 Ma Haines, Henry S. 22, Gatehouse Haines, James. M. 6G, 619 Mdfr. Tpka Haines, Terrance. M. 2B, Box 353 Harvard Haines, Terrance. M. 2B, Box 353 Harvard Halderson, Judith. M. 4G, 306 Harward Halderson, Samuel G. Z. 1942 Wtork Hale, Douglas R. M. 6G, 3032 W 7 Hall, Leonard W. Jr., 0G, 5622 Nail Shawnee Mission Hall, Michael B. M. 4A, 2430 Ohio Hall, Stephen W. M. 4D, 601 Ind Hall, Stephen W. M. 4D, 601 Ind Hall, Stephen W. M. 4D, 601 Ind Haller, Brian J. M. 2348 Murp Haller, Mary A. M. 0G, 109 W 9 Hall, Stephen W. M. 4D, 601 Ind Hall, Stephen W. M. 4D, 601 Ind Halperin, Alan K. M. 4M, 306 Locust, KCMo Hilstend, Cheryl L. M. 4D, 1632 Ten Hilstend, Cheryl L. M. 4D, 1632 Ten H仙源, Cheryl L. M. 4D, 1632 Ten H仙源, Cheryl L. M. 4D, 1632 Ten Hamilton, Charles M. M. 6G, 1502 W 7 Hamilton, Charles M. M. 6G, 1502 W 7 Hammersmith, V. M. 1727 W 4 Hammersmith, Jack. M. 6G, 8749 Kessler, Over- and Park Happy, Polly, 6G, 1510 University 843-3077 Harbaugh, Denise E, 3A, 1703 W 24 842-8413 Harbin, Gary B, 26, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Harbrecht, D J, 3M, 2922 W 44, KC 236-5842 Harbrecht, Sue, 5N, 2922 W 44, KC 236-5842 Hardy, Roderick, A 4, 2531 Redbud Hardy, Roderick, A 4, 2531 Redbud Harkins, Daniel M, 4A, 1525 Sunset Abroad 843-4711 Harkins, Daniel M, 4A, 1525 Sunset Abroad Harmon, Vickie Jo, 3D, 1603 W 14 842-3079 Harmon, Mary Rambo, 0G, 1321 NH 842-3378 Harmon, Roger, GG, 1817 La 842-3376 Harmon, Roger, GG, 1817 La 842-3376 Harmon, Judith K, 6G, 2911 Mo 842-3378 Harmon, Boh Sheng, 0G, 1701 Lu 843-4909 Richard L, 0G, 1000 Sunset 843-7107 Harper, Mary Rambo, 0G, 1321 NH 842-7000 Harper, Larry J, 6G, 2408 Dairy Harmony 842-3378 Harper, Patricia A, 0G, 1401 N, KC 371-7889 Harper, Robert C, 0D, 1232 La 842-6437 Harper, Larry J, 6G, 2408 Dairy Harmony 842-3378 Harper, Patricia A, 0G, 1401 N, KC 371-7889 Harper, Robert C, 0D, 1232 La 842-6437 Harrell, Helen, 0G, 1945 Anita Schila 842-6412 Harrell, Jackson J, 6G, 2526 Cdrwd 843-8666 Harrell, Lynda S, 9D, 2526 Cdrwd 843-8666 Harrell, Cornwall, Tpka FJ4-8188 Harrell, D W, 3292 W 39 PKA FJ4-8188 Harrell, Judith H, 0G, 1945 Anita Schila 842-6412 Harrell, Jackson J, 6G, 2526 Cdrwd 843-8666 Harrell, Lynda C, 4D, 1000 Mo 843-1889 Harrich, Richard T, 2D, 913 Ind 842-3248 Harrich, Richard T, 2D, 913 Ind 842-3248 Harrich, Steven, 0G, 2337 Murp 842-3539 Harris, Sr Marie J, 6G, 1030 Ala 842-3539 Harris, Susan, 3M, 1316S W 45, KC 268-5949 Harris, Susan, 3M, 1316S W 45, KC 268-5949 Harris, Virgil, 6G, 1717 La 842-6795 Harris, Alice J, 0G, 1507 Davis 843-0879 Harris, Anna E, 0G, 105 N Courtnid. 843-0879 Harris, John R, 6G, 768 W 25 843-0879 Harris, John R, 6G, 768 W 25 843-0879 Harris, Stephen, 26, 316 Park Hill 843-0037 Harris, Icier L, 3B, 1217 Tenn 842-8593 Harris, Icier L, 3B, 1217 Tenn 842-8593 Harris, Clindy, 3N, 39 & Rwbk, KC 843-5252 Harl, Richard W, 21, 1607 W 9 843-5252 Harl, Sandra K, 0G, 1603 W 15 843-5252 Harl, Mattain J, 4D, 736 W 25 843-5252 Harl, Mattain J, 4D, 736 W 25 843-5252 Harl, C, R 7M, 4911 Rswd, Sh Ms 722-2724 Harl, R L, 9A, 7624 Tauromee, GC 299-2171 Harl, Van M, J, 4D, 736 W 25 843-4230 Harl, Charles E, 3A, 2113 Hrwd 843-4230 Harl, Thomas G, 4P, 1603 W 15 843-5250 Harl, Thomas G, 4P, 1603 W 15 843-5250 Harl, Wm A, 4M, 1786 S ZC 843-1319 Harl, Wm A, 4M, 1786 S ZC 843-1319 Harl, Trickel, Thomas F, E, 3515 W 843-1319 Harl, Trickel, Thomas F, E, 3515 W 843-1319 Harl, Leather A, 4F, Field Work 843-1319 Hawell J, 6G, 1808 W 19 843-1319 Hawell J, 6G, 1808 W 19 843-1319 Hasemeyer, Julie, 4D, 1603 W 15 843-4530 Haicki F, 21, 1800 Naismith 843-8007 Haicki F, 21, 1800 Naismith 843-8007 Haassler, R D, 4M, 1000 Co Line, HC 8E2-7929 Haassler, R D, 4M, 1000 Co Line, HC 8E2-7929 LBJ birthplace made monument STONEWALL, Tex. (UPI) — The birthplace of former President Lyndon B. Johnson was dedicated as a national historical site Saturday, and Johnson said those who saw it would "get a glimpse of the past—of a time when life was hard and plain." The small frame home where Johnson was born Aug. 27, 1968, was made a part of the National Park Department along with two other homes where he spent his formative years in Johnson City, Tex. Johnson's birthplace is located on the eastern edge of the 296- acre LBJ Ranch. The former President drove the half-mile from his ranchhouse to his birthplace in a 1910 Ford given him by Henry Ford, and then told a crowd of 10,000 central Texans standing in the hot sun that he appreciated their hospitality during his term in office. "In the five years while I was President, you welcomed people from all over the world to our part of the country," Johnson said. "It is a matter of great satisfaction to me that so many people—visitors from 83 countries and from every state in the nation have found something of interest in these houses. "I am glad to welcome you to the land my father worked, and to the home my mother made. "But for the families that lived here then, so typical of that time and place, life was also a constant promise." "They get a glimpse of the past—of a time when life was hard and plain. Johnson lived in the house five years before moving with his parents—Sam Ealy and Rebekah Baines Johnson—15 miles away to Johnson City. Lady Bird Johnson accompanied her husband in the drive along the Pedernales river to LBJ's birthplace, as did Gov. Preston Smith, Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel and Johnson's grandson Lyn Nugent. The small house sits in a grove of pecan trees on a grassy hillside. June 16 1970 KANSAN 9 bits'n Pieces THE GO ANYWHERE LOOK in Juniqwear Top $6 Skirt $6 Tank Top $4 Dress $13 FOR Summer WE'RE DO IT OUR OWN NEW THING! ALL WASHABLE 5-13 ALL WEARABLE the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Top $6 Skirt $6 Dress $13 the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts The University of Kansas Theatre Announces Their Summer Season Rain by John Coulton Clemence Randolph, adopted from short story by Somerset Maugham Main Stage Arena July 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 at 8:20 p.m. The Miracle Worker by William Gibson July 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 at 8:20 p.m. and July 17 at 2:30 p.m. in Experimental Theatre Pinocchio by Brian Way Main Stage Arena July 6,7,8,9,10 at 7:20 p.m. and July 8, & 9 at 2:30 p.m. Luv by Murray Schisgal June 27, 29, 30 and July 1, 2, 3 at 8:20 p.m. Experimental Theatre University Theatre at Murphy Hall Ticket prices $1.50. Student with current registration card 75c. For further information call UN 4-3982 *Haswell, Glenn Lee. 6M. 8904 Mastin *Haswell, Glenn Lee, 6M, 8904 Mastin, 888-7183 *Hatchett, Wm R, 6G, 941 Kail 882-2375 *Hatcett, Frank Jr, 0G, 905 Em Rd 884-5404 *Haffield, James F, 4J, 1741 W 19 884-9034 *Hattcoat, Joe G, 12, 2740 Century 884-3174 *Haut, Charles J, 0G, 28 Stouffer 884-4527 *Haug, Sr Lauria M, 6G, 1509 Stratford 884-0354 *Haun, Ronald M, 4B, 1027 Avalon 884-4534 *Haviland, Roger O, 3A, 2347 Murp 884-6553 *Hawkins, Mricr A, 3R, 1603 W 15 884-4530 *Hakins, Jerry R, 6G, 1820 Miss 884-4534 *Haun, Ronald M, 4B, 1027 Avalon 884-4534 *Haviland, Roger O, 3A, 2347 Murp 884-6553 *Hawkins, Mricr A, 3R, 1603 W 15 884-4530 *Hakins, Jerry R, 6G, 1820 Miss Hennipill, Roger D. 4E, 1600 Learnard Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Carla. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Henderson, C. M. 0G, 1619 W2 Terr Henderson, H. M. 0G, 1619 W2 Terr Henderson, Diana. 12, 1815 Naismith Henderson, Floyd M. 0G, 1833 Mo Henderson, Frances. 12, 1815 Naismith Henderson, James. JA, 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Jim M. 6G, 1113 W2 W9 Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merriam Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, M. C. 0G, 1619 W2 Terr Hoffman, Floyd M. 0G, 1833 Mo Hoffman, Frances. 12, 1815 Naismith Hoffman, James JA, 9D, 1423 Ohio Hoffman, Jim M. 6G, 1113 W2 W9 Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merriam Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Carla. 26, 1619 W2 W terr Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merriam Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merriam Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Achton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Aachton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Aachton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Aachton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Herbert, Beverly. 18, 1815 Naismith Herbert, Chaucey. 4A, 1323 Ohio Herman, Janis Ann. 4D, 1003 W1 W5 Herman, Mahan. 4M, 7100 Mohawk Herman, Mandeez. Victor, 0G, 1815 Naismith Heron, Wm B. JR, 4E, 1020 Iowa Herrick, Myron D. 6G, 1224 LA Herrmann, Linda A. 15G, 1527 W9 Herrison, Lonita L. RM, 3948 Mercier KCMI Hertel, Richard. 22, 1025 Emery Hertz, Susan N. 4D, 1507 W2 Terr Hervey, Wm H. MG, 5128 Clark, S M Hesan, Jan. 0G, 1623 W6 Tern Hetherington, T. P. 4E, 1600 Watson Hewitt, Jay T. 24, 409 Watson, Tpka Hewitt, Michael J. 0G, 1026 Ohio Heyl, Andrew R. 3L, Field Work Hatt, David M. 4E, 1601 W2 Terr Hoffman, Carlo. 26, 1619 W2 Terr Hennaly, Allee F. 9D, 2724 Tappa Henderson, Judith D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Carolin D. 9D, 1423 Ohio Henderson, Reba. 0G, 1734 Ohio Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Hendrickson, Grace. 0G, 1525 La Henry, Carolyn P. 3D, 1012 Em Rd Henry, David Penn. 6G, 1145 Ind Henry, Joseph. 6M, 9422 Nienm, Ov Pk Henry, Julius P. 16, PO Box 235 Henry, Margaret. 4A, 923 Maine Henry, Richard. 9M, 9423 Maine Henry, Robert C. 4P, 1012 Em Rd Henry, Robert C. 6G, 825 N. 7 Aachton Henry, Robert C. 6G, 6600 KG, 6Mis Henry, Robert C. 4M, 1516 Fireside Henry, Healingh. Hugh C. 0G, 424 Knox Merrami Hensleigh, Paul A. OG, 7533 Norwood Meariam Hennessy, J.F. 0G, 9243 State, KC Her伯威. Browning. HU M G, 514 F rd W Henriber New game to 'educate' racial bigots DAVIS, Calif. (UPI)—A University of California professor has devised a parlor game designed to help white persons understand the discrimination and frustration faced by a Negro living in a slum. Robert Sommer, head of the psychology department at the UC Davis campus, said the game, called "Blacks and Whites," is a race oriented version of the well known game "Monopoly." "When people play games they also learn." Sommer said. "With Blacks and Whites they can begin to understand the misery of millions of Americans." Participants can play as either white or black persons in the game. The manufacturers encourage white persons to play as a black to get the full educational impact of the game. The rules feature many instances of discrimination. A white player starts with $1 million in the bank and the Negro player with $10,000. But if a white loses his money, he declares bankruptcy, while the Negro goes on welfare. Even the "chance" cards are segregated. A negro player, for example, may pick a card: "Chicago Mayor Daley has been reelected—go directly to jail," or "Spiro Agnew is elected President—go back four spaces." Negroes receive only $10,000 when they pass "go" while whites get $50,000. But he also may draw the card: "Skin lightener discovered—play next three turns as a white and collect $100,000. You may buy any unowned properties that you land on," such as in exclusive neighborhoods like Palm Springs or Beverly Hills. A negro player may find the government has started urban renewal projects which cost him his ownership of Harlem or Watts. The game also provides obstacles for the white player. He may choose a white player's card: "You've contracted a strange skin disease—play the next three moves as a black." Sommer receives no royalties from the game at his own request. June 16 1970 KANSAN 11 D DROP ANCHOR AT THE Captain's Table We Offer: Pastrami sandwiches roast beef sandwiches corn beef sandwiches baked ham sandwiches bar-b-q ham sandwiches bar-b-q beef sandwiches giant veal sandwiches rueben sandwiches hamburgers cheeseburgers hot ham and cheese jumbo shrimp basket chicken basket fish stick basket turkey sandwich All Sandwiches Are Sliced Thin And Piled High! The Captain's Table Across the Street From Lindley Hall Open 8:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Hornberger, Steve. 24, 1720 W 21 Terr. Horton, Frances L. 4, A123 La *Horton, Gary Lee. 0G, 3020 Iowa Horton, W. A. 4M, 3936 Wyo. KCMo *Houchin, Anthony A. 0G, PO Box 775, Baldwin Hoddywell, Anthony A. 0G, PO Box 775, Baldwin Mearley, Marilyn S. 3D, 901 Avalon Houser, Fred David. 18, 940 Ind Houston, K. L. 0G, 164, KC Houston, J. A. 4M, 3936 Wyo. KCMo Hovland, Pamela. 3F, 1012 Em Rd Howard, Bille E. 3E, 627 W 25 Howard, Candida G. 600 Howard, R. Sunrise Abroad Howard, Charles M. 4A, 1903 W 25 Howard, Judy D. 24, 1735 W 19 Howard, Lyn J. 6M, 6412 Charlotte Howard, Malin. 3M, 5346 Skyline, Ms Howard, Margaret. 3L, 1424 Tenn Howard, Patricia. 4D, 111 Harvard Howard, V. Janette. 3L, Field Work Howard, Wm II. 4M, 5000 W 51 Terr. Shawnee Mission AD6-9229 Howard, Donald G. 0G, 1918 High, KNC AD6-7809 Howell, Norm. G,RR 3 Box 80 Howell, Richard M. 4A,1401! Mass Howell, Nancy C. 4M, 1012 Ohio Hyot, Sandra. 4D, 2111 Kaidl Hyang, Paul W. 2E, 1224 Naismith Hyang, Ung, 2213, 0G, 1229 Ohio Hubbard, Delores L. 3A, 4500 Claudine HKC ME1-7360 Hubbard, Katherine. 4D, 1105 Conn Hubbard, Prevost III. 6G, 2440 Cdrwd Hubbard, Nancy C. 4M, 1012 Ohio Hubbard, M. 4G, 1737 OHc Hubbert, Mona G. 4A, 2416 Jasu Hubbert, Robert. 6G, 2416 Jasu Huddleston, Carolyn. 1200 Oread Hubbard, M. 4G, 1737 OHc Hubbert, Mona G. 4A, 2416 Jasu Hubbert, Robert. 6G, 2416 Jasu Huddleston, Carolyn. 1200 Oread Hubbard, M. 4G, 1737 OHc Hubbert, Mona G. 4A, 2416 Jasu Hudson, Joseph R. 0G, 1311 Valley Huerter, David. 3M, 9300 Booth, KC Huerter, David. 3M, 9300 Booth, KC Huff, Calvin E. 14, 1815 Naismith Huff, Marilyn Lee. 4D, 909 Av Rd Huffman, Wilmer E. 0G, 44 Winona Huggard, Albert D. 4B, 5150 Goddard HKC ME1-3517 Hughes, Charles A. 1E, 1815 Naismith Hughes, Eleanor. 0G, 2019 Taurounce. HKC ME1-3519 Hughes, Jeffrey O. 4A, 1028 Tenn Hughes, Mary D. 4D, 2200 W 26 Hughes, Paul S. 1E, 1815 Naismith Hughes, Nenzetta. 0G, 746 Mo Houck, Robert G. 6M, 8650 Grant, Over- land Park IM8-9154 Hutt, Robert E. 6G, 1416 KY Hutt, Robert E. 6G, 1416 KY Hults, Jon Rook. 22, Regency Hults, Jon Rook. 22, Regency Hume, Janice. 0G, 16 Stouffer 10 Hume, Joseph. 5M, 2805 W 75, Pr VI Hume, Joseph. 5M, 2805 W 75, Pr VI Huwain, F. PN. RR 1 Box 23, Weston Mo Hunt, Marcia Ann. 3R, 2120 Maplein Hunninghake, Gary. 3M, 1911 W 42, Hunt, Nantaj N. TM, 9115 W 99 Terr. *Hunninghake, Gary, 3M, 1911 W 42, KC 262-7133 Hunt, Nathan Jay, TM, 9115 W 99 Terr Upperson, Andre K, Hunter, Andreas, GN, 39 & Rnwb, KC 649-5350 *Hunter, Barbara, OG, 2401 N, T3 KC 299-2148 *Hunter, Donald A, OG, 1301 La 842-4720 *Hunter, John B, 4M, 3805 Booth, KC AD6-7448 *Hunter, Victoria M, 9A, Summer Abr 842-4720 Hunter, Wm, AM, PQ Box 37, Nixa Mo Hurlbut, Corinne, D, 4D, Canaan Mo Tonganoxie 485-2750 *Hursh, Debbie E, 0G, 10 Stouffer 5 483-3814 *Hursh, Emma W, 10, 912 Tenn 483-3431 *Hursh, Hilda, 4A, 10 StouFFER 5 483-3814 *Hursh, Frank R, OG, 2401 W 25 483-6596 *Hursh, Gayle, GC, 0G, 1012 Tenn 483-6596 *Hursh, Logan Lee, PA, 9A, 1922 Clare 483-7898 Hursh, Logan Lee, 3E, 1012 Em Rd 483-8883 *Hurtado, Juan Jose, G 6G, 1621 Oxford *Huston, Perry, P. 6G, 1922 W 29 *Huston, Larry P, P. 6G, Reservoir *Huston, Laurie, 9D, Regency *Huston, Melinda S. F, 4F, Field Work *Huston, Nengo, Linda, 3D, 1603 W 5 *Hutchins, Earl C, M 7319 W 26 Mz *Hutchinson, Grant L, G 627 W 22 *Hutchison, Jerry D, G 215 Princt *Hutchison, Jerry D, G 627 W 22 *Hwang, Irine R, OG, 1140 Ohio *Hyde, Marshall, 6M, 5922 W 62 Terr. Mission *Hylton, Lora, OG, 1RR, 1 Welville *Hylton, Marta, 14, 1815 Naismith I Ibrahim, Abdulrahman, D, 1464 Tenn Ibrahim, Abdulrahman, D, 1464 Tenn IIllan, Carl R, G 2006 Tenn IIllan, Carl R, G 2006 Tenn Clifford, W 28, 1329 W 9 Illig, Keith H, 11, 1815 Naismith Impfo, Lorie, W 29 Tern Impfo, Lorie, W 29 Tern IMman, Constance, OG, 1300 NE 48 Tern KCMo Ieland, Robert E, G 6G, 355 W 14 Ireland, Gary, 12, 1029 Tenn Ironsmith, Elaine M, 1125 Ints Irving, Ann K, 12, 1815 Naismith Irving, Thomas, M, 3913 Adams, KC Irving, Thomas, M, 3913 Adams, KC Irwin, Carol Crumrine, G, 1403 Tenn Irwin, John O, A, 41A Pioneer Isasac, Cathleen D, 26, 821 Ala Isasac, Cathleen D, 26, 821 Ala Iwasc, Christine D, Aila Iwasc, Christine D, Aila Ivers, Kenneth J, G, 40B, Tonga Ivers, Kenneth J, G, 40B, Tonga Iverson, Walter G, 2041 W 25 843-5134 Jabes, Jak, G 6G, 718 W 25 842-5112 Jackbar, Barbara A, 4D, 717 Miss Jackson, Carolyn E, TM, 1209 Ga, KC Jackson, Donna, OG, 1209 DeLaven, MU2-1133 Jackson, Floyd T, 22, 9461 rI Jackson, Floyd T, 22, 9461 rI Jackson, Gary D, 1L, 9461 rI Jackson, Howard, GQ, 1014 Saline, Tpka 233-6205 Jackson, Keith A, G, 241 Petry 243-095 Loretta S, 18, 403 Garland, Leaventworth UM2-1544 Jaxley M, 39 & Rnbw, KC 722-4043 Jaxley V, ZE 1, 1& Mich 824-1630 Jackson, Wallace A, GQ, 1049 Delaware, Leaventworth UM2-1133 J Craig, DQ, Box 399 Eudora 542-3122 Jebco, BF, 5001 Metro, KC AY22-4043 Jebco, Willis H, GQ, 1140 Mt 824-2866 Jebco, Errol G, GQ, 5811 W 75 Tern, Prairie Village UM2-1345 Jebco, M39, 3334 Bochk, KC 262-1017 Jebco, Patricia, 26, 1800 Naismith KC 834-1887 Jebco, Stanley G, GQ, 2020 Mass KC 834-1887 Jebco, Arvid, 2L, 1734 Ohio KC 834-1885 James, Ann, I4, 1230 Cadad KC 834-1895 James, E V, G 1125 Vt 834-1697 James, Jon Lee, 4A, 1718 Vt 834-1231 James, Judith S, GQ, 642 Lai 834-1885 James, Thomas, GM, 4635 Mdsln, KCMo Janelle, Jean, M5, 2505 Hadley, Sh Ms 362-6397 Janne, Vivian, GQ, 7914 Webster, KC CY9-0720 Jantz, Sharon, N5, 39 & Rnbw, KC AD62-5523 Jarurj, Salah, GQ, 1419 Ohio Jarvls, Mary C, GQ, 1433 Ohio Jasminas, Mary C, GQ, 1759 W 19 Jasminas, Srelle, JR, 1919 W 1845 Jayaram, M, 0G, 1319 Tenn 842-3611 Jayames, Christmas C, GQ, 808 Mss KC AD6-5252 Jeffries, Jeri L, 24, 1741 W 19 842-7502 Jenks, Debbie B, 12, 1932 Hillview 843-3527 Jensen, Daniel L, 4A, 512 Fireside 843-0396 Jensen, Vicki H, 4A, 512 Fireside 843-0396 Jensen, Winona Scae, 4J, 1800 Naismith 843-0396 Jefferson, Carolyn, PN. 39 & Rainbow *Jensen, Vicki H. 4, 512 Fireisel Jenin, Winona Sue. 4, J 1800 Naismith Jernigan, Herold D. 6, G72 Colonial Jernigan, Herold D. 6, G72 Colonial Jerome, Thomas G. 0, 810 Church, Eudora Jerome, Joan M. 3F, Field Work Jeremy Cheryl C. 0, 543 Walmur Jewell, Nancie M. 3X, Summer Abbr Jiamuchson, Chalong. 0, 1G3 1089 Jobson, Susan, G4, 1G21 Thompson, KC 722-0766 Conrad E. 6, G44 534 Skyline Mission Johnsen, Mary T. 4, 1A18 W 28 Terr Johnsen, Beverly L. 24, 1231 La Johnsen, Brittle M. 7349 Canterbury Pride Johnsen, Cathryn. 4D, 501 Buchanan, Topeka Johnsen, David W. 0G, 2516 Oundahl Johnsen, Diana L. 9G, 1343 Tenn Johnsen, Hannah R. 3D, Summer Abbr Johnsen, Helen, 7D, 933 N Oak, Otwa Johnsen, Howell, 4M, 5030 Skyline, Ms ADR-4874 Johnsen, Diana L. 9G, 1343 Tenn Johnsen, Judy M. PA, 2B10 W 42, KC 362-7641 Johnsen, Katrina W. 6G, 2516 W 24 Johnsen, Kenneth L. 9F, 901 Av Rd 483-8779 Johnsen, Judy M. PA, 2B10 W 42, KC 362-7641 Johnsen, Lliann G. 9G, 1021 W 10 Johnsen, Lliann J. 0G, 1021 W 10 Johnsen, Marilyn Kay, 3F, 2324 Chris Johnsen, Marilyn Kay, 3F, 2324 Chris PR62-4127 Johnsen, Martin, 3M, 6425 Wilh, Sh MCS 262-8193 Johnsen, Maxine D. 3D, 9009 Reedr. Overland Park Johnsen, Myra N. E 9D, 1840 Learndar Johnsen, Nancy J. A 6B, 6815 Main KCMO 483-7642 Johnsen, Nancy J. A 6B, 6815 Main KCMO Johnsen, Nancy Jane, 3B, 1630 W 12 Johnsen, Patricia, 4D, 2410 W 12 Johnsen, Pauline, 4D, 2410 W 12 Johnsen, Phyllus, M. 1442 Inad Johnsen, Richard L. 3M, 2820 Essex, KC 432-9584 Johnsen, Richard L. 4B, 18Souffier I MCS 422-9584 Johnsen, Rober B. 4M, 3685 Jefferson KCMO MI9-4424 Johnsen, Sherry Ann, 6G, 915 La Johnsen, Sherry Ann, 6G, 915 La Johnsen, Sherry Ann, 6G, 915 La Johnsen, Warren L. 10M, 5015 W 70 Shawnee Mission 6C13-7231 Johnsen, Wayne E. 0G, 10W 10 Johnson, Susan D. RM, 39 & Rnbw AD6-5252 Johnston, Suzanne C. 4D, 9111 Conser Overland Park Johnston, Ickey. 4D, 1605 W 9 Johnston, Ickey. 4D, 1605 W 9 Johnston, Ickey. 4D, 1605 W 9 Jones, Catherine L. 3D, 1800 Naismith 482-4783 Jones, Clara. 0G, 8700 Hadley, Sh Mcs 482-5033 Jones, Cynthia S. 4D, 2410 W 25 Jones, Diane E. 4D, 1815 Naismith Jones, Donald P Jr, 3R, 614 N Topека FL7-7486 J尔斯, Elizabeth, 0B25 Belhaven J尔斯, Fowler C. 6G, 549 Rosewd, Ms 831-2074 Jatthe Karan H. 4A, 2000 Vt Judith,PN. 1004 Dennis, Olathe 764-3286 Keith, Kesir S. 1010 Sunset J摩玛, Margaret A. 4N, 3700 Wyoming, KCMO 931-0629 J摩玛, Margaret J. 2A, 1017 Ind. J摩玛, Mariane, 4D, Box 35, Linwood 723-3550 JMartin, L. 4R, 1421 Del J Rebecca L. 28, 1603 W 15 J Ronald L. 0G, 1610 Ohio J Ronald L. 0G, 1610 Ohio J Sarah J. 2F, Box 216, Haiwata 742-6992 JStephen R. 3A, 1120 W 11 JVirginia L. 0G, 1733 Ohio JWilliam E. 6G, 24 Stouffer 9 Jones, Zetta Carol, 4A, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Jordan, Daniel P, 2R, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Jordan, Jonathan J, 3161 Oxford 842-2165 Jordan, Rebecca, 4A, 1137 Tenn 842-4532 Jordan, Robert J, 0G, 8389 22 Terr 842-3076 Jorgensen, J Stevan, 3P, 8 Stouffer 12 Jorgensen, Jan, 0G, 10111 W 99 Ter, Merriam 432-1752 Jorgensen, Nancey, 4D, 10111 W 99 Ter Merriam 432-1752 Joseph, Robert B, 11, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Joslyn, Catherine F, 9B, 1800 Naismith 842-8595 Joslyn, Catherine F, 9B, 1800 Naismith 842-8595 Jubelt, Burk, 3M, 4141 Ekony, KC Juhknie, Janet A, 6G, 1041 W 843-5312 Juhknie, Janet A, 5R, 7921 NJ, KC 891-0777 Juhknie, Janet A, 5R, 7921 NJ, KC 891-0777 Jurewicz, Patricia A, 0G, 1700 W 39 KCMo PI.3.0729 *Kabra, Pokar Mal, 6G, 8 Stouffer 8, 842-0267* *James, James M, 5M, 8723 Bdrmor.* Overland Park 642-5125 Kaplan, M. M., 5M, 7352 Brittany Shawnee Mission 631-1686 *Kagele, Jerry Lee, 2L, 918 La 642-5925 Kaplan, OG, 1651 W 9 642-0601 Kaplan, Janet L, 918 La 642-0601 Kaplan, Elizabeth M, 9D, 2228 East 643-7903 Kahn, Judith A, 11, 3822 Bwk, RC 643-7438 Kahn, Judith A, 11, 3822 Bwk, RC 643-7438 Kainowski, Oleg, 3F, 843' WH 643-7141 Kammelier, Sharon, 0G, 174 Wd, KC 631-1841 Kanatas, George, 6G, 625 W 16 643-8470 Kanatas, George, 6G, 625 W 16 643-8263 Kanter, Gary, 3F, 2408 W, Mcs Hh D2 643-7000 Kantz, June, 11, 1815 Naismith 643-7000 Kanter, Gary, 3F, 2408 W, Mcs Hh D2 643-7000 Kanzig, Viann, 16, 1524 W 9 643-8664 Kaugh, Joseph B III, 6G, 514 Fr Rd 643-8828 Kaugh, Judith B, 9A, 514 Fr Rd 643-8828 Kaplan, Harold A, 6G, 1517 W 943-3192 Kaplan, Harold A, 6G, 1517 W 943-3192 Kaplan, Janet M, 6G, 1517 W *Kaplan, Samuel S, 6M, 12730 W 100. *eneka* Barbara, K. JE, 1800 Naishtib Bary, KE, 845-859 *Karle, Henry J, 0G, RR 1, Bertham UN2-0892 *Karlson, Bruce Lee, 4B, 2401 W 25 Karns, Larry G, 3A, Summer Abroad Karakunakaran, Koomully, 6G, 915 Ohio Kashy, Jane L, 4D, 1815 Naishtib Karakunara C. 9D,RR 1 Box 754 Mulvane Kasselman, Mary JO, 6G, 2333 Rdg Ct 9 Kasten, Barbara Ann, 28, 1529 W 9 Kasten, Katherine L, 6G, 1241 La Kasten, William M, 9A, 1120 W 27 Kastner, William M, 9A, 1120 W 27 Kasubskil, David, 5M, 4127 Thompson 888-4598 884-8559 UN2-0892 824-2870 824-7000 PR1-6744 843-4693 843-693 884-8579 843-7162 884-8286 *Kasuay, Barbara J, 4D, 1831 Mo* Katz, Daniel A, 12, 1815 Nismith W Katz, Fred K, 7D, 1926 W Katz, Fred S, 2E, 2401 W Katz, Jerry S, G. 1903 W 25 Kauffman, Kay H, 4D, 1037 Owl Crk Kauffman, Ralph, D. 5M, 1907 W 43, KC Kaufman, Douglas, TM. 39 & Rnbw KC AD4-6141 K黛bor, Deb扎罗J, 12, 1311 W 19 Terr K黛bor, D. 5M, 1907 W 19 Terr Kearns, Larry R, 4A, 829 Ail Keene, Daniel W, 0G, 302 Iowa Kehr, Delbert D, 3J, 842 Avalon Keene, Daniel W, 0G, 302 Iowa Kelman, Gerald R, 6D, 22 Boucher 3 Keim, Robert E, 0G, 19 Stouffer 1 Keim, Sylb O, 0G, 19 StouFFER 1 Keith, Joy E, 31, Summer Road Keith, Nancy, D. 4D, 3020 Iowa Keith, Wm T, 18, 9953 Wdsn, Op Vk Keith, Joy E, 31, Summer Road Keith, Nancy, D. 4D, 3020 Iowa Keiler, M Joyce, PA, 372 Booth, KC Keiley, John C, 4F, 1041 Tenn Keiley, John C, 4F, 1041 Tenn Kellison, Holly IE, RR Euston Kellison, James E, 0G, 646 La Kearns, Dobbor J, 12, 1311 W 19 Terr Kearns, Larry R, 4A, 829 Ail Keene, Daniel W, 0G, 302 Iowa Kelman, Gerald R, 6D, 22 Boucher 3 Keim, Robert E, 0G, 19 StouFFER 1 Keim, Sylb O, 0G, 19 StouFFER 1 Keith, Joy E, 31, Summer Road Keith, Nancy, D. 4D, 3020 Iowa Kehler, M Joyce, PA, 372 Booth, KC Keiley, John C, 4F, 1041 Tenn Keiley, John C, 4F, 1041 Tenn Kellison, Holly IE, RR Euston Kellison, James E, 0G, 646 La AD4-6141 B00-0026 B00-9316 B00-9316 B00-9459 B00-1185 B00-1058 N18-3835 N18-3835 BIG FISH CLINTON, Ky. (UPI) — The largest small mouth bass caught by rod and reel was landed at Dale Hollow Lake near here by David L. Hayes on July 9, 1958. The bass weighed 11 pounds, 15 ounces. 12 KANSAN June 16 1970 CONTOURA with Diamonds of Ultimate Beauty . . . Illustration Enlarged Her fondest dreams come true when you choose a Contoura diamond bridal set. Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 909 Mass "Special College Terms" VI 3.5432 Available in 14K white or yellow gold. CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS Sandy's HAMBURGERS - SHAKES Sandy's THRIFT SWIFT Sandy's A mountain of a meal... Sandy's The Big Scot OPPOSITE HILLCREST PLAZA 2120 West 9th Kellogg, Virginia, 16, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 *Kennedy, GMA, 6, 731 Brittany, Shawnee Mission 831-4346 *Kelly, Dan A, 6M, 4700 W 79, Pr Vil 842-7000 *Kelly, GlennA, K 2L, 901 Av Rd 853-3096 *Kelly, Jessica, M 1743 W 35, KCMo 753-3096 *Kelly, Karine, K 2L, 901 Av Rd 863-3098 *Lawrence, IL, 21 Stouffer 7 842-3688 *Michael, B, 4A, 1745 W 24 842-3688 *Robert, GG, 4120 Tightw, Tpka 272-6098 *Keller, Ona Lee, 22, 321 KParkwd, K 843-3331 *Keller, Ona Lee, 22, 321 KParkwd, K 843-3331 *Philip, WB, 4W, 1471 W 19 843-0020 *Kendall, Forrest, 6M, 7220 Cantebury, PWage 362-8493 *Kennedy, Barry L, 6M, 2115 Gaddy KCMo 812-1887 *Kennedy, Cynthia C, 4D, 1101 Tenn 842-2785 *Kennedy, Sr.arlene, 0G, 3220 W 53 Shu 262-2814 *Kennett, Sr.ella, 9D, 1815 Naismith 842-3533 *Kennett, Konnie K, 2D, 1528 Powers 842-3533 *Ken'ther Cheral, S 4N, 1422 Booth, KC 842-1355 *Ken'ther Cheral, S 4N, 1422 Booth, KC 842-1355 *Ken'ther Cheral, S 4N, 1422 Booth, KC 842-1355 *Kernes, Terry W, 4A, 1423 Ohio 842-4865 *Kerr, Joy Anne, G0, 1012 Em Rd 842-5859 *Kessler, Kristin, I 1800 Naismith 842-5859 *Kessler, Stephen W, 4J 842-5859 *Kessler, Paula A, 1F, 1242 Redbud 842-5859 *Keyes, Thomas M, Jr, 4024 Barker 842-3020 *Keyes, Thomas M, Jr, 4024 Barker 842-3020 *Kurana, Satish, MT, 39 & Rnbw, KC 842-6433 *Kier, Charles T, 2L, 820 La 842-6433 *Kifer, Charles J, 4M, 3740 Booth, HCE 282-8495 *Kifer, Charles J, 4M, 3740 Booth, HCE 282-8495 *Killingsworth, James, MT, 39 & Rnbw, KC 842-6433 *Killingsworth, James, MT, 39 & Rnbw, KC 842-6433 *Kilmach K, 6M, 2115 Exesse, KC 842-1147 *Kilmach, Sarah Jane, IF, 2401 W 25 842-7671 *Kilmach, Sarah Jane, IF, 2401 W 25 842-7671 *Kimbrough, Eliza H, 2L, 603 Tenn 842-5211 *Kimbrough, Rick, 22, 1025 Everett, KC 842-4235 *Kimes, George, G758 Everett, KC 843-0490 *Kimes, George, G758 Everett, KC 843-0490 *King, James, MG, 8118 W 42, KC 843-3490 *King, James, MG, 8118 W 42, KC 843-3490 *King, Justice B, 11, 1815 Naismith KC 842-7000 *King, Mary M, 0G, 820 Ohio KC 842-5516 *King, Richard M, 8G, 1800 Naismith KC 842-5516 *King, Warder W, 0G, 7002 Naismith Merriam KC 842-1696 *Kinjo, Chikako, 4A, 1224 La KC 843-5336 *Kimland, Kenneth E, 14, 1353 La KC 843-5336 *Kimland, Kenneth E, 14, 1353 La KC 843-5336 *Kiryalfavl, Bela, G6, 603 Naismith KC 842-1696 *Kirigin, Kathryn, G0, 102 W 8, Eudora KC 842-2841 *Kirk, James T, 4B, 821 Ind KC 842-6667 *Kirkland, Wills L, 6G, 1174 KC 842-8144 *Kirkpatrick, John R, 6M, 7419 Prairie Village KC 842-8564 *Kirkpatrick, amuel 2A, 1821 26 KC 842-4049 *Kirkpatrick, amuel 2A, 1821 26 KC 842-4049 *Kitch, William C, 2L, 3024 W 7 KC 842-7331 *Kitchens, Albert F, GG, 555 Blue Grass Bonner Springs 441-3690 Klun, Addhi, OG, 1127 Ohio 843-7000 Elkham, Elkham, OG, 1127 Ohio 843-8882 Klammer, Peter F, 16, 1755 W 19 843-8882 Klammer, Joel V, 15 & Rwbw, KC 842-3602 * Klassen, B. R, 0G, 724 Shelburne 842-3000 * Klassen, B. R, 0G, 724 Shelburne 842-7000 * Kleder, David K, 4M, 3724 KWC 843-7696 * Klein, Steven C, 6G, 1005 I5 842-4119 * Kleinman, Arthur M, 4F, 800^2 Mo 842-2499 * Kleinsemidt, Gail F, 1430 La 843-0305 * Kleinsemidt, Gail F, 1430 La 843-0769 * Klemm, G S, 5M, 2700 W 48 Sh W 842-7000 * Klemm, Sr Roberta, 0G, 1815 Nsmith 842-7000 * Keydas, Kenneth A, 0G, 19R Box 142 Lmc 827-3717 * klinkenberg, Karen, 22, 1815 Nsmith 842-7000 * Kloster, Betty, 4G, 09W 10 Ottawa CH2-4820 * lotz, Paul, 0G, 1417 E 15 842-3102 * lotz, Paul, 0G, 1417 E 15 842-5460 * knapp, Phillip D, 4A, 24 Shuffler 8 842-1095 * Knief, Carolyn, 4A, 1133 V7 842-6936 * Knief, William D, 4A, 1121 OU 842-7000 * Davide E, 4D, 1815 Nsmith 842-7000 * Kinsley, Kinsley, OG, 129V W 29 Torr 842-0268 * Knoepel, David, 2D, 1019 W 29 Torr 843-7696 * Knowles, Terry Susan, 4F, 9 Stouffer 843-9502 *oxx, Charles H, 690 Fairman, Tpka CH2-1293 *oxx, Charles H, 690 Fairman, Tpka CH2-1293 *oxx, Charles H, 690 Fairman, Tpka CH2-1293 * Knuth, Sheryl, 4G, 4727 Jarbove, KCMO 843-6536 * Knuth, James L, 3P, 13 Stouffer 843-7696 * Knuth, Lynn Marie, 24, 1107 Ind 843-7696 * Knoeh, A, Therel, OG, 1821 VPvk 849-9823 * Koehn, Ronnie D, 26, 2200 W 26 842-4171 * Koelzer, John, 0G, 5337 Lydia, KCMO 843-1743 * Kenig, Carin H, 6G, 2008 Olathe, KC AD6-5252 * Kenig, Carin H, 6G, 2008 Olathe, KC AD6-5252 * Kole, Paul, TM, 39 Rwbw, KC 842-3002 * Kolb, Doris H, 6G, 2417 Manchester 842-4222 * Kolb, Karla, 3G, 2724 Booth, KCMO 843-5022 * Kolonsoy, Walter F, 6G, 2437 Redbud 842-1876 * Kolsky, Franklin G, 4A, 1017 RI 843-3136 * Kolsky, Franklin G, 4A, 1017 RI 843-3138 *忍弘昌, K, 6M, 4919 Prost, KCMO 842-3111 *忍弘昌, K, 6M, 4919 Prost, KCMO 842-3111 * Koochak, Hosselin, KC 842-3587 * Korb, Thomas, M6, 5580 W 92, Ovpk 849-3798 * Korff, Katherine, 3A, Summer Abbr 841-1069 * Korpf, Jean, 2F, 600I W 87, Lewdl 843-8535 * torkwelk, James L, 6G, 1934 La 843-8766 * korvik, Ernest, 6M, 800I W 81 Vpk 891-9245 * Kozeny, Jeffrey Oral, 4R Sumner Abbr 842-7914 * Kraft, Marie Lee, 4D, 1238 Miss 842-8468 * Nancy Carter, 4S, 420 North 842-8468 * Kraman, Kraman, OG, 129V W 29 Torr 842-8418 * Kraus, Gayne Way, 4L & 2 Ark 842-8118 * Kraus, Susan L, 4L & 2 Ark 842-8118 * Kraus, Gary E, IL 2137 Quirk Crk 842-3363 * Krebs, Prisella, 22, 1105 Harvart 842-7000 $ ^{*} $Krenytzky, Stephen M, 4M, 3010 W 42. KC 432-8480 Kresie Bryce W, IB, 2414 Ousdahl, *klegen* Paul E, 6G, 1203 W 19 *klegen* Paul E, 6G, 1203 W 19 Krisman, Jim D, A4, 3201 N, 54 KC Krizman, Frank A, 3B, 1517 W 9 Krobstein, Timothy R, 6G, 1333 Tenn Krobstein, Timothy R, 6G, 1333 Tenn Kroeger, Judith C, 4D, 1127 Ind Krogh, Linda M, G, 1117 Highland Krug, Warren G, 3A, 532 Fireside Kuger, Katherine, 4J, 1815 Naismith Kuger, Katherine, 4J, 1815 Naismith Kruse, Donald E, 6G, Box 7, Leptm Kuhmann, Donna, M4, 4000 Wyoming, *KCM* 931-2708 Kulbrar, Barbara, 4D, 1603 W 15 *Kuller*, Robert G, 6G, 1940 Naismith Kulp, Pamela, 4D, 2401 W 25 Kumar, Binod, G, 1134 La Kumar, Binod, G, 1134 La Kunz, Thinking H, 6G, 1025 Ind Kunz, Mary C, 26, 1012 Em Rd Uo, John L, 28, 1803 Ohio Kurata, Douglas, 3A, 1020 Mo Kurata, Douglas, 3A, 1020 Mo Kurtulus, McKinley, 7C, 1511 Cresent Kushner, Herale兰, 0G, 9307 Beverly, *Kushner, Herale兰*, 0G, 9307 Beverly, *Gand Park* Kutab, James, 1808 Mo Kutab, James, 1808 Mo Kuynz, Yuguld, 0G, 1194 W 6 apple records Lacava, Gerald J. 6G, 1724 Barker 842-6311 Lacey, Lancy L. 9G, 2413 Ala 842-5421 Lacey, Nancy G. 842-5421 *Lackman, A Ruben, G, Valley Fails 945-3564 Lackey, Darrell L, 4B, 1417 E F 15 Lacy, Debbie Lynn, 26, Sumner Abbr 843-3077 Lawrie, Patricia C, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Lafferty, Patria, 24, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 *Lagios, Penny Lou, D, 3D, 1255 842-1743 Lal, Yih Loong G, 6200 W, 42 KC Lal, Mary Gary, 38, 1335 Valley 842-7885 Lal, Rowley G, W Campus 842-7885 Lal, James S, D, 1013 E Poplar Olathe 764-1647 Lard, Patricia Sie, 4D, 1711 Ky 843-6344 Lard, Dawn D, 5N, 3735 Valley 842-7885 Lam, Julia, 3M, 4203 Cambrdg, KC 842-7800 Lambert, Bob D, 0G, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Lamble, John J, 2R, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Lamble, Work 842-7000 Lammy, Willis R, 9F, 1804 Maurel 842-7000 Lammy, Suzanne A, 2F, Field Work 842-auxures, Charles, 3F, Summer Abbr 842-5421 Lamp, Sandra Marte, 3M, 1318 NH 842-3056 Llandauer, Wilma, 0G, RR 1, Basehor 758-2523 *Landers, Burnell J, 7M, 4005 Cranes, Independence 252-6284 *Landers, 5M, 5408 Skyline, M32-4925 *Landes, Charlene, 0G, 803 Chureh, Eudora 842-5235 Landes, Mary Lee J, 1732 W 24 842-3530 Landes, Valdon G, 22, M42 842-3530 Landes, Cynthia Joy, TM, 36M, Belle-view, KCMo WE1-0201 Landes, Maria Louis, D, 1216 Tenn 842-4971 Lane, Charles A, 12, 515 Abilene Lane, David K, 4 B, 1911 Stewart Lane, David J, 6 G, 1003 Emery *Laney, David A, 12 Mont *Laney, Elizabeth P, 34, 911 Ala *Lange, James A, 4J, 941 Ala *Lange, Stephen T, 28, 1329 W 9 *Lange, Stephen T, 28, 1329 W 9 *Langworthy, Thomas, G, 654 Schwarz Lankford, Carl W, 4D, Field Work Lantz, David C, 6G, 1724'1 Barker Lantz, David C, 6G, 1724'1 Barker Lantz, Robin K, 3X, 125 Miss Lantz, Robin K, 3X, 125 Miss Larimer, Michael W, 6G, 1252 Del Larimore, Paula K, 21, 1714 Vt Larkin, Joan A, 4N, 1607 W 37, KCMO Larrison, Benton A, 0G, 7351 Brittany Shawnee Mission Larsen, Linda S, 6G, 6568 W 51, Sh Ms Larsen, Linda S, 6G, 6568 W 51, Sh Ms Larsen, Carolyn, 0G, 3408 Trail Larsen, Kurt E, 2X, Summer Abroad Larsen, Martha, 4D, 2127 Orehard Larsen, Martha, 4D, 2127 Orehard Lash, Ray E, 28, 1607 W 9 Lasley, Michael, 4M, 2700 W 48, Sh Ms Lattenner, Mary, 5N, 39 & Rnbw, KC AD6-5252 Lattenner, Mary, 5N, 39 & Rnbw, KC AD6-5252 Lalimer, Carolus F, 4F, 1334 Ohio Lalimer, Foster M, 4D, 1334 Ohio Lub, Lain Kay, 26, 1203 Oread Lub, Roger M, 6G, 9460 Ohio Lub, Roger M, 6G, 9460 Ohio Lape, George M, 9G, RR 2 Box 350 Lape, George M, 9G, RR 2 Box 350 Laurence, Dale R, 0G, 1927 Tenn Laurense, James C, 3B, 2200 W 26 Laurense, James C, 3B, 2200 W 26 Llaushman, Randall, 2F, RR 1 Box 129 Lavely, Lawrence, 0G, 1511 W 27 Terr Lavelly, Lawrence, 0G, 1511 W 27 Terr Llaw Marshall, A, 4A, 1017 RI Llaw Marshall, A, 4A, 1017 RI Lawrence, Charles A, 22, 2040 W 25 Lawrence, Donnie A, 3A, 1726 KY Lawrence, Jeanne L, 9A, Summer Abrd Layton, Georgia C, 4D, 925 Conn Layton, Georgia C, 4D, 925 Conn Leach, Steve G, 0G, 717 Ohio Leear, Patricia A, 3B, 120 Oread Leear, Deby A, 6G, 1423 W 22 Leewitt, Boby C, 12, 1815 Naismith Leercle, Connie V, 12, 1815 Naismith Lee, Davy E Jr, 18, 1815 Naismith Lee, Dickson C, H, 2L, Field Work Lee, Dickson C, H, 2L, Field Work Lee, Ellen J, PN, 3536 Genessek, KCMo 51-4785 Lee, Frank E, 0G, 7090 Olknd, KC Lee, Frank E, 0G, 7090 Olknd, KC Lee, Gwendolyn, 3M, 2223 W 39, KC Lee, Gwendolyn, 3M, 2223 W 39, KC Lee, Jonghe E, 7N, 2020 Olaf, KC Lee, Joy, AM, 4017 W 84, Sh Ms Lee, Leissa L, 4A, 1301 La Lee, Maureen M, 4F, 1252 KY Lee, Richard H, 0G, Regency Lee, Robert E, TM, 20 S Bethany, KC Lee, Robert E, TM, 20 S Bethany, KC Lee, Robyn R, 18, 1254 Miss Lee, Robyn R, 18, 1254 Miss Lee, Susan, 26, 1234 Miss Lee, Thomas F, 0G, 1508 W 21 482-4060 482-4060 THE ROWS THE BEATLES Hey Jude June 16 1970 KANSAN 13 apple records 10.23 1976 GRAND FUNK RAILROAD Grand Funk $399 KIEF'S KU Students Cleaning Headquarters KU LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities 1029 Phone New Hampshire 843-3711 ARENSBERG'S Semi- Annual ★ Women's Shoe SALE ★ ★ DRESS SHOES ★ FLATS ★ LOAFERS ★ SANDALS Entire Stock Not Included All Sales Are Final No Refunds or Exchanges Arensberg's = Shoes D Lee, Wan Stong, 3E, 1128 Ohio Lee, Wen E, 4A, 530 Apple,awa CH2-3076 Lee, Wem H, 4A, 1547 Ky Lee, William A, 1128 Land, 3D Lefmann, Wendy, 3D, 1815 Naismith Legrand, Linda, 16, 1815 Naismith Llehn, Catherine, 4D, 1800 Engel Llegrand, Linda, 16, 1815 Naismith Lleb, Michael K, 3B, 2510 Ousdahl Lebist, Mitzi D, 9G, 1704 W 20 Terr Leigh, Elizabeth M, 1F, 1940 Ind LElker, Norman A, 0M, 22 Stouffer 11 LElker, Rita M, 9G, 22 Stouffer 11 LElker, Vera Hook, 6G, 2462 Ousdahl Limbach, John C, JF, 1211 Kale Limbach, John C, JF, 1211 Kale Litkenrather, Ruth, 9A, Sunner Abbell Lenahan, Timothy, 4E, 1817 Naismish Leneaux, Grant F, 0G, 2504 Ousdahl Leneaux, Grant F, 0G, 2504 Ousdahl Leneaux, Grant F, 0G, 2504 Ousdahl OLathe 782-093 Lenzen, Kearn J, 4A, 840 Broadway Lenoch, Leslie Jr, 3E, 2200 Harper Lenoch, John C, JF, 1211 Kale Lenonard, Frances M, 6G, 2536 Mont Lenonard, Nancy C, OG, 1030 Mo Leopold, Christy Ann, 3A, 1025 Miss Lepparis, Anthony J, 4G, 1025 Miss Lepparis, Anthony J, 4G, 1025 Miss Lepparis, Anthony J, 4G, 1025 Miss Lepparis, Anthony J, 4G, 1025 Miss Lepparis, Anthony J, 4G, 1025 Miss Lester, Robert B, 12, 1028 Tenn Lester, Robert B, 12, 1028 Tenn Lester, Robert B, 12, 1028 Tenn Leung, Peeter, TM, 3Y, 289b, KWC Leverington, Wmn, 4R, Summer Abroad Leverington, Wmn, 4R, Summer Abroad Levitt, Judy, 0G, 1800 Kwaish Levity, Nell, 0G, 350 Yorkway, Tpkn 235-9766 Lew, James W, 501, 450 Okla Levitt, Judy, 0G, 1800 Kwaish Lew, Anthony J, 0G, 514 Fr Rd Lew, Bronwen G, 2633 Rdg Ct Lew, Edward J, 3D, 1815 Naismith Lew, James W, 4G, 1025 Miss Lew, Maurie Jeece, 28, 1025 Mass Lew,Patricia J, 0G, 1039 W Lew,Patricia J, 0G, 1039 W Llas, Hamed Attia, 0G, 1904 Twist 2 Libby, Patti, 4C, Cornish Sq Lichly, Michael J, 1I, 905 Em Rd Liee, Win-Pin, 1E, 1140 Lay Liebian, Richard J, 3A, 1815 Naismith Jelecht, Sandra L, 0G, 7438 Flush, Sh 631-8778 Jelecht, Sandra L, 0G, 7438 Flush, Sh 631-8778 Jelecht, Sandra L, 0G, 7438 Flush, Sh 631-8778 Liggett, Martha, PN, 39 & Rnbw, KC AD5-2552 Lignitz, Nancy J, 4D, 1618 Tenn Lice, Alice Annie, 16, 1815 Naismith Lliggett, Martha, PN, 39 & Rnbw, KC AD5-2552 Lignitz, Nancy J, 4D, 1618 Tenn Limley, Thomas, L, 4D, 23 Stouffer 6 Limley, Thomas, L, 4D, 23 StouFFER Mairs, Patricia, 3D, 1516 Shearer, KC 342-4641 Majele, Joyce, M 1519 Rowe, KC 342-4652 Majure, Joe, M 1519 Rowe, KC 342-4653 Malaney, Sr Mary, G 1609 Stratford 842-6459 Mall, Gerald H, G 1611 W 6 842-6393 Malone, Joyce, M 1519 Rowe, KC 842-7000 Malone, Betty, S 3N, 9# Rwbk, KC 842-7001 Malone, Michael S, G 1609 Firesley 842-4652 Malone, Patrick A, 26 Summer Abbr 842-6393 Malone, Mike L, G 1622 Swimming Stiffness KC 842-7000 Malone, Dennis M, G 2350 Weddow 842-4911 Malone, Kathleen, D 408 Broadview 842-4942 Maly, S r M, S, G 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Malone, Betty, S, G 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Mangan, Jim J, M 3A, 1218 Miscw 842-9416 Mangan, Mani J, M 3A, 1218 Miscw 842-9416 Manion, Carl V, M 7818 Eby, Ov Pk 842-9523 Manney, Michael R, M 1800 Naismith 842-3507 Manney, Michael R, M 1800 Naismith 842-3507 Manney, Glennia A, 2D, 914 W 21 842-6683 Manney, Ronald A, G 60, 809 W 21 842-9189 Manney, Sally E, I, G 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Manney, James E, G 60, 1615 Harper 842-6454 Marchant, Jean, A, 4291 Central Park Topeka 764-0734 Manohar, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Manohar, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Manohar, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Manohar, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Marchett, Jean, A, 4291 Central Park Topeka 764-0734 Marchett, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Marchett, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Marchett, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Marchett, Murli, 7M, 1017 W 30, KCMo 931-7438 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marsell, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marshall, James R, TM, 3724 Booth, KC 262-5949 Marse McBee, Lois Ann, 4F, Field work McBride, Alice, 0G, 20 Stouffer I McBride, Margaret, 4A, 2244 NH McCabe, John N, 3A, Windsor McCain, Karen K, 3D, Summer Abroad McCain, Roderick, 6G, 2146 IR McCain, Amy A, 6G, 8716 W 70 Terr Merrigan McCinnam, Tim A, 6G, 8716 W 70 Terr McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCauley, Kenny O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McClaim, Christine F, 4D, 10300 E 15 independence Mo McClain, Ralph, 9D, 1792 S 32, KC McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCauley, Kenny O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McClaim, Christine F, 4D, 10300 E 15 independence Mo McClain, Ralph, 9D, 1792 S 32, KC McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCauley, Kenny O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McClaim, Christine F, 4D, 10300 E 15 independence Mo McClain, Ralph, 9D, 1792 S 32, KC McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCauley, Kenny O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McClaim, Christine F, 4D, 10300 E 15 independence Mo McClain, Ralph, 9D, 1792 S 32, KC McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCauley, Kenny O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McClaim, Christine F, 4D, 10300 E 15 independence Mo McClain, Ralph, 9D, 1792 S 32, KC McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 Stouffer 12 McCauley, Kenny O, 1G, 10 StouFFER 12 McClaim, Christine F, 4D, 10300 E 15 independence Mo McClain, Ralph, 9D, 1792 S 32, KC McCinnam, Timora, 4D, 1815 Naismith McCarty, Janet O, 1G, 10 StouFFER Students volunteer for space studies HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (UPI)—Four college students Saturday entered a space station simulator for a planned uninterrupted 90 days of confinement. The chief purpose of the experiment is to test the effectiveness of life support systems to provide space station crewmen with drinkable water from reclaimed urine and perspiration and contaminent free oxygen from carbon dioxide. The test, conducted by the McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co. is the most comprehensive ever conducted by this nation, company officials said. First of the students to enter the 40 foot long chamber was Wilson Wong, 23, Glen Oaks, N.Y. and aeronautics major at California Institute of Technology. He was followed by Stephen G. Dennis, 22, Bradenton, Fla., Caltech, Terry Donlon, 31, Tacoma Wash., of UCLA, and John G. Hall, 25, Portland, Ore., Caltech. The experiment is being conducted under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 14 KANSAN June 16 1970 Air-Conditioned JAY BOWL Mixed Leagues Wednesday at 7:00 Open Daily Monday-Friday at 8 a.m. Saturday & Sunday at 1 p.m. JAY BOWL AT THE KANSAS UNION *Medinaorenzo, R T, 7M, 1505 Lexngtn. Minerteo, R, T, 7 M, 1505 Lexingt, KCMO 861-4468 *Medley, Wm J, ZR, 7 M, 1021 Avon *Meek, Palmar, M4, 1890 S 32, KC AD6-4896 *Mehan, Cheryl, 4J, 1529 W 9 *Mehl, Sheron, 0G, 6E1 1017 Del AD6-2992 *Mehl, Sheron, 0G, 6E1 1017 Del AD6-2992 *Mehrer, Bertold, 0G, 3020 Iowa AD6-3137 *Mehrotr, Sudhir, 6G, 1031 Miss AD6-3137 *Mehler, J, 2E, 635 W 25 AD6-4362 *Mehler, Richard, 0G, 1028 Eman AD6-3737 *Meinert, Nancy L, 9A, 9920 Cherokee, Leawood 864-3189 *Melia, Jaime, 0G, 20 Stout 10 *Melia, Rhadames, 0G, 1815 Nalshim AD6-7000 *Melia, Thomas, J. 26, 11 Stouffer 7 AD6-3300 *Melia, Thomas, L, 0G, 1800 Nalshim AD6-4972 *Mello, Louise, M, 0G, 1800 Easton AD6-7343 *Mloy, Patrick J, 4G, 1341 Misc AD6-7343 *Melin, Patricia J, 4D, Summer Abbr AD6-7343 *Melin, Sr Janet, 0G, 1732 W 12 AD6-6394 *Mendez, Reynado, 1R, 1908 Prvi AD6-3074 *Mendez, Roman J, 3E, 2404 Yale AD6-7295 *Mendez, Jorge, 11, 4206 W 73 Terr. *Mendez, Priage, 0G, 4206 W 73 Terr. *Mendez, Joane, G, 4M, 1026 W 73 Terr. *Prairie Village 236-7257 *Mengel, Donald R, G, 1433 Ohio AD6-4395 *Mengler, Richard, 4D, 5531 Evrt, KC AD6-7832 *Mensengh, Cam, 6M, 7632 Evrt Privi AD6-3074 *Mencze, Roman J, 3E, 2404 Yale AD6-7295 *Merciwether, Jon H, AM, 5109 W 70 2401 W 25 Miller, Rodney, OG, 7249 V, Ov P N Miller, Shirley P, 143 D, Frequency 83 *Miller, Tereigh V, OG, 4900 W 51 Mermo, Terreigh M, TD, 134 S Kensangt, KCMo Miner, J Russell, OG, 516 Fireside Miner, Timothy A, 6G, 1218 Miss Miner, Mary E, OG, RR 4 Miner, Ruth E, TM, 2108 W 41, KC Miner, Ruth E, TM, 2108 W 41, KC Mills, Howard W, TM, 134 S Kensangt, KCMo Mills, J Russell, OG, 516 Fireside Mills, Jule G, 26, Summer Lake Ln Mills, William R, 4A, 1603 W 15 Miner, Linda W, OG, 918 Ky Miner, Stephen C, KCMo Minson, Steven C, 22, 306 Nehr Minor, Peter M, OG, 1401 I Mass Minor, Stephen C, 220 W 26 Minute, Michael S, OG, RR2 Box 324 Mintz, Pamela F, OG, RR2 Box 324 Birth, Dale B, 6G, 534 Ohio Birth, Dale B, 6G, 534 Ohio Mishler, Anita, PCA, 3724 Hewlett, Ov PK Mishler, Anita, PCA, 3724 Hewlett, Ov PK Misner, Cara K, 4D, 2 Stouffer 6 Mitchell, Janice A, 4A, 918 Highland Mitchell, Janice A, 938 W 23, Tpk Mitchell, Richard W, TD, 1400 W Mitchell, Robert P, OG, 1140 IO Mitchell, Thomas S, JI, 1901 Naismith Mitchell, Thomas S, JI, 1901 Naismith Mitchell, Han, MG, 810 Juniper Prairie Village Mize, William D, LI, 5 Strouffer 6 Mize, William D, LI, 5 Strouffer 6 Mock, Carson M, G, 165 I Ined Moe, Carson M, G, 165 I Ined Moe, Ronald D, 6G, 2520 Ousdahl Moe, Ronald D, 6G, 2520 Ousdahl Moe, Robert F, OG, 1219 Hewlett Mohaghehpour, Nahid, LA, 1291 Ky Mohaghehpour, Joyce L, 142S Tkn Mohoghehpour, OG, RR 3, Tpk 4 Moholt, Kermel T, OG, 925 Wayne, Tpk Mollner, Carol A, OG, 1621 W4, KC Mollner, Hugh, MG, 5102 WA KCMo Mollner, Hugh, MG, 5102 WA KCMo Mmonroe, Dennis G, OG, 2114 Kasdur Mmonroe, Dennis G, OG, 2114 Kasdur Montanueck, Richard G, 2R x 333 Montanueck, Richard G, 2R x 333 Montanueck, Houlder L, 4D, Tower Apts, Spring H Montgomery, Mission M, 4M, 30W, Spg HI Montgomery, Mission M, 4M, 30W, Spg HI Moody, Walter E, GG, 1900 LA Moody, Walter E, GG, 1900 LA Moore, Charles H, 3S, Field Work Moore, Charles H, 3S, Field Work Moore, Cielan C, 24, 715 Lawrence Moore, Daniel J, 6G, 1735 W 19 Moore, Douglas J, 6G, 181 Suffer 1 Moore, Douglas J, 6G, 181 Suffer 1 Moore, James A, 4A, 1815 Naismith Moore, James W, 6G, 3637 Hgy W 10pke Moore, Judith, 36, 806 Crawford Moore, Kathleen A, 4A, 133 WN Moore, Lyle V, LI, 2R, RR 1 Bx 175, Lvw Moore, Mary Ann, OG, 2028 OHio Moore, Mary Ann, OG, 2028 OHio Moore, Richard, G, 1340 HX Moore, Richard, G, 1340 HX Moore, Richard, G, 1340 HX Moore, Richard, G, 1340 HX Moore, William F, 3E, 1732 W 24 Moore, Wilma J, 12, 1815 Naismith Morman, Nancy C, AD, 2401 W 25 Morman, Michelle T, MD, 1101 HOX Morray, Lloyd L, G, 16J, 1428 Tenn Morray, Lloyd L, G, 16J, 1428 Tenn Morray, Barbary L, Laurta, OG, 1815 Nsmith Morray, Barbara L, Laurta, OG, 1815 Nsmith Morray, Bruce J, 1B, 1815 Nsmith Morray, Christine T, 16, 829 HIX Morray, Dorrie L, G, 0G, 413 W 14 Morray, Dorrie L, G, 0G, 413 W 14 Morray, Hughes C, 3A, 829 RI Morray, Hughes C, 3A, 829 RI Mississippi 842-8260 Morgan, Lynn, 33, 1527 W 9 842-8756 Morgan, Margaret L, 42D, 1401 W 25 * Morgan, Alph, 3D, 7235 Rbsn, Op KR 262-2760 * Morgan, Marke *Nabors, James J, GG, 1728 W 19 Terr 843-9033 Nace, Larry J, EG, 1415 Naismith 842-7003 Meadow, Danny J, EG, 6M, 10315 W 88. Overland Park Nadvornik, Dennis R, DK, 1800 Kengel 842-6600 Nadvornik, Dennis R, DK, 1800 Kengel 843-7708 Nagaria, Arif, 2E, 707 TeM 843-7708 Nahas, Khalid H, EG, PO Box 802 842-6927 Nahas, Khalid H, EG, PO Box 802 843-9515 Nash, Jeffrey, OG, 2525 Winmil, Tpk 843-9215 Nash, Jeffrey, CO, 6G, 616 Mick 843-3215 603 W 15 Navarro, Salvador, OG, 1800 Engl 842-6007 Nazakur, Connie L, D 1800 Engl 842-8539 Neas, Gerald L, 4A, 1209 Tenn 843-7863 Neagash, K. 1244 Umah 843-1008 Negash, K. 1244 Umah 843-1008 Negley, Mary J, 3A, 1815 Naishtm 875-1096 Neighbor, R M, 3M, 5200 Shou, Shm V 753-1096 828-2804 Neis, Lei L, N 3K, 2300 N 43, KC 824-2347 Neis, Merille, D. 4R, 1R1 B 6x5A, Eudr 842-9910 Neison, Annabell L, OG, 1400 Ohio 842-9910 Neison, David, C. 24, Summer Abbr 842-4689 Neison, Douglas E, 28, 1741 W U 842-9910 Neison, Edward, 3B, 8619 Hdly, Ov Pk 842-9910 Neison, Jane M, G, 524 Fr Lwv, Ov Pk 842-9817 Neison, Joyce, OG, 1144 W 54 Tm, Sh 31-63745 Neison, Larry M, G, 903 Ala 842-8675 Neison, Linda K, G, 909 Av Rd 842-8483 Neison, Rebecca J, 4D, 1603 W 15 842-6888 Neison, Signe J, 22, 1541 Ky 842-4060 Neison, Efner, F, PO Box 156 843-4369 Neison, Darden, OG, 1244 Umah 843-6898 Neissn, John R, G, 6G, 25 Stouffer J 842-6648 Neismith, Leslie W, G, 6M, 2825 S 25 KC Neubauer, Colette, A4, 6Z0 Morningsdal TR 8196 Neuenschwander, D, 11, 1815 Nasmth 842-7000 Neuenschwander, John, M, 35' 525ln Skinn Shawne, Mission CO 28-6348 Neuann, James W, G, 4M, 920 W 7Terr, Prairie Village 848-3842 Neichler, Charles D, G, 1925 Emery 843-7370 Necomb, H. 4E, 1925 Emery 843-5460 Necomb, Kathy, D, 4B, 1815 Nasmth 365-2521 Neuwan, Genele H, E, 30, 1147 Iola Neuwan, Janelle, E, 30, 1028 Nasmth 365-2521 Neuwan, Genele H, E, 30, 1147 Iola Neuwan, Janelle, E, 30, 1028 Nasmth 365-2521 Neuwan, June O, 9D, 711 Wrb 842-5404 Neuwan, Johnelle, E, 30, 1028 Nasmth 365-2521 Neuwan, Jane O, 9D, 711 Wrb 842-5404 Neuwan, Johnelle, E, 30, 1028 Nasmth 365-2521 Neuwan, Ju June 16 1970 KANSAN 15 RANEY DRUG ★921 Mass. ★925 Iowa ★1800 Mass. I ROMEO AND JULIET Original Soundtrack Capitol™ THE CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD $399 KIEF'S Would You Believe This Is A Toyota? Unfortunately, we can't get this for you. It's still experimental. JAGUAR JAGUAR 1967 Or if your tastes are more economical . . . Thy this . . . Come in and see the Corolla, Corona and Mark II. Find the car of your dreams . . . and means. We can get this for you though. It is limited production and may take awhile. CSC Maserati NISSAN Competition Sports Cars, Inc. 1209 E.23rd St., Lawrence, Kan. 842-2191 Norwood, Helen E, 0G, 721 Ohio *Northom, Charles T, 22 & 2 Ark *Novak, Thomas R, 5R, 2 & 2 Ark *Ohio, Thomas R, 5R, 2 & 2 Ark Novagrad, Charles, 28, 1138 Miss Novotny, Richard L, 4E, 1 & Mich Nowak, Ronald M, 0G, Field Work *Nuell, Leon R, 6G, Regency *Nuell, Leon R, 6G, Regency W 9 Nugent, H Katherine, 3D, 2112 Vt Nugent, Mary C, 11, 2112 Vt Nugent, Myra R, 7N, 2020 Olath, KC 843-9200 842-6057 842-0771 842-0771 843-1572 843-1952 843-9452 842-5518 843-3589 843-2514 843-2514 843-2514 843-2560 0 *Oberg, Karen J, 0G, 1410 N 25, KC 342-6054 *Oberstar, David L, 6G, 1704 Miss 843-7321 *Obley, Nancy, 0G, 4127 Thmpson, KC 262-4893 *Obley, Patricia, 0G, 2033 N 56 Terr* 287-1376 *Oboyle, Susan E, 4M, 3735 Stn, KC WE 1-9043 *Obirna, Barbara C, 0G, Regency 842-7020 *Obrien, Dpwarm P, 0G, 99 W 843-3860 *OConnor, Melvin C, 16M, 3103 G C 334-0062 *Oconnor, Thomas, 0G, 5129 W 32, Tpk 272-9181 *Odigerle, Empuanel M, 50 N Ohio 842-2362 *Oschlager, Ronald, 5M, 7021 Russell, Overland Park AD 6-8599 *Osetti, Emmanuel B, 6G, 908 Ind 843-0247 *Officer, Danny O, 12 N 1815 Naismith *Ogan, Roby D, 16G, 103 W 21 842-7254 *Ogden, David J, 0G, 85 W 843-7076 *Ogdon, KA, 4G, 8106 W 72 Ter, Sh Ms 262-4997 *Oglivie, Artemus W, 4A, 1107 Ind 842-7627 *Oglesby, TJ, 4M, 200 E, 44KC 513-9215 *Ogrzovich, Janis A, 2R 842-7000 *Ohallaran, Kevin L, 4A, 929 Ky 842-7000 *Ohlinger, Patricia A, 5N, 1607 W 37 KCMo 753-3475 *Okun, Philip, 6M, 8150% Trst, KCMo 361-5250 *Laughlin, B, 0G, 3516 Kesme, KCMo 331-5376 *Oldfather, Melanie F, 3RF 5 843-7076 *Oldfield, R, W, 3M, 3717 Skn, KCMo 312-9343 *Olds, Merton R, 6G, 1204 Oread 842-9402 *Oleson, Vicki L, 3A, 7 Aspen, Eudora KI 21-2129 *Oliver, John J, 0G, 1415 Clare 843-4277 *Olliver, William, 16, 1353 NJ 843-3535 *Ollenberger, Sydney L, 4D, 615 W 25 Olson, Joshua M, 16N peasmith Olson, Bill R, 13E, 1380 Alpn Olson, Arthur A, 21 R, 1B xx6 B Olson, John R, 0G, 1800 Xsnith Olson, John R, 16N peasmith Olson, Mary L, 16, 412 Cntuy Clb Olson, Pamela, 4D, 7750 Cnbry, Pr V1 318-1831 Oneil, James, 4M, 5158 Rnbw, Sh Ms 262-5130 Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneill, Robert, 6G, 501 W, 9KCMo WI 2-0622 Oostherof, Albert, 0G, 1622 W 6 Terr 843-5928 Odycke, Douglas D, High, DeSto 858-1840 Oydke, Vincent P, 2455 W 6 Terr 842-7928 Oreagan, Eleanor P, 4E, 4Field Work Organ, Alan E, OG, 1125 Ind Oroke, Joe Edith, AQ, 1301 Vt. Orlan, Paul Layo, E, 5E, 1095 Fireside Orschel, Sheryl N, 4D, 916 Ohio Orth, C, L, 4D, 8512 W 89, Ovrdln P 843-9458 Ortiz, Robert, 22 Summer Abroad Osborne, Jamie L, 3F, 420 North Osborne, Vickie O, 4A, 1924 La Osbek, Michael S, 0G, 1800 Ueng Osteen, Thomas Lee, 3A, 2200 W 26 Ossulian, Thomas L, 13 Stouffer 8 Ott, Franklyn K, 18N peasmith Ott, Kenneth K, 4B, 1224 N 6KC 299-0722 Otaway, Terri A, 3D, 6321 W 66 Terr, Sh Ms 722-2515 Ot邓, David W, 6G 842-7425 *Oubourzain, Mansour, G, 1237 Ohio *Oubourzain, Sharon O, G, 1237 Ohio *Overal, William L, 0G 842-7425 *Othener, Empuanel M, 50 N Ohio 842-2362 *Oschlager, Ronald, 5M, 7021 Russell, Overland Park AD 6-8599 Otsetti, Emmanuel B, 6G, 908 Ind 843-0247 Otfficer, Danny O, 12 N 1815 Naismith Ogan, Roby D, 16G, 103 W 21 842-7254 Ogden, David J, 0G, 85 W 843-7076 Ogden, KA, 4G, 8106 W 72 Ter, Sh Ms 262-4997 Ollivie, Artemus W, 4A, 1107 Ind 842-7627 Olgesby, TJ, 4M, 200 E, 44KC 513-9215 Olgrzovich, Janis A, 2R 842-7000 Ollier, Philip J, 4A, 1915 Clare 843-4277 Ollier, William, 16, 1353 NJ 843-3535 Ollenberger, Sydney L, 4D, 615 W 25 Olson, Joshua M, 16N peasmith Olson, Bill R, 13E, 1380 Alpn Olson, Arthur A, 21 R, 1B xx6 B Olson, John R, 0G, 1800 Xsnith Olson, John R, 16N peasmith Olson, Mary L, 16, 412 Cntuy Clb Olson, Pamela, 4D, 7750 Cnbry, Pr V1 318-1831 Oneil, James, 4M, 5158 Rnbw, Sh Ms 262-5130 Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneill, Robert, 6G, 501 W, 9KCMo WI 2-0622 Oostherof, Albert, 0G, 1622 W 6 Terr 843-5928 Odycke, Douglas D, High, DeSto 858-1840 Oydke, Vincent P, 2455 W 6 Terr 842-7928 Oreagan, Eleanor P, 4E, 4Field Work Organ, Alan E, OG, 1125 Ind Oroke, Joe Edith, AQ, 1301 Vt. Orlan, Paul Layo, E, 5E, 1095 Fireside Orschel, Sheryl N, 4D, 916 Ohio Orth, C, L, 4D, 8512 W 89, Ovrdln P 843-9458 Ortiz, Robert, 22 Summer Abroad Osborne, Jamie L, 3F, 420 North Osborne, Vickie O, 4A, 1924 La Osbek, Michael S, 0G, 1800 Ueng Osteen, Thomas Lee, 3A, 2200 W 26 Ossulian, Thomas L, 13 Stouffer 8 Ott, Franklyn K, 18N peasmith Ott, Kenneth K, 4B, 1224 N 6KC 299-0722 Otaway, Terri A, 3D, 6321 W 66 Terr, Sh Ms 722-2515 Ot邓, David W, 6G 842-7425 *Oubourzain, Mansour, G, 1237 Ohio *Oubourzain, Sharon O, G, 1237 Ohio *Overal, William L, 0G 842-7425 *Othener, Empuanel M, 50 N Ohio 842-2362 *Oschlager, Ronald, 5M, 7021 Russell, Overland Park AD 6-8599 Otsetti, Ernest L, 1B xx6 B Otsetti, John R, 0G, 1800 Xsnith Otsetti, John R, 16N peasmith Otsetti, Mary L, 16, 412 Cntuy Clb Otsetti, Pamela, 4D, 7750 Cnbry, Pr V1 318-1831 Oneil, James, 4M, 5158 Rnbw, Sh Ms 262-5130 Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneill, Robert, 6G, 501 W, 9KCMo WI 2-0622 Oostherof, Albert, 0G, 1622 W 6 Terr 843-5928 Odycke, Douglas D, High, DeSto 858-1840 Oydke, Vincent P, 2455 W 6 Terr 842-7928 Oreagan, Eleanor P, 4E, 4Field Work Organ, Alan E, OG, 1125 Ind Oroke, Joe Edith, AQ, 1301 Vt. Orlan, Paul Layo, E, 5E, 1095 Fireside Orschel, Sheryl N, 4D, 916 Ohio Orth, C, L, 4D, 8512 W 89, Ovrdln P 843-9458 Ortiz, Robert, 22 Summer Abroad Osborne, Jamie L, 3F, 420 North Osborne, Vickie O, 4A, 1924 La Osbek, Michael S, 0G, 1800 Ueng Osteen, Thomas Lee, 3A, 2200 W 26 Ossulian, Thomas L, 13 StouFFER 8 Ott, Franklyn K, 18N peasmith Ott, Kenneth K, 4B, 1224 N 6KC 299-0722 Otaway, Terri A, 3D, 6321 W 66 Terr, Sh Ms 722-2515 Ot邓, David W, 6G 842-7425 *Oubourzain, Mansour, G, 1237 Ohio *Oubourzain, Sharon O, G, 1237 Ohio *Overal, William L, 0G 842-7425 *Othener, Empuanel M, 50 N Ohio 842-2362 *Oschlager, Ronald, 5M, 7021 Russell, Overland Park AD 6-8599 Otsetti, Ernest L, 1B xx6 B Otsetti, John R, 0G, 1800 Xsnith Otsetti, John R, 16N peasmith Otsetti, Mary L, 16, 412 Cntuy Clb Otsetti, Pamela, 4D, 7750 Cnbry, Pr V1 318-1831 Oneil, James, 4M, 5158 Rnbw, Sh Ms 262-5130 Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneill, Robert, 6G, 501 W, 9KCMo WI 2-0622 Oostherof, Albert, 0G, 1622 W 6 Terr 843-5928 Odycke, Douglas D, High, DeSto 858-1840 Oydke, Vincent P, 2455 W 6 Terr 842-7928 Oreagan, Eleanor P, 4E, 4Field Work Organ, Alan E, OG, 1125 Ind Oroke, joe Edith, AQ, 1301 Vt. Orlan, Paul Layo, E, 5E, 1095 Fireside Orschel, Sheryl N, 4D, 916 Ohio Orth, C, L, 4D, 8512 W 89, Ovrdln P 843-9458 Ortiz, Robert, 22 Summer Abroad Osborne, Jamie L, 3F, 420 North Osborne, Vickie O, 4A, 1924 La Osbek, Michael S, 0G, 1800 Ueng Osteen, Thomas Lee, 3A, 2200 W 26 Ossulian, Thomas L, 13 StouFFER 8 Ott, Franklyn K, 18N peasmith Ott, Kenneth K, 4B, 1224 N 6KC 299-0722 Otaway, Terri A, 3D, 6321 W 66 Terr, ShMs 722-2515 Ot邓, David W, 6G 842-7425 *Oubourzain, Mansour, G, 1237 Ohio *Oubourzain, Sharon O, G, 1237 Ohio *Overal, William L, 0G 842-7425 *Othener, Empuanel M, 50 N Ohio 842-2362 *Oschlager, Ronald, 5M, 7021 Russell, Overland Park AD 6-8599 Otsetti, Ernest L, 1B xx6 B Otsetti, John R, 0G, 1800 Xsnith Otsetti, John R, 16N peasmith Otsetti, Mary L, 16, 412 Cntuy Clb Otsetti, Pamela, 4D, 7750 Cnbry, Pr V1 318-1831 Oneil, James, 4M, 5158 Rnbw, Sh Ms 262-5130 Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneil, Vincent P, 14M, 1591 Clare Oneill, Robert, 6G, 501 W, 9KCMo WI 2-0622 Oostherof, Albert, 0G, 1622 W 6 Terr 843-5928 Odycke, Douglas D, High, DeSto 858-1840 Oydke, Vincent P, 2455 W 6 Terr 842-7928 Oreagan, ELEANOR Overman, William L. 20 Overholser, Norman T. 4A, 905 Em Rd 842-6966 *Overshiner, Betty F, 6G, 9500 Roe, *Overland Park *Cook County, GI 4144 Booth, KC *Owen, Marsha J, 0G, 2348 Murp *Owens, Christopher, 26, 1815 Nismith *B422-7237 *Owens, Christopher, 26, 1815 Nismith *B422-7237 *Oxier, John E, M, 23M1 W, 43 KC *Ozawa, Kenneth, GI 6, Stouffer 8 *843-2018 *Paalzow, L, 7M, 5537 Glenwid, Sh Ms* 423-6126 *C帧ach, C, 0. 3030 Iowa* 426-6123 *Pachtman, H, 6M, 617 W 43 Tern, KCM* 816-7906 *Paden, Lucile Y, 6G, 1624 W 22* 843-1709 *Paden, Lucile Y, 6G, 1624 W 22* 843-1709 *Page, Max C, 3J, 816 Miss* 828-4644 *Page, William, M 1603 W 13J* 842-6197 *Pagelar, Donald, B 28, 300 W 26* 842-4544 *Papen, Lucile Y, 6G, 1624 W 22* 843-1709 *Papen, Lucile Y, 6G, 1624 W 22* 843-1709 *Pall, Michael, G 1609 Sunset* 842-0925 *Palmer, Dolores C, 11, 2137 Teenn* 843-7438 *Palmer, Javon, V 24, 1815 Naismith* 842-7000 *Pall, Michael, G 1609 Sunset* 842-0925 *Palmer, Dolores C, 11, 2137 Teenn* 843-7438 *Palmer, Javon, V 24, 1815 Naismith* 842-7000 *Palmer, Kent D, 24, 1125 Ind* 842-2905 *Palmer, Michael L, 3B, 2200 W 26* 840-0004 *Pairlee, David F, B 19, 344 Strong* 846-8688 *Pairlee, Thomas M, G 16, 1026 Miss* 843-6022 *Pandurangam, P, 0G, 1319 Tenn* 842-6191 *Pang, Chung Ning, G 09, 319 Adams, KC* 842-5918 *Pang, Chung Ning, G 09, 319 Adams, KC* 842-5918 *Pankratz, Martha S, D 13, 1360 Ma* 843-8989 *Papacek, Patricia M, 0G, 941 La* 843-9112 *Papuchado, Lucien, G 17, 135 W 19* 843-9112 *Pappas, Byron N, 22, 2530 W 25* 842-7172 *Pappas, Charles R, 18, 2530 W 25* 842-7172 *Park, Cicily, A 4A, 2401 W 25* 842-5918 *Park, Cicily, A 4A, 2401 W 25* 842-5918 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Park, Kiyy, G 0W, 1420 Tenn* 843-8989 *Patrick, Fred E, 4M, 7416 Fntna, Pr VI* 862-1064 *Patrick, F迪, D 19, 1620 Monroe, Tpn 823-2909 *Patrick, F迪, D 19, 1620 Monroe, Tpn 823-2909 *Paterson, George F, 1L, 1332 Mass* 843-7319 *Paterson, John T, 0G, 1400 Tenn* 843-7319 *Paterson, Michael M, 5M, 3209 Fran, KC 843-6948 *Paterson, Nancy D, 1800 Naismith* 842-5918 *Paterson, Adendra R, G 1134 La* 843-7438 *Peasley, David R. 0G, 1510 N. 78 KC *Pearch, M. G, 04394 Boulk, Man EN 2-1140 *Carolyn, G0, 7402 W. 62 Sh, Ms 328-4505 *Peard, A, P, 6198 M, 8391 J, Op KM 428-4724 *Peard, A, P, 6198 M, 8391 J, Op KM 428-4724 *Peard, Craig E. 4D, 1941 Stewart 483-8551 *Pederson, John C. 1815 Nismath 482-7000 *Pederson, John C. 1815 Nismath 482-7000 *Peery, Lorraine C. 2F, 1603 W 15 *Peers, Gerald Jr. 4M, 3900 Booth, KC 362-5579 *Pelletier, L. 6M, 7720 W. 85, Op KM 498-954 *Pemberton, Strick D. 6G, 207 N 5 *Penn, George A III. 16, 1815 Naismith 482-7000 *Penner, Douglas A. 0G, 1115 W 10 *Penner, Douglas A. 0G, 1115 W 10 *Penner, Marjorie A. 4D, 2127 Harper 482-9198 *Penner, Raylene J. 0G, 1115 W 10 *Pennington, Dorothy. 6G, 1123 Ind 482-1050 *Pennington, Stephen J. 4A, 1145 La 482-9563 *Pennington, Joseph J. 0G, 1145 La 482-9563 *Pennington, Caroline S. 6G, 530 La 482-1716 *Pentin, Floyd C. 0G, 530 La 482-1716 *Pentin, Floyd C. 0G, 530 La 482-1716 *Penz, Jeanette C. 0G, RR 2 482-3824 *Penner, Inez. PN, 1005 Bikh Wkw, Wstn 386-2744 *Derdaris, Eva M. 3A, 1815 Naismith 482-7000 *Durdie, Sandra J. 22 RI 482-1776 *Durdie, Sandra J. 22 RI 482-1776 *Petfetti, Joseph J. 6G, 1903 W 25 482-4204 *Perrilla, Carl P. TM, 3726 Booth, KC 483-5434 *Perrett, Michael A. 1812 Bikh Wkw, Wstn 386-2744 *Persian, Henry B. 0G, 1820 Mo 483-5138 *Desmark, D. J. 0G, 1514 Topeka, Tpka 482-9198 *Pestinger, Suzanne L. 2113 Harvard 482-9188 *Prette *Pietarila, Randall, 4A, 3424 Harvard* 842-4788 *Pikley, John D, 6G, 2 & Ark* 843-5617 *Pincomb, Arthur C, 3A, 730 W 25* 843-6531 *Pine, Brenda L, 4D, 1603 W 15* 843-6899 *Pine, Richard R, 3A, Summer Abroad* 843-9841 *Pinkston, Elise J, 4A, 1242 La* 843-9817 *Pippit, David D, 6G, RR 2 Box 334* 846-6007 *Pipitt, Martha K, 6G, RR 2 Box 334* 846-6007 *Karyn K, 4D, 910 Wellington* 843-1327 *Pittman, Jack R, 4A, 1316 Mass* 843-0619 *Pizimzen, John J, 0G, Field Work* 843-2416 *Plager, S D, 6M, 5101 Broch, Sh Ms* 843-2416 *Pokery, William C, 6M, 6125 Sh Ms* 843-2727 *Plata, Maximino G, 6R, RR 2 Box 42* 843-1190 *Patl, John R, 4A, 1809 W 25* *Platt, Warren B, 6G, 3020 Iowa* 842-7000 *Plattner, Sharene D, 18, 1815 Mismail* 843-7000 *Plummer, Saundra E, 18, 1800 Engel* 842-6600 *Plummer, Steve, TM, 1202 W 40, KCM* 871-1045 *Pozwitz, Josephine, GG, 110 E 44, *KMO, Pogson, W III, 34夏,Abrown* *Poje, Vivian A, 3A, 1800 Naismith* 842-4786 *Pokyry, William C, 6M, 6125 Sh Ms* 843-6797 *Pokyry, William C, 6M, 6125 Sh Ms* 843-6797 *Poko, John P, 26, 2551 Redbud* 842-5101 *Marc, Mare C, 3E, 2003 Miller* 842-5480 *Marco, Lena C, 4G, 2014 Oushalh* 842-6299 *Poress, Reese L, 6G, 4054 Sh Ms* 842-2075 *Poole, Carol A, 0G, 3320 Evngsd, Tpkə 722-6885 *Poison, Jeffrey B, 22, 805 Z 25* *Pope, Virginia F, 11, 1815 Naismith* 842-7000 *Pop, Rita A, 11, 1815 Naismith* 842-7000 *Poppe, Joan, 22, 1146 Teen* 843-7773 *Prose, Joan, 22, 1146 Teen* 843-7773 *Postlethcah, Bonnie, 18, 1815 Naismith* 842-7000 *Poston, William, 28, 905 Mo* 842-8402 *Potucke, John A, II, 3L, 2933 Miss* 842-8851 *Pulsor, Chiarella Y, 4A, 3020 Iowa* 842-6878 *Power, Jerre F, 15, 1517 W 9* *Power, Leslie A, C, 4G, 1825 La* 842-3942 *Power, Patricia A, C, 8G, 12nd* *Power, Patricia A, C, 8G, 12nd* *Power, Virginia K, 3Z, 2482 Redbud* 842-4351 *Porto, Richard V, 3L, 2933 Miss* 842-3941 *Porto, Richard V, 3L, 2933 Miss* 842-3941 *Powers, Jerre F, 15, 1517 W 9* *Power, Leslie A, C, 4G, 1825 La* 842-3942 *Power, Patricia A, C, 8G, 12nd* *Power, Patricia A, C, 8G, 12nd* *Preiser, T, R, 6G, 8705 W 106, Ov Pkə 842-3979 *Preiser, Virginia K, G, 8705 W 106 *Terr, Overland Park* 842-2170 *Preiser, Virginia K, G, 8705 W 106 *Presson, Alice J, 0G, 2347 Murpʰ* *Prewert, Everett J, 10G, 1745 Vɛ$ *Price, Allyda A, 4D, 1815 Naismith* 842-7000 *Pruthin, A, 3D, 758 Elm* 843-6191 *Pride, Pridence B, 0G, 909ᵃ High *Baldwin* 594-3508 *Prieto, Argenis, 2E, 1815 Naismith* 842-1905 *Pringle, Bryce R, 4I, 1914 SouFFER* 842-4937 *Prichard, Donna K, 3F, 1526 Vɛ$ *Pritter, Linda K, 4J, 1012 Emr Dʰ* *Doctor, Thomas J, 4G, 1915 Naismith* 842-3532 *P埔loot, Charles M, 9G, 1055 Emr Dʰ* *Pruishing, Carola, PN, 617 N Parker, *Olatte* ST 2-0751 *Pruishing, Carola, PN, 4, 1309 Ky* *Puntenney, Mary Q, Lk Frst, Bn Sp Hʰ 2-5087 *Purcell, Katherine D, 18, 2401 Emr Dʰ* *Purcell, N, D, 6M, 13223 W 94, Lenexa* 842-3824 *Purcell, Charles M, 9G, 1055 Emr Dʰ* *Purdy, James L, 11, 1815 Naismith* *Puterbaugh, Deborah, 4D, 1272 Orchd* 842-7491 *Putnam, Anne C, 4D, 1012 Emr Dʰ* *Putnam, Anne C, 4D, 1012 Emr Dʰ* *Putt, Barbara S, 18, 907 Centennial* *Pukey, Linda P, 9F, 1527 W 9* *Pukey, Scott A, 4, 1527 W 9* Buddhist burns himself to protest Vietnam war SAIGON (UPI)—About 100 elderly Buddhist women and youths carrying signs reading "Americans Go Home" joined a funeral procession Sunday for a 74 year old monk who immolated himself in the cause of peace. It was the second anti American demonstration in Saigon during the weekend. The monk's 16 KANSAN June 16 1970 suicide was the first immolation in Saigon since 1967 when the government of President Nguyen Van Thieu was elected. The funeral demonstration was peaceful. But one of the most violent of a current series of demonstrations occurred Saturday when college students hurled more than a dozen firebombs at American and South Vietnamese combat police and damaged some American owned vehicles. They chanted "MP's go home." P. J. M. C. B. S. Apple THE BEATLES SgL.Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band apple records McCARTNEY Paul McCartney PLEASE REFER TO THE RIGHT SIDE FOR MORE DETAILS. $399 KIEF'S Beer Blast Bargains! MONDAY-50c Pitchers from 8-9 FRIDAY-50c Pitchers from 3-4 TUESDAY-ALL the Beer You Can Drink For only $2 at THE STABLES Grants, Awards Charles A. Sauer Jr., admissions officer, coordinator and instructor at the Intensive English Center at KU, will temporarily replace Clark Coan as dean of foreign students from Aug. 1 to Jan. 1, 1971. Coan will be on sabbatical leave studying international exchange programming in Great Britain and western Europe. Sauer, who was born in Korea and lived there for 17 years, earned both the B.A. degree in Oriental languages and the M.A. degree in linguistics and the teaching of English as a foreign language at the University of Michigan. He joined the Intensive English Center staff in 1966, and represented the KU Center at a Conference on Intensive English Centers in San Francisco in 1968. ★★ Edward I. Shaw, professor of radiation biophysics, has received a contract of $51,609 from the division of nuclear education and training of the Atomic Energy Commission to finance a faculty training institute at the University of Kansas this summer. Shaw, who is director of the institute, said 30 biology faculty from colleges and universities throughout the United States were selected to participate. Course work for the institute, which runs from June 8 to Aug. 1, will concentrate on radiation biology subject matter with an emphasis on laboratory techniques. * * Richard T. Briggs, doctoral student from Princeton, N.J. in the department of physiology and cell biology has been awarded a predoctoral research fellowship from the National Institutes of Health for the academic year 1970-71. The grant of $5,100 will be used to support Mr. Briggs researches on the role of microtubules in the structure and function of white blood cells via electron-microscopy. ★★ Alan E. Organ, doctoral student from Philadelphia, Pa., in the department of physiology and cell biology has been awarded a predoctoral research fellowship from the National Institutes of Health for the academic year 1970-71. The grant of $5,100 will be used to support Organ's research on the mechanisms of water intake and elimination by single cells, especially protozoa, which have a specialized water-excretory vesicle. * * A research grant of $21,700 has been awarded to Jerome M. Yochim, associate professor of physiology & cell biology, by the National Institutes of Health. The award is a continuation grant for a second year of research studies on the effects of light and dark cycles on the implantation, development and delivery of the mammalian foetus. Yochim uses laboratory rats in the researches which are aimed at developing a biological model for the study of hormonal control of the processes of implantation and delivery of the foetus. Math head is named Paul Stalling Mostert, a member of the faculty of Tulane University, New Orleans, since 1953, has been appointed professor and chairman of the department of mathematics at KU. Mostert will succeed G. Baley Price, head of the math department since 1951. Price is retiring in August as an administrator, but will remain on the faculty. June 16 1970 KANSAN 17 1 GOOD YEAR SALE 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRE! LOW PROFILE, 78 SERIES "SAFETY*ALL-WEATHER Z" TIRE Buy now save $2.30 to $4.00 $19.95 6.00 x 13 tubeless blackwall plus $1.60 Fed. Ex. Tax. No trade needed. Regular price $22.25 • Tufsyn rubber compound for tread wear • Angle Grip Tread • Low profile for stability and handling • Our best selling 4-ply nylon cord tire USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM S 4- LIBERAL BUDGET TERMS - LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS sale ends saturday night! You save $540! SALE Nylon cord tire for panels, pick-ups, vans and campers. "TRACTION HI-MILER" $2495 6 70 x 15 Tube Type 5.44 yds. 2.40 Feb 15 - Feb WAS $3035 no trade needed Free Mounting Hurry–Sale Priced only through Saturday Night! SALE no trade needed Free Mounting You save $540! SALE Nylon cord tire for panels, pick-ups, vans and campers. 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MULTICOLOR FABRIC AIR COOLED SEAT CUSHION $1.07 Comfortable conveni- nent air cooled cushion is 17 1/4" by 35" size, both front and back in multicolor black, blue, red, and green - will nicely compliment any auto interior and help keep clothes dry, clean and fresh while driving. GREGG TIRE CO. --- 814 W. 23rd 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Daily Thursday Until 9:00 p.m. Closed Saturdays at 4:00 p.m. 842-5451 Quackenbush, Ray E. 0G, 2105 Tenn 842-1749 Quainville, Robert J. 0G, 2106 Tenn 842-1749 Qualliano, Robert J. 14A, 54K7 842-1749 Qualizza, Stephen B. 9B, 1796 S. 32 KC 432-1458 Quinnich, Richard L. 3B, 1429 W 19 Tern 842-6001 Richard, Richard L. 3B, 1429 W 19 Tern 842-6001 R Rabe, John E. 4J, 1333 Tenn Radcliff, Daniel M. 21, RR B box 32 Radcliffe, James W. 42, RR B box 32 Raddemacher, D. R, 065, 2521 Ousdahl Rake, Ronald D. 16, 2112 Lah *Raiston, James S. 6G, 2009 Hillview *Ralston, Thomas A. J. 16, 1135 NH *Ralston, Thomas A. J. 16, 1135 NH *Ramirez, Rachel D. PN. 21 S Cherokee Kansas City AD 6-4072 Ramirez, William L. 0G, 26 Stouffer 842-6655 Ramirez, William L. 0G, 26 Stouffer 842-6655 Ramirez, William L. 0G, 26 Stouffer 842-6655 Ramine, Sheela S. 6G, 1205 Ky Randall, K. D, 0G, 748 N Water, Olathe 782-3121 Randolph, Judith M. 9D, 930 Murrow 842-7056 Rankin, Annabel A. 10G, 1011 Hirp 843-7344 Rankin, Annabel A. 10G, 1011 Hirp 843-7344 Rankin, Patricia C. 93G, 93W M gdnr 844-8194 Rapp, Erik. 0G, 706 HI Rardin, E. M, Jr. G, 809 Vovity, Sh Ms 826-1404 Rardin, E. M, Jr. G, 809 Vovity, Sh Ms 826-1404 Rathbun, Ted. 6G, 946 La Rattliff, Bobby D. 0G, bx 684, Balwind 845-3538 Ratzlaff, Robert K. 6G, 516 Ohio 842-8486 Ray, Richard H. 4D, 2401 W 2 Ray, Richard H. 4D, 2401 W 2 Razahgi, Khami S. 10G, 1204 Oread Real, William J. 4E, RR 1. Meriden 843-3366 Rees, Bernie B. 4E, RR 1. Meriden 843-3366 Rees, Rory R. 6G, RR 2 Box 36 Redburn, Dianna A. 0G, 2 & Ark 843-9599 Reddy, J. K. 7M, 1513 Lxgnt, KCmo 923-1747 Redeker, Kaymard S. 6G, 2550 Redbud 843-1423 Redeker, Patricia E. RM, 39 & Rainbow Kansas City AD 6-5252 Redfearn, David G. 10900 W, McSh Redford, James E. 4M, 4178 Eaton, KC 262-9373 Redmond, Chris J. 3L, 1517 W 9 Reed, Carolyn A. 2L, 905 Em Rm 842-2716 Reed, Janice J. 26, 1636 W 19 Terr 842-1422 Reepner, John C. 6G, 623 Mo 842-9428 Rees, Wgwynne E. 0G, 617 Tylpk *Reese, Linda W. 0G, 2410 W 22, Tpkra 233-0205 Reese, Gregina G. 16, 1135 W 19 Terr 842-1429 Reeves, Kenneth A. 10G, 1912 W 6, Sh Reeves, Thomas M. 2L, Field Work Refehe, Ronald K. 6G, 513 Fireside 842-8871 Reege, Pamela N. 4A, 1810 W 25 Reeger, Bobbie A. 3D, 1834 Vt 842-9298 Reeshuch, Susan M. 4F, 510 Westview. Mabattan JE 9-4432 *Rechenbassen, Don. G, 6517 W 9 Reid. D, A, GG, 1016 Ala - Reindy, Jack J. 6G, 5428 Redbud W * Rein, Lawrence W. 4G, 1132 Teem 843-40860 * Reinhardt, Carl D. 5R, 702 W 25 842-9909 * Reinhardt, Jean E. 4A, 2200 W 26 842-5629 * Reinhardt, Jean E. 4A, 2200 W 26 842-5629 * Reinhardt, Richard H. 6G, 1012 M Schrd 842-1834 * Reinoehl, Charles T. 0G, 404 S Church Olathe 842-3874 * Reiner, Lawrence G. 4G, 3032 Pearl K 842-8768 * Reiz, David L. 4D, 1308 Ohio 842-5820 * Remark, John F. 0G, 2401 W 26 842-4847 * Regnachy, Setti M. 6G, 2137 W 39 KC 236-7177 * Regnado, William I. III A. 4G, 1704 W 26 842-7876 * Renz, Barbara L. 0G, Summer Abroad 842-6171 * Reppert, Brent A. 0G, 1815 Naismith 842-mathone * Reppert, Brent A. 0G, 1815 Naismith 842-mathone * Re斯基, William A. 4E, 2237 Military 842-6171 * Resnik, William A. 4E, 2237 Military 842-6171 * Resnik, William A. 4E, 2237 Military 842-6171 * Reynsolds, Clarence J. 24, 5 Stouffer 842-4296 * Reynsolds, Donald G. 6G, 635 W 25 842-4055 * Reynsolds, Greg. 3E, 1605 W 26 842-4055 * Reynsolds, Greg. 3E, 1605 W 26 842-4055 * Reynsolds, Terrry C. 5G, 1924 Learner 842-7319 * Reynsolds, Tim C. 6G, 635 W 25 842-1408 * Rhea, Martha H. 0G, 444 Calif 842-6186 * Rhea, Martha H. 0G, 444 Calif 842-6186 * Rires, Mary B. 3M, 184 & Park 842-4296 * Rires, Patricia R. 6G, 2642 Learner 842-8632 * Rhodes, E. 4B, 90 W 29 Terry 842-3549 * Rhodes, Anne J. 4D, 2111 Kasol 842-2313 * Rhodes, Anne J. 4D, 2111 Kasol 842-2313 * Rice, Mary B. 3M, 184 & Park 842-4296 * Rice, Patricia R. 6G, 2642 Learner 842-8632 * Rich, Joseph D. 6M, 5033 W 37 Pr Vri 842-1861 * Nancy, M. 4A, 808 Broadview 842-0442 * Richards, David F. 1L, 12 Stouffer 842-4290 * Richards, Kenneth E. 6G, 314 Maine 842-2053 * Richards, R. D. 6M, 4812 W 27 Pr Vri 842-5811 * Richards, R. D. 6M, 4812 W 27 Pr Vri 842-5811 * Richards, Anne C. 4D, 305 W 23 842-0781 * Richards, Beverly, 4D, 9720 Albrhm ceawood 842-6381 * Richards, David L. 4A, 11 & Mo 843-6831 * Richards, Frances, PN, 1829 S 13 Kansas City 321-6957 * Richards, James W. 21, 8335 Lowell 649-1947 * Richards, Suzanne, 0G, 2931 Va Topeka 333-3385 * Richness, Jan E. 0G, 1451 S Hickory, CH 2-1809 * Richness, Brenda M. 4D, 1063 W 15 842-6958 * Richard, Louise E. 6G, 51 Stouffer 842-6958 * Richard, Timothy J. 6G, 51 Stouffer 842-7000 * Richard, Eric, 28, 1815 Naismith 842-7583 * Richicks, Linda C. 4A, 1741 W 19 842-1271 * Riddell, Patient A. 22, 1735 W 19 842-1271 * Riddle, Susan L. 9G, Summer Abroad 857-2264 * Ribet, Brida M. 4D, 1072 M Kcs 262-1012 Riegle, Kyra, 6G, 4454 Jfrons, KCMo 531-3608 Riekhof, Lai, P. 6M, 4512 W 9, Pr Vl 362-8667 Richtwil, C. 4A, 2401 W 25 Centrity 842-7267 Rifle, Carol C, 4A, 2401 W 25 Riggs, Phyllas, Y. 0P, PO Box 123, Olathe 888-5030 Risso, Becky S, 2F, 1603 W 15 842-7853 Risso, Becky S, 2F, 1603 W 15 842-7853 Risso, Becky S, 2F, 1603 W 15 842-7853 Linwood 723-5858 *Rlinger, Dennis R, 2L, 3020 Iowa 843-2316 *Rilinger, Mary R, 0G, 3418 Harvard 843-2933 *Riding, Phillip L, 0G, 3900 S 4, Salina 842-1640 *Riddt, Phillip L, 0G, 3800 S, KC 842-1640 *Ring, Stanley J, 4E, 1020 Kmc 842-6318 *Rinkenberger, R, 4M, 4718 Eaton, KC 262-3373 *Risman, Elaine F, 3A, 143 W 14 842-6600 *Rinkenberger, R, 4M, 4718 Eaton, KC 262-3373 *Risman, Elaine F, 3A, 143 W 14 842-6600 *Rischen, K, S, 0G, 3234 Flaunt, Lansing 842-8264 *Rivas, A S, 0G, 4105 Francis, KC RA 2-4979 *Rivas, Daniel D, 3A, 1344 KcmO 843-4138 *Ribbins, Elaine F, 3A, 143 W 14 842-6305 *Ribbins, Maria G, 0421 W 21 Tpk CE 842-2930 *Ribbins, Nancy M, 0G, 1517 W 9 842-8264 *Ribbins, Stephen L, 9A, 1245 W Camp 842-6244 *Ribbins, Barbara, OG, 3513 NE 6T Terr, Gladstone 842-8264 *Ribbins, Kenneth R, 4D, 1203 W 9 842-8264 *Ribbins, D. 6M, 9194 W 9, Meriam 822-2403 *Ribbins, Dave D, 0G, 5321 Tenn 824-2403 *Ribbins, Patricia A, 4D, 519 W 25 842-2930 *Ribbins, Patricia A, 4D, 519 W 25 842-2930 *Ribbins, Rachelle, 4D, 3611 Oak, KC 842-3824 *Ribbins, Ruth J, 0G, 2204 Tenn 842-8262 *Ribbins, Samuel G, 5M, 722 Ward Overland Park 862-5982 *Ribberton, Alfred G, 6D 5ouster 842-7138 *Ribberton, Alfred G, 6D 5ouster 842-7138 *Ribberton, Margaret, 0G, 1714 Vt 842-7138 *Ribberton, Samuel G, 5M, 722 Ward Pkwy KCMO LO 1-2505 *Ribberton, David, DG, 730 111 842-2940 *Ribberton, David, DG, 730 111 842-2940 *Ribberton, Ethel B, 26, 801 Broadview 843-1499 *Ribberton, Lawrence, 6I, 1815 Naismith 844-7000 *Ribberton, Lawrence, 6I, 1815 Naismith 844-7000 *Ribberton, Jerry C, 9E, 1209 E 23 842-7111 *Ribberton, Jerry C, 9E, 1209 E 23 842-7111 *Ribberton, Stephen A, 4A, 2507 Redbud 843-3507 *Ribberton, Stephen A, 4A, 2507 Redbud 843-3507 *Ribberton, William G, 1619 W 9 Terr 843-5995 *Ribbon, Clifford P, 0G, 904 W 29 Terr 843-1716 *Ribbon, Clifford P, 0G, 904 W 29 Terr 843-1716 *Ribbon, Walton W, 4D, 904 W 29 Terr 843-0822 *Roche, Gregory F, 0G, 940 Jana 842-8262 *Rochford, Connie, OG, 3638 Skpng 862-3129 *Rochill, Juhrene, 3J, 2401 W 25 842-6837 *Rochill, Juhrene, 3J, 2401 W 25 842-6837 *Rochigue, Cecilia M, 6G, Sum Abroad 842-1897 *Rroguez, Gabriel A, 6D, 621 S, 6K 842-1897 *Rroguez, Gabriel A, 6D, 621 S, 6K 842-1897 *Rodrock, Darwin, OG, 6040 Sha Mh 842-6160 *Roe, George W, 6G, 1603 W 15 Roe, Wm A Jr, GJ 1603 W 15 Roeyer, MF F, 34Z Elem Roeryer, Clemmy M, F 1133 N 34, KC * Roegers, M. M, F 1272 Roegers, Janis, F 4, 1605 W 9 Rogers, Jerry L, OG 1711 W 20 Rogers, Larry U, OG 1711 W 20 Rohren, Betta J, PG 1085 Abroad Rohren, Bettja J, PG 1085 Abroad Rohren, James W, OG 1815 Naismith Rohren, Sheila P, OG 7107 Shy, Sm S Rohnen, Sievert A, GJ 1026 Ohio Rohnen, Claire C, GJ 1026 Ohio Roller, Karsten A, PG 14, 1600 W 9 Rollins, Tony J, OG 811 W 29 Terr Romody, Judy J, DG 410, Llao Romody, Judy A, PG 1419 Maas Romondaanski, Tym P, OG 1419 Maas Romondaanski, Jamice M, 21, 1334 Ohio Romnbaum, Karen T, PN, 39 & Rnbw AD 6-2525 Rooney, Dana, GJ 2244 Boswell, Tpk 326 Rooney, Jerman W, GJ 626 Ohio Rooney, Joyce A, PN 39 & Rnbw, Naismith Rooney, Robert K, GJ 2906 Booth, Sm S Rooney, Robert M, A4, 3751 Booth, SM S 罗森feld, Bevergy V, GJ 2457 Jusu 罗森garten, Jeannie, OG 1965 W 94 Rosenberg, Jennie, OG 1965 W 94 Rosenthal, S J, M 4178 Eaton, TC 262-8373 Rosenwald, Gary W, GJ 11 & Mo Rosner, Barbara J, GJ 2014 Vaope TE 2e-2045 Rosner, Foog, FD 2031 Wishbn Tei Topека CE 4-4015 Ross, Elizabeth, OG 2224 Brdk, Tpk 266-9045 Ross, Barbara B, FJ 4, 2434 Ross, Barbara B, FJ 4, 2434 Ross, Linda, GJ 1257 Fillmore, Tpk CE 3-3338 Ross, Paul D, GJ 1037 Teinn Jerl Annette, 3A, 1815 Naismith Ross, Arthur A, MJ 1037 Teinn Merim Ross, Carol L, DL 4, Lk Forst, Bnr Spg 2e-2095 Ross, Emalou, GJ 1630 Mass Ross, Jennifer L, GJ 1016 Ill Ross, Ethan L, MJ 1037 Teinn Ross, Stephen C, MJ 1016 Ill Rothe, Patricia A, OG 523 Fireside Rothe, Janice K, OG 2903 Trumm, KC Rothe, Harriet M, OG 2903 Trumm, KC Rothe, Natale C, MJ 3A, 2622 W 12 Rourke, Janice B, GJ 1100 Va Olathe 764-2429 Roush, Peggy E, DJ 1142 Ind Rourke, Caroline C, GJ 1815 Naismith Rourth, Larry R, GJ 1815 Naismith Row, Steven D, I2 1457 W 9 Rowland, Herbert F, GJ 503 Kansas Rowland, Sharon S, GJ 1917 Oxford Rowland, Wilma, 9D Field Work Rowson, Stephen V, GJ 1815 Naismith Rowson, Meyer V, GJ 10195 W 57 F埠 Shawnee Mission CE 1-6905 Royer, Katherine A, 21, 1735 W 19 Rozan, Dorothy J, 11, 316 Minn Rozan, Dorytha J, 11, 316 Minn Rozelle, Robert W, GJ 2148 W 26 Rozenstein, Paill, 22, 1541 Kv U.S. treaty starts riots in Japan TOKYO (UPI)—Police battled radical students and other leftists in Tokyo and elsewhere during demonstrations demanding an end to Japan's military alliance with the United States. National police reported a total of 303 persons, including 40 women, were arrested throughout the country in connection with the anti-American demonstrations. They said 48 persons, including 22 police officers, were injured. In Tokyo, an estimated 40,000 demonstrators, marched through the rainy streets in the opening of 10 days of protests against the June 23 renewal of Japan's security treaty with the United States. They included housewives, towing children, folk singers strumming guitars, and radical students with fire bombs hidden in their shirts. The students clashed with riot police at several points in Tokyo. The worst violence flared when about 200 students marched on the Harajuku commuter station and hurled firebombs and cans filled with pesticides at police. The police waded into the students with swinging clubs and aluminum shields and drove them off. In contrast to the students, some young men and women carried flowers and posters declaring: "Japan is Ours" and "Voice without Voice." One marcher carried a toy machine gun over his shoulder with a huge flower protruding from the barrel. All of them denounced the U.S. Japan security treaty which comes up for automatic renewal June 23 for the first time since it was signed amid bloody riots 10 years ago. The treaty permits the United States to maintain air and naval strike forces in Japan and places the Japanese archipelago located off Soviet Siberia and Communist China under America's nuclear protection. Leftists and pacifists oppose the treaty because they do not believe that any country will attack Japan and because they consider the American bases a nuisance. 18 KANSAN June 16 1970 LPG welcomes students LA PETITE GALERIE ADVENTURE PARIS, 1973 C Capitol MARCUS AND RAYMOND GRAND FUNK RAILROAD On Time © THE BAND $399 KIEF'S Patronize Kansan Advertisers INCLUDE Griff's IN YOUR SUMMER FUN "The DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS" BURGER BAR This summer include Griff's Burger Bar in your everyday activities. It's not far from campus. You've probably seen it. It's the triangular building on 23rd street with the rainbow-colored roof. When you're feeling hungry, stop in Griff's. We'll be happy to show you how fast and friendly our service can be as we proudly serve our GIANT Hamburgers, DOUBLE GIANT Hamburgers, Fish Sandwiches, Shakes, and Fries. This summer, come to Griff's for a tasty meal, a cool drink, and a friendly smile. 100% Pure Beef Burgers Griff's Griff's Burger Bar 1618 W.23rd Rubin, Milton S. 4S, 1815 Naismith B42-7009 Rudick, Pearl M. 815 Ohio B42-7373 Rudick, Peter M. 815 Ohio B42-8663 *Ruebel, Karl, OG 3E, 8 Tonganoxie B45-3179 Ruebschoff, James J. 28. 4030 W 98 Sabanske, Cheri L. 34, 1735 W 19 Sobak, Mark A. J, 032 Em Rd 19 Sobak, Marvin M, 815 Em Rd 19 Sack, Sara H, 11, 16 Stouffer 1 Saffell, Linda L, 4D, 1615 Z 27 Saffell, Thomas F, 0G, 1615 W 27 Terr 19 Safco, Khalid S, 6M, 1547 Skyline 16, 2498 Saffer, Gwen W, 6G, 1612 W 29 Terr 19 Sager, Vernon D, 6G, 1616 Ind 19 Sager,uwanthan M, 6G, 12E Miss 19 Sahu, Geeta E, 6E Parmat 19 Sab, Karl L, 4D, 1315 W 19 Terr 19 Salzer, Joan M, 4D, 1735 W 19 Sabelu, Susan N, 6M, 1547 Skyline 16, 2498 Sahuel, Imogene P, 1N, 1718 S 37, KC 1E-1317 Sanzel, Elvi R, 3A, 1719 Randall 19 Sanzel, Gloria J, 1F, 1719 Randall 19 Sandbothe, Cathy D, TM, 807 W 40 JE-1583 Sanders, Osa, TM, 4344 Jckan, KCMo 161-844 Sanders, Shannon S, 4D, 1304 Tenn 19 Sanderson, Douglas D, 2E, 1718 Vt 19 Sanderson, Benjamin D, 2E, 1718 Vt 19 Sanderson, B, N, 4E, 2336 Egwatr, Tpk 27-1648 Santee, Pamela, 4E, 5116 Nail, Sh Ms 19 sappenfelt, Carol A, 0G, 1529 W 19 Sauert, Robert B, 4D, 106 W 6 Sauert, Robert B, 4D, 106 W 6 Sauerts, Charles W, 9D, 9525 Monrva Lenexa 188-1533 Savigamin, Sophon, G, 1224 Ohio Sawyers, Winston, 5N, 1815 Naismith Sayles, Letheia L, 16, 1815 Naismith 184-7000 Scanlon, S, LG, 6M, 1006 E Ploate, Olatha 184-7000 Schake, Jeremy D, 4D, 1314 Tenn 19 Schaffer, Domine E, 0G, 1515 W 9 Schaffer, R A, 3M, 5885 Fntna, Sh Ms 26-0728 Schall, Pamela G, 4A, 1837 Kt 184-7052 Scharine, Richard G, 6G, 1140 Pa 183-5072 Schauer, Pamela, 4D, 1518 Wedgewood 184-3702 Schauf, Karen A, 22, 1603 W 184-6007 Schauer, Kimberly A, 184, 1843 W 184-3704 Cheeler, Constance G, 6G, 1637 Ill 184-3235 Sheff, Judith F, 0G, 746 Miss 184-0056 Sheffler, Terrance J, 11, 1500 Kt 184-6385 Sheeld, Lynda M, 3D, 909 W 22 184-5924 Skenein, Robert M, 2E, 1603 W 15 184-7125 Seuren, John M, 6M, 5157 W 75, Pr V1 381-0752 Scheve, Jane M, 28, 2511 Jasu 184-6989 Scherling, Harriet, N, 4121 Thompson Kansas City 362-2691 Scharir, Marcia, 9A, Box 926, Ottawa 362-2691 Scharir, Martin, 4B, 1815 Naimshi McKinney 362-2691 Schesle, Daniel A, 4A, 1314 Oread 382-2894 Smalz, Barbara A, 3D, 1605 W 9 382-2894 Smalz, Pamela K, 3F, 1800 Kasold 382-2894 Smalz, Barbara A, 16, 1800 Engel 382-2894 Smalz, Bonnie L, 22, 2107 Harvard 382-2894 Smalz, Clarence B, 28, 1733 W 26 382-2894 Smalz, David R, 22, 2201 Stouffer KC 382-2894 Smalz, Barbara A, 16, 1800 Engel 382-2894 Smalz, James W, 4A, 1020 Ohio 382-2894 Schmidt, Linda, 0G, 9821 Bijkj, Sh Ms 888-1524 Schmidt, Marjorie, D. 491, 9791 Boehler * Schmidt, Ramon, 6M, 5516 Canterbury Shawnee Mission 722-6138 Schmidt, Starlet M, 1F, 11381, Ind 842-3794 Schmidt, Torki M, 101, 7011 Schinit, Anthony W, 4D, 1350uer MU 842-7121 Schinit, Linda K, 4D, 2327 Murp 842-7121 Schinit, Darrell W, 4A, 2530 Redbud 842-7503 Schinit, Gordon H, 3D, 190v wmth MU 2-2341 Schnafer, Gordon H, 3D, 190v wmth MU 2-2341 Schnafer, Kathryn M, PA, 2810 W 42 Kansas City 362-7641 Schnafter, Mary A, 12, 2200 W 20 Schnafter, Gary B, G6, 614 E 42 Schnellbacher, Gisela, G0, 4006 Trumen Topeka 842-5332 Schonnifsh, Glem O, 187, 1Mins, KC 842-5418 Schnoonover, Joan A, 2F, 1016 Ohio 842-9370 Schott, John S, 0G, 909 Centennial 842-9341 Schotz, Barry R, 22, 26 S touwer 842-6542 Schotz, Cynthia K, 4B, 1419 Ohio 842-7737 Schreiber, Cynthia K, 4B, 1419 Ohio 842-7102 Schreiner, Sandra N, 4A, 385um Abroad 842-1552 Schroder, Syndra G, 11, 645 Maine 842-1552 Schroeder, Syndra G, 11, 645 Maine 842-1552 Schroeder, Paulette A, 4D, 827 W 22 842-8098 Schroeder, Thomas S, 6G, 2340 Murp 842-6134 Schroeter, Nancy N, 6G, 256 Shh 842-3143 Schroeter, John L, 12, 815 Ohio 842-4637 Schroll, Kathryn L, 4A, 2401 W 24 842-6537 Schubert, Richard J, 22, 2429 Ohio 842-4140 Schuster, Diane M, 0G, 1501 Nevivon. KCMo 842-5381 Schuetz, Nancy, 9D, 4132 Fisher, KC CO 2-1826 Schuetz, Perry, 4M, 4132 Fisher, KC CO 2-1826 Schufetowski, Sharon A, 4A, 1910 Milr 842-9346 Schultze, Joyce E, 4B, 1515 W 14 842-5712 Schulze, Dawna A, 0G, 1130 W 11 843-0049 Schumarcher, Herbert O 0G, 1074 W 24 842-5579 Schwartz, Paula A, 3Sum, Abroad 842-3089 Schwarz, David E, 6G, 1720 Ohm 842-8098 Schwarz, Elizip, I, 1703 W 24 842-4813 Schwezerberg, R J, 3A, Sum Abroad 842-8098 Schweiger, Robert G, 6M, 2000 Brnsd KCMo JA 3-5111 Schweitzer, Stuart N, 3B, 3020 Iowa 842-7049 Stewman, John J, 4E, 1919 Barker 842-7049 Stewmann, Jeffrey, 4M, 2605 W 39 Kansas City 842-6167 Stewman, RM, 1046 E 5, KCMo 742-9373 Stewman, Dary, 6D, 1940 W 16 Scooby, Sylvia, 0G, 1 & Mich 842-3506 Collon, John N, 8A, 929 Min 842-3506 Collon, Kathleen M, 4D, 829 Miss 842-9987 Colnett, Nickel N, 6G, 1619 W 19 Coltt, Diane P, 4D, 940 Min 842-6885 Colt, Kenneth P, 3A, 2200 Harp 842-6885 Colt, Peggy C, 11, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Coltrout, H伯特 H, 9R, 3020 Iowa 842-7494 Sarah A, 3A, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Sarah W, 3A, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 William W, 9D, 2134 Leeward 842-6381 Scoville, Ralph D, 3M, 3740 Booth, KC 842-3898 Scrawler, R, 1M, 11Paw, Hiawata 842-3898 Scrambler, Brian K, 6M, 18149 McLaine 842-7109 Scrumbler, Robert B, 16, 1223 Ohm 842-7080 Scuderio, Dominic A, 6G, 2200 W 26 Seals, Marilyn K, 4A, 2401 W 25 842-1573 Sears, Howard K, 4D, 190 Ind 842-7087 Seeds, Howard K, 4D, 190 Ind 842-7087 Setriks, Og, 0G, 1530 VI 842-0363 See, Elizabeth, 6G, 3717 W 4M, Shh Me HS 842-6348 Seed, John C, 5M, 4896 Skynl, Shm Ms 26454裂 Seed, John C, 5M, 4896 Skynl, Shm Ms 26454裂 Segler, Dolores, 0G, 1110 Maismith 842-4653 Segulas, Omaira A, 22, 228 Ark 842-6168 Segolus, Dolores J, 3F, 1218 Maismith 842-9659 Segolus, Dolores J, 3F, 1218 Maismith 842-9659 Severt, Joyce, 0G, 3220 W 33 Shh Me TE 1783 Severt, Joyce, 0G, 3220 W 33 Shh Me TE 1783 Selden, Douglas, M 3801 Booth, KC Sellders, Sandra L, 0G, 649 W 67 Terr, 941-9898 Self, Patrick, G, 1630 W 22 941-9898 Selfridge, Martha, 3M, 2108 W 41, KC BA 29242 Sehai, Eik, 6G, 1632 Ohio 842-9374 Senecal, Barnbares, F, 0G, 1915 Stratf 842-0357 Senecal, Barnbares, F, 0G, 1915 Stratf 842-0357 Seregi, Verla Z, 4D, Field Work Sethi, Gulshan K, 6M, 39 & Rnbw, KC 23652 Seward, Maryouli D, 26, 1603 W 15 Suffer, Margarete, RM, 4316 Rbk, KC HE 2115 Suffer, Valerie E, 3B, 1603 W 15 842-3079 Sakabili, F, 7N, 1038 Forest, KC 842-3672 Sakabili, F, 7N, 1038 Forest, KC 842-3672 Sakabili, F, 7N, 1038 Forest, KC 842-3672 Shank, L Gary, G, 6G, 4207 Oxford, Pr VI Shank, John F, 4R, Summer Abroad Shanks, James L, 4R, 1R Meriden Shanteau, Richard, M 4M, 39 & Rnbw, KC Shanteau, Richard, M 4M, 39 & Rnbw, KC Shank Sharma, Shakti D, 6G, 1125 Vt Sharp, Maury D, 2F, 124 W t Sharp, Maurie D, 1F, 123 W Shaver, Constance B, 8G, Summer Abrode Shavik, Franklin H, 0G, 842 Avalon Shaw, Arline M, 0G, 2449 Ark Shaw, Andrew M, 0G, 2449 Ark Shaw, Edith S, 3A, 2410 Whitehall Shaw, Geneva L, 6G, 1435 W 19 Shaw, Joanne M, 0G, 7439 Flush, Sh Shaw, Joanne M, 0G, 7439 Flush, Sh Shay, Jerry M, 0G, 2203 Higlcrest Shay, Trudy D, 0G, 2023 Princeton Shea, Forest W Jr, 4B, 1911 Stewart Kansas City, S. G, 2348 Mpz * Simmons, Herbert, B. G, 2894 Mpz * Simmons, Mary F, 0G, 1815 Naismith * Simmons, Steven C. 38, Sum Abroad * Simmons, Robert K. 65, 1894 Mpz * Simone, Garry F, G, 538 Lawrence * Simoniptri, Francisco, G, 911 W 24 * Simmonen, Gloria K. 26, 1815 Naismith * Simmonen, Nance A. 9D, 7410 Rosewood * Prairie Village * Simpson, Donald R, G, 2033 Rdg Ct * Simpson, Eleanor, G, 334 Buchn, Tpk * Simpson, Joseph J. G, Sh. 61, 7544 * Simpson, Larry D, G, 661 1324 * Simpson, Nancy R, 3J, 1324 Tenn * Simpson, Shirley H, G, 2033 Rdg Ct Simon Christopher, 28, 6437 Morningstad JA 3-4118 Sins, Dana Rae, 2L, 180 Naismith * Simns, John P. G, 2357 Mpz * Simns, John P. G, 2357 Mpz * Simns, Roger B, 3A, 10 Stouffer 4 * Sins, Glen D, PA, 4206 Lloyd, KC 262-1842 842-6514 542-2147 842-1024 842-1023 842-8328 842-8433 842-8433 722-3536 843-6116 837-1725 631-7544 843-1828 843-6116 832-0338 842-0460 842-6842 842-6842 722-3531 *Singh, Amar, G6, 1140 La 842-3038 *Singh, B Jasmir, G6, 1538 K 842-2456 *Singh, Sharanjeet, M6, 3822 Admns, KC 236-8588 *Singh, Lyndon, M6, 3822 London *Sipe, Michael M, 4E, 1063 W 15 842-3292 *Sisramgan, Nirachorn, G6, 1308 KY 842-5199 *Sirkin, Deborah R, 4D, 110 Miss 842-6123 *Sirkin, Deborah R, 4D, 110 Miss *Sirtori, C, 7M, 3909 Genesee, KCMO. LO 1-4964 *Sitterly, Rebecca, 38, 833 S Mn, Otw CH 2-3390 *Sloy, Rosa E, 7M, 1110 Hazen, KC 843-2859 *Skinner, Carolyn S, FN, 10040 W 57 Merriam HE 2-4264 *Slagle, Donna M, 14, 523 Fireside 842-3654 *Slaven, John E, 5M, 8925 Gilmor, Eudora 524-2315 *Slaven, John E, 5M, 8925 Gilmor, Eudora 524-2315 *Slaven, Robert B, 3M, 8134 St, LK nc 722-0333 *Sleth, Jean G, 109, 7 S Maple, 242-6644 *Sleth, Jean G, 109, 7 S Maple, 242-6644 *Sleth, Robert B, 4M, 1018 Otw 842-9246 *Slenth, Robert B, 4M, 1018 Otw 842-9246 *Slinkard, Arthur R, 9A, Summer Abrd 827-4204 *Slocum, Arthur R, 2F, 5051 W 30 Terr. Opek HE 2-4264 *Slokte, Kathleen, 0G, McLeouth 804-3400 *Smerchek, Allen D, 4F, 1309 Ohw 843-9736 *Smiddy, Joseph, 6M, 2524 W 79 Terr. Prairie Village 381-3537 *Smith, Alan M, 6G, 1241 Tenn 843-0555 *Smith, Alma A, 3B, 1333 Tenn 843-0555 *Smith, Brian L, 9D, 2110 N 49, KC 843-2426 *Smith, Brian L, 9D, 2110 N 49, KC 843-2426 *Smith, Catty J, 2227 Murp 843-0644 *Smith, Cheryl C, 16, 185 Naismith 842-7000 *Smith, Constance F, 26, 1230 Oread 842-9042 *Smith, Emr D, 180 Naismith 842-7000 *Smith, Daniel L, 11, 185 Naismith 842-0644 *Smith, Daniel W, 6G, 2333 Rdg Ct 842-0644 *Smith, Edward D, 2 & Ark 842-5076 *Smith,黛勒, Dakley, Tpk LF 17-1781 *Smith, Ern N, 1242 W 842-9841 *Smith, Evan S, 24, Summer Abroad 843-6963 *Smith, Gary, 3M, 2810 St, LK nc 843-0693 *Smith, Gladys A, 9D, 510 2. Lansing 872-3624 *Smith, laywood L, TM, 4829 Agnes KCMo 861-7329 *Smith, James Anthony, 4F, 1800 Engel 842-6600 *Smith, James Anthony, 4F, 1800 Engel 842-6600 *Smith, James Anthony, 4F, 1800 Engel 842-6600 *Smith, Joanne R, 1308 NOW. Welchita 872-3624 *Smith, Julia S, 0G, 1418 W 22 Terr 843-0949 *Smith, Julia S, 0G, 1418 W 22 Terr 843-0949 *Smith, Kithey A, 3A, 1527 W 842-7556 *Smith, Kent H, 26, 1338"Ohio 842-7566 *Smith, Lois F, 2 & 2Ark 842-7566 *Smith, Ri taff R, 9F, 1204 W 842-7055 *Smith, Mayus L, 16, 185 Naismith 842-7322 *Smith, O Spencer, 0G, 1704 W 24 *Smith, O Spencer, 0G, 1704 W 24 *Smith, Pha M, 4D, 1293d Yrsed 842-7885 *Smith, Robert G, 2J, 1344 KY 842-4138 *Smith, Robert G, 2J, 1344 KY 842-4138 *Smith, Roberta J, 3D, 1020 Iowa 842-7326 *Smith, Sr Rita F, 9F, 1204 W 842-7055 *Smith, Stewart, 0G, 1333 Terr. 842-3853 *Smith, Stewart, D, 3M, 1417 Terr. Kansas City 1E-1681 *Smith, Stephen J, 4M, 1904 Fsh, KEC 842-6895 *Smith, Terence, TM, 1663 Gardl, KYC 842-7000 *Smith, William A, 2E, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 *Smock, Katherine F, 22, 1800 Engel 842-6600 *Smothers, Norman F, 18, 1207 WT 842-7886 *Smões, Mary L, 9D, 829 W Sheridan Olathe PO-45.471 *Seeger, Roger A, 4I, 946 OHo 842-4774 *Seeger, Roger A, 4I, 946 OHo 842-4774 *Seeger, Roger A, 4I, 946 OHo 842-4774 *Snodgress, Jasper, 1L, 1618 W 6 Terr. 842-4201 *Snordland, Neil E, 6G, 1017 W 24 *Snodyer, Carl R, 0G, 2520 N 63, KC 299-2180 *Snodyer, Carl R, 0G, 2520 N 63, KC 299-2180 *Snodyer, Mary E, 15, 1516 Crescent 842-3133 *Sobit, Arun A, 905 EM rsd 842-7920 *Soberger, Bob G, 5G, 1404 W 76 Terr. opaka CE 4-2804 *Solomon, M C, 6002 Lee, Leauward 648-1337 *Solomon, Steven J, 6G, 2130 W 26 *Solsky, Marilyn, 22, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 *Sommarri, Marvin G, 15, 1516 Terv. 842-2412 *Sooby, Steven D, I, 1515 Davis 843-6782 *Soregr, Gregory, 24, 430 NW 48 Terr. opaka CE 4-2804 *Solnauth, M C, 6002 Lee, Leauward 648-1337 *Solmon, Steven J, 6G, 2130 W 26 *Solsky, Marilyn, 22, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 *Sommarri, Marvin G, 15, 1516 Terv. 842-2412 *Sooby, Steven D, I, 1515 Davis 843-6782 *Soregr, Gregory, 24, 430 NW 48 Terr. opaka CE 4-2804 *Spencer, Anthony, 6G, 2702 Ridge 648-1337 *Soriano, Virginia, G, 1138 IDge 648-1327 *Sorrels, F David, 4A, Field Work 648-1327 *Southard, Andrea C, 0G, 3020 Iowa 648-1820 *Southard, Frank A, G, 3020 Iowa 648-1820 *Spade, Jeannette J, 11, 143 Glen 648-1320 *Spangler, Janice L, 3D, 5715 Mpl, Msn 432-6040 *Sparkle, John O, 6G, 1314 Prv. 632-6943 *Speaker, John O, 6G, 1314 Prv. 632-6943 *Speaker, Gregory, 24, 430 NW 48 Terr. opaka CE 4-2804 *Spencer, Calvin L, 3B, 2130 KY 842-5125 *Swann, Amy N, 39 & Rnb, KC AD 6-5252 *Spear, Linda K, TM, 4132 Eaton, KC 722-4227 *Spear, Linda K, TM, 4132 Eaton, KC 722-4227 *Spear, Frederick, 0G, 2416 Nali 648-1312 *Speaker, Charles, G, 16312 W 22 Terr 842-5289 *Speaker, Charles, G, 16312 W 22 Terr 842-5289 *Spencer, Calvin L, 3B, 2130 KY 842-5125 *Swann, Amy N, 39 & Rnb, KC AD 6-5252 *Spear, Linda K, TM, 4132 Eaton, KC 722-4227 *Spear, Frederick, 0G, 2416 Nali 648-1312 June 16 1970 KANSAN 19 DUNNY'S CANNONBALL ADDERLEY Country Preacher Capitol™ THE BAND Music From Big Pink $399 KIEF'S SUNDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY C PARTNERS IN PROGRESS PARTNERS IN PROGRESS Welcome Back! Have a good summer BUDWEISER BUD MAN WE'RE DOING OUR THING AT the Lounge MINI-PITCHER AND PEANUTS STILL 50c 12-7 Daily Budweiser BUD MAN 2018 Tnovsky, Martin, 6G, 846 Ark Ptemperate, Edward, 4E, 1815 Nashmth Ptolemy, Edward, 4E, 1815 Nashmth Troupe, Bobbie Jo, 3D, 153 Hurp Troupe, Bobbie Jo, 3D, 153 Hurp Troxel, Allen, 4B, 2049 Rdg Cf Trudelle, Str Marilyn, 0G, 1414 Tenn Trueworthy, R C, 7M, 1843 Larsn, Sh Fransen, R C, 7M, 1843 Larsn, Sh Trusottc, Francis, 24, 28 Stouffler II *Seng, Liang Fu, G, 4453 Francis, KC U, Chien Min, G, 1607 W 19 U, Chen Min, G, 1607 W 19 *Tucker, R D, G, 9207 W 8 Vk Pk Tuggle, John A, 4B, 1012 Em Rd Tulyayon, Vibulaya, O, 1815 Nashmth U, Ferne I, XN, Jr Col, Coeffeyvl Tundra, U, Ferne I, XN, Jr Col, Coeffeyvl *Tuomista, J, J, 7M, 725W, Dr Pr Turner, Deborah, 3F, 1603 W 15 Turner, Gary L, 0G, 1735 W 19 Turner, Gary L, 0G, 1735 W 19 Turner, Robert N, 4B, 1023 Ky Turner, Waneta D, 26, 1722 Ohio *Turvey, Carolyn H, G, 2041 W 25 Tujane, Jane A, 0G, 1739 Miss Tujane, Jane A, 0G, 1739 Miss Twyman, Richard C, 9G, 1704 W 24 Twyman, Richard C, 9G, 1704 W 24 Tyler, James, G, 1603 Ousdahl 11 Ubadamu, Hyacinth O, 6G, 1300 Kg 842-6666 Uchimura, Kuniko, 7N, 2020 Kly, KC 432-7271 Uchimura, Kuniko, 7N, 2020 Kly, KC 432-7271 Ultican, Dennis L, 2R, 1815 Naismith Uhmoltz, Marvin C, 22, 413 W 14 842-6108 Underhill, Gary E, 6M, 39 & Rnbw, KC 843-0043 Underhill, Douglas, 11, 1815 Naismith Underhill, John L, 3A, 1918 Ohio 843-4425 *Underhill, Johnson, M, 65, 329 NE 48, 453-7552 Unkefer, Evelyn, 11, Summer Abroad Unruh, Carolyn A, 4A, 940 Miss Ojushw, Joan, 4S, 505 E Loula, Olath ST-2 3841 Ojushw, Joan, 4S, 505 E Loula, Olath ST-2 3841 Urich, James L, 4A, 1603 W 15 843-7991 *Urie, Robert G, 6G, 1518 Lindwnd 843-5932 *Urie, Robert G, 6G, 1518 Lindwnd 843-5932 Ut, Zschock, B, 2B, 3530 W 15 842-0435 Uywadh, Ibrahim M, OG, 9 Stouffer 842-4739 Uzwondki, Donald, M, 614, 512k Fhr 626-2163 V *Valk, Jean W, 0G, Summer Abroad Van Tassel, Paula F, 4 E, 1032 Ky Vanman, Ann, 4D, 1337 Conn Vanance, Sharon G, 1507 Boo, KC Vance, Sharon G, 1507 Boo, KC Vanceleave, Janet G, 2940 Gage, Tpk Van爱iet, William G, 6G, 702 W 25 W *Wachs, William R, 3D, 10 Stouffer 11 842-4596 *Richard, J. 21 1003 W 15 *Waddell, Richard B, 1003 W 15 *Waddell, Thomas, 5M, 5445 Cdr, Tpk C2-1786 *Wade, Frederick, 4E, 1815 Naismith *Wade, Frederick, 4E, 1815 Naismith *Wadsworth, Jay A, 4S, 850 Meadow Leawood, Jay A, 4S, 850 Meadow *Waggoner, Diana, 9G, Box 4008, Tck 272-6977* *Waggner, Carol, GC, 5025 Greepky, KC 287-9822* Wagner, Diana K, 4D, 2045 Ohio 843-5827 * Wagoneller, Bessley AM, 10426 W 65 * Walte, William P, 6G, 829 Cantry 831-6609 * Walty, William D, 4D, 1130 W 11 * Waldo, Susan E, 3F, Summer Abroad 831-6609 * Walden, Keith B, 0G, 532 Oread 831-7191 * Waldrop, Lila, 0G, 7006 Clving KCMo 831-6613 * Waldrop, Walter J, 0G, Haskell Inst 842-0991 * Waldrop, Baker E, 4D, 1603 W 15 842-5170 * Walce, Dake E, 4D, 1603 W 15 842-5170 * Walser, Grover W, 4A, 531 La 842-4896 * Walser, Harold T, 21, 905 Em Rd 832-3787 * Walser, Larry G, 4M, 601 Buena Vis. School 832-3787 * Walser, Mae, TM, 3901 Lnwd, KCMo 832-1023 * Walser, Nancy, PA 3R & Rnbk KC Mo 8AD-6252 * Walser, Norman, GD, 1800 Naismith 842-6081 * Walser, Robert, 2E, 4706 Crg, Ov MI 91-3532 * Walace, Alan B, 6G, 1741 Vl 843-4374 * Walace, Douglass, 0G, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 * Walace, Murry, GD, 96 S Del, Tongx 843-3314 * Walace, Noel K, 6G, 1433 Ohio 842-8495 * Walace, Richard C, 2L, 634 Mo 842-6437 * Walace, Barbara J, 1F, 1603 W 15 842-6437 * Walmer, Thomas H, 6G, 540 Ariz 842-9317 * Walmer, Thomas, OG, 1824 E Terr 842-5065 * Walmer, Steven R, 4B, 533 NH 842-7222 * Walmers, Larry W, 4A, 6抒ning 842-1722 * Walters, Warren F, 3A, 2333 Rdg Ct 842-7173 * Walter, John, F 4A, 6抒ning 842-1758 * Walter, James D, 3M, 3717 Stak, KCMo 842-9447 * Walty, Kala, 1G, 1343 Tenn 842-9447 * Walder, Deborah K, 4A, 1001 Emery 842-7323 * Walzer, Barbara K, 6G, 815 KY 842-7323 * Walmer, Barbara J, 1F, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 * Walmanaker, Janis, 18, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 * Wang, Maw Song, 0G, 1140 Ll 842-1993 * Ward, Clark C, 2G, 5913 W 13, Tpka 235-8156 * Ward, Darrell L, 0G, 2023 Miller 842-1106 * Ward, Diane E, 3F, Field Work 842-5776 * Ward, Martjorie A, 0G, PO Box 75 842-2616 * Ward, Sandra M, 4F, 2416 Edgtr Wetr 842-2897 * Warfle, Samuel L, 0G, 2915 Mo 842-4020 * Warn, Ann B, 6G, 2抒ninger 842-8908 * Warn, Garrett R, 4R, 14 Stouffer 842-1246 * Warn, Dowen C, 2F,owing 842-6554 * Warn, Karen C, 24, 1抒ningar 842-6554 * Warn, R B, 3M, 3936 Wyo, KCMo 8JE-1594 * Warn, Victor D, 6G, 2抒ninger 842-8908 * Warn, Trey A, 3X, 1814 Naismith 842-4526 * Warnirer, Douglas A, 4A, 701 Tenn 842-2616 * Warsh, Bonnie M, 0G, 1002 W 24 * Warsop, Susan G, 22, 2906 W 92 Tern 842-3754 * Wartt, Brenda C, 4J, 2240 Murp 842-1912 * Wartt, James R, 4G, 1433 OHio 842-4395 * Washburn, Daniel J, 21, 1抒ningar 842-6552 * Waterbury, Kent E, 3A, 1329 OHio 842-9310 * Waters, David J, 6G, 2200 Harper 843-6455 * Watachanero, S, 6M, 2812 W 43 KC 236-5252 * Watkins, Jamie, 0G, 1709 Lndn, Abroad 674-4024 * Watkins, Karen B, 4D, 1471 E 1643-9412 * Watkins, Lloyd E, Jr, 4A, 1417 E 1643-9412 * Watkins, Michael M, 4E, 1607 W 9 842-4686 * Watson, Duane A, 6G 842 * Watson, Warren E, 1420 Cressmont 842-9577 * Watters, Linda K, 3F, 2345 Rdg Cst 842-3754 * Watts, Donale E, 4F, 1014 Jana 842-6464 * Waugh, Michael Z, 9D, 5942 Roe, Msn 831-3547 * Waugh, Michael Z, 1000 Enge 846-6600 * Waxley, Steven L, 4N, 1417 Wl 842-6391 * Weaver, Cynthia, 28, 2107 Harvard 842-6720 * Weaver, Frank H, 4A, 726 Ark 842-1291 * Weaver, Helen J, 21, 320 Malden 842-9577 * Weaver, Nikie, 10Naismith 842-7000 * Wealth, Alton, 3F, 1014 Miss 842-6514 * Webb, Edward C, 4B, 1012 Emr D 842-5730 * Webb, Tames J, 4D, 501 Calif 842-6730 * Webber, David C, 3A, 524 Fireles 842-0313 * Webber, Manfred C, 4G, 14 W 143 * Webber, Jennifer I, 2038 Emerald 842-6356 * Webster, Jianke J, 4F, 1142 Ind 842-6514 * Weil, Ying-Yen, 0G, 1821 Ind 842-9447 * Welderm, Thomas A, 0G, 604 Kyl 842-6944 * Weiner, Elizabeth, 0G, 2421 W 49 Ter, Shawnee Mission 842-3612 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weiss, Philip, 6G, 1005 W 9 842-7836 * Weinhol, Dolph, 6G, 427 Wntbrk,扎斯 872-1812 * Weinhol, Joseph L, 4E, 211 Kasold 842-5905 * Weinhol, Thomas J, 4B, 18kb, KC 841-6414 * Weinhol, McG, 4G, 14 kb 842 * Weinhol, McG, 4G, 964 Ohc 842-6356 * Well, Michael A, 6M, 5012 W 72, Pr Vl 826-0345 * Wrym, Gary T, 3M, 3924 Wkb, KCMo 841-6944 * Wrym, Engar J, 4F, 1142 Ind 842-6514 * Weil, Ying-Yen, 0G, 1821 Ind 842-9447 * Weilderm, Thomas A, 0G, 604 Kyl 842-6944 * Weiner, Elizabeth, 0G, 2421 W 49 Ter, Shawnee Mission 842-3612 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weiss, Philip, 6G, 1005 W 9 842-7836 * Weinhol, Dolph, 6G, 427 Wntbrk扎斯 872-1812 * Weinhol, Joseph L, 4E, 211 Kasold 842-5905 * Weinhol, Thomas J, 4B, 18kb, KC 841-6414 * Weinhol, McG, 4G, 14 kb 842 * Weinhol, McG, 964 Ohc 842-6356 * Well, Michael A, 6M, 5012 W 72, Pr Vl 826-0345 * Wrym, Gary T, 3M, 3924 Wkb, KCMo 841-6944 * Wrym, Engar J, 4F, 1142 Ind 842-6514 * Weil, Ying-Yen, 0G, 1821 Ind 842-9447 * Weilderm, Thomas A, 0G, 604 Kyl 842-6944 * Weiner, Elizabeth, 0G, 2421 W 49 Ter, Shawnee Mission 842-3612 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weiss, Philip, 6G, 1005 W 9 842-7836 * Weinhol, Dolph, 6G, 427 Wntbrk扎斯 872-1812 * Weinhol, Joseph L, 4E, 211 Kasold 842-5905 * Weinhol, Thomas J, 4B, 18kb, KC 841-6414 * Weinhol, McG, 4G, 14 kb 842 * Weinhol, McG, 964 Ohc 842-6356 * Well, Michael A, 6M, 5012 W 72, Pr Vl 826-0345 * Wrym, Gary T, 3M, 3924 Wkb, KCMo 841-6944 * Wrym, Engar J, 4F, 1142 Ind 842-6514 * Weil, Ying-Yen, 0G, 1821 Ind 842-9447 * Weilderm, Thomas A, 0G, 604 Kyl 842-6944 * Weiner, Elizabeth, 0G, 2421 W 49 Ter, Shawnee Mission 842-3612 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weinstein, Charles, 4M, 4200 Bth, KC 831-5628 * Weiss, Philip, 6G, 1005 W 9 842-7836 * Weinhol, Dolph, 6G, 427 Wntbrk扎斯 872-1812 * Weinhol, Joseph L, 4E, 211 Kasold 842-5905 * Weinhol, Thomas J, 4B, 18kb, KC 841-6414 * Weinhol, McG, 4G, 14 kb 842 * Weinhol, McG, 964 Ohc 842-6356 * Well, Michael A, 6M, 5012 W 72, Pr Vl 826-0345 * Wrym, Gary T, 3M, 3924 Wkb, KCMo 841-6944 * Wrym, Engar J, 4F, 1142 Ind 842-6514 * Weil, Ying-Yen, 0G, 1821 Ind 842-9447 * Weilderm, Thomas A, 0G, 604 Kyl 842-6944 * Weiner, Elizabeth, 0G, 2421 W 49 Westergren, Gary D. 16, RR 11, Tongnx 845-2776 Westerehus, Mary C. 4D, 1800 Engel 842-660 Weston, Mark M. 1F, 1815 Naismith 842-7009 Weston, G. 6F, 218 Mich 842-4137 Weston, T.J. 6F, 1845 KC, AK 842-6183 Wettack, Timothy G. 0G, 1529 NH 842-6183 Wahlen, Harold G. 4J, 190 W 24 842-6509 Whalten, Marcia S. 0G, 910 W 24 Wheeler, Charles R. 0G, 941 KY 842-1632 Wheeler, Donald J. 3P, 180 Naismith Wheeler, Julia C. 4G, 120 Stouffer 5 Wheeler, John A. 4G, 120 Stouffer 5 Winney, Marvin R. 4B, 609 W 25 842-9203 Winney, Rose E. 0G, 1201 W 19 842-1467 Whinek, David G. 6G, 504 La 842-1791 Whinek, Dave M. 6G, 504 La 842-1791 Whitaker, Dianne, OG, 842 Somerset, Prairie Village 842-7448 Wikler, James M. 3M, 1743 W 35, KCMo 843-6397 Wilene, Estelle B. 4D, 1130 Unh 842-4984 Wilene, Florence, 0G, 745 S'Cr, Otw 842-7859 Wilene, Gaylene C. 28, 176 N 7 842-3321 Wilene, John L. 3A,RR1 Bx1 142, Lwvth 842-7163 Wilene, Keith A. 6G, 1228 La 842-7000 Wilene, Kenneth R. 26, 1107 Unh 842-7000 Wilene, Patricia, 6G, Cornish Sq 842-9494 Wilene, Ruth E. 16, 924 Murrow 842-6497 Wilene, Susan E. 4D, 211 Harvard 842-3596 Wilene, William E. 4D, 211 Harvard 842-3597 Wilene, William E. 6G, 515 E. 14, Otawa 842-7421 Wilene, William L. 6M, 5700 Lowl, Tpk 842-7751 Wilene, Headline, Patricia, 1012 Om He Rd 842-7592 Wilene, Patricia, 4M, 1517 Om He Rd 842-5920 Wiberg, Vivian W. 9G, 4203 Roanoke KCMo 1-5024 Wickersham, Deborah D. 1527 W 9 842-4756 Wickersham, Deborah D. 1527 W 9 842-4755 Widger, Gary N. 1042 Unh 842-6049 Widger, Gary N. 1042 Unh 842-6049 Wwiee, Frank A. 0G, 937 Centenial 842-6003 Wwiee, Michael E. 6G, 622 Schwarz 842-8507 Wwiee, Michael E. 6G, 622 Schwarz 842-8507 Widlerson, Robert L. 18, 1815 Naismith 842-7000 Widlerson, Maurice E. 3E, 206 Mitchell 842-3978 Widlson, Maurice E. 3E, 206 Mitchell 842-3978 Widlson, Philip E. 3D, 917 Unh 842-7163 Wiles, Harry G. 3L, Pmbrk, Tpk 233-3948 Wiles, Lucine E. 22, 1332 Tenn 843-7909 Wiles, Lawrence Wendel F. 28, 1800 K琳恩 843-7909 Wikelson, Arthur O. 3L, 1720 W2 843-5809 Williams, Andrew C. 4R, Sumr Abroad 843-7512 Williams, Anne A. 4M, 1031 Unh 843-4065 Williams, Charles L. 6G, 2235 East 842-9232 Williams, Cheryl A. 1D, 1121 Naismith 842-7000 Williams, Clyde, 2011 Fed尔, KC 236-4078 Williams, Jenny L. 1907 W2 842-4526 Williams, Dorothy, 0G, 525 Ariz 842-9003 Williams, Earl M. 0G, 3637 SE US 40, 842-9003 Williams, Geraldine, PN, Box 338 842-5809 Exceliser Springs, Mo 7ME-5750 Exceliser Springs, Mo 7ME-5751 Exceliser Springs, Mo 7ME-5752 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-5753 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-5754 Excelliser Springs, Mo 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Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6376 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6377 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6378 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6379 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6380 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6381 Excelliser Springs, Mo 7ME-6382 Excelliser Spring Wing, Richard S, 6G, 1712 W 20 Winger, Ivan, 6G, 10, 73 W 38 Sh ME 1-9464 *Winger, Ian, 6G, 10, 73 W 38 Sh ME 1-9464 *Winger, Melva Jo, 4S, 1423 Ohio *Winslow, Macria R, 6G, 2008 Mitchell *Winslow, Harriyell K, 6G, 1933 Ohio *Winsor, Earl J, 4S, 1423 Field, Winch *Winter, Fred E, 4B, 1223 Vt *Winter, John 3M, 2522 W 42 KC *Winter, Michael, 4A, 1815 Naismith *Winter, Michael, 4A, 1815 Naismith *Winter, Mark L, 4D, Summer Abroad *Wintersteen, Wanda B, 2F, 1025 Ines *Wittle, Katherine T, 7632 Hmilock, *Wittle, Katherine T, 7632 Hmilock, *Wise, Marlene M, 4N, 3904 Adkcs, MK *Wise, Str Muriel, 9N, 1818 Tammer家, *Wanse City, MK *Wobker, Candace W, 0G, 1030 Avalon *Wobker, Candace W, 0G, 1030 Avalon *Wolden, Judy A, 2F, 1346 Ohio *Wolden, Judy A, 2F, 1346 Ohio *Wolfley, Randy P, 28, 91 W 24 *Wolfley, Rudy P, 28, 91 W 24 *Wolfley, Bruce R, 4D, 2109 KC *Wollesen, D. 2D, 202 Bdwy, Lwv O 1-3884 *Wollerskamp, Struff, KC *Womack, Mary L, 3N, 49 & Rbw, KC AD 6-5252 *Womack, Walter F, 5E, 2401 W 25 *Womble, Paul G, 4A, 946l Glmr, FA 1-1510 *Wong, Luther L, 4F, 1221 Teen *Wood, Cliffard A, 4D, 3020 Iowa *Wood, Jean R, 4D, 929 KY *Wood, Roger M, 4B, 18 Stouffer 4 *Woodcock, Jennifer, 4D, 1403 Teen *Woodhouse, Charles, 4A, 1102 Em Rd *Woodriff, Charles, 4A, 1102 Em Rd *Woods, William L, 9E, 1302 W 21 *Woods, William L, 9E, 1302 W 21 *Woodside, Susan, 0G, 1107 Ind *Wooldard, Mickey A, 16F, 1218 Summer Abbr *Wooldard, Mickey A, 16F, 1218 Summer Abbr *Wooldridge, Roger, 12, 1815 Naismith *Wooldridge, Roger, 12, 1815 Naismith *Wooldavid, David R, 14E, 1942 Stewart *Weshan, David R, 14E, 1942 Stewart *Worthon, Ronald D, 130, 1218 Worthon, Jonne, 4D, 1216 La *Wortmann, Dorothy W, 4M, 1710 W 36, *KCMo *Wortmann, Robert L, 4M, 1710 W 36, *KCMo *Woy, George, 3M, 9929 High, Lewd M *Nench, Sherry L, 12, 1815 Naismith *Nench, Sherry L, 12, 1815 Naismith *Wright, Barbara A, 4P, 1900 KC *Wright, D. L, 6G, 54131 W 100, Ov Pk NI 2-9059 *Wright, D. L, 6G, 54131 W 100, Ov Pk NI 2-9059 *Wright, Kelihal, K, 14F, 1200 W 26 *Wright, Tom M, 4A, 1215 Oread *Wright, Mary S, 3A, 1815 Naismith *Wright, Nancy H, TM, 4035 Spgsk, KC 43-5500 *Wu, Richard G, 2G, 1200 W 10 *Wu, Richard G, 2G, 1200 W 10 *Wulff, Jane F, 31, 1340 Ohio *Wulff, Jane F, 31, 1340 Ohio *Wulff, Blunkhard, Wendy, 3F, 1815 Naismith *Wulff, Blunkhard, Wendy, 3F, 1815 Naismith *Wycalek, A, F, 6G, 1623 W 6 *Yanez, B. Gustavo, 22, 1334 Ohio *Yazen, Ozae, G6, 151 Crescent *Yaun, Ellen M, 44, 436 W, K7, KCMo LO 3-971 *Yaun, Ellen M, 44, 436 W, K7, KCMo LO 3-971 *Yeager, Michael G, 3B, 2413 Ousdahl B2-7428 *Yeager, R A, 4M, 521 Dlly Hv, Op KV A6-6912 *Yeager, R A, 4M, 521 Dlly Hv, Op KV A6-6912 *Yeager, Marum, Sha拉 L, 4D, 231 Manchis *Yockey, Charles F, 3M, 4960 Skyl Mn 362-9465 *Yohhe, Thomas F, 3E, 2718 Bonanza K2-7671 *Youfter, Foster G, 15I, 151 Angel *Young, Frank, 6G, 407 Main *Young, Gail A, 6G, 112 Ind *Young, James M, 6G, 1618 Grv, TpK E3-7224 *Young, Foster G, 15I, 151 Angel *Young, Frank, 6G, 407 Main *Young, Gail A, 6G, 112 Ind *Young, James M, 6G, 1618 Grv, TpK E3-7224 *Young, Kathy S, 0G, 321 Colfax, Tpk 266-4822 *Young, Melvin, 4A, 1029 Tehn *Young, Pamela, G, 1340 KC *Young, James M, 6G, 1618 Grv, TpK E3-7224 *Young, W N, 9G, 7900 Haskell, KC 334-3699 *Youngberg, Dean M, 3928 Cohlk, KC 324-7543 *Youngberg, Irvin M, 4G, 7528 Skil, Sh Ms 432-4062 *Youngmann, Carl E, G6, 823 Cntyh *Wu, Walter W, 4E, 1815 Naismith *Yu, Winston W, 3E, 1603 W I5 *Yuk, Kishigawa J, 7N, 3920 Admss, KC AD 6-8279 *Yun, Young J, 7N, 3920 Admss, KC AD 6-8279 *Yung, Ring L, K, 0G, 1700 KC Z Zabel, Nancy D, 18, 1815 Naismith Zachs, Arge, G6, 14 Stouffer W 3C ADE 7248 Zakourna, James P, 1L, 1603 W I5 Zambrana, M A, 7M, 2812 W43, KC ADE 6457 Zambrana, M A, 7M, 2812 W43, KC ADE 6457 Zfrancisco J, G, 104 Orend ADE 3205 Zastoupil, Carol S, 0G, 4911 W10, Overland Park Zbabel, Box B1, Box 51, DeUo D1 U1-1791 Zeigler, John, 2E, 9207 W97, Op KV M1-9824 Zeiligli, John, 2E, 9207 W97, Op KV M1-9824 Zerger, John D, 4B, 10 Stouffer W 7 ADE 4491 Zerger, John D, 4B, 10 StouFFER W 7 ADE 4491 Zickel, Raymond E, G, Hampm Ct ADE 6239 Zimbelman, Diana, 3N, 39 &Rkb, KC ADE 5-625 Zimbelman, Rita Jo, SN, 941 Miss ADE 1532 Zimbelman, Miriam W, 3A, 1627 KC ADE 3948 Zimbelman, Mark M, 18, 1423 Ohio ADE 6897 Zimbelman, Robin S, 16, 1423 Ohio ADE 6897 Zinn, Marina E, G6, 9940 Mtiv, Op KV M1-7059 Zinn, Marina E, G6, 1430 Mews, KCM ADE 3026 Zuber, R, C, 6M, 541 W 7 Pr V1 ADE 6919 June 16 1970 KANSAN 21 --- JIMI HENDRIX Band Of Gypsys $399 KIEF'S K YOU HAVE 168 HOURS TO LIVE THIS WEEK. LIVE ONE (at least) WITH GOD Worship at 11 a.m. each Sunday. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH AND STUDENT CENTER C Fifteenth and Iowa Norman Steffen & Donald Conrad, Campus Pastors; VI 3-6662 Kent State reconvenes for graduation KENT, OHIO (UPI) — Kent State University President Robert T. White interrupted commencement exercises to announce former Pennsylvania Gov. William Scranton would head a blue ribbon panel to investigate the deaths of four students killed by National Guard gunfire during a campus disturbance. White said he received a telephone call from the White House and was told the panel would be made public at noon. Also named to the commission, White said, was Cleveland City Safety Director Benjamin O. Davis, a retired Air Force general. "At first glance, it's a reassuring list," White said. "Maybe it could have been better, but there are no active politicians on the list." About 1,200 seniors received degrees during the graduation ceremony attended by about 4,000 parents and friends. The 19,000 student university has been closed by court injunction since May 4 when a confrontation between National Guard troops and students resulted in the shooting deaths. White said a peaceful graduation ceremony would give the school a basis "to petition the dismissal of the injunction and to hold a reasonably complete summer session" scheduled to begin June 25. With only one small peace symbol to be seen among the graduating seniors, Kent State University reopened briefly Saturday for the first time since May 4. There were no incidents when the seniors, most of them solemn and reluctant to talk, returned to the campus for the commencement exercise. The lone peace symbol seen was on the cap of a graduating coed. Many of those who returned had signed pledges not to disrupt the proceedings. DES PLAINES, ILL. (Special) —When discarded and abandoned, an old refrigerator, ice box, or home freezer may easily become a death trap—as lethal as a gas chamber—a national industry association warns. Industry warns of icebox danger Old, used refrigerators, often unwittingly abandoned and discarded in basements, on back porches, and in garages and junk yards, have snuffed out the lives of 429 children between the ages of two and twelve in the United States during the past 20 years—an average of 17 children annually. These death traps and the resultant tragedies could have been eliminated or avoided "if only the doors had been permanently removed when the units were discarded and abandoned," said Willi Stafford, executive manager 22 KANSAN June 16 1970 of the Refrigeration Service Engineers Society. The design of most old-style refrigerators, including many still in current use in homes throughout the country, Stafford explains, is that "an airtight seal results when the door is closed. Hence, a child can suffocate in 15 to 30 minutes." When a refrigerator or ice box has been discarded and abandoned, it becomes a potential death trap that all too frequently holds a fatal attraction and fascination for children. Why? Because it offers a perfect hiding place for youngsters when playing hide-and-seek or provides a wonderful "jail" for locking up the "bad guys" when playing cops and robbers. A child can hide or be locked up by his captors and never released until someone opens the door from outside—and then it may be too late. It is this factor that so easily, so quickly, so innocently transforms the old, discarded refrigerator into a death chamber. Today, all newly manufactured refrigerators are required by law to be equipped with an inside safety release, according to Stafford. Nevertheless, it is estimated that more than a million old units not equipped with such a safety device are retired from service annually and are potential death traps. "It's depressing walking around this place," Thomas Pascarella of Girard, Ohio said. "It's just sad." About 700 others who did not return received their degrees through the mail. Twenty campus policemen were on plainclothes duty inside Memorial Gymnasium, where the commencement was held. They can be eliminated only if homeowners and others in every community make certain that such refrigerators are made harmless by removing the door. About 85 campus policemen and off duty policemen from surrounding communities patrolled the area. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)—The first woman member of Congress to represent the United States in the United Nations was Frances P. Bolton of Ohio. She also was the first congresswoman elected from the state. TWO 'FIRSTS' THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? BERNARDO "Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large, in supple leather. Navy, Brown White, Red $14.00 Bunny Black's Royal College Shop WELCOME BACK From ACME where you have ★ A 10% discount ★ Pick-up and delivery service ★ 3 locations (one near you) 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 News of the week in review United Press International The spotlight on the Middle East shifted its focus from the daily Arab Israeli conflict to Jordan where Palestinian guerrillas clashed with the army in their bid for a free rein to raid Israel from Jordanian territory. Jordan teetered on the brink of civil war as troops ringed the capital of Amman with tanks and heavy guns in efforts to prevent the Palestinian commandos from seizing full control of the city. commander-in-chief and another general as a concession to the guerrillas, and assumed personal charge of the armed forces in a last attempt to avoid all-out war. More than 100 persons were killed and hundreds more wounded in the fighting which flared in the capital Tuesday. Maj. Robert P. Perry, a military attaché to the U.S. Embassy, was killed Wednesday The flareup was the latest by Palestinian commandos rebelling against attempts by King Hussein to control their renegade activities into neighboring Israel from Jordanian territory. Hussein, like nearby Lebanon, fears Israeli reprisals if commandos are allowed to use Jordan as a staging area from which to shell Israel or to conduct guerrilla raids across the border. Inspection force reports Cambodia venture 'success' WASHINGTON (UPI)—A bipartisan task force just returned from an an Indochina inspection tour, told President Nixon Wednesday his decision to attack Communist sanctuaries in Cambodia was a military success and expressed hope it could accelerate U.S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam. But one member, Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre (D-N.H.), a persistent critic of Nixon's war policy, complained that he was unable to "obtain an unequivocal reply to my inquiry about whether the Cambodian action justified an earlier withdrawal." The 13-man party of congressmen, governors and White House aides reported personally to Nixon on the eve of a critical Senate vote of confidence on the President's conduct of the war. During a 70 minute session at the White House, the group reported, "The Cambodian operations are militarily successful, certainly for the short term... We are agreed that the attack on the sanctuaries has produced important immediate dividends for the United States and South Vietnam." June 16 1970 KANSAN 23 A THE STEREO STORE UDIOTRONICS NEW & USED COMPONENTS 9:30 - 5:30 Daily Thurs. 8:30 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 "...All leaders we met agreed that, due at least in some measure to the Cambodian operation, the scheduled U.S. troop withdrawals can safely and surely proceed. We conceive and hope that in the coming months an acceleration of withdrawals may even become possible." The task force also said the Cambodian operation "is not contemplated by any of the top American or Vietnamese leaders" as resulting in a wider war. Speaking to reporters after the meeting with Nixon, Sen. Howard Cannon (D-Nev.) said the Cambodian attacks had "greatly disrupted the communications ability of the North Vietnamese." The king, commanding what is regarded as one of the best armies in the Mideast, probably could crush the commandos but withheld such action for fear of tearing the country apart. Another member, Gov. Raymond Shafer of Pennsylvania, said top Cambodian officials were "very grateful for the operation." McIntyre also said American servicemen "responded enthusiastically to this combat initiative." WASHINGTON — President Nixon announced a shakeup of the cabinet that included the transfer of George P. Shultz as secretary of labor to director of the new Office of Management and Budget. NEW YORK — Eight persons were injured slightly when 15 sticks of dynamite exploded at New York City police headquarters causing heavy damage. DELICATESSEN & WASHINGTON — The Senate rejected an administration backed proposal permitting the President to send troops back into Cambodia if necessary to protect U.S. troops in South Vietnam. THE HITE in the WALL MOSCOW — The Soviet Union announced stepped up military aid to Hanoi because of intensified U.S. operations in Indochina. WASHINGTON --- The Defense Department will guarantee 50 million in short term loans in order to keep the Penn Central Railroad solvent. Some Time — Phone Order 843-7685— We Deliver-9g.III.gh. SANDWICH SHOP Bounty proposed WASHINGTON (UPI) Remember when youngsters used to roam the roadsides picking up pop bottles and turning them in to the nearest grocery store for the deposit? The nonreturnable, no-deposit bottle has changed that, but administration officials said Tuesday that President Nixon may propose a new twist, a federal bounty for each bottle and can picked up, to enlist children in a campaign to clean up park and highway litter. Gabrielle Raidal Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF L. G. Balfour Co. BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Exclusive Representative For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry Gabrielle Bridal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv. - Favors - Guards - Badges - Recognitions - Lavaliers - Stationerv Rings - Crested - Letters - Paddles - Mugs - Sportswear - Plaques Gift DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 V13-1571 LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss. 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog Baby Wear 645 Moss Al Lauter DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS - 3,000 Colors PICK UP STATION 2346 Iowa VI 3-9868 G & R Body Shop - Lowest Prices - Student Discounts 843-3735 1248 East 13th T Let PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Malls Shopping Center Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us VI 3-1211 FOR SALE KANSAN CLASSIFIED Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the advertisement must be served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and India prints from the Hodge Podge at 15 W. 9th, 10:00-5:30 '68 Datamat 2000 roadster - 5 ap, robin '69 DATAMAT 2010 roadster - 5 ap, robin new head, new head, C4 842-1191, 6-26 '65 MGB-BRG, almost new Michelin X's, overhailed transmission, new clutch, fantastic condition. Call 842-2191. Owner must leave town July 1. Needs someone to assume 18 payments on the phone under 3000 dollars sports extras, Phone VI-9305 and UN-4417 (Judith), Phone 6-26 '65 Mus—225 Vorsh, H-8, hurst shifter, Craag mags, new wide rubber, new paint, super clean, $1195. Call 842- 2191. '63 Sprite--black, new tires, both transmission & club luggage 842-2191-821 6-26 68 'YW' - Red sedan, one owner, care- rent. Paid, priced at wholesale 616. Call 842-219-1. Kustom K-100 Guitar Amplifier, 2-12" speakers, like new . . . must sell, 6-12". Robert's 770 X Stereo Tape Reorder—$225. KLH Model 24 Stereo and FM Radio-$200. Good condition. Call Kurt at VI 2-7584. 6-30 For Sale: 1) Unused: copper chafing dish, calf wallet & key case, Lite-Gem high-intensity study lamp, 8 silver drinking cups, assorted silver dishes, 2 bees ash tray, white decanter & 4 cases, GE Tole tray-table, assorted kitchen items, AM clock radio with appliance outlet, high-power 4 band Hallcraft radio, Short Wheel (1.6-30 MC) studio, world-wide reception. Call 6-31- 1400. 1967 Barracuda fastback, automatic power steering. Formula "S" performance package. Good mileage and good price. Call Fred at 843-0435-8-30 UN 4-4326 EMPLOYMENT Occupations That Pay Latest comprehensive information substantiated by U.S. Bureau of Labor on over 600 occupations and over 700 jobs. The largest hour jobs are and occupations and professions rewarding their employees $20,000 or more and plus $1.60 handling an address. Advisory Enterprises, P.O. Box 1063, Kansas City Missouri 64141, Dept. II. LOST AND FOUND The lost art of fine handcrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Podge. Find your new belt, vest, sailboard at 15 W. ninth. 10-30 5.30 WANTED Baby-sitter in exchange for room and board for Summer and/or/Fall. Close to campus. 843-0113 after 4 p.m. 6-23 Monday through Friday. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. sandals. Over 25 styles from $14.75, 3 day service. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 842-0682. Male student to share my furnished apartment, two blocks from campus. Must be new to be appreciated $40 Please provide all. 842-3436 foree 10:00 a.m. Wanted; 2 roommates to share house near campus $50 a month for summer work. Please send resumes to admissions@univc.edu New York Cleaners For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving 226 Mass VL 3-0501 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 - Portraits - Passports 7-31 - Applications NOTICE Visit a nudist camp free. For information write Garden of Eden, P.O. Box 590, Tonganoxle, Kansas 66086. 6.28 "Please call for appointment" Students of objectivism—meets every Monday night to discuss the philosophy of Ayn Rand. If desire further information, call 842-6210 after S 530. The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $5.25 at the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 7-31 Custom made leather—sandals, vests, pants, belts, wallets, purses, stash boxed items for the home. THE LEATHER WORKS, 1309, Ohio open 2-6 daily except Sunday. 6-26 D-L 515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Que. or some honest to-gooodness Bar- B-Que is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 1 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone 1-921-8501. Closed Sunday, Tuesday. Bob Blank, Owner Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. 7-31 The KU Infant Center, for infants 6 weeks to 12 months of age, is now open from 7:30 am. to 6 p.m. weekdays thru Aug. 7. This is a pilot program for performing and demonstrating food intake procedures in the center can accommodate a few more infants in full-day care and several more infants in partial day care with either regular or occasional attendance. The Department of Human Development UUN JN 4-4392, or come to room 294, new Haworth Hall. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 721 Mass. Guitar Lessons. All beginners and advanced folk, fingerpicking, blues, rock. Experienced, references $1.75 for hour lesson. Call Kurt 6-30 I-27-7848 TYPING Experienced typist with electric typewriter desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-597-398 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist KU B.S. (English-Speech Education). Office-size electric) Phone 8-74-2873. Accurate typing of thesis, papers, manuscripts by experienced typist on IBM carbon ribbon electric. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson VI2-1224. 6-26 Experienced in typing term papers, theses other misc. typing. Have elec- tric typing. Have typed each type. Correct spelling & punctuation. Call VI3-954, Mrs. Wright. 7-31 Tired of paying rent in a strange town? Two families are looking for one or two couples to share mortgage payments on a large house after Sept. 1. Prefer stable students interested in technical trades to those of getting most of your money back when property is sold. Call 842-9971 after 6:30 for details. 6-26 FOR RENT Typing: Former executive secretary to Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners, specializes in typing dissertations, theses, term papers. Call 642-8866. 6-30 You get the 12th month free when you rent a 2 bedrm. unfurnished apt. for $135 or 1 bedrm. unfurn. for $120. Same deal with 2 bedrm. furnished for $150 or 1 bedrm. furn. for $120. Call 843-2116 or 843-1085. 7-31 2 bedroom fum. furn. a/c p. a/ $55 per m. m. m. m. m. m. m. and after p. m. m. p. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. 6-26 483-3973 "If The Shoe Fits . Wear It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon The Sirloin Manhattan DURING The Sirtoin Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choice steaks, Finest sea foods Open 4:50 154 Mi. N. of Kaw Closed River Bridge Monday V13-1431 MISTER GUY CLEVERS A 100% M. E. M. C. THE CLOTHING CONSULTANTS With all types of sportswear, our consultants will help you put together the best looking outfits possible. The right slacks with the best knit, shoe and belt. Come in, look around, we'll help if you need it. Open Until 8:30 Thursdays MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS 1300 campers soon to arrive Four hundred junior high students, participants in the junior high division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, will depart after their grand concert Friday afternoon. But the void will be filled quickly with the arrival Sunday of nearly 1,300 senior high campers. The Midwestern Music and Art Camp, one of the most successful programs of its kind in the United States, brings senior high students from all fifty states to the KU campus for five weeks of study in nine different fields. This year's camp will include divisions of music, art, science, journalism, speech and four foreign languages—Spanish, German, Latin and French. camp enrollment shows decrease Russell L. Wiley, director of the camp, said the number of students who have enrolled in the camp this year indicates a drop from the number of students enrolled last year. He attributed the decrease to a number of factors, including parental concern over campus unrest, a general tightening of the economy, and the dropping of ballet, a division of the camp for 16 years, from the curriculum this year. "Unrest on campus has cost us students," he said. He said parents were concerned for their children, especially their daughters, even though camp officials had assured them no trouble was anticipated. Rising costs have forced a shortening of the camp from the usual six weeks to five weeks. "We elected to shorten the camp rather than increase the cost of attending it," Wiley said. Limited scholarship aid is available to students to help meet the $450 fee, which includes all tuition, room, board and recreational activities. Campers will live in residence halls Campers will live in three University residence halls. Approximately 800 girls will be housed in McColum Hall, and Lewis and Templin Halls will house the estimated 500 boy campers. Classes and rehearsals for campers start at 8 a.m. and last until 4 or 5 p.m. with a break for lunch. Evenings are free for study and recreational activities. In addition to a full schedule of classes or rehearsals, campers are kept busy putting their skills into practice. ing the final Sunday evening of the camp. Music campers have a heavy schedule of concerts, beginning Friday of the first week and end- Art exhibits in Murphy Hall, starting during the second week of camp, will display the work of art campers. Campers in the journalism division produce the Kamper Kansan, a weekly insert to the Summer Session Kansan, as well as edit Tempo, the yearbook of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. College students counsel Counselors for the camp are college students, who live in the residence halls with the campers. Most of the counselors are summer school students, many of them former campers. The camp also has 12 full-time supervisors. Many campers return after their first summer of attending the camp. Wiley estimated that about 25-30 per cent of this year's campers attended last year's camp. "About 50 ar 75 of our students are actually high school graduates," he said. "They'll be entering college in the fall—some of them at KU." One of the reasons the camp has been and remains popular is the high quality of instruction given to the campers by KU faculty members. "There are about 200 faculty people connected with the camp," Wiley said. Their hard work and interest has contributed heavily to the success of the program, he said. Even though the camp will be smaller, about 15 per cent smaller than last year, Wiley expressed optimism for its continued success. "We have never worked so hard as we have this year," he said. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 80th Year, No.4 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, June 19, 1970 1 Shultz reflects THE NATIONAL CAMPAIGNER'S DIRECTOR OF DEATHS Watson replies Unemployment hits three key industries WASHINGTON (UPI)—Skilled white workers in the aerospace, defense and automobile industries on the West Coast and in the Middle West have been hardest hit by the sharp rise in unemployment this year, according to the Labor Department. "The jobless rate for Negroes who have never been employed in large numbers in some of the hardest hit industries has risen at a less rapid pace than the jobless rate for whites," the BLS said. "The workers most affected initially have been those employed in relatively high skilled jobs rather than those at the bottom of the occupational ladder," the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) said in analyzing the jobless rise from a low of 3.3 The report issued Sunday said that "cutbacks in the defense and aerospace fields, the impacts of which are also being felt in many other industries, have been primary factors in faulting the growth of factory employment since mid 1969." per cent last year to five per cent of the labor force in May. 'Street carnival greets panelists A group of KU students prepared a "street carnival" to greet state Sen. Reynolds Shultz (R-Lawrence) and other members of a panel who spoke in Dyche and Woodruff Auditoriums Wednesday evening. But none of the panelists showed up for the party. The panel of six members, sponsored by the KU Coordinating Committee (KUCC) consisted of four university faculty members, Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson and Shultz. Before the panel discussion, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium, began, a group of about 50 students gathered in front of the building to pass out balloons and bubble gum. "It's a carnival," said one girl. "Would you like some candy?" George Kimball, candidate for Douglas County sheriff, sat on the platform before the discussion began, asking student representation on the panel. Dyche Auditorium quickly filled to capacity, about 200 persons, and overflowed into the aisles. Later a combination of heat and overcrowding forced the panel and audience to retire to air-conditioned Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. "This is a panel on campus unrest, and we think we ought to be represented," he said. "We're the ones who were supposed to have caused it all. "How about it—do we get a hippie on the panel?" A member of the audience asked why there were no women seated on the panel. John Baker, KUCC chairman and moderator of the panel, apologized for the oversight and said future panels would include women. Panelists were introduced as Shultz, Watson, Capt. Jeseph Marziluff, professor of naval ROTC; Lawrence Velvet, professor of law; Robert McColl, professor of East, Asian studies; and John Wright, professor of human development and family life. Baker set forth the topics of the discussion as "Vietnam," "Cambodia." "Unrest in the United States" and the "University's Role in Society." The two-hour discussion was punctuated frequently by heckling from the crowd, bursting balloons and flying popcorn. At one point, Baker threatened to stop the program if order was not restored. Baker attempted to quiet an older man who demanded a young questioner stand up and identify himself, but was shouted down by the crowd, who seemed to adopt the man as a mascot. Some of the questions put to the panelists included, "What do we do about Godless anarchy on campus?" "What was the reasoning behind the curfews of April?" and "Do you condone violence as a means of action?" The man identified himself as Ed Warner and stood to ask questions and shout comments frequently throughout the debate. At the encouragement of the audience, he walked to the stage once to stand on the platform. (Continued to page 8) GNEEP The mark of gneep? Construction men working on he new addition to Malott Hall seem unaware that the mark of Gneep is upon them. Who painted the sign or what it means has yet to be discovered. Only the Gneep knows. 49 Temporary buildings to alleviate crowding Temporary pre - fabricated buildings will ease overcrowded conditions at the University of Kansas until the state legislature approves fund resuests for permanent buildings. Five of the portable buildings will be purchased, at a cost of about $90,000, from funds provided by the KU Endowment Association at the request of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. Originally, the buildings were to have been purchased from Educational Building Funds (EBF), but the legislature denied that request, presumably because EEF funds are earmarked for permanent structures. Only one of the 24-by-60 ft. buildings will be used for classroom space. The remaining four will house offices for several college departments, including the department of visual arts, faculty offices and administrative offices of the student health service, presently located in cramped Watkins Hospital. Placement of the buildings is expected to begin about August 1 for use by the start of the fall semester Aug.24. Appointments given 7 Seven students in American studies have received appointments that will advance their academic and professional careers this summer and in 1970-71. Michael Collins, Garden City, will be the University of Kansas direct exchange scholar to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland. 1970-71; and Eric Chaet, Chicago, a graduate honors fellowship. Receiving awards from the University of Kansas Graduate School are Duane Watson, Lawrence, a summer dissertation fellowship; Wayne Leboe, Sunflower, a dissertation fellowship for Arthur Townsend, Lawrence, has been awarded a fellowship to the Winterther Museum in Washington, D.C. Two graduating seniors received American studies departmental awards. Donna Schafer, Wichita, is doing summer study under a Research Participation Award. Mary Jane Harmon, Lawrence, has been appointed a graduate editorial assistant on the Midcontinent American Studies Journal starting this fall. KU professor claims sight of atomic nuclei quarks A University of Kansas professor is one of a team of four researchers from three U.S. universities who claim to have observed evidence of quarks, the particles which some physicists theorize are components of the atomic nuclei. Nowhan Kwak, associate professor of physics, and three associates, William T. Chu and Young S. Kim, both of Ohio State University, and W. J. Beam of Rose Polytechnic Institute, observed a bubble track, which they feel might be interpreted as a quark, while examining 10,000 pictures of cosmic ray tracks exposed in a heavy-liquid bubble chamber at Northwestern University. Kwak explained that M. Gell-Mann of the California Institute of Technology formulated the theory that quarks, which are thought to be fractionally-charged particles, make up both protons and neutrons within atomic nuclei. So far no defini.e evidence has been found to prove the theory. A Lawrence man arrested after stabbing his father and discharging a shotgun in a tavern has been arraigned in Douglas County court. Walker was asked to leave Lloyd's Place, a local tavern, Friday evening after creating a disturbance. He returned later with a single-shot, 12 gauge shotgun, which he pointed at the tavern operator, Lloyd Miller, with the words, "Hi, Lloyd, I'm going to kill you." Bond for Marvin Larry Walker, 22, was set at $15,000 each for two counts of felonious assault. Man stabs father after gun incident in local tavern As Miller pushed the gun away, it discharged, hitting a door casing and wall. Walker then fled the tavern. He was arrested at the home of his father, Marion Walker, 49, after his father called police to report a stabbing. The elder Walker suffered a cut in the abdomen, but was released after hospital treatment. 2 KANSAN Although many experiments to find evidence of quarks have been undertaken, only two have achieved even possible success. Wev'e got lots of h.i.s for her For fit like a dream . . . without losing an ounce of femininity . . . reach for the Ensign slack from h.i.s for Her! The sportswear to make you thrill with delight in its flare leg look of today. Sizes 5 to 15 $7.00 Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-482 Jay SHOPPE Sandy's HAMBURGERS - SHAKES Sandy's THRIFT SWIFT Sandy's HAMBURGERS - SHAKES A mountain of a meal... The Big Scot Sandy's OPPOSITE HILLCREST PLAZA 2120 West 9th Sandy's Women, radicals talk to businessmen Representatives from the student protest movement and the women's liberation group exchanged views with 15 businessmen in the Executive Development Program being held at the University of Kansas June 7-26. The dialog was fitted to the first week's topic, "Our Changing Urban and Economic Environment." In its sixteenth year at KU, the Executive Development Program is this year divided into three one-week sessions. Most of the executives, however, have elected to attend all three of the segments. the faculty for the first week were Richard W. Pollay and Terry L. Dennis of the School of Survival not enough says conservationist NEW YORK (UPI)—The prize in the current ecological sweep-stakes is not merely survival—"it is the quality of survival." According to National Audubon Society President Dr. Elvis J. Stahr Jr., too many ecologists are shouting only that "mankind may not survive 15 years more." They may be right, Stahr said, "But if you're going to have to live in filth and poison what's the point of surviving? Survival alone is not enough." "It is vital," Stahr continued, that man "apply his scientific and technological skill to repairing the damage and the filth. "But it is even more vital that there be an understanding that these things shouldn't have been done in the first place rather than just going ahead and cleaning up after ourselves." "Man," he continued, "must use his foresight—he should have used it long ago. We can't keep polluting our water and air in the name of progress. "Mankind will always feel a need for progress—but some say you can't have progress without June 19 1970 KANSAN 3 Business and Ronald K. Calgaard of the economics department. "What good is progress if you have a houseful of gadgets—but you can't go out in the air?" dirty water or air. And that raises questions about what is progress Stahr, president of the 100,000 member conservation group since 1968, said, "This question of ecological survival isn't just a matter of what people would like. Nature doesn't care what people would like. She's going to exact a price for all the damage we do to her—and that price may be far higher than some of the sacrifices man now seems willing to make." The second session, "Accounting for Management Decisions," was this week. Instructors are Glenn L. Johnson, Lawrence A. Sherrr, and John O. Tollefson, all of the School of Business. This section features the use of a time computer to aid in the financial decision making. The goal is to make the distinction between relevant and irrelevant accounting data. Stahr, a noted educator and former secretary of the Army in the John F. Kennedy administration, says the Audubon Society's biggest role in the conservation ecology field is "environmental education." "You must have education and you must have conservation," he said. "Through education we must change defensive action into affirmative actions. And by conservation, we must try to stop the current damage and save that which is threatened. Otherwise by the time we educate people there won't be any heritage for the education generation." Long-range planning, vital even for smaller companies, will be the topic for the final week. Leaders will be business school faculty members Dennis, Jack E. Gaumnitz, and David P. Gustafson. Topics will be corporate strategy, manpower planning, financial planning and general planning techniques. The Bull & Boar SANDWICH SHOP Reubens 96c B-B-Q Ham 78c Roast Beef 78c Corned Beef 83c B-B-Q Beef 76c Grilled Swiss 48c All Sandwiches Include Chips & Relish ★ Coors on Tap ★ OPEN: 10 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. LOCATED: 11 West 9th St. V12-3335 LOCATED BEHIND WEAVERS DEPT. STORE Patronize Kansan Advertisers June 8-13-Darlene Austin June 15-20-General Assembly June 22-27-Saints'n Sinners June 29-July4-The Pride Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center Live Music Every Night (except Sunday) All Summer Free TGIF with ID's A. R. LEE The University of Kansas Theatre Announces Their Summer Season Rain The Miracle Worker by John Coulton Clemence Randolph adopted from short story by Somerset Maugham Main Stage Arena July 20,21,22,23,24 at 8:20 p.m. by Murray Schisgal June 27,29,30 and July1,2,3 at 8:20 p.m. Experimental Theatre Luv by William Gibson July 13,14,15,16,17,18 at 8:20 p.m. and July 17 at 2:30 p.m. in Experimental Theatre Pinocchio by Brian Way Main Stage Arena July 6,7,8,9,10 at 7:20 p.m. and July 8, & 9 at 2:30 p.m. University Theatre at Murphy Hall Ticket prices $1.50. Student with current registration card 75c. For further information call UN 4-3982 KANSAN COMMENT FYI-the campers This editorial comes under the heading of for-your-information. It's about those high school students who will be here on the campus for the next five weeks, and it's especially for those of you who will be saying to yourselves, as we faculty members tend to say each fall, "Boy, they're getting younger every year." The "they're' are the 1,300 students who are going to be here for courses in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. You oldtimers know what the camp is—though we must confess that sometimes we wonder if University officials really understand, or appreciate, the value and significance of the camp. These boys and girls are here blowing their horns, playing their violins, singing, painting, sculpturing, making pottery, studying languages, working in labs, sweating over math problems, acting, orating and writing news stories. They come from all over the country. They're the best their high schools have to offer. Most of them will look fresher to you than the more jaded University students, though you will notice that their hair will get a little longer and their attire a bit more draggled as the summer progresses, and as wet, sticky June yields to dry, sticky July. There's a bit more ingenuiness among those kids than among college types. They haven't become blase yet, and some of them still believe in things like cheer leading and football teams and debating. Some of them, too, probably are Junior League SDS, and some may have big ideas about the Reformation of Our Society. Most of them will be too busy to be doing much agitating. This editorial writer, who admits to what might be prejudice (no, that's not the word—call it leaning) toward these kids, is mainly sold on the camp, and what it offers. He has sat in the outdoor stands and in the University Theatre hearing them sing and play. He has seen some of their acting. He has taught them in journalism classes since journalism joined the camp program in 1963. Many of these young people come back to KU. Certainly they go back home and serve as boosters for the University. A number of them, who were in last summer's camp, wrote in April, expressing their dismay at seeing, on nationwide television, what happened to the Union, where they had spent a bit of their time (though not much; they're too busy at the other end of the campus). Some of these high school students will be meeting you, talking with you, performing for you. They're putting not only five weeks of their time into the camp; they're also putting a sizable amount of money. They think of themselves, while they're here, as University of Kansas people. If it isn't too boosterish, this friend of theirs (even though he doesn't know them yet) hopes that the faculty and students of KU will treat these young people so that the summer of 1970 will be one of the happy memories, and so that the five weeks here will help erase the memory of Walter Cronkite describing how part of the Kansas Union went up in flames.—CMP Big stars out of work By VERNON SCOTT UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — It's a bad time for actors. Many are selling their homes, limousines and other status symbols to keep solvent. The unemployment insurance lines are liberally sprinkled with famous faces and names. National economics aside there are simply too many actors and too few movies and television shows to keep them busy. Some have opted for other kinds of work. Others are hanging on awaiting a miracle. One major star announced grandly that he was prepared to offer his services to television after a long and heady career in movies. All three networks wished him well and declined with thanks. Henry Fonda, Jimmy Stewart, Shirley MacLaine, Tony Curtis and other film stars who disdained television are hugging the medium with the abandon of a new found love. THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL 'Sir, the 3rd platoon has chipped in and would like to buy 40 Thai soldiers to take our place out here.' The Lighter Side The little rich By Dick West — UPI Columnist WASHINGTON (UPI) At last count, the number of national associations headquartered in Washington stood at almost 800, give or take the National Association of Official Inspections Stations. Some of these organizations may be altruistically motivated, but by and large they serve as spokesmen for "special interests" and "pressure groups." For that reason I ordinarily would be loath to see the republic burdened with yet another association. Recently, however, I learned that an important socio-economic group in this country is being battered about, apparently for lack of organizational strength. I am therefore recommending that all of the low grade millionaires in America band together and form the National Association of Little Rich. The plight of this group came to my attention in a published comment by Mayor Mat Feldman of Englewood, N.J., regarding the economic impact of the recent stock market slump. "This market has been particularly hard on the little rich," Feldman was quoted as saying. People worth $1 million to $4 million-somewhere in there-have started to pull in their horns." I am sure you will agree that in a democratic society such as ours, a strong little rich class is needed for political stability. The little rich have long played a valuable sociological role by serving as a buffer between the non rich and the middle rich, just as the middle rich serve as a buffer between the little rich and the big rich. Since preservation of the little rich as an economic class obviously is in the national interest, I would like to see them organize an association to lobby for protective legislation. It is easy to say that the little rich got themselves into their present predicament and that government assistance would only encourage shiftlessness and irresponsibility on their part. But that is a shortsighted as well as a callous view. Should the present little rich class cease to exist, it would be exceedingly difficult to build another one. Because the only way you can make a small fortune in the stock market nowadays is to start out with a large fortune. This might be linked with a subsidy program under which the little rich would be paid not to play the market. One goal might be a federal subsistence program. Anytime the net worth of a little rich man dropped below $1 million the government automatically would reimburse him for his stock market losses. BOOKS SUNDAY THE RABBIS STAYED HOME, by Harry Kemelman (Crest, 75 cents)—Third in the enjoyable series of mystery novels dealing with Rabbi David Small, who fights his congregation and solves murders. In this one the rabbi becomes involved, at Passover time, in murder, marujana, and militants. Kemelman is literate and his rabbi hero is a joy. *** THE LOST QUEEN, by Norah Lofts (Crest, 95 cents)—Romanic historical novel stuff, this one about Princess Caroline Matilda, sister of King George III of England (yeah, he's the one), and her marriage to Christian, crown prince of Denmark, and her affair with the king's physician. History goes Gothic in this one. SEVEN SEATS TO THE MOON, by Charlotte Armstrong (Crest, 95 cents)—Suspense from the late Charlotte Armstrong, whose novels were usually slight but almost always intriguing. This is one about a man who listens in on a conversation between his hospital roommate and a visitor, and gets himself involved in a terrorist plot. EARTH IS ROOM ENOUGH, by Isaac Asimov (Crest, 75 cents) —Science fiction tales by one of the best writers in the genre. There are funny ones here, and imaginative ones, and also the kind Asimov specializes in philosophical and thoughtful ones. THE SECRET OF MIRROR HOUSE, by Patricia Maxwell (Gold Medal, 60 cents) —About a young girl who is invited to come live at Mirror House and doesn't realize, until too late, that it is a place of evil. If you haven't heard this plot you just haven't read any that is labeled "Gothic." A SWELL LOOKING GIRL, by Erskine Caldwell (Gold Medal, 75 cents)—Short stories by Caldwell that go back to the 1930s. Caldwell is one of the most earthy of all American writers, and his early novels, especially, were honest and now seem quite old-fashioned. There is good humor, and there is sometimes violence, and there is always a lot of sex in these stories. LOVE IS THE THEME, edited by Douglas and Sylvia Angus (Premier, 95 cents)—A collection of short stories that reveal the new frankness and openness of writings about love and sex. The stories are fictional, and only a few of them are by truly well-known writers (J. P. Donleavy, Leslie Fielder, Herbert Gold, Jeremy Larner, and Vladimir Nabokov among them). THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday in the Summer Session. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the opinions expressed in The Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. News Staff Managing Editor ... Adviser ... Business Staff Business Adviser Mel Adams Business Manager Jim Hatfield National Advertising Manager Donald R. Albon Business Staff Member Associated Collegiate Press Smokers climb aboard to kick habit NEW YORK (UPI)—Imagine a boatload of heavy smokers off on a two week Caribbean cruise without a single cigarette available. Would they be climbing the rigging the first night out? Pleading with the captain to put in to the first port? Start smoking their napkins? What may sound like the scenario for a situation comedy is actually a real cruise designed to help those who want to quit smoking. The tobacco less voyage was thought up by the Institute for New Motivations, a recently formed organization with a philosophy that people in a special environment can help each other break bad habits. The first two 13 day non-smoking cruises are scheduled for September and November using the 20,000 ton cruise ship Santa Paula chartered from Prudential Grace Lines. Except for special programs aimed at blowing away smoke dreams, the cruises will have all the partying and island touring of regular sea going vacations at prices ranging from $695 to $1,680. The Institute's medical director, New York psychiatrist William J. Nemon, thinks the idea of 250.-300 confirmed smokers trapped on a smokeless ship will not only be peaceful, but a fun vacation. "This is not to be a floating mental hospital or a psychiatric clinic," Dr. Nemon said in an interview. "Nobody will be doing any black magic. Most of all it's a vacation in an atmosphere of positive thinking and having a good time. "You can say I can really have fun—a good vacation—without smoking two packs a day. I can have a meal without smoking, or a drink without smoking or dial a telephone without lighting a cigarette." "We hope right from the time persons fill out their applications On board will be a medical staff including psychiatrists and psychologists. Dr. Nemon, who has helped smokers break the habit through hypnotism, said that sessions in self hypnosis would be offered those who want extra help in kicking the habit. they'll be thinking in a positive way." "These cruises will be sailing into a new state rather than leaving an old state," he said. "For some the ship's environment will be enough. Some will have more problems and will need discussion groups. For others lecture groups will remind them that cigarettes are harmful to their health. "In discussion groups persons get a great deal of satisfaction from hearing of others' cravings for cigarettes. They also get a feeling of self confidence when they find that food tastes better and things smell nicer and everyone else is experiencing the same thing. "This is not real group therapy, and nothing like encounter or sensitivity groups—that would be the worst thing," he said. "We don't want an atmosphere of inspection. We don't want to get into anyone's deep psychological problems. But if we can get one person to talk with another person he will be helping himself as well as the other person." Asked if he expected any backsliding when the ship stopped at various ports, he shrugged and replied, "I don't expect any problem. Three or four will run out and buy cigarettes at the first port. But by this time the group will be motivated and the social climate will be against cigarettes. Bringing cigarettes back aboard would be like bringing a bottle to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. June 19 1970 KANSAN 5 "For this kind of environment, a ship is ideally suited. The concept is very sound, very well planned. I have talked it over with many psychiatrists of different orientations in different parts of the country and their approval was unanimous," he said. "Of course it's not going to be 100 per cent successful. Some people want magic, but are not willing to help themselves. But if they really want to quit smoking they can have a grand vacation." They may also leave the Caribbean littered with well munched finger nails. PENNSYLVANIA LEADS NEW YORK (UPI)—There are more transportation, communications and public utility establishments in Pennsylvania than in any other state, according to Dun's Market Identifiers, a marketing service of Dun & Bradstreet. The Keystone State has 5,025 such establishments. New York is second with 4,923 and California third with 4,718. BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including Wrigwam/Day Of K/ Little Sadie Copper Kettle / Early Mornin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wrigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sodie Copper Kettle/Early Marin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $699 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Q BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center THE STEREO STORE AUDIOTRONICS NEW & USED COMPONENTS 9:30 - 5:30 Daily Thurs. 8:30 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" STARTS WEDNESDAY Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 WALT DISNEY'S Sleeping Beauty TECHNICOLOR TECHNIRAMA Re-released by BUENA VOLS DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. NOW SHOWING MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 THE STEREO STORE AUDIOTRONICS NEW & USED COMPONENTS 9:30 - 5:30 Daily Thurs. 8:30 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" STARTS WEDNESDAY Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5764 THE STEREO STORE AUDIOTRONICS NEW & USED COMPONENTS 9:30 - 5:30 Daily Thurs. 8:30 928 Mass. VI 3-8500 RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" STARTS WEDNESDAY Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5781 WALT DISNEY'S Sleeping Beauty TECHNICOLOR' TECHNIRAMA No Released by BILKIN MEDIA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. 1970 Walt Disney Productions NOW SHOWING MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5781 RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" STARTS WEDNESDAY Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5708 * British skinheads 'bovver' WALT DISNEY'S Sleeping Beauty TECHNICOLOR' TECHNIRAMA Re Released by BENETA MEDIA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. 1875 Walt Disney Productions NOW SHOWING MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:30 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 LONDON (UPI) — Hooligans are hooligans wherever they are found, but British cities have one particularly nasty breed known as "skinheads." The skinheads are white youths from metropolitan working class areas whose rebel cult calls for almost shaved heads and the wearing of baggy work pants held up by suspenders and heavy steel-toed boots. Mostly aged 10 to 15 and frequently school dropouts, their aim is making "bovver" slang for bother, for those who are "different" from most Britons in clothing, language or culture. Hippies and motorcycle gangs earlier this year were primary targets for skinheads out for a spot of "aggro," aggravation, with fists, bicycle chains and rocks augmenting stomping and kicking with heavy boots. The hippies and motorcyclists fought back, however, so the skinheads backed off. Now Asian immigrants, particularly Pakistani and Indians, are prime targets to skinhead attacks. By nature the Asians dislike violence and usually don't fight back. The skinheads call this sport "Pakibashing." "Pakibasing" occurs only in London and industrialized British cities with a large number of Asian immigrants, places like Birmingham and Manchester and Wolverhampton. NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES Presents the Grasshopper Starring JACQUELINE BISSET FROM THE MOVIE 'THE PASSING OF EVE' BY MAKE MCGHAIN PRODUCED BY JERRY BELSON & GARRY MARSHALL DIRECTED BY JERRY PARIS R TECHNICOLOR MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:15 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES Presents the Grasshopper NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES Presents the Grasshopper Starring JACQUELINE BISSET FROM THE MONTH: THE PASSING OF EVE; BY JAMR MASHMAN PRODUCED BY JERRY BELSON AND CARRY MARSHALL DIRECTED BY JERRY PARIS TECHNOLOGY! MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:15 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 JACQUELINE BISSET FROM THE NOVEL, THE PASSING OF EVE. BY MARA MUSHARE PRODUCED BY JERRY BELSON AND CAREY MARSALL DIRECTED BY JERRY PARIS TECHNOLOGY™ MAT. DAILY 2:30 EVE. 7:15 - 9:15 Varsity THEATRE ... Telegraph VI 3-1065 It centers in such tatty, low income neighborhoods as London's Bethnal Green. There about 50 skinheads recently and with no apparent provocation attacked the grocery store of a Pakistani immigrant, beating up two assistants and stabbing one. More than 100 Pakistanis saw the attack but none did anything to help. The skinheads fled before police arrived. The most commonly reported incidents are those of gangs of skinheads ambushing a single Asian youth or several of them. Complaints are seldom filed because as an 18-year-old Pakistani put it, "We don't want trouble, we just want to be left alone." Taiyabur Rahman, an official of the Pakistani Welfare Association in London, said "Our people are not in the mood to fight. We didn't come here to fight." NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES Presents the Grasshopper ENDS TONIGHT Shows: 7:15 - 9:15 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Because the Asians, unlike West Indian immigrants who also suffer from discrimination speak a different language, wear different clothes, and embrace a different culture, the skinheads are pressing the issue. PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents LEE MARVIN CLINT EASTWOOD JEAN SEBERG PAINT YOUR WAGON to ALAN JAY LERNER Producer PANAVISION" TECHNICOLOR" (G) COMING NEXT! Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065 LEE MARVIN CLINT EASTWOOD JEAN SEBERG The World's Most Honored Motion Picture! BEN HUR EVENING 7:30 ONLY MAT. SAT. & SUN. 2:00 Adults $1.50; Child .75c THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND 10TH AVE. MOST MOTION PICTURE MAKERS DON'T MAKE PICTURES LIKE THIS. WILLIAM WYLER DOES. a WILLIAM WYLER film THE LIBERATION OF L.B. JONES EVENING 7:15 - 9:15 MAT. SAT. & SUN. 2:15 ADULTS $1.50 The Hillcrest HILLCREST SHIPPING CENTER • 89TH AND IOWA ] The Relationship between 4 sensual people is limited. They must find a new way. D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" COLOR by Deluxe United Artists Eve. 7:10 - 9:30 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:10 Adults $1.50 KWSAN REVIEWS PLAYS: Destry Rides Again Bv JONATHAN JORDAN BY JONATHAN JORDAN The small western town of Bottleneck served as the location of a deadly conflict between the forces of justice and those of fascism at the University Theatre June 12 and 13. The play, "Destroy Rides Again," which will be performed at numerous U.S. bases in Europe under the sponsorship of the USO, successfully disproves the contention of some that the United States is a militaristic nation. The hero of the play, Destroy, played by John M. Myers, Springfield, Ohio, graduate student, refuses to wear a gun and declares that a man who lives by the gun can expect a bullet in the back. And what militaristic nation Best Sellers Fiction LOVE STORY — Erich Segal. DELIVERANCE — James Dickey. THE FRENCH LIEUTEN- ANTS HUMAN A WOMAN—15m Fewer LOSING BATTLES — Eudora LASTING TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT— Graham Greene. GREAT LION OF GOD—Taylor Caldwell. John Weitz. THE GANG THAT COULD DNIT THE VALUE OF NOTHING- John Weitz. THE GANG THAT COULDN'T SHOOT STRAIGHT — Jimmy Breslin THE ANDERSON TAPES— Larence Sanders CALICO PALACE — Gwen Bristow Nonfiction UP THE ORGANIZATION— Robert Townsend. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX—David Reuben THE SENSUOUS WOMAN— "J." MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS— Antonia Fraser. THE NEW ENGLISH BIBLE— Oxford University Press and Cambridge University Press. HARD TIMES--Studs Terkel HUMAN SEXUAL INADEQUACY-William Masters and Virginia E. Johnson. LOVE AND WILL—Rollo May. PARTY. POINTS OF REBELLION— William O. Douglas. AMERICA HERITAGE DIC TIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE — William Morris (editor in chief). 6 KANSAN June 19 1970 would send that message to its troops overseas? MY OWN. The best thing next to your bath MY OWN. FOLLOW ME ON: TWITTER @ MYOWN FACEBOOK @ MYOWN INSTAGRAM @ MYOWN MY OWN. The best thing next to your bath Your tubside companion for freshness. Start off with a wisp of MY OWN Spray. You're confident all day. MY OWN®. Hygienic Deodorant Spray.. for women only. Available also in cleansing towelettes. But the pacifistic overtones of Destry's behavior, although quite strong, cannot fully explain the play. For even though Destry and all the other characters still alive at the end of the play pile their weapons in the center of the stage, piously singing about the evils of living by the gun, Destry still was forced to wear his shooting iron at the showdown and only survived because Frenchy shot Rocky before Rocky could shoot Destry. We can explain "Destry Rides Again" if we compare it to the events leading up to WW II. As the play opens, rancher Clagget is trying to recover his ranch from Kent. Kent, town gambler and outlaw, terrorizes the town with the aid of his three sidekicks, Bugs, Gyp and Rocky. Sheriff Kaegh intervenes and is shot dead by Kent. The town drunk, Wash Dimsdale, is appointed Sheriff in the belief that he will not interfere with Kent. Dimsdale, however, sobers up and calls upon Destry to come to Bottleneck and help clean the town up. Destroy comes at Dimsdale's request and does clean up the town, but not before Dimsdale is shot in the back by Kent. II. Kent is Nazi Germany, Bugs, Gyp and Rocky are the Soviet Union, Japan and Italy, and Sheriff Kaegh is France. Dimsdale's role can be interpreted as the role of Great Britain, while Destroy, with his curious streak of pacifism and superior fighting power is the United States. While there are some differences in the course of history and this play, they are still amazingly similar. The acting was quite good. John Ingle, Kansas City, Mo., junior, easily handled the difficult role of Kent. The coldbloodedness and malevolence of Kent was quite clear. John Young, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, who played Wash Dimsdale, gave a noteworthy performance. Young, who previously starred in "The Hostage," excellently portrayed the drunk Dimsdale, and convincingly turned him into a determined peace officer. The comparison between the play and WW II is that the various characters can fulfill the roles of the nations that fought in WW One problem of reviewers is that they are paid by the word and consequently tend to see meaning where there is none. It is possible that I have read too much into "Destroy Rides Again," but a play in which three people are killed in a gunfight, a fourth is shot in the back during a jail break, a fifth is murdered off stage while a sixth awaits hanging in the morning would not have come as far as "Destroy Rides Again" if it was merely a musical comedy devoid of any meaning. BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT Includes: Wigwam / Days Of 49 / Little Sadie Copper Kettle / Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Use Kansan Classified The only beer that always tastes light enough to have another. FALSTAFF FALSTAFF Beer For One Four Generations Our Family's Master Brewers Have Devoted Their Dives and skills to Making this most Rewardling Beer Enjoyed Throughout The World since 1870...This is the Cheest Product of the Brewer's Art [Image] FALSTAFF FALSTAFF FALSTAFF. Beer For Over Four Generations Our Family Master Brewers Have Devoted Their Lives and skills to Making this most Rewarding Beer 'Enjoyed Throughout The World since 1870...This is the Chicest Product of the Brewers' Art Falstaff Brewing Corporation, St. Louis, Mo Grants Awards A one-year pilot study of community-controlled sanctions in a Kansas City housing project will be organized by Todd R. Risley of the University of Kansas with a $25,879 research grant from the National Institute of Mental Health of the U.S.Public Health Service. Risley, who is associate professor of human development and family life, will assist representatives of the Juniper Gardens Tenants Association in clarifying and elaborating the Juniper Gardens Resident's Code of Conduct. The code was drawn up by the residents of the Juniper Gardens Housing Project in 1967. * * Thirty-two scholarships totaling $8,320 have been awarded to students in the William Allen White School of Journalism for the 1970-71 school year. One new scholarship, the $400 Lucille Bluford award, is yet to be awarded. This is the greatest amount of money and the largest number of scholarships awarded by the School of Journalism, said Lee F. Young, acting dean and scholarship chairman. The Eugene C. Pulliam, Francis Elizabeth Taylor and Bluford scholarships are new this year. The most valuable grant, the new Eugene C. Pulliam award of $1,000 to the junior showing the most promise of future achievement, went to Monroe Dodd, Shreveport, La., for his senior year. Other awards vary in amounts from $50 to $500. * * A training grant of $63,888 from the National Institute of Mental Health will provide support for 10 graduate students in psychiatric social work and help support the teaching program in 1970-71. Mrs. Mildred Webb Sigler, associate professor of social work, will be project director for the grant, which will finance continuation of a long-standing program of field work and classroom training leading to the degree master of social work. * * Robert B. Welch, associate professor of psychology, financed by a first-year grant of $17,238 from the National Eye Institute of the U.S. Public Health Service, is starting a study of "Human Adaptation to Prism-displaced Vision." Welch said he will observe behavior of a small group wearing welder's goggles equipped with wedge prisms that shift the field of vision to one side. Although Welch said his primary aim is to learn more about the development and structure of the eye which enables humans to perceive in three dimensions, he said findings might also be useful in prescribing corrective spectacles. * * An unrestricted grant of more than $5,000 has been made to the School of Business by alumni in the Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Company, Dean Clifford D. Clark has announced. The gift represents a direct grant of $1,000 from the Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Foundation and personal contributions and matching gifts of KU alumni in the accounting firm. Expenditures of the School of Business from private sources now amount to more than 10 percent of normal budgetary sources, according to Dean Clark. Since some gifts are for specific purposes, unrestricted gifts are highly useful, he added. June 19 1970 KANSAN 7 World a glance away in Spencer Want to explore the Monongahela National Forest of West Virginia? Locate the mines in California's Inyo County? Get a visual representation of the oil and gas industry in Illinois? Study the street plan of the royal burgh of Aberdeen, Scotland? Or learn graphically about the agricultural potential of Lesotho? The answers are in just a few of the maps in the University of Kansas map library. Occupying four spacious rooms in the base-mement of Kenneth Spencer Research Library, the map library contains about 120,000 maps and atlas plates with numerous accompanying texts in many languages. Jennie Dienes, map library assistant, said the staff is presently counting the maps in the collection to determine the exact size and to ascertain how many duplications have been added over the years. Much has been done to arrange the maps for easy use by the public since the library was moved from cramped quarters in Lindley Hall to the Spencer Library in December of 1968. Mrs. Dienes said the increased space not only allowed expansion of the collection, but also enabled her to implement a simplified classification organized by Thomas R. Smith, a geographer and East Asian area specialist. Unlike the complicated system used by the Library of Congress, the nation's largest map library, Smith's system relies on area, subject and scale to determine classifications. Smith's system is easily applied to a collection the size of KU's. The KU map library contains maps of all kinds in nearly every language in the world. Looking about the reading room, one can ALLIANCE, Ohio (UPI) Mount Union College here has the distinction of founding the first summer session in the United States in 1870. FIRST SUMMER SESSION readily pick out selections in all the European languages as well as Chinese, Japanese, and Korean and many of the African languages. The college also provided the team that played the first basketball game west of the Allegheny Mountains in 1897. With the concentrated space exploration of the last 10 years, Mrs. Dienes said the library has received a number of lunar maps and two topographical maps of Mars. The collection is current, that is, all maps were made since 1900. Mrs. Dienes said earlier maps, especially those dated before 1850, are kept in the special collections section of Spencer Library. Maps of the Kansas-Missouri area are maintained in the Regional History section. The map library is part of the KU general library system and is available to anyone. Although the most frequent users are students in geology and geography, Mrs. Dienes receives requests for maps from other departments and from private citizens. Many of the maps came from such agencies as the U.S. Geological Survey and military mapmaking departments. Others came from private publishers and national agencies in other countries. Perhaps the largest source, however, is the Library of Congress. Under an exchange program, the KU map library sends a staff member to Washington to work in the Library of Congress for a set period, usually four weeks. In return, KU can select a large number of maps to be duplicated by the Library of Congress and added to the KU collection. Last summer the Kansas library obtained about 3,000 new maps under this program. Male Roles Still Remain To be Cast at The University Theatre Faculty & Students may apply For Information Call University Theatre and Ask for Dr. Jack Brooking Call Monday from 1:30-3:30 Help! Drink 'Em Dry at the Lounge Adjacent to Pool and Pinballs at Hillcrest Billiards S.W. Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa ★ SUMMER SPECIAL ★ "POOL AND A HALF" 1st hour regular price, ½ price on the remaining time thereafter per person Junior high campers plan concert program The junior high division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will present a grand concert performance at 2:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. The concert will conclude a 10-day program of intensive rehearsal and training of 300 young people from many states. Two bands and two choirs will present the performance, which features selection from the opera "Die Meistersinger" and several modern pieces. Guest conductor will be Dr. Milburn Carev. Concert Band Richard Brummett, Director Dr. Milburn Carey, Guest Conductor MINUTEMAN Robert H. Pearson DIE MEISTERSINGER Richard Wagner Excerpts from the opera arr. by Eric Osterling Mr. Richard Brummett Conducting AMERICAN FOLK RHAPSODY NO. 3 ... Clare Grundman SUITE FROM BOHEMIA ... Vaclav Nelhybel I. PROCESSION TO THE CASTLE II. FOLK TALE III. TOURNAMENT IV. ROUND TABLE Dr. Milburn Carey, Conducting THEMES FROM SYMPHONY NO. 6 Dr. Minburn Carey, Conducting **THEMES FROM SYMPHONY NO. 6** P. I. Tschaikowsky arr. Clair W. Johnson **HIGHLIGHTS FROM GIGI** Lerner & Loewe arr. by C. Paul Herfurth Mr. Richard Brummett, Conducting A CAPPELLA CHOIR A CAPITALIST CHOOSE Marilyn Curt, Director Dennis Mercer, Accompanist ALLELUIA (Exultate, Jubilate) . . . . . ORCHESTRA ORCHESTRA Larry Williams, Director ST. LAWRENCE OVERTURE Robert Washburn LOVE MUSIC FROM "BORIS GODUNOW" Modest Moussorgsky PASSACAGLIA Vaclav Nelhybel SHORT OVERTURE FOR STRINGS Jean Berger RUSSIAN SAILOR'S DANCE Reinhold Gliere - Isaac CONCERT CHOIR CONCERT CHOIR Marilyn Curt, Director Dennis Mercer, Accompanist **AVE MARIA** ... Victoria **KYRIE ELEISON (The Imperial Mass)** ... Haydn **BAILERO** ... Canteloube **THREE NORWEGIAN FOLK SONGS** ... arr. Coates I. The Night Bird II. Sulla Lulla III. Goatherd's Song **MAME** ... Herman-Albert SYMPHONIC BAND Dave Catron, Director Dr. Milburn Carey, Guest Conductor THE DAM BUSTERS Coates DRAMATIC PRELUDE Claude T. Smith MARCH LAMAR Clifton Williams OVERTURE IN C MINOR Eric Osterling OLIVER SELECTION Bart-Leyden ALLA BAROCO Caesar Giovannini Mr. Dave Catron, Conducting 8 KANSAN June 19 1970 8 BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam / Dayy Of 9 / Little Sadie Copper Kettle / Early Mormin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Q KIEF'S MICHAEL P. CUNNINGHAM --- Photo by Greg Sorber Panel continues After the heat in Dych Auditorium forced a move to Woodruff Auditorium, the panel regrouped and began to field more questions. Heckling from the crowd nearly prompted moderator Baker to stop the program at one point. Carnival greets panel (Continued from page 1) Panel members were allowed to answer any question, and no panelists were forced to answer any question. On the subject of Godless anarchy, McColl replied there was no such thing, because "collectively. thou art." Watson gave the process behind the decision to enforce a curfew, and said if a similar situation arose in the future, another curfew would be imposed. Shultz responded to a question about the possibility of allowing students two weeks in the fall to campaign for political candidates by saying that campaigning was Speaking on the question of violence as a means of action, Velvel said, "I wish I could say violence does not pay. But violence is like crime—and it does." perfectly all right, but "as far as closing down the University—no." Accusing Shultz of oversimplification, Wright said the question was one of alternatives, not of closing the University. The question of allowing alternatives, he said, was a question of whether "we will continue to have nothing but training schools for conformists." McColl suggested to Shultz that he submit a bill calling for a law similar to one in Minnesota allowing income tax deductions for political contributions and making provision for two weeks off for campaign purposes. POSTERS BLACK LIGHT PERSONALITY SIERRA CLUB PSYCHOLOGY TODAY DON QUIXOTE STUDIO ONE PLUS BLACK LIGHTS AND FIXTURES 919 Mass. TOWN CRIER Open Till 10 p.m. Beer Blast Bargains! MONDAY-50c Pitchers from 8-9 FRIDAY - 50c Pitchers from 3-4 TUESDAY-ALL the Beer You Can Drink For only $2 at THE STABLES News of the week in review SPACE CENTER, Houston Negligence from the launch pad through the entire Apollo program and its contractors, along with poor design, caused the explosion of an Apollo 13 oxygen tank near the moon a space agency investigation board reported. Board Chairman Edgar M. Cortright blamed the space agency and two of its contractors for allowing substantiated heater thermostat switches to be installed in the Apollo command ship. He said failure of these switches started the chain of events leading to the explosion April 13. ing to the explosion April 13. "It was a serious oversight in which all parties shared" Cortright said. WASHINGTON — A possible compromise that would fix a 30 day limit on any future commitment of American troops to battle without congressional approval emerged Monday in the Senate's continuing confrontation with President Nixon over Cambodia. Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.), a staunch critic of American policy in Southeast Asia, introduced the legislation which was immediately endorsed and co-sponsored by Sen. Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.) a conservative midwesterner, who frequently speaks for the White House. Javits said he did not know how President Nixon felt about his idea. But he said he considered the proposal the possible basis for a compromise to head off a constitutional crisis created by U.S. military operations in Cambodia and the continuation of the Vietnam War. critical of the press and of student dissenters, said the slogan of descalating the rhetoric is "the new favorite of editorial writers of all shades of opinion." But rhetoric needs to be elevated to a higher plane, rather than being suppressed, he said. "In its improper definition as invective, the rhetoric has already de-escalated," he said. WASHINGTON—The government, moving to clear up new questions involving the draft system, said the Supreme Court's ruling on conscientious objectors will not be retroactive. Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr, responding to the high court's ruling that a person need not hold a conventional religious belief to be a conscientious objector in the draft, said it does not apply to anyone who has been ordered for induction. Until the Supreme Court acts on that specific question, its decision will not be applied to such persons as boxer Cassius Clay, who had appealed his induction on grounds his Muslim religion qualified him for conscientious objector. MIAMI—Sniper fire and rock throwing broke out in Miami's predominantly black section of Brownsville. Shakespeare business profitable to Stratford STRATFORD ON AVON, England (UPI)—"The play's the thing," Will Shakespeare wrote and he was about half right. The other half of Stratford's thing is Will Shakespeare himself. The disturbance stemmed from complaints of overcharging, poor quality merchandise and dirty conditions at the market. Blacks also charged the store, owned by Fred Weller, a white man, charged too much. Stratford would be just another dying country town without the Shakespeare industry. Today this industry's heart, the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Company, is throbbing steadily through its $9\frac{1}{2}$ month season. Business is the same as always—phenomenal. According to purists, the Shakespeare industry has ruined Stratford just as the tourist industry has ruined the Costa del Sol. They decry the Shakespeare Tea Rooms, the ticky tack souvenirs, the Shakespeare Garage, the proliferating hotel rooms named for his plays. DETROIT — Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew hit back at newspaper editorial writers who he said have urged him to cool his rhetoric toward dissenters in American society. June 19 1970 KANSAN 9 But to American visitors, Stratford's commercialism doesn't strike all that sour a note. Most find it a lovely country town, immensely worth visiting for Shakespeare's birth place, Shakespeare's tomb, Anne Hathaway's romantic but fire scarred cottage and "the theatre." There's only one theatre here. Its undistinguished red brick hulk protrudes over the Avon's swans and is flanked by lovely gardens. Inside are 1,343 seats and standing room for 88 people. "We play to approximately 95 per cent over the season," said a spokesman for the Royal Shakespeare company. That means this year, over a season running from April 1 to Dec. 12 only 5 per cent of the tickets go unsold, including standing room. This year's program is especially ambitious—seven Shakespeare plays plus one by an Elizabethan contemporary, Christopher Marlowe. Mounting such a season requires a fair sized industry in itself. Agnew, who has been strongly Thirty-one college physics teachers are participating in a summer Institute for College Teachers of Physics at the University of Kansas, June 15-August 8. The institute is designed to provide teachers of physics in small colleges and junior colleges with a first hand knowledge of both classroom and laboratory materials that have recently become available. It is directed particularly to those whose college training was not primarily in physics. Gordon G. Wiseman, professor of physics, is director of the institute. The selected teachers receive stipends for their participation while earning six hours of college credit. 31 attend institute in physics Every prop, every costume, every scrap of scenery is manufactured by the company's own people in its own workshops. Besides the Stratford season, the company fills the Aldwych Theatre in London with modern plays and non-Shakespearean classics. It tours abroad—Japan and Australia earlier this year—and tours the British provinces with smaller scale productions Thus, for every actor on stage, the company employs 10 persons behind the scenes. Its total acting company this year is 47: its total employment is 520. This means that despite ticket sales which would make a commercial theater rich, the Royal Shakespeare loses money. Its government subsidy granted through the Arts Council amounts to $640,000 this year. Under Artistic Director Trevor Nunn—who took over the massive company at 28 and hasn't turned 30 yet—the Royal Shakespeare has developed a lean sparg style which sacrifices nearly everything to the Bard's language. In a typical production the stage is a gapping box almost bare of scenery. Costumes are simplified Music and lighting are minimal. RADIO SHACK Complete Line of Stereo and Recording Equipment - Stereo Headphones — starting at $7.95 - 2400' Polyester Recording Tape $2.69 (Lots of three) - Complete Line of Psychedelic Lights - Strobe Lights $29.95 - Police Radios (only a few) Hi/Lo $29.95 - Intercom only $9.95 1000 Massachusetts — VI 2-1566 Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Fri. till 5:30 p.m. RED DOG INN ICE ICE SAT. JUNE 20 $1 PITCHERS Nerva eight years from flight Nuclear powered rocket in test stage JACKASS FLATS, NEV. (UPI)—The United States is moving ahead with the development of a rocket engine that harnesses nuclear energy instead of fire to propel men and machines through space with twice the efficiency of the best of today's rockets. Tests last year in the desert, where prospector's donkeys once roamed, climaxed a research program dating back to 1955 and showed that the engine named Nerva works. The biggest hurdle now facing the world's only known nuclear rocket project is obtaining the money needed to build and test the final flyable engine design and financing construction of a rocket stage to carry it. David S. Gambriel, deputy manager of the Joint Space Agency Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) project, said American taxpayers already have spent $1.2 billion on the nuclear rocket program. He estimated $750 million more will be needed to get the engine qualified for flight in 1978 or 1979 and $800 million will be needed to build the stage. The potential of atomic energy in space is virtually unlimited. The potential of atomic energy in space is virtually unlimited. Nerva is still eight years from flight, but already it is being planned for a number of jobs. It could ferry men and equipment between the Earth and moon at a fraction of today's costs, it could carry heavy payloads to stationary orbit high above Earth, and it could propel unmanned probes and eventually manned ships to the planets. "It can go anywhere, far beyond the limits we can visualize right now," Gabriel said in an interview at the nuclear propulsion office in Las Vegas, 90 miles south of the desolate test site. "It's an entirely new kind of propulsion capability." The only similarity between today's rockets and Nerva is that they both expel hot gases to produce thrust. They go about generating the gases in completely different ways. The chemical engines used in all the big rockets of the United States, Russia and other countries produce thrust by burning two substances—oxygen or something containing oxygen and a fuel. The nuclear engine uses the heat generated by nuclear fission in a reactor to vaporize liquid hydrogen and expel it at twice the velocity of chemical rockets. Engineers measure rocket efficiency in terms of specific impulse—the length of time in seconds one pound of propellant will produce one pound of thrust. Nerva, using the lightest of the elements, has a specific impulse of 825 seconds. The best chemical rocket, burning the heavier mixture of oxygen and hydrogen, can generate one pound of fuel for 456 seconds. 10 KANSAN June 19 1970 Thus, the nuclear engine can carry out specific missions with less propellant than a chemical rocket and therefore carry more payload at less cost per pound. Or it can go farther, faster and maneuver more with a given amount of propellant. The hydrogen in Nerva is heated to about 4,000 degrees by passing through a reactor four feet in diameter and six feet tall not much bigger than a household hot water heater. Development of a flyable reactor and its uranium fuel elements to withstand tremendous heat for long periods of time has been a difficult and expensive task and the effort had discouraging results in the early 1960s. Reactor endurance then was on the order of five to 10 minutes. Last year, a ground version of the Nerve engine ran for a total of 3 hours and 48 minutes during a series of tests at the foot of the reddish Calico Mountains at the Nuclear Rocket Development Station. It was started and stopped 28 times and it produced up to 55,000 pounds of thrust. Two charred wooden light poles remain at the concrete and aluminum test stand as the only evidence of the great heat generated. Once the testing was completed, a heavily shielded yellow and black railroad car of the test center's "Jackass and Western" moved the Nerva engine to a radiation "hot bay" in a nearby building where the engine was remotely taken apart by men peering through a six foot glass window. There is no radiation hazard from a nuclear engine before it has been run. But once the reactor starts the chain reaction of nuclear fission to heat the hydrogen radiation becomes a problem. In space, a shield would protect astronauts from the engine's radiation. And after the rocket has done its job, it would be left in a sufficiently high orbit to keep it away from Earth for the 10 years that might be needed before radiation levels became harmless. safety has been extensively studied, and he said the Nerva could be launched from Cape Kennedy with an "essentially zero probability of an accident." Even if something did go wrong, a nuclear explosion would be impossible. Gabriel said nuclear rocket Nerva would be used as an upper stage of a Saturn 5 rocket or it would be carried into space by an advanced launcher. It would never be operated in Earth's atmosphere. Dr. Thomas O. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), told Congress May 19 that Nerva in a reusable rocket stage will have a key role in the space transportation system proposed for the 1980s and beyond. SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% ● Sandals ● Dress Shoes ● Sport Shoes ● Casuals ● Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence As now envisioned, the ingredients of that system will be a space shuttle powered by chemical engines to ferry men and supplies between the ground and Earth orbit, the nuclear rocket to shuttle between Earth orbit and lunar orbit and a space tug to fly between moon orbiting station and the lunar surface. McCalls The idea behind such a plan is that space transportation costs would be greatly reduced. With lower prices the reasoning follows that more would be done in space. With more missions, the system's development costs would be amortized over a reasonable length of time. As it now stands, however, only the Nerva engine assembly is an approved project. NASA, which is working on the engine itself, has $38 million in its budget for the new fiscal year for the program and the AEC will provide $43 million for work on the reactor. The Aerojet General Corp. of Sacramento, Calif. is prime contractor on Nerva and the Westinghouse Astronuclear Laboratory of Pittsburgh is the main subcontractor for the reactor. BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Dayne Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kette/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $699 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center M Summer Knits Mister Guy features the largest variety of summer knits in town. Choose from many colors, collar styles and patterns. Easily co-ordinated to our many slack ideas. Nine Twenty Massachusetts MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 MASSACHUSETTS 'Magic box' could ease life WASHINGTON (UPI)—Some day no home may be without Dr. George E. Mueller's little magic box. It would play wake up music in the morning and report the news while preparing the family breakfast and delivering it to bedside. It also would telephone for a taxi to get the man of the house to work, do the family grocery shopping, handle the family finances and give advice on the stock market, among other things. So far the box only exists in the imagination of Dr. Mueller, vice-president of General Dynamics and former head of manned space operations for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). But he predicts it might be reality by the year 2,000. The heart of the wonder gadget, estimated by Mueller to cost about $1,000 each, would be a small central processor, perhaps an inch wide, and inch deep and two inches long. Mueller said the idea occurred to him while he was preparing a series of lectures on space to be delivered at an international seminar in Australia in August. He concluded there was no reason why technical developments already known and used June 19 1970 KANSAN 11 TEACHERS WANTED TEACHERS WANTED Southwest, Entire West and Alaska for 24 years SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Free Registration - Good Salaries - Portraits - Passports - Applications 'Please call for appointment' Bajaj 5 721 Mass. bob Blank, Owner HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 by NASA shouldn't be wedded to other concepts still on the drawing board to make life easier for housewives. He acknowledged his dream might not be wholly pleasing to everyone. A broker whose advice ran counter to that of the magic box might be miffed. But Mueller was certain this would be offset by the housewife's pleasure with the cube. Embedded in a display console no bigger than a television set, it would have a high speed memory of about 10,000 words, a memory for voice commands, a circuit for recorded messages and a tape recorder that could store several days of designated programs. That would be only the beginning. The housewife could tell the computer what music she wants to hear and TV programs she wants to watch during the day and store the information for delivery when requested. When her husband is ready to leave for work, the computer would order a taxi and stay on the job until there was assurance that the cab was en route. Grocery shopping would be revolutionized. The hard working housewife would dial her supermarket and, with the aid of the computer's compressed information and a remote TV unit select the food she wants and load it on an automatic shopping cart tagged with her name and address. An automatically computed bill would be submitted on the TV screen for her approval then charged to her account and credited to the grocer's at the local bank. After ordering the groceries, the housewife could dial her favorite shop and select a new dress from those shown on the TV screen. It would be charged to her account and delivered before sundown. The computer could keep a current account of his tax situation, advise him how to avoid tax liabilities, and pay his taxes—as it would his wife's grocery bill—when they come due. The magic box could even evaluate the market and predict the action of his competition. Home of the "Big Shef" The electronic cube would provide the man of the house with a running account of his personal finances, and with current and past information about his stocks. Their performance would be analyzed and forecast, and orders to buy or sell would be honored. Try One Today 814 Iowa BURCER CHEF DEATH AND TAXES WASHINGTON (UPI)—It took President Abraham Lincoln's estate eight years to collect $1,279. 15 in federal tax refunds, proving that some things never change. Bernard S. Browning, president of General Business Services Inc., said the claim was filed in December 1864 and was finally paid in April, 1872. Exclusive Representative For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry L. G. Balfour Co. of Budges Crewel - Badges Favors - Guards - Mugs - Recognitions - Paddles - Lavaliers • Stationery - Gifts - Plagues - Gifts - Plaques - Sportswear - Sportswear "If The Shoe Fits . . Wear It" Rings - Crested - Letters 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog TOM PETTINY Let PLANNING A TRIP?? Maupintour Malls Shopping Center TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us the Sirloin Masthead Playing musical instruments VI 3-1211 Dine in candlelight atmosphere from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Finest sea foods Open 4:30 1½ MI. N. of Kaw River St. Bridge Monday VI-1-1431 DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W.6th VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS For the best in: DRIVE-IN AND COIN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 New York Cleaners K COIN OP. LAUNDRY 19th and La. 9th and Miss - Dry Cleaning - Alterations - Reweaving - Dry Cleaning 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 PICK UP VI 3-9868 - Lowest Prices G & R Body Shop 3,000 Colors 1248 East 13th - Student Discounts 843-3735 KANSAN CLASSIFIED Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the weekbook are deemed to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and India prints from the Hodge Podge at 15 W. Worth, 10:00-5:30 '68 Datatum 2000 roadster - S - sp, robin '69 Datatum 2000 roadster - S - sp, robin '70 Head w head. Call 842-1219-616 '71 Head w head. Call 842-1219-616 '65 MGB-BRG, almost new Michelin X's, overhailed transmission, new clutch, fantastic condition. Call 842-2191. Owner must leave town July 1. Needs someone to assume 18 payments on 69 Operating Managers 3,000 miles, extras. Phone VI-309-8260 UN4-4178 (Judith). 6-26 '65 Mus-225 horse V-8, hurst shifter, Crager mags, new wide rubber, new paint, super clean, $1195. Call 842- 2191. 6-26 '63 Sprite—black, new tires, both tops, rebuilt transmission & clutch. Call 842-2191. 6-26 88 VW - red sedan, one owner, care- tenance, priced at wholesale Call 842-219-1 Kustom K-100 Guitar Amplifier, 2-12" speakers, like new . . . must sell, 62.9 Robert's 770 XStereo Tape Recorder—$225. KLH Model 2 Stereo and FM Radio-$200. Good condition. Call Kurt at VI 2-7584. 6-30 For Sale: 1) Unused: copper chafing dish, calf wallet & key case, Lite-Gem high-intensity study lamp, 8 silver drinking cups, assorted silver dishes, 2) Used: brass nautilus decanter & 4 glasses, 10" GE fan, Tole tray table, assorted kitchen items, AM clock radio with appliance remote, 3) Used: brass nautilus AM, Short Wave (1.6-30 MC) radio, world-wide reception. Call VI 3-1400. 6-30 1967 Barracuda fastback, automatic, power steering. Formula "S" performance package. Good mileage and caliper. Call Fred at 843-0435 or UN 4-4326. 6-30 EMPLOYMENT Occupations That Pay Latest comprehensive information substantiated by U.S. Bureau of Labor on over 600 occupations and over 700 hour jobs are and occupations and professions rewarding their employees Serving Senior +1.60 for handling and postage Advisory Enterprises, P.O. Box 1063, Kansas City Missouri 64141, Dept. II. Experienced typist with electric typewriter desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-3597. Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist U.K. B.S. (English-Speech Education), Office-size electric) Phone 7-142 2873 Accurate typing of thesis, papers, manuscripts by experienced tliston IBM carbon ribbon electric. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson V12-2124. 6-26 Experienced in typing term papers, these other misc. typing. Have elec- tric spelling & punctuation type. Correct spelling & punctuation V1-9534, Mrs. Wright. 7-31 Typing: Former executive secretary to Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners, specializes in typing dissertations, theses, term papers. Call 842-8866. 6-30 Typing: Theses, Dissertations, Term Papers, Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, 842- 1522. 7-24 WANTED Baby-sitter in exchange for room and board for Sammer and Catering Co. Room 4 p.m. 6-23 Bare feet to be fitted for benchcrafted sandals. Over 25 styles from $14.75. 3 day service. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 842-0682. 7-31 Male student to share my furnished apartment, two blocks from campus. Must be seen to be appreciated $40 must be accompanied alls 842-3456 - 623 fore 10:00 a.m. Gabriele Pridal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. Wanted: 2 roommates to share house Wanted: 2 roommates to share house for small months. Call VI 2-2396. 6-30 Call VI 2-2396. 6-30 Galvin Paridak NOTICE The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $5.25 at the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 7-31 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest to-go-goodness B-bar-Que this is the place to get some, Ribs Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. phone: V92-150. Closed Sunday, Tuesday. Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grab Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. 7-31 Students of objectivism—meets every Monday night to discuss the philosophy of Ayn Rand. If desire further information, call 842-6210 after 5:30. Visit a nudist camp free. For information write Garden of Eden, P.O. Box 590, Tonganoxie, Kansas 66086. 6-26 Custom made leather—sandals, pants, pants, belts, wallets, purses, stash bags, and shoes. THE LEATHER WORKS, 1309, Ohio open 2-6 daily except Sunday. 6-26 The KU Infant Center, for infants 6 weeks to 12 months of age, is now open from 7.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays thru Aug. 7. This is a pilot project and demonstrating good infant-care procedures center can accommodate a few more infants in full-day care and several more infants in partial day care with either regular or occasional attendance of Human Development, KU UN 4-4392, or come to room 294, New Haworth Hall. Guitar Lessons. All beginners and advanced folk, fingerpicking, blues, rock. Experienced, references. $1.75 hour lesson. Call Kurt 6-39 I V 2-7584 Nursery school—Announcing summer and fall sessions at the 1st Presbyterian Church, MWF 9 to 11. Call 842-1253 or 842-8116. 7-7 Self-Dense Classes for men and women still forming Monday, June 15. Fire Stations, 745 Vermont. For more call 842-671-65. 6-19 MG, TRUMPH, VOLKSWAGEN, and other popular sports cars repaired and/or modified. Come on in and out, it's out. Just over the Kaw River bridge, the 317 North Second Street, Enterprises, the left Performance Store. VI-2191. 7-7 Ray Audio sells at discount prices. A.R., Dynac, Miracor, BSR, Shure and other lines. Phone 842-2047 eve. from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. 7-31 Jim's Shop. Tune-up, carb. work, minor engine repair on most foreign or domestic cars. Major engine work imports, other work considered. Specialty VW, IXV and British Call 842-7161 before noon or after 5.30. FOR RENT Tired of paying rent in a strange town? Two families are looking for one or two couples to share mortgage payments on a large house after Sept. 1. Prefer stable students interested in property management or getting most of your money back when property is sold. Call 842-9971 after 6:30 for details. 6-26 You get the 12th month free when you rent a 2 bedrum, unfurnished apt. for $135 or 1 bedram. unfurn. for $120. Same deal with 2 bedrum, furnished for $150 or 1 bedrum. furn. for $120. Call 843-2116 or 843-1085. 7-31 2 bedroom furnit. a/c $93 bathroom furnit. 1824, after a/p. pcm. 843-9373. Apt. for rent, some A/C-sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Borders campus and near town. Phone 843-5767. tf For Rent: Beautiful furnished air- conditioned 1 bedroom apartment to rent thru August. $100. Call VI 2-5752 afternoons and evenings. LOST AND FOUND The lost art of fine handcrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Podge. Find your new belt, vest, sandal, watchband at 15 W. 8th. 7-31 5.30 Lost—Eye glasses, black frames, Tues. 16th, somewhere from Snow along Jayhawk, Oread and Indiana Streets to 900 block. Ph. 842-7627. 6-26 THE HITE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III. Traffic director named John M. "Mike" Thomas has been appointed director of security at the University of Kansas, R. Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, plant development and coordination, announced today. Thomas has served in the KU traffic and security department since 1965 and was named acting director in February, a few weeks after the death of E. P. Moomau. Thomas's appointment as security director was recommended by a search committee composed of representatives of faculty, students, administration, local and state law enforcement officers. Thomas has completed three-fourths of the work toward a B.A. degree in sociology through part-time study while working fulltime in the traffic and security department. He is 26 years old, a native of Stillwater, Okla., and a graduate of Lawrence High School. His law enforcement training includes a diploma from the Institute of Applied Science in Chicago, a certificate from the Northwestern University Law Enforcement Supervisors Course, and completion of the Kansas Law Enforcement Officers Training School. "We are extremely pleased to have a director of security who is so well prepared, both by training and experience, for this important position," Vice Chancellor Lawton said. "While serving as 12 KANSAN June 19 1970 acting director during the event-filled spring, Mike Thomas clearly demonstrated his professional ability and his understanding of the complexities of this position." As director of security, Thomas is responsible for administration of the traffic and security department, including parking and traffic control, investigation of legal offenses on campus, control of disturbances, and supervision of the traffic and security staff. Thomas and his staff also provide liaison with other local law enforcement agencies. 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. Bongs exhibited in show detail. TradeMark Bog. Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass "Special College Tour" vi 3:43:27 CIRCLET $350.00 ALSO 150 TO 1975 DARIEN $300 WEDDING RING 87.50 VENTURA $300 ALSO $150 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 50 THE VENETIAN BROTHERSCOOP THE JOHNSTON WORLDWIDE Featuring MIKE FINNEGAN Tuesday & Wednesday June 23 June 24 Special Red Dog Inn Patronize Kansan Advertisers THE DRAUGHT HOUSE What Can You Get For A Dollar? UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TE IS LEGAL TENDER TS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE G 67058 WASHINGTON 969 G SERIES 1963 A Henry Seen ONE DOLLAR Saturday for a dollar you can get you and your date in the door or 2 pitchers of beer (½ gal.) Uppsala Follow the yellow brick road Photo by Greg Sorber One of the first obstacles facing a Midwestern Music and Art Camp student is finding the building he's looking for. A KU student gives a little friendly assistance to two bewildered campers. KU will host about 1300 high school campers for the next five weeks. See story and pictures, pages 12 and 13 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 80th Year, No.5 Tuesday, June 23, 1970 Administration overhauled The administrative organization at KU will be modified and streamlined in the fall in accordance with a plan submitted by Cancellor F. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and approved by the Board of Regents last week. Under the new system, the posts of provosts on the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses will be abolished and replaced with four individuals designated vice chancellors. Chalmers expressed the belief that the reorganization would improve lines of communication within the administration and enable the administrative branch of the University to keep pace with the changes in the legislative and judiciary branches of the University. "This is the complement, or the beginning of the complement, to the Senate Code and to the new judiciary," he said. "It would have been a quieter year if we had done these as parallel efforts instead of sequential ones." Title changes for those men to be named vice chancellors will be effective July 1. They are: - Francis H. Heller, dean or faculties and acting provost of the Lawrence campus, who will become vice chancellor for academic affairs; - William Balfour, dean of student affairs, who will be named vice chancellor for student affairs; - Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for finance, who will be vice chancellor for business affairs; Dr. Charles Brackett, acting provost of the medical center in Kansas City, who will become acting vice chancellor for health affairs. Vice Chancellor Keith Lawton, director of operations, plant development and coordination, will retain the title of vice chancellor for the present, but will work through the office of business affairs, headed by Nitcher. George Baxter Smith, vice chancellor for institutional planning, will be director of institu- Regents tighten policy on campus disruptions The State Board of Regents issued a new policy statement on the subject of campus disorder apparently aimed at preventing state schools from allowing students time off for political campaigning in the fall. The statement told state schools not to deviate from their published academic calendars. "Any deviation from this calendar for reasons other than natural disaster must have prior approval of the Board of Regents," the new policy declaration said. Optional systems of class attendance, such as were put into effect at KU during the last weeks of the spring semester, would be included under the term "deviation." KU requests record budget The toughened policy statement came out of a meeting last week with the heads of Kansas colleges KU's operational budget for the fiscal year 1972—a record $52.6 million—has been submitted for review by the State Board of Regents for consideration by the 1971 Kansas Legislature. Henry Bubb of Topeka, a member of the Board of Regents, said he personally was not satisfied with the way the board's policies were being enforced at state schools, and asked that proper action be taken against presidents who did not follow the board's policies. and universities under the jurisdiction of the Board of Regents. tional research and planning. Smith will also retain the title of vice chancellor. A statement issued by the Board of Regents before the meeting said, "We are unanimously committed to taking the steps necessary to insure the people of Kansas that our state universities and colleges remain open for the full academic year." He said, however, that he did not plan to ask for the resignation of KU Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., and denied that any such motion had been put before the Board of Regents. When the new system is in effect, only 10 persons will report directly to Chalmers, instead of 18, as provided by the old organization plan. The budget reflects an increase of 19.6 per cent over the budget recommended for the fiscal year starting July 1. In the 1972 budget, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. asked $52,648,003 for educational and general operating funds. Included in the budget for 1972 is a salary increase of about 8 per cent for faculty members, and 4.1 per cent salary increases for classified employees. The budget also included a request for $1,575,000 for capital improvements, which would be earmarked for remodeling in several campus buildings, improvements in electrical systems, street improvements and sidewalks in the Daisy Hill area. More than 120 new faculty members would be added with the approval of the budget, as well as more than 150 other employees, such as clerical workers and technicians. The Board of Regents will consider budgets for all state schools and present a package request to the legislature. In addition to the four vice chancellors and Smith, the directors of three independent organizations and two staff organizations will report to Chalmers. The independent organizations, which are part of the University, are the Alumni Association, directed by Richard Wintermote; the Athletic Association, directed by Wade R. Stinson; and the Endowment Association, headed by Irvin Youngberg. The staff organizations reporting to the chancellor are Univer- city Relations and Development directed by John J. Conard, and Urban Affairs, directed by Philip Gary. Those agencies which formerly reported directly to the chancellor's office will redirect reports to various vice chancellors, who in turn will carry them to the chancellor. Decision-making procedures and budgetary allocations will be simplified by delegation of authority, though the main responsibility remains with the chancellor. PETRONAS A tedious process Judy Martens, Scottsbluff, Neb., listens intently as the forms for registration and enrollment in the Midwestern Music and Art camp are explained. Judy will be an art student. PETER M. MILNE Tom Moore Professor says students bored during vacations CANYON, TEX. (UPI)—Summer vacation for most high school students is a wasted time, according to a West Texas State University professor. Dr. Fred Stoker, head of the Department of Educational Administration at West Texas State, said a study he made showed many students unhappy with present summer activities. "I believe they are bored with a three-month vacation, from June until September, as the public school system is now set up." Stoker said. "Our schools should take another look at the vacation period. To combat boredom and provide worthwhile experiences, more students could be involved in volunteer service oriented activities." The University professor also said schools should provide more summer activities in addition to remedial classes and, he said, colleges should waive some antiquated admission requirements and permit superior high school students to take college credit courses in the summer. "The vacation originally was set up to permit students to work on farms," Stoker said. "In a predominantly agricultural area such as the Texas Panhandle, only 20 per cent of the students now work on farms." Stoker said large groups of students wanted summer employment but were unable to find it. He said girls have a harder time than boys and often find nothing except baby sitting at low wages. "The survey shows that students who work during the summer months are generally happier than those who do not," Stoker said. "Less than six per cent of the students sampled believe the money earned in summer employment is essential to continue their education." Elkin named novelist in residence The first novelist in residence at the University of Kansas next fall will be Stanley Elkin of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., September 9-18. Elkin, a native New Yorker, is the author of "Boswell," published in 1964, a collection of short stories, "Criers and Kibitzers, Kibitzers and Criers," 1966 and "A Bad Man," 1967. Elkin will work with graduate students and advanced seniors in James E. Gunn's class in the writing of fiction. He will also give a public reading of his work. 2 KANSAN June 23 1970 Tom Moore is candidate Tom Moore, former director of the KU-Y, has announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the Kansas House of Representatives. Moore resigned his position as Executive Director of KU-Y late in the spring semester 1970, after a revision of the executive offices of that organization. In a prepared statement, Moore said his resignation from KU-Y had made it possible to plan a "reordering" of his life, to include the flexibility of schedule that would enable him to work effectively in the House of Representatives. A 1949 graduate of the University of California, Moore has been involved in youth programs for more than 20 years, 10 of these as Executive Director of KU-Y. "My training as a group work specialist and my experiences referred to above coupled with the time I am able to devote give me reason to hope that I might effectively represent all of the people of the 40th District," said his statement. COPENHAGEN (UPI)—When Otto von Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor, resketched the German-Danish border in 1864, so the story goes, his hand inadvertently covered Aeroe on the map, thereby neglecting to include the tiny southern Danish island in his booty. Bureaucrats annoy Danish island The islanders claim it is the Danish government that now has its hand over the map and that the cobble-stoned, thatch-roofed isle is little more than a blot on the horizon to the bureaucrats in Copenhagen. With hollyhocks lining the streets, 17th century pastel-colored homes legally protected as museum pieces, and the island enshrined as a must by travel experts, Aerose would appear to be sitting pretty. Not so. Like many small Danish islands dependent on farming, fishing and seasonal tourism, Aeroe has been in an economic slump. The national government thinks it has the cure: a bridge linking the community to the mainland. But someone forgot to consult the islanders. "The bridge will just help people leave," complained local newspaper editor William Nielsen. "The island's future lies in developing its own distinctive charm." To Nielsen, the solution lies in converting the island into a duty-free Hong Kong of the north, plus a few gambling casinos like the Crown Colony's neighboring Macao. In addition to tax-free revenue, there should be state subsidies for the island's ferry services, Nielsen savs. When Bismarck revised the borderline the people of Aerose opted for the Danish kingdom with the promise they would be given equal status with the rest of Denmark. "Local administration by local people," explained Nielsen, "Was supposed to have been the settlement. Instead, we're only a suburb of Svendborg, a town on the larger island of Fuen to the north. Because Denmark has neglected the island, Nielsen maintains, the 10,000 people of Aeroe are perfectly entitled to go their own way. To demonstrate their resistance, the islanders have begun rolling their own postage stamps (souvenir issues only, thus far) and the yellow-green red Aeroe flag, dating back to before 1864, has been fluttering from local flagpoles. One even turned up on an Aeroe pleasure craft, prompting a guard station to ask "What country is that supposed to be?" The Danish navy ordered the flag off the high seas. After the first murmurs of discontent, newsmen descended upon Aerose last summer and began sending back illustrated reports of life on the idyllic little island. But Nielsen has begun to worry that things are getting out of hand. "Please don't write that we are planning to declare independence," he said. "We are only standing up for the rights we won when we insisted on becoming Danish." An estimated 219,000 gasoline service stations now operate in the United States. THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD Featuring MIKE FINNIGAN ONE NIGHT TONIGHT ONE NIGHT ONE NIGHT ONLY TONIGHT ONE NIGHT ONLY RED DOG INN THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD Mini-skirt still favorite in Europe LONDON (UPI)—In France, the mini-jupe still draws ooh-las-las on Paris boulevards. In Moscow, minyubkus turn heads in Red Square. Whatever Europeans call it, the mini-skirt remains their favorite hem length, even if the maximidi look is a hot topic of cocktail party controversy. A survey by United Press International correspondents in European capitals of both East and West—from London where both the mini and maxi first made their mark to Belgrade where Yugoslav beauties lead the Communist fashion world—shows that the new longer hemlines are having an impact but not always the one designers had in mind. But among the very young and very fashion conscious, the midi and maxi are catching on harder with each successive season in the three main fashion capitals of Paris, London and Rome. And in London, where fashion trends and helmets probably move faster than any major city in the world, a major clothing manufacturer polled its customers between 25 and 50 years of age and found most wanted skirts just knee high. That is where they will be for fall, the company announced. —In Budapest, a state-owned clothing factory dutifully turned out a line of the latest maxicoats, sent them to Romanian stores and got them all back several weeks later. None had sold. Few girls have given up their minis altogether—as any tourist will note on a brief stroll through the streets. In fact, in Paris most skirts seem to have become shorter over the last year—except for a scattering of midis and maxis among younger mademoiselles. In France, even the refined models turned out by Paris high fashion designers failed to persuade most Frenchmen to accept the long look. A public opinion poll showed 84 per cent wanted the women they escorted to wear short skirts. Shops in Rome seem to be selling more longer dresses than anywhere else. "We're selling half and half, mini and midi, right now to girls of all heights," said saleswoman Dolores Di Nunno in a women's store near the famous Spanish steps. In the Santo Agostino chain store, clerks said mini skirts represented only about 20 per cent of sales and the rest were midi and maxi even to "older women." But on the streets, only an estimated one-fourth of the girls are wearing the longer skirts—changing hem lengths is a serious thing in a country where a bilingual clerk or a legal secretary is lucky to make 15,000 lire ($24) a week and where clothes are top quality but expensive. In London, where ready-to-wear is so cheap and good that the city has become a shopping haven for women from all over Europe, the longer skirts represent a sizable minority but seldom a majority of the stock in most stores. The maxi caught on so quickly in Britain partly because manufacturers could produce it for such a low price—a sizable selection of long skirts can be found for about $10 each—that women could afford to experiment. In Paris, where a $20 skirt is considered a bargain, women cannot and do not gamble the same way. Retailers and manufacturers in that fashion capital have admitted publicly that the entire mini-maxi controversy has depressed sales. A generally conservative attitude towards fashion right across the European continent also appears to be holding back the maxi-midi trend. "What is more worrying is that the contagious hesitation about hemlines is overtaking all departments of ready-to-wear," one business analyst said. "Polo shirts, for example, which stores run out of last year, are staying piled on the counters." June 23 1970 KANSAN 3 In Germany, a relatively small number of younger girls—mostly under 20—have started wearing cloth and leather maxi-coats over mini-skirts during the past winter, one of the toughest the country had known in years. Only a small proportion of longer looks were shown in shop windows for spring although several stores said they plan to gamble next fall. Women KANSAN A buyer in one leading Frankfurt store said "We've purchased a wide range of midi-length skirts and suits, but don't plan to put them on sale until autumn. We just don't know how they will go then but we expect the fashion to catch on with the younger women and girls. The older women will never go for them." "It's awful," said Ellen Denner, a 22-year-old dictationist in Frankfurt with the sort of slim figure and blonde good looks that create the best effect with the maxi-look. "I love the mini but I think the midi will catch on in the autumn. All the boys I know want us to keep the minis." In colder Stockholm, minis dominated the scene both in the shops and on the street. Maxis are few and midis are fewer and Swedish men, like most European males, hate them. "Would you really like to ruin this city's only beauties?" asked a 27-year-old student Haakan Bergman. "To put a maxi on a girl with beautiful legs would be the same as to cover up the sun." In Eastern Europe, the story is the same but with interesting variations. News of the midi-maxi look came to Russia last March 8, Women's Day throughout the Communist world, when the Soviet Union's most prominent designer, Vyacheslav Zaitsev, paraded his comradely models on television in the longer skirts. "Transition will be gradual, not before autumn, and then you will still see plenty of minyubkas (miniskirts) together with maxi-coats," Zaitsev told them. "But don't get alarmed yet." Leading fashion houses such as Dom Modely showed plenty of short dresses with long coats for spring, but the maxi look was not catching on as fast as the miniskirt movement did. Although the Soviet mass production manufacturers never got around to making minidresses, Russian girls started shortening their own hems and having miniskirts made up by tailors almost as fast as their Western counterparts. "We shall resist lowering our hemline here longer than our sisters in the west," a pretty chemistry student said. "And our determination to stick with the mini will be strong but sooner or later we shall have to yield to the caprices of fashion." But if Moscow women want to yield to the maxi-mini vogue, they will not find it in the stores. Their pretty comrades in Belgrade will and do. At the Centrotextil boutique in the Yugoslav capital's answer to Fifth Avenue, Kneza Mihajlova Street, the 32-year-old proprietor The occasional film star, tourist or diplomatic resident have been the only ones seen so far walking through the streets in maxicoats although many Russian women never changed from a slightly below the knee length that is almost midi. Mirko Polimac sniffed with disdain at the mention of the mini. "It's not fashion that's all," he said. "There will be growing interest in the maxi and midi, even in summer. We are selling them regularly, both dresses and coats. This is high fashion now." A less avant-garde boutique called Ateks had a different viewpoint. Its 20-year-old salesgirl Jovanna Bajic said the maxi "doesn't stand much of an overall chance against the mini. We've sold maxicoats, but not dresses or skirts. And not midis—in fact, we had a few midis but only sold them after we shortened them." "If you with litter will disgrace, And spoil the beauty of this place, BOSTON (UPI)—The Automobile Legal Association says American motorists could well heed the sign at the entrance to the Pleasure Gardens of Ceylon, which reads: May indigestion rack your chest, And ants invade your pants and vest." LITTLE BIT OF ADVICE There has been only one King John in English history. DROP ANCHOR AT THE Captain's Table We Offer: Pastrami sandwiches roast beef sandwiches corn beef sandwiches baked ham sandwiches bar-b-q ham sandwiches bar-b-q beef sandwiches giant veal sandwiches rueben sandwiches hamburgers cheeseburgers hot ham and cheese jumbo shrimp basket chicken basket fish stick basket turkey sandwich All Sandwiches Are Sliced Thin And Piled High! The Captain's Table Across the Street From Lindley Hall Near Chi Omega Fountain Open 8:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. KANSAN COMMENT An Incomplete Sneeze By JEANNE GOLDFARB By JEANNE GOLDFARB Somewhere in an undiscovered ring around the earth's atmosphere there is a vast repository. In this repository, suspended in their various stages of incompletion, are all the sneezes that have never come to fruition. Spring 70 was like an incomplete sneeze, slowly building to its culmination only to disappear, as it were, into thin air, leaving the prospective sneezer unfulfilled, vaguely disappointed, with a faint ginger-ale buzzing in his head and a resentful feeling of having somehow been cheated. "What were you doing when ...?" people ask. What were you doing when President Kennedy was assassinated, when Martin Luther King was shot, when Bobby was killed? Drinking at a party in a converted stable in South Central France, setting up camp in a coastal city of Florida, watching TV in a bedroom suburb of Washington, D.C.-violence and tragedy crystallized in a moment of time, placed into a drawer of the mind. Take it out, roll it in your hand like a piece of clay so that it is no longer just a moment in time but is a thing. What were you doing, they'll ask, during Spring 70? More important, what will you ask, during Spring 70? Spring 70 didn't fizzle out, it didn't grind to a halt, it didn't end with a whimper instead of a bang. The optional finals are over, the grades are in. The summer term, compressed in time and somewhat less serious in aspect, has already begun. But Spring 70 isn't over yet, even though the academic ceremonies and formalities that were salvageable have taken place. Spring 70 hangs suspended. But, unlike that unrealized sneeze, Spring 70 must be completed, and it is Fall 70 that will signal either its end or its continuation. Fall 70 is when we'll learn how Spring 70 is to end, if we're fortunate. We'll discover whether students at KU are committed to education and responsible expressions of dissent or to what seems to have become "business as usual" (that's the current term, isn't it?) on the campus. Fall 70 will indicate whether violence, destruction and agitation will be replaced by constructive, non-disruptive, within-the-system efforts to change that system. It will tell us whether Spring 70 is to be relegated to the position of a numbered event—Chicago 7, Expo 70, Kent State 4- or whether the question will have to be escalated and expanded to read "What were you doing during 'Year 70'?" or "What were you doing during the decade?" The waiting game, the stall for time, the great compromise have no place in the first weeks of a new semester, particularly when the hint of autumn in the last days of summer presages the getting - down - to - work atmosphere that usually surrounds the fall semester. The spirit and actions of Fall 70 can redeem those of Spring 70, can cancel out the "no win" appellation hung onto the sad months of April and May. September can be an end as well as a beginning. When will Spring 70 end? Waiting is. Amendment possible By Raymond Lahr WASHINGTON (UPI) — It is possible but improbable that the Constitution will be amended in time to provide for direct popular election of the President in 1972. Interest in the amendment has been reawakened by George C. Wallace's victory in Alabama and Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy's public musing about the likelihood of a new liberal party running a presidential candidate. Backers of the amendment see it as a safeguard for the two party system. The proposed amendment now awaiting action in the Senate would have to finish its route through Congress and be ratified by 38 state legislatures by next April 15 to apply to the 1972 election. The states needed only 10 months to ratify the 20th amendment, repealing prohibition, and nine to approve the 23rd, giving a vote for President to the District of Columbia. Wallace's vote as a third party presidential candidate in 1968 and the 46 electoral votes he collected gave a new push to the old campaign to abolish the electoral college system of electing the President. The House approved its version of a constitutional amendment for popular elections last year by a vote of 339 to 70. No such margin is expected in the Senate. There are doubts that "GET IN THE RE, CLEAN IT UP, GET OUT" Phoenix Fruit Juice & Start Purchase Co. © 1974 the Senate would give the amendment the necessary two-thirds vote and greater doubts that 38 legislatures would agree by April 15, 1971. Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), manager of the senate version, viewed Wallace's victory as a call for the senate to move quickly. He said the nation could not afford to have a minority vote president elected by bargaining among presidential electors, chosen by the states, or by the house, where each state would have one vote regardless of size. McCarthy, who rattled the teeth of the Democratic Party as an antiwar candidate for its presidential nomination in 1968 speculated about the formation of a new liberal party in the June 7 New York Times magazine. He thought that new party was almost sure to come if 1972 produces an issue like the 1968 debate over the war. "Well, at least we got in there . . . " Since House approval of the proposed amendment, the Senate Judiciary Committee has heard conflicting testimony from students of politics about whether the amendment would encourage or discourage formation of new political parties. The committee's majority report quoted only the views of Paul Freund, Harvard Law School professor, who described the amendment as "a deterrent to the rise of splinter parties." "Some critics of the direct popular vote have feared that . . . the plan would foster the growth of minor parties and would jeopardize the two party system," said Freund. "If, however, the only achievement of such splinter parties could hope for would be to force a runoff between the two leading candidates, the gain would probably not seem to be worth the candle in the first place and there could be an incentive to come to terms with a major party as at present." If Wallace ran as the candidate of a southern based party as he did in 1968 and McCarthy or a like minded candidate led a new liberal party, the voters would see a four party race resembling that of 1948. Harry S. Truman then won less than a majority of the popular vote but more than a majority of the electoral votes to retain the presidency. Washington window On secrecy By FRANK ELEAZER WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House will be asked shortly to give up its habit of deciding crucial issues in secret. It might even do that—except for one thing. The antisecrecy vote will be taken—you guessed it—in secret. Some quibblers will say secret is too harsh a word for the way the House has taken its stands this year for deployment of the antimissile (or ABM) against cutting impacted school aid for construction of a new 2.3 billion bomber; and against requiring the President to get out of Cambodia when he promised he would. The fact is, their votes were taken in open session of the House. There isn't any other kind. But they-and many others-were taken in a way to keep you from knowing how your congressmen voted, unless he happened to want to advise you or you were present and watching very carefully. What your congressman did was line up with dozens of others and walk up the aisle to be counted for or against. His body was counted. His name wasn't recorded. His face as he passed through the tellers was hidden from the press gallery, which would have had a hard time keeping track anyway since at the moment there are 430 members. Lobbyists or taxpayers so seated in the public galleries as to face the oncoming vote line were forbidden to record the name of any lawmaker they spotted. Rep., Charles S. Gubser, R-Calif. among others, says that the system fully justifies the word secret. He and others are demanding that the system be changed so that roll calls may be had on all significant issues. Their chance to change it comes later this month when a long awaited House reform bill reaches the floor. "Every citizen has the right to know how his congressman voted," Gubser said in a letter to fellow lawmakers. "The charge of secrecy is a valid one and we should move forthwith to correct what is wrong." You may have thought the Constitution took care of this problem. It says the yeas and nails shall be ordered in both houses of Congress on demand of one fifth of those present. Gubser says the time has come for a change. He is supported in his belief by a mixed bag of members sharing little more than a common concern for growing criticism of Congress. That is supposed to mean a roll call. And in the Senate that is what it does mean. The House, though, gets around this by legislating in "committee of the whole," a device borrowed from the House of Commons which way back in 16 hundred and something found itself at odds with the king and needed some way to keep his agents from observing its doings. Gubser said he would seek to amend the reform bill to provide for roll calls in the House not only on amendments approved in committee of the whole, as at present, but also on those that have lost. His problem is the one mentioned above. When his amendment is offered, it will be voted on by passing up the aisle between tellers. He's afraid it won't be the hawks and doves deciding the issue so much as the chickens. BOOKS ON BEING BLACK, edited by Charles T. Davis and Daniel Walden (Premier, 95 cents)—still another collection of writings by famous blacks, including James Baldwin, Arna Botemps, Gwendolyn Brooks, Eldridge Cleaver, W. E. B. DuBois, Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes, LeRoi Jones and Richard Wright. THE LOVING CUP, by Allan Prior (Crest, 95 cents)—A love story about a racing car driver (shades of "A Man and a Woman") and his wife, and what happens when the husband is involved in a freak highway accident and the wife finds herself serving a prison sentence. ME, THE FLUNKIE, by Andrew Sunmers (Premier, 75 cents)—A description of an educational experiment, Operation Wastebasket, centered around hard-core school failures, probing the thought processes of the dropouts. The author uses the work of the students, their papers, their reactions, to tell the story. MOTHER'S DAY, by J. M. Ryan (Gold Medal, 75 cents) Sing a Sad Song—The Life of Hank Williams, by Roger Williams. Blood and violence, in the guise of a novel, about the life of Ma Barker and her boys. Is there coincidence in the fact that Ma is now being glorified by Shelley Winters in "Bloody Mama"? What this book does present, however, is a comprehensive examination of country music to which Williams brought popular recognition outside the South. The author also details the rise of Nashville, Tenn. to prominence as the hub of the recording industry in America. Doubleday, $5.95. This latest biography of Hank Williams gives little new information about the late country western singer. Like others it tells of a "semi educated, good natured boy from a poor family in the heart of the South" who became a recording star and died at 29, the victim of "Love and alcohol and loneliness." While the Hank Williams tale itself presents no surprises, the book is worth reading because of the author's examination of William's music. *** THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postpaid payment at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and employment advertisement of the Summer Session. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertiser services of the Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial state of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of opinion expressions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. News Staff News Staff Managing Editor ... Cass Peterson Adviser ... Calder M. Pickett Business Staff Business Adviser ... Mel Adams Business Manager ... Jim Hatfield National Advertising Manager ... Donald R. Albon Member Associated Collegiate Press Cookbooks tell story of food fads NEW YORK (UPI) — Cookbooks tell the story of America's favorite foods, fads and cooking habits, says collector A. H. Perrin. That's why Perrin, a retired New York business executive who now lives in Berea, Ky., began collecting firsts among American cookbooks. Some of the volumes he owns are curiosities, compiled by or for home cooks in unique situations. "Operation Vittles" is one. It was published in 1949 by a group of American women in Berlin during the blockade. It's a mish- mash of homey American dishes such as cornbread, spoonbread and brownies, some foreign recipes from military missions and governments and a few improvisations whose contents are most inventive. Heaven-Knows-What Chicken starts out sensibly enough with chicken and celery. Then you add—among other things — pork sausage, mushrooms, chili sauce, parsley, shrimp and oysters. Perrin also has a copy of the first American temperance cookbook, published in 1900 by the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Its drink chapter, two pages long, includes two recipes for "unfermented wine" a euphremism for fruit beverages. But don't write the WCTU off as unimaginative. One sandwich recipe calls for a filling of butter, anchovy paste and a layer of nasturtium leaves. Emergency agencies on verge of creation NEW YORK (UPI) After nine months of study, President Nixon is about to create two emergency agencies as his first steps in a plan to protect the environment. Theodore H. White, the writer of books on recent presidential campaigns, said one agency, to be called the Environment Protection Authority (EPA), would monitor and regulate the environment, while the second would study and make predictions about the environment and try to change climate and weather. It would be called the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA). The EPA would take control from other government agencies of water control, air control, solid wastes, pesticides and radiation hazards. The agency would be a kind of "national environmental police force." First graders receive taste of job training BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (UPI)First graders in Ohio schools will get a taste of job training if a program that originated in Bowling Green catches on. A few of the teachers already have put the course to work. Thirteen teachers at the Elm Street Elementary School in nearby Perrysburg are enrolled in a course at Bowling Green State University to teach them how to teach the practical arts. One first grade class established an assembly line to make pen holders for gifts. Another class made leather jewelry, using authentic Indian methods. Other projects, using real tools, include the making of butter, knitting with student-made looms and producing paper. "We have always taught about the world of work but we felt our curriculum didn't go deeply enough." said Mrs. Lawrence Jensen, of Perrysburg, one of the teachers in the course. "The things we're learning in this course introduce our students into any number of occupational areas including construction and manufacturing jobs." The students use hand drills and jig saws among other real tools. Dr. Richard A. Swanson, who teaches the course, said he hopes the teachers will be given the chance to use what they've learned in their classrooms. "This is part of the growing interest in getting people ready for the world of work," he said. The North Sea once was called the German Ocean. Three years before the WCTU book was published, a vegetarian cookbook had suggested, among other things, a sandwich of buttered bread filled with two-thirds nasturtium blossoms, one-third nasturtium leaves. June 23 1970 KANSAN 5 "The new chief of EPA, who will report to the President directly, would have almost dictatorial powers to set continental standards and regulations, vertically and horizontally, conduct common research, bring industries to trial." The NOAA, which would be under the Department of Commerce, would make use of the best scientists to explore the entire atmosphere of the earth and its oceans. The third body in the President's master plan is the six month old Council on Environment Quality which "would be the President's eyes and ears for his entire government" in that every governmental agency would have to send their plans to the council to be cleared for their impact on the environment. White said the President is expected to announce his plans in a few weeks. He noted that the proposals will "enlarge the authority of the federal government even more than did Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal." Famous carrier to be mothballed BREMERTON, Wash. (UPI)—The USS Hornet, the aircraft carrier that recovered the Apollo 11 and 12 astronauts on their return from the moon, will be decommissioned Friday at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. The Hornet will join the Mothball Fleet after her crew and shipyard workers coat her with a preservative and remove equipment that can be used on other ships. The Hornet, 27 years old and the eighth U.S. naval vessel to bear that name, was commissioned at Newport News, Va., in 1943 and saw action in the Pacific in 1944. In 1966 she began her missions in the space program with recoveries of unmanned Apollo spacecraft. She was decommissioned after World War II but was put back into service for the Korean War. In 1956 she was reconverted for anti-submarine duty. T. R. RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" NOW Mat. 2:30 7:15 Eve. 9:30 Granada THEATRE ... telephone VI 3-5788 The same year, Anna K. Eccles wrote what really was the first American hamburger cookbook, although the ground meat patties she gave directions for were called salisbury steak. Her book was based on a health diet advocated by a Dr. Salisbury. It was built around simple fare, including a finely ground lean meat, cooked in 1-inch thick patties. NOW Mat. 2:30 7:15 Eve. 9:30 Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5788 The first American military cookbook, also in the Perrin collection, was "The Soldier's Health Companion," by Dr. J. Walter Scott, who interspersed medical advice with recipes and menus in his Civil War publication. TEXAS PINE Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-S788 Cookbooks often were compiled or translated by doctors, as early as the 17th century, reports COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (UPI)—Demand for pine timber from East Texas has increased sharply in the last year, according to Texas A & M forester Bill Smith. He said operation of new pulp and paper mills and expansion of existing facilities has tripled pulping capacity in Texas in the last 10 years. HIGH COST OF ACCIDENTS NEW YORK—Economic loss from auto accidents in 1968 hit a record $14.25 billion, reports the Insurance Information Institute. This figure, which takes into account such factors as property damage, legal and medical bills, and lost income, is equivalent to a bill of approximately $71 for every man, woman, and child in the country. Ben and Pardner shared everything the gold, the laughs, the songs... even their wife! PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents LEE MARVIN CLINT EASTWOOD JEAN SEBERG PAINT YOUR WAGON BETTY HOLLY AN ALAN JAY LERNER Production PANVISION' TECHNICOLOR' A PARAMOUNT PICTURE OPP Eleanor Lowenstein, a New York book dealer who specializes in out-of-print and rare books. It was through Miss Lowenstein that I learned of the Perrin collection. TOMORROW Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 The Pertin collection also contains a copy of the first American cooking school textbook, called "Cooking School Text Book and Housekeepers' Guide." Its author was Juliet Corson, who in the late 1800s taught in a New York training institution for women, then opened her own cooking school with classes for well-to-do women, domestic servants and the wives and daughters of working children and men and women "interested in high class cookery possibly for professional reasons." Eggs were selling then for a penny each, milk was four cents a pint and ribs of beef, 16 cents a pound. Miss Corson's book, like her classes, provided shopping information as well as mealplanning and cooking guidance. Perhaps the most poignant book in the Perrin collection is a post-World War II volume, "Recipes Out of Bilbidi," collected by an American army officer who had been a prisoner of the war in a Japanese camp in the Philippines. Col. Halstead C. Fowler wrote the recipes inside split envelopes from the few letters the POWs were allowed. The prisoners, an international group from America, Europe, Southeast Asia and the Philippines, fed themselves on boyhood recollections. Among the dishes they longed for, and recorded for later publication, was a Virginia version of brunswick stew, a Swiss fondue and a Javanese rijstaffel. Recipes for this multi-dish meal were contributed by two Dutch seamen who had been prewar chefs in the homes of Dutch oil "kings" in Java, then a part of Holland's overseas empire. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston has 401 parishes. THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED MOTION PICTURE! WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARDS including "BEST PICTURE"! FROM METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S PRESENTATION OF BEN- HUR WIDE SCREEN METRO Charlton Heston - Jack Hawkins Evenings 7:30 Only Mat. Sat. and Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 - Children 75c Now THE Hillcrest Showing Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA "A Totally Compelling Piece of Story Telling." — L.A. Times "THE FINAL ACT OF VIOLENCE MAY BE ONE OF THE COLDEST MOMENTS EVER UP ON FILM!" — Vincent Canby, New York Times COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a WILLIAM WYLER film THE LIBERATION OF LIBERATION OF L.B.JONES Lee J. Cobb Barbara Hershey A WILLIAM WYLER RONALD LUBIN PRODUCTION Eye, 7:15 - 9:15 Mat. Sat., 1:50 2:15 Adults $1.50 THE Hillcrest 2 ILLINOIS SHOPPING CENTER + STAIR AND DOWNS Proof of Age Required THE RELATIONSHIP THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SENSUAL PEOPLE IS LIMITED ...THEY MUST FIND A NEW WAY! LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEM D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" CAROLYN LEE Eve. 7:10 and 9:30 - Mat. Sat. Only 2:10 Ends Saturday Hillcrest Adults $1.50 Rated R ID's Required A moment to reflect . . . Two people with a good discussion going, or maybe two people with nothing to say at all, usually seek a place to themselves. This couple seems to find the walk around Potter Lake an ideal place for a quiet talk—or a tranquil silence. Fate of 18-year-old vote rests in President Nixon's hands WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Nixon will either sign or veto early next week a bill which would lower the voting age from 21 to 18 in all federal state and local elections by 1971, the White House said. The bill also would extend for another five years the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which has helped to add more than one million Negroes to the voting rolls in the South. The act is scheduled to expire Aug. 6. Although Nixon is in favor of lowering the voting age, he has previously expressed doubts it can be done without a constitutional amendment. However, White House sources expect Nixon will sign the bill into law despite this reservation. The courts could later rule on the constitutionality of lowering the voting age without affecting the provision of the bill to extend voting right guarantees. If Nixon were to veto the bill, Congress would have to rewrite it to eliminate the lower voting age and then vote on it again in order to extend the Voting Rights Act. Chances of doing this before the Aug 6 expiration of the act would be slim, congressional sources said. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler told newsmen Nixon would make his decision on whether to sign the bill after studying the question during the weekend at Camp David, the presidential retreat in nearby Maryland. WASHINGTON (UPI) — Attorney General John N. Mitchell accused the House today of "delaying to death" a key Nixon administration bill designed to combat what he described as a national epidemic of drug abuse. Ziegler said the President discussed the bill with his advisers Friday and at Camp David would study briefs submitted by constitutional lawyers as well as reports on the bill by congressional leaders and White House staff members. Until Ziegler spoke, there had been some speculation Nixon would simply hold the bill for 10 legislative days, permitting it to become law without his signature. Drug bill still awaits action the narcotics reform bill, combining proposals for less stringent penalties in some drug violation Widow wins negligence suit against four state doctors LOS ANGELES (UPI) — An ex-mental patient's widow was awarded $125,000 by a Superior Court jury on her claim four doctors were negligent in releasing her husband from a state hospital 36 hours before he killed himself. Mrs. Louis Boyce, 45, Long Beach, Calif., charged in her suit, her husband, Robert, then 37 and a chronic alcoholic, should not have been released from Metropolitan State Hospital, Norfolk, Calif. 6 KANSAN June 23 1970 Following his release Aug.21, 1964, Boyce, who had attempted suicide on two prior occasions, killed himself by attaching a hose to the exhaust of his car and breathing carbon monoxide fumes. Boyce was sent to the hospital on a "long term commitment" June 17, 1964, but was given a "certificate of competency" before he was discharged. The Cincinnati Zoo, built in 1906, was the site of the first barless animal exhibit in the United States. cases with such controversial police authority as "no knock" entry, was submitted to Congress last July 15. It was approved 82 to 0 by the Senate on Jan. 28. But Mitchell said there appears to be no immediate prospect for House passage of the bill and asserted that the delay would "paralyze our whole coordinated assault against narcotics of which the bill is an integral part." "The House of Representatives is delaying to death a key administration bill designed to combat the national emergency in narcotics and drug abuse." Mitchell said in a speech prepared for a meeting in Bal Harbor, Fla., of the Florida Bar Association. The text was made public by his Washington office. Mitchell charged that the bill "is being delayed to death by a combination of bureaucratic slowness and minor criticisms." "We could go on for years having hearings and making minor adjustments to our proposal," he said. "But we do not have years to waste—really we do not have any time left at all." BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Q ★ A 10% discount ★ A 10% discount ★ Pick-up and delivery service ★ 3 locations (one near you) 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 ★ ★ Heath wins election in English upset LONDON (UPI)—Conservative party leader Edward Heath unseated Labor Prime Minister Harold Wilson in a general election upset blamed in part on a housewives revolt against the soaring cost of living under the Wilson government. Wilson asked for an audience with Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace to hand in his Labor party government's resignation and with it his hopes of being the first prime minister in British history to win three consecutive five-year terms—as predicted by public opinion polls. It was possible the polls predicting a big Wilson victory had led to complacency—and nonvoting—by Laborites. June 23 1970 KANSAN 7 By nightfall Heath would be in power in the biggest political upset in Britain since Labor Party leader Clement Attlee threw out the government of Prime Minister Winston Churchill at the close of World War II. Heath's conservatives topped the figure of 316 in Parliament seats and thus won an absolute majority in the new 630 member House of Commons. It is party strength in the House which determines who is the prime minister. Wilson had waited until this moment before conceding formally, although in television interviews earlier he left no doubt that he knew he was a beaten man. Within minutes Wilson's No.10 Downing St. office announced, "Following the announcement that the Conservatives have secured more than half the seats in the new House of Commons the prime minister has asked for an audience of her majesty to tender the resignation of his government." At almost the same moment a furniture moving truck pulled up outside 10 Downing St. Heath stepped out of the door of the fashionable Albany apartment house where he has a bachelor flat and made his first public appearance as prime minister elect. Heath, noramly a shy retiring figure, stood on the doorstep in the sunshine waving and smiling with undisguised delight at crowds cheering and clapping him. tral office where another large crowd cheered him. He stepped into his car and was driven to the Conservative cen- After thanking his supporters, Heath told them in more serious vein, "We must forward the right policies and we have convinced the country they are the right policies. We are going to provide them with the right government and that government is going to provide for a better country tomorrow." In the belief of British politicians, commentators and of Wilson himself a house wives' revolt against rising prices was the only plausible explanation of Labor's defeat or at least a major factor in it. More than 1.5 million British teenagers voted for the first time in this election but it still was not clear how they had cast their ballots or whether they tipped the scales in Heath's favor. Polls taken of teenagers before the election appeared to indicate that in general they probably would vote more or less along the same lines as their parents. Later it was announced Queen Elizabeth was hurrying back to London from Ascot race course and would receive Wilson to accept his resignation. Heath was expected to be summoned soon afterwards to the palace to be named prime minister. FAST COMPUTER SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—A research project that took months or years before the University of California's Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute installed a computer can now be completed in between five minutes and one and one-half days. BELLS CLOTHES INDIA PRINTS INCENSE LAMP SHADES EARRINGS BLACKLITES SANDLES RINGS PIPES LEATHER THINGS POSTERS STRAWBERRY FIELDS 712 MASS. 712 Mass. Sandals are the goin' thing for Spring. Wrapped 'round with hardware, bold on design or circled in perfs, sandals are where it's at, sports fans ZOIAC ALTA Style no.22 Style no.23 Style no.16 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Southern black, white blood battle waged BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) Louisiana's only Negro legislator urged repeal of a 20--year-old state law requiring blood in hospitals to be labeled with the race of the donor. Aamco charged with insincerity of advertisement WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has charged Aamco Automatic Transmissions Inc., which advertises as the "world's largest transmission service" with illegal practices. The FTC said in a complaint Aamco's 200 shops advertise simple transmission adjustments for $4.50. "safe guard service" for $13.75 and removal and inspection for $23. "Although such services may be performed from time to time," the FTC said, "these advertised offers are insincere in that their real purpose is to get leads to prospects in order to sell them much more expensive repair jobs." The FTC said Aamco has refused to reassemble transmissions when customers did not authorize further work and failed to disclose when repairs were made with used parts among other deceptive practices. 8 KANSAN June 23 1970 A white legislator attacked the Department of Health Education and Welfare (HEW) and said the move would allow the federal government to control people's bodies. "HEW has taken over our schools and now they want to take over our bloodstreams," said Rep. Archie Davis of Bush La. "They've just gone too darn far when they start messing with somebody's blood." State Rep.. Enrest Morial, a Negro from New Orleans, urged his fellow legislators to repeal the "The climate of this state we hope, has changed since that time," Morial said. "The attitudes of the people have changed, as evidenced by my presence in this house. law passed in 1950 requiring race labels in state blood banks. "This legislation was passed in the heat of passion. It has no scientific basis," he said. "We all know the climate of the state at that time." But Rep. Ford Stinson, speaking in favor of race labels on blood, said Negro blood is different from the blood of whites. "Sickle cell anemia is in the Sickle cell anemia is a hereditary disease found mainly in Negro races, characterized by sickle or half moon shaped red blood cells. The disease is genetically based and is neither contagious nor infectious. colored blood and not in the white blood, and reacts at high altitudes," Stinson said. "That may be the reason there have been no colored astronauts. It's not a racial issue whatsoever. It's a fact that the blood is different-medically and otherwise." Generation gap exits in Grandma's heirloom NEW YORK (UPI) — The younger generation would cheerfully trade in Grandma's heirlooms for Puccini-printed ice buckets plastic cube tables and psycheled-colored clocks. That's the word from H. Jay Shaffer director of behavioral studies for a trading stamp company. Shaffer even knocks what to another generation is one of his firm's selling points—its age. The firm, Sperry and Hutchinson (green stamps) is 75 years old, but the behavioral scientist says such solidity doesn't impress the young. "It isn't enough for a coffee pot to make good coffee," he said. "It must be fun to live with, too." "The 'now' feeling among young people reflects a change in values," he said. "They no longer want heirloom possessions. They want products that will do the job, and also fit into their current life style. "The emphasis of today's youth is on experience. They do not set a high value on the security of ownership, as did the depression-conditioned older generation." He advises business to respond through form, color and presentation. The Lateran Treaty of 1929 made the Pope ruler of the small state of Vatican City. BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wrayman/Day Of 9/1 Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT Includes Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center e KIEF'S WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU GOT YOUR MONEY'S WORTH? Could it have been when you pulled a very unsportsmanlike move by driving your car through a mud puddle, spraying most of its content all over a campus policeman who had just finished writing you a ticket for illegal parking? Or was it when you spent $.06 for a stamp to sign up your favorite friend to the Columbia Record Club, and then heisted the 12 free records he was entitled to for joining! It certainly was grins watching him and Columbia battle back and forth over his "membership" and "money owed." Or was it the last time you spent Tuesday night at the Stables? That's the night when $2.00 buys all the beer you can sip, chug or just plain guzzle through your parched lips, down your dehydrated throat to satisfy your unquenchable thirst. It's the best bargain anywhere, especially from a female standpoint since she can enjoy the same Stable hospitality and values for only $1.00. Greatest new British import since the Mayflower! new ver! It may have taken 300 years, but now, genuine fish & chips are here. Genuine, that is, if they're Alfie's. Only Alfie (that sly rascal) takes the very freshest whitefish and fries it to a just right golden crisp. And serves it up with the crunchiest, lightest chips in the colonies. Plus the tangiest, most tempting secret sauce you've ever tasted. So special, grown men weep for more! Try a bit of tradition for lunch or dinner, today. Verily, there's a grand bit of Great Britain in every bite! Budweiser on Tap Alfie's AUTHENTIC ENGLISH T.M. Alfred's Fish&chips RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT 6th and Maine VI 2-5500 © 1969, Alfio's Fish & Chips, Inc. Vocational training to be aided A new breed of vocationaltechnical education experts is working to help the four of five Americans in their late teens who are not likely to graduate from college. In schools around the country they are pioneering a quiet but promising revolution known as the "new careers" program. The program goal is to create new approaches to preparing young people for careers as paraprofessional aides or technicians in fields where they are critically needed, such as health, local government administration, education, welfare, and new technical fields. In the technical area alone, a dozen new technologies are emerging-for example, electromechanical, nuclear-medical, environmental each offering an estimated 5,000 to 20,000 paraprofessional jobs over the coming decade. To help in this "new careers" effort, 10 experimental projects totaling more than $5 million are being funded by the Office of Education's National Center for Educational Research and Development (NCERD). Out of the projects will come educational programs that will have all-new curriculums, advanced teaching techniques, individual ways of learning, and procedures for testing the effectiveness of the programs. The overall effort includes two- and four-year colleges, technical institutes, high schools, and adult education activities as well as employers, professional groups, government agencies, unions, scientists, and researchers. "Indeed, anyone who is concerned about helping the schools educate and train people for rewarding paraprofessional careers can count himself in," says Howard F. Hjelm, Acting Deputy Associate Commissioner for NCERD. Dr. Hjelm cites several projects supported by NCERD as examples of the new approaches. He believes that "taken together, these vocational-technical projects represent a real turning point in our ability to meet critical demands for manpower in public and human services. People looking for a rewarding career will find that's where the real action is going to be." At the University of California, Los Angeles, Melvin L. Barlow is heading a four-year, $2 million project to come up with new courses and techniques to train people for as many as 40 kinds of medical and dental positions. Together with 20 community colleges, teaching hospitals, professional gorups, and government officials, Dr. Barlow's team is working on several innovations. One in the management of health facilities will result in an experimental course for a new health career—ward manager. He would relieve nurses of many administrative and housekeeping chores so they could focus on nursing Another involves work on "cores" of common courses that students in a related specialty could take. In the dental field, for example, project staff are developing common courses for three jobs—dental assistant, hygienist, and lab technician. "By 1972 we hope to have our new curriculums ready for nationwide distribution through commercial publishers," says Dr. Barlow. He expects that the courses will benefit at least 5,000 people in California alone. New two-year curriculums in the emerging field of electro-mechanical technology already have produced their first graduates. This May, 17 young men, mostly from underprivileged families, were the first to receive associate degrees in the field from the Technical Institute of Okla- Today's plastics may be antique of future NEW YORK (UPI)—One day our descendants will collect plastic antiques just as today's collectors search out a true Tiffany lamp or a Bentwood Chair. Plastic can become an antique you say? Keep in mind that many of the furnishings and accessories of untold value today were mass production items once upon a time. There is a surge of plastics all through the house, report those on the furnishings scene a "revolution" that's being felt around the world. Various industry sources estimate that before this decade is ended, plastics use in furniture will top the billion pound mark. At the recent International Home Furnishings Market in Chicago, an inaugural display featured plastic furnishings from 34 manufacturers representing practically every home furnishings item in use. One study by a chemical company indicated that about half of the 6,000 U.S. manufacturers use plastic components, exclusive of upholstery and surface coatings. All of us are familiar with plastics around the house such as the fruit juice container, wrappings on items from the drycleaners, the vinyl upholstery or the kitchen counter tops. What's new is plastic for its own sake in furnishings, not its use to imitate wood. Walk through some of the home furnishings displays in the stores to see what we mean. The crux of the development is a one step molding process which increases production rates while cutting labor costs. For instance, the Polyform Corp. of America, in High Point, N.C., is June 23 1970 KANSAN 9 making a well designed table at the rate of one every three minutes. It does not at all mean the end of the wood craftsmen. But their numbers are dwindling and the cost of mechanical reproduction of a wood carver's master design is increasing. A similar table of wood would take one week to produce and a clear acrylic three days at a minimum. And cost of using either would be as much as seven or eight times that of molded plastic. To those in the business, a plastic is a material just as wood, steel or leather is. And each material will perform differently. "Services for the poor have too fragmented, inflexible, lacking in accountability and contain serious gaps—particularly in programs to provide a decent home for displaced children," said Robert H. Finch, new presidential counselor. Nixon plans aid to young WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Nixon administration proposed a new federal program of social services to children under 5, particularly at the poverty level. homa State University, Stillwater. The program was developed by the Technical Education Research Center, Cambridge, Mass., as part of a 4-year effort to develop and evaluate complete curriculums for new technologies. The programs are to be general enough to encourage schools throughout the country to adapt them to local situations. The social service proposals were sent to Congress as an amendment to the administration's proposed welfare reform plan. Three areas of the proposed social service legislation will emphasize the administration's commitment to American children, Edward Zigler, new director of the Office of Child Development, told a White House news conference. The Center, headed by Arthur H. Nelson, is also devising curriculums in nuclear-medical, biomedical, and electro-optical technologies. Dr. Nelson notes that in the bio-medical program at one pilot school, 78 per cent of the students came from families "Many of the jobs waiting in these new fields are within the levels of aspiration and ability of many disadvantaged people," according to Dr. Nelson. They offer excellent ways for economic and social advancement." earning less than $5,000 a year. At the Institute for Local Self- Government, Berkeley, Calif. teams of city officials and com- munity college educators are working on programs to train people for careers in more than 20 expanding public service occupa- tions. Some 800 graduates of tal health positions, while about the programs already are working in welfare, recreation, and mental health positions, while about 5,000 students at more than 40 California community colleges are studying all or part of the courses developed. According to project director Randy H. Hamilton, a special feature of the programs is that "in combination with work training they enable people to advance from entry-level to full-professional jobs depending on their ability and motivation." Funds for the projects are provided under the amended Vocational Education Act of 1963 which authorizes research, training, and experimental programs to meet special needs in vocational-technical education. RADIO SHACK Complete Line of Stereo and Recording Equipment - Stereo Headphones — starting at $7.95 - 2400' Polyester Recording Tape $2.69 (Lots of three) - Complete Line of Psychedelic Lights - Strobe Lights $29.95 - Police Radios (only a few) Hi/Lo $29.95 - Intercom only $9.95 1000 Massachusetts — VI 2-1566 Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Fri. till 5:30 p.m. Mid-Summer SALE! Dresses Reduced 30 to 50% BRAS, SLIPS, PANTIES (discontinued styles) REDUCED 40% FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833 Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN Soyuz 9 leaves questions unanswered MOSCOW (UPI) A Soviet space commentator said the record breaking flight of Soyuz 9 may not have answered all the questions puzzling scientists about man's ability to endure prolonged periods in space. His comments, more cautious than those of many other Soviet space analysts, came as cosmonauts Vitaly Sevastianov and Col. Andrian Nikolayev settled down in quarantine for post flight medical and psychological checkups. the cosmonauts landed Friday after nearly 18 days of earth orbit, a record for space endurance. The official Soviet news agency Tass said they arrived quietly at the "star city" of Soviet cosmonauts outside Moscow Saturday and commenced about 10 days of quarantine in a special germ free apartment. Only a team of three doctors would be allowed to conduct the tests necessary to determine in detail how well they have survived their space experience, Tass said. "The medics insisted that meetings with relatives and friends should be held to a minimum," the agency said. "In particular they prohibited handshakes." Their aim of keeping the cosmonauts antiseptic had its human limits however. Both men kissed their wives and fondled their children in an emotional get together recorded by television crews. The principal objective of the Soyuz 9 was to test man's capability to live and work efficiently under conditions of weightlessness, free of the pulse fluctuations and weakenings of bone and muscle structure experienced by earlier spacemen. "This problem has been given great attention since the original decision to send men into space," science commentator V. Pavlov said in an article printed in Pravda, the Communist party paper. "Many positive results have been collected, but nonetheless one cannot state that the problems of weightlessness have been completely studied," he said in a review of space exploration through Soyuz 9. "With the increase in duration of space flights, the following factors have been added to the problem of weightlessness—long isolation limitations of movement, psychological strain and the possibility of infections from microorganisms inside the spaceship." Air Force deploys MIRVs WASHINGTON (UPI)—Multiple nuclear warheads have been placed for the first time on some of America's intercontinental missiles, the Air Force has indicated. Ten Minuteman ICBMs were the first to receive the multiple warheads at Minot, N.D., an announcement said. Plans to deploy the MIRV (multiple independently targeted reentry vehicles) missiles this month were announced last June 10, but have been criticized as a possible blow to the Strategic Arms Limitations Talks at Vienna. The Air Force announcement recalled that Air Force Secretary Robert C. Seamans Jr. said in March "we will start fielding the Minuteman III in June." The "III" is designed for the multiple warheads. "We can now say that the Strategic Air Command has assumed responsibility for the first flight of the missiles at Minot AFB, N.D." the announcement said. "The first flight consists of 10 missiles and one launch control facility." Although this was not saying directly that the multiple warheads were aboard, Pentagon Adviser critic resigns following sharp attack WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Nixon administration's most outspoken advocate of import restrictions, Assistant Commerce Secretary Kenneth N. Davis Jr., was removed from office following a sharp public attack on three White House advisers. Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans issued a two-paragraph statement accepting Davis' resignation less than 24 hours after Davis said President Nixon was getting bad advice on legislation to limit imports of textiles and shoes. "Mr. Davis chose to express his own personal views in New York yesterday on matters relating to certain United States policies and the resolution of some questions of international trade," Stans said. "His views do not represent my own or those of the Department of Commerce." Davis, a former treasurer of International Business Machines Corp., was assistant secretary for domestic and international business. There had been no prior indication that he planned to resign. Salk to wed Picasso's ex-mistress LA JOLLA, Calif. (UPI)—Dr. Jonas E. Salk, developer of the first polio vaccine, will marry Francoise Gulot, former mistress of Pablo Picasso, in Paris July 9. A spokesman at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies here said they would divide their time between La Jolla and Paris following their marriage. It will be the second marriage for Salk, whose divorce from his wife of 30 years was final in 1969. Salk is founder and director of the Salk Institute, formed here in 1962. Miss Gulot is the author of the book, "My Life With Picasso." Salk, 55, gained international acclaim in 1955 when he developed the first effective vaccine against polio. Until that year approximately 28,000 cases of polio were reported a year. Now about 50 a year are reported. 10 KANSAN June 23 1970 Stans said Davis "informed me last week of his decision to leave his position of assistant secretary of commerce at an early date. I agreed with his decision." Davis, in a speech to a management research meeting in New York said White House aides Henry A. Kissinger and Peter Flanigan and chairman Paul W. McCracken of the Council of Economic Advisers were doing a "disservice" to Nixon by advising opposition to the import control bill. The measure, drawn up by Chairman Wilbur Mills, (D-Ark.) of the House Ways and Means Committee, would restrict imports of apparel textiles and shoes. It is aimed at stopping a flood of low cost imports from Japan, Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan. sources said the missiles could not have reached this stage in their deployment without their being ready to fire. The one designed for the Minuteman III carries three nuclear warheads, each equal to about 250,000 tons of TNT or more than 10 times the power of the Hiroshima bomb. NOT SEEING THINGS STRAIGHT ANYMORE? Enhance them new sensibilities with a black light poster from The TOWN CRIER 919 Mass. Open till 10:00 p.m. come as you are... hungry Sandy's home of the plaid beret Don’t Forget “Pepsi Hour” Daily from 3-4:00 AT SANDY'S 15c Pepsi For 10c TARTAN HEADBAND the university shop announces its ANNUAL SUMMER SALE • JUST IN TIME FOR FATHER'S DAY!! • SUITS KNIT SHIRTS SHOES DRESS SLACKS SPORTCOATS RAINCOATS BERMUDAS SHIRTS TIES USED FORMALS FLARE SLACKS SWIMWEAR JACKETS WASH PANTS NOW 20-25-33-or 50% OFF Entire Stock Not Included the university shop MEN'S APPAREL Slight Charge For Alterations On the Hill 1420 Crescent Road Al Hack Shultz is confident as he enters new post WASHINGTON (UPI)—George P. Shultz, the former dean who has been assigned the task of bringing managerial efficiency to the $200 billion a year federal bureaucracy, said he was confident he would have the complete backing of President Nixon. Shultz is scheduled to leave the cabinet and his post as labor secretary on July 1 to become the first director of the newly created Office of Management and Budget. In an interview with two UPI newsmen, Shultz said details of the new office had not yet been worked out. He indicated the job would evolve, probably as a result of day to day problem solving. Shultz said he would report directly to Nixon from an office in the White House. He will not be required to filter his views through any other White House aide, he added. Asked if he had been assured of the President's backing in any controversies that might arise out of efforts to root out inefficiency and waste, Shultz replied: "It is his policies we will be carrying out. I am sure he will back his policies." Shultz brushed aside specific questions about the details of his new job during the interview conducted in his Labor Department office. He seemed relaxed and confident as he talked. One wall of the office is lined with books making it look more appropriate to the University of Chicago, where he was once dean of the School of Business Administration, than to a federal department. "If this organization is to perform well, it shouldn't regard itself as a fixed and rigid structure," he said. "We will have to deal with problems as they come along. "If we are able to make the government operation more effective, we will either save money in the sense of doing the same thing at less cost or we will be able to accomplish more with the money that is spent." It is generally conceded that the government wastes billions every year because of overlapping programs and general inefficiency. Shultz said, one of his jobs would be to coordinate the efforts of various departments. Although the new office will have a finger on every program, Shultz said it would not attempt to dictate day to day policy. Shultz said he had been assured of direct access to the President. Many top officials, including some cabinet officers have complained publicly or privately that they are unable to make their views heard by the President. Dissidents criticize AMA at convention BALLYMENA, Northern Ireland (UPI)—Ian Paisley, militant Protestant leader, won election to the British Parliament and Bernadette Devlin, his arch foe, also won reelection. Some groups, including the Medical Committee on Human Rights (MCHR) turned down the invitation. But representatives of about 25 others came to the forum and took over speakers' platform in a steady stream of criticism against the AMA which included some bits of "guerrilla theater." AMA officials refused to grant demands of the dissidents to address the policy making house of delegates, but voted to let them air their views at an open forum. Their polling triumphs set the stage for confrontations between them on the floor of the House of Commons at Westminster. "Of course my election will help peace in Northern Ireland," Paisley said after winning away the Unionist-held seat at North Antrim, "I will be in the House of Commons to answer the lies and slander of Bernadette Devlin." "Medical aid is a right and not a privilege," was the gist of each speaker's argument. Shouts of "right on" filled the room. Miss Devlin, the 23 year old campion of Northern Ireland's minority Roman Catholics and of its civil rights movement, successfully defended her mid-UIster seat which she won 13 months ago. Protestant leader joins Catholic foe at Westminster June 23 1970 KANSAN 11 CHICAGO (UPI)—The American Medical Association opened its 119th annual convention Sunday with a conciliatory gesture toward dissident medical and welfare groups threatening to disrupt its sessions. The speakers refused to be interrupted. One continued his speech against the AMA even when a white smocked girl collapsed in front of the podium and fell to the floor, feigning death. Again The five day convention is expected to attract about 10,000 physicians and the 244 member house of delegates was scheduled to take up such proposals as a liberalized abortion policy, shortening the time it takes to become a doctor, providing more doctors for slum areas, and measures to reduce mounting medical costs. The forum for the expression of criticism of the world's largest medical meeting was an unprecedented move by the AMA, which hoped to forestall disruptions for a third consecutive year. It's Time Again New Fall Fashions Arriving (Use Our Layaway Plan) Time for Spring and Summer Goodies to Go The AMA hinted other "peace" moves would be made to insure uninterrupted meetings. Dr. Ernest Howard, the organization's executive vice-president, said "steps were being taken to prevent disruption" but refused to say what they were. About six other girls, attired in black witches' costumes, rushed to the prostrate actress and chanted rhyming satirical stanzas on various types of members of the AMA. Sale 1/2 Off The Original Price (And More) SLACKS ● SKIRTS ● BLOUSES ● DRESSES ● TANK TOPS Group of Shorts and Blouses — $2.00 Not All Merchandise Included the VILLAGE SET 922, Massachusetts BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of KS/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Morning' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Q KIEF'S Use Kansan Classified 848 846 Exhibition Of New Paintings R. Dishinger M. Ellsworth R. Green L. Schneider R. Sudlow Through July 3, 1970 10:00-5:00; Mon.-Sat. Omnibus 846 Indiana Omnibus 846 Indiana When?? TONIGHT O . . take a pause for any cause and with $2.00 ($1 for co eds) enjoy it more with all the beer you can consume. Impossible? Check tonight only at . . THE STABLES --- Campers bring energy, pep to KU Brimming with enthusiasm and pep, more than 1300 high school THE BEST PAPER ABOUT MEN AND WOMEN IN THE WORLD. Waiting . . . Mary Chempiel, a Woodridge, N.J., high school student, rests atop a saxophone case as she waits for a friend to enroll. Highlights of week in review United Press International Harold Wilson decided to hold an election because England wide polls showed he would win. He lost. Wilson had called the election last month after 5 $ \frac{1}{2} $ years in office because polls said the Labor party would win. With what a perhaps classic British air of nonchalance Wilson remarked, "I think the public opinion polls have a lot of explaining to do." In the biggest upset in English elections since Winston Churchill was defeated after bringing his country through World War II, Edward Heath led the Conservatives to victory over Wilson and his Labor government in an outcome which stunned pollsters, pundits and public alike. The Labor party of the former prime minister, who maintained close relations with Washington during his tenure and received a sharp domestic setback when he was forced to devalue the pound, returns to the parliamentary role of opposition party. "From now on the Labor party will be on the attack," Wilson said, grim faced. For Americans, the election was reminiscent of the 1948 upset in which Harry S. Truman topped Thomas E. Dewey for President when the polls predicted the former New York governor would be victorious. Newark, N.J.—Kenneth A. Gibson handily defeated incumbent Hugh J. Addonizio in a bitterly contested and racially divisive campaign to become the first black mayor of a major Eastern seaboard city. Washington — President Nixon asked business and labor in a nationwide television address to stem the tide of inflation by voluntarily resisting increases in wages and prices. Phnom Penh — Communist Troops cut the last major surface route in Cambodia by severing the highway linking this Cambodian capital with Saigon. And waiting . . . Moscow—Two Soviet cosmonauts circled the earth in Soyuz 9 for 18 days, breaking the American space endurance record by five days. The cosmonauts safely parachuted to earth Friday. 12 KANSAN June 23 1970 1980 Templin Hall was the scene for the registration of music campers, the largest division of the camp. Campers got a taste of college enrollment as they stood in line, and stood in line and stood in line. students from all over the United States arrived on the KU campus Sunday-only to find themselves faced with waiting in line for enrollment and registration in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. But even the process of registration did not diminish their energy as they lugged in suitcases and boxes filled with the necessary gear for their five-week stay at KU. Once unpacked and settled, the campers were off again—this time to scheduled meetings with the directors of their respective divisions of the camp and then simply to explore their new surroundings. The Midwestern Music and Art Camp, under the directorship of Russell L. Wiley, opened the 33rd season of its program Sunday. More than 150 University faculty members will be involved in instructing the campers in nine different fields. When they are not busy learning, the campers will be busy performing. The music campers will begin a schedule of concerts June 27 that will continue throughout the remainder of the camp session. During their stay at KU, the campers will live in three air-conditioned residence halls on Daisy Hill. The girls will live in McCollum Hall and the boys will be housed in Lewis and Templin Halls. Their classes will be structured along the same lines as regular University classes. This includes, as some campers unhappily discovered, early morning and Saturday classes. The camp also enforces some rules, such as room checks and lights out hour. These rules, said one camp official, are more for the purpose of keeping the campers from wearing themselves out than for keeping them in line. Wiley said in an earlier interview that this year's campers, though fewer in number, would be as high in quality as the campers of previous years. One fact is apparent from the initial impression—this year's crop of campers are as high in energy as their predecessors. Church council needs revival for survival WASHINGTON (UPI)—Leaders of 33 Protestant and Orthodox denominations are gathering here to decide whether the troubled National Council of Churches can be revived or must be replaced. The 250 denominational representatives making up the Council's policymaking general board will take up during the weekend four alternative proposals for overhauling the nation's largest ecumenical organization. A final decision probably will be postponed until the general board's fall meeting at Phoenix, Ariz., Sept. 11 and 12. But the Washington talks may show the general direction the Council is apt to go. That it will go somewhere—down the drain, if nowhere else is generally acknowledged by NCC officials. As now constituted, the 20 year old Council is dependent on financial contributions from its 33 member denominations. Those contributions have been falling steadily—partly because denominations themselves are strapped for money and partly because the Council's liberal stands on race, Vietnam and other issues have made it intensely unpopular with conservative elements. Sharp cuts in staff and budget and a $4 million reserve fund have kept the NCC in business so far, but its warmest supporters agree it cannot last much longer in its present form. AUTO THIEVES BUSY NEW YORK—Auto thieves in 1968 were busiest in California, with 119,444 thefts, and New York with 103,557, reports the Insurance Information Institute. Countrywide, car thefts hit a record 777,800. THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? BELOW DO "Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium or large, in supple leather. Navy, Brown White, Red $14.00 Bunny Black's Royal College Shop June 8-13-Darlene Austin June 15-20-General Assembly June 22-27-Saints'n Sinners June 29-July 4-The Pride Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center Live Music Every Night (except Sunday) All Summer Free TGIF with ID's THE ROLLING STONES PARKSIDE Photo by Greg Sorber Moving in requires extra hands Moving into McCullom Hall is a family affair for Sherry McMurray, a student at Burlington high school. Her parents and brother helped her carry in luggage for her five-week stay at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Sherry is enrolled in the music division of the camp. O Photo by Greg Sorber You would't believe the schedule I got . . . Comparing class schedules, Allyson Britton, art student from Ellsworth; Michelle Zngaro, art student from College Station, Tex., and Bruce Johnson, speech sudent from Clinton, Iowa, are surprised to find classes scheduled on Saturday. Shortening the camp by one week made Saturday classes necessary. Chalmers defends options Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. defended his action in offering KU students a choice of options at the end of the spring semester before a television panel recently. Appearing on a television program entitled, "What Happened at KU?" and broadcast over WIBW television, Chalmers said he knew of no activities at the University which had been suspended by his action. "The faculty continued their teaching, making evaluations until the end of the semester," he said. "More than half of our students took their final examinations." Chalmers said KU was probably less prepared for the Cambodian invasion and the Kent State deaths than any other university in the nation because of the arson of two weeks previous to the incidents. In answer to questions posed by the three-man panel about the future of KU in the fall, Chalmers said the University faculty, administrators and students would have to do some intensive soul searching when classes open in the fall to ease tensions. "We must ask ourselves year-by-year, are we doing the opti- June 23 1970 KANSAN 13 Panelists for the program were Henry Jameson, editor of the Abilene Reflector-Chronicle, Max Falkenstein, news-sport director of WIBW, and Arden Booth from KLWN radio. mum to meet the students' and the educational needs?" Chalmers said. Chalmers appeared on the program at the advice of John Conard, who will be the new director of University Relations and Development. $100,000 fire damages stores local draft board including Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain Damage estimates for the fire that erupted Saturday morning in the 900 block of Massachusetts Street in downtown Lawrence were set at well over $100,000 by Lawrence Fire Chief Fred Sanders. BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wrigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $699 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Cause of the fire, said Sanders was tentatively attributed to faulty wiring in the basement between 925 and 927 Massachusetts. Windows of the stores were smashed to allow trapped smoke to escape. Q Three stores and the Professional Building, which houses the U.S. Selective Service office, were damaged in the blaze. The fire was reported at 9:16 a.m. and brought under control by the Lawrence Fire Department at about 11 a.m. Firemen used four trucks to fight the fire, and exhausted their supply of chemical foam in an effort to bring the blaze under control. The other stores damaged were Pound's, a recently opened fabric shop and Ray Stoneback's electrical appliance store, which suffered smoke damage. The fire was reported by Willard Doores, operator of Doore's Stationery, one of the stores damaged by the flames. Doores suffered burns on the left arm when he tried to combat the fire with an extinguisher before contacting firemen. An employee of an adjacent store reportedly heard an explosion when a vacuum cleaner was plugged in just before the fire started. Reports of a prowler in the basement of the building Friday were not immediately connected to the fire. LEPIDOPTERA KIEF'S LEPTDOPTERA India Prints Wooden Beads Handmade Clothing 19 West 9th St. ENCHANTED PERFECTLY YOURS JUDD The perfect symbol of your love . . .guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured) All rings are quality crafted in many beautiful styles. ENCHANCED $275 JUDD $300 ALSO TO 2100 WEDDING RING 125 Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" B09 Mass Special College Terms VI 3 $432 Available in 14K white or yellow gold. CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS Use Kansan Classified ★ SALE SALE MEN'S ITALIAN SANDALS WERE $6 to $11 NOW $3.90, $5.90, $6.90 at McKinley shoes 813 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-2091 VOLKANI m'cow's shoes Yet gusher no reason to rejoice Expert says oil blowouts a rarity TULSA, Okla. (UPI)—"Gone are the days when an oil gusher was reason to rejoice," says one of Sun Oil Co.'s outstanding environmental experts. "Today a blowout just means a lot of wasted oil and a mess that must be cleaned up." Harold F. Elkin, Sun's coordinator of environmental conservation, doesn't feel water pollution is a new problem but one more highly publicized recently, generating complex technical and legal problems for oil companies "Major oil spill incidents have shaken the public confidence in our ability to conduct our operations in a manner that will not harm the environment," Elkin said at a recent University of Tulsa course. "Oil spills have cost the industry millions of dollars in production-as well as clean up costs- But such costs are insignificant compared to what these spills have cost us in public confidence and goodwill. Drillers go to great lengths to prevent blowouts," he says. "During drilling operations, it is normal to use at least three or four blowout preventers and numerous control valves. Off shore wells are also equipped with a special automatic safety device called a downhole storm choke, which closes the hole automatically when there is a rupture in the system. "And yet despite our best efforts, on Jan. 28, 1969, oil drilling from an offshore platform in the Santa Barbara Channel triggered a flow of oil into the open sea. Some of this oil found its way onto the Southern California shoreline. The resulting contamination of beaches, harbors and boats propagated a wave of public concern over the safety of all offshore drilling ventures. "Yet at the same time," he adds, "The well that experienced the blowout was but one of 300 producing wells in the channel where over 900 wells had been drilled over the years without incident. `Inhibitions' stopped Nixon WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. John G. Tower (R-Tex.) said he believed President Nixon was unwilling to intervene with U.S. troops in Cambodia to prevent a Communist takeover because of "inhibitions" imposed on him by Congress. Tower said in a UPI "Washington Window" interview that it was "possible that Cambodia could fall" although the country had been given arms and had been helped by U.S. assaults on Communist border sanctuaries. Asked why the United States was unwilling to defend Cambodia with troops as it has in South Vietnam, Tower replied, "Well, I think the President is thinking in terms of the inhibitions imposed on him by a hostile Congress." Tower did not say he had any definite information that Nixon had ever been considering the use of troops to protect the Lon Nol government in Cambodia. LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Relief supplies for earthquake stricken Peru are piling up and there seems no immediate prospect of transporting them to South America, several donor groups reported. The total of food, medicine and clothing on hand neared 300,000 pounds. Relief supplies for Peruvians await delivery About 220,000 pounds were stockpiled at Los Angeles International Airport. Another 60,000 pounds awaited shipment from San Fernando Valley State College in nearby Northridge. "We have to either get transportation or stop the operation," said Genaro Sornosa of Monterey Park, Calif., a former Peace Corps worker who is trying to coordinate handling of relief supplies for Peru. A May 31 earthquake left an estimated 800,000 persons injured or homeless in Peru and an estimated 50,000 killed. Andrea Fischbach, a member of the International Students Club which organized the relief project, said it had been promised two planes to transport the goods in an arrangement made by Sens. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) and Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz). Miss Fischbach said, however, representatives of the senators called her Friday and said budget limitations prevented requisition of the planes. "We have contacted 11 different airlines," said Maj. Lincoln Upton, Salvation Army coordinator, "but no plane is available—even with our organization offering to foot the bill of $25,000." The Salvation Army tried to hire a jet transport to move some supplies but found no plane was available. 14 KANSAN June 23 1970 Nixon has announced that U.S. troops would not be used in support of the Lon Nol government and has limited the present U.S. operations to a limit of 21.7 miles within Cambodian territory. recognized that it must be able to do better, and began marshalling the necessary resources to find better ways of getting the job done. Our earlier oil spills task forces had produced an American Petroleum Institute (API) primer on oil spill cleanup. Tower said a majority of the senators "don't want any additional involvement in Cambodia and don't want us to come to the aid of this country. The disposition in the Senate is to wash our hands of Cambodia altogether." He called the attitude inconsistent because "in the past members of the Senate have urged Asians to defend themselves. And now that perhaps the Cambodians are showing some disposition to do that, we say we're going to wash our hands of it, we're not going to help you at all." The Senate probably will vote late this week on the Cooper-Church amendment designed to cut off funds for retaining U.S. troops in Cambodia after June 30, the President's deadline for ending the Cambodian operations. The next vote on an amendment is scheduled Monday on a proposal by Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) to add language stressing that nothing in the Cooper - Church amendment would take away from the President "that constitutional power which may be necessary to protect the lives of United States armed forces wherever deployed." It is expected to pass with a near unanimous vote. - Records - Records - Records - 8 Track Tapes "In February 1969, within a matter of weeks after the blowout in Santa Barbara, the API held a special meeting to discuss the whole spectrum of issues attendant to the oil pollution problem. - Fisher Stereophonic High Fidelity - Roberts Tape Recorders - Dual Record Changers - Garrard Record Changers - Records - Panasonic Radios - Sony Radios SOUND HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 925 IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 (913) V12-6331 A permanent subcommittee on oil spills cleanup was established to develop a program. The API board of directors has thus far appropriated $1.2 million to fund the subcommittee work through 1970. "Oil pollution has brought complaints from ordinary citizens as well as vocal and influential conservationists. Legislative proposals, on both state and local levels, are being considered which will make it more difficult for us to find, produce and transport oil and other petroleum products required by society. Future development of offshore oil reserves will probably be delayed as a consequence of our offshore accidents. The swift development of oil reserves on Alaska's north slope has been jeopardized. NOTICE STUDENTS & FACULTY University Theatre needs roles filled 4 men's and 2 women's parts needed for production of "RAIN." Islander's parts — need Polynesian types. For information call Dr. Brooking, UN 4-3944 at 237 Murphy Hall. "The subcommittee initiates and supervises its work through four task force groups, each dealing with a separate aspect of the cleanup problem. "The problem has been aggravated by unfavorable, and in some cases unfair, publicity," Elkin adds. "But the problem is serious and real, and our industry must solve it." "Early last year, our industry "One group is responsible for research on equipment and materials, another for insurance and legal problems, a third is studying the industry's response plans for dealing with spills and a final group is responsible for maintaining and improving government liaison." SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% ● Sandals ● Dress Shoes ● Sport Shoes ● Casuals ● Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% ● Sandals ● Dress Shoes ● Sport Shoes ● Casuals ● Boots Men's and Women's Downtown 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 KU Students Cleaning Headquarters LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities 1029 Phone New Hampshire 843-3711 KU Secret satellite launched CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — A secret satellite soared toward a high orbit Friday in a Defense Department project believed to be creating a network of space sentinels to warn of missiles fired toward the United States. In a departure from normal practice, the Air Force did not announce the launch ahead of time and said after the fact only that an Atlas Agena rocket had launched an "experimental payload." Informed sources, however, said the flight was a repeat of two earlier shots that sent spacecraft carrying new missile warning sensors into near stationary orbits ranging from 20,000 to 24,000 miles high. Dr. John Foster, director of the Defense Department's research programs, told Congress late last year the United States was accelerating a satellite system designed to provide early warning against Soviet land and sea based missile attacks. The spacecraft presumably also would be able to spot missiles launched from Red China. Both of the earlier satellites, launched in 1968 and 1969, are in orbits that cross the Equator at an angle of about 10 degrees. In such a path in the high orbit they are said to be in a "dwell orbit" where they trace a figure eight pattern above one broad area of earth. Friday's satellite was launched as hundreds of spaceport work- clear sky slowly on a bright plume of orange flame. It gained momentum over the Atlantic and a large white trail of vapor blossomed behind it when it reached the upper atmosphere. TEACHERS WANTED Southwest, Entire West and Alaska for 24 years SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Free Registration—Good Salaries - Applications - Passports "Please call for appointment" Be' 721 Mass. ers drove to their jobs. The 120 foot booster was clearly visible on its launch pad, venting oxygen vapor for more than an hour, a sure sign to observers that the launch was imminent. HIXON STUDIO VI 3-0330 The rocket climbed into the Two court martialed for My Lai 4 incident FT. McPHERSON, Ga. (UPI)—The Third Army said today two soldiers would be court martialed on charges they murdered Vietnamese civilians in connection with the alleged My Lai 4 massacre. Sgt. Esequiel Torres, 22, of Brownsville, Tex., and Pvt. Gerald A. Smith, 22, Chicago, would have their cases referred to a general court martial as non capital cases, the Army said, meaning the maximum sentence they could receive would be life imprisonment. Both men were members of Company "C" commanded by Capt. Ernest L. Medina, who was charged with overall responsibility of murdering "not less" than 175 persons at My Lai 4 in South Vietnam March 16, 1968. LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Picnic Supplies Ice Keg Beer Case Lot Beer 616 Vermont V13-0350 Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening Galvin Pardal Formal Wear Beautiful Bridal Apparel & 910 Kv. Home of the "Big Shef" THE HOLE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & Try One Today 814 Iowa SANDWICH SHOP BURGER CHEF Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & Ill. Exclusive Representative L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Favors Guards Mugs Guards Mugs Descriptions Result - Recognitions - Paddles - Lavaliers - Stationerv - Recognitions Paddles* - Gifts - Plaques - Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter VI 3-1571 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th Across from the Red Dog 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon "If The Shoe Fits . . Wear It" PENNY ROAD BIKE PLANNING A TRIP?? Malls Shopping Center Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE the Sirloin Dine in candlelight atmosphere U.S. choice steaks, Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Finest sea foods Open 4:30 1% River M. N. of Kaw Closed Bridge Monday VI3-1431 V13-1211 快乐篮球 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 New York Cleaners For the best in: ● Dry Cleaning ● Alterations PICK UP DRIVE-IN AND COUN OP. 900 Miss. VI 3-5304 COIN OP. DRIVE-IN 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 9th and Miss. - Reweaving G & R Body Shop - Lowest Prices - 3,000 Colors 1248 East 13th - Student Discounts 843-3735 KANSAN CLASSIFIED Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the new brochure are accredited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and印纸 prints from the Hodge Podge at 15 W. 9th. 10:00-5:30 FOR SALE '68 Datun 2000 roadster - S ap, robin gg blue sky car, 1090 roadster he he he, hehe 842-1219-101, 6-26 '65 MGB-BRG, almost new Michelin X's, overhauled transmission, new clutch, fantastic condition. Call 842-2191. 6-26 Owner must leave town July 1. Needs someone to assume 18 payments on 90 Opus phones under 3,000 miles, or extrax. Phone V13-908-6520 UN4-1478 (Judith). 6-26 '65 Mus—225 horse V-8, hurt shifter, Craag mags, new wide rubber, new paint, super clean, $1195. Call 442- 2191. 6-26 '63 Sprite—black, new tires, both tops, rebuilt transmission & clutch. Call 842-2191. 6-26 '68 VW=Red sedan, one owner, carefully maintained, priced at wholesale. Call 842-2191. 6-26 Kustom K-100 Guitar Amplifier, 2-12" speakers, like new . . . must sell, 842-0513. Robert's 770X Stereo Tape Recorder—R 25LK, KLH Model 24 Stereo and FM Radio-$200. Good condition. Call Kurt at VI 2-7584. 6-30 For Sale: 1) Unused; copper chafing dish, calf wallet & key case, Lite-Gem high-intensity study lamp, 8 silver drinking cups, assorted cups, 2 Vistas ashtray, white decanter & 4 glass, GE Tole tray-table, assorted kitchen items, AM clock radio with appliance outlet, high-power 4 band Hallcraft-air 2 Vistas (1.6-30 MCV) studio, world-wide reception. Call 6-30 1400. 1967 Barracuda fastback, automatic, power steering. Formula "S" perform- ance package. Good mileage and unlimited call. Fred Call at 843-0438 or UN 4-4326. 1968 Red 2-door hardtop Chev. Impala: black interior, auto, trans., air conditio- n, audio TV; 1968 Magnavox air conditio- n TV; 7' screen, included. 842-2071. 7-10 FOR RENT Tired of paying rent in a strange town? Two families are looking for one or two couples to share mortgage payments on a large house after Sept. 17. Safe, stable students interested in cooperative living get paid out of getting most of your money back when property is sold. Call 842-9971 after 6:30 for details. 6-26 You get the 12th month free when you rent a 2 bedrm. unfurnished apt. for $135 or 1 bedrm. unfurn. for $120. Same deal with 2 bedrm. furnished for $150 or 1 bedrm. furn. for $120. Call 843-2116 or 843-1085. 7-31 2 bedroom farm, apt. a/c $95 per room. p.m. call 843-9373. p.m. call 843-9373. 6-26 Apt. for rent, some A/C—sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Borders campus and near town. Phone 843-5767. tf For Rent: Beautiful furnished air- conditioned 1 bedroom apartment to rent thru August. $100. Call VI 2-5752 afternoons and evenings. per 5:00 6-26 LOST AND FOUND The lost art of fine handcrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Bind. Find your new belt, vest, sandals, watchband at 15 W. wkth. 5:30- 7:31 Lost—Eye glasses, black frames, Tues. 16th, somewhere from Snow along Jayhawk, Oread and Indiana Streets to 900 block. Ph. 842-7627. 6-26 WANTED Baby-sitter in exchange for room and board for Summer and/or Fall. Close to campus. 843-0113 after 4 p.m. 6-23 Bare feet to be fitted for benchcrafted sandals. Over 25 styles from $14.75, 3 day service. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 842-0682. 7-31 Male student to share my furnished apartment, two blocks from campus. Must be seen to be appreciated $40 includes all. 842-346-9900 ore 10:00 a.m. Wanted: 2 roommates to share house Wanted: 1 bedroom suitable for summer months. Call VI 2-2396 6-30 NOTICE The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $2.5 at the Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 7-31 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-government Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty, Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone 12-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday. Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Roth-fuss, 843-8074. 7-31 Students of objectivism—meets every Monday night to discuss the philosophy of Ayn Rand. If desire further information, call 842-6210 for S.30. Visit a nudist camp free. For information write Garden of Eden, P.O. Box 590, Tonganoxie, Kansas 60086. Custom made leather--sandals, vests, pants, belts, wallets, purses, stash box, jacket, lingerie. THE LEATHER WORKS, 1909, Ohio open 2-6 daily except Sunday. 6-26 The KU Infant Center, for infants 6 weeks to 12 months of age, is now open from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays thru Aug. 7. This is a pilot program and demonstrating good infant-care procedures. The center can accommodate a few more infants in full-day care and several more infants in partial day care with occasional attendance. Call or write at Human Development, KU, UN 4-4392, or come to room 294, New Haworth Hall. 6-30 Guitar Lessons. All beginners and advanced folk, fingerplking, blues, rock. Experienced, references $1.75 for half hour lesson. Call Kurt 6-30 V 2-7584 Self-Defense Classes for men and women still forming Monday, June 25. Police and Fire Stations, 745 Vermont. Information call 842-6715. 6-19 Nursery school—Announcing summer and fall sessions at the 1st Presbyterian Church, MWF 9 to 11. Call 842-2153 or 842-8116. 7-7 MG, TRUMPH, VOLKWAGEN, and other popular sports cars repaired and/or modified. Come on in and out. We are out. Just over the Kaw River bridge to Performance Enterprises, 317 North Second Street VI 2-1191. 7-7 Ray Dynao sells at discount prices. A.R., Dynaco, Miraacord, BSR, Shure and other lines. Phone 842-2047 eve. from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. 7-31 Jim's Shop. Tune-up, carb. work, minor engine repair on most foreign or domestic cars. Major engine work or imports, other work considered. Specialized for VW and British cars. Call 842-7161 noon or afternoon 5:30. Strawberry Fields Leather Snop. Custom-made sandals, purses, belts, watchbands—anything you want. 714 Mass. 7-14 TYPING Experienced typist with electric typewriter desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-3597. Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist U.E.S. (English-Speech Education) Office-size electric! Phone 7-2873 Accurate typing of thesis, papers, manuscripts by experienced tplist on IBM carbon ribbon electric. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson V12-2124. 6-26 Experienced in typing term papers, theses other misc. typing. Have elective course in other type. Can corrored spelling & punctuation. V1-9534. Mrs. Wright. 7-31 Typing: Former executive secretary to Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners, specializes in typing dissertations, thesis, term papers. Call 842-886-6-30 Typing: Theses, Dissertations, Term Papers, Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, 842-1522. 7-24 EMPLOYMENT Occupations That Pay Latest comprehensive information substantiated by U.S. Bureau of Labor on over 600 occupations and over 700 hours of work. Send your hour jobs are and occupations and professions rewarding their employees plus $1.60 for handling an postage Advisory Enterprises, P.O. Box 1063, Kansas City Missouri 64141, Dept. II. Your Kansas Union Bookstore welcomes you to the Summer Session G. C. One of the more useful souvenirs you could choose—a bronze Jayhawk paperweight. $3.50 --kansas union BOOKSTORE KANSAS UNIVERSITY 912 KANSAS 913 KANSAS KU KU KU Kansas University T-Shirts for casual wear, $2.25 each KU pennants, $3.25 & $2.40,and felt Jayhawks, $.60,.95,1.25, make great gifts for future Jayhawkers. Kansas Seal $1.30 SCIENCE & MATH CAMP Pins and dangles MUSIC & ART CAMP Pins and dangles $1.95 @ KU CAMP Sweat Shirts $2.95 Tee Shirts $1.95 KU All time favorites are these stuffed Jayhawks, $2.65 & $2.95,fuzzy and friendly companions for children of all ages. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 80th Year, No. 6 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Friday, June 26, 1970 FR Photo by Greg Sorber Silhouette and Sunlight Parking closest to where their classes are held two bicyclists chained their vehicles to the nearest stationary object, in this case a small tree near Hoch Auditorium. The early morning haze provided the soft background. Wives of foreign students face many U.S. barriers For a young mother raising her children in a foreign land, the problems of everyday life can seem insurmountable. Without a working knowledge of the native language, the simplificities of life can turn into obstacles. Such cultural and language barriers face many of the wives of foreign students at the University of Kansas as they attempt to adjust to community life while their husbands are in school. Since 1968, however, a group of Lawrence women have extended a helping hand to many foreign women through a community involvement program, Small World, Inc. Mrs. Joyce Classon, 1602 Rose Lane, Lawrence, former chairman of Small World, Inc., said the organization was founded in 1967 at the suggestion of Mrs. Jacob Enoch, wife of a KU physics professor. The Enoch family had just returned from an exchange program assignment in Venezuela where Mrs. Enoch said she experienced some of the cultural and language problems which face foreign students and their families when they come to Lawrence. From a 20-member beginning in February 1968, the group has grown to include 59 American and 84 foreign women and 112 foreign and American children. The members represent 30 nations and all of the world's major religions. While most women are associated with the University, members also come from the Lawrence community. Although the organization is non-sectarian, the women meet during the school year twice weekly at Lawrence's First United Presbyterian Church. Among the activities of Small World, Inc. members are group discussions on sewing, cooking and other household chores, occasional field trips to observe different facets of American life, and cultural exchange programs on art, music and literature. Regular language study is provided through the organization. In many cases foreign women who have been in the United States for some time assist other foreign women with English. When the organization began, Mrs. Classon said, American members contacted each foreign wife at her home after receiving her name from the office of the KU dean of foreign students. Although this practice continues, Mrs. Classon said word of the group's activities travels so fast that many foreign women now find Small World, Inc. before members have a chance to arrange home visits. Chalmers plans trip Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr., will travel more than 5,000 miles over Kansas this summer speaking to alumni, parents of students, and prospective students. The KU Alumni Association has organized meetings that will take Chancellor Chalmers into 35 cities and counties, according to Vince Bilotta, alumni field director. The Chancellor will be traveling all or part of 24 days, with most of the meetings in late July and August. Chalmers starts the summer schedule Sunday (June 21) in Chanute and goes to Belleville on Tuesday. Arrangements for the meetings are being made by local alumni chapter presidents and are being coordinated through KU Alumni Association headquarters. The schedule is one of the most extensive ever undertaken by a KU leader to communicate with alumni and is the first time in several years for summer alumni meetings The schedule: June 21, Chanute; June 23, Belleville; July 15, Wyandotte County at Kansas City; July 16, Johnson County at Shawnee Mission; July 21, Abilene and Great Bend; July 22, Scott City and Colby; July 23, Manhattan; July 28, Pratt and Garden City; July 29, Dodge City and Liberal; July 30, Atchison; July 31, North Central Kansas at Lovewell Reservoir. Aug. 4, Marshall County at Waterville; Aug. 5, Larned and Hays; Aug. 16, McPherson and Hutchinson; Aug. 11, Winfield and El Dorado; Aug. 12, Newton and Emporia; Aug. 13, Fort Scott and Pittsburg; Aug. 18, Parsons and Iola; Aug. 19, Independence and Coffeyville; Aug. 20, Salina. Sept. 10, Paola; Sept. 17, Leavenworth; Sept. 24, Ottawa; Oct. 2, Topeka. Lyons repository stirs opposition TOPEKA (UPI)—A leader of the Sierra Conservation Club said it would actively and legally seek to block establishment of an underground radioactive waste repository near Lyons. Ronald H. Baxter, a Topeka attorney and chairman of the chapter's executive council, made the statement the day after the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) announced an abandoned salt mine near Lyons had been tentatively chosen for the site. Baxter charges Kansans are not getting full information. "The facts are: 1. That no absolute guarantee can be given the leakage will not occur from underground storage of such material which will be radioactive for centuries. 2. That it is unknown where some existing underground mines exist in the area considered which could act as conduits into underground water supply in the event of leakage. 3. That by the AEC's own statement, the temperature of surface water will increase 14 degrees over the entire repository," he said. ... Pool offers respite from summer heat Photo by Robbie Robinson Keeping cool is a family project, and what better place to escape the summer heat than in a shaded cove, enjoying the breeze and the cool water? This happy trio takes time out from the day for a quick dip and a rap with nature. MCLOUTH JP. DULLODS Ball players practice Scrimmage releases tension, says KU Coach Ted Owens. Owens is directing a basketball clinic for jr. high and high school students this week on campus. His regular assistants on the coaching staff and Jo Jo White are also instructing the boys in the fine points of basketball. KU coach instructs student ball players By GARY ZINK Kansan Staff Writer KU basketball Coach Ted Owens and his staff are conducting a basketball clinic for junior high and high school students this week. The week-long clinic is designed to give the students a good grounding in the fundamental moves of basketball and to improve each player's game. The students compete among themselves to add life to the fundamental practice drills, which Owens says could become boring without an outlet for "steam." Owens talked about the purpose of the clinic during a practice session on Wednesday. "I think that if we can teach a young ballplayer the correct way There are 144 students in the clinic, and Owens is being assisted by several high school and junior college coaches. Also on the staff are his regular assistant coaches here at KU, Sam Miranda and Gale Cathett, and Jo Jo White, former Kansas basketball star and current player for the Boston Celtics. to play before he develops bad habits, we can do him a great service," he said. White, who attended a basketball clinic in St. Louis when he was in high school, said nearly all college players have done so at one time or another. The basketball players are staying in Naismith Hall and practicing at Lawrence High School. 2 KANSAN June 26 1970 Actress Joan Crawford is a Texan, born in 1908 in San Antonio. Summer theatre to feature shows in-the-round The 1970 summer program for the University of Kansas Theatre will feature four productions, two of them in-the-round. The season opens with "Luv" on June 27 in the Experimental Theatre with curtain time at 8:20 p.m. each night. Show dates are June 27, 29, 30, July 1, 2, and 3. This smash Broadway hit comedy will be directed by Dr. Tom Rea. COMPETITION SPORTS CARS has moved Actually, we haven't moved completely, but due to recent construction, we have been forced to move our Used Car Lot to 703 Vermont (across the street from the Post Office). It hasn't changed our eagerness to help you get the best in Reliable Used Cars though. Come out today and let our friendly salesmen help you find that perfect car (and get the most out of yours). Oh yes—if you want a new car you'll have to see us at our address on 23rd Street. 842-2191 1209 E. 23rd St. 701 Vermont Competition Sports Cars The next production will be on the main stage but will accommodate an audience of only 250 since it will be performed in the-round. "Pinocchio" will be seen July 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 at 7:20 each evening. There will also be 2:30 p.m. matinees on July 8 and 9. This traditional children's play, directed by Jed Davis, director of the University Theatre, will have all the usual characters but with more emphasis on the other puppets Pinocchio encounters. Children will sit around the action on stage, taking part in it and often initiating it. CSC "The Miracle Worker," the story of the deaf and blind Helen Keller and her teacher, will run July 13-18 in the Experimental Theatre. A 2:30 matinee will be seen on July 17. Directed by Peter Clough, KU drama graduate student, the play will emphasize the blind child's relationship to her teacher, not her deformities in blindness and deafness. The final production of the season is "Rain" which is also performed in the round on the main stage. Curtain time is 8:20 p.m. for all performances July 20-24. This classic story about Sadie Thompson, Honolulu streetwalker, and her encounter with the Rev. Davidson, a missionary on the island of Pongo Pongo during a period of the rainy season will be directed by Jack Brooking. FREE Speed Reading Lesson at the Holiday Inn Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. Friday Saturday Sunday 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:00 8:00 8:00 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Day of the Giant/Little Sedie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $699 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center V BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including Wigwam / Days Of 49 / Little Sadie Copper Kettle / Early Mornin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center KIEF'S ★ ★ $25 Prize For Best Name! You may win $25.00 for your entry in The Haas Hardware Name—The-Store Contest. The winner and the new name for our store will be announced June 30th. Come in and see our unique gift items and submit your entry—you may be the winner. Haas Hardware 1029 Massachusetts Dial-a-bedtime story popular in Lubbock LUBBOCK, Tex. (UPI)—An innovation in library service for children, that of personalized bedtime stories, has proved a major success during its pilot run in this West Texas city. The dial-a-bedtime story Miss Tell-A-Tale was given a sixweeks in Lubbock and immediately hit a snag. Miss Tell-A-Tale was too popular. "The program was expanded from six to eight weeks, Miss Tell-A-Tale got a private telephone number, and plans to include the program in the future are underway," said Mrs. Ella Mae Platz, head of the children's services of Lubbock City-County Library. night of the program a city official saw the switchboard confusion. "What have we got—a disaster?" asked City Manager Bill Blackburn. He was told it was only children trying to reach Miss Tell-A-Tale. But it was enough to get the special phone because the city must also take fire, police and power emergency calls. "We tried to hold the stories to three minutes, and take another minute to get the child's name, age, and invite them to the library," said Mrs. Platz. "With three story tellers, we averaged about 45 calls per night. At that rate, we estimate we handled about 1,400 bedtime stories during the eight-week period." In addition to members of the children's department of the library, volunteers were called upon. High school, college and young married women who enjoyed children and their books, also read. The average age of the caller was four to seven, although there were many older children. Mike Machen, eight, a Lubbock second grader, said he tried to reach Miss Tell-A-Tale every night. "It's fun to hear a bedtime story over the phone," he said. "It's better than being tucked into bed by mother. You can get that any night." Mrs. Platz said the program certainly helped create interest in the children's department and children's books. Those who already used the library came back more often, and new children started using it. Reaction of children was varied. —“This isn't a recording is it? My Daddy said it would be.” —"I know Miss Tell-A-Tate doesn't come on until eight. But I'm just six and I can't tell time yet." —“I'm too young to dial the phone. I had to get the operator to call for me. You won't tell, will you?” Mrs. Platz said stories were chosen to stand on their own without pictures. The children were invited to the library where they could find the story they just heard and many others. SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% ● Sandals ● Dress Shoes ● Sport Shoes ● Casuals ● Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% ● Sandals ● Dress Shoes ● Sport Shoes ● Casuals ● Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $399 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% - Sandals - Dress Shoes - Sport Shoes - Casuals - Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Rambkin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $3.99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center IT'S GOOD MORNINGSTAR AND IT'S GOOD FOR YOU MORNINGSTAR Bend your ears to the heavy sounds, when the Draught House unleashes one of the area's top recording groups—MORNINGSTAR. The Draught House can get you out of the Dog House and into the action! 804 West 24th Street IT ALL HAPPENS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ram THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $399 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center IT'S GOOD MORNING STAR IT’S GOOD MORNINGSTAR The Draught House AND IT’S GOOD FOR YOU MORNINGSTAR Bend your ears to the heavy sounds, when the Draught House unleashes one of the area’s top recording groups—MORNINGSTAR. The Draught House can get you out of the Dog House and into the The DRAUGHT HOUSE 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 MIRV DEPLOYMENT SALT TALKS SCIENTISTS US DEMATE GARRIS THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL TM 9. All rights reserved 1970 Damn the opposition! Full speed ahead!' hearing voices— I am sure that many of the students, faculty, and staff have, at one time or another, been victims of an unwanted (and all too often unnecessary) campus parking ticket. Various deeds of our men in blue compel me to suggest that the top line of these tickets be reworded to read, "Visitors (not Faculty, Staff, or Student): Welcome to KU." The espoused purpose of a campus police force—or any police force—is to "serve and protect." I would like to present a few typical examples of the service and protection we receive on this campus. 1) On evenings of home basketball games, Naismith Drive is blocked off to north-bound traffic while the south-bound lane is left open to vehicles. I wondered this apparent anomaly and asked the officer at the barricade the reason for the stoppage of traffic in one direction and not the other. The officer shined both of his flashlights in my face and said, "Don't you worry about it, just keep movin'." I did. At the next game I presented my query to a different officer who kept his flashlights pointed at the ground and answered, "Pedestrian safety. Now git movin'." I thanked him and drove on. Therefore, it seems that the campus police get the pedestrians half-way across the street and simultaneously inconvenience north-bound motorists who aren't going into O-zone to park. 2) Another familiar sight during this last spring semester was the towing of an unauthorized car from one of the campuses controlled zones with one or two tickets plastered to the windshield. An incident of this nature could conceivably cost the driver of such a car upwards of $45.00 (two $16.00 tickets plus towing fee). I saw this happen several times in O-zone (which probably shouldn't even be a controlled zone due to its enormous size and relatively poor location) and once in G-zone at 5:45 P.M. (there were about fifteen cars in this 60-space zone). Actions of this nature immediately raise the questions: "Whom does this serve?" and "Whom or what does this protect?" Maybe J. M. Thomas has the answer. 3) On more than one occasion since the beginning of the summer session, I have seen the same officer getting an early morning start on his quota by issuing tickets to violators in M1-zone. He parks in the east-bound lane of traffic and sits in his car to gather the pertinent information even though there may be a host of empty spaces in which he himself could park and not block traffic in the process of issuing a ticket. At one time, this officer had seven cars backed up behind him. One irate motorist, obviously attempting to get to a class on time, sounded his horn repeatedly. The officer, oblivious to all except his victim, stepped out of his car, placed the ticket securely behind the windshield wiper, got back in his car, and the robot drove a few carlengths farther and began the cycle again. Serve and Protect? I doubt it. speak of "respect from the citizenry." But how can I respect a police officer who will ticket an "unauthorized vehicle" in an otherwise empty parking lot? I believe that an officer of the law who demonstrates such a complete lack of ability to make a free decision within certain legal bounds does not deserve much respect. And if we can't get it together with our own campus police force, what does this say about our cities? Granted that this article registers a minor complaint, presenting situations which any of us can and do tolerate. But these problems are fundamentally analogous to the more complex situations which confront the people and law enforcement agencies of large metropolitan areas. Police officers Pat Hogan Wichita senior * * I would like to congratulate you on the June 16th headline "Moon Landing 'hoax,' say skeptics." It proves that even at an institution of higher education pockets of ignorance exist—such as the Kansan staff—a conclusion drawn without an attempt to reach a scientific cross section of the staff. There is wide-spread support for the theory that Adolf Hitler is alive and well and writing for the Kansan. Shirley Partin class '71 The Political Scene By JONATHAN JORDAN The Democrats face the unnerving prospect of becoming a permanent minority party representing the Northeast or being shattered by a fourth party effort headed by the extreme left wing elements of the party. The ugly rule-or-ruin mood of the left wing was evident in an article entitled "Winning in November is not Enough" in the June 13 issue of The New Republic. Written by John Kenneth Galbraith, former U.S. Ambassador to India, the article pulls no punches, declaring that: "If the Democrats will not dispense with Mendel Rivers, John Stennis, Jim Eastland, and John McMillan in order to organize the Congress, then power must be given to the Republicans." This article, along with an article by Sen. Eugene McCarthy on the third party movements, gives ample notice to moderate Democrats as to their fate if they do not toe the Liberal line. An essential basis for Galbraith's plan of action is the assumption that the Liberals will win a smashing victory in 1970. Yet Galbraith's skills as a political prognosticator were shown to be greatly lacking when, during the Tet offensive, he declared that the government of South Vietnam would collapse within two weeks. And Galbraith seems to be as far off base on the American scene as he was on the Vietnamese scene. The political arena where this conflict will take place is the U.S. Congress. In the current House the roles read 245 Democrats and 188 Republicans, but of the Democrats at least 75 are Southern, the type Galbraith would purge, and if only the Southern Democrats are purged, ignoring the Northern Conservatives, we find that the Democrats now have fewer members than the Republicans, and would need to gain more than 40 seats to regain their majority in the house. A victory of forty seats is rare even with a united party. The Senate is an entirely different body. Rather than having the whole body elected every other year, as in the House, the U.S. Constitution provides for the election of one third of the Senate every second year. This means that the Senate tends to change more slowly in opinion than the House. Almost all of the current crop of senators up for re-election last ran in 1964. They are products of the Democratic sweeps of 1964 and 1958. They are more Liberal than the whole of the Senate and mainly Democratic (of the 35 seats up in the election, 25 are held by Democrats). The current break down of the Senate is 56 Democrats, 43 Republicans and 1 Independent. The Republicans can gain a 50-49-1 advantage if they can capture seven Democratic seats. Democratic senators from normally Republican areas such as North Dakota, Indiana and Ohio are prime targets for a Republican drive to recapture the Senate. They gained their offices on Lyndon Johnson's coattails in 1964, or the Democratic sweep of 1958. This year, standing on their own, many of them may lose. If Quentin Burdick, Gale McGee and Joseph Montoya lose in 1970 Galbraith may not have any say as to who runs the next Senate. So this is the situation the Democrats find themselves in. In order to keep from losing control of the Congress they must mend their Southern fences, and even move to the right, but if they do the prospect of a Galbraith inspired fourth party running Eugene McCarthy for president awaits them in 1972. The Democratic predicament can be best summed up in a poem that was popular with the early puritan settlers; "You're Damned if you do, You're Damned if you don't You're Damned if you will, And you're Damned if you won't." The elections of 1970 and 1972 promise to be interesting THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Pub-Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the Summer Session. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as opinions expressed In The Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. THE AUTOMOBILE DEPOT. Meanwhile, as students study pollution problems . Camp concert program scheduled FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT 7 p.m. BLUE BAND Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor Mayer Channon, Guest Conductor William Porter, Guest Conductor STAR SPANGLED BANNER PROCESSION OF NOBLES FROM MLADA Rimsky-Korsakov TULSA Don Gillis ILLINOIS MARCH Edwin Franko Goldman LIEBESTOD Richard Wagner MAN OF LA MANCHA Leigh and Darion AN ELLINGTON PORTRAIT Floyd E. Werle IRISH TUNE FROM COUNTY DERRY...Percy Grainger SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 n.m. CONCERT CHOIR CONCERT CHOIR Darrell Benne, Conductor Ann Marshall, Accompanist O LAMB OF GOD MOST LOWLY Gordon Young ALMA DEI CREATORIS W. A. Mozart Soprano: Linda Cantu Violin I: Ann Marshall Violin II: Marquita Cross String Bass: Jean Eades Piano: Terry Knowles UNDER THE WILLOW TREE ... Samuel Barber I WANT TO DIE EASY ... arr. Shaw-Parker Tenor soloist: William Calvin CONCERT ORCHESTRA CONCENTRATION Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Colonel Sir Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor Dale Kemster, Guest Conductor Dale Kemper, Guest Conductor SYMPHONY NO. 2 ROMANTIC...Howard Hanson Second movement: andante con tenevezza music by Lorenzo Bellini Third movement: allegro con brio MERRY HUGS MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR, OVERTURE ... Otto Nicolai GOLD BAND David Catron, Conductor Mayer Channon, Guest Conductor William Porter, Guest Conductor IRISH TUNE FROM COUNTY DERRY Percy Grainger SYMPHONIC DANCE NO. 2 Clifton Williams MUSICA SIMPATICA William Rhoads GALLITO Santiago Lope OVERTURE IN B FLAT C. Giovannini ENGLISH DANCES Malcolm Arnold SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 p.m. three movements STAR SPANGLED BANNER ... Key CHAMBER CHOIR James Ralston, Conductor Leann Hillster, Accompanist CHAMBER CHOIR HOSANNA TO THE SON OF DAVID ... Moe IF YOU LOVE ME, KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS ... Thomas Tallis O VOS OMNES ... Thomas Ludovicus Victoria (O All Ye that Pass By PLACIDO E I L MAR (Calm Is the Sea) LACIDO E IL MAR... W. A. Mozart (Celvin Searn) WALKING ON THE GREEN GRASS ... Michael Hennagin MY LORD, WHAT A MORNIN' ... Spiritual arr. H. T. Burleigh CANTICLE OF PRAISE ... John Ness Beck SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Colonel Sir Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor IRISH TUNE FROM COUNTY DERRY Percy Grainger OVERTURE IN D MAJOR Handel SAVANNAH RIVER HOLIDAY, OVERTURE Ron Nelson LITTLE SUITE FOR ORCHETRA Malcolm Arnold 1. Prelude 2. Dance 3. March WALK TO THE PARADISE GARDEN Frederick Dellus SIMPLE SYMPHONY Benjamin Britten WALK TO THE PARADISE GARDEN 2. Playful Pizzicato 3. Sentimental Savaband CAPE ESPAGNOL Rimsky-Korsakov 4. Scena e Canto gitano 5. Fandango Asturiano SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT RED BAND LeRoy Esau, Conductor William Porter, Guest Conductor Mayer Channon, Guest Conductor THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER HIS HONOR MARCH Henry Fillmore Key SCENES FROM "THE LOUVER" Norman Dello Joia FROM THE LOUVR. I The Portals II Children's Gallery III The Kings of France IV The Nativity Paintings V Finale. CONCERT BAND CHORALE AND CAPRICcio C. Giovannini MANNIN VEEN Haydn Wood Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Colonel Sir Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor IRISH TUNE FROM COUNTY DERRY Percy Grainger WALTZES FROM DER ROSENKAVALIER Richard Strauss THE GOLDEN COOKERY Rimskv-Korsakov Introduction & Wedding March INVOCATION OF ALBERICH Mr. Wiley, conducting THE YEOMEN OF THE GUARD, OVERTURE FOUR SCOTISH DANCES A WELSH RHAPSODY Richard Wagner Mr. Wiley, conducting Arthur Sullivan Malcolm Arnold Edwar German KU production chosen for USO summer tour A musical given two seasons ago by University of Kansas students has been selected by the USO to tour military installations in Europe this summer. "Destry Rides Again," a Broadway hit with a Western flavor, will tour military bases in West Germany, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands, according to Dr. Jerry Davis, assistant professor of speech and drama, who will be the show's director-manager. Six of the cast are members of the original production shown two seasons ago as part of the regular theatre schedule. It was directed then, as now, by Mrs. Anita Messeth, instructor in speech and drama. ( The strange ritual of love between the Indian Princess and the white man RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" IN NAVIGATION TECHNOLOGY BANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR* © 2014 NOW Mat. Daily 2:30 Evening 7:15-9:30 Granada THEATRE-----Telephone VI 3-5780 16 researchers to train next year Advanced training of 16 research scientists will be conducted next year at the University of Kansas under a $113,292 grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. The goal of the program is to prepare scientists for positions in pharmaceutical and agricultural research or for academic work in bio-organic chemistry. Edward E. Smissman, University Professor of Pharmacology and Medicinal Chemistry, said the grant is one of seven currently being made in the U.S. Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. FREE Speed Reading Lesson at the Holiday Inn Sunday Friday Saturday 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:00 8:00 8:00 June 26 1970 KANSAN 5 V EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Use Kansan Classifieds PIRATE TIGER come as you are... hungry Sandy's HAPPY BIRTHDAY Don't Forget "Pepsi Hour Daily from 3-4:00 AT SANDY'S 15c Pepsi For 10c home of the plaid beret PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents LEE CLINT MARVIN EASTWOOD JEAN SEBERG PAINT YOUR WAGON Base on the Lerer and Loewe Bioaways institution al ply Mat. Daily 2:00 Eve. 7:10-9:45 Varsity THEATRE ... Telphone VI3-1065 "Pufnstuf" zaps the world! 9:15 JN. 2:15 orld! 50 G Hillcrest Adults $1.50 Children 75c THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED MOTION PICTURE! BEN HUR Winner of 11 Academy Awards —NOW SHOWING— Eve. 7:30 only Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:00 Adults $1.50 Children 75c THE Hillcrest "VERY LIKELY THE MOST SENSUOUS FILM EVER MADE!" Eve. 7:10-9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:10 "VERY LIKE -N.Y.Daily News D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" THE Hillcrest E PARKS LANDMARKS Proof of Age Required A horse-drawn wagon is seen near a stone building in the background, with people working nearby. The scene appears to be set in a rural area with open fields and a rocky wall on the left. Home of Hosteen Claw Begay, grandfather of the bride. এবার মানুষের স্বীকার প্রযুক্তি অনেক গুরুত্বপূর্ণ। Bride Wilma R Marriage The Navajo way A Navajo marriage is more of an arrangement between the two families than between individuals. Gary Mason, assistant professor in photojournalism, and his wife were recently invited to the Navajo marriage ceremony of friends they made while working on a Navajo reservation in New Mexico. While attending the marriage he and an assistant were permitted to take photographs of the ceremony. The ceremony was held in a ceremonial bogan at the home of Hosteen Claw Begay, the bride's grandfather, who is also a medicine man. Begay's home is on the Navajo reservation near Shipprock, New Mexico. Custom requires that the bride, Wilma Redhorse, and the groom, Harrison Charley arrive at the Hogan from opposite directions. Charley traveled across the desert from the east while Miss Redhorse arrived from the west. A hogan is made of vertical logs for the walls with horizontal logs placed atop them for the roof. The door always faces the east. The hogan is more spacious than it looks from the outside. During the ceremony approximately 40 persons were sitting inside. There is a square window in the roof to let the smoke out, but during the marriage ceremony there was no fire. 6 KANSAN June 26 1970 Charley and his family entered the hogan first. His family and his guests sat on one side of the hogan while Miss Redhorse's family sat on the other side. After Charley entered the hogan, Miss Redhorse and her family walked from her grandmother's house to the hogan, a distance of 400 yards, carrying food for the marriage feast and the marriage basket. It was explained at the outset of the ceremony that the white people present were invited guests and were permitted to take pictures of the ceremony. The ceremony was spoken entirely in the Navajo language. Miss Redhorse's uncle, Charles Begay, performed the ceremony, while her grandfather directed him in its execution. Begay first gave Charley a gourd of water. With the gourd he washed his bride's hands. Begay then took the gourd and gave it to the bride, who washed the groom's hands. The bride and groom mixed yellow and blue corn meal in the marriage basket and then ate of the meal starting in the north section of the basket. They then each ate some of the corn meal from the east, west, and south sections of the basket. The eating from the four sections of the basket symbolized the four sacred mountains of the Navajos, the La Plata mountains in the north, the Sierra Blanca peak in the east, the San Francisco peak in the west and Mt. Taylor in the south. The food brought into the hogan was eaten by everyone. No food is left, it is either eaten or taken home. The bride's mother gave the groom's mother food and a blanket symbolizing that the families are one. The bride and groom then introduced their families and guests. Wilma Redhorse attended Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia under a tribal scholarship and is now working for her tribe. Harrison Charley is also working for the tribe and will, as is customary, live with his wife's family. I The marriage ceremony Photos by Gary Mason and Greg Sorber - Records - Records - Records - 8 Track Tapes - Fisher Stereophonic High Fidelity - Roberts Tape Recorders - Dual Record Changers - Garrard Record Changers - Sony Radios - Panasonic Radios - Records THE SOUND • Records THE SOUND HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 925 10WA • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 (913) V1 2-6331 SOUND BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including Wigwam / Dayy Oil W/ (Little Sadie Copper Kettle / Early Mornin' Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center KIEF'S NAMOON DUMMUDA Bride Wilma Redhorse and brother James BONNIE GORDON Guests arriving at the ceremonial hogan Groom Harrison Joe Charley A. M. A. S. June 26 1970 KANSAN 7 Charles Begay, uncle of the bride performed the ceremony Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement White House staff scores tops in Reading Dynamics On hand for the graduation ceremonies was Evelyn Wood, the former Utah school teacher, who developed the techniques that have enabled students to increase their reading skills by an average factor of 4.7 times. "The high motivation of the White House students is explained by the incredible reading load that faces them in their jobs," according to Peter Kump, who, along with Shirley Carter of Evelyn Wood, was responsible for teaching the course. "The White House staff members work 12 hours a day, six days a week; the The classes were conducted at the White House under the direction of Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics. The company operates over 150 institutes in the United States and abroad and has taught rapid reading techniques to more than 450,000 persons in the last ten years. Washington, D.C., May 25—The White House had a graduation ceremony tonight-for staff members, including top presidential aides, who submitted themselves to a rigorous eight-week course in rapid reading techniques. Their purpose: to get out from under the pile of government paper and to put more stretch in their already demanding, 12-hour day, six-day a week schedule. Advertisement only way they can get through the mounds of reading material is to increase their reading efficiency. We have been teaching what we call responsible reading which implies not mentioning content coupled with faster reading. The students have been able to increase their reading rates three to four times; in effect, they have succeeded in 'creating' additional productive hours every day." Terry Cahill, general manager and executive vice president of Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics with headquarters in New York City, commented, "The fact that Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics was selected to conduct these classes at the White House attests to the efficacy of the technique that has been instrumental in helping thousands to improve their reading skills." Typical comments from the White House staff on the course include the following: "This course has given me the insight to achieve at a greater rate of speed." "Very good; has improved reading skills and comprehension tremendously." "The course has increased my reading speed to well over five times my previous ability. A course of this type is of great value to all who are required to read for background." "The methodology and instruction have been excellent." "Should be taught in early life in school." Advertisement Mrs. Wood, who now resides in Salt Lake City, addressed the class and presented a certificate of graduation to each student. In a separate ceremony, Mrs. Wood presented United States Commissioner of Education, Dr. James E. Allen, Jr., with 100 Reading Dynamic scholarships "to be awarded by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to individual and/or groups that in the opinion of the department could benefit from the techniques of rapid reading and contribute to their educational enrichment." Mrs. Wood said that the scholarships are being awarded "in recognition of the 'Right To Read' program as the nation's number one educational priority and in commemoration of the department's efforts to encourage students to read at the ton of their skills and thus to better prepare them for a responsible place in society." White House staff members who were enrolled in the class included: Ron Ziegler, secretary; Patrick Buchanan, special assistant to the President; Dwight Chapin, staff assistant; Kenneth Cole, Jr.; denuty assistant for domestic affairs; Leonard Garment, special consultant to the President; General James Donald Hughes, military assistant to the President; Egil Krogh, deputy assistant to the President for domestic affairs; John E. Niedecker, deputy special assistant to the President; John Price, staff assistant to the President; Constance Stuart, staff director to Mrs. Nixon; Rose Mary Woods, personal secretary to the President, and Dr. Stanley Bear, the President's doctor. This is the second time that Reading Dynamics has been taught at the White House, Mr. Cahill said. In 1962 President John F. Kennedy, who was a naturally fast reader, invited Mrs. Wood to the White House to teach reading improvement to members of his staff. It was in 1959 that Mrs. Wood brought her new reading techniques to Washington, D.C. Many prominent figures successfully took the course including 23 U.S. Senators and Representatives. Originally Mrs. Wood started to research rapid reading techniques while a graduate student at the University of Utah. After receiving a master's degree in 1945, she began to develop teaching techniques that would later become the basis of Reading Dynamics, the world's largest reading improvement program. In her system, the essence of rapid reading is to read down the page, not from left to right; to read groups of words or complete thoughts, not a word at a time; to avoid involuntary rereading of material, and to transfer reading efficiency to various reading materials. Her method employs the use of the hand as a pacer. The course, which requires some daily home practice, is given over an eight-week period, usually with a $2\frac{1}{2}$ hour class held once a week. Students learn to read different materials at flexible rates, depending on the reading purpose. They also learn to improve study and recall habits. Today Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics is a subsidiary of FAS International, Inc., an educational service company with 400,000 active students studying in 60 countries. The Reading Dynamics Institute in Lawrence will have a special four week course beginning July 7. This course will meet Tuesday evenings and Friday afternoons throughout the month of July. Free speed reading lessons will be given at the Holiday Inn Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, at 3:00, 5:30 and 8:00 p.m. This lesson will illustrate the essentials of Reading Dynamics and will provide the public with an opportunity to ask questions concerning the course. For information concerning the free lessons and the special four week course call VI3-6426. 12 --- Northeast corner safest One way to halt air pollution might be trap all noxious gases—for awhile, anyway. A water tower behind a house, plus a little tricky angling, were the components of this illusion. Tornado study compiled The radio crackles out news of possible tornado sightings. The rain stops, and an eerie calm settles in, predicting the coming storm. Sirens blare warnings to take cover. From long years of training, Midwest residents flee to the supposed safety of the southwest corners of homes and basements. Although this scene is familiar to many Midwesterners, researchers at the University of Kansas have determined the southwest corner is not always the most dependable haven of safety in tornadoes. After more than two years of observing tornado damage in four states, Joe R. Eagleman, associate professor of geography and meteorology and director of the research, said the safest shelter during tornadoes is the northeast corner opposite the approach of the storm. Eagleman's research began with studies of data compiled on the Topeka tornado of 1966. Since then, he has observed destruction by tornadoes in Ohio, Mississippi, Texas, and at Salina. Although tornadoes occur with some frequency in these areas, Eagleman said there is a surprising shortage of homes with basements. Many persons have only ground-floor shelters. Eagleman said the southwest corner of the ground floor is especially dangerous because the brunt of the tornado's impact strikes the southwest, slamming heavy debris into that section of a building. In one of his observations, Eagleman found that the central sections of buildings seemed to be the safest. All other studies showed the least destruction in north or northeast portions of homes. During his observations of the destruction by the tornado that struck Lubbock, Texas, in May, Eagleman was surprised to discover that smaller rooms also seemed to offer the best protection. He said many Lubbock residents survived the storm closed in closets or small bathrooms. The best protection in a tornado, Eagleman said, is a specially-constructed underground shelter. Cellars also offer safety. In homes, basements are safest, with ground floors and upper floors offering less protection. The meterologist said some of the most serious injuries and damage occur in trailer courts. He urged residents of such parks to request construction of some type of community shelter or basement for safety during storms. Eagleman's research is continuing with a $28,674 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service for 1970-71. He hopes to conclude the project by June of 1972. As a complement to safety research, Eagleman is working with Vincent Muirhead, associate professor of aerospace engineering, and Nicholas Willems, professor of civil engineering, to test model homes in wind tunnels. Through these tests and through laboratory observance of the behavior of a simulated tornado funnel, the researchers hope to determine the designs and building materials which hold up best under stress. OLD TIRES USED KOBE, Japan (UPI)—Japanese engineers are using old tires in an attempt to reduce serious highway accidents. Tires painted yellow are attached to concrete guardrails along curves on the Okufutabaki highway to absorb the shock of automobiles which strike the rails. The tires are placed side by side to form an unbroken rubber cushion on curves. Woman attends USITA program LAVIER $500 ALSO $250 TO 2500 TAMPICO $200 WEDDING RING 100 Clearly flawless The center diamond shows no visible flaws to a trained eye under 10 power magnification. Stop in and see our Diamond Rings today. PRODUCTS ON PERFORMANCE DEFINITION GOOD HOUSEKEeping GUARANTEES Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-No. 7368 Avepanke LAVIER $500 ALSO $250 TO 2500 KENNETH KING KENNETH KING TAMPICO $200 WEDDING RING 100 BOB DYLAN SELF-PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6.99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center CUSTOM LEATHER CRAFT from: Primarily Leather SANDALS - BELTS - WATCHBANDS BOOTS - BAGS - VESTS - MOCCASINS 812 Mass 842-8664 Remodeling Sale! • Summer Dresses Reduced 30 to 50% • Discontinued Bras Reduced 40% THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $3.99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Open 'til 8:30 Thursday Please use our parking lot (west) entrance during remodeling. Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 • 835 MASS. • VI3-4833 PRODUCER ON PERFORMANCE OFFER Good Mousekeeping GUARANTEED REIMMALION OF ROBERT TO CONSUMER Christian's Christian's "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass "Special College Dance" V13 5432 BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Morning Rain BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sodie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rum ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $3'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Q THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout. Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $399 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' CUSTOM LEATHER CRAFT Remodeling Sale! ● Summer Dresses Reduced 30 to 50% ● Discontinued Bras Panties Reduced 40% Girdles Open 'til 8:30 Thursday Please use our parking lot (west) entrance during remodeling. Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833 Grants Awards John Spaulding, associate professor of pediatrics, has been named director of the $2.8 million Kansas City University Affiliated Facility (UAF), soon to be built at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The UAF is part of the Medical Center branch of the Kansas Center for Human Growth and Development, a tri-campus program with other locations at the University of Kansas at Lawrence and Parsons State Hospital and Training Center. Dr. Herbert C. Miller, chairman of pediatrics, has served as interim director for the UAF here. Dr. Spaulding will coordinate the activities of the UAF with the Medical Center's Children's Rehabilitation Unit, of which he is also director. The UAF program will be an extension of the present interdisciplinary training program in the CRU. *** Fourteen predoctoral students at KU will study clinical psychology as it relates to community mental health during the 1970-71 academic year under one of the oldest continuing grants awarded to the University. This year's funding by the National Institute of Mental Health for $113,271 marks the 22nd year of support for the clinical psychology training program at KU. Eric M. Wright, professor of psychology, said the grant will finance class and field work by the 14 students and partially support expenses for faculty involved in the program. All 14 Ph.D. candidates will be assigned to mental health facilities either at the University or in the Lawrence area where they will participate in treatment and psychotherapy of clients and assess encounter group situations of clients in their families, schools and other social groups. * * Two graduating seniors in architecture have received American Institute awards for excellence. John R. Kelly, a January graduate from Chesterfield, Mo., received the Thayer medal for excellence in design and the AIA medal and award for scholastic achievement and promise of professional ability. Joseph E. King, June graduate from Potwin, received the AIA certificate of merit given to the senior who is runner-up for the AIA medal. King also received the Alpha Rho Chi medal from the national social-professional fraternity in architecture. **\*\*\*** Eleven undergraduate mathematicians are participating in a special research program of topological spaces at the University of Kansas. The 10-week program, June 8-Aug. 14, is funded by the National Science Foundation. Three faculty members from the staff of the mathematics department are in charge of the project. Dr. G. B. Price, chairman of the mathematics department is director, and Drs. Jack R. Porter and Charles J. Himmelberg are research supervisors. Participating students receive a $600 stipend for their research work. * * A University of Kansas research team, headed by Lugene Houston, assistant professor of biochemistry, will delve into the complex makeup of living cells in a study of nine growth enzymes and their respective reactions. The first year of the three-year project is being funded by a $15,702 research grant from the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases. June 26 1970 KANSAN 9 For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. FREE Speed Reading Lesson at the Holiday Inn Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE Friday Saturday Sunday 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:00 8:00 8:00 M EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Patronize Kansan Advertisers TOWN CRIER BOOKS MAGAZINES POSTERS CANDLES 919 Mass. STUDY GUIDES GREETING CARDS NEWSPAPERS BLACK LIGHTS Open Till 10 p.m. THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $3.99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Patronize Kansan Advertisers DROP ANCHOR AT THE Captain's Table Double Cheeseburger 70c Double Hamburger 65c Rueben Sandwich $1.00 The Captain's Table Across the Street From Lindley Hall Near Chi Omega Fountain Open 8:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE Spooner houses Union art Many paintings and etches that had been exhibited throughout the Kansas Union for many years were moved during the April 20 fire to a place of safer storage. Spooner Hall now houses the works of art in temporary storage. However, art museum director Bret Waller said, "They are not being stored under good conditions." Waller received a call on the night of the fire from Mrs. Katherine Giele, Union Activities, who informed him that the Union was burning and students were moving the art objects out. The students had carried many of them to a nearby apartment and Waller directed that they be moved to the art museum. "The students who risked their lives in running into the building and pulling these pieces out without damaging them were remarkable. It's a minor miracle," Waller said. According to Waller, only one painting was slightly damaged by water, which had turned the varnish white. FREE Speed Reading Lesson at the Holiday Inn Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. Friday Saturday Sunday 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:00 8:00 8:00 Included in the art collection are Piranesi etchings, paintings by John Steuart Curry and a variety of other prints and paintings. Curry's series of oil sketches for the mural in the Kansas State Capitol were among those objects moved. The collection will be re-exhibited as soon as reconstruction of the Union permits. The 14 students and two KU staff members, Evelyn Hutchinson and Margaret Peterson, are living in a dormitory at Coffeyville Junior College. Mrs. Carolyn Brose, assistant professor of medical-surgical nursing, is commuting between Coffeyville and Kansas City. The Coffeyville-Independence area was selected for the course because local physicians and hospital personnel offered to help and because the majority of patients there are from the immediate vicinity. Many patients at KUMC come from communities away from Kansas City and are not within easy access of students trying to make home visits. 10 KANSAN June 26 1970 City General Hospital to arrange special one-year training experiences for outstanding Congolese nurses. Three doctors head for posts in Africa In addition to work at the 110-bed Memorial Hospital, students spend time in offices of practicing physicians where they meet the patients for the first time. If the patient is scheduled for hospitalization, the student visits the patient's home to prepare him for his hospital stay. While in Africa, Mrs. Youmans plans to teach vocal music at the American secondary school. The four Youmans children will attend an American school. In early July, Dr. Roger Youmans will become part of a 10-physician team at the Kinshasa General Hospital in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The team will work to upgrade the hospital while training Congolese doctors in American medical methods. Dr. Youmans will be in charge of emergency trauma surgery, the emergency room and the intensive care unit. Dr. Grace Holmes will be assigned to the pediatric department while her husband will be chief of medicine. Three faculty members from the University of Kansas Medical Center (KUMC) and their families will assume positions as consulting physicians and instructors at two hospitals in Africa this summer. In addition to his work at the Kinshasa hospital, Youmans hopes to organize short assignments in the Congo for Kansas City area physicians through a newlyformed group, Doctors Overseas in Christian Service. Drs. Grace and Fred Holmes and their children left earlier this month for a three-year stint at the 300-bed Christian Medical Centre in Moshi, Tanzania. They will help organize the new referral hospital on the southern slope of Mt. Kilimanjaro. He also hopes to continue a program with KUMC and Kansas The students are fulfilling eight-hour elective requirements with a new course, "Nursing Intervention in a Small Community," which is based on a continuity-of-care philosophy. M The Coffeyville Memorial Hospital has become the summer campus for clinical experiences and classroom study this summer for 14 senior nursing students from the University of Kansas Medical Center. (KUMC). EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Nurses working in Coffeyville Patronize Kansan Advertisers June 8-13-Darlene Austin June 8-13-Darlene Austin June 15-20-General Assembly June 22-27-Saints'n Sinners June 29-July 4-The Pride Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center Live Music Every Night (except Sunday) - All Summer - Free TGIF with ID's OPENS TOMORROW THE BROADWAY COMEDY HIT LUV ★★ ★★ By Murray Schisgal June 27, 29, 30 & July 1, 2 & 3 at8:20 p.m. Experimental Theatre Murphy Hall For Tickets Call UN 4-3982 Womens Sandals Sale Priced Were $6 to $11 NOW $3.90, $5.90, $6.90 McCoy's shoes McCoy shoes 813 Mass. St. Phone VI 3-2091 New York Cleaners For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Picnic Supplies Ice Keg Beer Case Lot Beer 616 Vermont VI 3-0350 Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening The Sirloin Dine in candlelight atmosphere S. choice steaks, Finest seafoods Open 4:30 Closed Monday 1½ Mi. N. of Kaw River Bridge VI 3-1431 "If The Shoe Fits . . Wear It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon F PLANNING A TRIP?? Let Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans Early With Us Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 A baby playing a drum 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 Use Kansan Classifieds KANSAN CLASSIFIED Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the brochure are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin FOR SALE Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and India prints from the Hodge Fodge at 15 W. 9th, 10:00-5:30 '68 Datsun 2000 roadster—5 sp., robin egg blue, good rubber, new Stebro exhaust, new head. Call 842-2191. 6-26 '65 MGB-BRG, almost new Michelin X's, overhauled transmission, new clutch, fantastic condition. Call 842-2191. 6-26 '65 Mus - 215 horse V-8, hust shifter, Craager mags, new wide rubber, new paint, super clean, $1195. Call 842- 2191. 6-26 '63 Sprite—black, new tires, both tops, rebuilt transmission & clutch. Call 842-2191. 6-26 '68 VW—Red sedan, one owner, carefully maintained, priced at wholesale. Call 842-2191. 6-26 Robert's 770X Stereo Tape Recorder—$225. KLH Model 42 Stereo and FM Radio—$200. Good condition. Call Kurt at VI 2-7584. 6-30 For Sale 1) Unused: copper chafing dish, calf wallet & key case, Lite-Gem high-intensity study lamp, 8 silicone drinking cups, assorted silver trays, 2) Used brass knives, wdecanter & 4 glasses, 10' GE Tole tread table, assorted kitchen items, AM clock radio with appliance cord, AM radio with aircraft fans AM, Short Wave (1.6-30 MHz) studio, world-wide reception. Call VI 3-1400. 6-30 1967 Barracuda fastback automatic, power steering, Formula "S" performance package. Good mileage and CD call. Fred Call at 843-0435 UN # 4-4326. 6-30 1968 Red 2-door hardtop Chev. Impala: black interior, auto, trans. airconditioning Also 1968 Magnavox monitor 17" screen, included. B42-207I 7-10 Heathkit AR-14 30 watt receiver (FM tuner-amplifier) had excellent care and is in excellent condition. It costs $180, best offer over $119. 843-2353 For Sale: 1964 Val. at t.4 door, green, stand. 6-cylinder engine, automatic trans—good condition $450. 842-6685 evenings. 6-26 1970 VW stationwagon AM-FM radio. $2350.00. Call: 843-0050. 7-14 10-speed bicycle. $50.00. Raphael Geminiani, excellent cond. 842-7493. Olympia portable typewriter exc. cond. $45.00 or best offer. Also set of nice china for 12 almost new $25.00; pole lamp $7.00. 843-7251. 6-30 Newfoundland Pups. Excellent for pets. Reasonably priced. Call 913-748-0946. LOST AND FOUND Will person finding black briefease in Lindley Annex, please return as soon as possible. Books, notes, cassette tapes are essential to completion course of study. 7-7 The lost art of fine handcrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Pond. Find your new belt, vest, snorkel watchband at 15 W. 9th. 10-30. 5:30. Lost—Eye glasses, black frames, Tues. 16th, somewhere from Snow along Jayhawk, Oread and Indiana Streets to 900 block. Ph. 842-7627. 6-26 - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" 摄 Bob Blank, Owner HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 THE HLE in the WALL DELICATESEN & DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III NOTICE The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $25 at the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 7-31 515 Michigan St., Bar-B-Q. If you want some honest-to-goodness Bar-B-Q this is the place to get some, Ribs, Chicken, Brisket is our specialty. Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., phone 921-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday. Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfuss, 843-8074. 7-31 7-31 Students of objectivism—meets every Monday night to discuss the philosophy of Ajyn Rand. If desire further information, call 842-6210 after 6-26 Visit a nudist camp free. For information write Garden of Eden, P.O. Box 590, Tonganoxie, Kansas 66086. 6:26 Custom made leather-sandals, vests, pants, belts, wallets, purses, stash boxes. All in stock. THE LEATHER WORKS, 1309, Ohio open 2-6 daily except Sunday. 6-26 The KU Infant Center, for infants 6 weeks to 12 months of age, is now open from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays thru Aug. 7. This is a pilot program and demonstrating good infant-care procedures the center can accommodate a few more infants in full-day care and several more infants in partial day care with regular or occasional attendance. Courses are offered of Human Development, KU UN 44392, or come to room 294, New Haworth Hall. 6-30 Guitar Lessons. All beginners and advanced folk, fingerpicking, blues, rock. Experienced, references. $130 for hour lesson. Call Kurt at 2-17584 Self-Defense Classes for men and women still forming Monday, June 13. Fire Stations, the Police Department, Fire Stations, f6 Vermont information call 842-6715. 6-19 Nursery school—Announcing summer and fall sessions at the 1st Presbyterian Church, MWF 9 to 11. Call 842-215 or 842-8116. 7-7 MG, TRUMPH, VOLKSWAGEN, and other popular sports cars repaired and/or modified. Come on in and look at J. Stewart's bridge on the left Performance Enterprises, 317 North Second Street, 7-7 2-1191. Ray Audio sells at discount prices. A.R., Dynaco, Miracord, BSR, Shure and other lines. Phone 842-2047 ave. from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. 7-31 Jim's Shop. Tune-up, carb. work, minor engine repair on most foreign or domestic cars. Major engine work on imports, other work considered. Call for VW and British Call 842-7161 before noon or after 5:30. 6-26 Strawberry Fields Leather Shop. Custom-made sandals, purses, belts, watchbands—anything you want. 714 Mass. 7-14 Dress making and alterations, 20 years experience. Call 843-2767 from the 1-4 Having trouble with Math? Senior in Math available for private tutoring. Call Jim at 843-2518 through Math Central Call Jim at 843-2518 depend upon course. 7-10 LEATHER — sandals, belts, watchbands, bracelets, bags, vests, barrettes, boots, sneakers. The finest leather - Lawrence's most finest leather shop - pre-primarily leather. 812 Mass. fw Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Guards - Badges - Recognitions - Favors - Lavalier Apt. for rent, some A/C—sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Borders campus and near town. Phone 843-5767. tf - Paddles - Mugs For Rent: Beautiful furnished air- conditioned 1 bedroom apartment to rent thru August. $100. Call VI 2-5752 afternoons and evenings. 7-7 Apartment for rent to graduate male students only. Also want ironing. For baby sitting 842-34477 or call at 927 Ohio. 7-10 2 bedroom furn. apt. a/c $95 per month, call 843-8241 and after 5:06 p.m. call 843-9373. 6-24 - Gifts - Stationery - Sportswear - Stationery FOR RENT You get the 12th month free when you rent a 2 bedrm, unfurnished for $135 or 1 bedrm. unfurn. for $120. Same deal with 2 bedrm. furnished for $150 or 1 bedrm. furn. for $135. Call 843-216 or 843-1085. 7-31 - Plaques To Rent: Duplex, 1 br., A.C., furn, ample storage, 10 min. walk to KU, $95.00 mo. 842-0171. 7-7 TYPING Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Tired of paying rent in a strange town? Two families are looking for one or two couples to share mortgage payments on a large house after Sept. 15, when they interested in cooperative friendship back of getting most of your money back when property is sold. Call 842-9971 after 6:30 for details. 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog Across from the Red Dog Al Lauter VI 3-1571 Experienced typist with electric typewriter desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-3597 Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist (English-Speech Machine) . Office-size electric) Phone 743-2873. Accurate typing of thesis, papers, manuscripts by experienced tpist on IBM carbon ribbon selective. Close to campus. Phyllis Nelson VI2-1243. 6-26 Experienced in typing term papers, misses other misc. typing. Have elec- tronic skills. Use type. correct spelling & punctuation. V13-954, Mrs. Wright. 7-31 Typing: Former executive secretary to Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners, specializes in typing in theses, term papers Call 842-8866. 6-30 EMPLOYMENT Typing: Theses, Dissertations, Term Papers, Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, 842-1522. WANTED Bare feet to be fitted for benchesafed sandals. Over 25 styles from $14.75, 3 day service. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9h, 842-0682. 7-31 NEED men of all trades for NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA, up to $2600.00 a month. For complete information write to Job Research Centre, Point-Roberts, Wash., 98281. Enclose $3.00 to cover cost. 7-10 Wanted: 2 roommates to share house near campus. $50 a month for summer months. Call VI 2-2396. 6-30 Dental hygienist for full or part time employment. Write Box 36 UKD. 7-14 Gabriel Bridal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Ky. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF Try One Today 814 Iowa Minis last longer in Egypt CAIRO (UPI)—Ironically, the miniskirt may last longer in Egypt than elsewhere. Ironically because they are highly unpopular with "the establishment"—parents, educators, government authorities. But clothing casts are also a factor. The English language newspaper, The Egyptian Gazette, noted in an editorial why the mini may be hard to erase here—the higher cost of maxis and midis. Although expressing hope that the new longer lengths would bring the demise of the mini among Egyptian women, The Gazette conceded unhappily: "The maxi cloth lengths cost more and perhaps in these times of austerity it is asking too much to demand maxi magic by day as well as night." 12 KANSAN June 26 1970 Egyptian girls who persist in wearing minis still risk raised eyebrows, abrasive comment, school expulsion and occasional physical abuse or even divorce. Dr. Zeinab El Soubki, the head of Egypt's blood bank system, expressed a fairly typical establishment view when she said the minis are so outrageous they are grounds for divorce. "Mini skirts and other exciting clothes are against our traditions," she said. "A man should divorce his wife if she insists on wearing a mini." Most educators stand firm against miniskirts. at Helmy secondary modern school in Cairo had to pledge in writing they would "conform" and not wear minis, or else they were not allowed to attend classes. Seventeen-year-old Waffa Abdel Sami was expelled recently from school permanently for wearing one. Twenty other girls Anonymous persons threatened to burn university buildings unless teachers insisted that girl students wear below the knee clothing. Egyptian men also prove formidable opponents for mini skirted girls by staring, hooting, jeering and making obscene remarks at mini wearers. Several girls have been roughed up in similar incidents and many Egyptian youths flatly refuse to date girls who wear short dresses. A semicircular recess covered by a half dome is known in architecture as an apse. Sandals are the goin' thing for Spring. Wrapped 'round with hardware, bold on design or circled in perfs, sandals are where it's at, sports fans. footnotes™ Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 PONTI in antique Brown smooth, TIGER in White or Brown antique smooth Owens Optical Come in and see our complete selection of WIRE RIMS and STANDARDS with Photo Gray and High Fashion Tint-Q-Lite lens. LAWRENCE ASSOCIATION OF OPTICAL WORKSHOPS OFFICE OF ASSOCIATES IN PHOTOGRAPHY AND ELECTRONIC PHOTOGRAPHY Owens Optical at Hillcrest BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Morning'Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $6'99 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Bob Dylan 2 record set $699 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $399 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' ON COLUMBIA RECORDS THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD $399 KIEF'S Malls Shopping Center Use Kansan Classified THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 80th Year, No.7 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, June 30, 1970 Nixon prepares broadcast SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI) —President Nixon spent a busy weekend conferring with aides on the "white paper" he will issue Tuesday defending his decision to send U.S. troops into Cambodia as necessary to orderly American withdrawal from Vietnam. The President and Mrs. Nixon arose before dawn Sunday and he accompanied her to the nearby El Toro Marine Air Station to see her off a mercy mission to earthquake ravaged Peru. Nixon then returned to the Western White House to work on the public statement which will coincide with the deadline for the U.S. pullback from Cambodia. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President talked several times with Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, his chief foreign policy adviser and one of the architects of the Cambodian policy. Ziegler said Nixon spent most of the morning in the office of the Western White House and then moved to his adjacent blufftop residence overlooking the Pacific, taking with him files of background papers to study. Nixon will follow up on Tuesday report on Cambodia with an hour long review of all aspects of his foreign policy Wednesday evening in an interview on nationwide television. Friday, thirty-eight news executives heard confidential assessments from the President and his Defense and State Department advisers on the administration's controversial Southeast Asian policies. Nixon personally welcomed the group to the Western White House and then turned them over to three experts for more than three hours of background briefings. The President was seeking support for his decision to send U.S. troops into Cambodia and for his overall policy of gradually disengaging from South Vietnam. The President will further amplify his Southeast Asian policies and discuss U.S. involvement in other areas of the world in the unprecedented hour-long foreign policy interview with three network correspondents in a live television program from San Clemente Wednesday evening. Mrs. Richard M. Nixon, flying to Peru with the "heartfelt" prayers and offerings of the American people, changed her trip schedule so she could visit earthquake victims in the most devastated areas. Her brown eyes filled with excitement as she spoke of her plans for the three day visit. Mrs. Nixon told reporters in an airborne news conference: "I feel deeply about these things. That's the kind of person I am. After she had expressed her concern for the thousands of stricken Peruvians the President said he thought "it was a great idea" for her to make the journey, Mrs. Nixon said. "I told my husband how proud I am of the American people. They raised $2.5 million and they really showed compassion and affection for the Peruvian people." "I think you should go," he told her. The First Lady said she was carrying with her the 'heartfelt "We always found the South American people very warm and friendly," she said. "There are just a few organizers who always cause trouble." prayers and affection of a free people." "I really intend to meet with people," she said with emotion. "I don't intend to sightsee." Where have all the tadpoles gone? A peaceful moment by the water's edge is an increasing rarity. If you have the time for a moment's peace, the water is often too polluted for a proper setting. But sometimes the circumstances are just right. Legislating heavy before holiday WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate is expected this week to enact into law—over President Nixon's veto—legislation providing $2.7 billion in loans and grants for hospital construction. The House last week provided the two thirds vote needed to override Nixon's veto of the bill and if the Senate, as expected goes along, it will be the first time since the Eisenhower administration that a President's veto was rejected by Congress. RICHARD DAVENPORT In other actions this week before Congress quits for a short July 4th holiday: Whew! Riding a motorcycle can be pretty sticky business, especially when the weather is as sticky as it has been. This cyclist takes time for a brisk rubdown. would run the mails, the most sweeping postal reorganization in the 187-year history of the service. - The Senate will culminate seven weeks of debate triggered by the U.S. incursion into Cambodia with a vote Tuesday on the amendment by Sens. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky.) and Frank Church (D-Idaho) to deny funds for future large scale American operations in Cambodia. It is expected to be adopted but a vital vote on a proposal to water it down by allowing U.S. military support for South Vietnamese or Thai forces operating in Cambodia will come first. - The House meantime is almost certain to pass a $3.2 billion anticrime measure, authorizing more money under the 1968 Safe Streets Act and continuing for another three years the program of federal aid to local law enforcement agencies. - With action vital before July 1, the Senate may either pass the House bill raising the ceiling on the national debt to $380 billion or adopt a temporary one month resolution postponing the problem for the time being. If nothing were done the government would be prevented from borrowing any money after July 1, making it unable to meet its payroll in July. - The Senate will also try to complete action on a bill establishing the U.S. postal service, a nongovernment agency, which Fracas dampens festival celebrated in pasture IOLA, Wis. (UPI)—Twenty-six persons were arrested Sunday following the shootings of three persons during a fracas which developed between rock festival spectators and members of a motorcycle gang. The incident was still under investigation and details were sketchy, but it apparently put an end to the fun for thousands of young people who had been on hand for the festival which began Friday. Total attendance for the weekend was estimated at 60,000 but many had left by Sunday afternoon. The Portage county sheriff's department said it had 19 men and seven women in custody in connection with the shootings. Names of the gunshot victims were not immediately released. One Chicago area man was in good condition at a Stevens Point Hospital with wounds to the chest and neck, a second Chicago area man was in fair condition at the hospital with leg wounds, and a third man, from Madison, was in satisfactory condition with arm wounds. The Madison man was transferred from Stevens Point to the Veterans Hospital in Madison. Authorities said the motorcycle gang members came from Milwaukee or Chicago and had apparently been harassing spectators through the night. When some of the festival spectators retaliated by damaging some of the motorcycles, a fight erupted in which the shootings occurred, authorities said. They were investigating how many shots were fired, and it was not immediately disclosed what kind of weapons were used. The festival was scheduled to run until late Sunday night on a 200 acre farm near here along the Waupaca Portage county line. But authorities said the disturbance apparently soured many of the young people, who began leaving in large numbers. Parking registration is 'sticker' business By KEN MEADE Kansan Staff Writer More than one KU student or faculty member has found that dealing with the Traffic and Security Office sometimes just doesn't pay. In one such losing battle, J. Lawrence Day, professor of journalism, found himself ticketed and fined $30 after following the rules to the letter. Last summer, Day bought a small foreign made car in which the driver is seated on the right side. Day dutifully registered his car with the campus officials, receiving in the process a registration sticker and a booklet of rules and regulations set forth by the Traffic and Security Office. Following the directions stated in Section II, article B of the booklet, "Registrants will receive an identification sticker . . . valid only when displayed from the inside in the lower corner of the back glass on the driver's side," Day affixed the sticker to his car —on the right side. Some time later, a campus traffic officer checking the parking zone behind Flint Hall ticketed Day's car. One ticket charged him with the violation of a restricted area regulation, and the other with failure to register the car, though the registration sticker was prominently displayed on the right side. 2 KANSAN June 30 1970 Day took the two tickets to the Traffic and Security Office in Hoch Auditorium, and was told to take the tickets to one of the traffic control booths on campus. The officers in the booth told him to take the tickets to Hoch Auditorium. After the running back and forth became tedious, Day decided to forget the whole thing. Nothing was said for about two months, until Day received two new tickets, this time marked "Not Registered" and "No Permit." All this time, the registration sticker and zone parking permit were peeking innocently from behind the glass on the driver's side. Day ignored the two new tickets also. Recently, he received a letter from the Traffic and Security Office, calling attention to his "Excessive Violations" and requesting payment for $30 in accumulated fines. For Students on the Go, We're TOPS 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 Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking 音乐家 Independent LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN PLANT 202 W. 6th VI 3-4011 BIRD CITY 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 FREE SPEED READING LESSON at the Holiday Inn Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. Photo by Ken Meade Tuesday Wednesday Friday 3:00 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:30 5:30 8:00 8:00 8:00 M EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS WILLIAM ALLEW WHITE KU SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM 3948 STATE W 34 After collecting $30 worth of accumulated fines, Day moved the sticker from its proper position according to the rules, to its accustomed, though in this case improper, position. A copy of the letter was sent to Lee F. Young, acting dean of the school of journalism. Day was finally able to see Captain John M. Thomas, director of Traffic and Security. Thomas said he felt he must support the officers in their interpretation of the law, and could not invalidate the tickets. So Day still owes the fines, Thomas still backs his officers, and a date is to be set with the traffic and security tribunal for a final judgment. "I'm sure everyone involved here is a person of good will," Day said. "This situation shows what problems can develop in our modern society." And the registration sticker and permit? They're now displayed in the lower left side on the right-hand drive car, and Day anxiously awaits his next ticket — this time probably marked "Improper Display." In 1914, the proportion of field artillery to infantry was one gun to 1,000 rifles. Free Coke with the purchase of our DAILY SPECIAL and this coupon at The Captain's Table (near the fountain) COFFEE HOUSE OPENING July 3rd $1/head cover Located on the 2nd floor across from Winters Chew Featuring CHET NICKLES on Folk Guitar and Vocals ★ITS YOURS★ ★ D I G I T ! ★ 735 1/2 New Hampshire Grants Awards Paul Murray Kendall, former Rose Morgan Visiting Professor in the spring of 1969, will return as visiting professor of English for the 1970-71 academic year. Kendall, professionally an English scholar, is best known to the public as a historian and biographer. His books include "Richard the Third," "Warwick the Kingmaker," "The Yorkist Age," and "The Art of Biography." Holder of three degrees from the University of Virginia, Kendall taught for 33 years at Ohio University in Athens, the last 11 of them as Distinguished Professor. His scholarly work has been aided by grants from Ford, Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundations, and the American Philosophical Society. * * John W. Poos of Salina, a partner in the accounting firm of Kennedy and Coe, has been elected chairman of the University of Kansas School of Business Advisory Board's executive committee. Poos is a 1942 graduate of the KU School of Business. He succeeds Ray E. Dillon Jr., of Hutchinson, who will remain on the executive committee for an additional one-year term. The nine-member executive committee is chosen from the 52- member Advisory Board. * * A University of Kansas alumnus and native of Beloit has won the $1,000 Paton award for best in the show at the Fifth Biennial Beaux Arts Designer/craftsman exhibition at the Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts in Columbus, Ohio. He is Condon F. Kuhh, now associate professor of art at Drake University where he has taught since 1963. Kuhl earned the bachelor of fine arts degree at KU in 1963. Jewelry and silversmithing was his major. Kuhl's winning entry was a 13-inch-tall sterling silver chalice. It was purchased by the Columbus gallery for its permanent collections. Social welfare group studies mental illness Consultation as a mental health service will be the subject of an institute for social workers given in Wichita July 14-15 by the University of Kansas School of Social Welfare, Dean Arthur J. Katz said today. Larry R. Brown and John C. Baird of KU will lead the program at the Hotel Broadview. Because of the frequency of mental illness—a high level study reported one out of every four persons in the United States is mentally ill—the supply of social workers, psychologists and psychiatrists is far short of the need, Brown said. Hence social workers must rely on consultation to help many emotionally disturbed persons. By giving sound advice to ministers, lawyers, family doctors, and school personnel, the social worker can indirectly aid the mentally ill who are not getting clinical help, Brown explained. The Wichita institute will attempt to pinpoint the role of the social worker-consultant as a mental health servant. Participants also will consider the modes of consultation by analyzing case histories. June 30 1970 KANSAN 3 Botstein, appointed new college president NEW YORK UPI)—Leon Botstein, a mop headed 23-year-old just a year out of college will become the president of Franconia College in New Hampshire Aug. 1, making him the youngest college head in the nation. The appointment was announced Thursday by Joseph Monserrat, president of the New York City board of education. Botstein has been aide to the board's president since obtaining his master's degree from Harvard last year. He is currently studying toward a doctorate. "With this appointment the greatest cop-out of our times, the generation gap, will be exploded," Monserrat said. Franconia is a private co- educational school located near Laconia, N.H., which has experimented in giving students significant voice in policy making. It has 250 students. Botstein also will teach at the college. Botstein was born in Zurich, Switzerland, where his parents had fled from Poland. He received his bachelor's degree from the University of Chicago in 1967. He was appointed a teaching fellow at Harvard after receiving his master's, and also taught Western civilization at Boston University. His parents are doctors and are on the staff of Albert Einstein Medical College. "My own parents were incredulous when they heard of the appointment," Botstein said. FREE SPEED READING LESSON at the Holiday Inn Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call V1 3-6426. Tuesday Wednesday Friday 3:00 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:30 5:30 8:00 8:00 8:00 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS 1 V Use Kansan Classifieds Summer Clearance SALE 25-40% OFF SPORT COATS reg. to 69.50 from $25.00 SUITS reg. to $120.00 from $55.00 DRESS SHIRTS Entire Short Sleeve Stock $5.00 TIES special group 1/2 off KNIT SHIRTS reg. $14.00 now $10.00 Large group $4.00 SLACKS flairs, straight legs, patterns, solids $12.00 BERMUDA SHORTS entire stock reduced 40% SWIMWEAR all styles reduced 20% Famous Cole-Haan Shoes 25% Entire stock is not included OFF MISTER GUY The Clothing Consultants NINE-TWENTY MASSACHUSETTS KANSAN COMMENT Freedom Rubbish Midwestern Music and Art campers learned last week, much to their surprise, that they were being repressed. In one of the single-sheet mimeographed handouts so common on the KU campus, some anonymous group of self-appointed philanthropists announced their intention to free the campers from the "blatant examples of repression" to which they are being "subjected." Right on, right on, brothers! Free the poor, oppressed children from the horror of being forced to wear their hair short (how long can hair grow in five weeks?); free them from the terrible fate of being forced to wear dresses on Sunday five weeks in a row. Never mind the children who are going hungry in the poverty pockets of America—the Trail Room has been declared off limits to throngs of starving campers. Put aside the problems of the minority groups of America—the campers are not allowed to smoke in dormitories. Racial discrimination, oppression of minority groups, illiteracy, poverty—all these minor sosial problems must take a back seat to the major problem at hand. After all, America's other ills are year-round, and the campers must be released from their chains within the next four weeks. to pollute her lungs in her room? How can a budding artist express himself if he must make his bed and straighten his room each day? How can a camper possibly practice a Spanish dialect on Sunday if he must wear a tie? How can a flutist flute unless she is allowed When the campers are free at last (though it may require following them to their homes, where some of the same "unreasonable" regulations are enforced), let us hope that the mysterious group behind the handouts does not slacken their pace, but turns to free other oppressed peoples. If this writer may offer a humble suggestion, why not release infants from behind the bars of their cribs and playpens, or, better yet, free the fetus from the shackles of the womb? Surely these helpless souls are worthy of your attention. Oh, ye humanitarians. How sadly you are wasting your time and talents. The campers you are trying so hard to save were given a pamphlet of rules before registering for the camp. Obviously they did not consider those rules unduly restrictive, or they would not be here. Are black people given a list of discrimination and racist policies before being born? Perhaps the philanthropists of KU should turn their missionary zeal to free people in the direction it would do the most good. A camper's view (Editor's Note: The following is an editorial written by a student in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, journalism division. The subject matter is of his own choosing, and was not assigned or prompted by any camp official or faculty member.) A publication has recently appeared on the KU campus which condemns the repressions of freedom of the campers. My response to this publication is that it is a bunch of bunk. No freedoms have been denied the campers, and if some rules seem unduly harsh or overbearing, the campers are not without the power to have these rules altered. There are precedents for change, as was demonstrated last year. It also was entirely within the power of the students not to come to the camp, as all the rules were explained explicitly in the information sent to the campers. These rules were formulated with the good of the campers in mind, and none of the rules can hurt them. There are people in his world who try to right the world's wrongs, even when the wrongs actually are the rights. The publishers of the previously mentioned paper must belong to this category. They are trying to straighten out the crooked, uplift the downtrodden, and act like the heroes of tomorrow. These persons neglected to speak to the students here. The students are quite well off and are not being suppressed, but rather are being urged, simply by being offered to come to this camp, to express himselfs and what they believe in. The varied fields of studies, such as speech, music and journalism, all offer outlets of expression. I therefore say that we should count our blessings that we live in a country where even the Brutuses and the Guiteaus are allowed to flourish. —Bob Kolski Harry Berlin, played by Richard Sarradet, Metairie, La., junior, is a dropout. Ever since a dog urinated on Berlin's leg shortly after he left college, Berlin has had nothing to live for. Berlin is about to kill himself when Milt Manville, an old college friend, stops him. Milt, played by Rod Carr, Wichita graduate student, is the exact opposite of Harry. Milt sees the important things of life as being his gold watch, his suit and his finely descented armpits, which he forces Harry to smell. The play "Luv," which runs until July 3 at the Experimental Theatre, is a delightful comedy. It centers on the semi-tragic yet comical actions of three improbable characters, Harry Berlin, Milt Manville and Ellen Manville. The action of the play is very light. The three characters change moods with no effort. Harry, after stamping on Ellen's foot, rips off the front of her blouse. He then throws her fur coat in the river. Caught between these two men is Ellen Manville, played by Rhonda Plymate, Topeka senior. Ellen, in return, slugs Harry in the stomach, cuts his belt, causing his pants to fall down, and invites him to commit suicide. These actions, designed to test the love of each partner, give "Luv" its unique quality. If the reader has limited himself to the more heavy theatre offerings, last semester such as "The Three Penny Opera," or "View From the Bridge" he owes it to himself to see "Luv." It will give his cultural diet the vitamins it may be lacking. BOOKS: Anti-war Perhaps it is not good policy to write a new review about an old book. But it is even worse to assume that every reader knows about "Johnny Got His Gun" by Dalton Trumbo. Written in 1939 about World War I, shortly before World War II got underway, "Johnny Got His Gun" has yet to be equaled as a viciously honest and moving anti-war novel. Imagine, if you can bring yourself to it, a man with no legs, no arms, no face. A man, if he can still be called that, whose only connection with the living is through the reminiscences of those near death. biographical novel that is commended to those who are ready for light fare these summer days. There are enjoyable cartoons throughout. TENDER LOVING CARE, by Joni Moura and Jackie Sutherland (Crest, 95 cents)—The story of two Air Force nurses, an auto- The anguished cry of his mind will not be silenced. He devises a method at last to make himself heard. The feeble tappings of a faceless head against a bed, and the answering tap of fingers against what was once a forehead—and the realization that his silent plea is futile. Read it if you can bear the unbearable, if you can answer with the voice of the living the unanswered question of the dead. THE DEATH COMMITTEE, by Noah Gordon (Crest, 95 cents) A best-selling novel that deals with three prospective surgeons at the Suffolk County General Hospital in Boston. The book has been praised as an authentic depiction of life in a big city hospital. The author, Noah Gordon, wrote that interesting book of Jewish life called "The Rabbi." YOULL LIKE MY MOTHER, by Naomi Hintze (Crest, 75 cents) —Billed as being in the pattern of "Rosemary's Baby," this one is about a young widow and her horrible mother-in-law, a dame who is as bad as the worst ones in the jokes. Thrills and chills in this one. The author writes in the introduction of the book that its meaning "is what each reader conveses it to be, and each reader is gloriously different from every other reader, and each is also changing." BOOKS But the inglorious message of "Johnny Got His Gun" is unchanging. Each war is like any other war in that men die, and their bitterness is buried forever. "Johnny Got His Gun" is scheduled to become a motion picture. One can only hope that the results are as horrifying and brutal as the printed word. America should know. By JONATHAN JORDAN THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and employment advertised in Accommodations goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the editor's own opinion expressions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan or necessary ones, those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358 PLAYS:'LUV' News Staff Managing Editor Cass Peterson Assist Calderon R. Thielen Photographer Greg Sorber Art Director Michael K. Business Staff Business Advisor Business Manager National Advertising Manager Mel Adama Jim Merritt Donald R. Albon KWSAN REVIEWS Member Associated Collegiate Press NEWS ITEM: Al Capp says "hordes of people" want him to run for the Senate. NEWS ITEM. At Capp says "horses of people" want him to run for the Senate. MISTER CAPP! PLEASE RUN FOR THE YEW NITED STATES SENATE! YO IS JES A PO, HUMBLE, AVERAGE CITIZEN LIKE US EN KIN SAVE US FUM ALL THEM LEFT WINGERS! MODESTY COMPELS ME TO ADMIT YOU'RE RIGHT! THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL. 'Third Man' sewers now rigidly policed By JOHN F. SIMS VIENNA (UPI)—The sewer police of Vienna talk about Harry Lime almost as though he were a real person. The filming of Carol Reed's movie "The Third Man" was the most exciting thing that's happened in the sewers since World War II. When a four-man patrol of the Kanal Brigade took me on a guided tour of the most extensive sewer system in the world—2,000 miles of tunnels and canals—they first took me to the spot where Joseph Cotton chased Orson Welles. "Things have been quiet since then," patrol leader Andreas Werderitsch said. "But we occasionally see a rerun of 'The Third Man' on television." Vienna's first sewers were built in 1300 just after the city itself was founded. Since then they have grown into a honey-comb that builders take into account each time they consider a multi-story building. The sewers' own police force is made up of men who have served at least 10 years on the surface. Their tedious work consists mainly of checking to see that no unauthorized person is using the sewers. the wartime days when thieves would dig from the sewers into banks, warehouses and palaces are long gone. The most tempting tunnels are bricked off. During the four-power occupation of Vienna that followed the war, the sewer police were the only persons who could move unrestricted from one sector to another. On the surface, the sectors were more rigidly policed. But the arrival of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SA-LT) has brought a little spice to the work of the sewer police. They regularly check under the American and Russian embassies, where the SALT talks are held, to make sure no one is trying to bug the meetings. The danger is slight because the conference rooms in both embassies are on upper stories. The work is not pleasant. The police wear olive drab coveralls with hoods and thigh-high boots as protection. They carry powerful flashlight units and smaller flashlights for emergencies. They wear regulation pistols but can't remember the last time one was drawn in the line of duty. The smell is the worst part. The air underground is heavy and sickly-sweet with scent of decay. The light varies. In some spots it is as black as Harry Lime's heart. In others, daylight filters down from glass grilles in the sidewalks 30 feet above. The police know most of the sewer system as well as a pedestrian knows the streets above. But they carry maps in case they get lost. They maintain radio contact with an officer on the surface who warns them if it starts raining. Sudden rains cause floods. The water level ranges from a trickle in minor canals to a fast flowing six-foot depth in the biggest. In some places the flow halts and debris piles up in a thick sludge. One tunnel contained a 10-yard long pile of what looked like the remains of a year-long party—thousands of corks, cigarette ends, lemon and orange slices—and the biggest of the patrol members had to carry me piggyback through the squecling mess. We were under one of Vienna's most famous hotels. The air smelled great when we emerged. "You can understand we don't often feel like having lunch im- Parolees find work through classifieds Richard Nagy said his program has been so successful that he is asking civic organizations to get behind it and foot the bill. ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI) —A parole officer for the California Department of Corrections has launched a campaign to get newly freed convicts jobs by use of newspaper advertisements. Nagy fell upon the advertising idea quite by accident. "I was trying to find a parolee a job," he said. "We looked on foot for two days with no results. Then we decided to advertise. It worked." Nagy said at first he could not decide whether to mention anything about prison in the employment ad. "We decided to try it both ways, first stating the applicant was an ex-convict." He says these ads accomplished the purpose. "I've had a lot of discussions with ex-convicts who sometimes try to conceal the record to get a job," Nagy said. "I tell them they take a chance of losing the job when their employer finds The Astrodome in Houston, Tex., has a seating capacity of 44,500. out. But some think it's the only way. "But it's better to tell about the prison record as we did in the ad. Then we can also tell about the experience the man got while he was on the inside." Nagy said support from service clubs would serve a second purpose, as well as save the exconvict part of the $42 he receives when he leaves prison. "These service clubs could give the psychological boost the exconvict needs to start a new life," he said. June 30 1970 KANSAN 5 The tour was not finished. The patrol showed me a tunnel emerging into the Danube canal and mediately after coming up," said Werderitsch. a 70-year-old man who fishes at the exit. He doesn't catch fish. He uses a long pitchfork to harpoon pieces of animal fat and stores them in steel barrels. --at the Holiday Inn FREE SPEED READING LESSON Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. Tuesday Wednesday Friday 3:00 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:30 5:30 8:00 8:00 8:00 V EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS P.O. Box 21647, 500 S. 3rd Street, New York, NY 10005-300-21647 Email: info@elegantbusiness.com Website: www.elegantbusiness.com TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION AS TAUGHT BY MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION IS A NATURAL CONTANEOUS AS TAUGHT BY MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI TAMMAT MALKHAN Introductory Lecture by Casey Coleman 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 1 Forum Room — Kansas Union Carl's Pizza Palace PHONE V13-0753 729 MASS. OFFERS THIS COUPON FOR 1 Free Draw or Pepsi We Deliver and are now - WITH EACH PIZZA • Definitely Under New Management ☆ FRI SAT 4:00-2:00AM SUN THRU THURS/4-12 "He sells that to England," Werderitsch said, wrinkling his nose. "They sell it to fishermen to use as bait." THE ADVENTURERS Based on the Novel "THE ADVENTURERS" by HAROLD ROBBINS PANAVISION • COLOR R Starts Wednesday Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 I Granada THEATRE---Telephone VI 3-5788 A RICHARD HARRIS as "A MAN CALLED HORSE" ENDS Mat. 2:30 TONITE 7:15 Eye. 9:30 Mat. Daily 2:00 Eve. 7:10-9:45 Based on the Lerner and Loeye Broadway musical play FINAL PERFORMANCE TONIGHT 7:30 ONLY FROM METRO GOLDWIN MAYER WILLIAM WYLER'S BEN-HUIR PRODUCTION Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 CUSTOM LEATHER CRAFT from: Hillcrest THE Hillcrest Coming Soon Her Majesty's Secret Service Primarily Leather "A SID & MARY KROFF Production "Pufnstuf" PAINT YOUR WAGON At 7:15 Only plus John Wayne in HELLLIGHTERS at 9:10 Only SID & MARTY KROFFT Production SANDALS - BELTS - WATCHBANDS BOOTS - BAGS - VESTS - MOCCASINS 842-8664 812 Mass PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents LEE CLINT MARVIN EASTWOOD JEAN SEBERG Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 LARRY KRAMER MARUN ROEN KEN RUSSELL S D. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" COLOR by Deluxe United Artists Shows 7:10 & 9:30 ENDS TONIGHT THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER + VIDEO AND DVDA Next COMING APART No definite date set for Union reopening Plans for the prompt reconstruction of the Kansas Union are now underway, but no definite reopening date has been set. Frank Burge, Union director, said the actual reconstruction of the Union should begin very soon. Up until now, the work has consisted mostly of temporary repairs to prevent further and more extensive damage during the actual reconstruction. The official damage figure was set at $1,029,099.19. The building, however, was insured at replacement cost, both of its structure and of its contents. The repening of the Union will carry no new policies or restrictions. The use of the building and its facilities will continue as in the past. "The Union as reconstructed, is essentially a fire resistant building. It is necessary that its interior areas have a high accessibility to the thousands of students that use it." Burge said. "Obviously, careful surveillance by both the staff and the public will tend to prevent the re-occurrence of such a fire." Balfour said a contract for restoration would be negotiated with the B. A. Green Construction Co. of Lawrence. The time factor in restoring the building to full use and the Green company's familiarity with the structure were the factors in this arrangement, he said. The Green company built the original Union and subsequent additions and already had done the clean-up work, installed the temporary roof on the south portion of the building, and partitioned off the unusable sections. NY Cardinal urges rejection of state's new abortion law NEW YORK (UPI) — Cardinal Terence Cooke, calling the state's new abortion law the beginning of a "tragic chapter" in New York history, urged Catholics and non-Catholics to reject it and "uphold the sanctity of human life." Cooke, speaking for the Roman Catholic bishops of New York, said abortion is an example of "a world filled with violence, malice and selfishness." "We strongly affirm that the change of the civil law on abortion does not altar God's law," Cooke said. "The law of God and the law of our church remain unchanged. "To take a human life is gravely wrong. This taking of human life is particularly heinous because the life is innocent and defenseless." Cooke said he supports the doctors, nurses and other health professionals who refuse to participate in abortions and issued a BURGLAR ELUDES LONDON (UPI) — A burglar robbed Cyril Wickham of 25 pounds ($60) and two watches and then escaped because Wickham didn't want to chase him into the street wearing only an undershirt. Wickham ran after the burglar to his garden gate. "But I was too embarrassed to go any further," he said. "Kurtas" (India-style shirts) worth $267,000 were exported to France and the United States in 1968. 6 KANSAN June 30 1970 For Complete Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency VI 3-3012 824 Mass. St. plea for hospitals to develop policies to "respect the conscience" of these health workers. Cooke also said he was concerned that poor people will be pressured into having abortions "for the sake of lower welfare costs." The new law, which takes effect Wednesday, permits a woman to have an abortion performed by a licensed physician during the first six months of pregnancy. Cooke called Wednesday an "hour of sadness in New York state." "We call upon all people of good will to join with us in a campaign to reverse the life destroying trends in society which abortion and euthanasia represent," Cooke said. LAST CHANCE! $25 Prize For Best Name! You may win $25.00 for your entry in The Haas Hardware Name-The-Store Contest. The winner and the new name for our store will be announced June 30th. Come in and see our unique gift items and submit your entry-you may be the winner. Haas Hardware 1029 Massachusetts NOW PLAYING THE BROADWAY COMEDY HIT LUV By Murray Schisgal Today, July 1, 2 and 3 at 8:20 p.m. Experimental Theatre Murphy Hall For Tickets Call UN 4-3982 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or less: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Three days KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES S thirty 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 program are served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE Get it all together at your place with beautiful posters, funky incense, lampshades and India prints from the Hodge Podge at 15 W. 9th. 10:00-5:30 Robert's 770 X Stereo Tape Recorder—$225. KLH Model 24 Stereo and FM Radio—$200. Good condition. Call Kurt at VII -2-7584. 6-30 For Sale: 1) Unused: copper chafing dish, calf wallet & key case, Lite-Gem high-intensity study lamp, 8 silver drinking cups, assorted silver teacups, 2) Used: brass whisky decanter & 4 glasses, 10' GE fan Tole tray-table, assorted kitchen items, AM clock radio with appliance holder, 3) Used: Whisky ATM, AM, Short Wave (1.6-30 MC) dio, world-wide reception. Call VI 31400. 6-30 1967 Barracuda fastback, automatic, power steering. Formula "S" performance package. Package. Good mileage and up pr. Call Fred at 843-0443 or unr 4-4326. 1968 Red 2-door hardtop Chev. Impala: black interior, auto, trans, air conditioning Also 1968 Magnavox air conditioner; 17" screen included, model 842-2071 7-10 Heathkit AR-14 30 watt receiver (FM tuner-amplifier) had excellent care and is in excellent condition. Kit includes $180, best offer over $7,843-2353. 10-speed bicycle. $50.00. Raphael Geminii, excellent cond. 842-749-96 1970 VW stationwagon AM-FM radio. $2350.00. Call. 843-0050. 7-14 Olympa portable typewriter exc. cond. $45.00 or best offer. Also set of nice china for 12 almost $25.00; pole lamp $7.00. 843-7251. 6-30 Newfoundland Pups. Excellent for reasonably priced. Call 7-143 748-0946 NOTICE Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale: Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th edn. Campus Mad House, 411 W. 7th St. The summer Wallace Beery is here! Short sleeved cotton in a variety of colors. $5.25 at the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 7-31 515 Michigan St, Bar-B-Que, if you want some honest-to-goodness. Bar-B-Que this is the place to get some. Ribs, Chicken, Brisket are our speciality. Open 1 a.m. to 1 p.m., phone VI2-9510. Closed Sunday, Tuesday. Loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad Students. Beneficial Finance, 725 Massachusetts, call DeWayne Rothfuss, 843-8074. 7-31 Custom made leather-sandals, vests, pants, belts, wallets, purses, stash box, and backpacks. THE LEATHER WORKS, 1309 O'Hare, open 2-6 daily except Sunday. 7-17 The KU Infant Center, for infants 6 weeks to 12 months of age, is now open from 7.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays thru Aug. 7. This is a pilot program for perfecting and demonstrating the skills required by the center can accommodate a few more infants in full-day care and several more infants in partial day care with either regular or occasional attendance; please write the Department of Human Development KU 4392, or come to room 284, New Haworth Hall. Guitar Lessons. All beginners and advanced folk, fingerpicking, blues, rock. Experienced, references. $1.75 per hour lesson. Call Kurt. VI 2-7548 Nursery school—Announcing summer and fall sessions at the 1st Presbyterian Church, MWF 9 to 11. Call 842-125 or 842-8116. 7-7 MG, TRUMPH, VOLKSWAGEN, and other popular sports cars repaired and/or modified. Come on in and in cars out. Just over the Kaw River bridge. It is low. Performance trairises, 317 North Second Street, VI 2-1191, 7-7 PLANNING A TRIP?? Let PENNY RIDE Malls Shopping Center Maupintour TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Plans VI 3-1211 --- 大阪府立中学校 TGIF Free Admission with KU ID 格斗 groove to the of the HEAVY SOUNDS Mat. at 3-6 Fri. & Sat. MAJESTIC MOOD WARRIOR YUK NO YUK Free Admission TGIF with KU ID Strawberry Fields Leather Shop. Custom-made sandals, purses, belts, watchbands—anything you want. 714 Mass. 7-14 Ray Audio sells at discount prices. A, R.D., Dynacon, Miracord, BSR, Shure and other lines. Phone 842-2047 ever from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. 7-31 Dress making and alterations. 20 years experience. Call 843-2767 from 8 to 7-7-14. Having trouble with Math? Senior in Math available for private tutoring. Course: Maths Math. Call Jim: 843-2518 depend upon course. 7-10 LEATHER — sandals, belts, watchbands, bracelets, bags, vests, barrettes, boots, moccasins, lace. Lawrence’s wood most finest leather shop—Premarily Leather. 812 Mass. BASS GUITARIST wants to join group which plays for own enjoyment, or form such a group. All types of music. Call Mark Bauman. 834-0357. Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" 4th in Campus Med House, 411 W. 7th St. BASS GUITARIST wants to join group which plays for own enjoyment, or form such a group. A band or music Call Mark Baumn, 743-845-037 TYPING Experienced typist with electric typewriter desires manuscripts, term papers, themes and legal papers. Duplicating also available. Call 842-3587. Themes, theses, dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist KUGL S.B., English-Speech Education). Office-size electric) Phone 843-7287. LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Picnic Supplies Ice Keg Beer Case Lot Beer 616 Vermont V13-0350 Open to 10 p.m. Every Evening 73 Framed CIRCLET $500 ALSO $150 TO 1975 Christian's Perfect symbol of love "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass "Special Collections, Temple" 3 53432 TEACHERS WANTED Southwest, Entire West and Aloska for 24 years SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY 1303 Central Ave., N. E. 1303 Central Airlift Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Free Registration—Good Salaries Experienced in typing term papers, theses other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Covering business & punctuation. Call V13-9548, Mrs. Wright. 7-31 Typing; Former executive secretary to Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners, specializes in typing dissertations, theses, term papers. Call 842-8686-306 Experienced typist will give fast, accurate selections to patient solutions. Call 844-0288-71 Typing: Theses, Dissertations, Term Papers, Electric Typewriter. (Mrs.) Mary Wolken, 1712 Alabama, 842-1522. experienced typist will give fast, accurate service to applications in communications Call 844-0288 7-31 WANTED Bare feet to be fitted for bencheraffed sandals. Over 25 styles from $14.75. 3 day service. The Hodge Podge. 15 W. 9th. 842-0682. 7-31 Wanted: 2 roommates to share house near campus. $50 a month for summer months. Call VI 2-2396. 6-30 Use Kansan Classifieds Kansan Classifieds New York Cleaners For the best in: • Dry Cleaning • Alterations • Rewaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 The Sirloin Pleasantville DINING Dine in candlelight atmosphere Dine in a fine dining room Finest sea foods Open 4:30 1% ML. N, of Kaw Open 5:30 1% ML. N, of Kaw Monday VI 1-1431 "If The Shoe Fits . Wear It" 8th St. Shoe Repair 105 E. 8th 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Closed Sat. at Noon - Portraits - Passports - Applications "Please call for appointment" Skiing 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Bob Blank, Owner HIXON STUDIO FOR RENT You get the 12th month free when you rent a 2 bedrm. unfurnished apt. for $135 or 1 bedrm. unfurn. for $120. Same deal with 2 bedrm. furnished for $150 or 1 bedrm. furn. for $135. Call 843-2116 or 843-1085. 7-31 Apt. for rent, some A/C—sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Borders campus and near town. Phone 843-5767. **tf** Apartment for rent to graduate male students only. Also want ironing. For baby sitting 842-34477 or call at 927 Ohio. 7-10 For Rent: Beautiful furnished air- conditioned 1 bedroom apartment to rent thru August. $100. Call VI 2-5752 afternoons and evenings. LOST AND FOUND The lost art of fine handdrafted leather has been revived at the Hodge Podge. Find your new belt, vest, saffron, watchband at 15 W. 8th; 10-90 5.30; 7.30 Will person finding black briefease in Lindley Annex, please return as soon possible. Books, notes, cassette tapes are essential to completion course of study. 7-7 EMPLOYMENT NEED men of all trades for NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA, up to $2600.00 a month. For complete information write to Job Research Centre, Point- Roberts, Wash., 98281. Enclose $3.00 to cover cost. 7-10 Dental hygienist for full or part time employment. Write Box 36 UKD. 7-14 THE HITE in the WALL DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same Time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III. Galvin Bridal Beautiful Bridal Apparel & Formal Wear 910 Kv. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEEF WESTERN CITY Try One Today 814 Iowa Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Guards - Guards - Favors - Recognitions - Paddles Mugs - Lavaliers - Stationery - Envahers • Stationery • Gifts • Plaques - Gifts Plaque> Sportswear - Sportswear Rings - Crested - Letters Al Lauter Lauter V15 645 Mass. LNB Bldg. #306 Across from the Red Dog V13-1571 Nuns cater to tourist trade By DANIEL DROSDOFF SAN CARLOS DE BARI-LOCHE, Argentina (UPI)—A woman of imagination and enterprise is Rose Cavina, Mother Superior of the Little Sisters of Our Lady of Rosario. Five years ago the Little Sisters, of an Argentine order of nuns that specializes in education and hospital assistance work, ran out of money and were forced to halt construction on a two-story school building four and one-half miles from Bariloche. "We just went broke," said Sister Rose who heads a team of four nurses at Bariloche Hospital, the only hospital in town. A 40,000 peso ($11,428) government grant wasn't enough to complete the job. For a while the Sisters fretted. Then Sister Rose, 59, got an idea: why not raise money the way everyone else was making money in Bariloche—catering to tourism? 8 KANSAN June 30 1970 It just so happened that the 8.6 acre lot where the building was under construction was located on the road to the Llao Llao Peninsula, a 14-mile stretch of scenic highway along lake Nahuel Huapi and connecting a string of hostels, motels, hotels, cabins and estates. The Little Sisters, with their own muscle and some help from the townfolk, built five vacation cabins. "The cabins are paying, and the school will be finished shortly," the Mother Superior now says with satisfaction. They were built with pine, hammers, and nails. Doors and woodwork were donated by a rancher who was tearing down an old farmhouse at a nearby hacienda. A pump was installed to bring water from a nearby mountain stream. The cabins, which can hold a total of 27 visitors, are heated by wood stoves. Near them is a vacant lot where campers can park cars and pitch tents for 150 centavos (43 cents). SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE PRICES SLASHED 20% to 50% ● Sandals ● Dress Shoes ● Sport Shoes ● Casuals ● Boots Men's and Women's Downtown Lawrence Downtown Lawrence "They said I could head the school once it's built." She is aided by the four sisters of the same order who work in the hospital. The cabins of the Little Sisters of Rosario are well known to the businessmen of Bariloche. Their rates are highly competitive, around 11 pesos per night per person ($3.14), about two thirds the going price. The nuns do no advertising, but in two-and-a-half years the word of the cabins has spread rapidly. "I have reservations for the skiing season months in advance," the Mother Superior said. FREE SPEED READING LESSON at the Holiday Inn Raise Your Reading Rate 50-100% FREE For information about our Special 4-Week Course in July call VI 3-6426. Tuesday Wednesday Friday 3:00 3:00 3:00 5:30 5:30 5:30 8:00 8:00 8:00 --have you ever wanted to be a real live bar tender? Now is your chance! Tend bar every Tuesday at the STABLES during "girls night out," and guys be sure to come out to see how they do. And don't forget— EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS M GIRLS Friday 3:00-4:00 50c pitchers Monday ___ 8:00-9:00 50c pitchers All Day Thursday ___80c pitchers only at the STABLES A 10% discount ★ ★ Pick-up and delivery service ★ 3 locations (one near you) 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