First Edition THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Today's issue is the first of the 1970-71 year. The next Kansan will appear Monday and publication will continue on every weekday except holidays until the final examination period. 81st Year, No. 1 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, August 27, 1970 Report By KBI See Page 13 Summer Brought Tragedy to KU By BOB WOMACK Kansan Staff Writer The Shock of July Summer in Lawrence was a kaleidoscope of tragedy and fear. But even through the waves of shock and reaction there remained at summer's end some positive notes of hope and optimism. The problems were all too real for those who had to relive the days of last April. But as the news of what really happened spread farther and farther from Lawrence, so did the exaggeration and carelessness of interpretation. Millions of Americans heard national newsmen describe Lawrence as a violence-torn city with vigilantes on every roof and guns under every pillow. Irresponsible journalism seemed to exploit, rather than explain, the story. As if death and the threat of curfew days were not enough, the tragedy of reaction and overreaction almost found expression in the attempt of several Regents to use Chancellor Chalmers as the scapegoat for a tragic manifestation of deeply rooted problems that were more indigenous to the city of Lawrence than to the campus of the University of Kansas. THE VISIBLE expression of violence and tragedy began in late July with the death of a 19-year-old black youth during a gun battle with police in a predominantly black area of east Lawrence. Donald (Rick) Dowdell was known to police, and in fact had been stopped the night before his death by the same officer who shot and killed him. Dowdell's death came after witnesses saw two persons leave Afro House, a black culture center, enter a Volkswagen, which, according to police, ran a stop sign, and continue, under police pursuit until they attempted to enter an alley, but struck a curb. Dowdell ran from the car with a gun in his hand. Policeman William Garrett ordered Dowdell to halt and fired a warning shot. Garrett said Dowdell shot (Continued to page 12) The loss of Effective means of Birth Control Could STOP 95% of the Births in this country and year. Liberation A small but determined group of coeds smiles at the reaction of two male chauvinists to their Women's Lib pamphlets. Carrying signs and literature promoting birth control and urging establishment of a birth control clinic at KU, the marchers crossed the campus Wednesday afternoon. The trek was in response to a call by Betty Friedan, president of the National Organization of Women (NOW) for a nationwide strike by females. KU Seeks University Attorney The University is seeking a full time lawyer to serve as its attorney, and the Kansas Attorney General's office has offered its help if the search fails. About 10 weeks ago, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., said a University attorney was needed to handle problems the Attorney General's office could not cover because of time and staff limitations. Lawrence Blades, dean of the KU School of Law, Thursday said he had been trying to help Chalmers locate an attorney, but "we are still looking." He said the functions of the attorney would be confined to University matters. "The attorney would be a professional lawyer charged with upholding the laws of the University, seeing that the judiciary operates efficiently and fairly, and giving legal advice to the University when needed," Blades said. On Aug. 25, Kansas Attorney General Kent Frizzell mentioned the idea in his remarks on the Kansas Bureau of Investigation report on unrest at KU. Regents Vs. Chalmers, Senate Frizzell said he was in favor of such a position, but he called it a "prosecutor." On an average summer day at a not-so-average meeting of the Kansas Board of Regents the University of Kansas came within one vote of losing its chancellor of one year, E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. On July 26, during a closed door meeting, the Board voted 4-3 to retain Chalmers. The vote was presumably a result of campus disorders during the spring and summer, although Board members have refused to comment whether or not the vote indicated a question of Chalmers' ability to handle the disorders. In other action the Board unanimously voted to instruct Chalms to dismiss Gary D. Jackson as assistant to the dean of men. The Topeka Police Department had previously reported that Jackson had purchased 27 boxes of ammunition July 17 in Topeka with a check drawn on a Black Student Union fund in a Lawrence bank. A Regent told the Kansas Tuesday that the vote was a direct result of Jackson's purchases. A motion was also made that the attorney general be requested to conduct an investigation into the number of purchases of firearms and ammunition in more than normal amounts in Kansas City, Topeka and Lawrence in the weeks immediately preceding the Board meeting. The Board to date has not received a report on this. Blades said the word was misleading, because the University attorney would probably never present a case before the University Judiciary. "The University attorney would be analogous to the Attorney General in function. He would advise, but rarely prosecute," Blades said. The subcommittee met in Lawrence Aug.19 and held a hearing pertaining to the procedures of the Student Executive Committee. It will meet again Friday,Aug.28,in Lawrence to hold a hearing on hiring procedures of University personnel. Regents Henry Bubb of Topeka, Jess Stewart of Wamego and Arthur Cromb of Mission Hills were appointed to a subcommittee to investigate the allocation of student fees and the hiring procedures of administrative personnel at KU. The Board voted that allocations remain the same as last year until the investigation was completed. A report on both hearings will be made at the Board meeting Sept. 18. Another Regent confirmed to the Kansan Tuesday that there was no probationary period of any sort imposed on Chalmers. a sort of probation, but Bubb later said that he had been misunderstood by the press. After the Board meeting, Bubb reportedly said that action pertaining to another vote on whether or not to retain Chalmers would be delayed three months. This, in effect, would have put Chalmers on KBI Survey Report May Not Be Public The Kansas Bureau of Investigation report requested by the Board of Regents to investigate ammunition purchases in the area during the period of strife this summer may never be made public. Edward Collister, assistant attorney general said Wednesday. Earlier, Atty. Gen. Kent Frizzell and Harold Nye, director of the KBI, had issued a report about July's events and had said that another report could be expected this week. Collister, who has been coordinating matters relating to the probe, said Wednesday that ammunition purchases in Kansas City were still being investigated. He said the reports for Lawrence and Topeka were already completed. "We feel such a person should be a private attorney, someone from our office or who is a public prosecutor," Seaton said. Also still being investigated, Collister said, are allegations of racial trouble in Oliver Hall this summer. Collister said the request to investigate Oliver Hall was made two days before the end of summer school and the KBI had no available personnel then. He said the idea originated from Chalmers, not Frizzell, and Frizzell's comments were only "an affirmation of the Chancellor's commitment to find such an attorney for the University." Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard Seaton said the Attorney General's office was standing by to supply an attorney if University efforts failed. "But if nobody else gets the job done, we'll do it," he added. He said the Attorney General's staff would be hard pressed if a lawyer from their office was needed. "It would also have a better psychological impact if the attorney was a private lawyer," Seaton said. News Capsules By United Press International Wisconsin: Explosion MADISON—Police Chief Wilbur H. Emery confirmed Wednesday that a stolen truck filled with explosives definitely was used to blow up the U.S. Army mathematics research center at the University of Wisconsin. The FBI has taken over investigations of the blast which killed one person and injured four others Monday. Washington: Romney Housing Secretary George Romney told the Senate Select Committee on Equal Educational Opportunity Wednesday that government policies, official and unofficial, are largely to blame for current racial segregation in neighborhoods and education. He specifically named the Federal Housing Administration. Saigon: Helicopter Crashes Thirty Americans were missing and feared dead when Communists shot down a huge troop helicopter near the northern coast Wednesday. Two Americans were confirmed killed and seven wounded. Another chopper was brought down in the Mekong Delta, killing four GIs. California: Lettuce A strike by Cesar Chavez' farm union in the "salad bowl" of the nation forced lettuce prices up by as much as 100 per cent across the country Wednesday. In some cases, wholesale lettuce prices have doubled in the Midwest since Friday. California: San Quentin Inmates at San Quentin prison smashed toilets, washbasins, beds, light bulbs and burned mattresses Wednesday in the second day of trouble at the prison. Seven hundred prisoners were confined to their cells. No attempt was made to halt the destruction by officials. Paris: Xuan Thuy The chief Hanoi peace negotiator, Xuan Thuy, returned after a prolonged absence Wednesday and said North Vietnam was sticking to its same position in the stalemated peace talks. He refused to say if he would end his eight month boycott of the peace talks by attending Thursday's session. California: Inflation SAN CLEMENTE—President Nixon's chief budget manager, George P. Shultz, Wednesday cited the .5 per cent drop in wholesale prices this month, the largest in three years, as an indication that inflation is being controlled. St. Louis: Delay of Mail Richard F. Patrylo, a mail carrier in St. Louis County, told authorities Tuesday that he had just never gotten around to delivering 1,000 pieces of undelivered First Class mail and 4,000 pieces of circular type mail found in his garage and in the trunk of his car. He was charged in a federal warrant with unlawful detention and delay of mail. Washington: Pollution The Interior Department Wednesday said industries were dumping 4,800 pounds of dangerous lead pollutants into the Mississippi River daily between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Assistant Secretary Carl L. Quein told a Senate antipollution subcommittee that there is widespread lead arsenic and cadmium pollution in the area. Washington: Vietnam The Senate decided Wednesday to permit the continued defoliation of crops and forests in Vietnam over protests that it was sanctioning starvation warfare and an environmental disaster, accepting the Pentagon's contention that chemical defoliation was necessary to save Ameican lives by denying the enemy food and jungle sanctuaries. The United States has used an assortment of herbicides in Vietnam for the past eight years. Oregon: American Legion PORTLAND-Gov. Tom McCall told a statewide radio-TV audience that he will activate the National Guard, backed by federal troops, to deal with anyone coming to Portland to cause violence during the American Legion convention. McCall said reports came from a number of agencies, among them the FBI, indicating that there might be trouble. 2 KANSAN Aug. 27 1970 First Quiet Reported In 19-day Cease Fire By United Press International For the first time since the Middle East cease fire went into effect 19 days ago, the Israeli high command Wednesday reported no incidents along all front lines with the Arabs. "It has been a quiet day" a military spokesman said in Tel Aviv. But on the diplomatic front the scene was different. Israel's United Nations envoy Yosef Tekoah briefed his government in Jerusalem Wednesday on the first round of Middle East peace talks and said he expected negotiations to be upgraded to foreign minister level Hospital Has New Method In Amman, Iraqi and Palestinian guerrilla officials said they would continue efforts to prevent a peaceful Middle East solution. In the Jordanian capital fighting flared briefly between Arab guerrillas who oppose the current peace talks and forces of the Jordanian government which is participating in them. Although the cease fire along the Suez Canal went into its 19th day Wednesday there have been almost daily Arab guerrilla attacks along the Lebanese and Jordanian front lines but the attacks have slowed during the past few days. NEW YORK (UPI)A new approach to the age-old problem of the emotionally disturbed is being inaugurated by the Catholic Medical Center of Brooklyn and Queens. Tuesday there was only one mortar attack on an Israeli settlement in the Jordan Valley according to military communiques. Wednesday there was nothing. As a result of a program initiated by the Catholic Medical Center in cooperation with New York City agencies, patients are receiving effective treatment in their own homes, among their own families wherever possible. Formerly, adults who could not adjust to family and community life were sent for treatment to institutions where they might remain indefinitely. BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyFor The Devil - SympathyForTheDevil Somewhat Comm On The Battle 40.000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. PAUL NEWMAN just brag the Establishment as COOL HAND WIKE supar popular films ("What we've got here is a failure to communicate.") WOODRUFF AUD. AUG. 28/29 7 & 9:30PM 60¢ BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyFor The Devil - SympathyFor The Devil Somethin' Comin' On The Battle 40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. PAUL NEWMAN AUG. 28/29 7 & 9:30PM 60°C WOODRUFF AUD. AUG. 28/29 7 & 9:30PM 60°C WE HAVE MOVED TO 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE ST. OFFICE FURNITURE — OFFICE SUPPLIES XEROX COPYING SERVICE M&M OFFICE SUPPLY 843-0763 Don't Get Caught Short! 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WELCOME STUDENTS We're eager to serve our regular customers and anxious to help all new students - PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE - 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Use any of our three convenient locations BankAmericard DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Three Convenient Locations: Master Charge MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners KANSAN COMMENT We Can Help When football and fraternities were king at the University of Kansas, when Screw magazine was forced to fold and the SDS couldn't enlist enough people to start a chapter here, when there were "hippies" and Youth for Nixon-Agnew and athletes living with KU students, there was an easy sense of organization and of certainty about the campus. The clamor for reform of the University, of society—was on the upswing; in loco parentis was the common enemy. While the University administration remained in loco, the path of reform was simple: cleave through the endless shackles that bind students, the poor and the disenfranchised, to the dawn of solidarity in authority. Today students and the young have a measure of that authority. The Student Senate controls, nominally at least, more than $400,000 in student activity fees; the "street people" can provoke confrontations with police and the university where not long ago they could provoke only yawns; schools of the University have voting student representatives; student feelings are felt all the way to the governor's office. Yet with the triumphs of authority come the cares and failures and tragedies of responsibility. The Student Senate Executive and Finance and Auditing Committees have labored summerlong to formulate an equitable allocation of the student activity fees. A few members of the Board of Regents have emasculated their power, in part, by freezing athletic department fund recommendations at last year's level and by sending a special subcommittee to investigate the Senators' recommendations. Many campus groups that are student-controlled have lost all or a portion of their activity fees; they are understandably miffed at their peers' forsaking them. The street people have created an everescalating squabble with police. Although no cause-and-effect relationship has been or can be determined, the conflict of mentalities led to the clashing of bodies and involved the deaths of two youths in July. The chancellor was selected partially by a group of students and is influenced greatly by students' ideas and actions. Yet a vote to fire him has failed narrowly in a Regents meeting. This falls' election campaign, which may become hot enough to involve Chancellor Chalmers, portends ill for the students' backer in Strong Hall. The agonizing realization of the impact that power has can quickly bring the powerful and the semi-powerful to humility. And the realization that power is never total can bring a taste of exasperation to the romantics who imagine that, once rhinestones are forsaken, diamonds are theirs. Both of these conflicts, which are inherent in assumption of power, will affect KU this fall. What the outcome will be is uncertain, and to many students it is no doubt immaterial. But for those students who believe that our microcosm will be the prototype of the colliding forces in the future, the Kansan will attempt to be a guide to understanding. We will try to report, analyze and moralize about the news of KU and the news that bears on KU. Our analysis and moralizing you may accept or reject; our reporting, we hope, will be complete and factual, so that you will rightly trust our news pages. In that way at least, we can help you to resolve the conflicts of students' waxing authority and to understand the inevitable concomitant disappointments. —Monroe Dodd Editor of the Kansan The Lighter Side Whither the Bard On Women's Lib? By DICK WEST UPI Writer WASHINGTON-According to some scholars, William Shakespeare was something of a woman hater. That being the case, I made a search of the bard's works for clues to how he might have felt about the Women's Liberation Movement. Then, as my contribution to Wednesday's demonstrations, I pieced them together into a Shakespearian news conference: Q. Mr. Shakespeare, what is your opinion of the Women's Lib protest strike? Q. And what is your feeling towards Betty Friedan, who organized the strike? A. "In the gross and scrope of my opinion this bodes some strange eruption to our state. I know my place as I would they should do theirs." A. "The lady doth protest too much, methinks. She speaks yet she says nothing. Though she be but little she is fierce. A lion among ladies is a most dreadful thing." Q. Well what kind of woman do you prefer? A. "A maiden never bold of spirit, so still and quiet that her motion blush'd at herself. A woman moved is like a fountain troubled—muddy, it seeming, thick, bereft of beauty." Q. Are you suggesting that Miss Friedan is too militant? A. "She speaks poniards and every word stabs. Zonds: I was never so bethump'd with words since I first call'd my brother's father dad. Fie, fie upon her. There's language in her eye, her cheek, her lip." Q. Are you intimidated by her? A. "Shall quips and sentences and these paper bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humor?" Q. Some women have been burning their brassieres as a symbol of liberation. Would you comment on that? A. "Let them hang themselves in their own straps." Q. Women have been urged to abstain from sexual relations on the day of the strike. Do you think they will do so? A. "Have you not heard it said full out, a woman's nay doth stand for naught?" Q. Aren't you at all in sympathy with what the lib leaders are trying to accomplish? A. "Old fashions please me best. Such duty as the subject owes the prince, even such a woman oweth to her husband." Q. Thank you Mr. Shakespeare. SenEx on Campaigning: No Recess To the students and faculty of the University of Kansas: The concern for the future of this country has motivated many student and faculty members to a new level of political consciousness and to a higher degree of political participation. This year's election provides, once again, an opportunity for the strengthening of the concept of responsible citizenship. Members of the University community, realizing that it is essential that a sizable percentage of citizens participate in choosing public officials in order to insure the responsiveness of its officials, have been planning to work for the candidates of their choice in the coming elections. This intention to participate in the political process has produced, on the part of some, a suggestion that the University of Kansas declare an official "political recess" from mid-October through election day; or, if the recess is not declared, then it is suggested that the University grant immunity from academic sanctions to all who leave the campus to participate in the political campaigns. As an institution dedicated to the promotion of education and as a state institution responsible to the people of Kansas, we cannot fail to provide those educational opportunities that constitute our stated purpose. To provide for those educational opportunities the University of Kansas must be open and in operation. We cannot, therefore, declare an official "political recess," a declaration that would have the effect of closing the University for at least two weeks. Furthermore, we cannot change the academic calendar, either by shortening it or by rearranging blocks of time, without approval by the Board of Regents. Moreover, the University of Kansas has endeav- ored to cease acting in loco parentis. There is no University policy, for example, which uniformly and rigidly requires class attendance. Conversely, there should be no policy which creates a blanket insurance coverage for those who do not attend class by granting immunity from academic sanctions or relief from academic requirements. Each student must decide for himself the best uses of his time. In short, any student who absents himself from class must do so on an individual basis, assuming the usual responsibility for demonstrating his mastery of the content of each of his courses. Ruling out the declaration of the political recess and the granting of immunity from academic sanctions, does not, however, exhaust the possibilities for the concerned individual. Students who are interested in working for political candidates in other than their "spare time" should propose arrangements to their instructors, as soon as possible and preferably at the time of enrollment, for making up such class meetings, examinations, or deadlines for other assignments as they choose to miss in order to undertake the political activity. We urge all faculty members to consider seriously the educational value of such proposals as well as their own educational responsibilities when making their decisions on the propriety of substitution, postponement, and making up work. We would also expect each instructor to make clear at the outset those arrangements acceptable to him along with his policy regarding absences. The propriety of an accommodation must not, of course, rest on the particular beliefs and political loyalties of the instructor, the student, or the political candidate. It must be realized, however, that both logic and logistics may rule out completely such arrangements in certain types of courses. We believe that the University of Kansas must continue to provide wide and rich educational opportunities for all those who wish to take advantage of them. The choice of whether, when and in what manner to avail oneself of such educational opportunities is now, as it always has been, a decision for the individual responsible member of the academic community. To provide for that decision, the University will be open and active, as planned, throughout the coming school year. The University of Kansas believes that one of its major objectives is to educate men and women about their responsibilities, rights, and privileges as citizens of the United States. To achieve this objective there will be some courses offered in the fall that will be timely in their analysis of the political system, and several schools intend to encourage and sponsor non-partisan and balanced programs of forums, seminars, lectures, speeches, and other forms of interaction that will facilitate appropriate political involvement by all interested segments of the University community. University Senate Executive Committee Executive Committee William J. Argersinger Jr. Karon Baucom Russell N. Brandt M William M. Lucas Ross E. McKinney John S. McNown Bradley Smoot Richard L. vonEnde Paul E. Wilson Griff & the Unicorn THERE'S SOMETHING REAL INSPIRING ABOUT A NEW MORNING... BY SOKOLOFF GRIFF & UNICORN SOKOLOFF THERE'S SOMETHING REAL INSPIRING ABOUT A NEW MORNING... EACH DAY GIVES YOU ANOTHER CHANCE... ...AND IF YOU LIVE LIKE I DO, YOU NEED IT SOKOLOFF EACH DAY GIVES YOU ANOTHER CHANCE... ... AND IF YOU LIVE LIKE I DO, YOU NEED IT $ \textcircled{2} $David Sokoloff 1970 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester, for a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 660044. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. Member Associated Collegiate Press arts & reviews AGNew: PROFILE IN CONFLICT, by Jim Lucas (Award Books, $5.95) This book is excellent reference material on one of America's newest and most controversial household words. In the present climate of political polarization, one would say that the author, who died recently, was "for" the Vice-President but in a quiet and objective way. This is not a pro-Agnew polemic. The book is a chronological narrative of Agnew's political career. from Towson, Md., labor lawyer through the governorship of Maryland, to Washington. Of particular interest during Agnew's pre-vice presidential career is the account of his talks as governor to black leaders during the Baltimore race riots of 1968 following the death of Martin Luther King. It was then that Agnew lost liberal and black support which Lucas implies was unjust. Particularly clarifying are the chapters on the Republican Convention in Miami, the campaign and election, and most of all, Agnew's confrontations with radicals and with the mass media. The author was a reporter for the Scripps-Howard newspaper chain. He received the Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Korean War as well as two Ernie Pyle Memorial Awards for coverage of the Korean and Vietnam wars. *** WHEN PARENTS DIVORCE, by Bernard Steinzer (Pocket Books, $1.25) A practical approach to divorce, the author, a psychologist and family counselor, contending that an unhappy marriage can be worse than a divorce. Love, he argues, should be an essential in all marriages. *** HAIR, by Gerome Ragni and James Rado; BOB DYLAN, by Daniel Kramer; ROCK FROM THE BEGINNING, by Nik Cohn; OUTLAW BLUES: A BOOK OF ROCK MUSIC, by Paul Williams (all Pocket Books, 95 cents each) Four for the student of mass culture, or the rock enthusiast, and the latter would include virtually all university students these days. "Hair," is, of course, the by-now pioneering rock musical, and this is the book and lyrics. The Dylan volume is largely photographs, though there is a short text. The other two books are histories, and they carry the reader from the days of Presley and Bill Haley to the present. *** THE TROUBLE AT HARRISON HIGH, by John Farris (Pocket Books, 75 cents) A story of the nightmare that is becoming reality in many American high schools. The plot revolves around a boy who explodes a homemade bomb at his school. Sixty foreign nations maintain consulates in California. Aug.27 1970 Aug. 27 1970 KANSAN 5 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 $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. --- Patronize Kansan Advertisers "AIRPORT IS TOP FLIGHT ALL THE WAY!" "George Seaton has scripted and directed a sure-fire hit!" Dorothy Manner, J.A. Herald Examiner. 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Washington, D.C., Tuesday, January 27, 1970 THE EVENING STAR THE PASSING SHOW Obscene, No; Funny, Absolutely By HARRY MacARTHUR Drama Critic of The Star Sweden, which used to be headquarters for nude movies and sex movies, may declare war on Denmark over "Without a Stitch." This is the funniest satire on Swedish sex films that you are likely to encounter in months, maybe even in years. Don't be put off by the publicity and advertising being used to tout the new picture at Loew's Palace. It is not one of those "skin flicks" that belongs on Ninth St. It's a sharply comic entertainment that employs sex and nudity for a purpose rather than for exploitation. Alongside it, "I Am Curious (Yellow)" looks more than ever like a stag movie made for male smokers. I sat there in the dull morning laughing my head off while the voyeurs, who never should have allowed themselves to be lured south of New York Ave, by the ads, stalked out in boredom and befuddlement. "Without a Stitch," is a sort of "Candy" made with good taste and an alert sense of humor. It's not the cheapie its title suggests, but a well-made film. It has been handsomely photographed in color by Aage Wiltrup. It was written wittily by Anneliese Meineche and John Hilbard and it has been directed with defness and style by Miss Meineche. You do have to be prepared to go along with complete candor, maybe more than you ever have seen or heard on the screen. You also have to be prepared for a great deal of nudity and sex, both that which is considered normal and that which is considered aberrational. The sex is clearly simulated, but the nudity is not. And all you prudes had better be prepared for the fact that no healthy, young, redblooded boy in the audience is going to be repelled by the sight of Anne Grete, who plays the girl who keeps getting undressed. She just might be the second most beautiful girl in the world, dressed or undressed. --where the featured act is a pair of bosom-dropping broads wrestling in a pool of mud. She is rescued by a wealthy German and winds up being whipped to stimulate his desires and whipping him to satisfy them. Miss Grete plays a college student named Lilian, who goes to a doctor because she has failed to achieve the ultimate enjoyment in a sexual encounter with her boy friend, who is as clumsy in these matters as she is. The doctor explains — this has pretensions of being a sex-education film, pretensions it doesn't need—that it is more blessed to give than receive To put it bluntly, when he has fun, you will. The Golden Rule, the doctor explains, is involved in this area, too. Whatever you do is all right, just so long as nobody else gets hurt. "To desist from sexual pleasure," he adjures, "is not more moral than desisting from picking flowers, reading books, or skiing..." Unless you go along with this, you had better avoid deep shock by avoiding "Without a Stitch." ... With this sage advice the doctor dispatches Lilian on a hitch-hiking vacation with a brand-new diary in which to record her new experiences with life. She has some experiences, too. Her first ride is with a movie cameraman. This leads her right into movie stardom, in a stag movie made in Sweden for export only, and if they wouldn't show it there, you know this is an experience. She goes on to Copenhagen, where she meets an architectural student named Lise. Lise spends a happy night with her, then introduces her to a new gambol—one man and two girls. He doesn't appear to be quite the man for the job and this suspicion is bolstered by the fact that director Meineche quickly cuts to Germany. Here Lilian is appalled by the sexual deprivation of Hamburg, including a night club Lilian takes off, understandably, and this time comes up with an English art student on the way to Italy. He puzzles her by not making a pass at her for days. Then they get to Italy, meet an old friend of his and she learns about another of those three-way deals, this time two men and one girl. However, this account sounds "Without a Stitch" is a funny movie, not an obese one, largely due to the two women principally involved. Miss Grete, who is a real beauty, plays it with a wonderful innocence, as if it were "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm." Miss Meineche has directed it with sharp and subtle wit. without Astitch ANNE GRETE renounced "GREAT!" ONE SHOWING! Color Iry De Lasse Persons under 18 not admitted. X THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER • 9TH AND TWENTY Tonight and Saturday 12:15 a.m. Adm. $1.50 1000 RESPONSIBLE READING: BETTER COMPREHENSION LONGER RECALL FASTER EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS IS A CONTEMPORARY INVESTMENT . . . IN YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION — . . . IN FASTER READING (2-5 PAGES A MINUTE) — IN BETTER COMPREHENSION — ... IN LONGER RECALL — . . IN VALUABLE STUDY SKILLS — . . IN BETTER GRADES — ... IN THE ABILITY TO DO AN ASSIGNMENT BETTER IN HALF THE TIME — ... IN CONFIDENCE TO DO RIGOROUS ACADEMIC WORK — . IN MORE FREE TIME — . . . IN A GUARANTEE. AT LEAST TRIPLE YOUR READING EFFICIENCY OR YOUR TUITION WILL BE REFUNDED. FREE SPEED READING LESSON RAISE YOUR READING RATE 50-100% - FREE FRIDAY NIGHT 7:00 P.M. RAMADA INN KAW ROOM Book EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS 843-6424 or 843-6426 For Information, Send To: Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 1314 Oread Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Student's Name Home Address KU Address (if known) Repairs on Union To Be Complete Rebuilding and restoration of the Kansas Union, severely damaged by fire April 20, is underway and is expected to be completed by June 1971. Frank Burge, director of the Union, said that an insurance settlement of slightly more than $1,000,000 had been reached and that restoration had begun in early July. "To the extent possible, all floors up to and including the main floor have been opened," Burge said. "Walls, ceilings and floors have been replaced." Burge said the fire had destroyed air conditioning and other mechanical systems housed in the roof of the old section. "It is anticipated that steel roof trusses necessary to support new mechanical systems will arrive by mid-September and we hope the new permanent roof can be completed by late fall," Burge said. Burge noted that restoration of rooms inside the Union could not fully begin until the new roof is in. "One of the biggest losses of all to many people was the English Room," Burge said. "This room will be rebuilt precisely as it was before the fire." "Certain modifications have been planned for the rebuilding of damaged portions of the Union," Burge said, "especially the inclusion of the best fire-resistant materials and sophisticated, reliable fire-sensing equipment, to be installed in the top floor areas." "We anticipate partial use of the Jayhawk room and the Kansas room by mid-semester," Burge said. An investigation into the cause of the fire, believed to be arson, is not yet completed. State fire marshall Lloyd Davies said the investigation was still active, but that no definite conclusions had been reached. Temporary Buildings Provide Office Space If you're worried about having to go to class in one of those offensive-looking temporary structures scattered around the campus this fall, you can stop worrying. Nominees Sought for Hope Prize Nominations for the 1970 recipient of the Hope Award are being taken in Allen Field House during enrollment. The forms for nomination are available on the main floor of the Field House. A five-member committee, headed by Dave Steen, Wichita senior, will select the winner of the annual award, which will be presented at the Kansas-Nebraska football game Oct. 17. Steen said only seniors may make a nomination for the award, but they need not be dues-paying members of the senior class. Any member of the University faculty or administration is eligible for nomination. Aug. 27 1970 KANSAN 7 All but one of the so-called "portable classrooms" will be used for office space. The buildings, financed by the KU Endowment Association, were installed to alleviate a shortage of classroom space. That end, however, is being accomplished indirectly by a series of checkerboard moves which will shift offices from permanent buildings to the temporary structures, leaving more space open for classes in the permanent buildings. The endowment association was asked by the administration to finance the buildings after the requested budget was cut by the state legislature, and there were no funds available to finance the necessary additions. Each portable unit costs about $18,500. Five were added to the campus this summer and several have been in use by the University Extension Office for a year. The new buildings, located near Marvin Hall and between Fraser Hall and Watson Library; are located on sites chosen by the University Planning Committee. The building to be used for classrooms is located west of Marvin Hall. BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including SymphonyForTheDevil - SympathyForTheDevil Somethin' Comin' On The Battle 40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. TOWN CRIER For Use Kansan Classified BOOKS MAGAZINES CARDS STATIONERY NEWSPAPERS CANDLES STUDY AIDS POSTERS BLACK LIGHTS OPEN TILL 10:00 P.M. EACH NIGHT 919 Mass. VI2-2147 A GREAT BOOT FREE-FLEX Beautifully balanced Lo-Boot with famous Free-Flex comfort built right in. Hearty styling, yet flexible and soft from the first step. Angular toe, boldly strapped and buckled, in Gold Nugget or Black Smooth leather. by Freeman 1 PANAMA McCall's "Put Yourself in our Shoes" Downtown Lawrence Welcome Students & Faculty KROGER FAMILY CENTER is glad to have you here STOP OUT AND SEE US SOON FOR YOUR BACK TO SCHOOL NEEDS KROGER FAMILY CENTER - 23rd & NAISMITH “get back” >Back to where you once belong, K.U. & the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Regents Set Athletic Finances, Postpone Allocations of Money Allocation of money collected through student activity fees has been "practically paralyzed" by action taken July 26 by the Kansas Board of Regents, according to Bill Ebert, student body president. During a closed meeting the Board voted to freeze allocation of activity fees to student organizations pending an investigation into the amount and distribution of fee money by Regents Bubb, Cromb and Stewart In the same meeting the Board voted to freeze budgets for athletic departments in all state schools at no less than the 1969-1970 level. Ebert said the second decision allocated $180,000 to the University of Kansas athletic department. The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee previously had lowered the athletic department allocation to $130,000. This is the first year the Student Senate has been empowered to distribute activity fee money. "We were counting on that $50,000 to help fund new organizations or to supplement funds already granted," Ebert explained. "Now even if they release the other money after the investigation, we still only have $42,500 to give all remaining organizations, and that includes the BSU and the Kansan." "We had a misunderstanding with the Kansan over their funds, and the BSU was late submitting a budget request," he continued. Approximately $400,000 was available for distribution, Ebert said, for which the Student Senate had received requests totaling about $700,000. Subtraction of the $180,000 for the athletic department plus trimmed requests from other organizations left the $42,500 amount, he said. Results of the Board of Regents subcommittee's investigation will be presented to the Board Sept. 17 and members then will vote on whether or not to release the money. Ebert said the subcommittee met Aug. 19 to discuss proposed allocations with members of the Student Senate Executive Committee and Finance and Auditing Committee, but he said the Board had given no indication as to their final decision. Woman Fills New Position Miss Margaret Louise Schutz of St. Louis, Mo., has been appointed to the new position of director of field instruction in the University of Kansas School of Social Welfare. Miss Schutz, known nationally as an innovator, had filled the same position for in the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University for nine years. She began her KU duties this month. As director of field instruction at Washington University, she had to find internships for from 170 to 190 students each semester in recent years. To meet this problem she organized field student units who provided services in areas where established agencies were lacking. Miss Schutz also was associated with a six-year pilot project that tested novel methods of field work instruction. A few schools have adopted some of the ideas in the project report issued in 1969. Chalmers Attends Canada Meeting Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. is attending a meeting of the International Association of Universities in Montreal, Canada. Chalmers will return to his office Sept. 3 from the meeting, at which representatives will discuss problems confronting the modern educational institution. Aug. 27 1970 KANSAN 9 "The Student Senate had no warning the Board of Regents would freeze the funds," Ebert said. "The basic question is who controls money — their elected representatives or the Board of Regents." Max Bickford, executive secretary to the Board, said after the July 26 meeting that the Board thought athletic departments needed protection because of their obligations to pay notes for new stadiums and synthetic turfs. this campus and mistakenly assume the conditions are the same as when they were in school." "Priorities of the Board are in need of radical revision," Ebert commented. "They do not understand the conditions existing on SUA Pop Film Cool Hand Luke 7:00 and 9:30 Woodruff Aud. 60c Coffee House featuring Jamie Lewis Hawks Nest-50c 7:30 p.m. Rock Bands at Potters,2:00 p.m. . Patronize Kansan THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD Including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thurday Thing/Ramblin' On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr WRITE ON: TO THE CAMPUS . London School of Law TUXEDO SUIT In both our stores we're showing wide varieties of the newest classics (as shown) or the great stomp around looks in pants, shirts and sweaters. Come in today and get acquainted. The Town Shop 839 Mass. VI 3-5755 The University Shop 1420 Crescent Dr. VI 3-4633 1973-1982 SWEATERS COME ON STRONG This Irish Fisherman's knit is just one from our great collection of imports from around the world. A BIG, BOLD & COLORFUL Complete selection of shirts by GANT and CREIGHTON in the newest big collar styles. THE FLYER'S JOURNAL RUGGED AND WARM with a great selection of styles. The finest outerwear collection from leather to canvas. K.U.'s CLOTHING CONSULTANT MISTER GUY NINE-TWENTY MASSACHUSETTS Ladies Go Marching On Lib Groups Meet Jeers, Apathy By United Press International Bands of determined womens' liberationists carried their campaign for equal rights to the streets and city halls across the nation Wednesday. They battled the smirks and condescension of many men, diversionary attacks by members of their own sex and an apparent general apathy in the ranks of the nation's more than 100 million women. The demonstrations on the 50th anniversary of the winning of women's suffrage in the United Aug. 27 KANSAN 11 1970 States ranged from the silly to the academic. Politicians appeared to take more note than businessmen. An "I don't think a woman could be a guard at the city workhouse or a garbage collector." early spot check by United Press International turned up few reports of female absenteeism in business and industry. President Nixon, hailing the anniversary of women's suffrage, boosted the women's strike goals by calling for recognition "that women surely have a still wider role to play in the political, economic, and social life of our country." New York Mayor John V. Lindsay urged New Yorkers to "recognize how much senseless discrimination against women costs in talent, creativity, and achievement." But the mayor's office warned that women city employees taking the day off would have the hours docked from their vacation time. San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto saying, "I really don't understand the women's liberation movement," said city employees who deserted their jobs to march would not be paid. About 150 "lib" marchers met angry demonstrator waved at the exotic dancer a sign that read: "Pregnancy does not equal motherhood." An elderly woman in a print dress stood on the fringe of a rally at Madison, Wis. and lectured young liberationists: "You hippie brats . . . You should go home and change your children's diapers." Here's our look for fall . . . we'd like to share it with you. Lines like Corky Craig, Tami, Charlies Girls, Miss Pat, Denise, Ladybug, Lodenfrey, and Pendleton are all really great this fall . . . stop in and share in the goods . . . at the . . . In Pittsburgh four members of the "Radical Women's Union" braless and garbed in blue jeans tossed eggs at the windows of a radio station. They said they did it on a disc jockey's dare. Country House At the Town Shop Country A red-haired strip teaser named Amber Mist took much of the audience away from women staging a skit deflating males at Indianapolis' Monument Circle. Men turned their attention to the scantily clad Miss Mist when she demanded of the women's liberationists: "What's wrong with being a sex symbol?" One with St. Louis Mayor Alfonso Cervantes and told him women could handle any city job. Cervantes demurred. "I don't think a woman could be a guard at the city workhouse or a garbage collector" he said. 839 Mem at the back of the Town Shop 839 Mass. St. Uptown V1 3-5755 boots WITH OLD TOES PRODLE TOES SQUARE TOES FROM ALSO: VIBRAM SOLE HIKING BOOTS AND DYER MOCS. MENS AND WOMENS IN STOCK. MANY STYLES. FRYE FRYE AT PRIMARILY LEATHER 812 MASS. ART-ENGINEERING- GRAPHIC ARTS SUPPLIES DRAWING TABLES ACRYLICS MAT BOARD WATERCOLORS DRAWING SETS SLIDE RULES SHADING FILM GRAPHIC ARTS TAPES ILLUSTRATION BOARD TRANSFER TYPES BRUSHES RADIOGRAPH PENS CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. 843-6133 2. Tragic July Brings KU Under Fire (Continued from page 1) 21-1320 back at him once and then he returned the fire, striking Dowdell in the back of the head. Youth Flees for Cover as Police Hurl Gas Canisters . figure in foreground believed to be that of Rice On July 22, an all-white coroner's jury exonerated Garrett of any wrongdoing in the death of Dowdell. The only witness to the shooting, except for police, was Franki Cole, of Enid, Okla., a summer session freshman. She was driving the Volkswagen from which Dowdell ran before he was shot. During the inquest, Douglas County Attorney Dan Young refused to let Miss Cole testify, because she wanted only to read a prepared statement. She was refused immunity by the county attorney. Later, she did give a statement to Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) agents. She said she heard only one shot fired. The testimony of Miss Cole, and that of police and residents in the area of the shooting, given to KBI agents who compiled a report released last week, provided one of many examples of contradiction and variety of interpretation arising from the events of July 16-20 in Lawrence. Medical tests from an autopsy on the body of Dowdell are yet to be completed, and the KBI report raises more questions than it answers. There is no doubt that the all-white composition of the coroner's jury only exacerbated tense black-white relations in Law-rence. THE DEATH of Dowdell was the springboard for a series of sniping and firebombing incidents, and from the time Lawrence residents awoke to the news of Dowdell's death, the uneasy fears and tensions of last spring grew The old solidarity and sympathy between the "street people" of the Oread Avenue area north of the campus and Lawrence blacks, which developed during the confrontations at Lawrence High School last spring, asserted itself again in posters which began to appear after Dowdell's death, urging support for the "black brothers," and asserting that "Tiger" Dowdell had been mercilessly cut down by Lawrence "pigs." The old "white house" at 1225 Oread which by the end of the summer had been torn down to make way for a parking lot, once again became the scapegoat for the street people's outrage. It was the victim of numerous arson attempts in efforts to draw firemen and police into the area north of the campus. Two incidents the night following the FELTON KELLY George Kimball . . . speaks to press death of Dowdell marked the end of disturbances in the east Lawrence area. That night, a policeman was wounded and a police patrol cruiser was put out of service when it was struck by several shotgun and rifle bullets. By this time, it was becoming apparent to residents as well as city officials that if more violence were to occur it would be in the rows of old room houses in the 12th and Oread area. BY THE NIGHT of July 19, harassed police began to resort to tear gas to dispel the street people. Fire hydrants were repeatedly opened and several were damaged, each time drawing police into the area in order to shut them off. This series of confrontations seemed to escalate until it reached a climax on the night of July 20. The night began in the usual pattern. Police were called to shut off a fire hydrant and quench a small series of fires in the area. The police reported that they were assaulted with rocks, bottles and tomatoes each time they were called into the area. Police finally closed the Rock Chalk Cafe and used tear gas to disperse the crowd. A Volkswagen was overturned and the police observed several people tossing matches at it. By this time, harassed by real and imagined threats, and largely untrained in riot situations, the police charged the young people, tossing tear gas canisters, and finally opening fire. The KBI report says only, "Mr. Rice was later discovered dead. We cannot demonstrate that he was killed by a police bullet. We cannot demonstrate he was not killed by a police bullet. One shot was fired at a fleeing felon. We cannot demonstrate that that bullet struck Mr. Rice." And, as with others involved directly and indirectly in the events of July 16 to 20 in Lawrence, the aftermath may be as tragic as the central events themselves. Only last week, the mother of the dead youth reported that her family was still receiving hate mail—blaming, suggesting, accusing. Mr. Rice—Harry Nicholas Rice, Leawood sophomore, had been in Lawrence for a date and had been drawn, as many others had, to the 12th and Oread area. He, like so many others, apparently was just another innocent victim of what went on in Lawrence this summer. IF THERE IS another lesson to be learned from the tragedy of the summer, it is that there is no monopoly on extremism. It seems to surface in times such as these. Among those who saw Chancellor Chalmers as responsible for the latest outbreak of violence was Regent Henry Bubb of Topeka. A man viewed by some as ambitious and keenly determined to call the shots on policies and personnel involved in the direction of KU, Bubb had opposed the idea of allowing students to finish the last school term under a system of alternatives. He was and still is convinced that KU desperately needs a "strong" administrator as the solution for the problems which seem to many to be campus-centered, rather than essentially community problems. Of Chalmers, Bubb said, "He's a psychologist and he feels that if you leave things alone, things will work themselves out. He's a complete optimist. But you can't leave a powder keg alone with matches burning all around and not have something happen." BUBB'S CONVICTIONS solidified with his motion at a Board of Regents meeting on July 26 that Chalmers be fired. The motion failed by a vote of 4-3. Chalmers himself said he had no intentions of resigning and at the same time warned that crisis management of a university drained energy and enthusiasm, while creating tension and frustration. At the same time he said, "I would resign instantly if I thought it best for the University." But Henry Bubb remains entrenched in his position, convinced that, as he says, "the chancellor's time is limited, unless things change radically." Chalmers, meanwhile, embarked on an ambitious speaking tour across the state of Kansas to tell the KU story and fight the waves of backlash. Everywhere the questions were the same. The alumni were concerned about the influence of the BSU in the running of the University. At the same time as the vote on the firing of Chalmers, the Regents had ordered the firing of Gary D. Jackson, a black graduate assistant in the dean of men's office, who had allegedly driven to Topeka and purchased 27 boxes of ammunition a few days after Dowdell's death. Jackson had been recommended for hiring by the BSU as part of a program to hire more black students for involvement in different phases of the University operation. THE ALUMS were also worried about Chalmers' reactions to threats of any future violence, and to activities of faculty members. Chalmers was well received wherever he went across the state and his warmth and charm won him many friends, if not firm supporters. SUMMER WAS primary election time in Kansas, and KU's frequent critic and watchdog, Reynolds Shultz of Lawrence, entered the race for lieutenant governor. Most probably because of his reputation for advocating a "hard line" with regard to the campus, he won a narrow victory by a margin of 1,098 votes. One of the shortest of KU's summers became one of the longest, and the consequences and implications of what happened in Lawrence can never be erased. A team from the President's Commission on Campus Unrest visited Lawrence in an effort to probe even deeper into the causes and effects of Lawrence's tortuous summer. One of the commission staff members remarked before he left that what had happened in Lawrence was different from Kent State or Jackson State. In his review, their problems were uniquely campus problems, but Lawrence's problems were less definable, because of their roots in a situation not confined to the campus. But if the problems of black-white and straight-freak relations cannot be defined in a narrow spectrum, neither can the solution. If agreement is small between the varying elements of Lawrence, who are now meeting with representatives from all segments of the community, they seem to agree that city and campus cannot each blame the other. For it is a mutual challenge, and one that they want to meet, in spite of the persistent rumors that KU can only expect worse disruption and violence this fall. WOMEN'S CENTER FOR ORGANIZATION A Relative of Dowdell Leaves Funeral . . . black community mourns his death / Rice, Dowdell Slayings KBI's Report on Disturbances KBI Director Harold Nye said then that another report could be expected this week, but that portion may never be made public, according to Edward Collier, assistant attorney general. (See story, page 1.) At the request of the City Manager of Lawrence, the County Attorney of Douglas County and law enforcement representatives in the Douglas County area, the Attorney General's office has made a comprehensive investigation of the various events contributing to civil disturbances in Lawrence from the period of July 16, 1970, through the evening of July 20, 1970. Attorney General Kent Frizzell indicated the results of the intensive investigation by members of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) and staff of the Attorney General's office. Agents of the KBI have made a thorough investigation of all scenes involved in the disturbances, interviewed any and all witnesses of whose names they were made aware, and interviewed anyone volunteering information to law enforcement officials. For a period of approximately two weeks after the evening of July 20, approximately one third of the entire staff of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation participated in the investigation. In addition to the leads and information revealed by direct KBI involvement, the public was informed about July 29 that anyone having information relating to the various incidents under investigation should report that fact to the KBI. Mr. Frizzell indicated that as a result of efforts by the agents, the following information was developed. Woman Is Wounded Occurrences in Lawrence culminating in the shooting death of Rick D. Dowdell began at approximately 10:15 p.m. July 16, when the Lawrence Police Department received a call reporting shots fired in the vicinity of New York School, located in the 900-block of New York Street. While one patrol car was en route to this call, another call was received stating that Mrs. Mildred J. Johnson was wounded in one leg by gunfire as she and her husband were standing in their back yard, adjacent to Ninth on New York Street. Afro House Shooting At about the same time Mrs. Johnson was wounded, Melvin Eugene Reynolds of 1837 Tennessee was wounded as he was sitting on the porch of the Afro House, $946\frac{1}{2}$ Rhode Island. Reynolds stated that he was seated in an upright position on the porch of the Afro House when he was struck in the head and shoulder by pellets from a shotgun discharge. Reynolds stated that he believed he had been shot from a blast coming from a police car that had been patrolling the area. The Lawrence Police Department reported that it had no police car at the Afro House at the time Reynolds alleged he was shot, although there had been a patrol car there several minutes prior to the time Reynolds was wounded. On this page, the Kansan presents a condensed version of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation's study of the July turmoil at KU. The report was released last Friday. Dowdell Killed At the time Mrs. Mildred Johnson was wounded on the evening of July 16, 1970, the two persons who fired upon her were seen fleeing into the Afro House. The fact that these subjects entered the Afro House was observed by a witness and police officers who had arrived at the scene. The two police officers who observed the subjects entering the Afro House responded to a call of the Johnson shooting. As the patrol car containing these two officers entered the scene of the Johnson incident, the car was fired upon by unknown persons. Officers in the car observed the two individuals referred to previously, with what appeared to be pistols in their hands, as they ran across 10th Street and subsequently entered the Afro House. Other officers then commenced surveillance of the Afro House. Shortly thereafter, two persons were observed coming from the front of the Afro House and entering a light-colored Volkswagen. The Volkswagen left the Afro House, traveling west on 10th Street. Information concerning this occurrence was radioed to Officers Garrett and Avey who were participating in the surveillance. While police officers were following the Volkswagen in question, the latter vehicle ran two stop signs, traveled in excess of the lawful speed limit, and was driven in a reckless manner. In addition, after the red light and siren on the police vehicle were activated, the Volkswagen failed to respond. The Volkswagen failed to negotiate a turn into the north end of the alley in the 900 block between Rhode Island and New Hampshire. The vehicle ran upon the sidewalk and stopped. As the police car was pulling to a stop at the rear and right side of the Volkswagen, a Negro male (later identified as Rick Dowdell) was observed getting out of the vehicle on the passenger side. This subject passed within a few feet of the front of the police car and ran south down the alley. NOTE: One witness in the area of Ninth & New Hampshire stated that while the Volkswagen was being pursued, there were no shots exchanged between the two vehicles. Franki Cole, the driver of the VW, stated that no shots were fired prior to the time her vehicle came to a stop. Three witnesses who were one-half block away reported that Dowdell ran rapidly down the alley after getting out of the Volkswagen. Miss Cole stated that Dowdell walked hurriedly or trotted down the alley. When the subject passed in front of the police car, Avey and Garrett observed a long-barrel revolver in the left hand of the subject. At that time, the subject was described by officers as a Negro male in his late teens, wearing a blue denim jacket with no shirt. The officers did not recognize the subject. NOTE: Witnesses could not tell whether there was a revolver in subject's hand. Miss Cole stated that she did not see a revolver in Dowdell's hand when he left the car. Garrett pursued the subject on foot and commanded the subject to stop. The subject failed to stop, and Garrett fired a warning shot into the air. NOTE: The subject and Garrett were out of the view of all witnesses when all shots were fired. The subject then ran east into the back yards of 905 and 909 Rhode Island. Garrett took up a position at the southwest corner of a building located next to the alley behind 905 Rhode Island. At this point, Garrett commanded the subject to drop his gun. Without reply, the subject turned and fired the revolver at Garrett. Immediately Garrett returned one shot at the subject. Garrett and the subject were 60 to 70 feet apart when the two shots were exchanged. The subject then ran west to the alley and south down the alley. Garrett fired three shots at the subject running south. The subject was struck by one of the shots fired by Garrett and fell 259 feet south of Ninth Street and five feet west of the east edge of the alley. A .357 magnum Ruger revolver was laying beside the subject. The subject was wearing a shoulder holster on his right side, under his jacket. Miss Cole has stated that she heard only one shot after Dowdell and Garrett went into the alley. As a result of KBI interviews of a number of witnesses in the area where the shooting took place, a total of twelve witnesses stated that they heard four to six shots fired. Three witnesses stated that some of the shots sounded like they came from a different gun from the other shots. One witness stated that one shot sounded as if it came from a different weapon than the other shots. A total of sixteen witnesses stated they heard more than one shot. The coroner pronounced Dowdell dead at the scene. An autopsy was performed, and the cause of death was determined to be a cerebral laceration caused by a single gunshot wound to the head. The driver of the Volkswagen was found to be Miss Cole. Miss Cole was detained by Avey and then by Brian Hampton, a security guard. While in the Volkswagen, Miss Cole made the statement to Hampton that the man had pulled a gun on her and she wanted to know what was going on. Miss Cole was taken to the police station; she refused to give a statement to the county attorney on the advice of her attorney. Miss Cole also refused to testify at the coroner's inquest July 22 because she would not be granted immunity by the county attorney. Later, Miss Cole did give a statement to KBI agents in the presence of her attorney. She indicated that she was not aware that the patrol car was chasing or attempting to stop her. When her car came to a stop, Dowdell got out of the car and started down the alley. Miss Cole stated no shots were fired prior to the one just described. Buckshot Hits Officer On July 17, 1970, at approximately 10:25 p.m., Lt. Eugene V. Williams of the Lawrence Police Department was wounded in a gun battle between four Lawrence policemen and as many as 50 Negro males. Lt. Williams was wounded by what is thought to be one slug of 00 buckshot, which entered his right side and lodged near his spine and twelfth rib, after following the tib cage. Numerous events preceding this gun battle were reported to the Lawrence Police Department: - Through the evening the Police Department received numerous complaints of Negro males shooting out street lights in the vicinity of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania Streets along Tenth Street. - A COMPLAINT was received that a man had been fired upon while he was in his automobile. The shots had shattered the windshield and damaged the right front fender of the car. - The Police Department was advised that 45 Negro males, all carrying long guns or sidearms, were marching east on Tenth Street from New Jersey towards Pennsylvania. This call was received at the Police Department, but was interpreted as four or five rather than 45. Four Lawrence police officers were dispatched to the intersection of Tenth & Pennsylvania in answer to these disturbance complaints, and while en route at least two of the patrol cars were fired upon. As they approached this intersection, Lt. Williams was walking on the sidewalk, which is some ten to twelve feet elevated above the curb line of the street on the east side of Pennsylvania south of Tenth. As he stepped from behind some evergreen trees located at this corner, two shotgun blasts were fired at him from across Tenth Street to the north and slightly east Lt. Williams immediately said to one of the other officers that he had been hit. Officers radioed for assistance, advising that an officer had been wounded at their location. Shortly thereafter, an ambulance and three additional patrol cars arrived at the scene. Lt. Williams was evacuated to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The three additional patrol cars had contained six officers. These six and the remaining three of the original assignment then were involved in another gun battle at the same location. Killing of 'Nick' Rice The last major incident involved confrontations between Lawrence police and demonstrators in the 12th and Oread area adjacent but north of the University of Kansas campus. As a result of those confrontations, Harry Nicholas Rice was found shot to death and Merton Olds was wounded in the right leg. At 7:30 p.m., the Lawrence Police Department responded to a call at the Rock Chalk Cafe at 12th and Oread. Upon their arrival, they found a fire hydrant located on the northeast corner of 12th and Indiana opened, and a small series of fires burning on the southeast corner of the intersection at 12th and Oread. As the problems were cured, officers left the area. An hour and a half later a second call from the vicinity of the Rock Chalk Cafe and Tavern was received. Again, a fire hydrant located on the northeast corner of 12th and Indiana was opened, and again small fires were noted on the southeast corner of 12th and Oread. Shortly after officers arrived, they were pelted by rocks, bricks and tomatoes thrown from the south. The crowd of demonstrators that had gathered was dispersed, and the Rock Chalk Cafe was closed. At approximately 10:00 o'clock p.m. on the same evening, a third call was received from the vicinity of the Rock Chalk. It was reported that two fire bombs had been thrown in the Rock Chalk. A fire truck had responded to the call also, and the truck was preparing to leave and policemen were conversing with the firemen, a noise was heard south of their location. As the fire truck pulled away, the policemen noticed a red Volkswagen turned over in the middle of the street. Officers started in the direction of the Volkswagen, some tear gas was thrown in the direction of the crowd which had formed around the Volkswagen, and an unknown white male was observed standing on the southwest side of the vehicle striking matches and throwing them at the vehicle. Police weapons were fired. Rice was later discovered dead. We cannot demonstrate that he was killed by a police bullet. We cannot demonstrate he was not killed by a police bullet. One shot was fired at a fleeing felon. We cannot demonstrate that that bullet struck Rice. When police approached the Volkswagen, they did not use riot control techniques. They really weren't attempting to disperse a crowd at that time, but instead were attempting to stop a fleeing felon. The police were not armed for riot control. ) Religious Activities at the University of Kansas I AM WHO I AM ST. LUKE'S A.M.E. CHURCH 900 New York Alvin Larkin, Minister----842-7925 Church School----9:45 a.m. Worship----11:00 a.m. ASSEMBLY OF GOD — CHI ALPHA 13th and Massachusetts Lavern Pember, Chaplain—843-6990 Sunday Study—9:45 a.m. Worship—11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. BAPTIST, SOUTHERN—BAPTIST STUDENT UNION Yvonne Keefer, Director----842-6710 Ed Jarboe, President----843-1772 Sunday supper and Bible study at 1410 W.19th Terr. at 5:45 p.m. Weekly Rap Sessions, Prayer-Share groups and parties Worship in local churches at 11 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL COUNSELORSHIP (JEWISH) 917 Highland Drive (Jewish Community Center) Sidney Fiarman, Counselor----842-7822 CATHOLIC, ST. LAWRENCE STUDENT PARISH (NEWMAN CLUB) 1915 Stratford Road Father Donald Redmond, O.S.B., Chaplain----843-0357 Sunday Masses at St. Lawrence Chapel----8:00 a.m., 9:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Sunday Mass at Woodruff Aud.----11:00 a.m. Daily Masses at St. Lawrence Chapel----7:15 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. Sat. Midnight Mass at University Lutheran Church Parish Barbecue (free)----Sun., Aug. 30 at 5:30 p.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION Mrs. Edwyna Gilbert, Faculty Advisor—843-8338 Meetings every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel, beginning September 1 CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, FIRST (BRESEE FELLOWSHIP) 1942 Massachusetts Samuel Pickenpaugh, Pastor----843-3940 Services----10:45 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. EPISCOPAL (CANTERBURY ASSOCIATE Center: 1116 Louisiana C. F. Stolz, Chaplain—843-8202 Schedule at Canterbury: Holy Communion—M, Th, F, Sa at 5:15 p.m. Folk Mass—Tu 9:30 p.m. Schedule at Trinity Church (10th and Vermont) : Worship: Sundays at 7:30, 9:00 and 10:45 a.m. Wednesdays (Communion) at 9:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Holy Days Communion—9:30 a.m. KU-Y (YMCA-YWCA) Kansas Union—Rooms 110-111-112 Janet Sears, Director----864-3761 Membership Meeting----Wednesday, September 9 at 7:00 p.m. in Big Eight Room LATTER DAY SAINTS, CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST — INSTITUTE OF RELIGION 126 Indian Street—842-9221 Frank Aydelotte, Director—842-2584 Priesthood Meeting—8:45 a.m. Sunday School—10:30 a.m. Sacrament Service—4:30 p.m. Tuesdays—M.I.A.—7:30 p.m. LUTHERAN UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 15th and Iowa-843-6662 Norman Steffen, Pastor (Missouri Synod)—842-4489 Don Conrad, Pastor (ALC & LCA)—842-4425 Worship—9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Sunday Study—9:45 a.m. Gamma Delta/Lutheran Student Association Sundays at 5:30 p.m. Worship also at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church—10:30 a.m. Immanuel Lutheran Church—8:30 and 11:00 a.m. Trinity Lutheran Church—9:00 and 11:00 a.m. This Sunday, August 30—6:00 p.m. to Midnight Uni-Lu Rock Festival REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 1900 University Drive Novy Bowman, Presiding Elder----842-1078 or 864-4800 Worship----9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Midweek Fellowship Service----Wed. at 7:30 p.m. UNITED MINISTRIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION The cooperative ministry of — American Baptist, Disciples of Christ, Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Churches Campus Ministers: Don Baldwin—843-4933 Jerry Catt—843-1018 Rafael Sanchez—843-4933 Otto Zingg—843-4933 Campus Centers: United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread (across from the Rock Chalk) Rock Chalk Rock Chair Wesley Foundation, 1314 Oread (across from the Union) American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th (west of Oliver) Sunday Schedule at Amherst Artist Center: Creative Dialogue at 9:30 a.m. and Supper/Program at 5:30 p.m. Sunday Schedule at American Baptist Center: Sunday Worship Servicer: Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont—10:00 a.m. First Methodist Church, 946 Vermont—9:20 and 10:50 a.m. Central United Methodist Church, 1501 Mass.—10:30 a.m. First Baptist Church, 8th and Kentucky—11:00 a.m. First Presbyterian Church, 23rd St. at Iowa—9:00 and 11:00 a.m. West Side Presbyterian Church, 1124 Kasold Drive—11:00 a.m. First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky—8:30 and 10:45 a.m. Second Christian Church, 1245 Connecticut—11:00 a.m. Sponsored by Kansas University Religious Advisors Chairman Doubts Validity of Report LaVerta Murray, the new chairman of the Black Student Union, has expressed dissatisfaction with a report released by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation concerning the death of KU student Rick Dowdell, according to an article in the Lawrence Daily Journal World. The story said Murray found the report to be inconclusive. Murray was quoted as saying that until the black people found someone they felt they could trust and relate to, information would not be given out. The story said Murray had hoped that the President's Commission on Campus Unrest would clear up some of the confusion, but he said it, too, had proven to be a disappointment. Murray said he did not believe the events of the summer would have any effect on fall membership for the BSU, but that the Afro House had been temporarily set back because of the freeze imposed on all student fees by the Board of Regents, the story reported. The story said that Murray considered the demands presented to the Chancellor last spring were still "active" and would be revised and resubmitted. FREE WHEELING CONCERT Friday, August 28 9 p.m 9 p.m. $ \mathrm{9 p.m}. $ 9 p.m 9 p.m. Featuring: BETH SCALET & her throat parking lot 1116 La. Also guaranteed to show: Bob & Nancy, Martha Ric, Kris, Colleen OPEN MIC between sets. Bring your seat. UNIVERSITY STATE BANK "We're the closest to K.U. Automatic drive-up windows for your convenience." We are open: 9:30 - 3:00—Monday - Thursday 9:30 - 3:00 & 4:00 - 6:00—Friday 9:30 - 12:00—Saturday (Drive up windows only.) Come and see us! 955 IOWA Patronize Kansan Advertisers 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 AUGUST 1970 Laying it on the line KU football coach Pepper Rodgers watches the Jayhawks run through their two a day drills. At the same time workmen were laying a carpet of artificial turf in Memorial Stadium. The turf will be ready for the opening home game with Washington State on Sept. 12. A KU Harriers Set for Meets The KU cross-country team, Big Eight champion the past two years, will run in eight meets this fall. Coach Bob Timmons' squad of long-distance runners will run in dual meets with Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Southern Illinois and will run in five major events, topped by the NCAA championship at Williamsburg, Va., Nov. 23. Juniors on the squad are Thorn Bigley, San Diego; Rich Elliot, Hillside, Ill.; Rick Peterson, Winetaka, Ill., and Doug Smith, Waterloo, Iowa. Jay Mason, Hobbs, N.M., senior, will captain the 14-man squad. Other seniors are Jim Neihouse, Salina, Dennis Petterson, Wichita, and Mike Solomon, Westminster, Calif. The 1970 Kansas schedule: Sept. 26 — Iowa State at Ames; Oct. 3 — Oklahoma State Jamboree at Stillwater; Oct. 10 — Southern Illinois at Carbondale; Oct. 17 — Oklahoma State at Lawrence; Oct. 31 — Kansas Federation at Wichita; Nov. 7 — Big Eight at Stillwater; Nov. 14 — Central Collegiate at Carbondale, Ill.; Nov. 23 — NCAA at Williamsburg, Va. 16 KANSAN Aug.27 1970 BLOOD,SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyFor The Devil - SympathyFor The Devil Somethin Comin' On The Battle 40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. (back) BEN SHEYMON ALIVE IN LAWRENCE Sweetwater with Light Show by Dan Mayo & Aunt Rosie's Garage SATURDAY FRIDAY—SEPTEMBER 4,1970 SENIOR CLASS PARTY with TOGETHER & THE RISING SUNS FREE BEER & FREE ADMISSION FRIDAY Brownsville Station Kindred The Jerry Hahn Brotherhood with Mike Finnigan ALIVE IN LAWRENCE with SENIOR I.D. MARCO GIACCHETTI RED DOG "WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS" GIBSON'S IBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 25th & Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Daily----9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays Welcome Students WHERE IS GIBSON'S LOCATED? WHAT DOES GIBSON'S OFFER? KANSAS TURNPIKE NEST EXIT 6TH STREET EAST EXIT CITY OF LAWRENCE IOWA - HIWAY 59 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 19TH STREET 23RD STREET GIBSON RESTORATION CENTER 25TH E IOWA BRAND NAME MERCHANDISE AT DISCOUNT PRICES. EVERY DEPARTMENT IS STOCKED WITH FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND MERCHANDISE. HOUSEWARES-Westinghouse, Hoover, Sunbeam, West Bend, Presto, Sylvania, Ekco, Anchor-Hocking, Thermo-Serv, Delta Plastics General Electric, Etc. SOFT GOODS-St. Mary's, Williamson-Dickie, Endicott Johnson, Cone Mills, Cannon, Hampton Mills, Tog-A-Longs, Etc. CAMERA & JEWELRY—Panasonic, Remington, Sheaffer, Norelco, Westinghouse, Capital, RCA Victor, Columbia, Etc. SPORTING GOODS—Coleman, Thermos, Zebco, Remington, Winchester, Spalding AUTOMOTIVE—DuPont, Rubbermaid and All Top Brands of Major Motor Oil PLUS MANY OTHERS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST! SHOP LAWRENCE'S LARGEST STORE! FIRST QUALITY MERCHANDISE! BRAND NAMES AT DISCOUNT PRICES! NO LIMITS! NO SECONDS! --- GIBSONS DISCOUNT Four-year Commitment Women's AFROTC Program Begins For the first time, beginning this fall, the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC) Detachment at the University of Kansas will enroll women in its four-year program. The program leads to a commission of second lieutenant in the United States Air Force upon graduation from college, Capt. Lucian Siepielski, assistant professor of aerospaces studied. said The program includes approval for women students to compete for Air Force ROTC college scholarships of one to three years. These scholarships provide full tuition, incidental fees, an allowance for books and $50 a month in non-taxable subsistence allowances. Women students who are not on scholarship will receive the same salary and benefits as their male counterparts. The salary will include $50 a month in nontaxable pay during their last two years of the Air Force ROTC program. Women cadets will attend field training encampments as a required course in the Air Force ROTC training. Students selecting the four-year program will attend the four-week training course normally during the summer between their junior and senior years of college. They will visit other Air Force bases where they will be able to visit women already in Air Force positions, Siepielski said. Siepielski made no prediction about the number of women likely to enroll in the program but said all incoming freshmen women have been sent information about it. Women students who enrol will be placed in the introductory course, Aerospace Studies II, he said. They will receive the 18 KANSAN Aug.27 1970 initial service commitment of four years with the United States Air Force after graduation. They will be able to work at anything in the Air Force that would be THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD same academic information about the drilling and marching procedures of the ROTC program as the men enrolled. including: Women officers will have an possible for them in civilian life, Siepielski said. He gives examples of personnel positions, information officers, and finance or management positions. Including: One Man Woman /Captain Bobby 'Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thinp/Aamblin' On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. MARRIED STUDENTS Since the new Student Hospital coverage does NOT pay maternity benefits, you may be interested in learning of a plan that DOES include Liberal Maternity Benefits. ARE YOU CONCERNED ABOUT MATERNITY BENEFITS? This new insurance plan provides for liberal maternity benefits and other hospital medical and surgical costs at a very moderate premium. THE DIXON AGENCY 839 Mississippi Phone Day or Evening VI 2-9210 HOSPITALIZATION - LIFE - CAR - PERSONAL POSSESSIONS K.U. SPECIALS 1 x 12 Shelving in 3,4,5 & 6 Foot Lengths - Decorative Concrete Blocks ★ 4 x 8 Prefinished Paneling as LOW as $2.95 each (Formerly Logan-Moore) FOSTER LUMBER 1011 North 3rd "Where Quality & Service Count" ? 示 SUA Presents JAMIE LEWIS at the 7:30 p.m. Adm. 50c August 28&29 MIDDLE EARTH COFFEE HOUSE Hawks Nest of the Union 1970 Top Level Attention for Jayhawks! M CAMPUSBANK: 9th and Louisiana CAMPUSBANK OH and LAKESIDE EVERYTHING IS A-OK FOR SOMETHING REALLY NEW IN BANKING SERVICE FOR K. U. STUDENTS NEAREST BANKING ACCESS TO UNIVERSITY WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE OF THE CAMMERS WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE OF THE CAMPUS WALK-IN TELLER SERVICE OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT AT THE CAMPUSBANK CASH YOUR CHECKS EASILY WITHOUT CHARGE SPECIAL STUDENT ECONOMY CHECKING ACCOUNTS REGULAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS PAYING MAXIMUM INTEREST + LAWRENCE NATIONAL Is it it great that the oldest BANK in Lawrence is the one with all the young ideas LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY • MEMBER F.D.L.C. 7th and Massachusetts • 913/843-2110 No Written Policy Women or No in Marching Band? Despite sour notes registered by regents and the Student Senate alike, the KU Marching Band probably will remain all-male this fall, Director George Boberg says. The band directors have been accused of discrimination because no women have ever taken part in the pride of Jayhawker half-times. The Student Senate, with the Board of Regents approval, allocates money to the band, on condition that it follow the Senate's anti-discrimination policy based on religion, race, creed and sex. Brad Smoot, Sterling junior and president of the Student Executive Committee, said Wednesday that the band has proven so far that it doesn't discriminate. The traditional all-male band has no written policy, however. One girl talked to George Boberg, professor of percussion Sixty women out of 118 rushees pledged 10 KU sororities Tuesday night. Greeks Take 60 Alpha Delta Pi: Patricia K. Denzel, Leawood; Helen Ermeling, Leeward; Marcia Foster, Chanute; Janeal Gross, Stoekton; Sharon McAndrew, Leaward; Lexie Nebergall, Great Bend; 'Carol Pennington, Chanute; Charlotte Wiegers, Shawnee Mission. Alpha Phi: Cathy Ferris, Wichita; Alpha Phi: Cathy Ferris, Wichita Cathy Loehman, Evanston, III. Chi Omega: Anne Campbell, Council Bluffs. Ia.; Christine Ferguson, Overland Park; Marilyn Mitchell, Broken Arrow, Okla.; Kyle Simmons, Larned; Christine Smith, St. Louis, M; Mary Reynolds, Mission. Delta Delta Center: Christine Anderson, Clay Center; Candyse Hill, Pittsburgh; Marcia Orlowski, Kansas game; Stoneckebrand, Independence; Lynn Thornton, Overland Park; Maureen Zahradnik, Kansas City. Delta Gamma; Beebe Carduff, Shawnee Mission; Laura Dysart, Kansas City, Mo.; Judy Jones, Overland Park; Kathy Ruane, Wichita; Terry Sullivan, Salina; Barbara Yarnell, Wichita Gamma Phi Beta: June Lucas, Ar- Gamma Hts. Ili.; Mary McDonald, Mary Stephenson, Maeven- worth; Mary Stephenson, Mara- Mo; Rosina Trescay, Wilmette, Ill. Kappa Alpha Theta; Nancy Hertz- tle, NY; Marissa L. Winters, New york; Matttea N. Hudelson, Hutchinon Kappa Kappa Gamma; Susan Hillman, Linda Martin, Lind- quist, Kansas City; Jennifer Carthy, Topeka; Linda Martin, Wleh- wang, Shawnne Chitta; Susan Wood, Shawnee Mission. Pi Beta Phi: Patricia Bennett, Shawne Mission; Teresa Charlson, Lake Mine. Ia.; Caroline Eager, Kan- Village; Robin Fickle, Prairie Village; Shiny Hilder, Mission; McBride, Wichita; nifer Nelson, Central City. Ia.; Claudia Peteet, Kansas City. Mo.; Sogas, Overland Park; Sandra Riegel, Garden City; Wendle Wilkerson, Shawne Mission; Karen Williams, Wichita. Sigma Kappa: Gail Johnson, Overland Park; Mary Johnson, Hutchinson; Ann Murgatroyd, Western Springs, Ill.; Eva Perdaria, Arkansas City; Cecilia Portuguez, Prairie Village; Peggy Wendt, Kansas City. Aug. 27 KANSAN 19 1970 BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyFor The Devil - SympathyFor The Devil Somehin Comin' On The Battle 40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr and acting director of bands, about joining. Her only drawback was no knowledge of music but cymbals. Before joining the marchers, members must prove musical ability by auditioning for concert band. Girls in this band have shown no interest in double-time marching or anything connected with the band Boberg says. Boberg says the rigor and endurance involved in marching is a major factor in discouraging the opposite "sax." "Band members practice every day five times a week and march in hot uniforms," he said. "Girls probably couldn't take this." If women joined, special uniforms would have to be tailored. The band, 90 men strong this fall, has had no problem filling the present male uniforms. Although Boberg thought the guys are "all for the girls" in other music groups, they still play the tune of tradition. Several members were adamant. Bobberg also says that marching bands are traditionally all male. "The greatest marching bands in the country are just men," he said. "Looks and precision are as important as the quality of sound. Our band can play and appear over many larger bands which have women." David Koenig, St. Louis sophomore and drum major said twirlers might be a welcome addition to performances. "But marching bands are just like football, basketball — the practices are not meant for women and many times precision can be lost. If they want to play, they could organize a powder puff band just like sports," he said. Welcome—Students & Faculty FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE 91H AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • V1 3 0152 DRIVE IN BANK AT 9TH AND TENNESSEE ST. MEMBER FDIC EXCLUSIVELY YOU IN EWART ELART, LLART, a master of Electronic Impressionism, can produce from your own black and white or color photograph a unique and distinctive 20 by 30 inch color enhanced art piece. As a decoration for your room or apartment, it is an outstanding conversation piece. As a gift, it is ideal. There is nothing else like it, and yours will be one of a kind. It will never be repeated. To fully appreciate ELART'S uniqueness and style, color displays may be seen and order forms obtained at the following local merchants. On Display At Captain's Table,1420 Crescent Road The Jay Shoppe,835 Massachusetts Raney Drug Store,921 Massachusetts The Stables,1401 West 7th Street Zercher Photo Inc.,1107 Massachusetts Editors Comply Committee Ruling Affects New Daily The Oread Daily, a mimeographed news sheet connected with the student organization Catalyst, will continue to be published but its editors will attempt to "be more explicit" in identifying themselves in the publication. In order to comply with a University Senate Executive Committee ruling, concerning all University publications, the Oread Daily must identify its editor in each edition. A recent edition of the paper listed Charles Manson, Leion Trotsky and Mahatma Gandi as editors. The editors of the paper are Walker Hendrix, Overland Park senior, and Steve Hollis, Fredonia senior. The Catalyst Operating Board, chaired by Gus diZerega, Wichita special student, met Wednesday afternoon to discuss the paper and other activities of Catalyst. DlZerega said the meeting failed to produce a quorum of the 10-member Operating Board, which has four vacancies to be filled. Present members of the Operating Board are diZerega, Dave Awbrey, Hutchinson senior and former student body president; Bill Ebert, Topeka senior and student body president; Rick Von Ende, Abilene, Tex. graduate student and member of the Senate Executive Committee; Tom Coulter, Braintree, Md. junior, and Bill Black, Kansas City, Mo. junior. In addition to assuming responsibility for the Oread Daily, described as "the official publication of the information collective of the Lawrence Liberation Front," Catalyst aids in the organization of LAS courses offered by the University, and works with the Lawrence Liberation Front (LLF) in the operation of the "Food Conspiracy," 20 KANSAN Aug. 27 1970 a project to provide low-cost food supplies. DiZerega said Catalyst was helping the LLF in the organization of a tenant's union, and cooperated with LLF in a legal defense program. Among the subjects discussed in Wednesday's meeting, he said, was the possibility of publishing a magazine. "Catalyst is basically an educational organization," diZerega said. "We have tried to provide assistance to get programs in the air." Financial assistance to Catalyst through student activity fees remains frozen pending the completion of a Board of Regents study of fee allocations at KU. DIZerega said the organization received $1,280 from the activity fund for its programs last year. THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cate/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' On Columbia Records A $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr Tickets on Sale September 2 at the SUA Office, THE FLEET NEW YORK ROCK ENSEMBLE September 12 8:00 Hoch South Lounge, Student Union Prices $1.50 - $2.00 - $2.50 DESERT BOOTS LEATHER CHUKKA BOOT . . . the great knockabout casual with easy-on-the-feet cushion crepe sole. Easy on the eye with desert sand shag uppers. Sizes $ 6 \frac{1}{2} $ to 12. $ 9 9 9 $ $9.99 Penneys the now place Sunrise Flairs. A hit below the belt. C F Campbell's MEN'S WEAR 843 Massachusetts VI 3-0454 Russia Fires Test Missiles WASHINGTON (UPI) — Russia conducted two test flights last week of SS11 intercontinental ballistic missiles, tipped with the first multiple re-entgy vehicles ever fired by the Soviet equivalent to the U.S. Minuteman, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said Wednesday. Laird said the Russians launched both flights Friday from the south central Soviet Union. He said the missiles flew 5,750 miles to the Pacific Ocean, where a U.S. ship watched three "objects" from each ICBM plunge into the planned target area. In an unscheduled news conference Laird also disclosed a test flight Aug. 18 of an SS13 ICBM—another Russian missile similar to the Minuteman—to an impact in the Pacific target area 575 miles northwest of Midway Island. He declined to give any further details about this test Prior to the double SS11 test Friday, the only Russian firings of multiple re-entry vehicles had been conducted with the SS9, the world's biggest ICBM. The latest version of America's Minuteneman, the Minuteneman III, carries a multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicle MIRV warhead. Air Force missile men deployed the first 10 of these weapons in June. Laird declined to speculate whether the triple payloads lofted by the SS11s were actual weapons or experimental rockets or whether they could be guided toward separate targets. He said defense experts are still busy studying information gathered during the flights and at the target area. "If they deploy this kind of object and if it does have three weapons it would accelerate their number of targetable warheads by three times. We know they have well over 700 SS11s in being" Laird said a possible strategic reason for putting triple warheads on these missiles would be to overwhelm an antiballistic missile system. Aug. 27 1970 KANSAN 21 The Russians had five of their own missile support ships in the target area, other Pentagon officials reported. "This number of Soviet instrumented support ships in an impact area is believed to be unprecedented and suggests a buildup of instrumentation capabilities," a spokesman said. Demo Platform Boosts Docking TOPEKA (UFI) — The State Democratic Party Platform revealed Tuesday in Topeka full endorsement of Gov. Robert Docking's stand on campus unrest, the right to vote for 18 year olds, and a plan to base the Kansas income tax on a percentage of the federal tax paid. BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyForTheDawn - SympathyForTheDevil SomethinCommsOn - TheBette 40.000Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $399 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. KU MEN-COEDS TOO! QUALIFY FOR A COMMISSION IN THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE through the Air Force ROTC Advantages: — Leads to interesting officer careers — Paid four-week summer training program — $50 per month tax free allowance during last two years of AFROTC - Free AFROTC Textbooks and uniforms — Interesting coursework and field trips Scholarships Available Don't Delay. Enroll Now! CONTACT: Air Force ROTC Room 108 Military Science Building Phone: 864-4676 UNI·LU ROCK UNI·LU ROCK OPEN AIR "WELCOME" DANCE University Lutheran parking lot, 15th & Iowa Sunday, August 30 6-12 p.m. With these bands playing: "Steel" from Topeka—"Bluesball" from Manhattan "Majestic Mood" from Wichita "WELCOME" WORSHIP (continuing each Sunday) at UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN: 9 a.m. NLCM Contemporary service, led by Pastor Don Conrad 11 a.m. LC-MS service, led by Pastor Norman Steffen ALEXANDER WEBSTER BASS WEEJUNS are for doing things. People notice the way you look. And move in handsewn Bass Weejuns. Only Bass makes genuine Weejuns. The soft, supple, fine leather casual with authentic moccasin construction. Comfortable. Good looking. Ready to move. Lots of styles to choose from. VI 3-3470 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. WOULDN'T YOU LIKE TO BE IN HIS SHOES? Patronize Kansan Advertisers Narcotics Ring Is Broken NEW YORK (UPI) — The arrests of four persons—two in New York City and two in Europe—smashed a drug ring which smuggled an estimated 2.5 billion worth of heroin into the United States in the past five years, federal and local officials announced Wednesday. At a news conference in the federal courthouse in Brooklyn, Neaher announced the opening of a sealed indictment charging three alleged leaders of the ring with smuggling 60 pounds of heroin into the country between June 1969 and February 1970. That amount of heroin is worth an estimated 18 million "on the street." 22 KANSAN Aug. 27 1970 THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' On Columbia Records $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. THE JERRY HAHN BROTHERHOOD including: One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' On Columbia Records $299 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified Take a step in the right direction with... oldmaine trotters Lawrence The Colony And get a flattering foothold on "classic" fashion...that now swings with a delicate strap here ... mock chain there ... in a deep roasted Chestnut color everywhere. A true "classic" that stamps YOU all over it in the Oldmaine Trotter tradition. McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes Downtown TEMPO SAVE! DISCOUNT RECORD DEPT. TEMPO TEMPO DISCOUNT RECORD DEPARTMENT RECORD and TAPE SALE CARY PUCKETT THE UNION GAP'S GREATEST HITS Tammy'sTouch Tammy Wynette FEATURING: I'LL SEE HIM THROUGH INCLUDING: A LIGHTER SHADE OF BLUE HE LOVES ME ALL THE WAY LONELY DAYS LOVE ME, LOVE ME Donxón B. JIM NABORS HOUR Tomorrow Never Comes, Games People Play, Jean, I Can't Help It, You Must Have Faith, more! D. POCO Hurry Up, You Better Think Twice, Honky Tonk Downstairs, Keep on Believin', Regressa, more! The Jim Nahors Hour Tomorrow's New York Comedy Lewis Mills & Co. Mr. Wagner, Rush, Kimberly and Lee Toronto House Productions Ltd. Kingston Theatres O.A.R. Columbia Stereo POCO List $4.98 Reg. $3.47 $297 Each LP 3 DAYS ONLY! Woman-Woman, Young Girl, Don't Give in to Him, Home, This Girl is a Woman Now, Will Power, more! A. UNION GAP GREATEST HITS C. TAMMY'S TOUCH I'll See Him Through, Love Me Love Me, Just a Matter of Time, He Loves Me All the Way, more! DONOVAN-OPEN ROAD Changes, Song for John, Curry Land, Joe Bean's Theme, People Used To, Celtic Rock, more! DISCOUNT RECORD PRICES EVERY DAY BLOOD, GREET & TEARS 3 BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 Hi-De-Ho, The Battle, Lucretia Mac Evil, Lucretia's Reprise, Fire and Rain, Lonesome Suzie, 40,000 Headpie, more! List $5.98 - Reg. $4.87 ALL THESE ALBUMS ON STEREO TAPE 3 DAYS $397 ONLY! LP Charge It! Reg. $6.49 List $6.95 $497 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES RS Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $0.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the informational leaflet are accorded to all students without regard to color, creat, or national origin. FOR SALE For Sale, Masterwork stereo HFI, FM tuner, roll-top case, new cartridge Ampex micro 50 cassette tape deck, mic and tape. 842-6881. 9- BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyForThe Devil - SympathyForTheDevil Somehain 'Comin' On 'The Battle 40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyForTheDevil - SympathyForTheDevil Somethin' Comin' On The Battle 40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records For Stereo Asian fish mobiles to decorate your room with. Now available at the Museum Shikshu Museum of Natural History. Open daily 10:00-4:00, Sundays. 1:30-4:30. Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive—New 'Art' analysis of Western Civilization 14. Campus Mad House, 411 W 14th St. FRYE BOOTS—Primarily Leather carries a complete line of Frye's Armenian square or round boot with buckles and brass to your taste. 812 Mass. 10-30 On your way to the Student Union? Stop in to browse at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop—largest supply of unusual imports in this area. Open daily 10:00-4:00. Sundays, 1:30-4:30. 9-4 For sale: Leather pants for Men and Women. Better and less expensive than cycle leathers, at the Hodge Podge. 9-4 Thai temple rubbings, sterling silver jewelry, beggars bowls, clay water carafes and cups at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open daily from 10:00-4:00, Sundays, 1:30-4:30. 9-4 Use Kansan Classifieds NOW SHOWING EASY RIDER IS THE ONE! "ONE OF THE MOST MEMORABLE EVER PRODUCED IN THE U.S.!" -VOGUE "ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EVER MADE IN AMERICA!" -GANNETT NEWS SERVICE "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" BOSTON AFTER DARK "ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL EVER SEEN!" -VILLAGE VOICE "ONE OF THE SURPRISE HITS OF THE YEAR!" - ESQUIRE --- PANDO COMPANY in association with RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS present. PETER FONDA·DENNIS HOPPER easy RIDER PLUS MARLON BRANDO IN SAM SPIEGEL'S PRODUCTION OF THE CHASE Bonus: Journey to Far Side of Sun COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents Next. Undefeate Plus Bandolero & Boston Strangler Coming This Fall Soon: Bullett For Pretty Boy . . Bloody Mama Fanny Hill . . The Oldest Profession . . What Do You Say to A Naked Lady . . Christine Jorgensen Story ... Rosemary's Baby Rosemary's Baby... Sunset DIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 HELP WANTED Help Wanted: Browsers to fill our idle moments. You might even find something you love, the candles, India prints. The Hodge Podge, 15 West Ninth. 9-4 Part time work in Lawrence representing national concern. Excellent opportunity for right person. Send name, address, phone no. to C.E.A., box 1504, Maryland Heights, Mo. 63043. 9-4 WANTED Wanted: Bare walls to be covered by Hodge Podge posters . . . They're something to think about. 9-4 Hand Made Clothing & Jewelry India Print Clothes Bead Supplies Leather Accessories Lepidoptera Creations Creations 19 West 9th Street The Jungle is JUMPIN'! WALT DISNEY presents The Jungle Book TECHNICOLOR® AND WALT DISNEY productions' THE LOVE BUG TECHNICOLOR® © 1968 Walt Disney Productions Mat. DAILY 1:30 Jungle Book, 7:15-10:45 Love Bug, 8:50 only! Varsity The Jungle is JUMPIN'! WALT DISNEY presents The Jungle Book TECHNICOLOR® JANUARY WALT DISNEY productions THE LOVE BUG NOTICE PRIMARILY LEATHER, Lawrence's oldest and finest leather shop. Features handmade belts, watch bands, harbours, barrettes and bags. MASS — Downtown. 10-30 Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of Rosalea's Hotel. Write Harper, Kan. 67058 or call (316) 896-9121. 9-4 PERSONAL Varsitu THEATRE ... telephone VI 3-1065 WANTED: WATCHES—for handmade leather watchbands individually fitted to your wrist. Many styles and designs starting at $3.00. For quality leather, see the craftsmen at Primarily Leather. 10-30 Bird, George, Tex, Yuki, Buckeye, Tita: Oh, the cow kicked Nelly in it would barn and doctor said it would no harm. Cheer up ques and fast DUDE. Personal: Clothes you won't find everyone on campus wearing—strictly for the individual. At the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 9-4 Always wanted to study ballet or jazz. Enroll now for University beginner dance classes also available. Liz Harris. Liz Harris. 842-6875 or 843-3214. Acala. 9-4 KU Students Cleaning Headquarters LAWRENCE KU launderers and dry cleaners BankAmericard Master Cl daily pickup & delivery to all dorms, fraternities and sororities 1029 New Hampshire Phone 843-3711 1. ___ woodstock starring jane beer * joe cocker * country joe & the fish * cobys stills & nash orto gatto * icee havera * jimi hendrik * santana * john sebastian * sha na-ra sly & the family stone * ten years after * the who * and 400,000 other beautiful people. a film by michael wadleigh • produced by bob maurice • a wadleigh-maurice, ltd. production • technicolor® from warner bros. RESTRICTED Under 18 requires accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian NOW SHOWING Admission $2.00 Granada THLATRE ... telephone VI 5-5788 MATINEE MATINEE Fri., Sat., Sun. 2:00 EVENING Fri., Sat. 7:00 & 10:30 Sun., Mon., Tues, 8:00 only Chevron Fined Over Pollution In Nine Months NEW ORLEANS (UPP)—A federal judge fined the Chevron Oil Co. $1 million Wednesday for violating antipollution regulations and causing the largest oil slick in the history of the Gulf of Mexico. Chevron pleaded no contest to 500 violations of federal rules and U.S. District Judge Alvin Rubin fined the firm $2,000 for each violation. A cluster of oil wells blew out on an offshore Chevron platform last Feb. 10, causing a fire that spewed crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico for a month. A chocolate colored slick for weeks threatened Louisiana's multimillion dollar seafood beds. A grand jury May 5 indicted Chevron on 900 counts of failure to equip its offshore wells with proper safety and antipollution devices. The company pleaded no contest to 500 violations and Judge Rubin dropped the other 400. The judge said Chevron failed to equip the wells that caused the slick with devices called "storm chokes" which automatically shut down potentially hazardous wells when pressure builds too high. U. S. Attorney Gerald Galling-house who prosecuted the case said the Interior Department told him Chevron now is in compliance with federal regulations requiring the installation and maintenance of storm chokes on all wells capable of producing oil. I hope this decision will help inspire all industries to follow federal regulations," Galling-house said. Abandoned Buildings termed Fire Traps NEW YORK (UPI)—The head of the Uniformed Firefighters Association (UFA) charged Wednesday that thousands of abandoned buildings throughout the city are being used as a training ground by arsonists. The charge was made by Michael J. Maye, president of the UFA, after what he termed "an extensive personal tour yesterday (Tuesday) of abandoned buildings in the Bronx and Manhattan where firefighters have been injured fighting repeat fires, most of which are set on purpose." He estimated there are some 6,000 abandoned buildings in the city and demanded that the city either rehabilitate, brick up or tear down these "perilous fire traps." Maye said the abandoned buildings first became "havens for narcotics addicts, derelicts and alcoholics and are some times used as bomb factories where extremists manufacture Molotov cocktails and other explosive devices. "Arsonists use these buildings as a training ground. "Most abandoned buildings quickly become the scene of repeat fires and, after each blaze is put out, the building becomes more and more dangerous to firefighters," he said. "The New York firefighter should not be asked to continue risking his life in death traps that can and should be removed—or rehabilitated," Maye said. Weekend Events Set For Country Clubbers Newly arrived KU students need not look far for country club week activities. The Student Union Activities (SUA) and various Lawrence establishments are providing plenty of diversions to fill the spare time before the opening of classes. Movies playing at local theaters cater to a wide range of tastes. The Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts, is offering "Woodstock" all week, "Z," "Airport," and "Too Late the Hero" are appearing at the Hillcrest Theaters, 9th & Iowa. For those whose taste runs toward Walt Disney, the Varsity Theater, 1015 Massachusetts, is showing a Disney double feature, "The Lovebug" and "The Jungle Bug." "Easy Rider" and "The Chase" are playing at the Sunset Theater, RFD 1. All of these films run through Saturday. A good place to meet old friends and, at the same time, get some exercise is at one of the Lawrence dancing establishments. Tonight and tomorrow night Red Dog Inn visitors can groove to the sounds of The Jerry Hahn Brotherhood with Mike Finnegan (formerly of the Serfs), The Brownsville Station and the Kindred. Saturday night Sweetwater will team up with the Kindred to provide the entertainment at the Red Dog. Admission is $2.50 a person Thursday and Friday and $3.00 a person Saturday. The Preachers are playing all all week at the Yuk Down, 925 Iowa. Admission is $1.50 a couple Monday through Thursday and $3.00 a couple Friday and Saturday. 24 KANSAN Aug. 27 1970 Campus events sponsored by SUA offer other possible diversions. The last in a series of free films in Woodruff Auditorium will be shown tonight. "Knock on Any Door" will be at 7 p.m. and "The Last Hurrah" appears at 9 p.m. The free film series started Tuesday. The Draughthouse will feature The Green River Ordinance tonight and tomorrow and the Tide Saturday. Admission is $1.50 every night. THE JERRY HAIN BROTHERHOOD **Including:** One Man Woman/Captain Bobby Stout Early Bird Cafe/Thursday Thing/Ramblin' On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr The Students Friend Come in for One Stop Banking BUDGET COUNTY BANK BANK Checking Accounts—Savings Accounts—Loans Douglas County State Bank 9th & Kentucky Shirt sale for co-eds. Sale 2 for 7.00 Reg. $4 2 for $1 Tailored classics, body shirts, safari looks and more. Solids. Stripes. Prints. Long sleeves and roll-ups. Many with never-iron Penn-Prest®. Misses and junior sizes. So C'mon—don't take the shirt off his back! Penneys the now place Cooler THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Variable cloudiness with east to northeast winds five to 15 miles per hour and not quite so warm today. Locally cooler tonight with little change in temperature. High today upper 80s to lower 90s; low tonight in the upper 60s. High Wednesday upper 80s to mid 90s. Precipitation probabilities 20 percent today. Pepper's Optimistic 81st Year, No. 2 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, August 31, 1970 See page 6 LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATE FRONT Kansan Staff Photo Gay Liberation Leader Stresses Point at Sunday Forum . . . members of Minnesota group discuss goals with KU Front Enrollment Size Unknown BULLETIN Preliminary enrollment for the University of Kansas now stands at 17,169. At this time last year the figure was almost the same, 17,020. William Kelly, registrar, said today, that late enrollments would probably number 600, but that this figure was hard to predict. The official projection of enrollment is 17,800. This number is 300 more than last year but about 500 less than was projected a year ago. Medical enrollment was 1.420 last year, and 1,425 is projected by Kelly for this year. Despite predictions of lagging enrollment at the University of Kansas, the final verdict won't be determined for about a week. Vice-chancellor Francis H. Heller said Sunday enrollment would probably fall short of the number of students the University was budgeted for. "But we are dealing with an element of uncertainty because of the new early enrollment," Heller said. Regents Investigate Hiring Procedures Closed hearings were held Friday in Lawrence by a fourmember-subcommittee of the Kansas Board of Regens investigating the hiring procedures of University administrative personnel. The investigations were ordered at the July 26 meeting of the Regents after the Board unanimously voted to instruct the Chancellor to remove Gary D. Jackson as assistant to the dean of men. Jackson, hired in an attempt to fill demands by the Black Student Union (BSU) for black representation in administration, purchased 27 boxes of ammunition July 17 in Topeka with a BSU check, according to a report by the Topeka Police Department. Regent Jess Stewart of Wamego, chairman of the subcommittee, said the hearings dealt with general policies and procedures in hiring. A report of the hearings will be made by the subcommittee to the Board at a regular meeting Sept. 18. Stewart said the report will "serve to clarify procedures and serve as information for the entire Board." He said he did not know if the report would be made public. The hearings were closed to the press and the public, Stewart said, because at some points the hearings dealt with discussions of individuals and the subcommittee wanted to "protect the positions" of those individuals. Francis Heller, vice chancellor for academic affairs, one of the administrators who met with the subcommittee, briefly outlined the hiring procedure Saturday for the Kansan. He said appointments were made by the Chancellor on the authority of the Board, but the various departments have the initiative in recommending the candidates. Heller said general guidelines were established for the use of the departments. "We don't know how to guess our late enrollment, and until those figures are available, we don't know how far below our expectations we are." William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, the first administrator to meet with the subcommitee, said requirements for the hiring of an individual varied depending on the field. He said references, work records, education and recommendations were taken into consideration. The enrollment figure from last week's registration was not released Sunday night, but Heller said the number was "close to last year's total of 17,020 after three days of enrollment in the Kansas Union." Last year 560 students enrolled late on the Lawrence campus. "One could assume we will have more late enrollments because of the early start, but we have no experience in estimating for this situation," Heller said. KU Medical Center students are enrolling today, so total enrollment for both campuses won't be known until the Medi- See Enrollment page 12 Cites 'Hypocrisy' Gay Lib Gets No Response On Request By CASS PETERSON Assistant Editor The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front remains officially unrecognized as a student organization nearly a year and a half after its appearance at KU. Until the front gains official recognition as a student organization, the group is not eligible to request funds from student activity fees to support its programs. William Balfour, dean of student affairs, through whose office petitions for recognition are filed, said the group had filed a complete request for recognition. The only requisite yet unfulfilled by the group is that of securing a faculty sponsor. Dave Stout, Rolla senior and coordinator of the Front, indicated the organization would seek such funds if it were accorded official recognition. The problem of gaining official recognition and the goals of the organization were discussed at a meeting Sunday in the Kansas Union, attended by the chairman of the National Gay Liberation Alliance and representatives of a gay liberation organization at the University of Minnesota. National chairman Jim Chesebro, who is also the coordinator of the FREE: Gay Liberation Front at the University of Minnesota, stressed the importance of attaining "gay pride" within the organization. He listed the major goals of the gay liberation movement as being recognition, understanding, equal rights and achievement of an identity that was "not established by straights." In his explanation of the last goal, Chesebro cited the case of the stereotyped "queens," or effeminate homosexuals, who in actuality, he said, comprise only 15 per cent of gay people. According to statistics compiled by researchers—Chesebro cited "Pomeroy and Kinsey"—it was likely that 680 KU students, 2 members of the administration and 8 members of the state legislature were gay, Chesebro said. Chesebro was accompanied by three other members of the gay liberation organization at the University of Minnesota. Two of them, Jack Baker and Mike McConnell, are battling Minnesota common law in the courts in an effort to acquire a marriage license. Baker said the application for a license was refused on the grounds that a marriage between persons of the same sex violated Minnesota common law, though written law did not preclude such marriages. See Liberation page 12 Kansan Photo by Ron Bishop 100 Reconstruction Members of Kappa Sigma fraternity probably will move back into their fire-damaged house late second semester after repairs, begun about one week ago, are completed. Dave Steen, president, said the final damage estimate was $250,000 in losses to contents and building plus about $60,000 in personal losses to fraternity members. Steen said the fraternity pledged the anticipated number despite the difficulties. News Capsules By United Press International Wichita: Blacks Arrested Twenty-two blacks were arrested early Sunday after an assault on the Kappa Sigma fraternity house near the Wichita State University campus. Police said damage to the house was "considerable." No injuries were reported. The incident occurred at about 1:45 a.m, when the door to the fraternity house was chopped down with a fireaxe and property inside was damaged. A street fight in the area earlier was broken up by police. California: Clean Air PASADENA—A University of California at Berkeley car crossed the finish line first Sunday night to complete the 3,600 mile Clean Air Race which began a week ago at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. First across the finish line at California Institute of Technology was a 1970 Plymouth powered by propane gas and driven by Bak Ying Chan. All the cars had to meet the 1975 pollutant emission standards and will be judged on mileage, speed and the amount of pollutants emitted. Washington: Job Cut CAGLIARI—Three men brandishing guns and a knife hijacked an Algerian National Airlines twin engine turboprop early Monday and ordered it flown to Communist Albania. The Convair 600 landed here to refuel and after about four hours on the ground was airborne again for what was thought to be Tirana, the capital of Albania, airport officials said. Some of the 36 passengers believed to have been aboard were released. The Labor Department said Sunday manufacturers cut their new job opportunities by nearly half in the past year because of defense spending reductions and the economic slowdown. The sharpest declines in job earnings occurred in the instruments, machinery and electronic equipment industries. The survey is based on data collected from 12 "barometer" areas representing 15 per cent of the nation's manufacturing employment. Sardinia: Hijacking Abraham Zapruder, the only person to take motion pictures of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, died Sunday of cancer. Zapruder's pictures showed the President being hit and slumping forward in his car. The time sequence of the pictures ran shortly before Kennedy was shot until the motorcade sped away toward Parkland Hospital. His films have been used by the Warren Commission and by other persons in attempts to prove different theories about the assassination. Dallas: Zapruder Ethiopia: Summit Meet ADDIS ABABA—African foreign ministers ended their one-week summit meeting today on a note of discord—failing to agree on a draft resolution condemning the arrest and detention of two Algerians by Israeli authorities. After Algeria gave an account of the arrest of the two Algerians at Tel Aviv's Lydda airport Aug. 14, Somalia introduced the draft resolution denouncing the action and calling on U.N. Secretary General U Thant to take whatever measures necessary to secure the release of the two men. 2 KANSAN Aug. 31 1970 I'll just provide the text from the image. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Tom R. Chritle First Name Second Last High School Faculty of Math TOM CHRISTIE R. B. 49 West 90 Louisiana State A & B Soccer Summer 1970 Kansas City World Cup Soccer Summer 1970 "I think I would explain to them the fact that you're not really reading effectively or productively unless you're reading dynamically. Reading dynamics can not only increase the speed of reading but also the rate of understanding and the amount of enjoyment." I EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Music and Voice Feminist of Music Melanie First Name MELANIE OLDFATHER Oldfather R. R. 45 Summer, 1970 Director of Research and Education University of Wisconsin when circumstances would you make to improve comfort for a learner. "It works. Even if you don't have time to do all the home practice, the class instruction greatly improves speed and comprehension. The techniques are easy to use on virtually any type of reading matter." BOUTIQUE THINGS --at HILLCREST BILLIARDS s.w. corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa We've got them! Fall fashions that swing! Skirts, Dresses, Pants, Suits, Tops, Jackets, Coats-looks that never lose their cool at prices that help you Keep yours. By the way, ask about our "Action Alley" shirt. at $6 it's a must. P. S. If it is "With It," we have it, including ANTIQUE FUR COATS at 29.95. The Alley Shop CAMPBELL'S 843 Mass. We've been training all summer to keep up with you this Drinkin' BUD of course. The Lounge Bud Brussels BREW at the MB70 The Lounge BUDWEISER on tap of course MARRIED STUDENTS ARE YOU CONCERNED ABOUT MATERNITY BENEFITS? Since the new Student Hospital coverage does NOT pay maternity benefits, you may be interested in learning of a plan that DOES include Liberal Maternity Benefits. This new insurance plan provides for liberal maternity benefits and other hospital medical and surgical costs at a very moderate premium. THE DIXON AGENCY 839 Mississippi Phone Day or Evening VI 2-9210 HOSPITALIZATION - LIFE - CAR - PERSONAL POSSESSIONS Patronize Kansan Advertisers Black Parents Aid Youths The Lawrence Branch of Concerned Black Parents made its first appearance before the Chamber of Commerce "Eggs and Issues" breakfast Saturday morning at the Holiday Inn. The organization operates on the premise that black children have additional educational needs and problems, said Barbara Sabol, chairman of the organization. She added that the organization will attempt to make members of the school system more aware of problems faced by black youths. What the organization is doing to aid the students seems like a slow process to them, Mrs. Sabol Aug. 31 KANSAN 3 1970 BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT including: Wrigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Morning/Rain On Columbia Records Reg. $9.95 $699 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The New York Rock Ensemble Roll Over INCLUDING: RUNNING DOWN THE HIGHWAY TRAILTINA LIBERAL HEADLINES YOU DON'T WAIT TOO LONG GRMEDIGGER On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. DENI T HINT FOR ZANG OR AEDIGGEN Stage Fright THE BAND WESTMINSTER, NY - AUGUST 16, 1980 STAGE FRIGHT THE BAND FREEDOM FROM THE CURSE OF TERROR THE BAND JOIN US FOR A LOST WORLD AT 7:30 P.M. AT WESTMINSTER MUSEUM FOR A REMEMBRANCE OF OUR LOST GHOSTS AND ALL THE EVIDENCE OF ITS DEATH AMERICAN UNION FOR CHILDREN'S HAPPINESS CONFERENCE IN THE MUSIC CORNER WESTMINSTER, NY AUGUST 16, 1980 Stage Right THE BAND On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol. KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Mrs. Sabol said the group presently is concerned only with the Lawrence High School students and is open to all black people. Organized during last spring's crisis at Lawrence High School, Products of the organization have included a scholarship for Lawrence High School black students and a monthly newsletter. said. She said she did not consider events last spring as an overreaction by students or parents because it appeared to some members of the community that all channels open to them had been employed without success. CLIP AND MAIL TODAY EARN INCOME TAX COURSE LEARN TO EARN With America's Largest Tax Service I BLOCK JOB OPPORTUNITIES FOR BEST STUDENTS - includes current tax laws, theory, and application as prerequisite in - and application as practiced in Block offices from coast to coast. e 24 3-hour sessions (2 per week for 12 weeks). - 24 3-hour sessions (2 per week for weeks) * Chalkboard - Choice of days and class times. * Diploma awarded upon graduation. ENROLL NOWI Classes Start September 14 Write or Call H-R BLOCK 723 Mass. 842-3207 - Please send me free information about the 1971 H&R Block Income Tax Course. This is a request for information only and places me under no obligation to enroll.* 1 ZIP CODE. CLIP AND MAIL TODAY EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Frank Burkitt First Name Initial Last Name Anthropology Faculty of Education Department Year Curriculum 12521 W. Kitt. St Summer 1970 Department of Anthropology for Humanities (or Nephrology) Registration Number 283 Student ID 705 Course Number 2824 Student ID 905 "The study methods taught are most worthwhile." EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course 图 Psychology • Philosophy Learning of Body JUDY SCHWIEBERT 1919 Banker Summer 1920 *A member of the National Association of Commercial Bankers* **Not available.** Beginning Mark 217 60% Final Mark 1694 75% *Excellent way to get through an enormous amount of material required for western City. The hours put into the course are well worth it.* Use Kansan Classifieds A DROP ANCHOR AT OUR RESTAURANT Roast Beef Dinner .97 Baked Ham Dinner .97 Corned Beef Dinner .97 Mariners Dinner .97 Steak Sandwich 1.39 Prime Rib 1.79 Beef Sandwich .79 Ham Sandwich .79 Corned Beef .79 Bar-B-Q .79 Cabin Boy .39 Frankfurter .29 Mariners Sandwich .49 Wednesday Night—Chicken 1.69 Friday Night—Fish 1.69 Baked Beans----23 All Salads----23 All Pie----23 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. The Captain's Table Across the Street From Lindley Hall KANSAN COMMENT Larger Meaning In Regents' Code "8. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not use profane and vulgar language, nor conduct himself in a rude and challenging behavior in or upon any of the institutional properties, including residence halls and fraternity and sorority residences." —Kansas Board of Regents Code of Conduct At a cursory glance, this edict from the thorn in the side of Strong Hall, seems to be just another picayune threat to keep the Governor and Henry Bubb satiated. But, as is usually true, a larger meaning lies veiled under a blanket of political placebos. This resolution seems to give the regents power to suspend any student, faculty member or employee of the university who writes or says anything, that is in the Regents thinking "vulgar or profane." In fact, the Regents have reportedly already exercised this resolution of dubious legality. The Oread Daily, a single-page sheet that expresses everything but regents dogma, is currently under pressure from the Regents for sprinkling its pages with what polite people call "four letter words." The status of the daily pends a decision by the regents. One student connected with the paper says that he wishes to test the legality of the regents resolution in court, but that the staff does not want to lose publication time to an injunction before a court test. Drawing the resolution to its wildest conclusions, scores of painfully ridiculous situations materialize from the miasma of this inept stab at policing/coercing the wayward students of a campus that, Governor Docking has vowed, will never close again to the demands of a vocal minority. Picture a football coach cowering under the resolution, telling his team at half time, "Okay you guys, I don't give a gosh-darn what you do, but you'd better win this dagnabbed game." What would a Hoffman/Krassner speaking on campus do if he was forced to sling slogans about the war such as, "Fudge the War" or "Off the nasty pigs?" What is most disturbing about this resolution is that, in a time when the University most needs a rational, perceptive, intelligent ear and ally in Topeka, it is handed threats and counter-threats from a politician who has vowed to rock some political boats if the campus is not placid, as a campus should be in a political year, and who has just the followers to do the rooking. A precedent has been set. Any campus publication that feels it must quote obscenities verbatim for authenticity must now weigh its freedom to print and to speak as guaranteed in the Bill of Rights against the regents' threat of expulsion for non-compliance. The resolution obviously can not be enforced to the letter, and in every situation in which the law is transgressed, so one can expect selective enforcement. The regents have given themselves the power to arbitrarily censure with no basis in other than their own edict. A passage from Joseph Heller's brutal book, "Catch-22" is cut from the same cloth as the frustrating resolution. In this passage, the pilot screams to the bombardier, Yossarian, "Help him! Help him!" Yossarian asks, "who?" The pilot says "Help the bombardier!" Yossarian screams back that he is the bombardier and he is fine. The pilot screams "Then help him!" The university has been screaming it is fine, and the Regents just keep shouting, more insistantly, "Help him! Help him! . . ." —Tom Slaughter Here's Full Code of Conduct... Adopted July 10,1970 WHEREAS, the State Board of Regents has heretofore adopted certain resolutions pertaining to the participation by students, faculty members and employees in activities at our state educational institutions designed to and which do disrupt the normal and ordinary process of education and training offered by each of our state educational institutions; and WHEREAS, the State Board of Regents now deems it desirable and expedient to supplement such resolutions by adopting certain regulations relating to and governing the conduct and actions of students, faculty members and employees at our educational institutions. NOW, THEREFORE, be it resolved by the state Board of Regents, that the following supplemental regulations be adopted and approved relating to and governing the activities of students, faculty members and employees at the state educational institutions of our state. to-wit: 1. While we again reaffirm our position that our institutions should be committed to protection of free speech, freedom of assembly, and the right of lawful protest, we are equally committed to the task of maintaining the peace and safety of the campuses, with full knowledge that the rights of our students and institutions are in jeopardy when violence and civil disorder prevail over law and reason, and therefore a person having any association with any of our state educational institutions may participate in or have any association with any demonstration at any of the institutions under the control of the Board of Regents only when such activities do not exceed the bounds of free assembly and lawful advocacy. 2. Persons participating in a demonstration shall not engage in any unlawful acts which cause or imminently threaten injury to persons or property, or which in anyway obstructs or interferes with the normal and necessary activities of an institution. 3. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not engage in conduct that unreasonably obstructs teaching, research and learning. 4. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not unreasonably obstruct free access to members or guests of any of the institutions or to any of the institutional buildings. 5. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not damage institutional property or injure members or guests of the institution. 6. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not disobey the general rules of conduct of the university or of the regulations promulgated by the State Board of Regents. 7. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not cause any disturbance or breach of the peace or in anywhere violate any of the rules and regulations of residence halls or other places or in any building in which students or faculty members assemble. 8. Persons having a formal association with any of our state educational institutions shall not use profane and vulgar language, nor conduct himself in a rude and challenging behavior in or upon any of the institutional properties, including residence halls and fraternity and sorority residences. The Board reaffirms its position heretofore taken in that the chief administrative officer of each of our state educational institutions shall be expected to take such action as is necessary to carry out the purport of the rules and regulations promulgated by the State Board of Regents or any employees of the respective institutions by suspension or other disciplinary action as appropriate, such to be in accordance with procedures established within each institution for the government of students, faculty members and other employees. 9. The term "formal association" as used in these regulations shall mean enrolled students, faculty members and other employees. In order to insure due process any student, faculty member or other employee suspended, or who might receive other disciplinary action on the grounds of violating any of the premises of this resolution, as well as all other rules and regulations established by the Board of Regents, and also those established by the institutions, shall have at his or her discretion the right of the review of the action by the governing board constituted at each institution to handle disciplinary matters. Congress Stumped By Its Own Deeds By DANIEL RAPOPORT UPI Writer WASHINGTON—Pornography and nerve gas should have taught Congress a lesson—but they probably haven't. Both subjects illustrate how Congress can become agitated over its own action or inaction. For years, the House and Senate paid virtually no attention to the Pentagon's Chemical and Biological Warfare (CBW) program. It was one of those activities that rested on a standing authorization. At appropriations time each year, Congress had a chance to look at it, but little came out publicly. Appropriations subcommittees in the House and Senate took testimony, usually in secret, from CBW officials along with scores of other defense witnesses. The subject rarely was given more than a few pages in volumes of testimony. Little was said about CBW on the floor and virtually never did anyone offer amendments affecting the cost of the program or the storage, transportation, and use of CBW weapons. In spring 1969, Rep. Richard D. McCarthy, D.-N.Y., learned of and publicized army plans to transport tons of obsolete poison gas—including nerve gas—across the country for burial at sea. A storm of protest arose from communities along the planned route as well as from conservationists and others. Scores of congressmen normally friendly to the military joined in loud complaints and excoriated the Army. Under that kind of pressure the Army cancelled the operation and found other means to dispose of most of the gas. Recently the Army dumped into the sea that portion of the nerve gas that could, it contended, not be detoxified at its southern sites. The burial took place despite protests and criticism—this time from many Dixie congressmen who consider themselves pro-military. Pornography is not as clear an example of congressional neglect's turning into congressional ire, but it is working its way up. Three years ago, Congress approved legislation establishing a presidential commission to study virtually all aspects of pornography, with orders to report what it found and to recommend what to do about the flood of smut. The commission has been working busily and next month is expected to announce its findings. A draft of the report has been prepared and makes it clear that a majority of the commission feels that ill effects of pornography have been overrated. The draft suggests that the best solution lies in abolishing laws that deny such materials to adults who want them. It proposes enacting or retaining laws keeping pornography from adults who do not want it thrust upon them and from children whose parents do no want them exposed to it. Early congressional reaction to the report ranges from mild outrage to apoplexy. Lawmakers have been roasting the commission. As they do so, one cannot help but observe that the commission's principal crime has been doing only what the Congress asked it to do—study pornography. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription费 $6 a semester, $10 a year. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 660444. Productions, goods, services and employment advertised offered to all students with regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State Board of Regents. NEWS STAFF News Advisor ... Del Brinkman Editor Monroe Dodd Assistant Editor Cass Peterson Campus Editor Tom Slaughter News Editors Galen Bland, Ann Moritz, Robin Stewart, Mary Jo Thum, Nila Walker Sports Editor Joe Bullard Editorial Writers Charlie Cape, Bob Womack Women's Editor Carolyn Bowers Arts and Reviews Editor Marilyn McMullen Assistant Campus Editor Jeff Goudle Assistant Sports Editor Don Baker Makeup Editors Ted Iliff, Craig Perker Secretary Vicki Phillips Photographers Ron Bishop, Greg Sorber, Mike Radencich BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor --- Mel Adams Business Advisor Mel Adams Business Manager Mike Banks Advertising Manager John Lagios Assistant Business Manager John Huggins Assistant Advertising Manager Ron Carter National Advertising Manager Richard Simmons Classified Advertising Manager Shirley Blank Circulation Manager Todd Smith T REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY NATIONAL Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 --- Member Associated Collegiate Press Questions on University Life Daily Fare for Center Staff A campus information center has grown out of last spring's rumor control center and will provide answers around the clock by phone—(UN4-3506)—to questions of any type pertaining to the University. "The purpose of the information center is to provide accurate information about the University," said Shirley Gilham, fulltime director of the information center. The University Information Center will provide information ranging from social activities available to an individual at any particular time to functions of University organizations. It will also retain its original function as a rumor control board. Established July 17, the center is staffed by eight students and Mrs. Gilham. All of the students are upperclassmen or graduate students who are familiar with the University. Residence Halls Use New Phone Service Change has come to the KU residence halls. A telephone has been installed in each room of the residence halls and residents can now dial both local and long distance calls direct, by-passing the old method of placing the call through the hall operator. "A student billing card with a code number is necessary when a residence hall student wishes to place a long distance call," Ed Carter, Southwestern Bell district manager, has announced. "The student simply diales "9, plus the usual Direct Distance Dialing procedures and, while his call is going through, an operator will come on the line and ask for his student billing card number. That's the only contact with the operator he'll have." Carter said. The system that makes this change possible is called Centrex. In addition to the direct dialing, students can transfer calls made from off-campus to other numbers within the Centrex system and they can call room-to-room by dialing five digits. Off-campus friends and relatives can call a student direct by dialing his 7-digit number. If the number is unknown, 864-2700 is the number to dial for campus directory assistance. Candidate Urges Students To Campaign for Peace "During the critical period in July we even got long distance calls from alumni and parents wanting to know what was happening on campus," Mrs. Gilham said. Although he does not describe himself as a peace candidate, Tom Moore, former KU-Y adviser, encourages students to work for the election of peace candidates for national office. Moore is runing for election to the Kansas House of Representatives from the 40th district which includes much of south and west Lawrence. The Vietnam war cannot be considered a state issue, Moore says, because state governments do not formulate national foreign policy. While his campaign will probably not involve the war issue directly, he says he plans to emphasize the state's social and economic problems which are indirectly related to the war. Aug. 31 KANSAN 5 1970 Moore says he recognizes the concern many students feel about the war. "I hope working for my campaign would be a way of expressing that concern," he says. "Hammering, hard-core action." —Bob Salmeggi, Group W Network ABC Pictures Corp. in association with Patomar Pictures presents An Associates and Aldrich Production of Robert Aldrich's Too Late The Hero in Metrocolor GP Eve. 7:15 & 9:40 Adult 1.50 Child .75 THE Hillcrest SHOPPING CENTER • 813-424-1014 Z ENGLISH DUBBED GP VERSION Eve. 7:10 & 9:30 Adult 1.50 Child .75 THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER * 9TH AND IOWA But now the questions are concerned more with enrollment and housing, she said. People new to the campus have been calling up and wanting to know the location of buildings. Stressing that the information center was not synonymous with directory assistance, she said some people have called requesting telephone numbers and had to be referred to telephone information. Jumping PETER O'TOOLE BEST ACTOR OF THE YEAR! Peter O'Toole Petula Clark "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" Panavision* and Metrocolor COMING SOON THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER & TIP AND GORG BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyFor The Devil - SympathyFor The Devil Somewhere Comin' On 'The Battle €0.00 Headmen He De Ho BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyForTheDevil, SympathyForTheDevil Somethin Comin' On The Battle 40.000 Headmen Hi-De-Ho On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr $699 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Milk Shopping Co. On Columbia Records $3.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. BOB DYLAN SELF PORTRAIT The Firesign Theatre Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers including Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Mornin' Rain On Columbia Records $2.99 O On Columbia Records Reg. $9.95 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr NEW YORK (UPI) — Mickey Mantle received an ovation from a crowd of 20,980 when he returned to the New York Yankees as a coach Sunday. Wigwam/Days Of 49/Little Sadie Copper Kettle/Early Morrn/Rain StageFright THE BAND PRESENTED BY: STAGE FRIEND MUSIC DESIGNER: BENNETT RUBERSON DIRECTOR: JOHN TAYLOR PRODUCERS: DANIEL MILLER ROBBIE COOPER JOHN TAYLOR COSTUME DESIGNER: WILLIAM COTTERMAN MUSIC DESIGNER: JOEL WRIGHT 7 Mickey Mantle is Back in Game Mantle retired as an active Stage Light THE BAND On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capito! KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS 3 including: SymphonyForTheDev - SympathyForTheDev Somewhat similar. On Columbia Records $3.99 © Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. KIEF'S Records & Stereo Mall's Shopping Ctr KIEF'S Records & Store player at the beginning of the 1969 season. MERCEDES THE #1 NOVEL OF THE YEAR- NOW A MOTION PICTURE! PETER M. GONZALEZ Eve. 7:05 & 9:35 Adult 2.00 Child 1.00 THE Hillcrest HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER WIRE AND IOWA A B AIRPORT SIMPLY BURT DEAN LANCASTER • MARTIN JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR ® • Produced in T000 AD ™ C THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY presents THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY presents SIDNEY POITIER MARTIN LANDAU in A WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION "THEY CALL ME MISTER TIBBS!" GP COLOR by DeLuxe* Varsity United Artists Evening 7:15 - 9:25 I 30.32 Steven Drive Lincoln Square & East Village Summer 1970 (Evening) and Late Evening (Saturday) Business Administration EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course PENNY HERMES Beginning Rates Ending Rates 55 Course 79 60 "IF I had really beamed down, I probably could be reading 2,000 to 3,000 lines." "I would have been with more than Success in Reading With Reality. Trying" "I very much regret having made this decision." [Image of a person reading a book] EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Donets D. Walker First Name Last Name Fund of Studies Computer 5018 Rosen 111 Summer 1970 Senior General of the University Management for the University of Washington, Seattle Equipment Number 221 License plate number Catalog Number 1329 *What opportunities do you need to make an impact? Read on Reading Coaching.* "The course proved to me I was able to adjust to a more rapid rate of reading. Applications of methods employed insure individual rate increases at any desired time, heavily acquired skill and technique will definitely aid graduate work." *What questions do you want to ask in the following?* SABOTEUR HITCHCOCK! SABOTEUR SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Wed. 2 Sept. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM NORTH BY NORTHWEST NORTH BY NORTHWEST Rodgers Optimistic but Cautious KU Football Sports New Look KANSAS COACH By JOE H. BULLARD JOVIAL PEPPER RODGERS will take a largely inexperienced team into his fourth season at the Jayhawk helm. But the likeable Jayhawk mentor has installed a new triple-option offense and has expressed confidence that his youthful team will surprise a few people before the season's end. After tieing for second and first places in his first two years at KU, Rodgers experienced for the first time a losing season when the Jayhawk contingent plummeted to a 1-9 record and a last place finish last year. Kansan Sports Editor Inexperienced but enthusiastic are the words head coach Franklin "Pepper" Rodgers uses to describe the 1970 University of Kansas football team. Following a disappointing '69 season of 1-9, the football program has received a face lifting which includes a new quarterback, a different offense, a soccer style place kicker, and a reshuffling of team positions all of which Rodgers hopes, when combined with good team enthusiasm, will be the key to bringing the Jayhawks out of the Big Eight cellar in 1970. During a Kansan interview last week, Rodgers took an optimistic but cautious outlook on the new season and was quick to point out the critical lack of experienced players. With only 23 lettermen returning, the Jayhawks possess the least experience of any team in the Big Eight. Out of the 70 man squad, only 26 men have ever played a down of varsity level football. To compound Rodgers' problems, the Jayhawks have lost three lettermen, all defensive linemen, due to preseason injuries. Gone are Steve Carmichael, defensive end and 1970 co-captain; Karl Salb, defensive tackle, who had started 18 consecutive games, longest string of starting assignments by any player on the squad; and Steve Wilhelm, defensive tackle. Those three injuries plus the inexperience of the backup men, Rodgers said, makes the defensive line the weakest unit on the team. Brightest new face for KU may be junior college transfer Dan Heck. Heck has taken over the quarterbacking duties from Phil Basler who has been moved to linebacker. During Saturday's scrimmage, the California junior completed 14 of 22 passes for 277 yards and three touchdowns. Heck came to KU from El Camino College of Torrance, Calif. He was El Camino's regular quarterback for two years and led his team to 10-1 and 7-3 records, passing for nearly 1,400 yards as a freshman and 1,200 yards last fall. "Dan," Rodgers said, "is not the worst quarterback in the league nor is he the best. Before a team can have a successful season, they must have a good quarterback and how KU fares will depend largely on Heck's performance." Another new face will be place kicker Bob Helmbacher, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore. Helmbacher boots the ball soccer style and along with punter Keith Lieppman, Kansas City, Mo., senior, is expected to improve a kicking game that saw some terrible moments last fall. Also new to the Jayhawks will be a new offensive set. Rodgers said the Hawks will operate out of the triple option which allows the quarterback to pitch out, hand off or pass the ball. Rodgers listed the offensive line and the defensive secondary as question marks, while praising the receivers and linebackers as the best units on the team. Rodgers said, much like the defensive line, the offensive line and the defensive secondary are hurt by inexperience in all but a few positions. The exceptions are: center Mike McCoy, Hiawatha, senior; defensive back Dale Holt, Enid, Okla., senior; and offensive tackle Steve Lawson, Chicago, Ill., senior. McCoy has taken over the center position left vacant by second team All-American Dale Evans. Holt has been a regular starter for the past two seasons and finished third in total tackles the last two years with 34 as a sophomore and 33 last fall. Lawson is one of six two-year lettermen on the squad and is figured to rank among the top offensive tackles in the league. Rodgers is pleased with this year's receivers, all of whom he described as having good hands and plenty of speed. Leading the field is tight end and captain of the Jayhawks, Larry Brown, Starke, Fla., senior. Rodgers thinks Brown has the potential to become one of the best tight ends in college football. He runs the 40 in 4.8, catches the ball well and is an outstanding blocker. KU's flankers are Ron Jessie, Yuma, Ariz., senior; Xerk White, Taipei, Taiwan, junior; and Marvin Foster, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Jessie was KU's number two receiver and runner last season compiling 1,301 total offense while operating out of the tailback position. White's football career at KU was delayed a year due to a shoulder separation last fall, however, Rodgers expects great things from the former junior college standout. Foster was last year's freshman team leader in pass receiving, catching 20 passes for 344 yards. Kicking Game Brighter in '70 BY DON BAKER Assistant Kansan Sports Editor Hank Stram is a strong believer in a football team's kicking game. The head coach of the world champion Kansas City Chiefs has been quoted as saying that a good kicking game can make the difference in as many as five or six games a season. As spring drills opened for the Hawks last April, Rodgers made it clear that several questions had to be answered if KU was to expect a comeback, one of which was the kicking game. Pepper Rodgers has admitted often that KU's kicking game was partly if not largely responsible for the Jayhawks' 1-9 record of last season. Place-kicker and punter Billy Bell, now with the Atlanta Falcons, experienced a dismal senior campaign after promising and sporadically brilliant sophmore and juniors years. Early spring sessions offered little encouragement, but by the time of the annual spring game the answers seemed to be a little more in focus. Keith Lieppman, the Kansas City, Mo., junior who had taken over last year for the graduated Donnie Shanklin in the "squib" kicking department and who by-passed spring drills to concentrate on baseball, was being counted on by Rodgers to fill the punting void. The place-kicking answer was not definitely found as early, and remained in doubt to the point that he word was out over Mount Oread that anyone who thought he could kick a football was welcome to come to spring drills and try out. Fortunately, the situation wasn't so desperate that Rodgers had to take someone from the student body at large. However, the answer did come in the form of a non-scholarship freshman by the name of Bob Helmbacher. The St. Louis yearling had performed for the KU freshman team on a more or less try-out basis and his abilities were still in question by the time spring drills began. Helmbacher gradually improved and gained consistency and by the end of the spring sessions Rodgers was beaming over his new prospect. The climax came in the spring game when Helmbacher displayed such a kicking artillery that Rodgers was even bragging about him in the postgame interview. Rodgers can thank sophomore hawk Mike Cerne that Helmbacher ever made the KU football scene to begin with. The Lawrence product realized Helmbacher's possibilities after watching him kick for their fraternity football team. KU coach Don Fambrough welcomed Helmbacher to the freshman team after hearing Cerne's testimonial and assured the soccer-style kicker he would get his chance. However, the chance came a bit quicker than either Helmbacher or Fambrough first thought. Jerome Nelloms had been doing the freshman kicking, but after making a long touchdown run in the first game Helmbacher suited up for. Nelloms found himself too tired to get to the sidelines to change shoes and return to the field to kick the extra point. Fambrough immediately summoned Helmbacher, who calmly trotted to the field to kick over the extra point. And so Rodgers and his staff rested comfortably over the summer months, thinking their kicking problems had been settled, only to be awakened when Lieppman announced he would pass up his senior year to concentrate on baseball. The hard-hitting third-baseman led all KU hitters last spring with a .417 average, and the prospects of a probaseball career were certainly more evident than those for a similar career. But Pepper rescued himself from the dilemma by convincing Lieppman that if he returned he would be used solely as a punter, thus limiting the chance of injury. Lieppman agreed and the kicking picture was rosy again. The word "if" is easily overused when looking back on last season. But "if" the Hawks had been blessed with the kicking game they appear to have this year, Hank Stram's kicking philosophy might have held true for KU and resulted in as much as a 6-4 or 7-3 season rather than 1-9. Rodgers seems to be optimistic that KU has that slight edge it lacked last year. If so, who knows, Kansas might really be back. 63 THIS IS THE YEAR of the "new look" in KU football and keeping with the theme the Jayhawks will appear in new uniforms when they open the new campaign against Washington State on Sept. 12. The new uniforms will team with the new Tartan Turf and the new triple-option offense in hopes of rekindling the Jayhawk firepower of two years ago that took KU to the conference championship and a trip to Miami and the Orange Bowl. Modeling the new apparel is offensive guard Gary Cooper, a 6-2 220 pound junior from Spring Valley, Calif. Features of the new uniforms are soccer-style shoes for use on the Tartan Turf and large Jayhawks on each side of the helmets. KU Switches to Mod Sod ... Tartan Turf replaces buffalo grass Turf Brightens Football Scene By DON BAKER Assistant Kansan Sports Editor Pepper Rodgers has strongly indicated that the KU football picture looks much brighter now than it did at the end of last year's disastrous 1-9 season. However, whether the Jayhawks will make it all the way back as the popular bumper stickers say is a matter of question. But regardless of how the team itself looks, one thing is certain—the scene in Memorial Stadium will definitely be brighter than it ever has before. The reason is simple. KU has now joined the ever-increasing ranks of colleges using artificial turf. Three months of work on the stadium's new Tartan Turf is scheduled to culminate Sept. 4, just eight days prior to the Jayhawks Sept. 12 opener against Washington State. Being installed at a cost of $240,000 by the 3M Company, the synthetic surface will join last year's newly installed Tartan track and a fresh coat of paint to give Memorial Stadium its brightest and most modern appearance in its history. THREE OTHER BIG EIGHT schools also initiate synthetic fields this year. Oklahoma concurred with KU and will open their home schedule on a Tartan field while Kansas State and Nebraska both decided to use Astro- Turf. All four carpet jobs will cost nearly a quarter of a million dollars apiece. KU first announced its intentions of installing an artificial field last January but the method of financing was not disclosed until late in May. KU Athletic Director Wade Stinson explained then that Kansas would be able to finance the project because of an excess of revenue over expenditures in the football ledger. Stinson said in an interview last week that the project would be paid for over a five year period with the money coming primarily from gate receipts. Approximately $25,000 will come from alumni donations. Stinson said that 20 per cent of the total cost ($48,000) will be paid in the first year along with the cost of the base preparation for the field which will amount to about $30,000. TO THE UNKNOWING FAN, the base preparation for the carpet is not anything one would want to play football on. In explaining the construction of the field, Stinson said the field is first leveled in preparation for the base. The base itself consists of 6-7 inches of crushed rock and clay pressed together and layed on the field in such a manner as to leave an 18 inch crown down the middle. The composition closely resembles a concrete base, Stinson said. Following this two layers of asphalt, one an inch and a half thick and the last one an inch thick, are applied to the rock and clay composition in preparation for the Tartan. The Tartan is a cold mix, Stinson said, that is poured onto the field. It is hard at first but is rolled for three or four days which makes it soft and spongy. Stinson compared this to the Tartan track by saying that the track consists of different elements that make it a harder surface. AFTER LETTING THE Tartan set for an indefinite period (it set for three weeks in Memorial Stadium) the actual carpet is layed. A chemical paste is used to bind the carpet to the Tartan which is layed out in a series of rolls approximately four feet in width. The actual laying of the carpet only began last Monday in Memorial Stadium. Upon completing the laying of the carpet, the 3M Company will paint the yard-markings on the field. Stinson said at this time there are no plans for any endzone markings. He added though that a Jayhawk may be put in the center at a later date. Jayhawk Sports By Joe H. Bullard Kansan Sports Editor KU football fans got their first look at the Tartan Turf in Memorial Stadium last Saturday when the Jayhawks held a full scrimmage on the new artificial field. Workmen have been busy all summer working to finish the field in time for the Sept. 12 opener with Washington State. By Saturday only about half of the field was covered with the carpet-like substance which composes the playing surface. Workmen were expected to have the field completely finished in time for another scrimmage on Saturday, this time with yard markings and goal posts. KU is one of four Big Eight schools to dedicate artificial turfs this year. The new turf provides many benefits for the game, such as low cost maintenance and constant field conditions under any type of weather, and is much faster than conventional natural field coverings. There are however, some drawbacks to the new surface. The most noticeable flaw is the heat. Pepper shouldn't have tny trouble with the Jay-hawks not hustling—the turf will take care of that. The fact is, the turf gets so hot that the soles of the feet start to burn if you stand in one place for too long. No one has checked the temperature of the field, but I am reminded of the report of 120 degree plus temperatures recorded this summer on the artificial turf in Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis. The turf also causes burns much the same type produced by sliding on a carpet or wood floor. Last Saturday, the players wore arm protectors that extended from just above the wrist to the upper arm, and socks that covered the entire leg. After the scrimmage, however, many players showed the effects of the turf, mostly on the hands and elbows At first glance, the turf doesn't appear to be too durable. It would seem that a well placed cleat in a seam might tear out a large portion of the turf. Not so, says 3M company, the manufacturers of the turf. 3M, however does not guarantee the surface. The new turf has only been around for about three years, and 3M can't obtain any estimate of the life expectancy of the carpet. No guarantee could be a real headache—at the price of $240,000, KU couldn't afford to replace the turf too often. Time will be the true test for artificial turf. ✩ ✩ ✩ Pepper Rodgers commenting on KU's triple option. "It should be called the quadruplet option. The quarterback can hand-off, pitch out, pass or fumble." ★★ Big plays may be the deciding factor for KU football this year. To anyone watching Saturday's scrimmage, it should be obvious that this year's team is capable of explosive offensive play. Dan Heck's three touchdown passes of 60, 60 and 30 yards speak for themselves. Summer Kept Thinclads Active While most students not enrolled in summer school headed for home or other parts of the country upon completion of the spring semester last May, members of the KU track team remained on the hill in preparation for two important summer meets and many individual track excursions that lasted throughout the entire summer. Coach Bob Timmons related last week that it was a busy but beneficial summer that saw the Jayhawks place high in two team meets and also saw various team members scattered throughout the world for clinics, demonstrations, training camps and further meets. The highlight of the summer activities came at the NCAA finals held June 18-20 at Des Moines where for the second consecutive year KU finished in the runnerup spot. California won the championship with 40 points while the Jayhawks, Oregon and Brigham Young all followed with 35 points. The lone individual winners for KU were Karl Salb in the shot put and Jan Johnson in the pole vault. TWO WEEKS PRIOR to the NCAA meet the club traveled to Wichita for the United States Track and Field Federation (USTFF) meet where it easily captured the first place prize. The victory, however, meant more than just adding additional hardware to the already crowded track office in Allen Field House as a choice of either a South American or Caribbean tour was also awarded. The latter was chosen and included stops in Haiti, Martinique, Trinidad, Tabago and Venezuela. Paid for by the USTFF and co-sponsored by the State Department, the trip was not all sightseeing as the primary purpose was to give track clinics and demonstrations and in general just to encourage track participation and development in that area. Making the trip which lasted from July 15 to August 5 in addition to Timmons were hammerthrower Bill Penny, pole vaulter Johnson, and sprint and distance runners Mickey Mathews, Mike Solomon and Jim Neihouse. Individual excursions were also a part of the KU summer track agenda. Bill Hatcher spent a large portion of the vacation months at Duke University while attending a training camp sponsored by the U.S. Olympic committee and Steve Wilhelm traveled across the sea to France, Germany and Russia on an AAU sponsored trip. Heck Passes Blue Team to Victory The first-team dominated Blue squad ripped the second-string White team 27-0 Saturday afternoon in a controlled scrimmage on Memorial Stadium's partly completed Tartan Turf. The scrimmage was part of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce sponsored football scrimmage and dinner, an annual affair that gives the public a chance to meet the players and coaches personally, and to inspect the KU dressing room and press box facilities. This year the crowd of about 400 was also able to inspect and watch the laying of the new synthetic turf. The scrimmage, which was not played under game-like conditions, saw the two squads operate on the northern half of the field, the only part where the carpet has been laid. The difference in the game was spelled in the passing arm of the Blue's Dan Heck. The juco transfer from Hawthorne, Calif., who is now established as the Jayhawks' number one quarterback, completed 14 of 22 passes for 277 yards including two 60-yard scoring bombs. Leading receivers for the Blues were flanker Ron Jessie who was on the receiving end of four passes for 109 yards and tight end Larry Brown who gathered in three Heck aerials for 85 yards. Neither team was capable of engineering a substantial ground game. Leading rushers for the Blues were Steve Conley and John Riggins. Both picked up 31 yards for the day's work, Conley on five carries and Riggins on nine carries. Leading the White rushers was Donnie Joe Morris, a transfer from Independence Junior College, who collected 49 yards on 15 carries. No MISTER GUY MONTGOMERY MOTION IS HER HEARTS AND SILK IS HER SKIN PANDA PUNCH FALL '70 Never before has the variety of ideas been available in men's fashions. Never before have men been able to express their individuality in dress. Today, all ideas for all individuals can be found at the Clothing Consultants. MISTER GUY KUCC Exists 'In Limbo?' The Kansas University Co-ordinating Committee (KUCC) still exists but is living in a state of limbo, John Sanford, Bartlesville, Okla., said Sunday. "I have a feeling the KUCC has served its purpose," Sanford said. The Committee was organized during an emergency situation and will probably remain somewhat dormant unless another such situation arises, he said. He added that when it was first organized he did not think it would function more than three weeks Sanford explained that the committee did not initiate action, but would help anyone who asked for assistance. He said the group has worked on such things as scheduling rooms, publicizing individuals or groups, channeling complaints, mailing notices and collecting and distributing petitions. Donations alone, including the present the group has no specific location, but the Information Center is located at the Dean of Women's Office. Dean of Women's Office where the Committee was first headquartered, have maintained the committee, Sanford said. At EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course JACQUE J. Arnold First Name: Jacquie Last Name: Arnold Female of Study: Cooperative Year Completed: 1607 W. 15th. Summer 1970. Living Unit at Baldwin For Department of Art (Department of Dance) Beginning Weight: 188 Ending Weight: 35 Finding Notes: 1246 Camping %: 75 What measurements would you make to accommodate this student in your Reading Dynamic? "Merely that it increased your wpm and site myself as an example. On the first lesson alone I had already tripled my rate." Aug. 31 KANSAN 9 1970 A spokesman for the "Douglas County Reward Fund" said Sunday that the reward fund was still in effect for this year. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course JACQUIE J. Arnold First Name Surnal Last Name Funded by Study Degree Year Carpenter 1603 W. J. 15th Summer 1970 Living Center is a Student for Beginning Education Reading Experience Beginning Rate 188 35 Beginning Grade Cengage, N. Ending Rate 1246 75 The spokesman, Travis Glass, 944 Jana Dr., said if a crime were committed which the operating board considered serious enough, the board would offer a reward for the discovery of the criminal. Glass said the reward was given only if the crime were solved within 60 days. Reward Is Still Good In County The fund was established last year by the city leaders to aid Lawrence law enforcement personnel in solving serious crimes in Douglas County. The New York Rock Ensemble Roll Over INCLUDES: RUNNING DOWN THE RHIGHWAY TRADITIONAL ORDER FIELDS OF ON DON'T WAIT FOR LAND. GIRLLEDGER On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. THE STAGE FRIGHT THE BAND MUSIC BY RALPH HOLLIS DJ RALPH HOLLIS PRODUCED BY RALPH HOLLS THE BAND FEATURING: THE LETTERS OF ATHENA BY JOHN MARTIN ROBERT LAMBERT BY JOAN MAYER BY JASON DAVIDSON BY KATHRYN SCHNEIDER BY KIM KWANG BY CHRISTOPHER HOFFMAN BY SHELL MCKELLEN BY LEE O'NEIL BY NICHOLAS WISE VOLUME 1 PUBLISHED BY HARVARD PICTURES ONE OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST TITLE COMPanies On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. SUNDAY SUNDAY NEW YORK ROCK ENSEMBLE September 12 8:00 Hoch Tickets on Sale September 2 at the SUA Office, South Lounge, Student Union Prices $1.50 - $2.00 - $2.50 Patronize Kansan Advertisers SUA MEMBERSHIP MEETING september 3 8:00pm Woodruff The purpose of the SUA membership meeting is to explain to students the opportunities for working in SUA during this school year. Each board member will present a short explanation of his area and the committee positions available. There will be an opportunity for students to ask each board member specific questions about his area and the purposes of the club. his area and the city for each committee member. Students may then sign up for committees in which they are specifically interested. Petition Supports Chalmers A petition circulated during enrollment in support of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. had gotten 1,580 signatures at the end of that three-day period. The coed behind the effort, Kae Enright, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, said there would be tables on Jayhawk Blvd, and at the Union Monday through Friday for students who have not signed the petition but wish to do so. Yearbook Due For October Richard Louv, Wichita senior and editor of the Jayhawker magazine yearbook, said Friday that the spring and commencement issues of the 1969-70 Jayhawker should be distributed in either September or October. "The staff's job was finished the first of the summer and the copy and layout has been at press since then," Louv said. The magazine yearbook is being printed by a Lawrence printing firm. --offers 10 KANSAN Aug. 31 1970 1 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course James First Name L. Transue Last Name High School School of Science Supremo Year Capacity 640 Rhode Island Living Learning & Education Department for Educational Sciences Summer 1970 Development and Your Student's Journey Read Experience Beginning Name 255 Ending Name 702 Examining Number 1246 Examining Number 805 As far as I'm concerned, reading dynamics is definitely a new feature. That's why I'd recommend it for anyone today. To be able to read at well over 200 words with no student, businessman or homemaker should be a priority. Books are in books, in books to you a new door to learning. One which you could have never opened previously; F. N. TAMCAN EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Charles H. Duncan First Name Initial Last Name History Business Administ. Feeding of Study Degree Year Crested 1232 Indiana #984 Summer 1970 Living School a Student for Department of All Instruction Reading Dynamics Beginning Age 245 Completeness 60 Ending Age 1620 Completeness 85 C. H. DUNCAN What information would you make to encourage someone to read Reading Dynamics? The course can do only good things to help your reading ability, skill, speed and what you get out of what you read. The information and assistance you receive about studying and the knowledge of Recall Patterns are of immense aid to a college student. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Charles H. Duncan First Name Initial Last Name History Business Administ. Feather of Study Degree Year Created 1223 Indiana #94 Summary 1970 Living College A Department For Department of Art Instruction Beginning Page 245 Count 60 Ending Page 1620 Count 85 The Firesign Theatre Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers C 30102 The Firesign Theatre Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers C 30102 On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. SINGING WITH THE BAND MUSIC BY JONATHAN GILLIAM ARTIST ANONYMOUS DOWNLOAD NOW AT: SUNDAY, APRIL 20TH AT 11:30 AM AT THE NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ART NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ART ALL RIGHTS RESERVED THE BAND On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol. KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 Capitol $347 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The New York Rock Ensemble Roll Over INCLUDES: RUNNING DOWN THE HIGHWAY TRADITIONAL ORDER/FIELDS OF JOY DON'T WAIT TOO LONG GRAY EDIGGER The New York Rock Ensemble Roll Over INCLUDING RUNNING LONG THE HIGHWAY TRADITIONAL ORDER FIELDS OF JOY DON'T WAIT TOO LONG GRAVEDIGGER On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. SINGRIGHT THE BAND FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 1985, SINGRIGHT THE BAND WILL BE CURRENTLY GREATROUND IN THE BAND. AT THIS MOMENT, WE ARE THERE TO SERVE YOU. PLEASE JOIN US FOR A FREE TRACK! MARCH 20TH, 1985 AT 7 P.M. THE BAND WILL BE HERE ON MONDAY, MARCH 3RD, AT 10 AM. SINGRIGHT THE BAND 705-640-6400 www.singrighttheband.com On Capitol Records Reg.$5.98 $347 Capitol KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. SINGLE NIGHT THE BAND On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. The Firesign Theatre Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers The Firesign Theatre Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers C 30102 On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Columbia Records $2.99 KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. CUT WESTERN CIV IN HALF BARKER SOCIAL CON Ortega Y Guzmán THE PHARAGE WALDEN and "CIVIL DIECESS" Dialogues of essential works of THE RICH AND THE POOR Discoveries and Opinions of GALILEO RUSSELL RELIGIOUS essential works of UTOPIA The Abolition of Man The Viking Period Library Voltaire SELECTIONS FROM THE ESSAYS THE VARIETIES OF RELIGIOUS EXPIRATIONS Existentialism How to Read a Book HERITAGE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION BEATTY and JOHNSON Select R Existentialism How to Read a Book HERITAGE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION BEATTY and JOHNSON Select R evelyn wood reading dynamics A SPECIAL WESTERN CIVILIZATION READING DYNAMICS COURSE - 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 this fall we refund the entire tuition of the course. THIS CLASS BEGINS SEPT. 9, WEDNESDAY, 7:00 - 9:30 P.M. You Must Pre-Enroll CALL NOW: 843-6424 WANT ADS WORK WONDERS KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES --- One day 25 words or fewer: $1.00 each additional word: $.01 Three days Three days 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 10:30 a.m. day before publication Five days 25 words or fewer: $1.75 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the vice president's letter of approval to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE For Sale, Masterwork stereo HIF), FM tuner, roll-top case, new cartridge Ampex micro 50 cassette tape deck, mlc and tape. 842-8681. 9-81 Asian fish mobiles to decorate your room with. Now available at the Tokyo Museum of Natural History. Open daily 10:00-4:00, Sundays. 1:30-4:30. 9-4 Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! Revised, comprehensive. "New An- alogy of Western Civilization." 41d edition Campus Maud House, 411 W 14th St FRYE BOOTS—Primarily Leather carries a complete line of Frye's Ambulance booties or round or round boots with buckles and brass to your taste. 812 Mass. 10-30 On your way to the Student Union? Stop in to browse at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop—largest supply of unusual imports in this area. Open daily 10:00-4:00. Sundays. 1:30-4:30. 9-4 For sale: Leather pants for Men and Women. Better and less expensive than cycle leathers, at the Hodge Podge. 9-4 Thai temple rubbings, sterling silver jewelry, beggars bowls, clay water carafes and cups at the Museum of Natural History Gift Shop. Open daily from 10:00-4:00. Sundays, 1:30-4:30. 9-4 19" Zenth B&W TV with Space Command and stand; Thermos ice chest; 4 drawer desk; Underwood portable typewriter. 842-8799. 9-4 Back to school specials. 1967 Yamaha 100cc $199; 1968 Hodaka $029; 2449; 1968 Yamaha $250c $495; 1969 Yamaha $250c $495; 1969 Yamaha $250c $495; New Suzuki's and Kawasaki's at Nichols Motorcycles, in 300 West 6th. Phone 842-0504. For Sale: Two F60-15 Goodyear GT'S. Both for $75. One F70-15 Goodyear Wide tread with Z-28 Rally Wheel. $30. Dave, 842-5786. 9-4 For sale -1954 Ford—excellent condition —$250-Call Larry at 842-0759 or come by Gatehouse, 2200 W. 26th, Apt. E-26. 1961 Detroiter Mobil Home, 10 x 51, 2 bedrooms, central air-conditioning, new w/w carpeting, raised ceiling in kitchen and living room. 1 mile from campus. Call 842-8808 after 5 or weekends. 9-4 HELP WANTED Help Wanted: Browsers to fill our idle moments. You might even find something else to post, posters, candies, India prints. The Hodge Pond, 15 West Ninth, 9-4 1 TACO GRANDE With This coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 Free! Part time work in Lawrence representing national concern. Excellent opportunity for right person. Send name, address, phone no. to C.E.A., box 1504, Maryland Heights, Mo. 63043. 9-4 1720 West 23rd Street WANTED Wanted: Bare walls to be covered by Hodge Podge posters . . . They're something to think about. 9-4 WANTED: WATCHES—for handmade leather watchbands individually fitted to your wrist. Many styles and designs starting at $3.00. For quality leather, see the craftsmen at Primarily Leather. 10-30 Roommate Wanted: Sophomore or higher. Jayhawker Towers. Owers. No Room. See to appreciate. $35+1. phone. Apt. 107B or Dave-424-5786. THE HTE in the WALL DELICATESSEN & DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP Same time — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III Same Time — Phone Order Roommate wanted: One girl to share two bedroom apartment. Call 843-9444. 9-4 NOTICE PERSONAL Personal: Clothes you won't find everyone on campus wearing—strictly for the individual. At the Hodge Podge, 15 W. 9th. 9-4 Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of Rosalea's Hotel. Write Harper, Kan. 67058 or call (316) 896-9121. 9-4 PRIMARILY LEATHER. Lawrence's oldest and finest leather shop. Fea- tures, handmade belts, watch bands, sandals, skirts and bags. MASS — Downtown. 10-30 Always wanted to study ballet or jazz? Enroll now for University be- available. Enlist in enhanced classes avail- able. Liz Harris Dance Academy 842-6875 or 843-3214. 9-4 Board your horse with us and all you'll have to do is ride—we provide complete stall care. Close to town. No stallions. 842-1406. 9-4 Visit the Omnibus. In the place for lovers of the art. 846 ind. (above Owens flower shop). Open 10 till 5 daily except Sat. 9-4 Sunbathing, swimming, and piercing is available at the beautiful Garden of Eden. Only 16 miles from Lawrence. For information write P.O. Box 590, Tonganoxie, Kansas 66086. 9-11 Has anyone been managing editor of a scientific or scholarly journal? Please call: Mary Louise Sherman, 843-008-00; evenings preferable. 9-4 Bar-B-Q and more Bar-B-Q from an outside pit. Large Rib plate $1.75. Small plate $1.30. Plate of brisket $1.75. Brisket sand. $.75. 1/2 chicken $1.30. Rub slab to go $3.40. Slab to eat here $3.60. Hrs. 1 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. 515 Mich. St. Closed Tues. and Sun. 842-9510. EMPLOYMENT Part or full time transmitter operator for radio station KANU FM. 1st, 2nd, or endorsed 3rd class radio telephone operator license required. Work hours arranged by contacting John Tucker at Broadcasting Hall. 864-94532 Wanted: Men and Women to canvass house to house verifying information for the new Lawrence, Kansas city directory. Wages plus bonus. Car necessary. Must be plain writers. See Mrs. Stovall. $729] \frac{1}{2} \mathrm{Mass},$ 202. 9-4 WE HAVE MOVED 10 729 NEW HAMPSHIRE ST. OFFICE FURNITURE OFFICE SUPPLIES XEROX COPYING SERVICE M&M OFFICE SUPPLY 843-0763 WELCOME STUDENTS We're eager to serve our regular customers and anxious to help all new students - PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE - 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Use any of our three convenient locations BankAmericard DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Three Convenient Locations: Master Charge MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners Enrollment... From page 1 cal Center and late enrolling students are counted. Max Fuller, director of admissions, said 19,001 students enrolled at both campuses last year. "When we submitted our 12 KANSAN Aug.31 1970 budget request to the Kansas Legislature in May, 1969, we projected a total increase of 800 students," Fuller said. "Last winter, admission requests indicated we would fall short of the increase, and we have been expecting it." Fuller cited two reasons for the lag—the area economy and junior colleges. From page 1 Baker and McConnell have enlisted the aid of the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union and expect a decision in the case, a group effort by 35 couples, in November. Liberation... The other member of the Minnesota group was Jim Meko, editor of "MPLS Free," a gay liberationist newspaper published monthly by the organization at Minnesota. Chesebro urged the Lawrence group to work within institutional bounds if possible. But if the group got no results, it should "expose the bigotry and hypocrisy within the system," Chesebro said. Norway has been Winter Olympic champions five times. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Nagel A. Reed First Name Last Name High School Faculty of Science Engineering Year Graduated 803 Avalon Road Summer 1970 Department of English Instruction For Department of Education Beginning Rate 142 Ending Rate 602 Total Rate 1009 What statements would you make to encourage students to take Reading Document? "The course was very rewarding and a lot of fun. A little frustrating at times, but worth every minute of it." PADMA EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS Student Evaluation of Course Terry First Name R. Wright Last Name Advertising Faculty of Science Department of Physics 608 W. 25th. #3 Summer 1970 Senior and New Student name for Department of Information Beginning Name 217 Student ID# 65 Ending Name 1842 Student ID# 70 If what statements would you make to encourage someone to rate Reading Dynamics: "The course is the most fantastic experience I have ever had. I was totally unprepared for the progress I made. I increased my reading about 10 times and get better comp as a rule." Stage Fright THE BAND MUSIC BY: JOHN GOSLING SONG WRITER: MICHAEL SMITH BAND ARTIST: COLLECTION OF MICHAEL SMITH PRODUCED BY: JOHN GOSLING Stage Right THE BAND On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. On Capitol Records Reg. $5.98 $347 Capitol! KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. Use Kansan Classified --- h.i.s for her Swabby Join the Navy crowd . . . the group that's making the Swabby look the rage this season. Button-through just like the genuine article with added touch of belt loops and front patch pockets. All from h.i.s-for-her, of course. $8.00 "IT'S A JOY!"—to wear Shaffer knits in cotton boucle. Solids, stripes and striped trims in your favorite colors—S-M-L. Priced—$6.50 and $8.00 OPEN TILL 3:30 THURSDAYS JAY SHOPPE DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833 TREBAL CIVILISATION A series of thirteen 52-minute color films, a personal view of the ideas and events of the last sixteen hundred years in the history of Western man, written and narrated by Kenneth Clark, produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation and presented by TIME-LIFE FILMS. FIRST IN THE SERIES The Skin of Our Teeth. A synoptic view of the thousand years between the fall of Rome and the rise of the great Gothic. Thursday, September 3 6:45 Woodruff Aud. (Sponsored by SUA, History of Art, Western Civilization, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Department of Drawing and Painting) FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE